The Boston Globe - 20.08.2019

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Today is Tuesday, Aug. 20,
the 232nd day of 2019. There
are 133 days left in the year.
Birthdays: Writer-director
Walter Bernstein is 100. Boxing
promoter Don King is 88. For-
mer senator George Mitchell,
Maine Democrat, is 86. Former
representative Ron Paul, Texas
Republican, is 84. Former All-
Star Graig Nettles is 75. Broad-
cast journalist Connie Chung is


  1. Chicago trombone player
    Jimmy Pankow is 72. Led Zep-
    pelin singer Robert Plant is 71.
    Country singer Rudy Gatlin is

  2. Singer-songwriter John Hi-
    att is 67. Actor-director Peter
    Horton is 66. TV weatherman
    Al Roker is 65. Actress Joan Al-
    len is 63. Movie director David
    O. Russell is 61. Limp Bizkit
    singer Fred Durst is 49. Actor
    Andrew Garfield is 36. Actress-
    singer Demi Lovato is 27.
    ºIn 1866, President An-
    drew Johnson formally de-
    clared the Civil War over,
    months after fighting had
    stopped.
    ºIn 1910, a series of forest
    fires swept through parts of
    Idaho, Montana, and Washing-
    ton, killing at least 85 people.
    ºIn 1953, the Soviet Union
    publicly acknowledged it had
    tested a hydrogen bomb.
    ºIn 1968, the Soviet Union
    and other Warsaw Pact nations
    began invading Czechoslovakia
    to crush the ‘‘Prague Spring’’
    liberalization drive.
    ºIn 1986, postal employee
    Patrick Henry Sherrill went on
    a deadly rampage at a post of-


fice in Edmond, Okla., shooting
14 fellow workers to death be-
fore killing himself.
ºIn 1988, a cease-fire in the
war between Iraq and Iran
went into effect.
ºIn 1989, entertainment ex-
ecutive Jose Menendez and his
wife, Kitty, were shot to death
in their Beverly Hills mansion
by their sons, Lyle and Erik.
ºIn 2009, the only man con-
victed in the bombing of Pan
Am Flight 103 returned home
to Libya after his release on
compassionate grounds from a
Scottish prison. (Abdel Baset al-
Megrahi, said to have only
months to live because of pros-
tate cancer, died nearly three
years later.)
ºIn 2014, the United States
launched a new barrage of air-
strikes against Islamic State ex-
tremists and weighed sending
more troops to Iraq as Presi-
dent Obama vowed to be re-
lentless in pursuit of those who
beheaded American journalist
James Foley.
ºIn 2017, comic Jerry Lewis
died of heart disease in Las Ve-
gas at the age of 91.
ºLast year, in a letter to
Catholics worldwide, Pope
Francis vowed that ‘‘no effort
must be spared’’ to root out sex
abuse by priests and cover-ups
by the Catholic Church. The Re-
cording Industry of America
said The Eagles’ greatest hits al-
bum had surpassed Michael
Jackson’s ‘‘Thriller’’ to become
the best-selling album of all
time in the United States.

This day in history


challenging at first, however.
“I would ask, ‘What can an
architect do?’ It’s an underpaid
profession; we couldn’t afford
to do a lot of free stuff all the
time,” Mr. Wilson recalled dur-
ing a pair of 1996 Globe inter-
views. “But we did some free
front-end work. And I was able
to attract some young archi-
tects and designers.”
Along with guiding the task
force to work with more than
50 nonprofits, he both spoke
out and wrote about why archi-
tects had a duty to help the
homeless.
“Every place I walked in the
city, there were people lying in
the streets in tatters — in that
era of total hedonism, of build-
ing all these projects with exot-
ic materials,” he told the Globe.
“I was outraged.”
For nearly 20 years, until
merging into other design ad-
vocacy organizations, the task
force helped improve and re-
shape buildings that house
Greater Boston’s social service
safety net.
According to “Designing for
the Public Realm,” a publica-
tion that took stock of those ef-
forts, the task force worked on
more than 80 projects. The re-
port also quoted extensively
from Mr. Wilson’s writings.
“A society that allows some
of its citizens to be without
homes, sometimes literally liv-
ing like animals, must recog-
nize that it is structurally
flawed, despite the superficial
beauty of the monuments it
erects,” he wrote.
As an architect and planner,
Mr. Wilson helped create some
of those attractive structures.
He spent his career as a
principal at Payette Associates
in Boston, except for a year
teaching at the University of To-
ronto. His design work focused
on health care buildings such
as Leonard Morse Hospital in
Natick, on which he collaborat-
ed with Tom Payette, the firm’s
namesake.
Among Mr. Wilson’s other
key buildings were a hospital in
Athens, Ga., Jordan Hospital in
Plymouth, and the Johns Hop-

uWILSON
Continued from Page B

kins Outpatient Center in Balti-
more — “the first freestanding
outpatient building in the Unit-
ed States,” Kevin Sullivan, Pay-
ette’s current president, said in
an interview.
Mr. Wilson was a modernist
who “loved to experiment with
color, so his buildings were
filled with color and natural
light,” Sullivan added in an e-
mail. “He brought humanity
and high design to health care.”
John Leslie Wilson was born
on April 3, 1941, in Spokane,
Wash., and grew up in nearby
Cheney, the son of Martha Leet-
sch and Victor Wilson.
After graduating from
Cheney High School, Mr. Wil-
son went to Harvard College.
“To get to Cambridge from my
small town in eastern Washing-
ton in the fall of ’58, I took my
firstplaneride,”hewroteinthe
50th anniversary report of his
Harvard class. “There was a lot
of landing and taking off — four
stops in Montana alone.”
He received a bachelor’s de-
gree from Harvard in 1962 and
a master’s in architecture four
years later from the Harvard
Graduate School of Design.
In 1964, he married Mari
Ziegler, an attorney currently
with the Morgan Lewis firm in
Boston.
“He was wonderful,” she
said. “He was a man of all
parts.”
During his summers as a

youth in eastern Washington,
he worked on road crews. As a
college undergraduate, he was
a janitor at Harvard’s health
services. While he was in grad-
uate school, psychologist and
psychedelic drug advocate Tim-
othy Leary tried to persuade
him to set aside architecture
and pursue psychology, Mari
said.
Mr. Wilson was an avid
reader whose packed floor-to-
ceiling bookshelves in his New-
ton dining room were the envy
of friends and colleagues.
Intellectually or physically,
very little seemed beyond the
reach of Mr. Wilson, who was 6-
foot-4. At home, he did the
plumbing. At the family’s vaca-
tion place on Cape Cod, he put
a new roof on the barn.
“Wherever he went, he be-
came immersed in where he
was,” his wife said of his proj-
ects around the world. “He had
the most incredible respect for
the people he was working
with.”
Such was the case in Boston
when he founded the Task
Force to End Homelessness.
“It was like the heavens had
parted and he showed up to
help us,” Dr. Jim O’Connell,
president of Boston Health
Care for the Homeless, said of
Mr. Wilson’s work on the agen-
cy’s Barbara McInnis House re-
spite facility in Boston.
“With very little money he

made that place look like
home,” O’Connell said. “John
really knew how to turn an old
tired building into a dignified
place for homeless people.”
According to the task force’s
history, its other projects in-
cluded work with the Casa Nue-
va Vida shelter for homeless
families in Boston; The Second
Step organization in Newton,
which assists those who have
experienced domestic violence;
and Bridge Over Troubled Wa-
ters in Boston, which works
with runaways.
Mr. Wilson was a fellow of
the American Institute of Ar-
chitects. In 1996, the organiza-
tion recognized his task force
workbyhonoringhimwithits
Whitney M. Young Jr. Award,
named for a civil rights leader
in the architecture field.
The institute praised Mr.
Wilson for applying “design-
thinking beyond the architect’s
studio” as he “assembled multi-
disciplinary teams to solve spe-
cific problems, from a cash-
strapped church building a
soup kitchen to a bank opening
a drop-in center for people ex-
periencing homelessness.”
In addition to his wife, Mr.
Wilson leaves their daughter,
Victoria, and son, Sam, both of
Newton, and his sister, Nancy
Cashon of Spokane.
Plans for a service are in-
complete at this time.
“For me, design certainly
has moral or ethical overtones
for our society,” Mr. Wilson told
the Globe in 1996.
In his writings, he advocat-
ed for diversity in the work-
place and diversity in the proj-
ects design firms choose to pur-
sue.
And though Mr. Wilson was
stoic as his health declined due
to cancer diagnoses and other
ailments, he was never silent
about his advocacy for the poor.
“What is missing,” he once
wrote, “is the outrage that this
situation of poverty and home-
lessness can exist in the richest
country in the history of the
world.”

Bryan Marquard can be
reached at
[email protected].

John Wilson; sought to stem homelessness


By Alyssa Lukpat
GLOBE CORRESPONDENT
Great white sharks forced
hourlong closures Monday at
four Cape Cod beaches: New-
comb Hollow and Marconi in
Wellfleet, Nauset in Orleans,
and Head of the Meadow in
Truro, officials said.
A tagged shark was detect-
ed at Newcomb Hollow Beach


at 9:07 a.m., according to the
Atlantic White Shark Conser-
vancy’s Sharktivity app and
Suzanne Thomas, a Wellfleet
beach administrator. The
shark “stuck around” after it
was detected, so the beach was

closed until 10:27 a.m., Thom-
as said.
Marconi Beach was shut for
an hour after a shark was spot-
ted at 10:30 a.m., Thomas
said.
People onboard a boat and

a plane at Nauset Beach spot-
ted a shark three times be-
tween 12:45 and 1 p.m., said
Brandon Burke, an Orleans
beach director.
The beach was temporarily
closed.

Head of the Meadow Beach
in Truro was closed twice
Monday due to shark sight-
ings, first from 2:09 p.m. to
3:09 p.m. and again from 3:
p.m. to 4:20 p.m., according to
the Truro Recreation Depart-
ment’s Facebook.
These sightings bring the
total number of shark closures
on the Cape and Islands this

Augustto 6 3,accordingtoa
Globe tally.

Globe Correspondent Maria
Lovato contributed to this
report. Alyssa Lukpat can be
reached at
[email protected].
Follow her on Twitter
@AlyssaLukpat.

Shark sightings close four beaches on Cape Cod


Thesesightingsbringthetotalnumberofsharkclosureson


theCapeandIslandsthisAugustto63.


DAVID L. RYAN/GLOBE STAFF/
Mr. Wilson founded the Boston Society of Architects Task
Force to End Homelessness.

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LEGAL NOTICES LEGAL NOTICES LEGAL NOTICES
CiLegal Noticety ofNewton
Thursday, September 5, 2019

Public hearings will be held
on Thursday, September5, 2019 at 7:00 PM, sec-
ond floor, Newton City Hallbefore the Land Use Com-
mittee of the Newton CitCouncil for the purpose oyf
hearing the following peti-
tion at which time all par-ties interested in the items
shall be heard. Notice willbe published Tuesday, Au-
gust 20, 2019 and Tuesday,August 27, 2019 in The
Boston Globe and Wednes-day, August 28, 2019 in the
Newton Tab, with a copposted on the city’s websitey
at http://www.newtonma.gov andin a conspicuous place at
Newton City Hall.
#256-19 Petition to extend
nonconforming front setbackat 2 Thaxter Road
KEN THORNBY petition for aSPECIAL PERMIT/SITE PLAN
APPROVAL to construct dor-
mers on each side of the sec-ond floor, vertically extending
the non-conforming frontsetback at 2 Thaxter Road,
Ward 1, Newtonville, on land
known as Section 21 Block 04Lot 14, containing approxi-
mately 4,952 sq. ft. of land ina district zoned SINGLE RESI-
DENCE 2. Ref: 7.3, 7.4, 3.1.3,
7.8.2.C.2 of Chapter 30 of theCity of Newton Rev Zoning
Ord, 2017.
#257-19 Amended Petition to
allow attached dwelling unitsat 956 Walnut Street
956 WALNUT STREET, LLC.petition for SPECIAL PER-
MIT/SITE PLAN APPROVAL
to raze the existing single-family dwelling and construct
seven single-family attacheddwellings in two buildings, to
reduce the frontage require-
ment, to reduce the sidesetback requirement, to al-
low three-stories, to exceedmaximum lot coverage, to
allow a retaining wall greater
than 4’ in the setback and toallow a driveway in the side
setback at 956 Walnut Street,Ward 6, Newton Highlands,
on land known as Section62 Block 04 Lot 05, contain-
ing approximately 32,274 sq.ft. of land in a district zoned
MULTI RESIDENCE 1. Ref: Sec.
7.3.3, 7.4, 3.4.1, 3.2.4, 5.4.2.B,6.2.3.B.2 of Chapter 30 of the
City of Newton Rev ZoninOrd, 2017. g


#258-19 Petition to extendnonconforming FAR at 11
Canterbury RoadRICHARD AND YOKO BRYDEN
petition for SPECIAL PERMIT/
SITEextend the existing noncon-PLAN APPROVAL to
forming FAR by replacing anexisting one-story addition
with a two-story addition,
creating an FAR of .64 where.51 exists and .46 is allowed
at 11 Canterbury Road, Ward5, Newton Highlands, on
land known as Section 54
Block 45 Lot 14, containingapproximately 4,325 sq. ft.
in a district zoned SINGLEDRESIDENCE 2. Ref: 7.3.3, 7.4,
3.1.9, 7.8.2.C.2, of the City
of Newton Rev Zoning Ord,2017.


#259-19 Petition to allow at-tached dwelling units at 264
Pearl StreetBENEDETTO CAIRA, TRUSTEE
petition for SPECIAL PERMIT/SITE PLAN APPROVAL to al-
low construction of three
single-family attached dwell-ing units, to allow a reduction
in the required side setbacks,to allow a reduction in the
requiredfrontage,toallow
a reduction in the requiredlot area, to allow a driveway
within 10’ of a side lot lineand to allow retaining walls
great than four feet within asetback at 264 Pearl Street,
Ward 1, Newton, on landknown as Section 11 Block
14 Lot 10, containing ap-
proximately 14,608 sq. ft.of land in a district zoned
MULTI RESIDENCE 2. Ref: Sec.7.3.3, 7.4, 3.4.1, 3.2.4, 5.4.2.B,
6.2.3.B.2 of Chapter 30 of the
City of Newton Rev ZoningOrd, 2017.


#260-19 Petition to extendnon-conforming front set-
back at 28 Wade StreetPETER W. TSE petition for
SPECIAL PERMIT/SITE PLANAPPROVAL to further extend
the existing non-conforming
front setback on Wade Street,creating a new front setback
of 14.7’ where 14.9’ exists aswell as to further extend the
existing non-conforming front
setback on Hersey Street,creating a new front setback
of 14.8’ where 14.7’ existsand to allow parking in the
front setback and within 5’
of a street at 28 Wade Street,Ward 5, Newton Highlands,
on land known as Section 83Block 01 Lot 01, containing
approximately 4,587 sq. ft. of
land in a district zoned SIN-GLE RESIDENCE 3. Ref: 7.3.3,
7.4, 3.1.3, 7.8.2.C.2, 5.1.7.A,5.1.13 of Chapter 30 of the
City of Newton Rev Zoning
Ord, 2017.
#261-19 Petition to allow ga-rage greater than 700 sq. ft.
and dormer at 213-215 Lan-
gley RoadBILL TRASK AND BRENDA
MARCH petition for SPECIALPERMIT/SITE PLAN APPROV-
AL to construct a 484 sq. ft.detached two-car garage and
construct a dormer on thenew structure greater than
50% of the wall plan below
and closer than 3’ to theend wall, where one garage
exists, creating more than700 sq. ft. of garage space
at 213-215 Langley Road,
Ward 6, Newton Centre, onland known as Section 65
Block 19 Lot 39, containingapproximately 7,240 sq. ft. of
land in a district zoned MULTI
RESID7.4, 1.5.4.G.2.b, 1.5.4.G.2.c,ENCE1.Ref:Sec.7.3.3,
3.4.2.B of the City of NewtonRev Zoning Ord, 2017.


#262-19 Petition to allowmore than one garage at 333
Otis StreetNATHANIEL K AND LAURA
FOOTE petition for SPECIAL
PERMIT/SITE PLAN APPROV-AL to amend Special Permit
Board Order #63-99 to con-struct a 329 sq. ft. one-car
attached garage where a
three-car garage exists, cre-ating private garage space
greater than 700 sq. ft., morethan one garage and a pri-
vate garage for more than
three vehicles at 333 OtisStreet, Ward 3, West Newton,
on land known as Section 32Block 03 Lot 13, containing
approximately 24,547 sq. ft.
of land in a district zoned SIN-GLE RESIDENCE 2. Ref: Sec.
7.3.3, 7.4, 3.4.2.B.1 of Chap-ter 30 of the City of Newton
Rev Zoning Ord, 2017.
#264-19 Petition to amendSpecial Permit Board Order
#479-14 at 29 Kewadin Road
DAN AND BRENDA KOSTYpetition for SPECIAL PER-K
MIT/SITE PLAN APPROVAL toamend Special Permit Board
Order #479-14 to allow modi-
fications to the approved siteplan at 29 Kewadin Road,
Ward 5, Waban, on landknown as Section 55 Block
51 Lot 9, containing approxi-
mately 13,400 sq. ft. of landin a district zoned SINGLE
RESIDENCE 2. Ref: Sec. 7.3,7.4 of the City of Newton Rev
Zoning Ord, 2017.


You may call the City Council***
Office at 617-796-1210 forinformation.


NOTICE OF SEIZURE AND INTENT TO FORFEIT
Notice is hereby given that the United States Departmentof the Interior is hereby commencing a forfeiture proceed-
ing against the following items of wildlife or wildlife prod-
ucts, which were seized in the Boston area of Massachu-setts on the dates indicated because they were involved
in one or more violations of any of the following laws:Endangered Species Act, Title 16 U.S.C. Sec. 1538, the Ma-
rine Mammal Protection Act, 11 U.S.C. Sec. 1371-1372, the
Lacey Act, 16 U.S.C. Sec. 3372, Wild Bird Conservation Act,16 U.S.C. Sec. 4901-4916, or the African Elephant Conserva-
tion Act, 16 U.S.C. Sec. 4221-4245. These items are subject
to forfeiture to the United States under Title 16, U.S.C. Sec.1540(e), 16 U.S.C. Sec. 1377, or 16 U.S.C. Sec. 3374 and Title
50 Code of Federal Regulations, Section 12.23. Any person
with an ownership or financial interest in said items whodesires to claim them must file a claim with the U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service, Office of Law Enforcement, 70 Everett
Avenue, Suite 315 Chelsea, MA 02150; Telephone 617-889-6616. Such claim must be received by the above office by
10/01/2019. The claim will be transmitted to the U.S. Attorney for institution of a forfeiture action in U.S. District-
Court. If a proper claim is not received by the above of-
fice by such date, the items will be declared forfeited tothe United States and disposed of according to law. Any
person who has an interest in the items may also file with
the above office a petition for remission of forfeiture in ac-cordance with Title 50, Code of Federal Regulations, Sec-
tion 12.24, which petition must be received in such office
beforeassessed.dispositionoftheitems.Storagecostsmayalsobe
INV # SEIZURE DATE VALUE
2019502351 05/06/2019ITEMS SEIZED $
of medicine containing snake (Serpentes sp.)Three hundred twenty-five (325) vials

LEGAL NOTICE
REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL
Montachusett Regional Transit Authority, (herein referred
to as “MART), has purchased a new pre-engineered steelbuildingand isrequestingbidsfromcontractorstoinstall
the structure along with corresponding site work and
foundation. The pre-engineered steel structure will be lo-cated at MART’s 1427R Water St., Fitchburg MA location.
The structure is approximately 3,400 sq. ft. The contractor
will be responsible for all work consisting of excavation,grading, foundation, and erection of the structure in accor-
dance with the plans/specifications.
Contractors are invited to obtain the Request for Proposal
document which outlines the instructions for proposalsby accessing our website at http://www.mrta.us/doing-
business/contracting-opportunities or contacting procure-
ment@mrTuesday, September 10, 2019 at the MART Office, 1427Rta.usProposalswillbeaccepteduntil4pmon
Water Street Fitchburg, MA 01453. Proposals received af-
ter the date and time specified above will be consideredlate. MART reserves the right to accept or to reject any
and/or all proposals.
The award under this solicitation is subject to funding fromFederal Transit Administration and Massachusetts Depart-
ment of Transportation. Disadvantaged Business Enterpris-es are encouraged to submit proposals; and no proponent
will be subject to discrimination based on race, color, na-tional origin, gender, age, or disability. The successful con-
tractor will be required to comply with applicable federal
regulations including Equal Employment Opportunity andthe Americans with Disabilities Act.

NOTICE of MEDICALRECORD DESTRUCTION
Ophthalmic
Consultants of Boston
If you were last seen atOphthalmic Consultants
of Boston prior to
January 1, 2009: This isnotice that your records
will be destroyed perstate law, onSeptember
30, 2019. If you would
like a copy of your medi-cal record, please contact
Ophthalmic Consultants
of Boston at 50 StanifordStreet, Suite 600, Boston,
MA, 800-635-0489.
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