To Soar Again on Cape Cod Powe

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September 11, 1988

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Burlington's Minor Confusion

THE onetime saying has it that you need a scorecard to keep track of the players, but in Burlington, Vt., these days, baseball fans are finding they need their scorecards to keep rail of the team.

Small-scale league baseball first appeared in Vermont in 1984 when Mike Agganis, a businessman, brought his franchise north from Lynn, Mass., and signed a four-year agreement with the Cincinnati Reds.

The Vermont Reds scored iii consecutive AA Eastern League championships, had a less successful 1987 flavor, then flew south to Chattanooga, Tenn. Mr. Agganis signed an agreement with a new parent lodge, the Seattle Mariners, and the Vermont Mariners settled into Burlington's Centennial Field for the 1988 season. They have been defenseless up in a tight race for this season'due south league championship.

Win or lose, Mr. Agganis plans to hitting the route again, taking his franchise with him to Canton, Ohio. Canton, he said, offers ''a improve marketplace and a brand new stadium,'' now under structure. Well-nigh a million people live in the Canton metropolitan area, which is about twice the population of Vermont.

''Our attendance has averaged out to about 85,000 over 5 years in Burlington,'' said Mr. Agannis, who has been a club owner for eight years. ''In Canton, we can probably practice between 225,000 and 300,000 attendance.''

Mr. Agannis's move is only 1 in a new circular of minor league musical chairs. The Glens Falls, N.Y., minor league team is moving to London, Ontario, side by side year, and a Burlington man of affairs, Ray Pecor, has struck a tentative deal to buy the Williamsport, Pa., franchise for $1.iv million, subject to approving by the Eastern League owners.

To the uninitiated, minor league baseball can be a baffling thing. Under a typical agreement, the parent club provides for and pays the players and the manager, while the franchise possessor pays all other costs and collects the profits.

What owners actually own is the correct to operate ane of the 26 AA affiliates, said Geoff Belzer, spokesman for the Vermont Mariners. When Mr. Agganis goes to County, he is probable to sign an agreement with the Cleveland Indians, who are now playing in Williamsport, and Mr. Pecor could strike a deal with the Seattle Mariners.

That means that when Mr. Agganis moves, he volition not be packing upward whatever bats or balls - or ballplayers, for that matter.

''All he's actually taking with him is his franchise and his role equipment,'' Mr. Belzer said. For Falling Grape, A Mouth Agape

WHEN Paul Tavilla caught a grape that roughshod 788 feet from the tallest building in New England terminal week, it made a loud popping sound as information technology landed in his mouth.

The ribier grape smarted a little on impact, having reached speeds of about 110 miles an hour in its 60-story descent from the top of the John Hancock Building in downtown Boston.

Mr. Tavilla, of Chelsea, Mass., said he is used to the smarting since he began setting records in the Guinness Volume of Earth Records in 1982 for continuing under skyscrapers and catching falling grapes in his mouth. The catch Sept. three topped his previous record of 660 feet set in downtown Tokyo on March 1, 1986.

For his latest stunt, grapes were dropped from a window-washing rig atop the John Hancock Building. The sidewalk outside the mirrored glass skyscraper was littered with splattered grapes after most 70 were thrown by his son-in-police, perched in the rig 60 stories overhead. One grape hobbling Mr. Tavilla's lips, another bounced off his chest, and withal another struck his chin.

''I don't rush it, just I tin can most go a feeling when I'm getting closer to a catch,'' said Mr. Tavilla. ''It's almost like looking in the dark and eventually seeing something.''

Mr. Tavilla, who is 54 years old, began catching pieces of fruit for fun equally a child.

''I'd catch cutting upwardly pieces of watermelon, grapes, oranges, anything,'' he said. ''In the Regular army, I used to catch piddling pieces of hot-dogs.''

Mr. Tavilla said he uses the black ribier grapes because they're easier to come across coming down. It's Farewell To Summer Again

Greatcoat COD's twelvemonth-round residents again lined the Mid Greatcoat Highway's overpasses on Labor Mean solar day to bid adieu to retreating summer residents and tourists.

Merely this yr there was a difference.

For each of the past five years, as the Cape's permanent population has increased, ''Over The Bridge Solar day,'' as the farewell is called, has brought out more celebrants and a greater variety of signs and banners strung along the overpasses and on the two bridges that carry motorists over the Cape Cod Canal toward Boston and Providence.

The signs and banners, as usual, ranged from jovial to sardonic.

They included gentle good byes such every bit ''And so long, it'due south been good to know yous'' and ''Adept good day. Good luck. Come back with some bucks. Others were less beneficial: ''Good bye and close the gate behind you.''

Just this year, alongside the traditional ones, were banners for local causes.

On the Oak Street overpass in Barnstable, a big banner was hung urging parting motorists to ''honk for moratorium,'' a reference to a non-binding resolution on the November ballot that calls for the halting of new construction on the Greatcoat.

On the Route 149 overpass near Exit 5 in Barnstable, opponents of nuclear ability unfurled a large banner that proclaimed: ''Pilgrim - Mortiferous Radioactive Waste. Vote Yes on N iv - Life.''

The reference was to the Pilgrim nuclear power plant, fifteen miles north of the Cape Cod Canal, which has yet to accept a start upwardly.

The anti-nuclear forces have succeeded in placing an item on the statewide Nov election called Question 4, that would prevent the use of whatever free energy sources that produce radioactive waste product.

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Source: https://www.nytimes.com/1988/09/11/us/northeast-journal.html

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