Meet & Greet July 16, 2013

Meet and Greet
Tuesday 5-7 pm – July 16, 2013
Caragiulos in Sarasota - 69 South Palm Avenue
 
A fine time had by all at the Meet and Greet. Thanks to Gayle Maxey and Tom Halbert for their great work in setting up these great events.








 


Caragiulos in Sarasota at 69 South Palm Avenue is the location of our July Meet & Greet. The happy hour venue will be the spacious bar with full cocktail, wine and beer specials. An added attraction for this event will be a Treviso martini in honor of Sister Cities of Sarasota 50th anniversary year! Caragiulos has bar, high rise and booth seating plus room to mingle in an attractive setting.

Caragiulos became one of Sarasota’s most popular eateries in much the same way the family found the cozy storefront on Palm Avenue, with… ease. From his bakery in Brooklyn, Tony Caragiulos and his five sons came to Florida in pursuit of an agreeable location to open a simple Italian restaurant. 

After an exhausting, two week long car trek around Florida with no prospects and tempers flaring, Tony signaled for the car to pull over; “Stoppa the*#!*#!!!! car!,… This is it,” he declared, pointing to the vacant stucco location… And it was.
Courtesy RSVP by June 16. This will allow Caragiulos to ensure they have sufficient bar staff for our meet & greet group. Last minute walk-ins are encouraged.
Gayle Maxey, Events Director
Sister Cities Association of Sarasota
RSVP: 941-416-3565 or gmaxey632@gmail.com





Sister Cities Conference July 2013 in San Antonio





The Sister City International Conference is being held in San Antonio, Texas. Great conference, with attendees from all over the world. 





Tom Halbert, Gayle Maxey, Shirley Gossett, Ray Gossett, Beth Ruyle Hullinger, and Craig Hullinger attneded from Sarasota Sister Cities.

Gayle Maxey and Tom Halbert at the SSI Conference.



The Riverwalk in San Antonio is one of the great urban spaces of the world. According to Wikipedia it was nearly paved over and replaced by a storm sewer. This plan was blocked. 

"In San Antonio native and architect Robert Hugman submitted his plans for what would become the River Walk. The leadership of former mayor Jack White was instrumental in passage of a bond issue that raised funds to empower the 1938 “San Antonio River Beautification Project”.

The plan was controversial and took a long time to implement. Today it is a very special and popular place and the heart of San Antonio.






The Conference theme is "The Power of Exchange - Creating Sustainable Cities and Sustainable Relationships". The San Antonio River Walk is a great example of sustainable development. 










Sister City International CEO Mary Kane Tweeting after advising conference attendees to learn social media, including Twitter.  Practicing what she preaches.

Click for a Video of the River Walk.

Click for a Video of a Band on the River Walk

More Photos


Bob Rivard is a San Antonio journalist who gave the Sister Cities Conference an excellent presentation on the use of media and on San Antonio. His excellent web site on San Antonio below:


Professor Veronico Xixitla.

We are pleased to invite you to meet our visitor from Mexico, Professor Veronico Xixitla. Prof Xiitla is the Director for the Dept of Indigenous Languages and Culture in Cuautla, Mexico. He has already given several local presentations to the Sarasota Community of some teaching of the nahuatl language (original aztec dialect), as well as singing to different types of music (including the Beatles) in nahuatl. He has already been at several radio stations and local newspapers.

Prof Xixitla's next presentation is scheduled for: 

Friday, July 19 @ 7 p.m. at the Bari Brooks Center, YMCA Berlin Branch. 
 1075 S. Euclid Avenue (one block off Bahia Vista)

Feel free to invite friends and forward to your contacts for a most unique experience of the Aztec cultures. 

This is a FREE event!

Thank you,
Javier Curiel
 
 

Long Time Sister City Member John Adam Romanes

Jul. 5, 2013

John Adam Romanes, the former Chairman, Managing Director and Proprietor of A Romanes and Son Ltd., Dunfermline Press, died peacefully on July 5, 2013 at Tidewell Hospice.Jack, who resided in Longboat Key, had suffered a heart attack nine days before he was admitted to Tidewell.

He is survived by his loving and caring wife Maggie, his son, Iain, and his daughter Carol and their respective spouses Christine and Kevin. All of whom were with him up until his passing. He is also survived by his grandchildren Victoria and Donald and his great grand child Angus.

There will be no funeral ceremony.This was at his specific request.The family wishes to thank those at Blake Medical Center and Tidewell Hospice for their attention and care, to which, any who wish, should make a donation.


Great Sister City Visit to Vladimir, Russia































We had a great time in Vladimir. The Mayor and his staff and the Police Chief took 
great care of us and showed us the town and region.  Our thanks to them and an 
open invitation to visit us in Sarasota.  This photo is at the Vladimir train station.

Lovely Churches 




Meeting with the Mayor


Presenting Awards to the Young Vladimir Playwrights


Meeting at the American House

Click for More Photos and Information





We will be adding more photos and text as our delegation has time to add them to the blog.


Donald Osborne

Donald Osborne, A Special American Scot and Friend

Don Osborne was indeed a special American Scot, proud of his Scottish heritage and always eager to assist in Scottish events and relationships whenever called upon by his fellow Scots, in a city, Sarasota, Florida, which was first settled by 65 “heat-seeking” Scots from Glasgow, Scotland in 1865.

Don was a longtime member of the Caledonian Club of Florida West and served very ably as it membership chair, enlisting 52 new members one year, which broke an old record of 47 - his happy smile and “interested in you” demeanor doing much to achieve that record, which still stands - and later became president of the club.

Don was also creative and, when president, upon hearing of the local group called the Sarasota Sister City Association, inquired if we had a Scottish sister city.  It seemed only natural to Don that a town settled by Scots should have a Scottish sister city.   

Upon learning there was no Scottish sister city, Don set about, with the sponsorship of the Caledonian Club, in developing a sister city relationship with a city in Scotland by the name of Dunfermline, already well known to Sarasota because its old opera house, disassembled to make room for a shopping center, had been “discovered by Sarasota arts enthusiasts and carefully shipped from Scotland and beautifully restored in Sarasota to become the “mainstage” of the famed Asolo Repertory Theatre.

With the blessing of the Caledonian Club and the Sarasota Sister Cities Association, Don, alone, flew to Scotland, motored to Dunfermline and convinced the city fathers of that ancient capital of Scotland that it should become a sister city of Sarasota, Florida – and it did! Since that time, the sister city relationship between these two cities has become the most active of Sarasota’s eight sister cities, engaging annually in citizen exchanges in the arts, business, education, sports and government.

Even after moving to Montgomery, Alabama for family health considerations, Don would frequently call his many friends in Sarasota to keep up to date on Scottish activities there.

Donald Osborne was indeed a special Scot and a very special friend.

With great affection, William (Bill) Wallace

________________________


Obituary for long time Sister Cities member Don Osborne from the Sunday, July 7 edition of the Sarasota Herald Tribune:


Sep. 6, 1922 - Jun. 5, 2013 

Donald Osborne was born in St. Paul, MN on September 6, 1922 and died on June 5, 2013 in Montgomery, AL. He was preceded in death by his wife, Jeanne and son Roger.

He was a World War II Navy veteran serving on the submarine tender USS Orion in the South Pacific. He was Executive Director of Hillcrest Family Services in Dubuque, Iowa for 22 years and retired after a 40 year career in Social Work.

Don lived in the Sarasota area for 13 years from 1995 to 2008. Don was active in the Lakewood Ranch Rotary Club, Mental Health Community Centers, Red Cross, Sister Cities Association and the Caledonian Club.

Survivors include his wife, Karen Osborne, son, David and wife Linda, daughters, Barbara and Nancy Barker and husband Gordon, three grandchildren, and three great grandchildren.

In lieu of flowers, memorials can be made to Mental Health Community Centers. The memorial service will be at 1PM, Wednesday, July 10, 2013 at the Hadley Chapel on the campus of Hillcrest Family Services in Dubuque, Iowa.