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News acorns

December 19, 2019

Join the Christmas Bird Count

The annual Christmas Bird Count, a nationwide event sponsored by National Audubon, will take place in Lincoln on Sunday, Dec. 29 when participants record the visitors to their bird feeders. If you have established feeders (meaning they are already up and being used), can watch them for at least an hour, and are confident in identifying the species of birds you see, email Gwyn Loud at gwynloud555@gmail.com and she will send you a checklist and other information.

Library offering automatic renewals

Automatic renewals are coming to the Lincoln Public Library and the Minuteman Library Network. Eligible library materials (books, DVDs, CDs) will be automatically renewed two days prior to their due dates. Items that are automatically renewed must meet the following criteria:

  • There are no holds on that title
  • Your library allows this type of item to renew
  • The item has not reached its maximum allowed renewals
  • Your library card is not blocked or expired

Patrons will receive a courtesy reminder two days before due date if an item cannot be renewed. If you do not have an email address associated with your library account, items will still be automatically renewed. You can check due dates by logging into My Account at the MLN website at www.minlib.net or by calling the circulation desk at 781-259-8465.

Film: “Ayiti Mon Amour”

The Lincoln Film Society will show “Ayiti Mon Amour (Haiti My Love)” on Thursday, Jan. 2 at 6 p.m. in the Tarbell Room. In the film (in French with English subtitles), a magical fable weaves together the lives of three different people in Haiti five years after the devastating earthquake.

Lincoln-Sudbury recognized for German program

Lincoln-Sudbury Regional High School has been chosen as one of the few recipients of the German American Partnership Program (GAPP) School of Distinction school plaque award, in recognition of its exceptional partnership in fostering long-term youth exchange between the U.S. and Germany.  

Since 2003, the high school’s GAPP coordinator, Joan Campbell, has been organizing exchanges with the Gymnasium Vilshofen in Vilshofen, Germany, bringing students together with host families in their respective countries and building lasting relationships between teachers, administrators, schools and participating communities. GAPP program is supported by the German government, the U.S. Department of State, and the Goethe-Institut.

“With this recognition, we highlight and celebrate the school’s dedication to student growth and inclusion of global perspectives, and we celebrate the work of everyone involved in the GAPP exchange,” said GAPP Executive Director Molly Rowland.

Category: arts, conservation, nature

The call of Lincoln’s reference librarians: “Can I help you find something?”

December 18, 2019

Reference librarian Laura Paryl and her colleagues are the library’s “in-house detectives” for finding resources.

By Lucy Maulsby

The Lincoln Public Library may be small, but its reference librarians are always busy. In addition to answering routine questions (over 100 a week) about the library’s holdings, directing patrons to “a good book,” and assisting with research on a variety of topics, they’re also teaching people how to access and effectively use the expansive electronic library of books, journals, and other media — all of which are transforming the ways in which we engage with news, entertainment, and information.

“My work has always involved helping people find what they’re looking for, helping them use the tools available, and solving problems,” reference librarian Kate Tranquada said. But those tools and problems have changed a great deal. When she first started working as a librarian in Waltham, “the card catalog filled the lobby and we had a few computers in use at the library — for staff use only. We were just getting everything barcoded — lots of data entry. Checkout still involved punching cards and pockets in books. Music and books on cassette had not quite replaced the vinyl record collection.”

The library offers both the old and the new, subscribing to a rich array of electronic resources even as it continues to build a robust print collection. These resources include subscriptions to national and local newspapers such as the New York Times and Boston Globe as well as the millions of news, magazine, and journal articles available through General One File.

Digital books, audiobooks, and movies can be accessed through the library catalogue as well as through Hoopla (movies, music, audiobooks, e-books, comics, and TV shows), Overdrive (e-books, magazines, audiobooks, and videos), and Kanopy (documentaries, classics, and independent films).

Helping patrons learn about and use these resources is central to the library staff’s work. “Although the market for print books is expanding, publishers are no longer printing many reference books. These resources are now available only in digital formats,” reference librarian Laura Paryl noted. She and the other reference librarians help patrons understand what is and isn’t available online (from social services to movies) and how to access that information. They’re also experts at helping patrons evaluate the quality of information available through online platforms.

In order to provide technological assistance, reference librarians answer questions via email, phone, and, as always, in person (on the first floor to the left of the entrance in the reference room).

“The library has always been a place for the public to get their hands on the latest dominant technology. We work with people who can use help getting up to speed on current tools,” Tranquada said. “We also provide equipment for experts whose computers and printers are temporarily on the blink, or for people away from home. Next to meeting so many people, my favorite part of the job has been learning how to use all the new gadgets and programs as they become available.”

To better help resolve technical issues and set up accounts through which patrons access digital books, Tranquada holds 30-minute drop-in help sessions on Thursdays from 3–5 p.m. She helps people install apps and download materials onto their personal devices including iPhones, iPads, Android devices, and Kindles. In addition, she makes regular visits to The Commons and can sometimes be found at Bemis Hall during their computer drop-in sessions on Thursdays at 1:30 p.m.

The library’s core collection now includes a wide range of digital subscriptions that allow patrons to research diverse topics. Subscriptions to Britannica Digital Learning and World Book open doors to learners of all ages on an expansive range of topics.

“The online versions are much easier to use — no need to consult multiple heavy volumes just to find the magazine article you need,” Tranquada said. “Sometimes it’s been hard for old-timers like me to part with the gorgeous volumes that were once as valuable as gold to us. The challenge is letting people know we still offer many of the same expensive reference tools. But now they’re more invisibly digital: there are no bookcases full of volumes reminding people what the library offers.”

Since space is not as much of a concern as it once was, the reference material at the library has expanded to include new kinds of resources. For patrons interested in family history and heritage, online databases such as Heritage Quest — which includes federal censuses, books, and bank records — offer access to extraordinary collections. In addition, digital copies of some local public records and archives are available through the Lincoln Archives. For information about accessing these, patrons can email Lincoln’s archivist, Lisa Welter, at archives@lincolntown.org.

The library also subscribes to indexes that offer practical information about and ratings of goods, services and investments such as Consumer Reports, Consumer’s Checkbook, Morningstar, and Value Line.

The secret to finding all the digital riches available is through the library website: www.lincolnpl.org. Under the Services tab, select Research Tools to see resources listed by subject. If you have a question — any question — you can bring it to a reference librarian. And if the librarians can’t find the answer, they’ll refer you to someone who can.

Lucy Maulsby is the Lincoln School Committee’s appointee to the Library Board of Trustees.

Category: features

Barrett, Stanley address Lincoln issues at meeting

December 17, 2019

Lincoln’s representatives in the state legislature, Sen. Mike Barrett and Rep. Tom Stanley, updated residents and town officials about locally issues important including transportation, housing, and sustainability.

At their December 16 meeting, selectmen asked about $500,000 that was allocated in a state bond bill for designing improvements to Lincoln’s commuter rail station. Although the bill passed in 2018, the money has yet to be released. This has been a source of frustration for Lincoln officials, who hope to upgrade the station as part of a larger plan to rezone South Lincoln to allow more mixed-use development, making it more attractive for commuters, residents and businesses.

“Is it worth the time and effort to continue to push in this direction, or start to make some noise in another direction?” Selectman James Craig asked.

“I understand some things are really riding on this… that’s good for us to know about,” Barrett said. “It’s not a good idea to plan on the assumption that that money is going to be available in the next two years… [but] it’s worthwhile pushing hard and asking us to push hard.”

Both legislators were optimistic that the state will authorize spending to address the Boston-area traffic and transportation crisis, which could encompass public transportation improvements such as those sought in Lincoln. “I believe in the next 24 months, serious money will be made available for transportation projects. Certainly the demand is there. It’s approaching anger,” Barrett said.

One avenue being pursued is the Transportation and Climate Initiative (TCI), a regional effort to institute a carbon cap-and-trade system that would also raise gasoline prices. “The particulars are gnarly, but if this is put in place, it would generate a huge amount of money,” Barrett said.

Stanley has also introduced legislation that would study the potential for a mileage-based fee to replace motor fuel taxes. The two proposals work in different ways to achieve the same goal: increasing revenue from gasoline while also driving down greenhouse gas emissions.

“Legislators are in the habit of putting in play many more projects that can be actually launched and funded,” Barrett said, referring to the stalled Lincoln MBTA funding, “but with TCI fnds, the odds change and many more projects become financially viable.”

Housing

Another important regional issue is the housing crunch. To make it easier for housing developments to win local approval, the proposed Act to Promote Housing Choices would lower the requirement for town-wide approvals from a two-thirds supermajority to a single majority. This would affect projects that require Town Meeting approval such as Oriole Landing, a mixed-income project that Lincoln voters approved in 2018.

Significantly larger so-called 40B affordable developments are looming in several towns bordering Lincoln that aren’t meeting the state requirement that 10 percent of their housing be affordable. The housing choice legislation, if approved, could result in even more projects.

However, that proposal is now being targeted for amendments from two differections. Some say the bill takes away too much local control, while others want it to go even further in relaxing requirements for developments. Meanwhile, Springfield and Needham are asking that they and about 70 other towns (including Lincoln) that already meet the 10 percent affordable-housing requirement would be exempt from the law, if passed.

Because of all the proposed changes, “the central idea is in danger of sinking,” Barrett said. “Already the idea is being slow-walked, and no one is really eager for that discussion,” especially heading into an election year, he added.

Dover Amendment

Selectman James Dwyer asked the lawmakers if there was any possibility that the Dover Amendment requirements might be somehow “capped” for towns like Lincoln. That state law allows educational and religious institutions to bypass some local zoning rules and also have those parcels be exempt from local property taxes.

Lincoln’s tax revenue is limited by a combination of a small commercial tax base and a significant portion of state and federal land, such as Minuteman National Historic Park, Hanscom Air Force Base (where children of military retirees who live in tax-exempt base housing attend public school), and various nonprofit institutions. More land was lost to the tax rolls when McLean Hospital recently won a legal battle to create a tax-exempt residential treatment facility on Bypass Road.

“I like the Dover Amendment, but is there ever a limit as to how much a town could bear?” Dwyer asked.

Stanley said he was willing to work with the town on this issue, although changing the Dover Amendment is “very controversial,” he cautioned. Many other communities including Boston and Cambridge (with their universities and hospitals) and western Massachusetts with its many state parks and forests also lose out on some local tax revenue. “Lincoln has a case to make, but these other places would come forward with a surprising diversity of cases of their own,” he said.

Property taxes

Selectman Jennifer Glass noted that Lincoln is working on a proposal to limit the impact of rising property taxes on needy seniors with a local version of the state circuit-breaker program (a move that would need legislative approval even if Lincoln residents vote in favor). Lincoln hopes to expand the state criteria to include eligibility for renters as well as homeowners in town, she said.

“I think a home rule [petition] is the way to go, and I would be prepared to be very supportive,” Barrett said.

Category: government, land use, news

News acorns

December 16, 2019

Ugly sweater party to benefit FELS

The Rustic Twenty-Nine restaurant (29 Hudson Rd., Sudbury) is hosting an Ugly Sweater Party on Thursday, Dec. 26. Proceeds from the event will benefit the Foundation for Educators at Lincoln-Sudbury. Bring friends and enjoy holiday movies, festive cocktails, door prizes and raffles in support of FELS. No reservations necessary — just don your ugliest attire and bring what’s left of your holiday cheer. Show your Facebook RSVP at the door to get two free raffle tickets.

Indian ballet performance at Bemis

Biswajit Das, the lead dancer from the international Saptavarna troupe that toured the United States and visited last summer, is returning to the Boston area over the holidays and will perform in Lincoln on Saturday, Jan. 4 at 4 p.m. in Bemis Hall. the event is free for Lincoln residents. Das will perform the traditional new year ritual that takes place each year at the Konark Sun Temple in India.

Category: arts, charity/volunteer

Winter wonderland (Lincoln Through the Lens)

December 16, 2019

An early winter snowfall blankets trees in Minute Man National Historic Park. (Photo by Ron Boisseau)


Readers may submit photos for consideration for Lincoln Through the Lens by emailing them to lincolnsquirrelnews@gmail.com. If your photo is published, you’ll receive credit in the Squirrel. Photos must be taken in Lincoln and include the date, location, and names of any people who are identifiable in the photo. Previously published photos can be viewed on the Lincoln Through the Lens page of the Lincoln Squirrel.

Category: Lincoln through the lens, nature

Police log for week of December 6, 2019

December 15, 2019

December 6

Deerhaven Road (1:19 p.m.) — Officer delivered court paperwork.

Lincoln Road near Codman Road — Two-car crash. One person transported to a local hospital with minor injuries.

Wells Road — Confused elderly resident requesting assistance. Spoke to resident and assured them all is fine.

Hanscom Air Force Base (10:54 a.m.) — Pagano Modesto, 43, of Wakefield was arrested on a warrant for leaving the scene of a crash. 

December 7

Concord Road (9:35 a.m.) — Family member requested a well-being check on a party driving on Concord Road and says they’re tracking the party’s phone. Driver reported to be in Concord; call transferred to Concord Police Department.

Transfer station, North Great Road — Caller complaining that the cardboard recycling bin is full. Call transferred to the DPW.

Beaver Pond Road (10:49 a.m.) — Party reported odor of natural gas. National Grid contacted to check the area. 

Tower Road — (10:50 a.m.) — Reported odor of natural gas. National Grid contacted to check the area.

Deerhaven Road (1:50 p.m.) — Caller reports a phone wire fell in the roadway. Verizon contacted.

Food Project field, Concord Road — Caller reports her vehicle is stuck in the snow at the Food Project lot. Tow truck was contacted to assist.

Wells Road (9:56 p.m.) — Elderly resident requesting assistance. Advised that all is fine at the residence.

December 8

Codman Road (9:50 p.m.) — Caller reports an injured deer on the side of the road. Officers unable to locate the deer.

Wells Road (11:56 p.m.) — Elderly resident requesting assistance. Advised that all is fine at the residence.

Department of Public Works (2:01 a.m.) — Officer found footsteps in the snow around the cell tower and open door. Cell tower company notified.

Ryan Estate, Lincoln Road (3:03 a.m.) — Party called with a civil matter; officer assisted them with information.

Ryan Estate, Lincoln Road (4:28 a.m.) — Party called again about same issue; was given same information.

December 9

Lincoln Road (2:20 p.m.) — Low-hanging wire. Verizon contacted.

Wells Road (3:17 p.m.) — Call complained about a door-to-door solicitor, who was informed of the bylaw and sent on their way.

December 10

Weston Road (3:00 p.m.) — Caller reports a worker saw a van pull into their driveway earlier and then leave. Officers checked the area and were unable to locate. 

Wells Road (3:34 p.m.) — Same elderly resident requesting to speak to an officer. No issue at the residence.

Old Lexington Road (5:38 p.m.) — Officer assisted parties after a minor two-car crash.

December 11

Rte. 117 at the railroad tracks (12:54 a.m.) — Hazardous pothole in road reported; DPW contacted.

Lincoln Public Library (5:01 p.m.) — Andan Thi, 57, of Acton was arrested on a warrant from Harvard University Police for trespassing.

December 12

Old County Road (6:28 a.m.) — Report of deer in Cambridge Reservoir. Fire Department assisted in getting it out of the water.

Tower Road (11:31 a.m.) — Caller reported goats in the road. Neighbor returned them to their residence.

Hemlock Circle — Resident walked into police station to report an ongoing neighbor dispute. Officer took a report to document the complaint.

Category: news, police

Monopod waterfowl (Lincoln Through the Lens)

December 12, 2019

A group of Canada geese huddle from the cold — but one leg stays exposed. (Photo by Harold McAleer)


Readers may submit photos for consideration for Lincoln Through the Lens by emailing them to lincolnsquirrelnews@gmail.com. If your photo is published, you’ll receive credit in the Squirrel. Photos must be taken in Lincoln and include the date, location, and names of any people who are identifiable in the photo. Previously published photos can be viewed on the Lincoln Through the Lens page of the Lincoln Squirrel.

Category: Lincoln through the lens, nature

LEGOPalooza brings STEM excitement to Lincoln

December 12, 2019

Left to right: GearTicks Audrey Gammack, Ben Morris, Erin Crisafi, Laura Appleby, Amelia Pillar, and Prerna Karmacharya at LEGOPalooza (click to enlarge).

By Olivia Crisafi

On November 23, 12 teams of Lincoln School students wrapped up their FIRST Lego League Jr. (FLL Jr.) season at Lincoln’s Reed Field House for the second Annual Lincoln Legopalooza. The event, organized by the Lincoln GearTicks, was created last year to showcase and celebrate the months of hard work each team had put into their Lego models and programs.

The GearTicks are a local FIRST Tech Challenge team comprised of middle and high school students who take pride in spreading their engineering knowledge with students in the local community. Kevin Ji, who attended and helped organize the LEGOpalooza both years, said he enjoyed seeing the kids he mentored using their creativity to solve engineering problems.

FLL Jr., a hands-on STEM (science, technology, engineering, and math) enrichment program by the robotics organization FIRST, was first introduced to Lincoln’s existing program last year. The GearTicks thought that even earlier exposure to STEM activities would benefit Lincoln’s youth, and parents were thrilled with the prospect of signing FLL students’ younger siblings up for FLL Jr.

Over the course of two months, teams of six K-3 students worked to solve the annual challenge put out by FIRST. This year, the challenge, “Boomtown Build,” encouraged the young engineers to use their love of LEGO to imagine, design, and create a healthy and happy community.

The teams ran with this mission and thought of fun and creative solutions to real-world problems. The Lincoln Elephants were excited to share their mall equipped with a chocolate store, and a Japanese restaurant that featured an industrial-inspired lifting car garage. The Golden Dragons utilized the motor in the We-Do kit to create a moving drawbridge for their castle.

Along with parent coaches and GearTick mentors, teams from Lincoln and Sudbury met after school and on the weekends to build and program Lego models. They then worked to create a “Show Me” poster documenting their process.

To foster a fun environment, the GearTicks led a free build table, a medal decoration table, and a robot pit as well as gave each team a thematic trophy. “I was thrilled to see how far the students had come with their intricate programs and carefully designed models,” GearTick team member Audrey Gammack said.

“FLL Jr. is a great start to the progression of FIRST programs that leads to FLL and FTC for older students,” GearTicks coach Anne Hutchinson said.

Category: features, kids, news

Letter to the editor: Abrams inspires support for voting rights organization

December 11, 2019

To the editor:

The right to vote is a nonpartisan issue. It represents the “voice” of the electorate and is a right of all citizens — except that, in reality, it is not. Stacey Abrams, however, is doing what she can to ensure that everyone can exercise the right to vote.

More than four hundred concerned and enthusiastic voters, including voters from Lincoln, attended a meeting sponsored by Force Multiplier in Wellesley on December 4 to meet Stacey Abrams, the founder of Fair Fight, the nonprofit organization established to fight voter suppression in Georgia and in the nation.

Fighting for fair elections — and fighting against voter suppression — is the key mandate of Fair Fight, and an issue on which we can all come together. Abrams asserted that many problems prevent fair elections — foreign intervention, lack of uniform federal voting standards, corruption, and disinformation — exist, but we can’t overcome all of them immediately. Fair Fight’s immediate aims are practical and on the ground: train poll watchers to oversee the elections, assure accessible polling stations, provide aid to voters, have lawyers on call, and give reliable information to voters ahead of time.

Following the 2018 race for governor of Georgia, Abrams, the Democratic candidate who lost by 55,000 votes, led efforts to study the role of voter suppression in the election. She and other analysts learned that 1.4 million people were removed from the list of registered voters, including 570,000 people who were purged in one day. They were removed because they had not voted in recent elections and were considered “not to exist.” Abrams asserted that the “sacrosanct” right to vote must not be sacrificed to assure the election of those who want to stay in power.

In Georgia, the contested race for governor was not “called” by the networks for 10 days because of irregularities. After the elections, 50,000 voters called the hot line to try to understand why they were told they did not “exist.” Abrams herself, when she went to vote, was informed that she had already voted. A Yale-trained lawyer, with cameras from CBS, NBC, Fox News and other networks observing the exchange, Abrams prevailed and cast her vote for governor.

Abrams, a charismatic speaker and passionate advocate for fair elections, received at least three standing ovations for her words and her work. She answered numerous questions from a well-informed and concerned audience. When asked about the Electoral College, she asserted that the Electoral College itself creates voter suppression and ought to be eliminated. “It’s not about giving Idaho an equal chance to elect the president,” she said.

In response to a question of how we in Massachusetts could help, Abrams suggested we go to the organization’s web pages at www.fairfight.com and fairfight.com/fair-fight-2020. The former fosters voter education and advocates electoral reform at all levels. The latter is focused on the upcoming election and will fund, staff, and train voter protection teams in 20 battleground states. These team members will be hired locally so they’ll know the vulnerable communities they’re trying to protect.

We are co-chairs of the Lincoln Democratic Town Committee. We strongly believe that the right to vote should be supported by all of us, whether Democrats, Republicans, independents, or otherwise. In her newly established organization, Stacey Abrams offers us an opportunity to make a commitment to this right of citizenship.

Sincerely,

Joan Kimball and Barbara Slayter
Co-chairs, Lincoln Democratic Town Committee


Letters to the editor must be signed with the writer’s name and street address and sent via email to lincolnsquirrelnews@gmail.com. Letters will be edited for punctuation, spelling, style, etc., and will be published at the discretion of the editor. Letters containing personal attacks, errors of fact or other inappropriate material will not be published.

Category: government, letters to the editor

Service this Saturday at St. Anne’s for James Spindler

December 10, 2019

James Spindler

A memorial service will be held at St. Anne’s in-the-Fields Episcopal Church on Saturday, Dec. 14 at 11 a.m. for James Walter Spindler, a resident of Lincoln since 1968, who died on December 7 at the age of 80.

From 1968 to 1979, Spindler practiced law in Boston with Hale and Dorr (now WilmerHale), concentrating on securities and mergers and acquisitions work. In 1979 he became the first in-house counsel for Computervision Corp., a tech company based in Bedford. Beginning in 1985 he pioneered the provision of legal services as independent general counsel for companies which lacked full-time in-house counsel. In 1992 he co-founded and chaired for about 15 years the Association of Independent General Counsel, an informal organization that hosted speakers, discussed legal questions and practice management issues, and served as a support group for its members.            

Spindler was Lincoln’s representative to SILC, a subregional planning organization, from 1969 to 1975.  From 1977–83 he served as a member of the Lincoln School Committee and was chair in 1980–81. He served on the Lincoln Commission on Disabilities from 2007–09, representing the commission on the committee overseeing the renovation of the town offices. He was senior warden of St. Anne’s Episcopal Church for two terms and sang bass in its choir for 25 years. A high point of his service at St. Anne’s was chairing the search committee that in 1986 recommended the calling of Mark Hollingsworth, Jr., who became its new rector.

In 1984 Spindler won the Lincoln Public Library Centennial Spelling Contest. His older son, David, then a junior in high school, was runner-up. He could frequently be seen working in the yard and fields of their 1846 Greek revival house, which he and his wife renovated. He often walked on nearby roads as therapy for Parkinson’s disease (diagnosed in 1990) and enjoyed visiting with neighbors along the way.

Spindler loved all things related to language: reading, etymology, editing, and foreign languages.  He studied Russian, Latin, and French, and learned German as an adult. As a young teenager, he composed gibberish chants for his nieces and nephews that they can still recite (“Beep moo see so battery boo…”)

In addition to reading, Spindler enjoyed swimming, playing squash and tennis, playing the piano, singing, and listening to music. He could easily be located wherever there was food, unabashedly helping himself to seconds and thirds on dessert. Every weekend he would make a pancake or waffle lunch for his family.

Spindler graduated from Cornell University, where he majored in government, took a number of courses in Russian, rowed on the men’s varsity heavyweight crew, chaired the Student Government Academic Affairs Committee, and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa in his junior year.He was a member of Cornell’s varsity eight-man crew that in 1961 was runner-up in both the Eastern Sprints Championships and the IRA Regatta, which served as collegiate rowing’s national championships at the time. He received the Eastern College Athletic Conference award as the most outstanding scholar-athlete in his graduating class.

Spindler was selected as the class marshal for his Cornell College of Arts and Sciences graduating class. During the summer after his freshman year, he was the tallest member of the specially recruited World’s Tallest Laundry Crew, who used their formidable reach to fold 106-inch sheets for resorts in Glacier National Park.

In the summer of 1961 following graduation, Spindler traveled to Czechoslovakia, the Soviet Union, and Poland as a member of a group of 11 students representing the National Council of Churches. The trip, which focused on religious life in the countries visited, occurred at a time when few U.S. citizens were able to travel behind the Iron Curtain. On the trip he bought a Russian fur hat, which he wore so frequently in the family’s 1962 VW Beetle that it finally wore a hole in the roof upholstery.

After earning a degree from Harvard Law School, Spindler went on active duty with the U.S. Marine Corps and attained the rank of captain. He served as a legal officer (prosecutor and defense counsel) in Vietnam with the Third Marine Division and then in California (doing primarily appellate review work) with the Fifth Marine Division. During law school and for about 15 years thereafter, he worked with Professor Harold Berman in translating the Russian Criminal Codes and Judiciary Act, published by Harvard University Press.

Spindler is survived by his wife of 55 years, Mary Griffing Spindler of Lincoln, whom he married on August 29, 1964 at the Presbyterian Church on Shelter Island, N.Y.; son David Neill Spindler and wife K.C. Swanson, of Arlington, Va.; son Henry Carlton Spindler and wife Carol Bertucci Spindler of Keene, N.H.; and five grandchildren (Samantha Dorothy and Clara Abigail Spindler of Arlington, and Hannah Madeline, Megan Elizabeth and Evan Bernard Spindler of Keene).   

Born in Middletown, Ohio to Walter Herbert Spindler of Peoria, Ill. and Mayme Laue Spindler of Shumway, Ill., Spindler was preceded in death by his three older siblings, Donald Charles Spindler of Parma, Ohio, Margery Anne Spindler McIntosh of Middletown, Ohio, and Alan Herbert Spindler of Davenport, Iowa. He is survived by numerous nieces and nephews, only a few of whom learned the gibberish chants.

A reception in the church will follow the December 14 service. Burial in the Lincoln Cemetery will be private. Gifts may be made in his name to Parkinson’s Foundation, 200 SE 1st St., Suite 800, Miami FL 33131 or www.parkinson.org, and St. Anne’s Episcopal Church, P.O. Box 6, Lincoln MA 01773, c/o Music Fund.

Arrangements are under the care of Glenn D. Burlamachi of Concord Funeral Home. To share a memory or offer a condolence, visit www.concordfuneral.com.

Category: obits

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