WORCESTER { news | arts | dining | nightlife
mag
January 19 - 25, 2012 worcestermag.com
FREE
inside stories
news n ews
Student performance and teacher employment Page 4
local pens New: local author Q&A Page 14
arts
Miss Ana Sol Page 15
THE THIN
GREEN LINE What’s the conservation commission’s role when it comes to development?
WE’VE INCREASED OUR INTERNET SPEEDS AGAIN. Restrictions apply.
START-TO-FINISH WINDOW & DOOR REPLACEMENT
is Perfect for Window Replacement! Quick, easy winter installation by experts. With Renewal by Andersen’s expert winter installation, you can expect: Drafty windows making you feel cold?
Make your home more comfortable in as little as a day.
• Protection of your carpet and furnishings • Your old window is removed and your new window is in place in no time • Minimized heat loss by closing off the room we are working on • Meticulous clean up after installation • Most installations are completed in less than a day Call us today to feel the difference in your home this winter!
EXCEPTIONAL WINDOWS AT
$156 PER MONTH† or
Save $150*
Offer Ends January 28th, 2012 For a FREE in-home consultation call:
1-866-384-5718 Northborough Showroom - 104 Otis St.
Winter Window and Installation Experts
†Payments based on a job size of $9330, spread over 60 months. *DETAILS OF OFFER – Offer expires January 28, 2012. Not valid with other offers or prior purchases. Save $150 per window when you purchase 4 or more windows or patio doors. Five years no interest when you purchase 4 or more windows or patio doors between 1/1/12 & 1/28/12 with approved credit. Equal Fixed Minimum Monthly Payments Required. Repayment terms vary from 1 to 60 months. The first monthly payment will be due 30 days after the loan closes. 0% fixed APR. Available only at participating locations. See your local Renewal by Andersen location for details. License number available upon request. Some Renewal by Andersen locations are independently owned and operated. Home exterior photo is not an actual product photograph. Andersen Corporation, including its subsidiary Renewal by Andersen Corporation, was named an ENERGY STAR 2011 Partner of the Year. “ENERGY STAR” is a registered trademark of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. “Renewal by Andersen” and all other marks where denoted are trademarks of Andersen Corporation. ©2012 Andersen Corporation. All rights reserved.
OldWindowFix.com 2
WORCESTERMAG.COM • JAN UARY 19, 2012
Kirk A. Davis President Gareth Charter Publisher x153 Doreen Manning Editor x235 Jeremy Shulkin Senior Writer x243 Steven King Photographer x278 Brittany Durgin On-line Editor x155 Vanessa Formato, Paul Grignon, Janice Harvey, Josh Lyford, Gary Rosen, David Wildman Contributing Writers Veronica Fish Contributor Tammy GrifďŹ n-Kumpey Copy Editor Emily Hornsby Photography intern Don Cloutier Production Manager x380 Kimberly Vasseur Art Director/Assistant Production Manager x366 Ross Acerbi x350, Becky Gill x350, Morgan Healey x366, Stephanie Pajka x366, Stephanie Mallard x366, Graphic Artists Jennifer Shone Advertising Sales Manager x147 Lindsay Chiarilli x136, Joan Donahue, Aimee Fowler x170, Michelle Terranova x131 Account Executives Erin Johnson ClassiďŹ ed Manager Worcester Mag is an independent news weekly covering Central Massachusetts. We accept no responsibility for unsolicited manuscripts. The Publisher has the right to refuse any advertisement. LEGALS/PUBLIC NOTICES: Please call 978.534.6006, email sales@centralmassclass.com, or mail to Central Mass ClassiďŹ eds, Leominster Plaza, 285 Central St., Suite 202B, Leominster, MA 01453
DISTRIBUTION: Worcester Mag is available free of charge at more than 400 locations, limited to one copy per reader. Additional copies may be purchased for $1 each at Worcester Mag ofďŹ ces. Unauthorized bulk removal of Worcester Mag from any public location, or any other tampering with Worcester Mag’s distribution including unauthorized inserts, is a criminal offense and may be prosecuted under the law.
F
inside stories
or a small unnamed body of water on the outskirts of Worcester, the pond behind the Vander Salm’s Salisbury Drive property has been a recurring topic in the pages of Worcester Mag, with two previous news stories in 2008 and 2009 preceding this week’s feature article. Worcester’s leaders constantly praise the city for its conservation efforts; praise that’s warranted. Broad Meadow Brook is a gem that rivals even the most rural conservation land. Late last year the city closed on an expansion of Green Hill Park, which created a walking trail leading all the way to the shore of Lake Quinsigamond. As the Asian Longhorned Beetle decimated trees across the city, a coordinated response to re-stock sidewalks with 35,000 new trees is underway. But even with these recent achievements the natural environment within city limits has been passively and surreptitiously eroded, and much of it from developers who have come before the city’s planning board and conservation commission. Acres of urban forest have been cut down for houses placed on precipitous bluffs or crammed in on freshly paved cul de sacs, all the while buildings in the same areas call out for renovation and reuse. So whose job – if anyone’s – is it to stand up and say a project isn’t needed? Is that even legal? Is minimal environmental impact something the city can afford? (Conversely, is limiting economic development in the name of environmental impact something the city can afford?) Our story doesn’t answer all the questions, but it raises them. And as for the Vander Salm’s pond, well, it might just be the ground zero the city needs to address them.
Jeremy Shulkin | Senior Writer
SUBSCRIPTIONS: $47 for one year, third class mail. First class mail, $125 for one year. Send orders and subscription correspondence to Worcester Mag, 101 Water St., Worcester, MA 01604. ADVERTISING: To place an order for display advertising or to inquire, please call 508.749.3166. Worcester Mag (ISSN 0191-4960) is a weekly publication of The Holden Landmark Corporation. All contents copyright 2012 by The Holden Landmark Corporation. All rights reserved. Worcester Mag is not liable for typographical errors in advertisements.
4 City Desk 9 Worcesteria 10 Harvey 10 People on the Street 11 Cover Story 19 Night & Day 24 Film 26 Eat Beat
13
EDITORIAL: 508.749.3166 SALES: 508.749.3166 E-MAIL: editor@worcestermag.com Worcester Mag, 101 Water St. Worcester, MA 01604 worcestermag.com
32 Weekly Picks 34 Venues/Clubs/Coffeehouses 39 ClassiďŹ eds
15
54 2 minutes with‌ ABOUT THE COVER Photo by Steven King Design by Kimberly Vasseur
ON SALE NOW! JANUARY 20 – 22
5IF)BOPWFS5IFBUSF PSH t 4)08
4PVUICSJEHF 4U t 8PSDFTUFS ." 4XJQF GPS QPJOUT BOE QSJ[FT
$3 OFF
Use Code:
OSCAR
sesamestreetlive.com • Follow us on
and
TM/Š2012 Sesame Workshop. All Rights Reserved. 54610 1/12
JANUARY 19, 2012 • WORCESTERMAG.COM
3
WOO-TOWN INDE X
A weekly quality of life check-in of Worcester
{ citydesk }
January 19 - 25, 2012 ■ Volume 37, Number 20
Bad apples
Ballot question would tie student performance to teacher employment
Jeremy Shulkin “Sexting in Suburbia,” a Worcesterproduced and filmed movie about mong the four referendums likely bullying, airs on the Lifetime Channel over headed to the ballot in November, the weekend. +1 one has already drawn sharp criticism from the state’s education Expansion joint on I-290 bridge in secretary and the head of the Worcester dislodges, damaging several state’s largest teachers union. vehicles and causing a crash between a The proposed law, called “an pick-up truck and a tractor trailer. -1 act promoting excellence in public schools,” would create an The Patriots stomp the Denver evaluation process used to hire, Broncos. Mercifully, at least we’ll get an fire, promote and transfer teachers eight-month break from “Tebow Time.” +2 and principals, putting their effectiveness before seniority. “A school district and its King of lists: MSN Real Estate names teachers’ union, if any, would Worcester among the five best housing decide whether to (1) implement markets for 2012, the Daily Beast a model evaluation system to be ranks Worcester as the Best Health designed by the state Department Care city for 2012 and TransWorld of Elementary and Secondary SNOWboarding chose our city as one of Education using the Board’s its top five adventure spots of last year. standards, or (2) develop another +6 system consistent with those standards,” the petition’s four-page Parks Commission votes to keep the summary explains. Summer Nationals boozeless at Green Initiatives to tie teacher salary or job placement to student Hill Park, citing policy that limits alcohol performance are not new, but service in city parks. +1 they have gained traction. It’s a controversial proposition, as critics Telegram & Gazette goes through say that a poor evaluation system, more restructuring, moving their print such as one tied too closely to operations to the Globe’s Dorchester standardized tests, and countless facility, cutting 64 full- and part-time jobs factors that teachers have no at the Millbury plant. -3 control over (a student’s home life,
A
Worcester City Council’s economicdevelopment subcommittee gets a walkthrough of CitySquare as construction on the new streets that cut through the site speeds up. +2 “For instance, I have been arrested on a charge of parading without a permit. Now, there is nothing wrong in having an ordinance which requires a permit for a parade. But such an ordinance becomes unjust when it is used to maintain segregation and to deny citizens the First Amendment privilege of peaceful assembly and protest.” The city celebrates Martin Luther King Jr. day, just months after the city’s own permitting fees come into question by Occupy Worcester. +2 This week: +10 Last week: -10 Year to date: -6
4
WORCESTERMAG.COM • JANUARY 19, 2012
for example) could create a system that simply penalizes teachers without looking at the broader picture. “Measuring teacher effectiveness is not going to be easy. Until they have a formula that is very precise it will be very subjective,” says Lenny Zalauskas, head of the Education Association of Worcester, the local bargaining unit for public school teachers and other employees. It’s something that Stand for Children
observation. “We made clear it should not simply be driven by MCAS.” In fact, the state has already begun to implement similar evaluation processes in hiring educators, particularly at EMILY HORNSBY Level 4 turnaround schools and the innovation initiative, where a school’s teachers can have a say in who gets hired based on how their personality and teaching style would fit in with the community they’re trying to create. And that’s why Paul Reville, Massachusetts secretary of education, recently called out Stand for Children in the Boston Globe for moving too quickly on this. “Stand for Children was at the table while this new evaluation system was being put together,” says Zalauskas, who believes those involved should first see how it works before broadening the changes. Worcester School Committee member Tracy Novick also questions the move, echoing Reville’s sentiments that they’re still doing this on a trial basis in some local schools. “That actually is good stuff,” she says of the broader evaluation of potential hires, “and we’re going to chuck that out the window?” Not only that, she worries that having new statewide regulations would limit the local powers that the school administration or multiple-choice test,” says the former school committee would have over publicFall River educator. Williams promises school staffing. that this ballot initiative would create “Any time you’re making educational an evaluation system that would include policy through ballot initiative you end portfolios showing student growth up with bad policy,” she cautions. “It’s a (something one year of MCAS scores does not), a look at lesson plans and classroom continued on page 6 executive director Jason Williams had in mind when his organization drafted the petition. “I certainly wouldn’t want my success as a science teacher to be based on a
V E R BATI M
I’ve written a few vampire poems, but I always thought that vampires are too individualized,” said Victor Infante, the editor of the online poetry journal radiuslit.org, “They almost have to become characters. A zombie by definition has no personality, so you can concentrate on metaphor.”
-The New York Times quotes local poet and T&G journalist Victor Infante on the rise of zombies in contemporary poetry.
{ citydesk }
Slavery still a modern-day problem Vanessa Formato
W
Diplomates, American Board of Orthodontics
Practice Limited to Orthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopedics
brothels and massage parlors.â€? “It’s hard to say exactly what we have going on in Worcester as far as trafďŹ cking,â€? Lantz adds. Because trafďŹ cking is so underground, it can be difďŹ cult to track. Individuals who are trafďŹ cked may also fear coming forward about their experiences, even after escaping, due to threats of retribution. “One recent case we had was a Worcester case: a young woman who was kept in somebody’s home as a domestic
100 MLK Jr. Blvd. Worcester, MA 01608 (508) 753-2489
#1 KIA Deale r
in Centra for Sales, l Mass. S and Selec ervice, tion!
WAGNER KIA OF SHREWSBURY Proud Member of the Wagner Family of Dealerships! Route 9 East | Shrewsbury, MA 01545 (508) 581.5700 -ON 4HURS PM s &RI PM s 3AT PM s 3UN PM
wagnerkiaofshrewsbury.com
276 Main Street Spencer, MA 01562 (508) 885-2749 www.tightbite.com
continued on page 6
Stay Active, Stay Strong, Stay Standing!
Call 508-799-1232 to register for one of the following programs: “My Life, My Health� “Healthy Eating for Successful Living� or “Diabetes Self-Management.�
By Steven King
1,001 words
hen Alissa was 16, she moved in with her boyfriend. It wasn’t long before the arrangement became a nightmare: the boyfriend, an older man, began to sell Alissa’s body on the Internet. The young girl, who had been tattooed with her boyfriend’s name to identify her as his property, was advertised as a prostitute online to men she was forced to meet for sex in Dallas hotel rooms. She complied, as many people would if their captor kept an assault rie in the closet. Alissa is not unique; stories like hers, provided by the U.S. Department of State’s 2011 TrafďŹ cking in Person’s Report, are examples of modern slavery. Human trafďŹ cking – which encompasses labor trafďŹ cking as well as sex trafďŹ cking – is one of the fastest growing criminal enterprises in the United States. “[When we refer to human trafďŹ cking] we are referring to people who have been coerced or forced to work for someone else’s ďŹ nancial beneďŹ t in a number
of industries,â€? explains JozeďŹ na Lantz, director of Services for New Americans of Lutheran Social Services. Lutheran Social Services of New England is a nonproďŹ t anti-trafďŹ cking organization based in Worcester that provides pro bono legal services to trafďŹ cking victims. “We see cases of both sex and labor trafďŹ cking [in Massachusetts],â€? says Julie Dahlstrom, the program manager of the Immigration Legal Assistance Program at Lutheran Social Services. “We often see cases involving domestic servitude,
Dr. Lisa M. Giarrusso & Dr. Gregory Livanos
Each program has 6 classes which will be held FREE at the
Worcester Senior Center this spring.
ambitious
Take charge of your health! Funded in part by the Greater Worcester Community Foundation.
Cold Weather Hot Savings! 2012 SORENTO LX
239
$
.00*
/Mo
>WSeW Xad %+ ?a`fZe
s ,ITER %NGINE s !UTOMATIC -ODEL 3TOCK ++
2012 SEDONA LX SAVE UP TO $5,500**
E SO BL AL ILA A AV MSRP $25,700 Model # 64222 / Stock # KK125327
*Lease through HMF. Title, tax, doc fee, acquisition fee and 1st month payment are additional. Lease payments based on Tier 1 and 2 approved credit. Lessee is responsible for all regular maintenance and excessive wear and tear and .20 per mile over 12,000 per year. $2999.00 due at signing. **Includes customer cash, KIA finance cash and competitive bonus cash to dealer. Not responsible for typographical errors. Sale ends 1/31/2012
JANUARY 19, 2012 • WORCESTERMAG.COM
5
{ citydesk } BALLOT QUESTION continued from page 4
SLAVERY continued from page 5
difďŹ cult thing to do well.â€? The Massachusetts Teachers Association seems to agree. It’s planning a legal challenge to the initiative, arguing the legality is too complex to succinctly summarize on a ballot. Williams doesn’t take much solace in the fact that some of this is already happening across the state – he’d like to see more consistency in evaluations across the commonwealth, an explicit law that says seniority can only be used in hiring as a tie-breaker between two equal candidates, and this method should spread to all schools as soon as January 1, 2013 or after the current collective bargaining agreement ends. What’s already in effect he considers ďŹ rst steps, but they don’t meet the end goal. “It just didn’t resolve who’s in front of the classroom,â€? he says, wondering why these benchmarks aren’t already being held against currently employed teachers across the state. “We shouldn’t wait until a school gets into a chronic underperforming status.â€?
servant and was not allowed to go to school, to go out or to freely talk to anyone,â€? Lantz says. TrafďŹ cked individuals occur across all genders, education levels and national origins, but according to Lantz, the majority of trafďŹ cking survivors are women. Many of these women are not uent in English or have received little education, factors which aid trafďŹ ckers in isolating their victims. According to statistics provided by the Polaris Project, there were ďŹ ve calls made to the National Human TrafďŹ cking Resource Center Hotline from Worcester between January and September of 2011. In that period, the hotline received 13,530 calls nationwide, 119 of which were
placed from Massachusetts. The U.S. Department of State estimates that between 14,500 and 17,500 people are trafďŹ cked to the United States each year. On November 21, 2011, Gov. Deval Patrick signed legislation that established trafďŹ cking offenses in Massachusetts, including sexual slavery and forced labor. This legislation will make it easier to convict trafďŹ ckers, though measures should also be taken to address survivors, who often need extensive rehabilitation to re-enter society successfully. Lutheran Social Services offers help in this arena as well. Of the utmost importance in the ďŹ ght to end human trafďŹ cking is awareness. Many trafďŹ cking survivors are unable to seek help due to fear of physical violence, social isolation, language or education
barriers, and simply not knowing what to do—some are even quite literally locked away. If the general public is aware of the warning signs of trafďŹ cking and who to call with tips, they can play a key role in liberating those in need. On January 11, Lutheran Social Services, along with local ofďŹ cials, organized a rally in front of Worcester’s City Hall to raise awareness of human trafďŹ cking. Mayor Joseph M. Petty attended, declaring the day Anti-Human TrafďŹ cking Day. “This is slavery,â€? Lantz says. “It’s such a despicable crime, and in today’s day and age, is there anyone that shouldn’t care about that?â€? Contact Lutheran Social Services at 877-500-8263 to learn more.
D A M N E D LI E S and STATISTICS
Overall health-care coverage: 95.15% Age 18 and younger with coverage: 98.86% Age 65 and older with coverage: 99.81% Disabled population with coverage: 98.36%
— Data used by the Daily Beast in awarding Worcester the “Best Health Care� city in 2012
CELEBRATING OUR 84TH YEAR!
SAME FAMILY! SAME LOCATION! SAME GREAT SERVICE! BUY AMERICAN! GRAND CHEROKEE GO JEEP!! THINK â&#x20AC;&#x153;Most Awardedâ&#x20AC;? SUV EVER ABOUT IT!! GO LAHTIâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S!! /,%(57< 63257 *5$1' &+(52.(( NOTE:
6
CHRYSLER JEEP
DODGE RAM
ÂŽ
2010 JEEP
We have no mortgages. We own our vehicles. We pay no interest. Consequently, we can sell for less.
New 2012â&#x20AC;&#x2122;s â&#x20AC;˘ SUV of the Year â&#x20AC;˘ Wardâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s 10 Best Interior Award â&#x20AC;˘ Most Luxurious SUV â&#x20AC;˘ Urban Truck of the Year â&#x20AC;˘ Insurance Highway Safety Top Safety Pick â&#x20AC;˘ 5-Star Rated â&#x20AC;˘ Consumers Digest Best Buy â&#x20AC;˘ Four Wheeler of the Year â&#x20AC;˘ Wardâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Top 10 Engine â&#x20AC;˘ Best-in-Class Ground Clearance â&#x20AC;˘ Best-in-Class 4x4 Capability â&#x20AC;˘ Best-in-Class Horsepower â&#x20AC;˘ OfďŹ cial Winter Vehicle of New England â&#x20AC;˘ ESPN Best SUV
#A105
#A111
2007 JEEP
COMPASS
/,%(57< 63257
#A114 2010 DODGE
$9(1*(5
LIBERTY
#A115 2007 JEEP
2007 CHRYSLWER
$:'
#120
2010 JEEP
&203$66 ;
#A117 2006 JEEP
:5$1*/(5 '5 &200$1'(5 /7'
#A100
#A102
2007 JEEP
WRANGLER
PATRIOT
2009 JEEP
*5$1' &+(52.(( /,%(57< 63257 #103
Our 84th Year... WORCESTERMAG.COM â&#x20AC;˘ JANUARY 19, 2012
2010 JEEP
#A113
{ worcesteria }
GOODS for the HOME
FURNITURE ~ DECOR ~ USEFUL THINGS
LEGISLATIVE REMEDIES? The MBTA has
begun a series of 20 public hearings in its service area to go over proposed fare hikes and service cut-backs, which drew more than 60 people to the Saxe Room at the Worcester Public Library on Tuesday night, with 45 of them criticizing the MBTA’s plans to eliminate commuter-rail service on weekends and after 10 p.m. on week nights. Sen. Harriette Chandler said the T’s ideas would hinder economic goals and would be “unfair to those who worked so hard” to bring increased service to Worcester. City Councilor Rick Rushton read a letter from Mayor Joe Petty and added that the T’s problems are “Boston-centric,” therefore the cuts should be “spread about the Boston area.” As T officials lamented the sizable debt the agency carries (much of it from the Big Dig), one speaker not so jokingly suggested the MBTA look at bankruptcy. “Airline companies do it all the time,” he added … T officials drove home the point that no aspect of its service is self-sufficient and revenues generated by fares goes toward paying down the interest on its debt, leading some speakers to wonder if changes to the T’s financing system will need to come from Beacon Hill. According to Chandler, that might happen soon. The state legislature’s MBTA caucus, made up of representatives from the transit agency’s service areas, recently met to discuss a “coordinated solution” that addresses the MBTA’s crippling debt. “Our concern is this isn’t a oneyear problem. We shouldn’t be looking at a one-year solution.” She’s hopeful an interim solution can be reached for 2013, buying time for larger funding reforms in the coming years. In short: tolls, taxes and fare hikes will likely be on the table.
Let us help you love the space you live in, inspire creativity and live well for less.
Jeremy Shulkin
BUT WHERE WILL I FIND MY TOP-10 CAT MEMES? The Internet
sure was a lonely place on Wednesday as some of the most heavily trafficked sites like Wikipedia, Reddit and BoingBoing spent the day “off-line” and others like Google featured black bars across their home pages in protest of bills in the U.S. House and Senate that critics say will jeopardize free speech online. Worcester has been on the front lines of this fight, and local advocates met with Congressman Jim McGovern last week to press him to vote “no” on the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA). With public pressure mounting, the two bills that looked sure-fire to pass through Congress now have done something unseen in recent history: they’ve brought back bipartisianship. “While Internet piracy is an issue that should be addressed, HR 3261 (SOPA), as written is unwise, unfair, and against what I believe are fundamental rights for all Americans,” read a statement from McGovern’s office. “I plan on voting against the current legislation, although the GOP is now indicating that they will not bring SOPA to the floor for a vote at all.”
THE HOME
MARKETPLACE
Closer than you think... and always worth the trip
68 Tower St., Hudson, MA 01749
978-562-3221 Monday-Saturday 10am-5pm Sunday 12pm-4pm
View our updated on-line gallery at stilllifehome.com
GOING AFTER THE LT. GOV.:
Massachusetts Treasurer Steve Grossman, who campaigned in 2010 on a theme of better transparency for state government (and followed through with the release of the state’s checkbook online late last year), was asked last week on WGBH whether or not Murray has been “forthcoming enough” about the circumstances surrounding his accident. After giving thanks that Murray escaped seemingly unharmed, and some pressing from the interviewer, Grossman added, “Transparency should be part of something every one of us in government does all the time.” Later, he qualified Murray’s situation, stating, “I’m going to leave it to the Lt. Governor and his legal team to decide what the appropriate approach is and how they should proceed from this point on … but I’ll tell you this, I think the people of this Commonwealth deserve transparency from all of us in state government in everything we do.” It might not have been shoe-banging, but it could be a foreshadowing of the 2014 Democratic gubernatorial primary.
COUNT ME OUT: With the District 15 state representative seat open after Vincent Pedone steps down this week, the scrum to replace him will not feature rumored candidate Gladys Rodriguez-Parker, a senior district representative for Congressman McGovern. Rodriguez-Parker said she was asked, but wasn’t interested. But because it’s now a majority-minority district, she said that it’s “an opportunity for someone in the minority community to put their hat out there.” Get more Worcesteria at worcestermag.com/blogs/dailyworcesteria and follow @JeremyShulkin on Twitter. Got a tip? Email it to jshulkin@worcestermag.com.
MORE FOR LESS!!!
WELLNESS EVERYONE CAN AFFORD
NEW AFFORDABLE RATES Central Community Branch YMCA The Central Community Branch YMCA is GREETING 2012 by making Wellness Affordable For ALL- During the months of January, February and March sign up with the Central Community Branch YMCA as low as $30/month for an individual or $60/month for a Family. Come see what we can do for YOU!
Central Community Branch YMCA 766 Main St. Worcester, MA 06101 508-755-6101 www.ymcaofcm.org JANUARY 19, 2012 • WORCESTERMAG.COM
7
slants rants& O commentary | opinions
The Rosen
Report
Was the school-committee recount a miscount? Gary Rosen
ON THE
EOPLE STREET
Should teachers’ salaries be based on their students’ test results? AS K E D O N M A I N ST R E E T
No. They should just help you either way.
Katherine Harris WORCESTER
Yes. If the teacher isn’t teaching anything right, then your students aren’t learning or progressing.
Dave Oslebo WORCESTER
No. The scores depend on how good and interested the students are.
Gordanos Hedrit GERMANY
It would make sense. If the students test better, it means they’re doing a better job at teaching.
Matt Quinn ROCHESTER, NY
Yeah, it’s the logical thing to do.
Richard Rivers WORCESTER
PHOTOS BY EMILY HORNSBY
Tell us how you really feel Letters to the editor should be legible, signed and brief (preferably no more than 200 words). A daytime telephone number must be provided for verification. Worccester Mag reserves the right to edit letters for length, clarity, libelous or offensive material and style. Send letters to: Letters, Worcester Mag, 101 Water St., Worcester, MA 01604 or E-mail: editor@worcestermag.com, or fax: 508-749-3165 8
WORCESTERMAG.COM
• JANUARY 19, 2012
n the game show, “Man vs. Machine,” you are competing for a prize of $14,000 (the annual pay of a Worcester school-committee member). You add up a very long list of numbers, first with a calculator and then by hand. Unfortunately, the resulting sums are different. So for your final answer, do you choose the calculator’s sum or the one you found by hand? The choice is easy, or is it? While last November’s school-committee election was not a game show, the thousands of ballots cast were counted by two different methods. The first count by older oval-scanning voting machines showed that then-incumbent Mary Mullaney had won the sixth and final seat by two votes. But later, a hand count by older oval-reading humans showed that challenger Donna Colorio had won the same seat by 33 votes. Best two out of three, anyone? I guess my background and training in science leads me to believe that the machine count is more accurate and reliable than the hand count. Isn’t that the main reason machines are used to count the votes in the first place? Even City Clerk David Rushford stated publicly that human error figures prominently in the results of any hand recount. But the law thinks that humans can count better than machines. Although nobody really knows who got more votes, by virtue of winning the hand recount, Donna Colorio was declared the winner. Congratulations to her, and I know that she’ll represent the children in our public schools quite well. And it’s fitting that Mary Mullaney will return to the school committee if present member Dianna Biancheria is elected to fill the state rep. seat vacated by Vincent Pedone. In any case, the tedious, 11-hour, school-committee
recount was a process so flawed and fraught with human error that the results of the election are questionable. The Levi Lincoln chamber was too crowded. The tired, pressured and sometimes cranky counters and tally clerks, with two observers looking over their shoulders, quickly read the ovals and recorded the votes of all 10 candidates. Without a ruler as a straight edge, and using their personal choice of X’s, check marks or lines, the recorders filled in tally sheets where candidate names were too close together and not shaded to distinguish between names. And the paid recount workers were required to count the votes of all 10 candidates as one group. But, while they were fresh, alert and before fatigue set in, the counters, tally clerks and observers first should have counted only the Colorio and Mullaney votes. That was the true purpose of the recount. Once their votes were counted, the vote totals for the other eight candidates could have been determined without as much pressure to be exact. Now I understand how candidates can gain votes in the recount. While voting machines ignore ballots with check marks or with ovals not completely filled in, the election commissioners can judge voter intent and add votes to a candidate’s total. But I have no idea how Mary Mullaney lost 20 votes. The only explanation is that human error took those votes from her and that is unacceptable. It’s ironic that even if the city buys new state-ofthe-art voting machines, a candidate can still ask that the highly accurate machine totals be thrown out and the questionable results of a tedious hand count be substituted. When the hand count confirms the original machine results, everybody has faith in the electoral process. But when the hand count changes the outcome of an election, people can’t be blamed for being critical of the process and skeptical of the results.
{ coverstory }
The thin green line
WHAT’S THE CONSERVATION COMMISSION’S ROLE WHEN IT COMES TO DEVELOPMENT? Jeremy Shulkin
The last decade has not been kind to the unnamed pond in Judith Vander Salm’s backyard, she and her family allege. The unnamed river that fills the acre-wide pond has poured increasing amounts of sediment and eroded hillside in with the water, turning it brown for days after a rainstorm. When that sediment finally settles, algae and other undesirable aquatic plants have found the new soil phosphorous and rich enough to move in and choke out the vibrant natural ecosystem.
federally protected Blackstone River, the Environmental Protection Agency got involved, revealing that Bailin and Associate’s permit for the development never included running storm-water overflow into the water below, and even after obtaining that permit they still “failed to implement and maintain Best Management Practices.” Even with that record, city and state officials haven’t followed up with matching concerns. The EPA fined Bailin $10,000 in 2009, far less than the $157,500 maximum. The Conservation Commission issued no fines, though they could’ve at a cost of $25,000 per violation. In fact, in a 2009 Worcester Mag article, city
100-foot buffer zone of the wetlands that flow into their pond, the Vander Salms fear that the pond’s ecosystem won’t bounce back. “This pond is going to take an additional beating,” he said while giving a tour of the rocky, soggy and treeheavy land between Salisbury Street and Salisbury Hill. Capital Group Properties bought the remaining Salisbury Height’s development from Bailin and Associates at the foreclosure auction in November, despite its awareness of the pending litigation regarding the property. With that in the background, Capital Group submitted plans to develop seven more lots abutting STEVEN KING
The cause, they say, is Salisbury Heights, a luxury condo development for the 55 and older crowd that razed 72 acres of trees above a wetland on the WorcesterHolden town line near the Vander Salm’s property. Jamie Vander Salm, Judith’s son, has been fighting the Conservation Commission for years regarding this. “My guess is that if there were 20 people around this, there would be more public outcry,” he says. The Vander Salms, along with the Jewish Community Center, are the pond’s only abutters.
ALL WET Salisbury Hill’s original plans called
for building 280 condos, but even after clearing out the space between Salisbury Street, Whisper Drive and Barrows Road, just more than 70 have been built despite large areas of now stripped and barren land. Even before the economy stalled out on Bailin and Associates, the original buyer and developer of the land, and the company lost the property to foreclosure, they were already running afoul of local and federal environmental laws.
In 2004, a year and a half or so after Bailin and Associates broke ground, silt-laden run-off would come down the hillside and into the wetlands below, leading to an enforcement order from the Worcester Conservation Commission. In 2007, Bailin was again cited for runoff pumped out of a detention pond. In 2008, after a site visit by a Conservation Commissioner and a city inspector, Bailin received a letter saying their detention ponds, catch basins, and silt fences “require[d] immediate attention.” Later in 2008, noting that this water flowed into the
The unnamed pond, and site of contention, behind Judith Vander Salm’s Salisbury Street home. officials would admit there were valid concerns about the character of the wetland behind Salisbury Hill but that Bailin and Associates was responsive in fixing problems and some of the high volume of water coming down the hill was because of major storms, not faulty waterdischarge. The issue still lingers. In 2011 both the EPA and the Conservation Commission again cited Bailin and Associates for failure to maintain storm water run-off and turbid discharges into the waterway. Both the Vander Salms and the EPA have filed suits against Bailin and Associates, the project’s engineers and these same city officials. And now, with the Conservation Commission allowing Salisbury Height’s new owners, Capital Group Properties, to build seven more houses on Salisbury Street within the
Salisbury Street. Four of those properties will come close to within 30 feet of the wetland, while the remaining three will sit within or just outside of the 100-foot buffer. Capital Group Properties has also enlisted the same engineering firm that Bailin and Associates used for Salisbury Heights. So far, these plans have cruised through the Planning Board and Conservation Commission, despite the city’s wetlands ordinance cautioning “projects undertaken within 100 feet of a wetland resource area have a high likelihood of altering that area, either during construction or from routine operation of the completed project.” At a December Conservation Commission meeting some on the board expressed concerns about run-off into
continued on page 10
JANUARY 19, 2012 • WORCESTERMAG.COM
9
{ coverstory } continued from page 9 STEVEN KING
Left: Mendon conservation commissioner Peter CofďŹ n. Right: Jamie Vander Salm explains the ecological changes heâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s seen to the pond behind his motherâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s house.
the wetlands, but the board ultimately voted four to one in favor, attaching to the project a lengthy order of conditions intended to limit the impact that construction will have on the area. Vander Salm, who attended the meeting and spoke for his mother and sister, was incensed. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Be proactive,â&#x20AC;? he implored the commission, saying theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;d likely be back later to answer to enforcement orders like Bailin and Associates. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Tell them they canâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t build there.â&#x20AC;? He also complained that the roles in front of the Conservation Commission had been reversed: he had to explain why Capital Group Properties couldnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t build on a wetland buffer while Capital Group Properties didnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t have to prove why they could. â&#x20AC;&#x153;It would be wrong to presume that the burden is on the opponent,â&#x20AC;? he chastised. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The burden of proof is on the proponent.â&#x20AC;?
WHO WATCHES THE WETLAND? Vander Salm has spent
hours in front of the Conservation Commission advocating for his backyard and the waterway, and has come away calling them â&#x20AC;&#x153;recklessâ&#x20AC;? and accusing them of working with the developers at the expense of the environment. (This has not endeared him to the commissioners.) A look at the map provided to the city detailing Capital Group Propertiesâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; plans for the seven houses, and then an actual visit to the site, causes one to question the want or need to build there. And it brings
up the question central to Vander Salmâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s argument: who but the Conservation Commission should keep developers away from sensitive environmental areas? But the Conservation Commissionâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s role isnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t so simple. First of all, each of the stateâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s municipal conservation commissions has different bylaws and ordinances. All of them can enforce the stateâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Wetland Protection Act differently, so long as their rules are stricter than the stateâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s statute. â&#x20AC;&#x153;They are not designed to be interpreted inconsistently,â&#x20AC;? says Linda Orel, executive director of the Massachusetts Association of Conservation Commissions. At the same time, however, â&#x20AC;&#x153;there are instances where a developer could develop an area that a lay person would say was a wetland, but a conservation commission would say wasnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t.â&#x20AC;? â&#x20AC;&#x153;The whole thing is to treat everybody in the process fairly,â&#x20AC;? says Peter McKone, a Worcester Conservation Commissioner
',925&( 0(',$7,21 If you canâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t save your marriage, you can save your divorce.
whose term ended last September. He says he remembers approving projects that he â&#x20AC;&#x153;had to hold [his] nose on.â&#x20AC;? â&#x20AC;&#x153;You canâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t tell someone they canâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t build on a property if they own buildable property,â&#x20AC;? he adds. In CGPâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s favor, their plans come close the no-build buffers but donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t cross into them. Though, thereâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s some conďŹ&#x201A;ict over how black and white these laws are. According to Peter CofďŹ n, land-use planner, former private developer and Mendon conservation commissioner, â&#x20AC;&#x153;people are wrong when they think people canâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t build in wetlands or that wetlands are protected,â&#x20AC;? as loopholes exist. (CofďŹ n is also coordinator of the Blackstone River Coalition and, in this case, a supporter of the Vander Salmâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s.) â&#x20AC;&#x153;Each conservation commission has its own character and it depends on who is appointed.â&#x20AC;? Others want a more idealistic approach.
Central Massâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; Newest Mortgage Company! RATES AS LOW AS
3.75% APR
'LYRUFH FDQ EH H[SHQVLYH ÂŤ
30 YEAR FIXED
Mediation allows you to save, time and emotional energy. Protect your rights while preserving your familyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s resources. 2WKHU $YDLODEOH 6HUYLFHV Â&#x2021; )ODW )HHV Â&#x2021; ([SHGLWHG ZHHNHQG QLJKW DSSRLQWPHQWV Â&#x2021; /LPLWHG ,VVXHV 0HGLDWLRQ
6LQFH -DPHV ) &RQQRUV 683(5 /$:<(5
10
&HUWLĂ&#x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
(OP 6WUHHW :RUFHVWHU
WORCESTERMAG.COM
ZZZ DWW\MIFRQQRUV FRP Â&#x2021; FRQQRUVHVTXLUH#JPDLO FRP â&#x20AC;˘ JANUARY 19, 2012
2OLYHU 6WUHHW )LWFKEXUJ
No Closing Cost Programs Available Call Today for a FREE Quote Financing â&#x20AC;˘ Re-ďŹ nancing â&#x20AC;˘ FHA & VA Loans
508-835-1111
NMLS LIC# 509399
66 West Boylston St. â&#x20AC;˘ West Boylston
“Their role is supposed to be protecting the environment from undue impacts of development,” says Sue Reid, executive director of the Conservation Law Foundation. “In some communities, absolutely no development is allowed in the buffer.” Reid believes conservation commissions are offered this “false choice” between protecting the environment versus economic development, though she’s wary that developers are working their way onto conservation commissions and planning boards across the state. She also says the conservation commissions deserve to be tough on development because corporations are given multiple loopholes to still get their projects done, via the legal system. Coffin doesn’t necessarily hold a developer’s job against them if they serve on a planning board or conservation commission, but believes the boards should be “well balanced and representative of the community [with] people who understand the resources but also how development happens.” “We are a pretty heavily regulated industry,” says Guy Webb, executive director of the Central Massachusetts Builders Association, a membership group that includes contractors, remodelers, developers and suppliers. That regulation,
{ coverstory }
STEVEN KING
A flag demarking a wetland buffer zone at the Salisbury Holdings site. he says, starts with local planning and conservation boards, and even boards of health. “There’s a lot of power on the local level. In other parts of the country it’s different.”
Webb blames the high cost of housing in Massachusetts on the regulations imposed by state and local government on developments, and complains that conservation commissions can engage in “de facto zoning” with simple adjustments
that make environmental regulations stricter. “[Commissioners] set a tone of trying to be helpful,” says Jordan Berg Powers, a member of the Worcester Conservation Commission (and the only dissenter in the vote allowing Capital Group Properties to build on Salisbury Road). “Overwhelmingly, it’s only been this issue and the snow-shoveling issue that there’s been any argument.” (Earlier this year Meadow Lane residents took their opposition to the city’s snowshoveling ordinance to the Conservation Commission, charging that the law forced them to shovel chemicals into the brook behind their homes.) Berg Powers, who admits he initially thought the role provided more for environmental stewardship, says the Conservation Commission’s power has a sole focus. “We’re not the first line of protection for the environment; we’re the first line of defense for wetlands.” For example, a scenario where a developer comes and cuts down acres of trees wouldn’t see any repercussion from the Conservation Commission, unless they could argue that cutting down those trees threatened a wetland. “Developers can go around us,” he adds,
continued on page 12
SPRING 2012 Take your career to the next level. Finish your bachelor’s degree. Earn a graduate degree or certificate. Indulge your passion for learning. Classes and programs at UMass Amherst
Get On Up Take The Next Step In Your Career, Your Life, Your Learning
For a full catalog of current offerings scan this code or visit:
Isenberg MBA, Public Health, Nutrition, Education, University Without Walls, Nursing, Green Building, Wind Energy, Arts Management, and much more.
Spring Semester classes start January 23
REGISTER NOW
UMassULearn.net/spring JANUARY 19, 2012 • WORCESTERMAG.COM
11
{ coverstory } continued from page 11
saying it’s better to work with them first rather than be brushed aside later. “It’s a balancing act,” says the city’s director of planning and regulatory services Joel Fontane, Jr., who says the law was set up for municipalities to be “cognizant of wetlands as an important environmental resource.” He adds that sometimes the Conservation Commission works to purchase land for preservation purposes, and that the mere presence of the board keeps some projects from ever gaining traction.
LIMITS TO THAT POWER Despite the Conservation
Commission’s ability to pass more stringent environmental bylaws, there is one aspect where their hands are tied: they can’t use a developer’s previous environmental failings against them in voting for or against a project.
12
In this case, not only has Salisbury Heights had enough issues to warrant further scrutiny, Capital Group Properties, who will finish Salisbury Heights and build the seven houses in the wetland buffer on Salisbury Street, comes with plenty of baggage: in the past 15 years Capital Group or its affiliated companies have been cited four times by the Southborough Conservation Commission for wetlands violations. “It sounds like a fair and appropriate practice,” says Orel of not using a developer’s history against future projects. Fontane says while it’s not a set law, there’s case law that supports it. “Because you did or didn’t do something before, doesn’t change your rights to a certain place.” For its part, Capital Group Properties believes all its ducks are in a row for finishing Salisbury Heights and starting the strip of houses on Salisbury Street. In fact, in a letter from Angelo Catanzaro, a lawyer representing Capital Group, to the Conservation Commission, he wrote that Robert Dipietri “took immediate action … to assure current compliance with all environmental directives and orders” after purchasing the land. After initially playing phone tag with
Dipietri, he could not be reached for comment. Patrick Healy, an engineer for the firm Thompson-Liston Associates, Inc., that worked on the plans for the original Salisbury Heights and the current seven parcels planned for Salisbury Street, said he couldn’t comment on his prior project due to pending litigation. However he bluntly stated that future plans are “in compliance with city wetland policy” and did not expect any issues because of the lengthy list of conditions placed on the development by the Conservation Commission. Healy doesn’t have concerns about siltation or wetland damage due to these developments. But not everyone in government believes a consistency has been found. That could also be a sign that not everybody’s on the same page. “There’s a bigger issue here of what appears to be a disconnect between priorities of the council and administration not always translating to these volunteer committees that play an important role in our city’s development,” says District 5 City Councilor Bill Eddy – the host district of the Salisbury Heights development. Eddy says a better balance needs to be reached between these kinds of developments and their impact on the environment – not just the urban forest but their neighbors as well. “If we’re going to grant special permits, we’d better make sure we’ve crossed our T’s and dotted our I’s,” he says, noting that if a developer comes to city asking for a special permit, then it’s in the city’s best interest to add conditions and ask for more stringent
disclosure. At the very least, Vander Salm wants an independent engineer to take a look at the site and offer an opinion – sentiment offered by a conservation commissioner in December, but one not followed up on. He plans to appeal, a process that would go through the state’s Department of Environmental Protection’s regional office, then state office and then the court system. He calls this an “uphill battle” but he’s convinced he’s right, and has 10 years’ worth of photos, videos, enforcement orders and first-hand experience he says proves it. “It’s extremely obvious that there will be inevitable damage,” he warned the Conservation Commission in December. “You are perfectly entitled to say no building in this zone.” It’s likely too little too late. Though Capital Group Properties does have to go through another round in front of the Planning Board for Salisbury Heights. Vander Salm is tenacious, eloquent and a lawyer. It’s hard to imagine someone without the legal knowledge, resources and energy devoting so much time to one particular battle. For him, however, that’s the problem: forget could, he wonders, isn’t that what the conservation commission should do? “That’s just unbelievable to me regardless of any wetlands law that you could build something there,” he says, as he walks through the woods.
ONLINE OPINIONS
COMMENT ON THIS STORY AT
WORCESTERMAG.COM
DIVORCE WITH DIGNITY ~ Save Time, Money and Emotional Stress ~ 1,800 - 2,000 Divorce/Family Mediation Cases Since 1997 Mediation for comprehensive uncontested divorce settlement Custody • Visitation • Child Support/Alimony Financial Issues “One of the most experienced Mediators in Worcester County” Polly A. Tatum
Attorney/Mediator
Call for a free initial session
508-795-1557
or visit www.mediationadvantage.com WORCESTERMAG.COM
• JANUARY 19, 2012
night day& January 19 - 25, 2012
art | dining | nightlife
Creative Ingenuity Paul Grignon
Cuban Art at Holy Cross Gallery
Distilling 120 incredible works of art to roughly a third its size, The Cantor Foundation Resource Gallery at Holy Cross still manages to produce a remarkable exhibition that highlights the vivid imagination and inventiveness of these artistas from the República de Cuba. The show, Cuban Artists’ Books and Prints,
“This exhibition is a slightly smaller version of the touring exhibit that was shown at several exhibition sites over the last couple of years,” says Roger Hankins, the gallery director at Holy Cross. “The Cuban books in the show are primarily produced at the Ediciones Vigía, a collaborative artisans’ press founded in 1985 in Matanzas, Cuba, and the books are mostly assembled out of humble and often found materials that carry a disarmingly complex visual weight.” Today, the ties between Russia and Cuba are close, but two decades ago artisans had to struggle to make ends meet in order to produce their delicate and acclaimed
La Hilacha (The Shred of Cloth), 2006 Roberto Manzano
1985-2008, curated by Linda S. Howe, associate professor of romance languages at Wake Forest University, features an amazing array of art from talented folk who had to improvise to construct their intriguing and intricate creations.
art. This exhibit highlights their dedication, diligence and drive to maintain their artistic visions despite upheavals within the island nation, through difficult living conditions and various political factions. To that end is Ediciones Vigía devoted to the craftsmanship in publishing limited collections of handmade books, prints and objects, all created by Cuban writers and artists that underscore the perplexities of Cuban life.
With the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, subsidies to Cuba ended, and a simple resource such as paper was very limited. Artists were thus forced to adapt, and used other varied materials such as beads, thread, string, fabric, copier paper, wood, leaves, crayons, and donated items from international visitors to create their exceptionally sophisticated handmade works of art, fabrications that commented on Cuban history and culture. The desire to create, despite such deprivations, is apparent in Nancy Morejón’s “Pierrot y la luna,” or “Pierrot and the Moon,” an intricate and elaborate construction of paper and ink. A richly detailed and patterned book, when opened it reveals a complex and captivating city view, replete with a dizzying assortment of buildings that have been painstakingly rendered. A huge crescent moon peers down at the burgeoning metropolis, and three finely costumed characters complement the entire composition. It is a fascinating visual feast that will astound the viewer with its minutiae of detail, line work and architecture, economically created in such close confines. “La hilacha,” or “The Shred of Cloth,” by Roberto Manzano, is a striking example of the inventive and imaginative spirit that propels these artisans. This small book is constructed out of paper, ink, string, wood, fabric and tar paper, and depicts a figure composed entirely of thread drawn with ink on brown paper. One hand holds a needle and the body is populated with a profusion of stars. Lacking proper and basic art supplies, the carefully designed work showcases the brilliant application of scavenged and recycled materials into a complex and compelling work of art. “I’m really glad we were able to borrow the work from the curator, Linda Howe and the Cuba Project, at Wake Forest University, to show in our Cantor Foundation Resource Gallery. At the same time we are presenting Painting Borges: Art Interpreting Literature in the Cantor Art Gallery,” says Hankins. “These two shows provide a rare opportunity for the students at Holy Cross and the Worcester community to contemplate some fine art objects that are not very well known in this country, and perhaps come away with some new insight about both books and culture.” Cuban Artists’ Books and Prints, 1985-2008 at The Cantor Foundation Resource Gallery, College of the Holy Cross, 1 College Street, Worcester. Opening reception for both shows, Jan. 31, 5-6:30 p.m. Both shows open Jan. 31, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. For more information, visit holycross. edu/cantorartgallery.
JANUARY 19, 2012 • WORCESTERMAG.COM
13
14
night day &
{ localpens }
Adele Quinn SUPER SAVINGS FOR YOUR FOOTBALL PARTIES WINE Yellow Tail 1.5 L ................................................................................................ $8.99 Fetzer 1.5 L ..................................................................................................... $10.99 Relax Riesling 1.5 L ......................................................................................... $14.99 J. Lohr Chardonnay 750 ml ................................................................................. $9.49 Sterling Napa Valley Chardonnay 750 ml ........................................................... $11.99 Matua Sauvignon Blanc 750 ml ........................................................................... $8.99 Danzante Pinot Grigio 750 ml ............................................................................ $8.49 Ch. St. Jean all types 750 ml ............................................................................. $9.49 Battle Axe Malbec 750 ml ............................................................................... $11.99 Apothic Red 750 ml ........................................................................................... $7.99 Bartolomeo Prosecco 750 ml .............................................................................. $9.99 RufďŹ no Prosecco 750 ml .................................................................................... $8.49
BEER (beer prices do not include deposit) Miller Lite 30 pk ............................................................................................. $18.99 Coors Lt. 18 pk ............................................................................................... $12.80 Bud & bud Lt 24 pk can ................................................................................... $15.85 Rolling Rock 18 pk ............................................................................................. $9.99 Miller High Life 18 pk ........................................................................................ $9.19 Naragansett 12 pk ............................................................................................ $8.39 Sam Adams 12 pk ........................................................................................... $11.79 Harpoon 12 pk ................................................................................................ $11.79 Busch & Busch Lt. 18 pk bottle ........................................................................... $8.99 DogďŹ sh Head 60 min. 6 pk 8.99 90 min 4 pk ..................................................... $8.99 Woodchuck Cider 6 pk ....................................................................................... $6.99 Heineken 24 pk loose bottle ............................................................................ $20.99 Corona 24 pk loose bottle ................................................................................ $20.99 Becks 24 pk loose bottle ................................................................................. $18.99
SPIRITS Smirnoff Red 1.75 L ........................................................................................ $19.99 Sobieski Vodka 1.75 L ..................................................................................... $15.99 Fleischmannâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Vodka 1.75 L ............................................................................. $10.49 Capt. Morgan Spiced 1.75 L ............................................................................. $25.99 Canadian Mist 1.75 L ...................................................................................... $16.99 Cuervo Gold 750 ml ........................................................................................ $17.49 Malibu Rum 750 ml ......................................................................................... $14.99 Av Patron Silver 750 ml ....................................................................................... $37.99 aila ble Baileyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Irish Cream 1 L ................................................................................... $27.99 wh Hammer & Sickle Vodka 750 ml ....................................................................... $22.99 ile sup Jagermeister 750 ml ....................................................................................... $14.99 Sa p l i le i es las ne Chocolat chocolate liquer 750 ml ........................................................................ $8.99 t ffe ct t Durango Gold Tequila 1.75L .............................................................. $18.99 hru 02 .08 .12
67$7( /,48256
:25&(67(5¡6 ),1( :,1( 6+23 3DUN $YH :RUFHVWHU
9LVLW XV DW VWDWHOLTXRUH[FKDQJH FRP WORCESTERMAG.COM
â&#x20AC;˘ JANUARY 19, 2012
A Hands On writer With Rita Sawyer
With the unveiling of our new monthly local author feature Local Pens, Adele Quinn is our ďŹ rst literary guest. Quinnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s debut release â&#x20AC;&#x153;Hands Onâ&#x20AC;? is a short story published with Secret Cravings Publishing Andrewâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s a chef that canâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t sleep. Jeremy has a touch that can help. Being Drewâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s employee, can they both get what they want without getting hurt?
Letâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s give the readers a little glimpse into who you are. Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;m a Worcester native,
though I think Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll always be a country girl at heart. Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ve been writing on various subjects since I was a young child. After a short stint in northern Maine, where I received a B.A. in English and history, I came back to the city to pursue my two loves in life; food and writing. I hope to one day own a small cafĂŠ where I can continuously people watch and create delicious confections while writing equally as delicious stories.
You live here in Worcester. Do you include any local places in your stories? Though Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;m always
gathering inspiration from whatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s around me for now, no, nothing local to Worcester or the surrounding areas show up in my stories. As you can see in â&#x20AC;&#x153;Hands Onâ&#x20AC;? itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s just a general area, no set location is named. As for whatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s coming up, itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s all set in foreign places and other parts of the country. But as I said, inspiration is all around me so I can eventually see some local landmarks showing up in my tales.
Letâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s talk a little about what got you started writing. How long have you been writing? And have you always wanted to be a writer? Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ve been writing recreationally for a long, long time. I started to see it as a possible career of sorts in my early teens. I would write all sorts of stories, and still do, but one day I stumbled upon an m/m fanďŹ c (stories written by fans of an original work) of a favorite band of mine and was just so intrigued, not to mention that while reading, it became very evident that I could and would do it better. Thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s when I decided to write my own with my own characters.
What genre(s) do you write? I write mainly M/M (male with male) contemporary romance.
Where can readers get a copy of your book? Right now â&#x20AC;&#x153;Hands On,â&#x20AC;? the only story I currently have published, is available as an e-book through Secret Cravings Publishing. It can also be found on Amazon and Barnes and Noble. So those with Kindles or Nooks can go check it out. Can you tell us a little about what youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re working on next? There are so many ideas ďŹ&#x201A;oating around in my head, but right now Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;m focusing on a ďŹ ve-part series about a modern coven of witches. I know that most people think that itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s been overdone. I think Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll be able to throw some twists in and truly make this magical world my own. Though I said above that I write mainly m/m stories, there are also heterosexual couplings for this series. I also have a jewel-thief mystery in the works â&#x20AC;Ś like I said, many ideas!
For those aspiring authors out there, what has been the best advice or words of encouragement youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ve received? No matter how many rejections you get, just keep trying. If you feel like a writer and like what you write, chances are once you hone your craft there are others out there who are going to like it too.
With the start of the New Year do you have any goals for your writing? Of course. I would
really like to get a jump on my witch series and see what I can do with it. I also have a few plots together for a couple short stories. So Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;m hoping that I can get at least three more things out to my readers over the next year. Of course, if itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s possible Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;d love to give them more!
Can readers ďŹ nd you on the internet? Yes. I can be found at adelequinn.blogspot.com where people can ďŹ nd me writing (more likely rambling) about things that catch my fancy in everyday life. There are also links to my Facebook and Tumblr, which I think is a great way for readers to get a good look into who I am. DO YOU KNOW A LOCAL ONLINE AUTHOR WE SHOULD CONSIDER
OPINIONS
FOR LOCAL PENS? TELL US AT
WORCESTERMAG.COM
night day &
{ arts }
The International Miss Ana Sol
Doreen Manning
STEVEN KING
Freedom found through art. That’s how Miss Ana Sol, born Ana Perez in Mayaguez, Puerto Rico, discovered her love of art. The youngest of eight children, Perez was adopted by her maternal grandmother, and at the age of 10 found herself in the downtown Piedmont Street area of Worcester. Quickly learning that the streets where no place to roam free, Perez learned a new sense of freedom through her evolving artistic expression. That evolution has led her to The International Lounge on Pleasant Street, in a onewoman, one-night-only exhibit on the evening of January 21.
being on a napkin and me trying to draw it over and over again, until I could get it to look like hers,” she recalls. Perez has shown her work in the area through collaboration with musical acts, but never a solo show of this kind. “My
It all started with a doodle of a rooster that Perez’s mother drew. Perez was only four at the time. “I remember the drawing
first [was] with a Hip Hop trio who went by the name of Project Move,” says Perez. “I’ve done many of these shows over the years, but recently I’ve decided to start taking matters into my own hands and become more business savvy.” Perez has collected an eclectic repertoire of her recent work to create a one-night show featuring 13 works of abstract art. Her medium is acrylic on canvas, along with touches of gold leafing and paint marker. The pieces range from 8-by-11 inches to 40-by-30 inches, and feature
bright colors with loose lines often painted thickly on the canvas for an added dimension. Her homeland culture shows through the interpretation of the bright colors used, but all most certainly with an urban edge to them. “My inspirations come from music, people I meet and my life experiences,” says Perez. “A few of my pieces will represent beauty and joy while others show pain and suffering, in a sense they are all from the heart.” As for the location, Perez admits that although she’d love her own gallery show, without connections it’s almost impossible to do so. “I seem to be someone that everyone knows, but no one knows anything about,” she admits. “I can’t seem to get my foot in the right door, which is why I started meeting with business owners instead.” The International Lounge owner Andre Mikhael enjoyed her artwork enough to offer her an evening to display her work and produce an event – which Perez gladly accepted. “I really like the
atmosphere of The International Lounge, it’s comforting and relaxing and [I knew it] would be beneficial to my show.” A single mother and 10-year veteran of a Worcester insurance agency, Perez works hard to create a life of inspiration and hope for her children. “When I leave this earth, I’d like to leave a mark neither with solitude nor popularization but with gratitude. To let everyone know that when all else fails there is always love and even at your weakest points find the strength within yourselves to inspire others.” The Artwork of Miss Ana Sol will be on display at The International Lounge, 27 Pleasant St., January 21 from 7-11 p.m. Jazz musicians Joe Carcia and Pete Shungu will perform, as well as several spoken-word artists. Complimentary hors d’oeurves will be served, as well as a full bar. Dig up more on Miss Ana Sol by searching for her on Facebook.
ONLINE WHAT DO YOU THINK OF MISS OPINIONS
ANA’S WORK? TELL US AT
WORCESTERMAG.COM
Worcester JCC Wahoo Swim Team
Does your child enjoy swimming? Or are they looking for a new sport to try? Swim Team is a great way to make new friends, improve swimming skills and stroke technique, build endurance, develop your fitness level, and build self confidence. Our team is for everyone from 6-18 years old. Our swim team runs year round.
Worcester JCC
633 Salisbury St • Worcester, MA 01609 Cassy Currie 508-756-7109 x250 • worcesterjcc.org THE JCC IS OPEN TO ALL REGARDLESS OF RACE, COLOR, RELIGION, NATIONAL ORIGIN, GENDER, SEXUAL ORIENTATION, AGE, DISABILITY OR ECONOMIC CONDITION. THE CENTER IS HANDICAPPED ACCESSIBLE
JANUARY 19, 2012 • WORCESTERMAG.COM
15
16
night day &
{ film }
So much potential squandered on the youth Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close Grade: C + David Wildman
WITH SUPPORT FROM
This is the story of a kid who goes on a quest to find something that he thinks is important and fascinating but that we as an audience know from the beginning will ultimately prove meaningless. The film sent me off on a journey of discovery and futility of my own: an attempt to learn why something so potentially whimsical and engaging involving proven craftsman in their fields should turn out to be so extremely painful to watch.
In order to solve this mystery I sat through the film twice. Both times I found myself often charmed by novelist Jonathan Safran Foer’s quirky ideas, sometimes delighted by his trademark offbeat characters and inordinately moved by the übersentimental ending. And yet I also felt like a weighty rock had been placed on my chest the whole time, making my enjoyment of these things more than a little problematic, as I do actually like to breathe when watching a film. Not having read this particular book but being quite familiar with Foer’s work, it’s easy for me to discern the author’s voice. It comes through in the form of extended voiceover by the young protagonist Oskar (Thomas Horn). Right off the bat we’re hearing about a mythical sixth borough around Manhattan that his adventurous fun-loving, jewelry storeowning father (Tom Hanks) tells him floated off years ago. We see through flashback how this parent sent him on missions around the city for clues to its existence, but we also get the message how the entire point of the thing is to get Oskar to talk to people, in the hopes of bringing the precociously bright kid out of his antisocial Asperger’s-like internal exile. So far so harmless, it has sort of an urban “Where the Wild Things Are” vibe. And then Sept 11 hits and dad bites it in the towers, sending Oskar, desperate to keep some piece of his father’s existence
WORCESTERMAG.COM
• JANUARY 19, 2012
alive in his world, off into heartbreaking obsession to try to find the lock to a key he finds in his dead dad’s closet. It doesn’t matter what lock the key might really fit, it’s all about the journey to find out, and it sends the kid into fanatical detailoverkill as he devises a system of contacting everyone in the Manhattan area that might have a clue to what the key means. He sets out on his quest, shaking a tambourine every moment he’s not safe at home. Okay, that’s annoying. He finds a woman (Viola Davis) whose last name—Black—corresponds to the key and uses a chillingly corny pickup line to try to charm her. That’s just plain discomforting. And the off-putting nature of our protagonist only gets worse from there. He’s extremely loud and way too close. The director Stephen Daldry is an old pro (“The Hours,” “The Reader”), and the film is both visually realized and well put together. And yet he lets Hanks roam through this thing like a sleepwalking dinosaur, overdoing the subtlety (like when he’s supposed to shrug he awkwardly thrusts his shoulders up like Quasimodo humps). Max Von Sydow is usually an arresting presence and yet even he proves somewhat grating without even saying a word as a silent old man who communicates only by writing on cards. The screenplay by Eric Roth can dip into the overly precious at times. But none of these things are what ultimately suffocate us. It’s the kid. The answer was right there all along. I look up his bio: he came to prominence as a huge winner on Jeopardy. That seems about right. His cold, smug, smart-ass nature shines through the role. His acting is not good. You just want to throttle him after 15 minutes. It’s hard to believe that one kid could ruin an entire production, but this film is all about his world, and you won’t find yourself wanting to spend much time there.
g
krave
night day
Oli’s Italian Eatery
&
FOOD ★★★ DRINK ★★★ AMBIENCE ★★ SERVICE ★★1/2
VALUE ★★★
STEVEN KING
339 West Boylston St., West Boylston • 508-854-1500 • oliseatery.com
With patience, Oli’s leaves you satisfied Mallory Sterling
It was a few minutes past seven on a Friday night in Oli’s sparsely decorated waiting area. On weekend evenings, Oli’s takes reservations only for groups of six or more, so our party of four had anticipated a wait. But, after 50-minutes in huddle-formation, sidestepping to make room for steady streams of customers picking up to-go orders and servers yelling “Behind you!” as they carried trays through the crowd, I started to get cranky.
The awkward space in the reception area and the lack of drink service — we were all dying for a glass of wine, or even a Diet Coke — were almost as irritating as
repeatedly witnessing parties of two seated at four-tops. By eight, we were salivating and shaking, both from standing in high heels and from low blood sugar. Fortunately, by the time we were seated, the sweet man serenading dinner guests with his vocals and guitar talent had gone silent. We had been straining to hear each other from the noise level, so the four of us were relieved when we realized he had retired for the evening. Our server corrected my pronunciation of bruschetta ($6.99), which we devoured anyway. The dish comes with eight fanned slices of bread, topped with fresh tomatoes, basil, onions, buffalo mozzarella and is drizzled with a sweet balsamic reduction. The bread is toasted expertly to give an adequate crunch, yet is soft enough to not tear the roof of your mouth. I always order arancini when I can find it, and Oli’s has it — on the menu as “risotto balls.” In Oli’s arancini ($7.99), the prosciutto mixed within the rice grains is too scarce and the Asiago cheese is shredded rather than shaved, as described on the menu. Regardless, the four little orange-sized lightly fried risotto balls have a crispy outer layer and a decadently
r a B r e t s y O & t n a r u a t s e R Thanks for a great 2011! We look forward to serving you the same great food in 2012!
680 Main St., Holden • www.flipflopsMA.com • 508-829-3008 RESTAURANT HOURS: Tues-Thurs 4-10pm • Fri 11:30am-10pm • Sat 4-10pm • Closed Sun. & Mon. (Bar Open Later Tues.-Sat.)
moist middle, exactly as they should. With or without marinara sauce, they are an appetizer not to be overlooked. I love dining with friends who have a range of palates. When our main courses arrived, our table was a colorful showcase of poultry, veggies and seafood. Cami ordered the amaretto pollo, one of Oli’s three weekly dinner specials. Pumpkin ravioli is the base, topped with whole chicken breasts, sautéed spinach, red peppers and shiitake mushrooms in a beautiful golden-brown amaretto cream sauce. It is a rich and generous dish for $17.99. Tara ordered the full shrimp scampi ($14.99) with six large sautéed shrimp and diced tomatoes in a classic buttery lemon-garlic sauce over linguine. She was gorging on her shrimp so we didn’t hear much from her, but I gather she enjoyed. Meg started with the half portion mesclun salad - tossed with blue cheese, walnuts, pita croutons and homemade balsamic vinaigrette. It looked phenomenal for only $4.50. Her pizza, the small mushroom al fresco ($7.99), loaded with a variety of mushrooms including
{ dining}
shiitake and button, seasoned with dried oregano, basil, thyme, garlic and oil, could feed two. Because of its abundant fresh veggies, I wished I had ordered Meg’s salad/pizza combo rather than the eggplant parmesan. A heavy dish, the eggplant is thick on breading (described as “lightly breaded” on the menu), but the blend of the soft eggplant, mild mozzarella, sharp parmesan and sweet marinara sauce baked together was almost as good as my mom’s. Like most of Oli’s entrées, the eggplant parmesan came with a choice of angel hair, penne or linguine topped with marinara sauce; essentially two full meals for $13.99. Oli’s food left us satisfied, yet mildly frustrated service-wise. But, for only $33 per person, including wine and tip, we each had another meal fitting for a Saturday lunch. Unless I have a reservation, the next visit to Oli’s will be a night other than Friday or Saturday.
2012 Menu Launch On JAN 31 Dinner Reservations Suggested
Complementary Tastings From 6P-8P of Signature ‘EVO-Tini ‘ & Sierra Nevada Pale Ale
Coming Soon!
Gumbo Join Us For New Year’s Eve!
A New Orleans Kitchen & Oyster Bar Opening Mid-March 65 Water Street • Worcester
B re a k f a s t | L u n c h | D i n n e r New Wine Selection | Fresh Cocktails We’ve Stacked Even More Healthy Options Inside Our Stellar Menu! 234 Chandler Street . 508.459.4240 . www.evodining.com Find us on Facebook, YouTube & Twitter!
JANUARY 19, 2012 • WORCESTERMAG.COM
17
night day &
{ bites }
the signature dishes as specials from EVO’s 1,600 degree revolving stone-hearth oven. EVO gave us a sneak peek into some of the new menu dishes. One of the new Flats is sold! To our horror, the delectable highlighted entrées is the EVO Hanger—a organic pizza maker has sold the business flavorful and juicy, and locked the door on Worcester’s all-natural, grass-fed gourmet-pizza shop earlier this week. Hanger steak that is Rumor has it, the new owner will continue flame-grilled to your on with a similar menu with added items specification. It’s and the addition of delivery; we’ll keep served over yummy you posted. sautéed mushrooms, onions and peppers, For those picky Armsby Abbey was recently featured on and then glazed with eaters, don’t fret NECN’s TV Diner receiving its “very rare” an Asian sweet Thai any longer! Rosalina’s Platinum Plate Award. The video segment chili teriyaki sauce Kitchen now has at necn.com raved about the food, the and accompanied a “Design-Abeer and the atmosphere. All things we by whipped potatoes Dish” menu. On knew already! and sugar-snap Wednesday evenings, peas. The second you’ll get whatever Pulse Magazine reported that Mezcal entrée highlighted is signed a deal with the City of Worcester to you crave! You can the Salmon Filet—a choose from dozens relocate to Major Taylor Boulevard across hand-cut filet of of meats and fish, from the DCU Center; however, according salmon grilled sauces, and add-ins to Mezcal Manager Andrew Tuori, this and topped with a to create more than report is unfounded. “We won’t be leaving choice of an Asian 65,000 different food Shrewsbury Street any time soon,” Tuori sweet Thai chili combinations. How says. He adds that they had won the bid teriyaki glazed crust could you resist? on the location, but the city still needs or a fire-roasted Not to mention, to fix citation stuff before anything can Rosalina’s offers happen. Looks like Mezcal is here to stay, A calzone from Shrewsbury Street Bruschetta and aged balsamic reduction. gluten-free options. at least for a while. Bread and Pizza’s WooFood menu. Accompanied by 83 Hamilton St., sautéed sugarWorcester. For more Paging all Worcester food lovers! You snap peas and whipped potatoes. The info, visit rosalinaskitchen.com or call might have noticed some menu changes last sneak peak highlights the addition 508-926-8887. at a few restaurants. WooFood is an of Lobster Mac ’n’ Cheese. The ridged organization formed by three medical macaroni is tossed in a lobster-infused In celebration of EVO Dining’s third year in students and clinicians from Mass and developed with a primary goal to integrate business, it will be kicking off celebrations cheese sauce with a generous helping with the addition of fresh new menu items of fresh lobster meat (claws, knuckles healthy and delicious food into every and tails) then baked in the stone hearth as well as new wine selections. Fortunate restaurant in Worcester. So far, a few oven with an original crumb topping. diners last week had the chance to sample Worcester restaurants have completed If that isn’t convincing, the new menu items also include starters, salads, pizzas, sandwiches, entrées and desserts! EVO’s new menu will also show the collaboration with WooFood. One of 19 Temple Street • Worcester • 508-792-3700 • www.fiddlersgreen.com their main changes to the menu includes trying to get out WooFood’s advice to eat in moderation. So EVO will be offering half-portion entrées for half the price. The their certification while others are still working toward it. Look for changes from the Flying Rhino, WooDaddy Waffles, Shrewsbury Street Bread and Pizza, WooBerry Frozen Yogurt, Evo Dining, Nancy Chang and Coral Seafood. Let’s hope more restaurants start hopping on board. Learn more at woofood.org or find them on Facebook.
With Brittany Murphy
18
Worcester Hibernian Cultural Centre
Fiddlers’ Green Irish Pub New Pub Manager, New Chef, and a Whole New Menu... and Great Prices! Come in and check us out!
ENTERTAINMENT EN N FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY
Karaoke with Outrageous Greg The Brennan Brothers Seisiun 4 P.M. to 8 P.M.
new menu will launch on Jan. 31. Dinner reservations recommended. 232 Chandler St, Worcester. For more info, visit evodining.com or call 508-459-4240. New pub food! Sometime in February, The Clam Box will be opening its second Snows. Snows II Restaurant & Pub will be on West Boylston Street in Worcester. The first Snows is in Ware … more information to come.
TPK Cooking Demo Dinner! Join The People’s Kitchen for a night full of informational
fun. The experience includes a cocktailmixing demo and tasting, a wine-pairing education and tasting, and finally a chef’s cooking demo! Not only will you get to enjoy the cooking demo, but you’ll also feast on a multicourse dinner, take home some recipe cards, and get a certification of completion. Hurry because spots are limited! Wednesday, January 25; $100 per a person, includes tax and gratuity. 1 Exchange Place, Worcester. Call 508-4599090 or R.S.V.P. at nichehospitality.com Don’t miss Worcester’s Best Chef Competition! Cheer on your favorite local chef. Sunday, Jan. 29, 5-8 p.m.; $40 single/$60 V.I.P. 321 Main Street, Worcester. Start looking forward to the last Monday of each month. Bocado will kick off its signature wine dinner series featuring tapas creations from Chef Steve Champagne and regional Spanish wines presented by Mike Covino. Monday, Jan. 30, 7-10 p.m.; $45. 82 Winter Street, Worcester. Call 508-797-1011 or R.S.V.P. at nichehospitality.com. New manager, new chef, new menu. Check out Fiddler’s Green Community Pub & Function Hall and the new changes. 19 Temple St., Worcester. Visit fiddlersgreenworcester. com or call 508-795-0400. Have a BITES tip for us? Share it at editor@worcestermag.com.
India Cafe Authentic Indian Cuisine
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK Lunch Buffet 11:30am-3pm Dinner 3pm-10:30pm 84 Boston Turnpike, Rt. 9 Shrewsbury, MA 01545 508-754-2200 www.indiacafeonline.com White City East Shopping Center Next to IHOP
$5 Off $25 $10 Off $50 Excludes buffet, drinks & chef’s recommendations
Hall available for Private Functions & Weddings 508-795-0400 WORCESTERMAG.COM
• JANUARY 19, 2012
Catering for Weddings, Birthdays & Special Occasions • Function Room for 50 Take Out Service Available • Call for Reservations
night day &
Yama Zakura 369 West Main St., Northboro 508-393-4187 yamazakurafoods.com Yama Zakura will delight fans of locally produced, high-quality sushi in a creatively charged and casual environment. The friendly staff serves up a wide variety of sashimi, sushi and maki rolls, as well as familiar Polynesian appetizers, soups and salads, meat and vegetable combinations, teriyaki and Thai curry dishes. Open daily for lunch and dinner. Dino’s Ristorante 13 Lord St., Worcester 508-753-9978 dineatdinos.com Dino’s is still everything that you’ve always enjoyed: reasonably priced Northern Italian classics, served in a quaint, old “Little Italy” style. Though renovations have made it a bit more upscale (and uncovered an ancient treasure!), it’s still home for Worcester’s families and lovers. Fugakyu Café 621 Boston Post Road, Sudbury 978-443-1998 Look for the two red lanterns that hang outside Fugakyu Café. Inside is a well-stocked bar, exclusive sushi bar - about six seats and an extensive menu to satisfy the Japanese cuisine enthusiast as well as the novice. Even the purist should be able to overlook the nouveau selections. There is no shortage of sushi, fried “kitchen” appetizers, soups and entrées from simple katsu, teriyaki and tempura to exotic eel and live lobster sashimi. The price range is as wide as the delectable choices. Spend as little or as much as you like and still leave satisfied. The Red Lantern 235 Shrewsbury St., Worcester 508-795-0500 theredlantern.com The Red Lantern offers the staples that have made Polynesian restaurants an integral part of the American scene for so long. Also offered are enticing, less-common dishes sure to revive the appetite of area diners. Fresh, varied dishes make The Red Lantern truly “Polynesian”; and served in their clean, open facility
Come Discover...
25
downtown, Worcester will find it convenient and pleasing. Open seven days to midnight; Monday through Saturday lunch buffet; Sunday dinner buffet, 5-8. The Webster House Restaurant 1 Webster St., Worcester 508-757-7208 websterhouseweb.com Patrons are treated like family at The Webster House. The bountiful menu includes beef, chicken, seafood, vegetarian and Greek specialties, with a home-cooked taste straight from your Yia-yia’s kitchen. A number of international and domestic wines are flagged by which meals they complement best. Each month, The Webster House features selections from a different international cuisine. Be sure to leave room for a slice of homemade pie or baklava cheesecake. Val’s Restaurant & Lounge 75 Reservoir Road, Holden 508-829-0900 Val’s Restaurant and Pizza Palace is the perfect stop for families looking for a wide variety of familiar seafood, beef, chicken and pasta entrees, plus pizza and burgers, at budget-friendly prices. The service can’t be beat, and you might be surprised by the recipes and presentation. Porto Bello 156 Shrewsbury St., Worcester 508-753-9865 For more than a decade, Shrewsbury Street’s Porto Bello has served up classic Italian fare in an uncontrived, paper-napkin style. Evocative of North End Boston, it’s an atmosphere without too much preciousness. Four pages of menu offerings rarely stray from the rule on Italian cuisine. Entrée highlights include various seafood and meats with pesto, mascarpone, scampi and cream sauces; four raviolis (Maine lobster, lemon basil, roasted eggplant, and Porto Bello mushroom); and the classic marinara with sausage and/or meatballs, and lasagna.
El Basha 2 Connector Road, Westboro 508-366-2455 elbasharestaurant.com Lovers of El Basha’s two Worcester locations, especially those from Metro West, will be pleased with their new Westboro location. Though not as arabesquely elegant as Park Avenue, the Westboro branch offers the same delicious fare in a clean facility. Middle Eastern specialties are the calling card: shawarma, kebabs, salads, gape leaves, beef, chicken, quail, lamb and seafood. BYOB.
Dine Beside Our Two Crackling Fireplaces
As seen on...
“Your Ahi Tuna is always sensational”
25 Grafton Common, Grafton www.thegraftoninn.com
Arturo’s Ristorante 54 Main St., Westboro 508-366-1881 arturosristorante.com Arturo’s is everything that made it a hit in Worcester before the move to MetroWest: Colorful Italian food and brick-oven pizza. Lots of wine choices, Mediterranean classics, and seating for about 200. Try the antipasto misto for a sampling of all Arturo’s antipasto offerings.
Great Food & Great Music
PEOPLE ARE STILL TALKING!
New England’s Nightly News Magazine Program
church standing at the fork of Greenwood Street and Blackstone River Road and tucked behind Route 146, in the middle of growing Quinsigamond Village. The moderately priced, mostly Mediterranean menu includes some of the best hummus in Worcester, staples like chicken Parmesan and fish & chips and gourmet pizza, with such entertaining names as Texan (steak, mushroom and onion) and the Golden Greek (locanico sausage and peppers). A respectable wine list and homemade desserts top off a tasty dinner out.
The Belfry Restaurant 59 Blackstone River Road, Worcester 508-751-5040 The Belfry Restaurant is definitely worth a visit, a renovated
On The Common Restaurant CHRONICLE
{ recommended}
“Best Ruben Ever!” - Earl Jackson, Newburyport, MA
- Dr. Bob, Grafton, MA
NOW YOU TRY US!
Dana Lewis on Guitar Every Thursday
508-839-5931 Tu-Th 11:30-9 Fri & Sat 11:30-10 Sundays noon-8 Closed on Mondays •
•
JANUARY 19, 2012 • WORCESTERMAG.COM
19
Wine Barefoot 1.5L all varietals .............................................................................................................................................................................................. $8.44 Cavit 1.5L all varietals .......................................................................................................................................................................................................... $9.94 Mischief Maker Chardonnay, Sauv Blanc, Merlot and Cabernet Sauv. 750ml Regularly $8.99 ................................................$5.99 Gazela 750ml ....................................................................................................................................................................................................................... $4.44 Cupcake 750ml all varietals ......................................................................................................................................................................................... $6.94 7 Deadly Zin 750ml ...................................................................................................................................................$10.94 Sweet Treats from California Bella Moscato or Red Sugar 750ml ............................................................................................... $9.99 Moore Woode 750ml Pinot Noir Regularly $19.99......................................................................................................................................... $17.99 Moore Woode 750ml Chardonnay Regularly $16.99 .................................................................................................................................. $14.99 Kathryn Kennedy Lateral 750ml ................................................................................................................................................................. $35.99 Hollywood & Vines Short Ends Cabernet Sauv 750ml ................................................................................................................. $39.99 Ch Haut Bages Liberal, 2009 Pauillac ........................................................................................................................................................ $69.99 Mollydooker Carnival of Love Shiraz ....................................................................................................................... $79.99
Spirits
EVERYDAY LOW SPIRIT PRICES
Pinnacle Vodka 80 proof, all ďŹ&#x201A;avors, 750ml ...................................................................................................... $10.99 Jagermeister 750ml ................................................................................................................................................... $17.99 Riazul Anejo Tequila 750ml 94 pts ........................................................................................................................$42.99 Riazul Reposado 750ml 91pts ................................................................................................................................. $37.99 Riazul Silver 750ml 91pts .......................................................................................................................................... $34.99 Fabrizia Limmoncello 750ml Locally made .................................................................................................... $16.99 Bowmore Legend ...................................................................................................................................................$24.99 Bowmore 12 yr Single Malt .................................................................................................................................$39.99 Auchentoshan Classic Single Malt Scotch .................................................................................................. $29.99 Glen Garioch Founder Reserve Single Malt .............................................................................................. $34.99 Springbank 10 yr Campbeltown Single Malt ........................................................................................... $46.99 Glendronach 12 yr Single Malt .................................................................................................................. $39.99
Beer Miller Lite and Coors Light 30 pk, 12oz cans............................................................................................................................$18.99 Sam Adams 12 pk 12oz btl, all types ..................................................................................................................................................... $11.99
The Shoppes at Blackstone Valley
Follow us on...
Exit 10A off the Mass Turnpike | 70 Worcester Providence Turnpike | Millbury, MA 01527
Prices good through February 5, 2012 All beer prices are plus deposit. Not responsible for typographical errors. Prices subject to change without notice. No rain checks. WineNation reserves the right to limit quantities. WineNation is a registered trademark. All rights reserved. Please drink responsibly.
20
WORCESTERMAG.COM
â&#x20AC;˘ JANUARY 19, 2012
508-917-0400 Store Hours: Mon. - Thursday. 10am - 9pm | Friday - Sat 10am - 10pm | Sunday Noon - 6pm
www.WineNation.com
Spirits now available
Everyday Low Prices.
Great Selection.
Unmatched Service. JANUARY 19, 2012 â&#x20AC;˘ WORCESTERMAG.COM
21
night day &
{ opt }
Take a peek at the week ahead! Want to see your listing here? Visit our website at worcestermag.com, click on night&day, then select Calendar and submit your event. Really want to catch our attention? Add to our online database and pester our editor at editor@worcestermag.com.
>Thursday 19
During the Worcester Art Museum’s Third Thursday After Hours series, don’t miss the music of The Linda Dagnello Quartet plus a tour of the In Search of Julien Hudson exhibition. Always great company, cash bar. $14, free for museum members; 5:30-8 p.m. Worcester Art Museum, The Museum Cafe, 55 Salisbury St. 508-799-4406, worcesterart.org.
Nick’s Bar and Restaurant will host Loves It featuring Jenny Parrot from Shotgun Party tonight from 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Nick’s Bar and Restaurant, 124 Millbury St. 508-753-4030. Pure brutal heavy metal awaits you at Ralph’s Chadwick Square Diner with 18 Wheels of Justice, Impressions in Flesh, Kali Ma and Mucklers Circle. 9 p.m.-2 a.m., 148 Grove St. 508-753-9543.
A reading and book signing with Jim Fay is free tonight from 6:30-7:30 p.m. at the Jacob Edwards Library, Reading Room, 236 Main St., Southbridge. 508-764-5426.
weekly
Live- Elmo’s Super Heroes Friday, January 20 - Sunday, January 22. When Super Grover loses his superness, Sesame Street needs a hero. Never fear, Elmo and his team of Healthy Heroes are here. Teaching lessons of healthy habits through song and dance, Elmo, Abby Cadabby and your favorite Sesame Street friends will explore exercise, nutrition, sleep/energy and hygiene - all in a quest to put the “super” back in Super Grover. Full price tickets are $14, $22, $32, $42 and limited “Sunny Seats” available
COURTESY OF THE FITCHBURG ART MUSEUM
Or if you’re looking for something with a bit more depth and breadth of sound, try Metal Thursday: MTCLI at Ralph’s Chadwick Square Diner with Suicide Dream, Recently Vacated Graves, Dead Languages, and Western Syndrome. 9 p.m.-2 a.m. 148 Grove St. 508-753-9543.
“The Lyres” return to Ralph’s with The Evil Streaks, Tsunami of Sound, and Classic Ruins. 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Ralph’s Chadwick Square Diner, 148 Grove St. 508-753-9543.
>Friday 20
Dave Dick & Michael Addis: Blues, Roots and Americana are two talented, exciting performers who will bring their unique collaboration to The Blueplate Lounge for a memorable night of roots and Americana music. $5; 8 p.m.midnight. 661 Main St., Holden. 508-829-4566.
Mason Tyler Trio can be heard at Verona Grille tonight from 8-11 p.m., 81 Clinton St., Shrewsbury. 508-853-9091.
The Lucky Dog Music Hall will feature Mike Hirsch and The Letters to the Editor with Gunther’s God and White Mullet tonight. $6; 8 p.m.-2 a.m. Lucky Dog Music Hall, 89 Green St. 508-363-1888, luckydogmusic.com.
Bitmap - Electro/House/Top40 RMX will offer a night of Electro, House, and top 40 remixes with Rob Wampum from Club 5 on Hits943 and the Flying Eye with an amazing multimedia light show! $5; 9 p.m.-1:30 a.m. The Raven, 258 Pleasant St. 508-3048133 or find them on Facebook.
22
Catch Andy Cummings at the Coppertop Lounge/ Wachusett Mountain Ski Area. No cover; 3-5 p.m. 499 Mountain Rd., Princeton. 978-464-2300, wachusett.com. Are owls wise? How do they fly so silently? Can they really turn their heads all the way around? Find out at Owl Prowl, an evening program for families. Play owl games and learn some fun facts. We’ll practice owl calls inside then search the sanctuary for these magnificent creatures of the night. Bring a flashlight and dress warmly (we’ll be outdoors for about an hour. Ages 5 and older. $8 adults, $6 for children; $2 discount for Mass Audubon members; maximum fee per family is $28, $20 for members; 6:30-8:30 p.m. Mass Audubon: Broad Meadow Brook Conservation Center and Wildlife Sanctuary, 414 Massasoit Ave. 508-753-6087.
If you looking for something smooth tonight, try Nick’s Bar and Restaurant and discover Crooners!, a spotlight of Worcester’s finest male vocalists. No cover; 9 p.m.-2 a.m., 124 Millbury St. 508-753-4030.
Wisecracks Comedy Club is Worcester County’s newest and hottest comedy club, currently in Halligan’s Sports Bar & More on the third Friday of every month. Go to the website to see who will be making you laugh this Thursday. $15; 8:30-10:30 p.m. Halligan’s Sports Bar and More, 889 Southbridge St., Auburn. 508-832-6793, wisecrackscomedyclub.com.
quickly enhance your images (cropping, resizing, color balance) as well as preparing your images for web, email, and printing. Bring your camera and your laptop if you have one, for hands-on help. $40, $35 for members; 12:30-3:30 p.m. Tower Hill Botanic Garden, 11 French Drive, Boylston. 508-869-6111.
Traditional Irish music with the The Tom Lanigan Band from 9:30 p.m.-1:30 a.m. at the The Grey Hound Pub, 11 Kelley Square. 508-754-6100, tomlanigan.com. Come experience a nice relaxing evening of Rage Against the Machine, with Worcester’s own Gorilla Radio. Opening up this fine evening with be a smattering of ’90s crap with Grungeasaurus. $5; 10 p.m.-1:30 a.m. Beatnik’s, 433 Park Ave. 508-926-8877. Treat the family this weekend and take them to Sesame Street
for $67. 7-8:30 p.m. Hanover Theatre for the Performing Arts, 2 Southbridge St. 877-571-7469, thehanovertheatre.org.
>Saturday 21
If you own a digital camera and a computer, but are challenged by the basic activities of transferring, storing and manipulating images, then Digital Workflow for Beginner Photographers is for you. Learn to connect your camera to the computer, transfer picture files, format your digital media card, organize, rotate and name your images, save your files in different formats, and archive your images. The instructors will also cover the basics on how to
Women’s Personal Safety (Basic Self Defense) class starts today and runs through February 11 from 10 a.m. - noon. This message is for you, friend, co-worker, colleague, daughter, sister: We have the right to live our lives without fear of assaultabuse. We need to say stop to rape, assault, abuse and domestic violence! You will learn the basic of fighting back and how to outsmart an attacker. Important aspects of personal safety, awareness to avoid being attacked. Practice skills on a live person in a padded suit. This is a hands-on class. $72 for fitness-plan members, $85 for YWCA members, $103 for nonmembers; ages 12 years and older. YWCA of Central Massachusetts gym, 1 Salem Square. Call 508-791-3181 or visit ywcacentralmass.org.
>Sunday 22
On view today through March 18 at the Fitchburg Art Museum are two new exhibits. First, Treasures from the Arthur M. Sackler Foundation, NYC, featuring Central, East and South Asian Ceramics 1200 BC–16th century AD. Included in the exhibition are animal-form vessels from Iron-Age
OPEN EVERY SUNDAY YEAR ROUND • 8AM - 4PM • RAIN OR SHINE Door Prizes • Hidden Treasures • Fun 1340 Lunenburg Rd, (Rte 70) • Lancaster, MA 01523 (across from Kimball Farms) 978-534-4700 • www.thelancastermarketplace.com
1 FREE ADMISSION
with one paid admission with this ad WORCESTERMAG.COM
• JANUARY 19, 2012
GRANITE COUNTERTOPS & QUARTZ! • Over 250 colors to choose from (all slabs on site)
Backsplash, Flooring, Glass & Mosaic Tiles Available
¼ Mile East of Home Depot 620 Boston Turnpike (Rt. 9), Shrewsbury Big Blue Building
508-842-9800
Fax 508-842-9808 Mon. - Fri. 9-5, Sat. 9-4, Thurs. nights by appointment only
220 Colors On Sale! Exotic Marble, Granite & Soapstones Available.
picks
&
{ opt }
$15 for members at the door, $20 for nonmembers; 5-7 p.m. Lamoureux Ford, 366 East Main St., Route 9, East Brookfield. 508-347-2761, cmschamber.ning.com.
>Wednesday 25
During this month’s Access Hanover Lyceum Series you can enjoy a multimedia tour of Worcester’s movie palaces during the heyday of the palace theater phenomenon of the last century. Explore Worcester›s movie-theatre history, architecture and design - all the fun of a matinee at the movies; conducted by Preservation Worcester docent Marilyn Polito. The Access Hanover Lyceum Series, now in its third year, offers monthly opportunities to gain insight on different facets of The Hanover Theatre and the fascinating world of the performing arts. Join us for nine excellent topics that cover a wide range of interests and tastes. The series aims to enlighten, entertain and expand your knowledge in a relaxed social setting. $10; free for members and their guests; 5:30-7 p.m. Hanover Theatre for the Performing Arts, 2 Southbridge St. 877-571-7469, visit thehanovertheatre.org.
Sustainable Worcester and Worcester Transition, along with Worcester State University’s Communication Dept., welcome you to a meeting on Sustainability and Green Issues in the Blue Lounge of WSU’s Student Center, 486 Chandler Street at 2p.m. This inaugural kick off meeting will serve to promote a major regional sustainable event in the late spring of 2012. Come be a part of the early planning! Also on the docket is a presentation by Sarah Byrnes of the Instutite of Policy Studies on Resilience circles and more and public recognition of two outstanding individuals who have promoted and encouraged green living in the city. For more info call 508-769-5634.
Worcester Local First is a non-profit network of local independent businesses. Tonight’s Worcester Local First Networking Event features special guest speaker Mayor Joseph Petty. Please RSVP by emailing worcesterlocalfirst@yahoo.com or calling 774314-9495. Their mission is to strengthen the local economy and enhance the vibrancy of our community by connecting consumers and local independent businesses. 5:30-7:30 p.m. Beechwood Hotel, 363 Plantation St. 774-314-9495.
Within A Lifetime CD release at The Raven will also feature Atlas, Gone Astray, Fermata, Fake Out, A Cold Night For Alligators, Still Silent and I Came I Saw I Conquered. The Raven, 258 Pleasant St. 508-304-8133 or find them on Facebook.
>Thursday 26
Art’s Diner, 541 West Boylston St. will host a benefit show for the John Davies Children’s Fund from 7 p.m.-2 a.m., featuring Big Jon Short, James Keys, Rick Booth, Willie “T-bone” Smith, Jonathan Lacouture and others. Any size donation will gladly be accepted. Banana Joes will provide food to be prepared by Parky’s BBQ. ZaZa Ink of West Boylston has organized an auction with some hot items, plus donations are welcome for the John Davies Children’s Fund.
The return of Sip-n-Sketch to Nick’s Bar and Restaurant from 2 p.m.-5 p.m., plus Andy Cummings 9 p.m. till close. Sip, create, listen, be inspired. No cover; 2 p.m.-2 a.m., 124 Millbury St. 508-753-4030. Join The Grey Hound Pub for a Burns Supper, a tribute to the Bard of Scotland, Robbie Burns. Scottish food and fare, whisky and music. 3-7 p.m. The Grey Hound Pub, 11 Kelley Square. 508-754-6100.
Opening Reception of The Boston Printmakers Show at The Gallery at Worcester State University is tonight. Printmakers frequently hear questions such as “How are prints made?” “Please explain this technique,” or “How many steps does that involve?” This show aims to answer these questions as well as to highlight the rich talent of their membership. Each print is accompanied by a recipe card sharing its inspiration and process. More than 60 prints in all variety of print media will be on display through Feb. 23. The opening reception is free and open to the
>Tuesday 24
January Fun at Five is a networking event where you can relax and mingle with other local business people, enjoy delicious food, a cash bar, take a chance to win great prizes and, of course, have some fun! $10 for members who pre-register,
public. Gallery hours are Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday from 1-4 p.m. (free and open to the public) or by appointment. Contact Catherine Wilcox-Titus at cwilcoxtitus@worcester.edu for more information. Free; 5-7 p.m. Worcester State University: Ghosh Center for Science and Technology, First Floor, 486 Chandler St.
Flora in Winter: 10th Anniversary Spring arrives early at the Worcester Art Museum for the 10th Anniversary of Flora in Winter, the premier floral-design event of the year. Skilled arrangers
$
40SAVINGS = $99
99
$
$15999 –
50 SAVINGS = $109
99
$
$24999 –
20 SAVINGS = $229
L.B. Wheaton
Worcester needs to set bigger goals. Submitted by Rodney Witkos.
beech tree
books! records!
99
thru January 28, 2012
d
olla
s · classic · oddball · e record r ob a r · rds htreebooksandrecords.c scure c e o e b c · e om r re · trad
l · sel buy
fin
eu
s records CD book s se d
bebop
twee pop lo-Þ TAS list
cosmic disco
ACID ROCK boogaloo
crust
jubilee JU-JU
doom
delta freakout
torch
twang
AOR glam PSYCH garage
Camara & Supplies • Top Quality Processing Mon-Wed: 10am-6pm • Thurs-Fri. 10am-8pm • Sat: 10am-5pm • Sun. 12pm-4pm 259 Park Ave. Worcester • 508-791-3308 • lbwheaton.com
Worcester Art Museum, 55 Salisbury St. 508-799-4406. Blue Hills Brewery invites all craft beer enthusiasts to join them at O’Connors Restaurant & Bar in Worcester from 6-9p.m. to celebrate the brewery’s 3rd anniversary! They’ll have three different BHB beers on tap, plus some special menu options just for this evening. Come meet the BHB crew, have some pints, and maybe even win some BHB swag. See you and your friends there! 6-9 p.m. O’Connors Restaurant & Bar, 1160 W Boylston St. Call 781-821-2337 or visit facebook.com/BlueHillsBrewery.
Send your Worcester related smartphone picture and description to editor@worcestermag.com with the subject Weekly Pics to be included in this segment. Like now.
POWERSHOT SPECIAL INSTANT REBATE
$13999 –
from across New England create clever, provocative interpretations of works from the museum›s collection--it›s a feast for the eyes and spirit in the middle of winter! Four days of floral-inspired family fun, festivities, lectures, music, demonstrations, and so much more, featuring extended gallery, cafe and shop hours. Varying prices.
Illuminations: Artist Talk - Artists, Carrie Crane, Lisa Barthelson, Rose LeBeau, and Nina Fletcher will discuss their work and process that led to the exhibition Illuminations. Free and open to the public; 5:30-8 p.m. Worcester Center for Crafts, 25 Sagamore Road. 508-753-8183, worcestercraftcenter.org.
weekly pic
Iran, and bowls, jars and figures from China, Korea and Thailand. For more than 5,000 years, the ceramics of ancient Iran and South Asia produced beautiful, technically sophisticated, and often amusing works of art. This special exhibition establishes the great ceramic tradition of the ancient world. Plus Pioneers in American 20th Century Photography, where a rare Alfred Steiglitz image, “The Steerage” (1907), is the centerpiece of this exhibition featuring early 20th-century American photography. This exhibition also includes works by Berenice Abbott, Arthur Rothstein, Walker Evans, Dorothea Lange and Ben Shahn, including photographs, which Rothstein printed from Farm Security Administration negatives. Both exhibits run through March 18, 2012. Free for members; $7 for adults, $5 for seniors and students (13+). 978-345-4207, www.fitchburgartmusuem.org.
night day
tribal madrigal JUMP ska
9 Maple St. (rt 140) West Boylston · 508.335.4938
hillbilly
crunk SCREAMO quadrille
JANUARY 19, 2012 • WORCESTERMAG.COM
23
24
who’s the best? { news | arts | dining | nightlife
vote on your favorite local businesses in Worcester and we will find out WHO IS THE BEST OF THE BEST!
coming soon... WORCESTERMAG.COM
• JANUARY 19, 2012
Upload your listings at worcestermag.com. Click the Night & Day toolbar, then choose Calendar to place your event listing in both our print and online weekly calendar.
music
>Thursday 19 Karaoke 7 Nights a week. cafe neo bar and grille, 97 Millbury St. 508-615-7311. Linda Dagnello Quartet. 5:30-8 p.m. Worcester Art Museum, 55 Salisbury St. 508-799-4406. Third Thursday After Hours featuring the music of The Linda Dagnello Quartet and a tour of In Search of Julien Hudson. Enjoy art and music during Third Thursday’s AFTER HOURS. This January, listen to the jazz stylings of local favorite The Linda Dagnello Quartet, and a tour through the Julien Hudson exhibition. Always great company, cash bar. Free for Members; $14 nonmembers. 5:30-8 p.m. Worcester Art Museum, The Museum Cafe, 55 Salisbury St. 508-799-4406. Open Mic Night with Ed Sheridan. A great sounding PA and a supportive audience of players and listeners makes this a wonderfully rewarding and informal way to share your music and meet new musical friends. 7-11 p.m. Blueplate Lounge, 661 Main St., Holden. 508-829-4566. Irish Music Session. Each week, a traditional Irish music session is held at Mulligan’s Taverne. The public are welcome to join in music, song, and ca.m.araderie. No cover charge, all ages and talent levels welcome. Listeners welcome, too! No Charge. 7:30-10 p.m. Mulligans Taverne-on-theGreen, 121 West Main St., Westborough. 508-344-4932 or westboroughsession.com. Bruce Jacques. No cover. 8-10 p.m. Coppertop Lounge/ Wachusett Mountain Ski Area, 499 Mountain Road, Princeton. 978-464-2300 or wachusett.com. Flock of A-Holes, the ultimate 80’s tribute band with guests Polluted Remains and more. $5. 8 p.m.2 a.m. Lucky Dog Music Hall, 89 Green St. 508-363-1888 or facebook.com. Karaoke with Mike Rossi. Free. 8-11 p.m. Greendale’s Pub, 404 W Boylston St. 508-853-1350. Two Hour Mic Check. 8-10 p.m. Beatnik’s, 433 Park Ave. 508-926-8877. Wibble - Live & Acoustified. Playing your favorite classic rock hits! Some bluegrass, little bit of country & a lot of rock n’ roll! Free :). 8-11 p.m. Black & White Grille & Pizzeria, 206 North Spencer Road, Spencer. 508-885-5018 or youtube.com/ wibblemusic. Dana Lewis Live! Acoustic Classic Rock Hits of the 50’s to the 80’s From the Animals to Zevon “The sound track of your youth” Great Food, Full Bar, Lottery & Me! No Cover. Come on out! 8:30-10:30 p.m. Grafton Inn, The 25 Grafton Cmn, Grafton. 508-839-5931 or myspace.com/danalewismusic. All Request Thirsty Thursday with CJ/DJ. Come on down and dance to the hottest music around.No cover. 9 p.m.-2 a.m. days end Tavern, The Downstairs, 287 Main St., Oxford. 508-868-7382 or soundzlikefun.com. Cara Brindisi. 9 p.m.-midnight Vincent’s Bar, 49 Suffolk St. 508-752-9439. Crooners!, A spotlight of Worcester’s finest male vocalists. No Cover. 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Nick’s Bar and Restaurant, 124 Millbury St. 508-753-4030. Karaoke 7 Nights a week. 9-1:45 p.m. cafe neo bar and grille, 97 Millbury St. 508-615-7311. Metal Thursday: MTCLI: Suicide Dream, Recently Vacated Graves, Dead Languages, Western Syndrome!. 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Ralph’s Chadwick Square Diner, 148 Grove St. 508-753-9543. Jay Graham Live. 9:30 p.m.-1:30 a.m. Funky Murphy’s Bar & Grill, 305 Shrewsbury St. 508-753-2995. Sean Fullerton: Acoustic Blues, Rock, Fingerstyle Guitar & Harmonica. Sean Fullerton has been a successful professional musician, singer-songwriter, recording engineer and producer since 1995. Sean’s live shows are fun, exciting and audience participation is always encouraged. Dinner, Drinks, Music & Fun. 9:30 p.m.-12:30 a.m. Cigar Masters, 1
Exchange Place. 508-459-9035 or seanfullertonmusic.net. Holy Cross Night. Holy Cross takes over the Hound. Draft beer specials every week. 10 p.m.-1:45 a.m. The Grey Hound Pub, 11 Kelley Square. 508-754-6100.
>Friday 20
Karaoke 7 Nights a week. cafe neo bar and grille, 97 Millbury St. 508-615-7311. Scott Marshall & Arizona Doug. Free admission. 7:30-10:30 a.m. Verona Grille, 81 Clinton St., Shrewsbury. 508-853-9091. New Bay Colony - The Northboro JJ’s Not The Sutton JJ’s. Rock and Roll never forgets, but we do. 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. JJ’s Sports Bar and Grill, 380 Southwest Cutoff, Northborough. 508-842-8420. newbaycolony.com Dana Lewis LIVE!. Acoustic Classic Rock Hits Every Friday. Music of the 50’s to the 80’s from the Animals to Zevon. “The sound track of your youth” Fa.m.ily dining, Home made desserts, Full Bar, Lottery & Me! No Cover. Check it out! Free. 5:30-8:30 p.m. Webster House Restaurant, 1 Webster St. 508757-7208 or myspace.com/danalewismusic. Live music at the 1790 Tavern. Live music most Friday nights in the tavern, blues, jazz, contemporary, call for more information. Free. 6:30-10 p.m. 1790 Restaurant & Tavern, Tavern room, 206 Turnpike Road, Westborough. 508-366-1707. The Core / Chris Jensen - Duo Band night. The Core - Acoustic duo playing intricately arranged Christ centered music Chris Jensen - Chris is a singer/song writer from Clinton who has played at many of our open mic nights. It is obvious that his life is all about receiving what the Lord puts on his heart and sharing it through his music. Free. 7-10 p.m. Mill Church Cafe, 45 River St., Millbury. 508-864-5658. The Recliners. Band Free. 7-11 p.m. Greendale’s Pub, 404 W Boylston St. 508-853-1350. A Ton of Blues. The Central MA based blues band, A Ton of Blues, recently won the 2011 Boston Blues Challenge. A Ton of Blues will now travel to Memphis to compete in the Blues Foundation’s International Blues Challenge, which takes place Jan 31 - Feb 4, 2012. This concert will help raise the money to pay all the necessary expenses of traveling and living in Memphis for the 5-day competition. A Ton of Blues is: Mike Kelly, vocals & harmonica; Scott Leblanc, guitars; Al Clark, drums; and Jeff Lorenzen, bass. Look for their new CD coming out after the first of the year, followed by and East Coast tour in the Spring and a European tour in late Summer. $20. 8-11 p.m. Bull Run Restaurant, Sawtelle Room, 215 Great Road, Shirley. 978-425-4311 or tickets.bullrunrestaurant.com. Dave Dick & Michael Addis: Blues, Roots and Americanaa. Two talented, exciting performers bring their unique collaboration to The Blueplate for a memorable night of roots and Americana music. $5. 8 p.m.-midnight Blueplate Lounge, 661 Main St., Holden. 508-829-4566. Mike Hirschand the Letters to the Editor With Gunther’s God and White Mullet. $6. 8 p.m.-2 a.m. Lucky Dog Music Hall, 89 Green St. 508-363-1888 or luckydogmusic.com. New Orleans Jazz Rhythm & Blues with Henri Smith & the Workingman’s Band. No cover. 8-11 p.m. Concord’s Colonial Inn, 48 Monument Square, Concord. 978369-2373. The Invaders. The Invaders are a fun rock cover band that will have you dancing all night. Come down and have a great time with us! 8:30 p.m.-12:30 a.m. Squire Whites Pub & Restaurant, 347 Greenwood St. 508-752-7544. Bitmap - Electro/House/Top40 RMX. A night of Electro, House, and Top 40 Remixes with Rob Wa.m.pum from Club 5 on Hits943 and the Flying Eye with an a.m.azing multimedia light show! $5 Cover. 9 p.m.-1:30 a.m. The Raven, 258 Pleasant St. 508-304-8133 or facebook.com. DJ. Classic rock to the Blues. Large dance floor to shake it. Come see this Worcester classic. Full bar reasonably priced. Ice cold beer. Friendly service. Keno Free. 9 p.m.-2 a.m. 3-G’s Sports Bar, The Music Room, 152 Millbury St. 508-754-3516.
Friday Frenzy with Blurry Nights & DJ Soup - DJ B-Lo. Friday Night Frenzy at Fusion features the best sound and lights in Central Mass with DJ Soup & DJ B-Lo spinning your favorite Dance, Hip Hop And Top 40 Tracks. Lounge Opens At 9:00 p.m. Dance Club Opens At 10:30 p.m. Coat room available with attendant. 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Fusion, 109 Water St. 508-756-2100. Jon Lacouture. Free. 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Art’s Diner, West Boylston St. 352-895-8355. Karaoke 7 Nights a week. 9-1:45 p.m. cafe neo bar and grille, 97 Millbury St. 508-615-7311. Ladies Night - Top 40 Dance Party. Our Top 40 Ladies Night Dance Party returns to Speakers. Ladies (and Gent’s) come in and dance the night away with the hottest DJ in the MetroWest Area DJ Norm! Free. 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Speakers Night Club, 19 Weed St., Marlborough. 508-480-8222 or speakersnightclub.net. Loves It, featuring Jenny Parrot from Shotgun Party. 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Nick’s Bar and Restaurant, 124 Millbury St. 508-753-4030. Ned Lucas Band. Free. 9 p.m.-12:30 a.m. Drea.m.ers Bar & Grille, 815 Worcester Road, Barre. 978-355-9095. New Bay Colony. JJ’s welcomes New Bay Colony. Playing all the Classic Rock Hits! Check them out at facebook.com. 9 p.m.-12:30 a.m. JJ’s Sports Bar and Grill, 380 Southwest Cutoff, Northborough. 508-842-8420. Pete the Polak, DJ. 9 p.m.-2 a.m. 3-G’s Sports Bar, 152 Millbury St. 508-754-3516. Pure Brutal Heavy Metal w/ 18 Wheels of Justice, Impressions in Flesh, Kali Ma, and Mucklers Circle. 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Ralph’s Chadwick Square Diner, 148 Grove St. 508-753-9543. Pajama Jam with Joe’s Equipment. 9:30 p.m.-1 a.m. Jillian’s - Worcester, 315 Grove St. 508-793-0900. The Tom Lanigan Band. Traditional Irish music with the Tom Lanigan Band. 9:30 p.m.-1:30 a.m. The Grey Hound Pub, 11 Kelley Square. 508-754-6100 or tomlanigan.com. Gorilla Radio. 10 p.m.-1:30 a.m. Beatnik’s, 433 Park Ave. 508-926-8877. Gorilla Radio (Rage Against The Machine Tribute). A nice relaxing evening of Rage Against the Machine, with Worcester’s own Gorilla Radio. Opening up this fine evening with be a smattering of 90’s crap with Grungeasaurus! $5.10-
night day &
{ listings}
1:30 p.m. Beatnik’s, 433 Park Ave. 508-926-8877. Joe D’Angelo trio. A program based largely on the original compositions of Mr D’Angelo, with Bob Simonelli on bass and George Dellomo on drums Free/ donations. 10 p.m.-2 a.m. Sahara Cafe & Restaurant, 143 Highland St. 508-798-2181.
>Saturday 21
Chris Reddy - Narragansett Promo. Join us for a performance by the premier rock guitarist in Worcester County, Chris Reddy. Narragansett Brewing Company will be here promoting their line of beers, and giving away prizes. No cover. The Grey Hound Pub, 11 Kelley Square. 508-754-6100. Karaoke 7 Nights a week. cafe neo bar and grille, 97 Millbury St. 508-615-7311. With Daggers Drawn, Dead by Wednesday, Manifest, The Craving, The Circadian Rhythm, Slacker Kingz, Political Animals, Rodan, Heris E, Deadset, Conflict of Interest. The Raven, 258 Pleasant St. 508-304-8133 or facebook.com. Dale LePage does the Wong with Bobby Gadoury and Thomas Spears. Dale LePage with Bobby Gadoury and Thomas Spears 7-10 p.m. Wong Dynasty, Holden, MA, 176 Reservior Road (Route31), Holden. 508-829-2188 or dalelepage.com. Pamela Hines Trio. Pa.m.ela Hines-piano Sean Farias-bass Miki Matsuki-drums 12. 7-8:30 p.m. Acton Jazz Cafe, 452 Great Road, Acton. 978-263-6161. Jesse Fontaine “Trio”. Fontaine and his group of musicians break down generational barriers through the integration of popular standards, jazz, and rock ballads. 7:30-11 p.m. Guiseppe’s Bar & Grille, 35 Solomon Pond Road, Northborough. 508-393-4405 or jessefontaine.net. Sean Fullerton: Acoustic Blues, Rock, Fingerstyle Guitar & Harmonica. Sean Fullerton has been a successful professional musician, singer-songwriter, recording engineer and producer since 1995. Sean’s live shows are fun, exciting and audience participation is always encouraged. Dinner, Drinks, Music & Fun. 7:30-10:30 p.m. Tavern on the Common, 249 Main St., Rutland. 508-886-4600 or seanfullertonmusic.net. Chris Stovall Brown. No cover. 8-10 p.m. Coppertop
Adult Retail Boutique e Open To Everyone For All Your Intimate Needs
Toys • Novelties • Lingerie • Shoes es Lotions • DVDs and more
Shop online 24/7 at our new eBoutique eboutique.desirees-desires.com m 9 Walker Drive • Upton, MA 01568 • Off Rte. 140
508-529-3600 • desirees-desires.com Tues 11am - 5pm, Wed-Sat 11am-8pm • Closed Sun & Mon JANUARY 19, 2012 • WORCESTERMAG.COM
25
night day &
Upload your listings at worcestermag.com. Click the Night & Day toolbar, then choose Calendar to place your event listing in both our print and online weekly calendar.
{ listings}
Lounge/Wachusett Mountain Ski Area, 499 Mountain Road, Princeton. 978-464-2300 or wachusett.com. Sean Ryan. No Cover. 8-11 p.m. Stake’s Sports Pub, 1281 Pleasant St. 508-755-2925. The Hamburg Symphony Orchestra, Jeffrey Tate, Conductor, with Guy Braunstein, Violin. Works of Vaughan Williams, Brahms, and Dvorak will be performed. A pre-concert Talk starts at 7 p.m. $46, $43, students $20 advance/$15 at door. 8-10:30 p.m. Mechanics Hall, The Great Hall, 321 Main St. 508-754-3231 or musicworcester.org. Two greats together tonight: Flock of A-Holes, the ultimate 80’s tribute band, and Mullethead, the glamslam kings of 80’s hair metal. You aren’t going to want to miss this night! Two of the best 80’s bands will be performing together under one roof in celebration of the special birthdays of Alley and Chris. $10. 8 p.m.-2 a.m. Lucky Dog Music Hall, 89 Green St. 508-363-1888 or facebook.com. Live Music in the Pub: Terry Brennan. Terry is entertainer with over 25 years experience as a singer, song writer, musician, part time DJ, and comedian. Solo, or as a member of The Brennan Brothers, he’s performed all over New England, as well as Ireland, St. Thomas, Philadelphia, Long Beach California and more. Wherever people want to have a good time, you might just find him!! No Cover (Worcester Students Earn WOO Points). 8:30 p.m.-12:30 a.m. Fiddlers’ Green Pub & Restaurant, 19 Temple St. 508-792-3700 or terrybmusic.com. “The Lyres” return to Ralphs with The Evil Streaks, Tsunami of Sound, and Classic Ruins. 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Ralph’s Chadwick Square Diner, 148 Grove St. 508-753-9543. Flock of A-Holes. The Flock is back and ready to rock at JJ’s on Saturday, Jan 21st! Playing all your favorite 80’s hits, these guys will have you dancing! facebook.com. 9 p.m.12:30 a.m. JJ’s Sports Bar and Grill, 380 Southwest Cutoff, Northborough. 508-842-8420. Karaoke 7 Nights a week. 9-1:45 p.m. cafe neo bar and grille, 97 Millbury St. 508-615-7311. Ned Lucas Band. Great food & great people! One of our favorite clubs to play! Free. 9 p.m.-12:30 a.m. Admiral T. J. O’Briens, 407 Main St., Sturbridge. 508-347-2838. Pan Americana Roots Rock band Gumbo Diablo. 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Nick’s Bar and Restaurant, 124 Millbury St. 508753-4030. Probable Cause. Join us at JJ’s as we welcome back Probable Cause, one of the area’s best party bands! These guys play a variety of all the hits old and new, and will have you up and dancing all night! Visit probablecause.net 9 p.m.12:30 a.m. JJ’s Sports Bar and Grill, 380 Southwest Cutoff, Northborough. 508-842-8420. Silverbacks. BAND $5. 9 p.m.-1 a.m. Greendale’s Pub, 404 W Boylston St. 508-853-1350. Silverbacks at Greendales! All star cast of players, including Cliff Goodwin, Jim Perry, Bill MacGillvray, Mike Lynch, Glenn Ditommasso, and Laurie Kollios. Classic sound and a very sophisticated song list. 9-12:30 p.m. Greendale’s Pub, 404 W Boylston St. 508-853-1350. Spinsuite Saturdays - Top 40. Spinsuite Saturdays - DJ Soup - DJ Nick - DJ B-Lo spin your favorite Dance, Mash Ups & Top 40 Tracks. Fusion’s Lounge opens at 9:00 p.m. and Dance Club opens at 10:30p.m. Coat room with attendant available. No Cover Charge. 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Fusion, 109 Water St. 508756-2100. Gumbo Diablo - Zydeco, Cumbia, Forro Fusion. Free admission. 9:30 p.m.-1 a.m. Nick’s Bar and Restaurant, 124 Millbury St. 508-753-4030. Mass Octane. 9:30 p.m.-1 a.m. Jillian’s - Worcester, 315 Grove St. 508-793-0900. Sugar and The Cane Breakers - 1/21 at Beatnik’s. Sugar and The Cane Breakers is an 8-piece band fronted by
26
WORCESTERMAG.COM
singers Keri Anderson and Craig Rawding. They have chosen a tasty batch of funk and soul chestnuts to play for you. The songs were plucked from crate-diggin’ archives all over the world. From New Orleans to West Africa to Ja.m.aica to Belize City, they have searched far and wide to bring you the best collection of funky soul and soulful funk that you will ever hear played live in concert! Do not miss this show! $10. 10 p.m.-1:30 a.m. Beatnik’s, 433 Park Ave. 508-926-8877 or sugarandthecanebreakers.com. The Red Riders. After a couple months away, The Red Riders return to their 3rd Saturday at Sahara to jump & swing at their club-house! 10 p.m.-1:30 a.m. Sahara Cafe & Restaurant, 143 Highland St. 508-798-2181 or musiclyne.com.
>Sunday 22
Karaoke 7 Nights a week. cafe neo bar and grille, 97 Millbury St. 508-615-7311. Within A Lifetime CD Release w/Atlas, Gone Astray, Fermata, Fake Out, A Cold Night For Alligators, Still Silent, I Came I Saw I Conquered. The Raven, 258 Pleasant St. 508-304-8133 or facebook.com. Glenn Stewart. No cover. 4-6 p.m. Coppertop Lounge/ Wachusett Mountain Ski Area, 499 Mountain Road, Princeton. 978-464-2300 or wachusett.com. Live Music Sunday. 4-8 p.m. McBride’s Pub, 161 Wayland Ave., Providence. 401-751-3000. Traditional Irish Seisiun. Authentic Irish Seisiun held the 2nd & 4th Sunday of every month. Area regional musicians come from far & wide to “jam” in the age-old Irish version of a pick-up band. Fiddlers, in whistles, flutes, banjos, pipes, singers & more stop in to just enjoy making music. An old world tradition suitable for the entire family. Free (Worcester College Students Earn WOO Points). 4-8 p.m. Worcester Hibernian Cultural Centre, 19 Temple St. 508-792-3700. Acoustic Open Mic/WARL Charity Event. Celtic/ Acoustic music and an ongoing charity event for the Worcester Animal Rescue League. No Cover. 5-9 p.m. Jak’s Pub, 536 Main St. 508-757-5257. Vincent’s presents: Big Jon Short. Armed with a suitcase kick-drum, National Reso-phonic Guitar and Lowebow cigar-box hillharp, Big Jon Short’s high energy solo performances bring a foot-stomping show that taps into the heart of the songs, regional styles, and folklore of the Blues. 5-8 p.m. Vincent’s Bar, 49 Suffolk St. 508-752-9439. bigjonshort.com Jim’s Blues Jam presents ‘Mission of Blues’ w/ Scott Bronnes. 6-10 p.m. Greendale’s Pub, 404 W Boylston St. 508-853-1350. Karaoke 7 Nights a week. 9-1:45 p.m. cafe neo bar and grille, 97 Millbury St. 508-615-7311. Sunday Funday with LoriAnn. You never know what’s happening here on Sundays. Great special drinks whipped up by LoriAnn are always the standard. Free. 9 p.m.-1:45 a.m. Lucky Dog Music Hall, 89 Green St. 508-363-1888 or luckydogmusic.com. The Sunday Night Hang w/ Ronnie Sugar Bear. Free. 9 p.m.-1:45 a.m. Lucky Dog Music Hall, 89 Green St. 508-363-1888 or luckydogmusic.com. Reggae Fusion Sundays with DJ Nick. Worcester’s longest running Reggae night hosted by DJ Nick and Guest DJ’s spinning the hotttest Reggae, Hip Hop and Top 40 every Sunday. 10 p.m.-2 a.m. Fusion, 109 Water St. 508-756-2100.
>Monday 23
Karaoke 7 Nights a week. cafe neo bar and grille, 97 Millbury St. 508-615-7311. Driftin’ Sam Politz 7 p.m., then Big Game Karaoke 9:30 p.m. till close. 7 p.m.-2 a.m. Nick’s Bar and Restaurant, 124 Millbury St. 508-753-4030.
>Tuesday 24
Karaoke 7 Nights a week. cafe neo bar and grille, 97 Millbury St. 508-615-7311.
• JANUARY 19, 2012
Bruce Pratt, world-class pianist. No Charge. 2-3 a.m. Briarwood Continuing Care Retirement Community: Birches Auditorium, 65 Briarwood Circle. briarwoodretirement.com. In the Tradition, Tuesdays, WCUW 91.3FM, and strea.m.ing at wcuw.org. Join Jeff Boudreau every Tuesday 5-8 p.m. for old-time, pre-bluegrass, bluegrass and contemporary stringband music played “in the tradition” on community radio WCUW, 91.3FM and strea.m.ing at wcuw. org. 5-8 p.m. WCUW 91.3 FM - Worcester’s Community Radio Station, 910 Main St. 508-753-2284 or wcuw.org. Open auditions for the Master Singers of Worcester. The Master Singers of Worcester invite singers to attend open rehearsals for their upcoming production of Arthur Honegger’s Dra.m.atic Psalm ‘King David’ on Tuesday, January 17 and Tuesday, January 24, 2012. Singers in all voice parts are welcome, especially basses and tenors. Singers interested in becoming members may audition at the end of the open rehearsal or schedule an appointment by phoning 508-842-1349 or emailing info@mswma.org. The King David concert is planned for April 1st, 2012 at Temple Emanuel in Worcester, and feature outstanding soloists and orchestra. The Master Singers of Worcester numbers about 50 members drawn from Worcester and surrounding communities. Rehearsals are held on Tuesday evenings starting at 7:00 P.m. at the First Congregational Church of Shrewsbury. 7-9:30 p.m. First Congregational Church of Shrewsbury, 19 Church Road, Shrewsbury. 508-845-7286 or mswma.org. Open Mic Night w /Bill McCarthy Open Mike. To check the schedules and open slots visit: MySpace.com/ OpenMicWorld. Any slot marked as “open” usually is. Email Bill McCarthy to reserve it! Email Bill McC at: openmcc@verizon. net Free. 7-11 p.m. Greendale’s Pub, 404 W Boylston St. 508853-1350. The Earth and Spirit Singers (weekly rehearsal). Join the chorus! Be a part of the Earth and Spirit Singers. Lend your voice to our community chorus, celebrating peace, earth and nature. We’ll sing for the beautiful, a.m.azing and fragile environment on our small planet. We’ll also sing songs of working people, of peace, and of spirituality. Led by composer/ guitarist Jim Scott, The Earth and Spirit Singers is a no-audition choral group. The chorus welcomes singers of any age and experience. Learning from music and by ear, the chorus sings many styles of music celebrating ecology, peace and world community. Four Songfest evenings start September 14th. The regular rehearsals start on October 12th. For information and to register interest, visit: JimScottMusic.com, call: 508-755-0995, or email: Jim@JimScottMusic.com $7 per rehearsal. 7-9 p.m. First Unitarian Church of Worcester, 90 Main St. 508-755-0995 or JimScottMusic.com. “Totally Tuesdazed!” Tunes in the Diner every Tuesday Night!. 8 p.m.-1 a.m. Ralph’s Chadwick Square Diner, 148 Grove St. 508-753-9543. Big Jon Short. Armed with a suitcase kick-drum, National Reso-phonic Guitar and Lowebow cigar-box hillharp, Big Jon Short’s high energy solo performances bring a foot-stomping show that taps into the heart of the songs, regional styles, and folklore of the Blues. bigjonshort.com. No cover. 8-11 p.m. Armsby Abbey, 144 North Main St. 508-795-1012 or armsbyabbey.com/2009/08/jon-short. Live Music Tuesdays. 8-11 p.m. McBride’s Pub, 161 Wayland Ave., Providence. 401-751-3000. T.J. Peavey. A veteran, accomplished and eclectic singer, songwriter and guitarist. Pass The Hat. 8-10 p.m. Jak’s Pub, 536 Main St. 508-757-5257. Terry Brennan / LIVE. 8 p.m.-midnight Banner Pub, The, 112 Green St. 508-755-0879 or terrybmusic.com. Karaoke 7 Nights a week. 9-1:45 p.m. cafe neo bar and grille, 97 Millbury St. 508-615-7311. Live Karoake with Bobby Gadoury American Songbook Sing-a-Long. No Cover. 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Nick’s Bar and Restaurant, 124 Millbury St. 508-753-4030.
>Wednesday 25
Karaoke 7 Nights a week. cafe neo bar and grille, 97 Millbury St. 508-615-7311. Open Mic/Free show. The Raven, 258 Pleasant St. 508304-8133. Girls Night Out. Free apps, pool, and Game cards! Free. 6 p.m.-1 a.m. Jillian’s - Worcester, 315 Grove St. 508-793-0900. Matt Robert Solo Acoustic. Matt Robert (Hat on, Drinking wine, Home Skillet) performs old-timey, old, and new covers and originals that draw on blues, jazz, folk, and rock, from Jelly Roll Morton, Louis Armstrong, and Gus Cannon’s Jug Stompers to The Decemberists, Cake, and Beck. Nu Cafe is a warm, laid-back atmosphere. December shows to benefit the Salvation Army. Donations Suggested. 6-8 p.m. Nu Cafe, 335 Chandler St. 508-963-0588. “A Night of Barnburning Blues” Acoustic Blues Open Mic, Every Wednesday, hosted by Sean Fullerton. Welcome to the brand new Acoustic Blues Open Mic. South Side Grill & Margarita Factory and Plaid Couch Music present “A Night Of Barnburning Blues”, hosted by local musician & Blues fanatic Sean Fullerton, 2010 & 2011 Worcester Music Awards ‘Best Blues’ nominee. Every Wednesday night from 7-10 p.m. If you or someone you know sings and plays the Blues, please contact Sean Fullerton at seanfullertonmusic@gmail.com for information and set times. See ya ‘round the clubs! Dinner, Drinks, Music & Fun! 7-10 p.m. South Side Grille & Margarita Factory, 242 West Broadway, Gardner. 508-479-2309 or seanfullertonmusic.net. Open Mic. Acoustic open mic beginning Nov. 2. Sign up at 7:00 p.m., Performers start at 7:30. Feature act starts at 8:45, Drop-in performers start again at 9:30. Nice stage and lighting. Good sound system and room acoustics. Select videos will be posted online at blbrumby.com. Professional videographer will be on site as well offering nice audio/video packages. 7-11 p.m. Rte 56 Roadside Bar & Grill, 24 Leicester St (Route56), North Oxford. 508-987-8669. Open Mic Night. Looking for Worcester’s amazing acoustic acts to come check out the new Leits Back Bar Open Mic night! Sign-ups begin at 8 and acts begin at 830. We’ll keep the music going as long as there’s acts to play, so come down and check us out! You wont be dissappointed! 8 p.m.-2 a.m. Leitrim’s Pub, Back Bar, 265 Park Ave. 508-798-2447 or LeitrimsWorcester.com. Rock Of Ages 80’s Karaoke event Tonight. Celebrating the arrival of Rock of Ages at Hanover Theatre Win Big! It’s a Karaoke contest and the winner will receive 2 tix to the opening show of “Rock of Ages”, a CD of the music from the show and 2 VIP tix to the “cast party” after the musical. Free. 8 p.m.-2 a.m. Lucky Dog Music Hall, 89 Green St. 508-363-1888 or thehanovertheatre.org. Sean Ryan & Company. Open Ja.m.! Free. 8-11 p.m. Greendale’s Pub, 404 W Boylston St. 508-853-1350. Vincent’s Presents: Tiki Night with Frank & Eric. Frank and Eric will help you get over the hump every Wednesday with all of your favorite tropical drinks while soaking in special musical guests and movies. 8 p.m.-1:30 a.m. Vincent’s Bar, 49 Suffolk St. 508-752-9439. Wednesday Night Open Mic at The Hotel Befont with Bill Mccarthy Local Musicians Showcase! Open Mic Night with Bill Mccarthy. Sign-up in Advance by Emailing Openmcc@verizon.net and Visiting myspace. com/openmicworld Free. 8 p.m.-midnight. Belfont Hotel, 11 South Main St., Millbury. 508-917-8128 or myspace.com/ openmicworld. Jon Short!. 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Nick’s Bar and Restaurant, 124 Millbury St. 508-753-4030. Karaoke 7 Nights a week. 9-1:45 p.m. cafe neo bar and grille, 97 Millbury St. 508-615-7311. Woo-town Wednesday Free show - Live Bands. Live entertainment every Wednesday night. Check luckydogmusic.com for complete lineup. Free. 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Lucky Dog Music Hall, 89 Green St. 508-363-1888 or
Upload your listings at worcestermag.com. Click the Night & Day toolbar, then choose Calendar to place your event listing in both our print and online weekly calendar. luckydogmusic.com.
arts
ADC Performance Center (@ The Artist Develop.m.ent Complex), 18 Mill St., Southbridge. 508764-6900 or adcmusic.com/Index.htm. ARTSWorcester, My Portrait/Myself. Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thursdays, Fridays, Saturdays, Dec. 2 - Jan. 20. Hours: closed Sunday - Monday, 1-4 p.m. Tuesday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wednesday - Friday, 1-4 p.m. Saturday. Admission: Free. 660 Main St. 508-755-5142 or artsworcester.org. Asa Waters Mansion, Admission: $3 for guided tour $710 for tea. 123 Elm St., Millbury. 508-865-0855 or asawaters. org. Assumption College: Emmanuel d’Alzon Library, 500 Salisbury St. 508-767-7272 or assumption.edu/dept/ Library. Booklovers’ Gourmet, Hours: closed Sunday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday, 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Tuesday - Thursday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Friday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday. 55 East Main St., Webster. 508-949-6232 or er3.com/book. Clark University: Cohen-Lasry House, Power, Prosperity and Hope in Eastern Congo - ongoing exhibit, Through Jan. 22. 11 Hawthorne St. clarku.edu/departments/ holocaust. Clark University: Schiltkamp Gallery, 92 Downing St. 508-793-7349. Clark University: Traina Center for the Arts. 92 Downing St. clarku.edu. Clark University: University Gallery, Hours: noon5 p.m. Sunday, closed Monday - Tuesday, noon-8 p.m. Wednesday, noon-5 p.m. Thursday - Saturday. 950 Main St. 508-793-7349 or 508-793-7113 or clarku.edu. Clark’s Cafe and Art On Rotation Gallery, Hours: 6 a.m. to 1 p.m. Sunday - Saturday. Admission: Free for galler. 310 High St., Clinton. 978-549-5822 or 978-365-7772 or aorgallery.com. College of the Holy Cross: Iris & B. Gerald Cantor Art Gallery, Hours: closed Sunday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday - Friday, 2-5 p.m. Saturday. 1 College St. 508-793-3356 or holycross.edu/departments/cantor/website. Danforth Museum of Art, Hours: noon-5 p.m. Sunday, closed Monday - Tuesday, noon-5 p.m. Wednesday - Thursday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday - Saturday. 123 Union Ave., Framingham. 508-620-0050 or danforthmuseum.org. Dark World Gallery, Hours: closed Sunday, 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday - Saturday. 179 Grafton St. darkworldgallery.com. DZian Gallery, Hours: 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday, closed Monday - Tuesday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Wednesday - Saturday. 65 Water St. 508-831-1106 or dzian.net. EcoTarium, Playing Together: Games, Through Sept. 9; Preschool and Toddler Wednesdays, Wednesdays, through Dec. 19. Hours: noon-5 p.m. Sunday, closed Monday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday - Saturday. Admission: $12.00 adults; $8.00 for children ages 2-18, college students with IDs & senior citizens. Children under 2 & EcoTarium members Free. Additional charges apply for Tree Canopy Walkway, Explorer Express Train, planetarium programs & other special programs. 222 Harrington Way. 508-929-2700 or ecotarium.org. Fisher Museum Harvard Forest, 324 N. Main St., Petersham. 978-724-3302 or harvardforest.fas.harvard.edu/ museum.html. Fitchburg Art Museum, Hours: noon-4 p.m. Sunday, closed Monday, noon-4 p.m. Tuesday - Saturday. 25 Merria.m. Parkway, Fitchburg. 978-345-4207 or fitchburgartmuseum.org. Fitchburg Historical Society, Hours: closed Sunday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday - Tuesday, 10 a.m.-midnight Wednesday, closed Thursday - Saturday. 50 Grove St., Fitchburg. 978-3451157 or fitchburghistory.fsc.edu. Fitchburg State University: Ha.m.mond Ca.m.pus Center, 160 Pearl St., Fitchburg. fsc.edu.
Framed in Tatnuck, Hours: closed Sunday - Monday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tuesday - Friday, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday. 1099 Pleasant St. 508-770-1270 or wwwfra.m.edintatnuck. com. Fruitlands Museum, 102 Prospect Hill Road, Harvard. 978-456-3924 or fruitlands.org. Higgins Armory Museum, Hours: noon-4 p.m. Sunday, closed Monday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday - Saturday. Admission: General Admission: $12 for Adults, $9 for Seniors (age 60+), $7 for Children (age 4-16), Children 3 and under are Free. 100 Barber Ave. 508-853-6015 or higgins.org. Highland Artist Group, 113 Highland St. highlandartistgroup.com. Mass Audubon: Broad Meadow Brook Conservation Center and Wildlife Sanctuary, Hours: 12:30-4 p.m. Sunday, closed Monday, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday - Saturday. 414 Massasoit Ave. 508-753-6087 or massaudubon.org. Museum of Russian Icons, Celebrating the Season: Icons of the Nativity, Through Jan. 28. Hours: closed Sunday - Monday, 11-3 a.m. Tuesday - Wednesday, 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Thursday, 11-3 a.m. Friday, 9-3 a.m. Saturday. Admission: $5 adults, senior voluntary contribution, student and children fre. 203 Union St., Clinton. 978-598-5000 or 978-598-5005 or museumofrussianicons.org. Old Sturbridge Village, Admission: $7 - $20 charged by age. Children under 3 fre. 1 Old Sturbridge Village Road, Sturbridge. 800-733-1830 or 508-347-3362 or osv.org. Park Hill Gallery, Hours: closed Sunday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday - Friday, closed Saturday. 387 Park Ave. 774-6960909. Post Road Art Center, Hours: closed Sunday, 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Monday - Saturday. 1 Boston Post Road, Marlborough. 508-485-2580 or postroadartcenter.com. Preservation Worcester, Hours: closed Sunday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday - Friday, closed Saturday. 10 Cedar St. 508754-8760 or preservationworcester.org. Prints and Potter Gallery, Hours: closed Sunday, 105:30 a.m. Monday - Tuesday, 10-7 a.m. Wednesday - Thursday, 10-5:30 a.m. Friday, 10-5 a.m. Saturday. 142 Highland St. 508-752-2170 or printsandpotter.com. Quinebaug Valley Council for the Arts & Humanities, the Arts Center, Hours: 2-4 p.m. Sunday, closed Monday - Friday, 2-4 p.m. Saturday. 111 Main St., Southbridge. 508-346-3341 or qvcah.org. Quinsigamond Community College: Administration Building, 670 West Boylston St. qcc.edu. Rollstone Studios, Hours: 11-4 p.m. Sunday, closed Monday - Wednesday, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Thursday - Saturday. Admission: fre. 633 Main St., Fitchburg. 978-348-2781 or rollstoneartists.com. Salisbury Mansion, Hours: closed Sunday - Wednesday, 1-8:30 p.m. Thursday, 1-4 p.m. Friday - Saturday. 40 Highland St. 508-753-8278 or worcesterhistory.org. SAORI Worcester Freestyle Weaving Studio, 18 Winslow St. 508-757-4646 or 508-757-0116 or saoriworcester.com. Taproot Bookstore, Hours: noon-5 p.m. Sunday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday - Tuesday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Wednesday Thursday, 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Friday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday. 1200 West Boylston St. 508-853-5083 or TaprootBookstore. com. Tatnuck Bookseller & Cafe, Hours: 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday, 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday - Thursday, 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. Friday - Saturday. 18 Lyman St., Westborough. 508-366-4959 or tatnuck.com. The Foster Gallery, 51 Union St. 508-397-7139 or thefostergallery.com. The Sprinkler Factory, Hours: noon-6 p.m. Sunday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday - Friday, closed Saturday. 38 Harlow St.
sprinklerfactory.com. Top Fun Aviation Toy Museum, Hours: 1:30-4:30 p.m. Sunday, closed Monday - Friday, 10:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Saturday. 21 Prichard St., Fitchburg. 978-342-2809 or 978297-4337 or topfunaviation.com. Tower Hill Botanic Garden, Abstract Landscape in Watercolor, Thursday; Digital Workflow for Beginner Photographers, Saturday; Guided Garden Tour, Sundays, through Dec. 30; Yoga by Nature - Winter Session 1, Class 3, Wednesday. Hours: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday, closed Monday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday - Saturday. Admission: $10 Adults, $7 Seniors & $5 Youth, Free to Members & Children under . 11 French Drive, Boylston. 508-869-6111 or towerhillbg.org. Westboro Gallery, Hours: 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Sunday, closed Monday - Tuesday, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesday - Saturday. 8 West Main St., Westborough. 508-870-0110 or westborogallery. com. Worcester Art Museum, Art Since the Mid-20th Century, Through Dec. 31; Wall at W.A.M.: Charline von Heyl, Through Jan. 31. Hours: 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday, closed Monday - Tuesday, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesday, 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Thursday, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday. Admission: Free for members, $14 adults, $12 seniors, Free for youth 17 and under. Free for all first Saturdays of each month, 10 a.m.-noon. 55 Salisbury St. 508-799-4406 or worcesterart. org. Worcester Center for Crafts, Illuminations, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thursdays, Fridays, Saturdays, through Feb. 18. Hours: closed Sunday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday - Thursday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday, closed Saturday. 25 Sagamore Road. 508-753-8183 or worcestercraftcenter.org. Worcester Historical Museum, On The Rails, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thursdays, Fridays, Saturdays, Dec. 20 - Feb. 14; The Cakemaker’s Portrait, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thursdays, Fridays, Saturdays, Oct. 25 - March 31. Hours: closed Sunday - Monday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday - Wednesday, 10 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. Thursday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Friday - Saturday. 30 Elm St. 508-753-8278 or worcesterhistory.org. Worcester Public Library, Hours: closed Sunday Monday, 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Tuesday - Thursday, 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Friday - Saturday. 3 Salem Square. 508-799-1655 or worcpublib.org. WPI: George C. Gordon Library, 100 Institute Road. wpi.edu.
theater/ comedy
Premiere Female Impersonator and Live Vocals with Jackie Collins - Fridays, Friday, November 13 Friday, February 24. Premiere female impersonation shows and live vocals with Jackie Collins, Natalie Gay in the flesh $5 Admission. 10 p.m.-2 a.m. Dark Lady, 124 Snow St., Providence. Call 401-831-4297. Open Mike Comedy - Saturdays, Saturday, July 24 Sunday, November 11. Hosted by a variety of local comedians under the leadership of Andy Paquette. Worcester’s longest running open mic attracts regional talent and newcomers. 100’s of aspiring comedians have bared their wares in front of this supportive and simpathetic crowd. Well known as the breeding grounds for local talent it has produced many known and not to be known comedians. Fear not! Your Sense of Pride. 7-9 p.m. 3-G’s Sports Bar, The Music Room, 152 Millbury St. Call 508-754-3516. Frank’s Comedy Safari - Saturdays, Saturday, April 23 Monday, April 23. Show every Sat Night. Call 1-800-71-laugh for reservations or buy tickets at the door. $20 a Ticket. 8-9:30 p.m. Viva Bene Italian Ristorante, 144 Commercial St. Call 508799-9999 Or Visit frankscomedysafari@yahoo.com. Wisecracks Comedy Club @ Jose Murphy’s Saturdays, Saturday, January 14 - Saturday, December 29. Wisecracks is Worcester County’s newest and hottest comedy
night day &
{ listings}
club franchise - this location is in Jose Murphy’s (2nd floor) every Saturday night. There’s a full bar and food menu in the showroom! During the show, get a pitcher and a large pizza for just $10. You’ll see comics that have been on Comedy Central, HBO and all the late night shows. This location is also 18+ We are expanding to several other venues in central Massachusetts! Go to our website for more information. $15 (All Woo card holders and active duty military is 2 for 1). 8-10 p.m. Jose’ Murphy’s, 2nd Floor, 97-103 Water St. Call 508-792-0900 or visit wisecrackscomedyclub.com. Wisecracks Comedy Club @ Halligan’s - Friday, January 20. Wisecracks is Worcester County’s newest and hottest comedy club - we are currently in Halligan’s Sports Bar & More the THIRD Friday of EVERY month. You’ll see comics that have been on Comedy Central, HBO and all the late night shows. We are expanding to several other venues in central Massachusetts! Go to our website for more information. $15. 8:30-10:30 p.m. Halligan’s Sports Bar and More, 889 Southbridge St., Auburn. Call 508-832-6793 or visit wisecrackscomedyclub.com. Sesame Street Live- Elmo’s Super Heroes - Friday, January 20 - Sunday, January 22. Additional Performances: 01/21/2012 (10:30 a.m., 2:00 p.m., 5:30 p.m.) 01/22/2012 (1:00 p.m., 4:30 p.m.) Teaching lessons of healthy habits through song and dance, Elmo, Abby Cadabby and your favorite Sesame Street friends will explore exercise, nutrition, sleep/ energy and hygiene - all in a quest to put the “super” back in Super Grover. Get the ultimate fan experience with Sunny Seats! The Sunny Seats Package includes a VIP Seat and a pre-show photo opportunity with two characters from the show. Sunny Seat orders will include a special admittance ticket for entry into the Photo Opportunity. Full price tickets are $14, $22, $32, $42 and limited “Sunny Seats” available for $67. $3 discount available for members, groups of 10 or more, corporate partners and WOO card holders on price levels 3, 4 and 5 only. $14 tickets available for price levels. 7-8:30 p.m. Hanover Theatre for the Performing Arts, 2 Southbridge St. Call 877-571-7469 or visit thehanovertheatre.org.
poetry >Mondays
Dirty Gerund Poetry Show! Downstairs Every Monday Night at 8pm!. No Cover. 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Ralph’s Chadwick Square Diner, 148 Grove St. 508-753-9543 or dirtygerund.com. Dirty Gerund Poetry & Variety Show. Spoken Word, Poetry, Music, Visual Arts and Ruckus collide to create an innovative, fast paced variety show that ain’t your grandma’s poetry reading. Open Mic, Featured Performers, Live Painting, House Band, Snack Time and Bonus Ruckus Challenges make Monday’s Fun and Inspiring! Hosted by Nicholas Earl Davis and Alex Charalambides. 21 plus. 1/23/12 – NYC Intangible Slam Collective Poet & New Write Bloody Author MEGAN FALLEY on tour! 2/6/12 – WILLIAM JAMES – Pittsburgh “Steel City Slam” Poet on tour! 2/20/12 – NYC Poet CAROLINE ROTHSTEIN on tour! 3/19/12 – Former Bay Area / Current Portland OR Slam Poet STEPHEN MEADS on tour! $2-5 Suggested Donation. 9-11:30 p.m. Ralph’s Chadwick Square Diner, 148 Grove St. 508-753-9543 or dirtygerund.com.
>Sundays
The Poets’ Asylum. Join Worcester’s longest running poetry series every Sunday night for an open mic reading followed by a featured poet and/or a poetry slam. For more info please visit our website - poetsasylum.org/. Please put some money in the bucket to support the reading and pay the feature. 7-10 p.m. WCUW 91.3 FM - Worcester’s Community Radio Station, 910 Main St. 508-753-1012.
JANUARY 19, 2012 • WORCESTERMAG.COM
27
EMPLOYMENT
AUTOMOTIVE
REAL ESTATE
SERVICES
MERCHANDISE
Reaching Over 90,000 Readers in Print and Online at
www.centralmassclass.com
Online ads post immediately! New postings every day!
ONLINE: www.centralmassclass.com EMAIL: sales@centralmassclass.com
PHONE: 978-728-4302 FAX: 978-534-6004
PLACE ADS:
HOME SERVICES ELECTRICAL SERVICES Charles Kach licensed electrician. No Job too small. Free estimates. Quality work. Lic #E35374. 508-755-4619.
FENCE & STONE Commonwealth Fence & Stone Your Complete Fence & Stone Company. All fence types- Cedar, Vinyl, Chain Link, Post & Rail, Ornamental, Pool. Hardscapes- Stone Wall, Walkways, Patios. For a free estimate contact: 508-835-1644
PAINTING/REPAIRS
HELP WANTED
Interior & Exterior Painting Power washing, carpentry, wallpapering, water damage repair. Call Jim Charest Countryside Painting 508-865-4321 508-277-9421
Mental Health Psychotherapist (non-licensed) Work location- 19 Tacoma Street, Worcester, MA 01605) Mult openings. Provide mental health psychotherapy to clients in a variety of settings. Provide contracted consultation and evaluation to outside agencies. Provide crisis consultation/assessment and psychological evaluations. Provide client advocacy, outreach, and education. 40 hrs/wk. Master’s in Psych, Social Work or rel field. Must be fluent in Spanish. Mail resume: HR, Edward M. Kennedy Community Health Center, 2000 Century Drive, Worcester, MA 01606.
Painting Unlimited Services Skilled, Reliable, Reasonable. Meticulous prep & workmanship. Interior/Exterior Painting/Staining, Powerwashing. Free Estimates. Fully Insured. HIC #163882 Call Tim: 508-340-8707
SNOW PLOWING/ REMOVAL
FLOORING/CARPETING C & S Carpet Mills Carpet & Linoleum 30 Sq. Yds. $549 Installed with Pad. Free Metal Incl’d. Berber, Plush or Commercial. Call Tom: 800-861-5445 or 508-886-2624
Briggsy and Son Lawn Care *Snow Blowing & shoveling *10% discount to Worcester Residents 508-459-0365 *Still doing fall cleanups
EMPLOYMENT
HOME IMPROVEMENT
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
Brad’s Home Improvement Quality Workmanship Reasonable Rates Licensed & Insured 508-829-7361/ 508-380-7453
Become an Independent Consultant! Eco-Friendly Organic, Made in the USA and Fair Trade Products Direct Sales
General Repairs: Floors: Ceramic, Hardwood, Vinyl. Painting, Framing, Roofs, Vinyl Windows, Remodeling baths & kitchens. Handyman Services. ONE CALL DOES IT ALL J.D. Richardson 508-826-0941 MC/Visa Accepted Lic HIC 154720/CSL104667.
28
WORCESTERMAG.COM
www.myceladonroad.com/ 12908
• J A N U A R Y 19 , 2 0 12
Home Health Aides All areas, car needed. Excellent wages/benefits. Email resumes@homestaffma.com or apply in person to Home Staff LLC 40 Millbrook St., Worcester HELP WANTED LOCAL
LOOK INSIDE FOR... Tax Time Directory Snow Plow Directory Crossword Puzzle Sudoku & Much More! To Contact email- sales@centralmassclass.com
FOSTER PARENTING
FOSTER PARENTS WANTED Foster Care Information Session Every 3rd Wednesday of the Month • 2pm-4pm (Please Call for Details)
Seeking families throughout Central Massachusetts who are interested in improving a child’s life. Call to inquire about our upcoming foster parent training. $1,000 SIGN-ON BONUS Call for Details
688 Main Street, Holden, MA Toll Free (877) 446-3305
www.devereuxma.org HEALTH STUDY
SUBOXONE STUDY HEROIN, OPIATES & OXYCONTIN USERS If you have a problem with opiates like heroin, Oxycontin or Percocets, you may be eligible to participate in a 3-month Suboxone research study to test medications for opioid abuse. This study is being conducted by the University of Massachusetts Medical School. We are currently seeking volunteers ages 18 to 25. If you are interested, please call Chelsea or leave a message at (508) 856-4566. All calls are confidential. Docket #13261.
Store Manager Service Tire Truck Centers, a leading provider of truck tires and services to the transportation industry with 38 locations in 8 states, seeks a location manager for our Auburn, Massachusetts location. Minimum of 5 years management experience in a transportation related industry. Responsible for location’s P&L, 20 employees, inventory, receivables, sales functions and all daily aspects of running a stand-alone point of sale. Must be driven to provide excellent customer service and have strong people and communication skills. We offer competitive salary, bonus plan and comprehensive beneÀts. Pre-placement physical/drug screen required. STTC is a leader in the commercial tire industry with an unyielding commitment to quality products like Michelin and Goodyear, great service, and the best people. Visit us at STTC.com. Fax resume to 610-332-4812 or e-mail kpropsner@sttc.com Equal Opportunity Employer
Health, Mind & Beauty
Need a friend? Call Dial-A-Friend
508.852.5242
Inspirational Messages Recorded Daily
To advertise Call 978-728-4302
24 Hours Everyday
www.centralmassclass.com
CENTRAL MASS CLASSIFIEDS
SNOW PLOWING & REMOVAL DIRECTORY Briggsy & Son Lawn Care Snow Blowing & Shoveling Worcester Residents 10% Discount
508-459-0365
Still Doing Fall Clean-Ups
TTo Advertise In The Snow Guide Please Call 978-728-4302
Home Of The Free, Thanks To The Brave
MILITARY HERO OF THE WEEK
Is there a special service person in your life?
The Central Mass Classifieds would like to feature members of our Armed Forces on a regular basis. If you have a special service person in your life, please email ejohnson@leominsterchamp.com with some information, photo, brief summary of his/her service, and we will be happy to recognize them in the Central Mass Classifieds. The brave men and women of the United States Armed Forces should be remembered all year long.
Call Erin at 978-728-4302 or email ejohnson@leominsterchamp.com for more information. God bless our troops.
JONESIN’ Across 1 “___ wish” (line from “The Princess Bride”) 6 Makers of the 90, 900 and 9000 10 “Gnarly!” 13 Sorer than sore 14 Gp. that’ll teach you how to serve 15 “It was 20 years ___ today...” 16 Universal’s 1985 Chevy Chase comedy 17 Burger chain with a bird mascot 19 Invasive crawling plant 20 Universal’s 1976 Richard Pryor comedy 21 Pronoun separated by a slash 25 Have the desire 26 “Later!” 29 Late writer/ philosopher/”psychonaut” McKenna 31 With 44-across, Universal’s 1977 Burt Reynolds comedy 33 “Did I do that?” character 37 Chew toy Àller 38 MCD divided by X 39 Movie role played by George Burns and Morgan Freeman 41 “Gangsta Lovin’” rapper 42 Twin Falls’ state 44 See 31-across 47 Not at sea 49 Capital home to the Viking Ship Museum 50 Result 53 “Had you fooled for a second there” 55 Universal’s 1984 Emilio Estevez Áick 57 Knuckle-cracking, e.g. 61 World capital within the Distrito Federal 63 Universal’s 1980 Olivia NewtonJohn musical 64 “Breaking Bad” network 65 Abbr. for a president 66 Adjective for fairy tales and Nick Jr. shows 67 Vote shown on C-SPAN 68 Spoiled kid 69 Come after Down 1 Gp. concerned with rights 2 Place to store tools 3 Former Israeli Prime Minister Rabin
(978)728-4302
“Happy 100th, Universal!” -- the studio’s restoring 13 of its classics; these 5 didn’t make the cut. - By Matt Jones
4 With perfect timing 5 “That’s disgusting” 6 Big ___ (California region) 7 “Hey, wait ___!” 8 When duels take place, often 9 Scary-looking Àsh 10 Morocco’s capital 11 Like some hiring practices 12 “Tiny Bubbles” crooner 13 “I’m not typing right now” acronym 18 “For sale by ___” 22 “Kilroy Was Here” group 23 One wish for the new year, on many a greeting card 24 West end? 26 Fusion chef Ming ___ 27 In the thick of 28 ___ Bora (mountain area in old bin Laden news) 30 Lawn tools 32 Friedrich Hayek’s Àeld 34 Adidas alternative 35 Resident ___ (PlayStation game) 36 Actor Jared who sings in 30 Seconds to Mars 40 Follow instructions 43 Hostess snacks 45 Move like a wallaby 46 Words after “Look, ma!” 48 Soviet monster
50 Country singer Keith 51 PreÀx before tan or frost 52 Not focused 54 Pen-desk connector, at some banks 56 “The Godfather” Àlm scorer ___ Rota 58 Singer Erykah 59 “This’ll be the day that ___...” (“American Pie” refrain) 60 One day: abbr. 62 Be a thespian 63 Classic Jaguar ©2012 Jonesin’ Crosswords (editor@jonesincrosswords.com)
Last week's solution
©2010 Jonesin’ Crosswords (editor@jonesincrosswords.com) For answers to this puzzle, call: 1-900-226-2800, 99 cents per minute. Must be 18+. Or to bill to your credit card, call: 1-800-655-6548. Reference puzzle #0472.
J A N U A R Y 19 , 2 0 12 • W O R C E S T E R M A G . C O M
29
CENTRAL MASS CLASSIFIEDS
www.centralmassclass.com MERCHANDISE FOR SALE 1 Wheaties Box 1lb 2 oz 1984 Winning Moment Doug Flutie Hail-Mary Pass $950, Mint condition 978-342-1474 4 AMER. RACING TRUCK RIMS 15X7 PCO 5X4.75 +50MM EX CONDITION $200/ BO 508-380-2373 4 Tier Metal Shelves 2- 36"W x 55"H x 18"D $50 508-829-6877 Coffee and End table set Glass tops with Metal frames $80 or B.O. 508-886-0135 Compact Wireless- G USB Adapter, Connect to your desktop or notebook Asking $25 508-340-0076
30
FOR SALE
FOR SALE
Dining Room Table (Hard rock Maple), 48" round w/ 9" leaf including glass top protector $100 508-755-7153
Mahagony Antique Dresser Needs refinishing Asking $100 508-829-5003
Entertainment Center, Bureau (5 draws), metal cabinet, bookcase, Cash & Carry - Best Offer! 978-790-4386
Mirror 22"x30" Brand new beveled edge, hangs both ways $40 (pd $100) 508-754 -1827
Entertainment Center 48"x49"15" Brown oak finish shelves, storage, mint condition $90/ BO 508-791-0531
Must Sell Antique Kitchen Light, 96" round, Glass pears, apples $250 508-8541447
Entertainment Center $1500 neg. 11’6"Wx9’H TV MAX: 60"Wx48"H Gd Cond can send pics 508-983-4677
Nichols & Stone 50" Round Dark table w/ leaf- 5 Cane back chairs, 2 need fixing $500/BO 978-534-8214
Everlast- Boxing gloves 2 pr., speed bag with gloves and ankle weights $30 978466-6460
Plane Tkt to Florida or elsewhere from Worc. Round trip $150 978-464-5560
Insulation for Sale removing now, appox 16-18 x-large bags full, like new Best offer 978-840-8890
Rebuilt C4 Tranny 1960 to late 70’s stainless steel pan with drain plug $250 508579-9340
Daniel J. Acuña,
Military Hero of the week! He just returned from an 10 month deployment in Iraq where he served the US Army in the Military Police (2nd Platoon 59th MP Company). Dates of service: enlisted November 2007, basic training Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri March 2008 – April 2010: Yongsan Military Base, Seoul, S. Korea June 2010 – February 2011: Fort Carson, Colorado Springs, CO February 2011 – December 2011 Camp Cropper and Al Asad Air Base, Baghdad, Iraq SPC Acuna, 59th MP CO, was presented a Coin of Excellence from General Austin, USF-I Commanding General, for his exceptional performance 2011. December 2011 – present: Fort Carson, Colorado Springs, CO Dan graduated from Wachusett Regional High School in 2007. His parents: Natalie A. Mello (mother) and David DiBiasio of Paxton, Rodolfo A. Acuña (father) and Sharon Acuña of Paxton Brother: Andrew C. Acuña of Holden Sister: Sienna Acuña of Paxton
Call Erin at 978-728-4302 or email sales@centralmassclass.com to submit your own Military Hero! WORCESTERMAG.COM
• J A N U A R Y 19 , 2 0 12
SNOWBOARDING BOOTS mens 10.5. Burton FSLTD. Very gd shape. reasonable offers. 508-943-0189 Set of 12 Dunlop Golf Clubs with golf bag $75 Call Chris 978-534-5730 TOM TOM GPS incl manual, car/windshield attach & travel bag. Exc cond. $40 Call after 5 PM 508-829-9240 TV 48" Projection TV $200 978-537-0262 Twin Bunk Beds Solid LT pine wood, sturdy w/ mattress, box spring & platform Gd cond $135 973-650-1333
Guide to
Antiques
& Collectivles
“Oh My Gosh” Antiques & Collectibles Found at The Cider Mill
15 Waushacum Ave., Sterling 978-422-8675 Open 7 Days a Week 11 am to 5 pm Thursdays 11 am to 8 pm
To Advertise In This Directory Please Call 978-728-4302
Items Under
$2011
Treasure Chest ofCENTRAL FR MASS EE CLASSIFIEDS Ads!
(978)728-4302
FR EE!
in the
SUBMIT ITEMS UNDER $2012 FOR FREE!
Here’s all you need to do! 3 ways to submit... 1. Mail completed form to Central Mass Classifieds, 285 Central Street Suite 202 Leominster 01453 2. OR FAX the completed form to 978-534-6004 3. OR Email the info with name/address/phone number to sales@centralmassclass.com
NO PHONE ORDERS ACCEPTED FOR FR EE ADS PLEASE PRINT CLEARLY... We are not liable for misinformation due to ad being illegible:
TREASURE CHEST - ITEMS UNDER $2012
Have you advertised in the Central Mass Classifieds before? Please check one. ___ Yes ___ No Name ____________________________________________________________________________ Address __________________________________________________________________________ Town ______________________________ Zip ______________ Phone _______________________ Email Address (optional) ______________________________________________________________ Ad Text: (approx 20 characters per line includes letters, spaces, numbers, punctuation) _________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________
PLEASE R EA D TH E RU LES:
Maximum 4 lines (approx. 20 characters per line). We reserve the right to edit if ads come in that are too long. NO phone orders accepted. See ways to submit above. Merchandise Ads Only - NO autos, snowmobiles, RV’s, trailers, boats, ATV’s, etc. We have a special rate for these ads ($20 till it sells). NO business Ads accepted for this section. If we suspect the ads are being sent in by a business, we reserve the right to refuse. Limit 1 ad per name/address/phone number every 2 weeks. Ads will run for 2 weeks. Limit 1 item per ad (group of items OK if one price for all and under $2012) Price must be listed in ad.
DEADLINE FRIDAY 5 PM to begin following week • HAPPY TREASURE HUNTING!
CENTRAL MASS CLASSIFIEDS
Professional Services
www.centralmassclass.com
Call Erin at 978-728-4302 to place your ad ADVERTISE IN THIS DIRECTORY & REACH
ASK about double blocks (size 3.75" x 1.75") and COMBO pricing into our other zone and reach 50,000 households in 26 towns in Central Mass each week. FREE line ad included with each block purchased.
30, 000 households each week! Add another Zone and reach 50,000 households! Call Erin at 978-728-4302 for more information. Deadline: Monday, Noon.
Financial Advisor
Floor Covering
Concrete & Fence
Flooring
SHOULD YOUR INVESTMENTS.
& 6
&DUSHW 0LOOV
To schedule a complimentary Portfolio Review, call today.
â&#x20AC;˘ FENCE ALL TYPES - Cedar, Vinyl, Chain link, Post and Rail, Ornamental, Pool, Temporary Security Rentals â&#x20AC;Ś â&#x20AC;˘ STONE HARDSCAPES - Stone Walls, Pavers, Walkways, Patios, Concrete Work, Pool Patios
6T <GV ,QVWDOOHG ZLWK 3DG %HUEHU 3OXVK RU &RPPHUFLDO
508-835-1644 for free estimate
800-861-5445 or 508-886-2624
CARPET & LINOLEUM
www.edwardjones.com Member SIPC
Lisa M. Casillo Financial Advisor 325 Main St. Worcester, MA 01608 508-363-3900
Free Metal Included Call Tom
PAINTING
Home Improvement
LIFE DOESNâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;T STAND STILL AND NEITHER
<HDUV LQ %XVLQHVV
ADVERTISING
(978)728-4302
SIZE PER BLOCK 1.75 X 1.75 8 weeks ........... $31.50/week = $252 12 weeks ......... $26.75/week = $321 20 weeks ......... $25.20/week = $504 36 weeks ......... $23.60/week = $850 52 weeks ......... $22/week = $1144 Minimum commitment of 8 weeks.
B RADâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S HOME I MPROVEMENT â&#x20AC;&#x153;Over 30 Years Experienceâ&#x20AC;? Remodeling & Repairs Kitchens & Baths â&#x20AC;˘ Windows & Doors Finished Basements â&#x20AC;˘ Decks RooďŹ ng
508-829-7361 Licensed d
ADVERTISING
Water Damage BUSINESS REFERRAL PROGRAM COMPLETE REPAIRS & PAINTING
Refer a business to join our Service Directory, and if they advertise with us, youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll receive a $25 credit on your account for future Call Jim Charest advertising. We appreciate your business in the 508-865-4321 â&#x20AC;˘ 508-277-9421
Countryside Painting
Central Mass Classifieds!!
TBH Tax Preparation Timothy B. Hardy, Enrolled Agent
â&#x20AC;˘ 2 0 1 2 â&#x20AC;˘ F O R T H E Y E A R 2 0 11
Rates start at $55 for 1040EZ, $85 for 1040A, $150 for 1040 Includes electronic ďŹ ling (no charge) and 1 state return 20% DISCOUNT FOR SENIORS (60+), REFERRALS, AND FAMILY MEMBERS
To Advertise In This Directory Call 978.728.4302 or e-mail us at â&#x20AC;Ś sales@centralmassclass.com
In-home service offered at your convenience. All returns prepared at our ofďŹ ce and delivered back to you. DUBE & HAZELWOOD, P.C.
Email: tbhtaxprep@gmail.com
Phone: (978) 422-9695
Member of the National Association of Tax Professionals Helping businesses, non-profits and individuals, for more than 20 years providing the following services: â&#x20AC;˘ Tax planning and preparation â&#x20AC;˘ Financial Statements â&#x20AC;˘ Business Consulting
Our goal is your success!
100 Doyle Rd. â&#x20AC;˘ Holden
508-853-9638 â&#x20AC;˘ Complete tax service â&#x20AC;˘ Individual & Business â&#x20AC;˘ Electronic Filing available â&#x20AC;˘ Year-round tax & accounting service â&#x20AC;˘ Accredited tax advisor â&#x20AC;˘ Day/evening appointments
$OEHUW 1 &HFFKLQL &3$ ($ 67 Millbrook St., Suite 216 Worcester, MA 01606 508-797-0077 â&#x20AC;˘ Year-round tax, accounting & consulting service. â&#x20AC;˘ Computerized State & Federal taxes, electronic filing. â&#x20AC;˘ Business & Individual returns. Day/evening by appointment
COMPARE OUR RATES TO THE NATIONAL CHAIN FIRMS! â&#x20AC;˘ Tax Return Preparation - Personal, Corporate, Partnership, Estates and Trusts, Non-Profit â&#x20AC;˘ Free e-file â&#x20AC;˘ Back Taxes & Audits â&#x20AC;˘ IRS & DOR Representation â&#x20AC;˘ Multiple States â&#x20AC;˘ Prior Year Return
Licensed IRS Tax Professionals
774.261.8501 WWW.DH-CPAS.COM info@dh-cpas.com Causeway Crossing 45 Sterling Street | Suite 21 West Boylston, MA 01583
David L. Johnson EA, ATA
Call Now 10% OFF Any Tax Return for New Clients
MICHAEL D. CONRAD IRS Enrolled Agent 645 Chandler St, 2ND Floor Worcester, MA 01602
508-754-2665 www.strataccounting.com
J A N U A R Y 19 , 2 0 12 â&#x20AC;˘ W O R C E S T E R M A G . C O M
31
www.centralmassclass.com
CENTRAL MASS CLASSIFIEDS
(978)728-4302
EDUCATION
REAL ESTATE WANTED
MUSIC INSTRUCTION
Dorothy Pond, Millbury, MA, House or Land Wanted. Please call 508400-0512 508-400-0512
MUSICWORCESTER.COM Expert Instruction, Guitar, Bass, Drums, Band Workshops Holden Center Studio 508-340-5012
REAL ESTATE
VACATION PROPERTY FOR RENT S.Dennis 15Wellingtree dr
OPEN HOUSE
GET IT RENTED! do you have an apartment or house you need rented? 125,000 potential tenants are waiting!
find us on
32
Call Erin today to place your classified Ad 978-728-4302 or email
Real Estate â&#x20AC;˘ Jobs â&#x20AC;˘ Auto â&#x20AC;˘ Services
Central Mass
CL ASSIFIEDS
sales@centralmassclass.com
Millbury Home For Sale OPEN HOUSE Jan 22 11:30 - 1 PM
3 Bedroom, 1.5 Bath newly remodeled inside and out! NEW: roof, windows, heating, Granite kitchen, tile, Berber carpeting, hardwood. 1st floor bedroom and laundry. Walk-out basement. Detached garage. 14 River St. $219,900 Homestead Realty Group: 508-826-5750
2000sqft cape house sleeps 10 $1500 a week homelandrealtycape.com
4&& .03& 0/ -*/& XXX DFOUSBMNBTTDMBTT DPN
Wedding & Special Events Guide For the Perfect Wedding 3DUN $YH :RUFHVWHU 0$ Â&#x2021; ZZZ 7RRPH\5HQWV &RP
et us help create the wedding of your dreams with a distinctive wedding cake created just for you. Party Pastries Cookie Trays Wide Assortment of Cake Ornaments
L
#1
Voted Best Bakery in Worcester 45 Times!
Delicious Fresh Gluten-Free Cookies & Cakes
Tables â&#x20AC;˘ Chairs â&#x20AC;˘ China â&#x20AC;˘ Linen Party Tents â&#x20AC;˘ Food Service Equipment â&#x20AC;˘ Tools, Too!
Rent Quality ... Rent Toomeyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s! Reserve now for the Holidays! WORCESTERMAG.COM
â&#x20AC;˘ J A N U A R Y 19 , 2 0 12
133 Gold Star Blvd., Worcester
508-852-0746
www.thecrownbakery.com
To advertise call
978-728-4302
Does your business cater to
Wedding and Special Events? Advertise next month in our Wedding & Specials Events Guide to reach 125,000 readers throughout Central Massachusetts!
ď&#x192;§
To view current Real Estate Transactions, pick up a print copy of
The Landmark • The Community Journal Leominster Champion The Millbury-Sutton Chronicle • Worcester Mag And you will find them in the Central Mass Classifieds! Sponsored by…. Residential • CommeRCial • ConCRete
978-405-0017
• Exterior Painting & Staining • Decks & Deck Re-finishing • Interior Painting & Staining • Epoxy Coatings • Stamped Concrete & Overlays • Decorative Concrete Applications
Call for Free Estimates!
www.blackbearpainting.com
CENTRAL MASS CLASSIFIEDS
www.centralmassclass.com
AUTO/RV
AUTO/TRUCK
AUTOS
AUTOS
BOATS
1999 Wilderness 28’ Single slide 5th wheel travel trailer. Rear kitchen. Queen bed. Sleeps 6. Awning. 1 owner. Exc. cond. Asking $6695.00 508-886-8820
1999 Chevy S-10 Reg cab, long bed, 4x4, 4.3L, V6, New Michelin tires, Auto, C.C., after market speakers & CD player, rear sliding window, 77K, $2,500 508-885-9857
2001 Honda Accord Good to exc. cond. 98K+ miles, insp. 10/11. Very clean, leather seats. 4 new tires, 6 cd changer. $6500.00 or b/o. Call 508-435-3660
2009 Toyota Corolla LE Estate Sale, Like new, 31K, Millbury, MA. $14,000 OR B/O. 603-306-6326
1996 17ft. Boston Whaler 90HP Mercury w/ new trailer. $10,800.00 Call 508-886-6405
2011 Chevrolet Malibu Low mileage. Never seen winter. Many options. Factory coverage. Must sell. $17,000.00 OR B/O 508-769-4546
CAMPERS/TRAILERS
AUTOMOTIVE AUTO/MOTORCYCLE 2008 Honda Metropolitan Scooter Black and gray. Mint cond. 469 miles. Asking $1650.00. Includes helmet. 207-289-9362 OR 207-4501492.
2003 Acura 3.2 TL Excellent Condition, leather, moonroof, complete care record available, 105K miles, $7,490 508-7999347 and 508-754-6344
AUTO/TRUCK
2008 Suzuki GSX 650/K8. All black with silver and red trim. Less than 850 miles. Cover, new battery, and lock. $5500.00 508-7926080
1991 Ford F150 4.9 4x4 power window & locks , new clutch, alum wheels, cb radio 121,500 miles . Runs good, need a little T.L.C. $1,500 B/O 508-331 -2664
2005 Ford F150 Orig. 13k. Extended cab. Cloth upholstery. Bed cover. Like new, clean. $14,900.00 508-829-6854
2006 Chevrolet Aveo LT 5sp. trans. 4 dr hatchback. Fully loaded. Cruise, sunroof, pwr windows, pwr locks, cd player, rare spoiler, alloy wheels. Low miles, 35k. $6,900.00 978-5346727
AUTOS 1993 Honda Accord New rebuilt 3k engine, clutch, tires, batt, new glass, full power. Must Sell! $2500 978-874-0546 or cell 978602-6841.
2006 Nissan Altima Sedan, special edition, low mileage. Silver ext/Black int $14,000 or BO. 508-826 -0197
1995 Cadillac Limousine 52,800 original mileage, In good condition, black w/ silver trim $4,000 or B.O. 508-756-0687
Mercury Grand Marquis LS 2003 Silver, leather, 77k miles. Exc. cond. In/Out. Nonsmoking, well maintained. Recent tires/ brakes. $5900.00 508-757-4753
RECYCLING+YOU= CHANGE
Over 40 Acres! Over 3000 Vehicles! <:,+ 5,> (<;6 7(9;:
+(@ .<(9(5;,,
FREE Nationwide Parts Locator Service ;Y\Z[ \Z [V KV P[ VUJL HUK KV P[ YPNO[
+LWVZP[Z JVU]LUPLU[S` [HRLU V]LY [OL WOVUL
-VYLPNU +VTLZ[PJ ,HYS` 3H[L 4VKLS ,UNPULZ ;YHUZTPZZPVUZ 5L^ 9HKPH[VYZ ;VSS -YLL1-800-992-0441 -H_ 508-882-5202 .HZ ;HURZ >OLLSZ ;PYLZ )HSHUJLYZ 6MM 9[L *VSKIYVVR 9K ,_OH\Z[ 4HUPMVSKZ >PUKV^ 4V[VYZ 6HROHT 4( ^^^ HTOLYZ[VHROHTH\[V JVT
Amherst-Oakham
We Buy Unwanted & Junk Vehicles SCRAP METAL ACCEPTED ROTHERS BROOKS
USED AUTO PARTS
508-792-6211
>VYJLZ[LY 5V
Worcester, MA
508-799-9969
Car For Sale? Truck for Sale? RV? SUV? RUN YOUR AD UNTIL IT SELLS!
34
Reaching 125,000 readers in PRINT & ONLINE Contact Erin at
978-728-4302 WORCESTERMAG.COM
• J A N U A R Y 19 , 2 0 12
ONLY $20 FOR SIX LINES FOR ALL 5 PAPERS UNTIL IT SELLS!
FOR SALE Subaru Mint Condition. Low miles. Garaged. New tires. New wipers. Need to see. Black with tan interior. Must see to believe. Call for appt. 555-555-5555
2008 Fleetwood Niagara Pop-up camp, exc cond, 2 kings, flush toilet, shower, 3way fridge, stove, micro. Pop out din area to bed. 508 -395-1558 $12,500. 4x6 Trailer Closed in, New tires, great condition $900 508-8564580 Motor Home. 1997 Fourwinds 5000 Good cond, low miles, kept inside winters. Sleeps 6, AC, awning, recent brakes. Asking $13,500.00. 508-989-4558
LEGALS/PUBLIC NOTICES
Town of Sutton Request for Proposals RFP 12-01
(<;6 9,*@*305.
(978)728-4302
Request for Proposals are being solicited for the town of Sutton for a long-term telecommunications easement at the cell tower that exists at 194 Stone School Rd with the use commencing in 2024. Specifications may be obtained at the Town Administrator’s Office, Second Floor, 4 Uxbridge Road, Sutton, MA 01590 starting January 11th, between 8:00am and 4:00pm each business day excluding Fridays when bids may be obtained between 9:00am and 12:00 noon, until scheduled opening of bid. Bids must be in duplicate and enclosed in a sealed envelope addressed to the Town Administrator, 4 Uxbridge Road, Sutton, MA 01590 no later than 12noon Tuesday February 14th at which time they will be opened. The town of Sutton reserves the right to waive any informalities or irregularities in the bids received, or to reject any and all bids, or to accept proposals deemed to be in the best interest of the town of Sutton. The Town Administrator will award the contract on behalf of the Town of Sutton no later than thirty (30) working days after the date of the bid opening. James Smith Town Administrator 01/19/2012 01/26/2012
Commonwealth of Massachusetts The Trial Court Probate and Family Court 225 Main St. Worcester, MA 01608 508-831-2200 Docket No. WO11P1995EP1 MUPC SUPPLEMENTAL NOTICE In the Estate of: William P. McCormick Date of Death: 05/31/2011 to all persons who may have interest in the above-captioned estate, the Division of Medical Assistance and, if interested, to the Office of the Attorney General and the United Stated Department of Veterans Affairs; notice is being sent to you as you may have a legal interest in this case, in order to inform you of your rights. Under the new Massachusetts Uniform Probate Code Inventory and Accounts are not required to be filed with the Court, but interested parties are entitled to notice regarding the administration from the Personal Representative and can Petition the Court in any matter relating to the estate, including distribution of assets and expenses of administration. Interested parties are entitled to Petition the Court to institute formal proceedings and to obtain orders terminating or restricting the powers of the appointed Personal Representative. Petitioner requests to be permitted to file a MUPC Bond. 01/19/2012
www.centralmassclass.com
CENTRAL MASS CLASSIFIEDS
(978)728-4302
LEGALS/PUBLIC NOTICES
NOTICE OF MORTGAGEE’S SALE OF REAL ESTATE
By virtue and in execution of the Power of Sale contained in a certain mortgage given by Edward J. Bishop to Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., dated November 17, 2006 and recorded with the Worcester County (Worcester District) Registry of Deeds at Book 40184, Page 214, of which mortgage Wells Fargo Bank, NA is the present holder, for breach of the conditions of said mortgage and for the purpose of foreclosing, the same will be sold at Public Auction at 1:00 p.m. on February 7, 2012, on the mortgaged premises located at 3 Alstead Path, Millbury, Worcester County, Massachusetts, all and singular the premises described in said mortgage, TO WIT: The land with buildings thereon, situated in the Town of Millbury, County of Worcester, Commonwealth of Massachusetts, consisting of Lots 298, 299 and 302 on Plan of Part 2, Dorothy Pond Heights, Millbury, owned by J.W. Wilbur Co., Inc. dated June 27, 1923, Ernest W. Branch, C.E. and recorded with the Worcester District Registry of Deeds in plan Book 39, Plan 56, to which a more particular description may be had. Being the same premises conveyed to Mortgagor by Deed recorded with said Registry of Deeds immediately prior hereto in Book 40184, Page 212. For mortgagor’s(s’) title see deed recorded with Worcester County (Worcester District) Registry of Deeds in Book 40184, Page 212. These premises will be sold and conveyed subject to and with the benefit of all rights, rights of way, restrictions, easements, covenants, liens or claims in the nature of liens, improvements, public assessments, any and all unpaid taxes, tax titles, tax liens, water and sewer liens and any other municipal assessments or liens or existing encumbrances of record which are in force and are applicable, having priority over said mortgage, whether or not reference to such restrictions, easements, improvements, liens or encumbrances is made in the deed. TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of Five Thousand ($5,000.00) Dollars by certified or bank check will be required to be paid by the purchaser at the time and place of sale. The balance is to be paid by certified or bank check at Harmon Law Offices, P.C., 150 California Street, Newton, Massachusetts 02458, or by mail to P.O. Box 610389, Newton Highlands, Massachusetts 02461-0389, within thirty (30) days from the date of sale. Deed will be provided to purchaser for recording upon receipt in full of the purchase price. The description of the premises contained in said mortgage shall control in the event of an error in this publication. Other terms, if any, to be announced at the sale. Wells Fargo Bank, NA Present holder of said mortgage By its Attorneys, HARMON LAW OFFICES, P.C. 150 California Street Newton, MA 02458 (617) 558-0500 201109-0390 – BLU 01/12/2012, 01/19/2012, 01/26/2012
Sutton Planning Board Public Hearing Notice
In accordance with the provisions of M.G.L. Ch. 40A § 5, the Sutton Planning Board will hold a public hearing to consider changes to the Town of Sutton Zoning Bylaw. The hearing will be held on Monday, February 6, 2012 at 7:15 P.M. at the Sutton Town Hall. The following is a summary of the proposed changes; a copy of the proposed changes may be inspected in the office of the Town Clerk during normal business hours. 1. To amend the Zoning Bylaw, Section III.A. Table 1 – Use Regulation Table, by allowing large photovoltaic installations (250kW+) in the residential districts (R-1, R-2 and V) if a parcel is 100 acres or larger. 2. To amend the Zoning Bylaw, Section VI.O. – Large Scale Solar Photovoltaic, by adding a new section that states no more than 30% of a parcel can be utilized for an entire installation in the residential districts (R-1, R-2 and V). Scott Paul, Chairman Sutton Planning Board 01/19/2012 and 01/26/2012
TOWN OF SUTTON ZONING BOARD OF APPEAL TO ALL INTERESTED INHABITANTS OF THE TOWN OF SUTTON In accordance with the provisions of M.G.L. Ch. 40A, §11, the Zoning Board of Appeals will hold a public hearing at the Sutton Town Hall, on February 2, 2012 at 7:30pm on the petition of Mr. John Esler. The petitioner requests a variance from III(B) (3)( Table II) of the town’s zoning bylaws to permit a one (1) ft. front property line setback in order to construct an addition. The property that is the subject of this petition is located at 10 Point Way, Sutton MA on Assessors Map #9, Parcel #105. The property is located in the R-1 Zoning District. A copy of the petition may be inspected during normal office hours in the Town Clerk’s Office located in the Town Hall. Any person interested or wishing to be heard on this variance petition should appear at the time and place designated. Richard Deschenes Board of Appeals Clerk 01/19/2012, 01/26/2012
Commonwealth of Massachusetts The Trial Court Probate and Family Court Worcester Probate and Family Court 225 Main St. Worcester, MA 01608 Docket No. WO08P2321GR1 CITATION GIVING NOTICE OF PETITION TO EXPAND THE POWERS OF A GUARDIAN In the Interests of: Nadine Burt of Shrewsbury, MA Respondent Incapacitated Person/Protected Person to the named respondent and all other interested persons, a petition has been filed by Department of Developmental Service of, in the above captioned matter requesting that the court: Expand the powers of a Guardian. The petition asks the court to make a determination that the powers of the Guardian and/or Conservator should be expanded, modified or limited since the time of the appointment. The original petition is on file with the court. You have the right to object to this proceeding If you wish to do so, you or your attorney must file a written appearance at this court on or before 10:00 A.M. on the return date of 02/21/2012. This day is NOT a hearing date, but a deadline date by which you have to file the written appearance if you object to the petition. If you fail to file the written appearance by the return date, action may be taken in this matter without further notice to you. In addition to filing the written appearance you or your attorney must file a written affidavit stating the specific facts and grounds of your objection within 30 days after the return date. IMPORTANT NOTICE The outcome of this proceeding may limit or completely take away the above-named person’s right to make decisions about personal affairs or financial affairs or both. The above-named person has the right to ask for a lawyer. Anyone may make this request on behalf of the above-named person. If the above-named person cannot afford a lawyer, one may be appointed at State expense. WITNESS, Hon. Denise L. Meagher, First Justice of this Court. Date: December 30, 2011 Stephen G. Abraham Register of Probate 01/19/2012
LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE Notice is hereby given by Boulevard Towing of 550 Franklin Street Worcester, MA, pursuant to the provisions of Mass G.L c. 255, Section 39A, that they will sell the following vehicles on or after January 27, 2012 by private sale to satisfy their garage keeper’s lien for towing, storage, and notices of sale: 1. 2003 GMC Sierra PU VIN#1GTHK24UX3E380946 2. 2004 Dodge Stratus VIN# 1B3AL36X74N223468 3. 2003 Volkswagen Passat VIN# WVWPD63B53P258464 4. 1998 Jeep Cherokee VIN# 1J4FJ68S0WL271030 5. 2005 Nissan Murano VIN# JN8AZ08WX5W415760 Signed, Pat Assad, owner Boulevard Towing 1/12, 1/19, 1/26
THE COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS LAND COURT DEPARTMENT OF THE TRIAL COURT (SEAL) Case No. 441371 To: John DiTullio;Tamra DiTullio and to all persons entitled to the benefit of the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act. Household Finance Corporation II claiming to be the holder of a Mortgage covering real property in Sutton, numbered 10 Colonial Road given by John DiTullio and Tamra DiTullio to Household Finance Corporation II, dated March 21, 2008, and recorded with the Worcester County (Worcester District) Registry of Deeds at Book 42601, Page 316 has filed with said court a complaint for authority to foreclose said mortgage in the manner following: by entry and possession and exercise of power of sale. If you are entitled to the benefits of the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act as amended and you object to such foreclosure you or your attorney should file a written appearance and answer in said court at Boston on or before Feb 20, 2012 or you may be forever barred from claiming that such foreclosure is invalid under said act. Witness, KARYN F. SCHEIER, Chief Justice of said Court on Jan 9, 2012 Attest: DEBORAH J. PATTERSON RECORDER 201008-1491-GRY 01/19/2012
Commonwealth of Massachusetts The Trial Court Probate and Family Court 225 Main St. Worcester, MA 01608 508-831-2200 Docket No. WO11P1995EP1 NOTICE OF PETITION FOR PROBATE OF WILL In the Estate of: William P McCormick Late of: Sutton, MA 01590 Date of Death: 05/31/2011 to all persons interested in the above captioned estate, a petition has been presented requesting that a document purporting to be the last will of said decedent be proved and allowed and that Ellyn McCormoick of Sutton, MA be appointed executor/trix, named in the will to serve Without Surety. IF YOU DESIRE TO OBJECT THERETO, YOU OR YOUR ATTORNEY MUST FILE A WRITTEN APPEARANCE IN SAID COURT AT: Worcester ON OR BEFORE TEN O’CLOCK IN THE MORNING (10:00 AM ON: 02/07/2012 in addition, you must file a written affidavit of objections to the petition, stating specific facts and grounds upon which the objection is based, within (30) days after the return day (or such other time as the court, on motion with notice to the petitioner, may allow) in accordance with Probate Rule 16 WITNESS, Denise L. Meagher, First Justice of this Court Date: January 11, 2012 Stephen G. Abraham Register of Probate 01/19/2012
J A N U A R Y 19 , 2 0 12 • W O R C E S T E R M A G . C O M
35
www.centralmassclass.com
CENTRAL MASS CLASSIFIEDS
(978)728-4302
LEGALS/PUBLIC NOTICES NOTICE OF MORTGAGEE’S SALE OF REAL ESTATE By virtue and in execution of the Power of Sale contained in a certain mortgage given by Michael A. Romano to Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., dated June 3, 2005 and recorded with the Worcester County (Worcester District) Registry of Deeds at Book 36489, Page 1, of which mortgage The Bank of New York Mellon, fka The Bank of New York as Successor in interest to JP Morgan Chase Bank NA as Trustee for Structured Asset Mortgage Investments II Inc. Bear Stearns ALT-A Trust 2005-9, Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2005-9 is the present holder, for breach of the conditions of said mortgage and for the purpose of foreclosing, the same will be sold at Public Auction at 1:00 p.m. on February 8, 2012, on the mortgaged premises located at 20 Manor Road, Millbury, Worcester County, Massachusetts, all and singular the premises described in said mortgage, TO WIT: A certain tract of land with the buildings thereon located in Millsbury, Worcester County, Massachusetts and being shown as Lots 179, 180, 181 and 182 on a plan of Dorothy Manor, Millbury, for sale by Bay State Land Company, Boston, Massachusetts, April 1915, Erneset W. Branch, CE and bounded and described as followse: NORTHWESTERLY by Manor Road, one hundred fifty (150) feet; EASTERLY by Lot 179 as shown on said plan, one hundred twenty-nine (129) feet; SOUTHEASTERLY by Lots 179, 171, 172 and 173 as shown on said plan one hundred (100) feet; SOUTHWESTERLY by Lot #18 as shown on said plan, one hundred sixty-five feet of land, more or less CONTAINING according to said plan, 14,492 square feet of land, more or less. Being the same premises conveyed to the Mortgagors by Deed dated May 24, 2005 and recroded prior hereto with the Worcester District Registry of Deeds at Book 36488, Page 388. For mortgagor’s(s’) title see deed recorded with Worcester County (Worcester District) Registry of Deeds in Book 36488, Page 388. These premises will be sold and conveyed subject to and with the benefit of all rights, rights of way, restrictions, easements, covenants, liens or claims in the nature of liens, improvements, public assessments, any and all unpaid taxes, tax titles, tax liens, water and sewer liens and any other municipal assessments or liens or existing encumbrances of record which are in force and are applicable, having priority over said mortgage, whether or not reference to such restrictions, easements, improvements, liens or encumbrances is made in the deed. TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of Five Thousand ($5,000.00 ) Dollars by certified or bank check will be required to be paid by the purchaser at the time and place of sale. The balance is to be paid by certified or bank check at Harmon Law Offices, P.C., 150 California Street, Newton, Massachusetts 02458, or by mail to P.O. Box 610389, Newton Highlands, Massachusetts 02461-0389, within thirty (30) days from the date of sale. Deed will be provided to purchaser for recording upon receipt in full of the purchase price. The description of the premises contained in said mortgage shall control in the event of an error in this publication. Other terms, if any, to be announced at the sale. The Bank of New York Mellon, fka The Bank of New York as Successor in interest to JP Morgan Chase Bank NA as Trustee for Structured Asset Mortgage Investments II Inc. Bear Stearns ALT-A Trust 2005-9, Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2005-9 Present holder of said mortgage By its Attorneys, HARMON LAW OFFICES, P.C. 150 California Street Newton, MA 02458 (617) 558-0500 201106-1145 – YEL 01/12/2012 01/19/2012 & 01/26/2012
Keep it Legal
36
CALL ERIN AT 978-728-4302 OR EMAIL AT SALES@CENTRALMASSCLASS.COM
TO PLACE YOUR YOUR LEGAL/PUBLIC NOTICES WORCESTERMAG.COM
• J A N U A R Y 19 , 2 0 12
MORTGAGEE’S NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL ESTATE By virtue and in execution of the Power of Sale contained in a certain Mortgage given by David C. Hoyle to Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., dated January 26, 2007 and recorded with the Worcester County (Worcester District) Registry of Deeds at Book 40564, Page 325 of which the Mortgage the undersigned is the present holder by assignment for breach of the conditions of said Mortgage and for the purpose of foreclosing same will be sold at Public Auction at 11:00 AM on February 6, 2012 at 81 Elmwood Street, Millbury, MA, all and singular the premises described in said Mortgage, to wit: The land with the buildings thereon, situated in Millbury, Worcester County, Massachusetts on the southwesterly side of the road leading from the Old Common in Millbury to Millbury Center and bounded and described as follows: Beginning at a drill hole in the southerly line of Elmwood Street, said drillhole being easterly of a stone highway bound #8 measured along the southerly line of Elmwood Street by these five (5) courses S. 79 degs. 33’ E 87.70 feet and N. 80 degs. 31’ E 110.75 feet and S. 85 degs. 07’ E 57.16 feet and S. 89 degs. 07’ E 93.87 feet and N. 87 degs. 26’ E. 13 feet plus or minus; Thence No. 87 degs. 26’ E along the southerly line of Elmwood Street one hundred thirty-six and 44/100 (136.44) feet to a drill hole; Thence S. 80 degs. 44’ E. along the southerly line of said Elmwood Street eighty-three and 90/100 (83.90) feet to an iron pin at a corner; Thence S. 17 degs. 40’ W. by land now or formerly of LeClaire one hundred forty-one and 90/100 (141.90) feet; Thence S. 16 degs. 56’ W. one hundred ninety-five and 77/100 (195.77) feet to a stone bound; Thence S. 10 degs. 03’ E. by land now or formerly of Clara Fortin sixty-one and 12/100 (61.12) feet; Thence S. 19 degs. 33’ E. by land of Fortin one hundred thirty-one and 12/100 (131.12) feet to a stone corner; Thence S. 14 degs. 14’ E. one hundred seventy-two and 93/100 (172.93) feet to a stone corner bound; Thence N. 79 degs. 32’ W. two hundred fifty-eight and 47/100 (258.47) feet to an iron pipe; Thence N. 69 degs. 30’ W. twenty-six and 05/100 (26.05) feet more or less to a point at land now or formerly of Grennon et ux; Thence N. 5 degs. E. six hundred thirty and 70/100 (630.70) feet more or less along land of said Grennon to the point of beginning. Containing 3.09 acres plus or minus, according to said plan. See plan recorded in Plan Book 227, Plan No 41. Being the same premises conveyed to the herein named mortgagor (s) by deed recorded with Worcester District Registry of Deeds herewith. Liber 40564 Page 323 The premises are to be sold subject to and with the benefit of all easements, restrictions, building and zoning laws, unpaid taxes, tax titles, water bills, municipal liens and assessments, rights of tenants and parties in possession. TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of FIVE THOUSAND DOLLARS AND 00 CENTS ($5,000.00) in the form of a certified check or bank treasurer’s check will be required to be delivered at or before the time the bid is offered. The successful bidder will be required to execute a Foreclosure Sale Agreement immediately after the close of the bidding. The balance of the purchase price shall be paid within thirty (30) days from the sale date in the form of a certified check, bank treasurer’s check or other check satisfactory to Mortgagee’s attorney. The Mortgagee reserves the right to bid at the sale, to reject any and all bids, to continue the sale and to amend the terms of the sale by written or oral announcement made before or during the foreclosure sale. If the sale is set aside for any reason, the Purchaser at the sale shall be entitled only to a return of the deposit paid. The purchaser shall have no further recourse against the Mortgagor, the Mortgagee or the Mortgagee’s attorney. The description of the premises contained in said mortgage shall control in the event of an error in this publication. TIME WILL BE OF THE ESSENCE. Other terms if any, to be announced at the sale. Massachusetts Housing Finance Agency Present Holder of said Mortgage, By Its Attorneys, Orlans Moran PLLC P.O. Box 962169 Boston, MA 02196 Phone: (617) 502-4100 01/12/2012 01/19/2012 & 01/26/2012
ANSWERS TO TODAY’S PUZZLE
www.centralmassclass.com
CENTRAL MASS CLASSIFIEDS NATIONAL ADVERTISERS
ADOPTIONS
AUTO DONATION
EDUCATION & TRAINING
HEALTH & FITNESS
LAND FOR SALE
Birthmother: We’ll care about you as you get to know us… open-minded, marrid couple hoping to become ADOPTIVE PARENTS. Expensses paid. TEXT/ CALL Lisa 1-917-478-3178\\
DONATE YOUR CAR FOR CASH ON THE SPOT & IRS TAX DEDUCTION. FREE $2,000 Grocery Shopping Coupons. FREE Towing. All Cars Accepted. 1-855-WE-CUREKIDS/1-855-932-8735, CarsCureKids. org*
ALLIED HEALTH CAREER TRAININGAttend college 100% online. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial Aid if qualified. SCHEV certified. Call 800-491-8370 www.CenturaOnline.com\\
Health and Fitness: Lose 7-15 lbs. In 7 Days Eat the Foods You Enjoy Quickly and Dramatically Shrink Your Waistline Lose Weight and Keep it Off www. lose15poundsin7days.com\\
100 ACRE LAND SALE Near Growing El Paso, Texas Was $64,500 Now $19,500 Almost 70% Discount. $0 Down, No Credit Checks! Beautiful views, owner financing. FREE color brochure. 1-800-343-9444 \\
A Loving alternative to unplanned pregnancy. You choose the family for your child. Receive pictures/info of waiting/approved couples. Living expense assistance. 1-866-236-7638\\ PREGNANT? CONSIDERING ADOPTION? Talk with caring agency specializing in matching Birthmothers with Families nationwide. LIVING EXPENSES PAID. Call 24/7 Abby’s One True Gift Adoptions 866-413-6293 (Void in Illinois) ^ AUCTIONS AUCTIONS, REAL ESTATE, YORK BEACH, MAINE - COURT ORDERED; One Residential Condo & One Retail Condo; Auctions: February 9; For details & terms, visit www.tranzon.com; Tranzon Auction Properties; 207-775-4300; Thomas W. Saturley, ME RE Lic. #90600017// AUTOMOBILES DONATE YOUR VEHICLE Receive $1000 GROCERY COUPONS. UNITED BREAST CANCER FOUNDATION. Free Mammograms, Breast Cancer Info www.ubcf. info FREE Towing, Tax Deductible, NonRunners Accepted. 1- 800-728-0801\\ CASH FOR CARS! Any Make, Model or Year. We Pay MORE! Running or Not. Sell Your Car or Truck TODAY. Free Towing! Instant Offer: 1-888-545-8647\\
DONATE YOUR VEHICLE RECEIVE FREE VACATION Voucher United Breast Cancer Foundation Free Mammograms, Breast Cancer info www.ubcf. info FREE towing, Fast, Non-Runners Accepted, 24/7 (888) 444-8216// AUTOS WANTED
SELL YOUR CAR, TRUCK OR SUV TODAY! All 50 states, fast pick-up and payment. Any condition, make or model. Call now 1-877-818-8848, www. MyCarforCash.net* CASH FOR CARS: Any Car/Truck. Running or Not! Top Dollar Paid. We Come To You! Call For Instant Offer: 1-888420-3808 www.cash4car.com^
CASH FOR CARS: Any Make, Model or Year. We Pay MORE! Running or Not, Sell you Car or Truck TODAY. Free Towing! Instant Offer: 1-800-871-0654
DONATE YOUR VEHICLE LOVE IN THE NAME OF CHRIST. Free Towing & Non-Runners Accepted. 800-549-2791 Help Us Transform Lives In The Name Of Christ.* BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
Make Up To $2,000.00+ Per Week! New Credit Card Ready Drink-Snack Vending Machines. Minimum $3K to $30K+ Investment Required. Locations Available. BBB Accredited Business. (800) 962-9189\\ PAID IN ADVANCE! Make $1000 Weekly Mailing Brochures from Home. Income is guaranteed! No experience required. Enroll Today! www.national-mailers. net \\ CONTRACTORS HAS YOUR BUILDING SHIFTED? Contact Woodford Bros., Inc. for straightening, leveling, foundation and wood frame repairs at 1-800-OLD-BARN, www. woodfordbros.com, MAHIC#155877; CTHIC#571557; RICRB#22078* EDUCATION Teach English Abroad! 4-week TEFL course in Prague. Job assistance worldwide. We have over 1500 graduates teaching in 60+ countries! www. teflworldwideprague.com info@teflworldwideprague.com ^ MEDICAL BILLING TRAINEES NEEDED! Hospitals & Doctors depend on certified Medical Office Assistants! Job Training & Placement Assistance available! Find out if you qualify! Call now for free info! 1-888-589-9680 //
//AVIATION MAINTENANCE/AVIONICS Graduate in 15 months. FAA approved; financial aid if qualified. Job placement assistance. Call National Aviation Academy Today! 1-800-292-3228 or NAA.edu.*
AIRLINES ARE HIRING- Train for hands on Aviation Maintenance Career. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualified- Housing available. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance (877)8180783 \\ EARN COLLEGE DEGREE ONLINE. *Medical, *Business, *Criminal Justice. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial Aid if qualified. SCHEV certified. Call 800488-0386 www.CenturaOnline.com \\ EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES NOW HIRING Companies desperately need employees to assemble products at home. No selling, any hours. $500 weekly potential. Info 1-985-646-1700, Dept. ME-5204.* Paid In Advance! Make $1,000 a Week mailing brochures from home! Guaranteed Income! FREE Supplies! No experience required. Start Immediately! www.homemailerprogram.net (AAN CAN)^ Earn up to $150 per day Undercover Shoppers Needed to Judge Retail & Dining Establishments Experience Not Required Call Now 1-888-891-4244\\
Help Wanted!!! Make $1000 a Week processing our mail! FREE Supplies! Helping Home-Workers since 2001! Genuine Opportunity! No experience required. Start Immediately! www.national-mailers.net \\ FOR RENT WARM WEATHER IS YEAR ROUND In Aruba. The water is safe, and the dining is fantastic. Walk out to the beach. 3-Bedroom weeks available in May 2012 and more. Sleeps 8. $3500. Email: carolaction@aol.com for more information. * FOR RENT: One week at the largest timeshare in the world. Orange Lake is right next to Disney and has many amenities including golf, tennis, and a water park. Weeks available are Feb. 26 to Mar. 4 & Mar. 4 to Mar. 11, 2012. (Sun. to Sun.) $850 inclusive. Email: carolaction@aol.com*
ATTENTION DIABETICS with Medicare. Get a FREE Talking Meter and diabetic testing supplies at NO COST, plus FREE home delivery! Best of all, this meter eliminates painful finger pricking! Call 888-903-6658\\ ATTENTION SLEEP APNEA SUFFERERS with Medicare. Get FREE CPAP Replacement Supplies at NO COST, plus FREE home delivery! Best of all, prevent red skin sores and bacterial infection! Call 866-993-5043 \\ Canada Drug Center is your choice for safe and affordable medications. Our licensed Canadian mail order pharmacy will provide you with savings of up to 90 percent on all your medication needs. Call Today 888-459-9961 for $25.00 off your first prescription and free shipping. \\ Affordable Health Insurance for EVERYONE!! Uninsured? Dissatisfied? Been Turned down? Call Now We Can Help Licensed Agents Standing By 1-800951-2167\\ Local STD/HIV Testing Did you know you can have an STD and show no symptoms? Early detection and treatment can prevent permanent damage? Highest levels of privacy and discretion. Call 1-888-737-4941 \\ HELP WANTED Drivers-Pyle Transport needs OWNER OPERATORS & COMPANY DRIVERS! Regional Truckload Operations. HOME EVERY WEEKEND! 0/0 Average $1.84/Mile. Steady, Year-Round Work. Requires CDL-A, 2 Yrs Exp. Call Charity: 888-301-5855. www.DriveforPyle. com// $$$HELP WANTED$$$ Extra Income! Assembling CD cases from Home! No Experience Necessary! Call our Live Operators Now! 1-800-405-7619 EXT 2450 http://www.easywork-greatpay. com (AAN CAN) ^ Attn: Exp. Reefer Drivers: GREAT PAY/Freight Lanes from Presque Isle, ME. Boston-Lehigh, PA 800277-0212 or primeinc.com //
MISC. FOR SALE CASH FOR WAR RELICS: COLLECTOR WILLING TO BUY CIVIL WAR, WW1, WW2, HELMETS, SWORDS, DAGGERS, FLAGS, MEDALS-DON’T SELL FOR LESS AT HOTEL SHOWS-WE PAY MORE!! Will travel 617-785-1694. // Living in Pain? Real Time Pain Relief Lotion Relieves Pain in Minutes. 10 Single Application Travel Packs only $9.95 Call 888-228-1522. Smells Good Too!\\ DISH Network. Starting at $19.99/ month PLUS 30 Premium Movie Channels FREE for 3 Months! SAVE! & Ask About SAME DAY Installation! CALL 877-992-1237\\ READERS & MUSIC LOVERS. 100 Greatest Novels (audio books) ONLY $99.00 (plus s h.) Includes MP3 Player & Accessories. BONUS: 50 Classical Music Works & Money Back Guarantee. Call Today! 1-888-799-3451 \\ 100% Guaranteed Omaha Steaks SAVE 64% on the Family Value Collection. NOW ONLY $49.99 Plus 3 FREE GIFTS & right-to-the-door delivery in a reusable cooler, ORDER Today. 1-888543-7297 and mention code 45069SKS or www.OmahaSteaks.com/fvc11 \\ MISCELLANEOUS GIGANTIC MIRRORS! Jobsite Leftovers. Nine 72”x100”, Perfect For Gym/ Dance, $165. Each. Six 48”x100”, Perfect For Bathrooms, $125. Each. Perfect Condition. Free Delivery! Installation Available. 1-800-473-0619* Earn $1000 a week Mailing Brochures from Home. Free Supplies! Guaranteed Income! No experience required. Start Today. www.national-mailers.net \\ EARN COLLEGE DEGREE ONLINE. *Medical, *Business, *Criminal Justice. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial Aid if qualified. SCHEV certified. Call 888-216-1791 www.CenturaOnline.com//
(978)728-4302 SAWMILLS from only $3997-MAKE MONEY & SAVE MONEY with your own bandmill-Cut lumber any dimension. In stock ready to ship. FREE Info & DVD: www.NorwoodSawmills.com/300N 1-800-578-1363 Ext. 300N // AIRLINES ARE HIRING-Train for hands on Aviation Career. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualified-Job placement assistance. Call Aviation Institute of Maintenance 877-2020386// Advertise your product or service nationwide or by region in up to 12 million households in North America’s best suburbs! Place your classified ad in over 750 suburban newspapers just like this one. Call Classified Avenue at 888-486-2466 or go to www.classifiedavenue.net\\w MUSIC MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS CLARINET/ FLUTE/ VIOLIN/TRUMPET/ Trombone/Amplifier/ Fender Guitar, $69 each. Cello/Upright Bass/Saxophone/ French Horn/Drums, $185 ea. Tuba/ Baritone Horn/Hammond Organ, Others 4 sale.1-516-377-7907* REAL ESTATE 20 Acres-Live On Land NOW!! Only $99/mo. $0 Down, Owner Financing, NO CREDIT CHECKS! Near El Paso, Texas, Beautiful Mountain Views! Free Color Brochure. 800-7558953 www.sunsetranches.com\\ ROOMMATES ALL AREAS - ROOMMATES.COM. Browse hundreds of online listings with photos and maps. Find your roommate with a click of the mouse! Visit: http://www.Roommates.com. ^ WANTED TO BUY WANTED YOUR DIABETES TEST STRIPS. Unexpired. We buy Any Kind/ Brand. Pay up to $18.00 per box. Shipping Paid. Hablamos espanol. Call 1-800-267-9895 www.SellDiabeticstrips.com \\
AT&T U-Verse for just $29.99/mo! SAVE when you bundle Internet+Phone+TV and get up to $300 BACK! (Select plans). Limited Time Call NOW! 1-866944-0810\\
CE A L P T E K MAR w e n s ified s s a l C ss a M l a r Cent e h t t u Central Check o Mass
s a m l a r t n e c . w w at w
. m o c . s s a l sc
Real Estate • Jobs • Auto • Services
CL ASSIFIEDS
J A N U A R Y 19 , 2 0 12 • W O R C E S T E R M A G . C O M
37
Two minutes with...
Clifford Wilson CLIFFORD WILSON OF WORCESTER’S FRAMED IN TATNUCK IS ONE OUT OF 61 PEOPLE IN THE WORLD THAT CAN SAY THEY ARE A MASTER CERTIFIED PICTURE FRAMER. FROM GEORGE WASHINGTON’S WILL TO AN ANTIQUE KIMONO AND SANDALS, WILSON HAS FRAMED IT ALL IN THE 10 YEARS THAT HE’S BEEN IN BUSINESS. SOON HE WILL BE TRAVELING TO LAS VEGAS FOR THE PROFESSIONAL PICTURE FRAMER’S ASSOCIATION 2012 ANNUAL CONVENTION. BUT FOR NOW, WILSON HAS SHARED THE COMMON MISCONCEPTIONS ABOUT THE FRAMING BUSINESS AND MUCH MORE. First off, tell us a little about yourself? I live and work in Worcester. As chairman of Worcester Local First, I promote the success of local independent Worcester businesses. I spent 25 years in computer science and management positions. When I decided to start my own business 10 years ago, my experience framing my own art made the picture framing business a natural fit.
We hear that you’re one of the only 61 Master Certified Picture Framer’s in the world...what does this mean? The Professional Picture Framers Association tests framers for two certifications. The first is the Certified Picture Framer® (CPF®), which is a three-hour, proctored, written exam much like the SATs. There are about 3,800 CPFs in the world. The second designation is the Master Certified Picture Framer® (MCPF®), which is a hands-on evaluation of framing craftsmanship. There are currently only 61 MCPFs.
What kind of work went into this? I had to frame four pieces of art: a canvas, a textile, paper, and a 3D object. These four framed pieces were then sent to an evaluation site. At the site, I had to frame a piece of art within 90 minutes in front of an evaluator. After I finished the onsite piece, two Master Evaluators took all five framed pieces apart and critiqued each one against a very demanding scoring system that takes preservation and workmanship techniques into account. I had to score 90 percent on all five of the framed pieces to pass.
38
WORCESTERMAG.COM • JANUARY 19, 2012
STEVEN KING
What first sparked your interest in framing? I was painting pastel
landscapes as a hobby and got into a gallery in Wellfleet, which required me to frame my work. When I decided to start my own business, it seemed like a natural transition to become a professional picture framer. Of course, I’ve learned a great deal about framing since then.
Tell us a little more about the Professional Picture Framer’s Association (PPFA) 2012 Annual Convention? Each year, the PPFA holds an international convention to enable framing education and hold framing competitions. The convention is attended by framers from all over the world. I’m really looking forward to it this year. It is going to be a very hectic week for me. Not only do I have to attend the board meeting because I am a director, but I am speaking at the Chapter Leaders Conference and teaching three classes.
What’s the most common mistake people make with their framing? Many people
believe that bigger or more ornate “takes away from the picture.” This is often an incorrect assumption. What’s important is to select a mat and frame combination that coordinates with and supports the art. Often wider mats or frames provide “visual breathing room” that actually gives the picture more presence and prominence.
What is your role as the president of the New England chapter of the Professional Picture Framer’s Association? As
president of the New England chapter, I organize two small trade shows for the framing industry each year and bring
in educators for framing seminars and workshops. Our goal is to improve the knowledge and craftsmanship of framing in New England.
Can you tell us about your time as the director on the International Board of the Professional Picture Framer’s Association? As with any Board of
Directors, our job collectively, and my job individually, is to ensure the health and growth of the organization. The PPFA operates to improve the health of the picture framing industry through education, certification and competition.
Are there any common misconceptions about framing? There are a number
of misconceptions! The biggest is probably that it is expensive. Big Box chain framers have coupons at 50 percent-off and more on a regular basis. This gives consumers the idea that custom framing at an independent store will cost twice what it does at these large chains. In reality, when
like to like is compared, independent stores, like Framed In Tatnuck, usually beat the Big Box 50 percent-off sales with everyday prices. Another misconception is that all framers know what they are doing. Framers aren’t required to demonstrate capability before they open a frame shop. As in any industry, materials and techniques are improved on a regular basis and at a rapid pace. Some framers are not adequately trained, or do not keep up with the changes and can do harm that won’t be seen until the art is reframed sometime in the future.
What has been your greatest accomplishment? Wow, I’ve been
married for 35 years to a wonderful woman and raised two great kids. Got both kids through college, then started a business from scratch and grew it during down economic times. Who knows, maybe my greatest accomplishment is yet to come.
-Brittany Murphy
JANUARY 19, 2012 • WORCESTERMAG.COM
39
WE’VE INCREASED OUR INTERNET SPEEDS AGAIN. Not only have we increased our download speeds, but for a limited time you can get Charter Internet Express at the special price of $19.99 per month for up to twelve months. No wonder PC Magazine ranked us the #1 Internet Service Provider in the Nation. If you don’t already have Charter Internet, there couldn’t be a better time to add it. Call 1-888-GET-CHARTER or visit charter.com/power.
THIS MUCH POWER COULD GO TO YOUR HEAD. ©2012 Charter Communications. Limited-time offer. Qualifying residential customers only. Internet service only is 6-month term & price is $29.99 months 6-12; Bundle is 12-month term & price is $29.99 months 12-24; standard rates apply after promotional period. Taxes, fees, surcharges, equipment, install extra. Available Internet speeds may vary by address; small percent of customers will receive lower than advertised speeds. Services not available in all areas. Restrictions apply. PC Magazine Report 9/11.
40
WORCESTERMAG.COM
•
JANUARY 19, 2012