Gene Marrano

Living in the present as a better way to help make life decisions – that’s the concept behind “Mindfulness” and the subject of a conference at Mill Mountain Theatre today. Guest speaker George Mumford taught Mindfulness techniques to former NBA greats like Michael Jordan and Kobe Bryant; yesterday he spoke to young people at Patrick Henry High School and Roanoke College. Several hundred people attended today’s 4th annual Mindfulness Conference at Mill Mountain Theatre.

Transitional Options for Women – the “halfway house” on Patterson Avenue that helps female ex-inmates as they return to mainstream society – received a ten thousand dollar grant that will be used to renovate another building on 13th Street in the West End.  Royal Neighbors insurance company presented Executive director Dorothy Owsley with that “Big Check” today. Transitional Options for Women has also made the short list of nominees vying for larger grants from the Roanoke Women’s Foundation; those will be announced in November.  Owsley says that space will generate revenue for the shelter with a full-service coffee shop, a thrift store and several apartments.

Clean Valley Council is gearing up again to host the Fall Waterway Cleanup. Its the first one for Mary Ann Brenchick as the new executive director. More from WFIR’s Gene Marrano:

Click below to hear an extended conversation with Mary Ann Brenchick from Clean Valley Council:

As a young man in New Jersey Jon D’Amore got drawn by accident into a Las Vegas mob scam that funneled millions of dollars out of casinos there. Years later D’Amore wrote a memoir about it, “The Boss Always Sits in the Back.” Now he returns with a mob-flavored novel, “Deadfellas.” D’Amore will talk about his new book and sign copies from 3 to 5-pm tomorrow at Altus Chocolate on Campbell Avenue in downtown Roanoke. He  lightens the mood in Deadfellas by adding Zombies to the plot. D’Amore is related to the old Genovese crime family in New York – but also notes that the “Mafia” is pretty much extinct at this point.

 

Ballast Point officials say the Botetourt County brewery will deliver its beers not just to the eastern U.S. but to Europe as well.  Ballast Point is now on a pace to produce about 200,000 barrels of beer a year at the brewery in Daleville initially – perhaps 2 million barrels at some point in the future. The bottling line can turn out 600 bottles per minute. Marty Birkel is the Ballast Point president, here today from California to cut the ribbon for the company’s brewery operations.