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Kirk A. Davis President Kathleen Real Publisher x331 Walter Bird Jr. Editor x322 Steven King Photographer x323 Joshua Lyford x325, Tom Quinn x324 Reporters Colin Burdett, Sarah Connell, Brendan Egan, Brian Goslow, Janice Harvey, Jim Keogh, Jim Perry, Jessica Picard, Kara Senecal, Corlyn Vooorhees, Contributing Writers Megan Baynes, Eli Flagg, Ben Kammer, Tom Matthews, Corinne O’Brien, Editorial Interns Don Cloutier Director of Creative Services x141 Kimberly Vasseur Creative Director/Assistant Director of Creative Services x142 Matthew Fatcheric, Becky Gill, Stephanie Mallard, David Rand Creative Services Department Helen Linnehan Ad Director x333 Diane Galipeau x335, Rick McGrail x334, Media Consultants Kathryn Connolly Media Coordinator x332 Michelle Purdie Classified Sales Specialist x433 Worcester Magazine 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 978.728.4302, email sales@centralmassclass.com, or mail to Central Mass Classifieds, P.O. Box 546, Holden, MA 01520
DISTRIBUTION: Worcester Magazine 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 Magazine offices. Unauthorized bulk removal of Worcester Magazine from any public location, or any other tampering with Worcester Magazine’s distribution including unauthorized inserts, is a criminal offense and may be prosecuted under the law. SUBSCRIPTIONS: First class mail, $156 for one year. Send orders and subscription correspondence to Holden Landmark Corporation, 22 West St., Suite 31, Millbury, MA 01527. ADVERTISING: To place an order for display advertising or to inquire, please call 508.749.3166. Worcester Magazine (ISSN 0191-4960) is a weekly publication of The Holden Landmark Corporation. All contents copyright 2016 by The Holden Landmark Corporation. All rights reserved. Worcester Magazine is not liable for typographical errors in advertisements.
EDITORIAL: 508.749.3166 SALES: 508.749.3166 E-MAIL: editor@worcestermagazine.com Worcester Magazine, 72 Shrewsbury St. Worcester, MA 01604 worcestermagazine.com
The only thing we can think of that can top our annual Best Of Worcester contest is what you’re holding in your hands right now: the results! Well, OK, maybe the actual party tops both (it’s May 9 at the British Beer Company, if you’re wondering. Oh, and it’s invite-only). Anyway, here it is: the one and only Best Of Worcester issue. Inside, you’ll find out who our readers consider the best – at just about everything. That’s right, we have a lot of categories, although Best Middle-Aged, White Weekly Newspaper Editor with a Goatee somehow did not make onto our list. Ah, but for those who did, inside you’ll learn who won and who came in second (or first loser, considering your point of view). Although putting together this mammoth issue is a challenge, now that it’s off our hands and into yours, it feels pretty damn good. We appreciate all of you who took the time to vote. You may agree or disagree with some of the results, but the process is pure: you vote, we compile, the results stand. So congratulations to our winners, all of whom we hope will make an appearance at next month’s awards ceremony/excuse to eat, drink and be merry. In the meantime, we hope you’ll enjoy this special issue, with amazing photos by Steven King. To the runner-ups and the ones who didn’t quite make the cut, fret not: the next contest is less than a year away!
- Walter Bird Jr., editor
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2015 NEWSPAPER OF THE YEAR WORCESTER MAGAZINE
8 City Desk 14 Worcesteria 16 Editorial 16 1,001 Words 17 That’s What They Said 18 Best of Worcester 61 Night & Day 65 Film 66 Krave 74 Event Listings 82 Sports Listings 83 Classifieds 91 2 minutes with… About the cover Congratulations to Wormtown, 2016 Best Craft Beer winner. Photo by Steven King Design by Kimberly Vasseur
APRIL 21, 2016 • WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM
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April 21 - 27, 2016 n Volume 41, Number 34
Clark U grad’s phone app aims to get users outside and active
Guy Pistone Tom Quinn
I
n an age with a documented decline in organized youth sports and an increase in the popularity of video games and obesity, many have tried to think of ways to get people active and excited about sports. In a historic Worcester building in Main South,
Guy Pistone and his team are trying to reverse current trends and get people involved in athletics again by leveraging the obsession with smartphones to launch two apps – one focusing on hooking people up with personal trainers, another enabling users to meet up for pick-up games of basketball, soccer, or any variety of sports or activities.
“This is a solution to allow folks to play sports for free,” Pistone said. “[Society is] going in the opposite direction. Kids are playing video games, they’re on the computer. The funny thing about technology is it screws the world by getting people to look at their phones, but then technology comes up with a solution to fight that problem.” At first blush, Pistone seems like a bit of an industry upstart. He started his company, Fitivity, as a senior at Clark University in 2012, and ran it out of his apartment until the city started sending inspectors in response to complaints from neighbors. Now the team of five people and an occasional squad of interns operate out of a small, narrow office in the Ivy Corset building on Jackson Street, and claim 438 separate sports and fitness apps under the Fitivity umbrella. Pistone can rattle off numbers that would make most start-ups jealous: 10 million unique visitors since the company started, 500,000 users per month and 10,000 new downloads per day. Most of it is free, but people pay for “advanced” courses and programs. “We want to build cool things first. We want to make sure we build something impactful before making this a huge monetizing business,” Pistone said, laying out a strategy to eventually make the entire portfolio free. Fitivity’s newest venture is a crowdfunding project on Kickstarter that aims to raise
Total for this week:
A weekly quality of life check-in of Worcester
Few people are covering themselves with dignity as issues at David Prouty in Spencer boil over. -4
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WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM • APRIL 21, 2016
MetalFest rocks The Palladium in Worcester. +1
Shooting at a Worcester barbershop called Who’s Next? Unfortunate incident and unfortunate name for at least one day. -3
continued on page 10
+1
WOO-TOWN INDE X Kudos to Uxbridge paramedics and police who, according to the Telegram & Gazette, helped deliver a baby at home. +3
$50,000 to fund both the pick-up sports app and the personal training app. It’s an ambitious goal, but it matches the ambitions of the app. Pistone said the program will be able to auto-generate events at different sporting venues in addition to allowing users to create their own events. “The system will identify areas where there’s a critical mass of users,” Pistone said. “It will send a notification to all those people asking if they want to play in a pickup game at this public field. People will reserve spots, and once enough spots are reserved, we’ll notify all the people that the game is on.” Fitivity is not the first company to think of a pick-up sports smartphone app. “Sportan” raised $25,000 through a similar crowdfunding campaign in 2014, but did not achieve the level of downloads or number of users necessary to sustain a pick-up sports app. Pistone isn’t even the first person in Massachusetts to think of the idea; a group from Boston raised more than $6,000 last year for the “Who’s Hoopin?” basketball pick-up app. And this isn’t even the first time Pistone has tried to launch a pick-up sports app; when he first started his company he created an app also called Fitivity, a location-based pick-up sports scheduling platform. “It failed miserably,” Pistone said. “We built this great product, and we really tried to
Marvelous spring weather (for real!) on Patriots Day, which was great news for runners in the Boston Marathon and fans of the Red Sox, since both took place/played the same day. +2
Interior demolition of the old Stearns Tavern was done with expertise, but some sadness still felt as historic building readies for move to new site. -1
Continuing with Stearns Tavern, it is pretty cool that the building is being preserved for permanent use on the old Coes Knife factory site at Coes Pond. +1
No City Council meeting during school vacation week? We’ll take that. +2
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APRIL 21, 2016 • WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM
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scrap for downloads on Twitter and Facebook, but we maxed out at 50 downloads per day.” The reason behind Fitivity’s first failing, and the failings of other pick-up sports enthusiasts, is a lack of users, Pistone said. Pick-up sports rely on the ability to marshal a group of people across multiple venues at multiple times, to give people options. If a user sees no one else using the app, there is no reason to keep it on their phone. But Fitivity’s 500,000 monthly users give it an edge; it has a built-in base of users, making the app ready to go from launch day. “We have the critical mass,” Pistone said. “We have visions where we can get people not only to play pick-up sports, but people to get together and work out together. I have a vision we can create a yoga event, we’ll get them a yoga workout, and 15 women over the age of 30 will get together in the outfield of a softball field and work out together because they share that common interest.” The failure of the first Fitivity app taught Pistone a valuable lesson, though. He had tried putting a few different exercise and sports programs as additional content in the app. But he found when that same content was split out into its own application, it got far more downloads than if it had been packaged with other sports; thus was born the strategy of having more than 400 separate
programs, rather than packaging all the content into one app. “I figured out people aren’t necessarily searching for Fitivity, but they are searching for jump rope workouts [for example],” Pistone said. “And it was early enough in the mobile game to be able to make content for that subsection of people and get relatively high rankings.” For this reason, Pistone calls himself an “expert in app store optimization,” rather than one of the computer scientist types who usually thrive in the smartphone app business. While he took some computer science courses in college and has engineers on staff, the beauty of Fitivity is a platform behind the scenes that enables even the technologically inept to take the instructional videos that make up Fitivity’s bread and butter and create an app within minutes. “I could create an app right now, while I’m talking to you,” Pistone said “I had this vision – let’s take advantage of the fact that sports and fitness are so fragmented,” he continued. “It’s across all these different goals. And the greatest thing about sports and fitness are people have interests spread across all different types of sports and fitness … we leveraged that in a couple different ways.” While Worcester may be a different case study than other cities, with residents
clamoring year after year for more rectangular fields and opportunities for places to play sports, Pistone sees a trend nationally of declining numbers of youths getting into sports. He’s backed up by media articles every year, notably the Wall Street Journal, which tracked a variety of statistics in free fall in 2014, culminating in a 4-percent decline in youth participation in basketball, soccer, baseball and football. Because the apps are all separate, it is difficult to see how users evaluate them as a group, but the app’s ratings tend to get around four out of five starts from user ratings. Reviews citing technical issues persist, but they are outweighed by positive feedback and compliments for the focused, explanatory design. “This is my go to app from now on!” reads one review on a weight loss app. “Week one day one really pushed me! This is definitely a workout! I love the structure of this app. I like how there are instructions, a video, and a good. I also love how it keeps track. Great job!!” Pistone has a sporting background. He played college basketball at Ithaca College and Clark, and played for a year in the professional Eastern Basketball Alliance. He charges $75 per hour for personal training for his clients now, which leads to his second app idea – virtual coaching.
“It’s a business that only very wealthy families are able to afford,” Pistone said about personal training. “The easiest way to scale it is to get rid of this whole concept of inperson training, which isn’t sustainable for the majority of people.” Virtual coaching would allow someone to train dozens of people at once, Pistone said, lowering costs for everyone, while maintaining the same personal interaction and customized workouts as a one-on-one session. As of press time, Fitivity has raised $1,671, with 25 days left in the crowdfunding campaign. Pistone said the company will not collapse if the Kickstarter fails, though. “I always go into things pessimistically,” Pistone said. “I went into this saying, ‘Let me attack this as if it’s not going to get funded.’ If this doesn’t get funded, the world is just going to have to wait until we have the operating capital to do it. No one else can do it – nobody else has a unique data set of users like we do. So it’s really up to the world – if the world wants it, eventually we’ll reach that mark and be able to build it.” Reporter Tom Quinn can be reached at 508-749-3166 x324 or tquinn@ worcestermagazine.com with story ideas, feedback, or questions. Follow him on Twitter @bytomquinn.
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WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM • APRIL 21, 2016
{ citydesk }
Last hurrah: Circus elephants coming to Worcester, DCU for last go-round Tom Quinn
FILE PHOTO/STEVEN KING
After May 1, Ringling Bros. will cease to use elephants in any of their circuses. Stephen Payne, vice president of corporate communications for Feld Entertainment, which runs Ringling Brothers and Barnum and Bailey Circus, said the retirement of the elephants will not negatively impact the future of the circus. “The circus will continue to come into Worcester,” Payne said. “We have some changes that are going to be made to Ringling Brothers that are amazing, and no, I can’t tell you what they are just yet.” “It will go into rehearsal and emerge as the 146th edition,” he continued. “Most people don’t realize Ringling Brothers is one year older than baseball. Baseball’s not going anywhere, and neither are we.” Opposition to the circus in Worcester stemmed from accusations of animal abuse
T
hree years after the City Council debated a ban on exotic animals for entertainment purposes, the Ringling Bros. and Barnum and Bailey circus is back in Worcester. This time, though, it comes after animal rights activists claimed victory in their push to stop the circus from using elephants in the act. The circus announced months ago it would phase elephants out of its shows, and the weekend show at the DCU Center marks the last time the elephants come to Worcester – and the second-to-last weekend they will appear in any show nationwide. The circus will come to the DCU Center, as it has for years, April 22-24. The last stop for the tour, titled “Legends,” will be in Providence May 1. A separate iteration of the circus running concurrently will end in Wilkes Barre, Pennsylvania on the same date.
continued on page 12
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APRIL 21, 2016 • WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM
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{ citydesk }
Rewind: 40 Years of News, Entertainment and More
Best of ... the past
1995: Stephanie Jarvis, Paul Dell Aquila, Samantha Ker and John Kamp count ballots
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1999: Interns get the task of tallying all the votes
because of some of the legislation that was debated in Worcester,” Payne said. “We’ve seen several markets across the county pass what we consider completely unnecessary anti-circus bills, but really what that was doing was making it very difficult to take the elephants with us. City A has one set of regulations and City B has a different set of regulations – we couldn’t just leave them at the city limits.” Which is not to say Ringling Bros. has changed its stance on ordinances like the Worcester ban, which was killed on an 8-3 vote. “We still oppose, in all its forms, bans on animals in the circus,” Payne said. “People consistently say seeing our wonderful animals is one of the big reasons they come to Ringling Brothers, but there had been a big focus on the elephants. But we’re an entertainment company, we’re not in the business of playing legislative Whack-AMole.” Payne and other defenders of the circus contend the bans on exotic animals are unnecessary, because the animals are treated with care and dignity. The six Asian elephants arriving in Worcester this weekend, for example, are well-treated, he said, and many agree removing those elephants from the circus robs people, and especially children, of a connection to nature that WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM • APRIL 21, 2016
CIRCUS continued from page 11
and inhumane conditions fostered by the circus. Opponents said barring exotic animals would shut down an industry they contend profits from animals’ pain, and elephants were the prime exhibit in their argument, with a special focused placed on the way the animals — which have been observed to be intelligent and social — are trained and controlled. “When we’re being told that elephants in the wild will be extinct in 10 years, why are we doing this?” Lukes said two years ago, when the circus came to Worcester after her proposed ordinance was voted down. “Their argument is they’re protecting them. They’re exploiting them.” At-Large City Councilor Mike Gaffney was staunchly opposed to the ordinance when it was brought up for debate, and said via email recently his views have not changed. “Ringling Bros will be eliminating elephants from their show due to costs and in response to the free market, not government control,” Gaffney said. “That is how capitalism works. If the market doesn’t like a product, the product fails.” Payne conceded Worcester, and cities like it, were a contributing factor in deciding to end elephants’ involvement with the circus. “Part of the decision to transition the elephants off the circus to the center was
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cannot be replicated on a computer screen or smartphone. “The circus has a long history with Worcester,” Gaffney said. “The importance of the circus is to introduce children to the wonders of nature safely and in a way that is entertaining.” The six elephants that Worcesterites will see in a few weekends will retire to Ringling’s Center for Elephant Conservation in Florida. They will join the rest of the herd, which will then total 42 animals, on 200 acres of land, where they will get to just “be elephants,” Payne said. But the giant mammals’ service to humanity will not end with their retirement – researchers are studying the elephants to unlock the key to why they get cancer at lower rates than humans, and if there is a way to transfer that resistance to people. “We decided, let’s take those resources out of playing that frustrating Whack-A-Mole game and invest them in greater commitments to the conservation of the elephants and perhaps to [curing] cancer,” Payne said. “Wouldn’t that be amazing?” The research started before the announced retirement of the elephants, although Payne said it will be easier to manage with all the elephants in one place. He was quick to note, with the controversy over elephant care still lingering in the air, the research was completely benign.
“Really all we’re doing is providing blood samples,” Payne said. “They key to this is in the elephant’s genes. It’s not any nefarious research like some people have said, we’re not doing anything to hurt the elephants in any way. But since we have the largest herd and the most genetically-diverse herd, we’re sharing that genetic knowledge that’s been gained from 55 million years of elephant evolution.” “We’re conserving Asian elephants to save them as a species, and it seems like it might come full circle and they might save us from one of the dreaded diseases of our time,” he continued. And while Payne had previously said the circus would not return to Worcester if the ban on exotic animals was passed, now that Ringling has phased them out voluntarily, he said he is looking forward to returning to the DCU Center. “We’ve always enjoyed bringing the circus to Worcester,” Payne said. “We’ve always had great fan reception there, and we look forward to bringing the circus to Worcester for years to come.” Reporter Tom Quinn can be reached at 508-749-3166 x324 or tquinn@ worcestermagazine.com with story ideas, feedback, or questions. Follow him on Twitter @bytomquinn.
“IT’S NOT BRAGGING IF YOU CAN BACK IT UP.”
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WORCESTER MAGAZINE is Honored to have been presented 26 awards at the New England Newspaper and Press Association’s 2015 Better Newspaper Competition
Social Issues Feature Story First and Second Place Walter Bird Jr. Special Section or Supplement (Editorial) First Place: Walter Bird Jr. Editorial/Opinion Writing First Place: Walter Bird Jr. Feature Photo First and Second: Steven King News Photo First Place: Steven King Personality Photo First and Second: Steven King
Photo Series First and Second: Steven King Pictorial Photo First Place: Steven King Spot News Photo First Place: Steven King Photo Illustration Second Place: Steven King Local Display Ad: Black & White First and Second: Kimberly Vasseur Local Display Ad: Color Second Place: Kimberly Vasseur
Sports Story First Place: Joshua Lyford Racial or Ethnic Issue Coverage Second Place: Joshua Lyford Columnist Third Place: Janice Harvey Illustration/Infographics Second Place: Melissa Stocker Human Interest Feature Story Second Place: Kurt Wolf and Lindsey Townsend Honorable Mention: Jim Perry
Plus
General Excellence Photographer of the Year Reporter of the Year and
Best Ad Designer APRIL 21, 2016 • WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM
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WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM • APRIL 21, 2016
Tom Quinn
A NOT TORNADO:
Longtime Worcester baseball fans might remember Chris Colabello from his days with the Worcester Tornadoes. The Assumption College graduate and Framingham native was back in the Bay State this weekend, helping the visiting Toronto Blue Jays knock off the hometown Red Sox. Worcester even got a shout-out on NESN, with Not Don Orsillo and Not Jerry Remy going through his life story, from his childhood in Italy to his solid batting for the Minnesota Twins and the Jays. But the bulk of Not Orsillo’s amazement was reserved for Colabello’s seven seasons with the Tornadoes in an obscure independent league. Now that I think about it, he maybe mentioned how obscure the Can-Am league is a little too much. Wondering how Colabello did against the Sox? So would he, after he suffered a Not Concussion when Steven Wright beaned him in the head with a fastball. Colabello claimed and appeared to be fine afterwards, but a scary moment for one of Worcester’s few pro sports exports.
SMOKE SIGNALS: There aren’t enough
firefighters stationed at Worcester Regional Airport, according to a union representing firefighters stationed at Worcester Regional Airport. There also aren’t enough commercial flights or destinations or airlines, but that’s a story for another time. The Telegram got its hands on a letter from the lawyer for Massport Firefighters Local S-2, IAFF, which represents firefighters at the other state-run airports in the state. “Circumstances are beyond dangerous,” reads the letter, which cites a drop in personnel down to eight people, and a lack of experience among those on staff. Complicating matters is the fact that firefighters at ORH have a dual role – firefighting and security – a weird anomaly in the world of airports, one that seems designed to save money at a time when JetBlue is the one and only commercial carrier offering flights to one and only one state. There’s also the question of why, when a small plane crashed near the airport in October of last year, firefighters on staff at the airport got to the scene after the regular WFD, which responded to the scene within minutes even though they were only called because the control tower couldn’t reach the airport’s firefighters. Forget this union letter – I want to read the letter that explains how that happened. The response from Massport, beyond the expected statement about how everything is safe and sound with current staffing levels, is that S-2 is trying to leverage the press in their fight to represent the Worcester Airport firefighters. “Massport does not conduct labor negotiations in the newspaper,” a Massport spokesperson said. No matter what you think about labor unions, you have to admit they make for juicy stories in the press. Here’s hoping Worcester Airport never catches fire, so we don’t have to see which side is right.
THE SOUND OF SILENCE: Yes, someone was shot outside Who’s Next? barbershop on Hamilton Street. Get your giggles out now. Who’s Next? You’re next! That one’s weak, but you get the idea. According to Worcester Police, they first heard about the shooting via ShotSpotter technology – which will have to be funded by the city when CSX mitigation money runs out in the next budget, good timing on that – but also started getting calls around 3 p.m. on Friday, April 15. That’s what those who study the ebbs and flows of the space-time continuum call “broad daylight.” A 27-year-old was on the ground with “serious” gunshot
{ worcesteria } wounds, and a large crowd had gathered – a crowd that had not dissipated by 4:30 p.m. Another victim was brought via car to a city hospital. A WPD officer followed the car, believing it to be suspicious, and it’s a good thing he did, since there’s no way the victim was going to call up the police department for a chat otherwise. That victim, at 24-year-old, refused to cooperate with police, as did the three friends who drove him to the hospital. That’s usually an indication it’s not a random event. Residents who were gathered outside the scene did not cooperate with reporters, although that doesn’t mean they aren’t helping the investigation. At least one person standing outside watching the mayhem was told not to say anything by the WPD, or so they claimed. Maybe the force is hoping they can get inside the cone of silence the victims and shooters seem to be facing off in.
COMPASSION FATIGUE: The fallout from the City Council’s
April 12 vote to deny a zoning change to a tire repair shop on Chandler Street is still in the air a week later. Once the lobbying and the debating stops, the spin cycle starts up, as both sides try to tilt public opinion in their favor. If you haven’t been keeping up, the gist is that Gilberto Ledesma needed an exception from a zoning rule he said he didn’t know about to move his business from one side of Chandler Street to the other, having already sunk a few hundred thousand dollars into the project and giving up his lease, meaning he passed a point of no return. The City Council had to make a choice – a compassionate exception that would have saved a small business but angered a local business association trying to change the character of their neighborhood and set a precedent ripe for abuse, or kill the business but maintain the integrity of the zoning rule and the long-term strategy for a business corridor. The Council went the second route, with six councilors voting for Ledesma and five voting against; since a two-thirds majority was needed, the motion failed. Apparently the Jordan Levy Show – I don’t listen personally, but maybe I’ll start if they stop talking about Donald Trump for a week – had been taking a stand with Ledesma and against the business association (and the city Planning Board and the others who were against the change), with guests ripping the opposition. Now, Chandler Street Business Association president Paul Collyer is firing back, shooting off an email to Levy complaining about a lack of equal time on the radio, resulting in an unfair debate. And Collyer laid out his case – rather than dodging around the issue this time, he took the issue of “compassion” head on. “It should be noted that when your District and District Councilor [the show leans West Side in composition] had the chance to be compassionate to people in need, your District suggested changing the Dover Amendment to save your neighborhood,” Collyer said, referencing the West Side’s rejection of a homeless shelter. “When the time came for my neighborhood to be compassionate to people in need my neighborhood rolled up its sleeves and worked arm in arm with the city and SMOC to create what is now called PIP II and to this day it still works arm and arm with this same program and the sleeves have never come down.” Or, to say it another way – people want compassion as long as it’s Not In My Backyard.
POWER BROKER: Last week, At-Large City Councilor Kate Toomey suggested Worcester look into electricity aggregation. That’s a program where cities or other communities can pool their buying power and work with a broker to get lower energy rates for all. Other places in Massachusetts are already doing it, and it has proven cost savings that individual places can’t negotiate on their own. So what’s the catch? A cynical person might look at that and assume there’s a reason Worcester isn’t already doing this. “We’re going to look at it,” City Manager Ed Augustus Jr. said. “I don’t know why the city hasn’t done it before – it’s something that hasn’t been on my radar.” Maybe the city hit its sense quota and is worried this plan makes too much sense. Don’t worry, guys, we can always sell that excess sense back to the grid.
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WINE
Barefoot Cellars 1.5L All Varieties .........................................................$9.99 Rex Goliath 1.5L All Varieties .................................................................$8.99 Cielo 1.5L Pinot Grigio .............................................................................$9.99 Clos Du Bois 1.5L Chardonnay ............................................................ $16.99 Dark Horse 750ml All Varieties ...............................................................$7.99 Apothic 750ml Red & White ....................................................................$8.99 Castle Rock Columbia Valley 750ml Cabernet Sauvignon..................$8.99 Toasted Head 750ml Chardonnay ....................................................... $10.99 Argento 750ml Malbec ............................................................................$7.99 Oyster Bay 750ml Sauvignon Blanc ........................................................$9.99 Lamarca 750ml Prosecco ...................................................................... $11.99
LIQUOR
Stolichnaya Vodka 1.75L ..................................................................... $27.99 New Amsterdam Vodka 1.75L ............................................................ $17.99 Johnnie Walker Red 1.75L ................................................................... $29.99 Auchentoshan 12 Year Scotch 750ml ............................................... $38.99 Auchentoshan Threewood Scotch 750ml ........................................ $51.99 Jack Daniels Whiskey 1.75L ............................................................... $40.99 Eagle Rare 10 Year Bourbon 750ml .................................................. $28.99 Canadian Club Whiskey 1.75L .......................................................... $18.99 Tullamore Dew Whiskey 1.75L ........................................................... $29.99 Captain Morgan Spiced Rum 1.75L................................................... $22.99 Patron Silver Tequila 1L ...................................................................... $59.99 Sauza Hornitos Tequila Blanco & Reposado 750ml ....................... $21.99 New Amsterdam Gin 1.75L ................................................................. $17.99
SWING FOR THE FENCES: The Worcester Bravehearts’ third annual Fan Fest is
coming up Saturday, April 23, and it looks to be a doozy. The free event will start at noon, giving Worcesterites a chance to buy tickets to any of the two-time Futures Collegiate Baseball League’s games this season. Feel like gambling instead? For $20, fans will get five swings of the bat against Bravehearts coach Kevin Hartigan, and a home run will get them season tickets. And the entry fee can be applied to tickets or merchandise even if you lose, so there’s really no logical reason not to give it a shot. The contest does specify the homer has to be “over the fence, though, so you can’t chip one into left field, spring around the bases, and claim the contest never said the homer couldn’t be an inside the park job. Still worth a shot. Reporter Tom Quinn can be reached at 508-749-3166 x324 or tquinn@worcestermagazine.com with story ideas, feedback, or questions. Follow him on Twitter @bytomquinn.
Mon. 8am-10pm • Tues.-Sat. 8am-11pm • Sun. 10am-9pm Prices in effect through 04/30/16 | Not responsible for typographical errors | No rain checks APRIL 21, 2016 • WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM
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commentary | opinions slants& rants { }
Editorial
No easy call when it comes to Notre Dame
Thank you to all our readers that voted in this year’s BEST OF WORCESTER!
O
ne of the worst decisions you can make is the one made on pure emotion. Deciding to tear down historic Notre Dame des Canadiens Church simply because you can is not the right call. Neither, however, is steadfastly denying a developer’s right to do so out of reluctance to bid farewell to a link to the past – albeit a majestic one. Hard though it may be, a decision on whether to tear down Notre Dame, smack in CitySquare, where developers just so happen to be helping the city craft a vision for the future, must be made free and clear of emotional attachment or wishful thinking. It is hard to imagine, on a purely sentimental level, anyone wanting to tear down the church. If, however, developers — in this case, Leggat McCall Properties — can prove there is, in fact, no practical way to preserve the church, either in whole form or perhaps just its facade, without incurring significant financial burden, it may be hard to deny the firm’s recent application for a waiver to the city’s demolition delay ordinance. Likewise, it could be hard to demonstrate any detrimental effects to the city’s historical or architectural resources. Either or both are reasons the Historical Commission could deny the request for a waiver. What kind of a resource, however, has Notre Dame been in the years it has sat as a shell of itself? Yes, it is truly a sight to behold. Would that it could be preserved within the CitySquare landscape as a visual link to an architectural beauty and craftsmanship long gone by. Yet, taking that emotional attachment out of it, what sort of a resource has the church been to the city? That will be the task of such groups as Preservation Worcester and others, who no doubt will flock to the first meeting held on the request. Developers are already laying out their case, as told by the Telegram & Gazette’s Nick Kotsopoulos, quoting from the application for a waiver. CitySquare developers say a one-year delay in tearing down the church will result in greater deterioration to the building as well as potential risk to the public and surrounding buildings. That, too, is a case that must be proved. One could argue the church has stood as is for years without crumbing and taking out unfortunate passersby. Surely, some cost-efficient safety measures, such as netting, could be taken to prevent a catastrophe. Ultimately, Notre Dame is likely to face the same fate seemingly facing Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Church, which is likely to be closed — and ultimately demolished — because of structural deficiencies and inadequate funding. The question, then, is sooner or later? Or can one or more groups or organizations come up with a viable plan — and the financing to enact it — to save Notre Dame from an inglorious fate? Whatever the ultimate call, it must come from a place of reason, sound thought and rational discourse. The Historical Commission will have a tough task ahead in listening to the impassioned pleas of those who, against all odds, want to save what is truly one of the most beautiful buildings in Worcester. At the same time, members will hear from a developer who has taken on the steep challenge of sculpting from a downtown rooted in history, a future that can last several more generations. The city, even those who will plead for the life of Notre Dame church, wants this future – it needs this future. Is it ready to let go of even the most wondrous links to its past to achieve it?
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WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM
• APRIL 21, 2016
WORCESTER MAGAZINE’S LETTERS TO THE EDITOR POLICY Have something on your mind? Don’t keep it bottled up, put it in words and send it to Worcester Magazine! Letters to the editor are a great way to share your thoughts and opinions with thousands of readers and online viewers each week. There is no word limit, but we reserve the right to edit for length, so brevity is your friend. If handwritten, write legibly - if we cannot read it, we are not running it. Personal attacks and insults don’t fly with us, so save them for when someone cuts you off in traffic. A full name and town or city of residence are required. Please include an email address or phone number for verification purposes only. That information will not be published. Make sure your letter makes it into Worcester Magazine in a timely fashion — send it in by the Monday of the next issue. Please note that letters will run as space allows. Send them to Worcester Magazine, 72 Shrewsbury St., Worcester, MA 01604 or by email to editor@worcestermagazine.com.
1,001 words By Steven King
kissed
commentary | opinions
{slants&rants}
That’s What They Said FILE PHOTO/STEVEN KING
“We still oppose, in all its forms, bans on animals in the circus. People consistently say seeing our wonderful animals is one of the big reasons they come to Ringling Brothers, but there had been a big focus on the elephants. But we’re an entertainment company, we’re not in the business of playing legislative Whack-A-Mole.”
Put your information in the palm of our readers’ hands! Promote your Educational Programs to more than 80,000 readers in our May Education Sections. Coming May 5 & May 12, 2016 Space reservations: April 29 and May 6.
- Stephen Payne, vice president of corporate communications for Feld Entertainment, which runs Ringling Brothers and Barnum and Bailey Circus “Thank you all so much.” - Javier Rincon, Great Brook Valley teen, who along with a friend came to aid of Worcester police officer after he was struck by car. He was responding to an outpouring of praise on the Worcester Magazine Facebook page. “This is a solution to allow folks to play sports for free. [Society is] going in the opposite direction. Kids are playing video games, they’re on the computer. The funny thing about technology is it screws the world by getting people to look at their phones, but then technology comes up with a solution to fight that problem.” - Guy Pistone, founder of Fitivity, through which he and his team create apps to help get people outside and active. “People are just paranoid and afraid.” - Kris Berthiaume, commenting on a post on Facebook page “Your Probably from Worcester MA if ___” about a man allegedly carrying three licensed handguns found by police near Worcester State University.
Reserve your space today! Contact your media consultant at 508-749-3166 or via email at sales@worcestermagazine.com APRIL 21, 2016 • WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM
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{ BESTof }
Congratulations to the staff at Sharfmans Jewelers, voted Best Jewelry Store for the 13th year in a row!
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WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM
• APRIL 21, 2016
STEVEN KING
{ BESTof }
Well, here it is, folks — what you have been waiting for. Over the following pages, we offer the winners (and almost-winners) in our annual Best of Worcester competition and photographs from 2015 Photographer of the Year Steven King. This is the Best of Worcester 2016 — and, as always, there is no way we could have done it without you. After all, the winners are hand-chosen by you. All we do is tally the final votes, so in many ways this truly is your issue. Turn the page and find out who you think are the BEST OF THE BEST!
APRIL 21, 2016 • WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM
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{ BESTof }
FOOD & BEVERAGE Second: Gerardo’s Bakery 339 West Boylston St., West Boylston 508-835-2200 gerardositalianbakery.com
ASIAN/ FUSION FIRST: BABA SUSHI 309 Park Ave., Worcester 508-752-8822 babasushi.com
FIRST: SMOKESTACK URBAN BBQ 139 Green St., Worcester 508-363-1111 bbqstack.com
BAGELS
FIRST: BAGEL TIME 194B Park Ave., Worcester 508-798-0440 bageltimeusa.com
FIRST: EMERALD MEATS 347 Chandler St., Worcester 508-756-2700 emeraldmeats.com
BREAKFAST
BARBECUE
Second: Nancy Chang 372 Chandler St., Worcester 508-752-8899 nancychang.com
BUTCHER
Second: B.T.’s Smokehouse 392 Main St., Sturbridge 508-347-3188 btsmokehouse.com
FILE PHOTO/STEVEN KING
FIRST: LOU ROC’S DINER
Second: Fairway Beef 48 Grafton St., Worcester 508-556-1329 fairwaybeef.com
Second: Tie Gold Star Restaurant 68 West Boylston St., Worcester 508-852-7900 Annie’s Clark Brunch 934 Main St., Worcester 508-756-1550
CAFÉ
1074 West Boylston St., Worcester 508-852-6888
FIRST: NU CAFE
335 Chandler St., Worcester 508-926-8800 nucafe.com
BURGERS
FIRST: THE FIX BURGER BAR
Second: Bagel Inn 785 Main St., Holden 508-829-3550
166 Shrewsbury St., Worcester 774-823-3327 thefixburgerbar.com
BAKERY
CATERING
FIRST: PEPPER’S FINE CATERING 43 Hudson St., Northborough 508-393-6844 pepperscatering.com
Second: Wild Willy’s 317 West Boylston St., Worcester 508-459-2088 wildwillysburgers.com
FIRST: THE CROWN BAKERY 133 Gold Star Blvd., Worcester 508-852-0746 crownbakeryandcafe.com
Second: BirchTree Bread Company 138 Green St., No. 5, Worcester 774-243-6944 birchtreebreadcompany.com
continued on page 22
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WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM
• APRIL 21, 2016
{ BESTof }
BEST NEW RESTAURANT
Congratulations to Wicked Wing Co. for winning Best New Restaurant. Pictured here are owners Nick and Andy Norton.
APRIL 21, 2016 • WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM
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{ BESTof } STEVEN KING
SWEET
BEST PLACE TO FOREIT YOUR DIET
BEST DESSERT
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WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM
• APRIL 21, 2016
FILE PHOTO/STEVEN KING
Second: Struck Catering 130 Hamilton St., Worcester 508-755-5953 struckcatering.com
{ BESTof }
CHINESE
FIRST: NANCY CHANG 372 Chandler St., Worcester 508-752-8899 nancychang.com
Second: Jasmine 711 Southbridge St., Auburn 508-832-8869 jasmineauburn.com
CRAFT BEER
FIRST: WORMTOWN 72 Shrewsbury St., Worcester 774-239-1555 wormtownbrewery.com Second: Armsby Abbey 144 Main St., Worcester 508-795-1012 armsbyabbey.com
COCKTAILS
FIRST: ARMSBY ABBEY 144 Main St., Worcester 508-795-1012 armsbyabbey.com
Lucky Number 13! Regatta Deli takes first place for Best Grinders for the 13th year in a row!
Second: People’s Kitchen/Citizen 1 Exchange St., Worcester 508-459-9090 1nichexchange.com
COFFEE
FIRST: INHOUSE COFFEE 225 Shrewsbury St., Worcester 508-363-1212 inhousecoffeeusa.com
Second: BirchTree Bread Company 138 Green St., No. 5, Worcester 774-243-6944 l!ial! pec birchtreebreadcompany.com ermSerpec Sia um S um Sm
CUPCAKES
DESSERT
DINER
238 Millbury Ave., Millbury 508-762-9254 thequeenscups.com
72 Shrewsbury St., Worcester 508-373-2248 sweetworcester.com
1074 West Boylston St., Worcester 508-852-6888
FIRST: THE QUEEN’S CUPS
FIRST: SWEET
Second: Sweet 72 Shrewsbury St., Worcester 508-373-2248 sweetworcester.com
FIRST: LOU ROC’S DINER Second: Boulevard Diner 155 Shrewsbury St., Worcester 508-791-4535
Second: Wholly Cannoli 490 Grafton St., Worcester 508-753-0224 whollycannoli.com Over Over 40 COlOrs 40 COlOrs On sale On sale
continued on page 25
O 40 C On
GRANITE COUNTERTOPS E COUNTERTOPS GRANITE COUNTERTOPS & &QUARTZ! & QUARTZ! QUARTZ! 45 Colors for 45 Colors for 45 Colors for ¼ Mile East of SALE!! Home Depot SPRING ¼ Mile East of &Home De GRANITE COUNTERTOPS ¼ Mile East of Home Depot GRANITE COUNTERTOPS GRANITE COUNTERTOPS Radio Show Podcast! $45.00 $45.00 $45.00 of 620 Boston Turnpike (Rt.(Rt. 9), 9), Choose From 50 Colors 620 Boston Turnpike (Rt. 620 Boston Turnpike
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Selection of of of • The• Biggest The Biggest Selection and Granite of any ny Marble Marble and Granite of any Fabrication Shop! Fabrication Shop! • Over 250 colors • Over 250 colors to choose fromfrom to choose (all slabs on site) (all slabs on site) • Backsplash, • Backsplash, Flooring, GlassGlass & & Flooring, Mosaic TilesTiles Available Mosaic Available
Over Over 40 COlOrs 40 COlOrs On sale On sale
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Broadcasting LIVE from Julio's Liquors
Includes: Rounded, Beveled or polished edgesedges Includes: Rounded, Beveled or polished e Includes: Rounded, Beveled or polished ¼ Cutout Mile East offor Home Depot 4 in back Splash. for East sink. ¼ Cutout Mile East of Ho ¼ Cutout Mile of Home Depotin back Splash. 4 for sink. 4 in back Splash. sink.
(w/orders over 40combined sq. w/any ft.Boston • Exp. 4/30/16) (Cannot be combined other sales) 620 Turnpike (Rt.(Cannot 9), be combined w/any other sales) (Cannot be w/any other sales) 620 Boston Turnpi 620 Boston Turnpike (Rt. 9), Shrewsbury Shrewsbur Shrewsbury Biggest Selection of Marble andand Selection of Marble a Biggest Selection of Biggest Marble Granite of ANY Fabrication Shop Big Blue Building Granite of ANY Big Fabrication Sh Granite of ANY Fabrication Shop Blue Bu Big Blue Building
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Saturday 11am - 1pm! Blue Buildin Listen on WCRN AM830 or stop by 508-842-9800 280 Colors to Choose From 508-842-980 508-842-9800 280 Colors to Choose From 280 Colors to Choose From 508-842-9800 Granite Countertop, Quartz Surfaces, Soapstone 508-842508-842-9800 Granite Countertop, Quartz Surfaces, Soap Granite Countertop, Quartz Surfaces, Soapstone Julio’s and join the fun! Drive a Little - Save A Lot! Fax 508-842-9808 Fax 508-842-9808
a Little - Save A Lot! Drive a Little - Save A Lot! Drive Fax 508-842Fax 508-842-9808 Fax 508-842-9808 Fax 508-842-9808 1/4 Mile Home DepotDepot 620 Boston Turnpike 9), Shrewsbury 1 Mon. - Fri. 8-6, Sat. 8-7 1/4East /4 Mile East of Home Depot - 620 Boston Turnpike MileofEast of Home - 620 Boston Turnpike (Rt. 9), Shrewsbury Mon. - Fri. (Rt. 8-6,9) S Mon. -(Rt. Fri. 8-6, Sat. 8-7 Mon. -- Fri. 8-6, Sat. 8-7
Mon. - Fri. 8-6, Sat. 8-7
Mon.
-
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No Radio,Sat. No problem! 8-7 8-6,
Big Blue Building • Blue 508-842-9800 • FaxBuilding Big • 508-842-9800 • Fax 508 Big Blue Building • 508-842-9800 • 508-842-9808 Fax 508-842-9808
Colors On On Sale! Exotic Marble, Granite & Soapstones Available. e!220Exotic Marble, & Soapstones Av 220 Colors Sale! Marble, Granite & Soapstones Available. Mon.-Fri. 8Exotic to 5 • 5Thurs. 8-68-6 •Thurs. Sat. 9-49-4Granite Fri. 8 to 5 • 8-6 • Sat. 9-4 Mon.-Fri. 8 to • Thurs. • Sat. Exotic Marble, Granite & Soapstones Available. Granite & Soapstones Availab e! Exotic Marble, Granite & Soapstones Available. A P R I L 2 1 , 2 0 1 6 • W O R C E S T E R M A G A Z I N E . C O M 23 S
S
WHO KNEW
HISTORY
COULD BE SO
AWESOME! Return to Old Sturbridge Village this season and travel back in time to the 1830s. Participate in exciting programs and events and discover a new perspective on the past. Visit on a Sunday and enjoy a delicious brunch in the Oliver Wight Tavern. LAST WEEKEND TO ENJOY Family Farm Fest | Thru April 24 Mother’s Day | May 8 Garden Weekend | May 14 & 15
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WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM
• APRIL 21, 2016
Wool Days | May 28 – 30 Antique Car Rally | June 11 Freedom Week/Juneteenth | June 13 – 19 Independence: 4th of July | July 2 – 4
{ BESTof }
FROZEN YOGURT
Second: Hot Dog Annie’s 244 Paxton St., Leicester 508-892-9059
508-756-2076 haciendadonjuan.com
141 Highland St., Worcester 508-459-2311 wooberryyogurt.com
Second: O’Connor’s Restaurant & Bar 1160 West Boylston St., Worcester 508-853-0789 oconnorsrestaurant.com
ICE CREAM
LATIN/ SOUTH AMERICAN
FIRST: THE BOYNTON
165 West Boylston St., West Boylston 508-835-9747 110 Leominster Road, Sterling 978-422-3900 meolasicecream.com
82 Winter St., Worcester 508-797-1011 bocadotapasbar.com
continued from page 23
FIRST: WOOBERRY
FILE PHOTO/STEVEN KING
FIRST: MEOLA’S
FIRST: BOCADO
117 Highland St., Worcester 508-756-8458 boyntonrestaurant.com
Second: BirchTree Bread Company 138 Green St., No. 5, Worcester 774-243-6944 birchtreebreadcompany.com
Second: Hacienda Don Juan 875 B Main St., Worcester
Second: Gibby’s 50 Sunderland Road, Worcester 508-753-1095 gibsonsdairy.com
LUNCH SPOT
continued on page 26
INDIAN
FIRST: BOLLYWOOD GRILL 97 Boston Turnpike, Shrewsbury 508-793-9888 bollywoodgrill.com Second: Yoway Cafe & Frozen Yogurt 395 Park Ave., Worcester 508-459-0611
Second: Udupi 378 Maple Ave., Shrewsbury 508-459-5099 theudupi.com
GRINDERS
KID-FRIENDLY RESTAURANT
28 Lake Ave., Worcester 508-756-6916 3A Colonial Drive, Westborough 508-366-8958 regattadeli.com
117 Highland St., Worcester 508-756-8458 boyntonrestaurant.com
FIRST: REGATTA DELI
FIRST: THE BOYNTON
FILE PHOTO/STEVEN KING
Second: Bushel ’N Peck Deli 643 Chandler St., Worcester 508-799-6305 17 East Mountain St., Worcester 508-856-0516
HOT DOGS
FIRST: CONEY ISLAND 158 Southbridge St., Worcester 508-753-4362 coneyislandlunch.com
LIVE & LOCAL Jim Polito 5-9 am
WTAG.COM
Jordan Levy 3-6 pm
APRIL 21, 2016 • WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM
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{ BESTof } STEVEN KING
BEST BARTENDER
CHIP O’CONNOR NICK’S continued on page 28
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WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM
• APRIL 21, 2016
RAISING SUSHI TO AN ARTFORM
B A B A Worcester's Best Chef 2007-2012 Worcester Magazine & Worcester Living Best Sushi Restaurant: 2008-2015 Worcester Magazine Best Asian Fusion Restaurant 2013-2015 309 Park Ave., Worcester 508.752.8822 babasushi.com Sun. 2:30pm-10:30pm Mon-Thurs. 11:30am-11:00pm Fri. 11:30am-12:30am Sat. 2:30pm-12:30am
Shabu 301 Park Ave.,Worcester 508-762-9213 ShabuWorcester.com Mon.-Thurs. 11:30am-11pm Fri. 11:30am-12:30am Sat.12pm-12:30am Sun. 12pm-10:30pm
COMING SOON! SECOND LOCATION IN STURBRIDGE! APRIL 21, 2016 • WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM
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{ BESTof } continued from page 26
MEXICAN
FIRST: MEZCAL
30 Major Taylor Blvd., Worcester 508-926-8307 20 Leominster St., Leominster 978-728-4084 mezcalcantina.com Second: El Patron 192 Harding St., Worcester 508-757-8000
MIDDLE EASTERN FIRST: EL BASHA
256 Park Ave., Worcester 508-795-0222 424 Belmont St., Worcester 508-797-0884 2 Connector Road, Westborough 508-366-2455 elbasharestaurant.com
NACHOS
PIZZA
PLACE TO FORFEIT YOUR DIET
117 Highland St., Worcester 508-756-8458 boyntonrestaurant.com
72 Shrewsbury St., Worcester 508-756-8658 volturnopizza.com
72 Shrewsbury St., Worcester 508-373-2248 sweetworcester.com
FIRST: THE BOYNTON
FIRST: VOLTURNO
FIRST: SWEET
FILE PHOTO/STEVEN KING
Second: Mezcal 30 Major Taylor Blvd., Worcester 508-926-8307 20 Leominster St., Leominster 978-728-4084 mezcalcantina.com
NEW RESTAURANT
Second: Tie The Boynton 117 Highland St., Worcester 508-756-8458 boyntonrestaurant.com BT’s Smokehouse 392 Main St., Sturbridge 508-347-3188 btsmokehouse.com
FIRST: WICKED WING CO. 321 West Boylston St., Worcester 774-243-7336 wickedwingco.com
RESTAURANT
FIRST: THE SOLE PROPRIETOR 118 Highland St., Worcester 508-798-3474 thesole.com
Second: Figs & Pigs Kitchen & Pantry 50 Foster St., Worcester 508-929-0701 figsandpigskitchen.com
Second: The Boynton 117 Highland St., Worcester 508-756-8458 boyntonrestaurant.com
Second: Shiraz Armenian Cuisine Inc. 259 Park Ave., Worcester 508-767-1639 Second: Wonder Bar 121 Shrewsbury St., Worcester 508-752-9909
Full Auto Diagnostic Service Basic A/C Recharge Most Models $75 2-Full Duty Mechanics on Site We Install What We Sell on Site Full Auto Body Service Available
257 Granite St., Worcester 508-755-8631 • standardautoinc.com 28
WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM
• APRIL 21, 2016
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RIBS
SUNDAY BRUNCH
139 Green St., Worcester 508-363-1111 bbqstack.com
144 Main St., Worcester 508-795-1012 armsbyabbey.com
FIRST: SMOKESTACK URBAN BARBECUE
Second: B.T.’s Smokehouse 392 Main St., Sturbridge 508-347-3188 btsmokehouse.com
SEAFOOD
FIRST: THE SOLE PROPRIETOR 118 Highland St., Worcester 508-798-3474 thesole.com
Second: West Boylston Seafood 321 West Boylston St., West Boylston 508-853-3655 westboylstonseafood.worksmartermarketing.com
STEAK
FIRST: 111 CHOP HOUSE 111 Shrewsbury St., Worcester 508-799-4111 111chophouse.com
Second: Willy’s Steakhouse 2 Grafton St., Shrewsbury 508-842-7220 willyssteakhouse.com
“Hank and Walter on Worcester”
A New Weekly Podcast
FIRST: ARMSBY ABBEY
Second: Ceres Bistro 363 Plantation St., Worcester 508-754-2000 ceresbistro.com
SUSHI
FIRST: BABA SUSHI 309 Park Ave., Worcester 508-752-8822 babasushi.com Second: Kaizen 479 Main St., Fiskdale 508-347-1088 kaizen479.com
“Hank and Walter on Worcester,” featuring WCRN radio personality Hank Stolz and Worcester Magazine editor Walter Bird Jr., will talk all things Worcester, and maybe even a little beyond. You can bet they will hit on the politics, the shenanigans and latest events. Special guests will also make an appearance.
TACOS
FIRST: MEZCAL
30 Major Taylor Blvd., Worcester 508-926-8307 20 Leominster St., Leominster 978-728-4084 mezcalcantina.com
Listen online at worcestermagazine.com and on air at WCRN 830 AM. New podcast available every week. continued on page 30
.
R IE S A E W O N IS R E T T BE
855-UMASS-MD
One Call. 1,700 G reat Doctors.
In today’s hectic world, who doesn’t love a time saver? At UMass Memorial, we realize that you don’t have time to check out every one of our exceptional doctors. So we’ve simplified the process. Calling 855-UMASS-MD means speaking with a real person – a knowledgeable representative who will provide solutions to your inquiry. One call gets you to the doctor best suited for you. We’re your connection to all of UMass Memorial Health Care.
Better is now easier with our personalized process.
Reach out today. Call 855-UMASS-MD (855-862-7763) www.umassmemorial.org/bookonline
APRIL 21, 2016 • WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM
29
continued from page 29
Second: El Patron 192 Harding St., Worcester 508-757-8000
TAKEOUT
STEVEN KING
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WINGS
FIRST: WINGS OVER WORCESTER 1 Kelley Square, Worcester 508-421-9464 wingsoverworcester.foodtecsolutions.com
FILE PHOTO/STEVEN KING
FIRST: CIAO BELLA 402 Grove St., Worcester 508-756-2426 ciaobellarestaurant.biz
Second: The Boynton 117 Highland St., Worcester 508-756-8458 boyntonrestaurant.com
VEGETARIAN/ VEGAN
FIRST: BELMONT VEGETARIAN 157 Belmont St., Worcester 508-798-8898 belmontvegetarian.com
Second: EVO 234 Chandler St., Worcester 508-459-4240 evodining.com
Second: Wicked Wing Co. 321 West Boylston St., Worcester 774-243-7336 wickedwingco.com
continued on page 31
I wanted to be able to
afford a lifestyle
Give ’em 5! Perfect Game repeats as Best Sports Bar for the fifth year in a row. Pictured here are owners (from left) Mike Erlich, Stephen Debs and Mark Erlich.
LOCAL. SUSTAINABLE. DELICIOUS. Award winning food and drink.
”
for my child but also watch her grow.
”
Rob Roy Academy
RONALD, RRA GRAD ’15 BARBER SHOP OWNER
BARBERING COSMETOLOGY
CALL LIZ 508-799-2111 WWW.ROB-ROY.COM • 150 PLEASANT STREET, WORCESTER FALL RIVE R • NEW BE DFORD • TAU NTON • WORCESTE R • WOONSOCKET
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• APRIL 21, 2016
4/8/16 11:14 AM
Join Us for Brunch Sat. & Sun. 72 Shrewsbury St., Worcester Bar menu daily at 4pm 508.373.2248 sweetworcester.com
ARE YOU WORCESTER STATE? At Worcester State, we know that how you travel your chosen path is just as important as where you end up. No matter what you bring at the beginning of your journey—be it knowledge, talent, experience, or instinct—we firmly believe that your education should take you out of your comfort zone and equip you for a future you can’t even imagine today. Come start your journey now and discover first-hand just what makes us Worcester State. Visit worcester.edu.
16:1 s t u d e n t-t o fa c u lt y r at i o
12 princeton review best colleges list
(northeastern
u.s.)
APRIL 21, 2016 • WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM
31
{ BESTof }
PEOPLE
BARTENDER
FIRST: CHIP O’CONNOR, NICK’S 124 Millbury St., Worcester 508-753-4030 nicksworcester.com
CHEF
COLUMNIST
509 Stafford St., Cherry Valley 508-892-5437 unclejaystwistedfork.com
Worcester Telegram & Gazette
FIRST: JAY POWELL, TWISTED FORK
Second: Damian Evangelous, Armsby Abbey 144 Main St., Worcester 508-795-1012 armsbyabbey.com
Second: Joy Flanagan, Armsby Abbey 144 Main St., Worcester 508-795-1012 armsbyabbey.com
508-754-5418 paulconzo.com Sean Pearson, W Salon 14 East Worcester St., Worcester 508-755-9492 wsalon.net
FIRST: DIANNE WILLIAMSON Second: Janice Harvey Worcester Magazine
LOCAL BLOG
FIRST: TURTLEBOY SPORTS
COUNCILOR
turtleboysports.com
FIRST: MIKE GAFFNEY
508-799-1049 GaffneyM@worcesterma.gov worcesterma.gov/city-council/gaffney
Second: Fun Things to Do in Central MA funthingstodoincentralmass.com
Second: Kate Toomey 508-799-1049 ToomeyK@worcesterma.gov worcesterma.gov/city-council/toomey
FIRST: MARGARET MELICAN
LOCAL POET Second: Nick Davis
MASSAGE THERAPIST
HAIR STYLIST
FIRST: JULIE BOVENZI TRUTH ORGANIC SPA
FIRST: ROBERT WILLIAMS, HEADSHOP HAIR FACTORY
202 Worcester St., North Grafton 508-839-6466 truthorganicspa.com
58 Millbury St., Worcester 508-796-5111 headshophairfactory.com
Second: Jennifer Durkin, Soothe Massage Therapy 55 Cedar St., Worcester 508-450-3667 soothemt.com
Second: Tie Paul Conzo, Paul Conzo Day Spa & Hair Salon 490 Shrewsbury St., Worcester
continued on page 33
Show 'em Your Smile!
Bring addi in this a That'tional $6 d for an 0 s MOR a saving OFF! E THA s N 50 of %!
ZOOM Teeth Whitening ONLY $350 (A $600 value)
GIFT CERTIFICATES AVAILABLE — Paint Center —
MASS. HEALTH PATIENTS WELCOME
Caring, Qualified Staff • Preventive • Cosmetic • Restorative Crowns Extractions • Root Canal • Partial & Complete Dentures
Worcester ~ Auburn
Locally Owned and Family Operated. 315 Brooks St., Worcester 508-852-2133
470 Southbridge St., Auburn 508-315-6333
nalspaintcenter.com ©2015 Benjamin Moore & Co. Benjamin Moore, ARBORCOAT and the triangle “M” symbol are registered trademarks and Only this can and Paint like no other are trademarks licensed to Benjamin Moore & Co.
32
WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM
• APRIL 21, 2016
101 Pleasant St., Rm. 106 • Worcester 508-770-1451 • www.artofdentistry.net Open Tuesday, Thursday & Friday 9-6
Emergency Walk-ins Welcome • We Accept Most Insurances
That moment in the ER when you realize you could
AT HOME
ER CHECK-IN ONLINE stvincenthospital/emergency We understand that waiting in the ER is no fun. That’s why we’re offering an online check-in service at stvincenthospital/emergency to reserve your time online and comfortably wait at home. It’s quick, easy and you’ll be seen by a healthcare professional within 15 minutes of your scheduled time.
if you have a life threatening emergency call 911. APRIL 21, 2016 • WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM
33
FILE PHOTO/STEVEN KING
{ BESTof } continued from page 32
RADIO PERSONALITY FIRST: JIM POLITO
BEST MUSEUM/ART GALLERY
wtag.iheart.com/onair/the-jim-polito-show-10899 Second: Jordan Levy wtag.iheart.com/onair/the-jordan-levy-show-1050
SCHOOL COMMITTEE FIRST: DONNA COLORIO Coloriod@worc.k12.ma.us
Second: Brian O’Connell BOConnell@worc.k12.ma.us
SHORT ORDER COOK
FIRST: ANNIE, ANNIE’S CLARK BRUNCH 934 Main St., Worcester 508-756-1550
Second: Rob Evans, Addie Lee’s Soul Food 596 Main St., Worcester 508-752-0569
STATE OR FEDERAL LEGISLATOR FIRST: JIM MCGOVERN mcgovern.house.gov
Second: Kate Campanale
WORCESTER ART MUSEUM
continued on page 36
L A I C E SP CING PRI JUNE 30! L
UNTI
Cabinets for Your Lifestyle. Design for Any Budget.
689 Southbridge St, Auburn 508-832-3789
180 Cherry Brook Rd, Canton, CT 860-352-2030 (by appointment only)
cabinetresources.net 34
WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM
• APRIL 21, 2016
STEVEN KING
{ BESTof }
BEST COLUMNIST
DIANNE WILLIAMSON TELEGRAM & GAZETTE APRIL 21, 2016 • WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM
35
{ BESTof }
BEST SALVAGE YARD
STANDARD AUTO
SMALL LOAD CONCRETE Serving Central New England
Why Small Load Concrete?
• Flexibility – according to your schedule • Customer Mix / Pour on the job… no “Hot-Loads” • Buy ONLY what you need • Less Expensive than bagged (see Calculator) and large mixers • No Job too small • No Minimum Quantity to purchase • Cost Effective • No Waste • Environmentally Friendly
Custom - Concrete: Buy Only Quantity Needed NO LOAD TOO SMALL!
Sidewalk & Curb Repair • Concrete Finishing Services Available
Concrete Applications for Contractors & Homeowners Requests for pricing and scheduling: Provide project location, date/time needed, application, and volume Quick response. Major credit cards accepted, cash and checks.
115 Southwest Cutoff ~ Worcester, MA 01604 • 508-770-1200 • Fax: 508-770-1201 • SmallLoadConcrete.com
36
WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM
• APRIL 21, 2016
{ BESTof } WAITER/ WAITRESS FIRST: MEGAN ZAWALICH, ANNIE’S CLARK BRUNCH 934 Main St., Worcester 508-756-1550
Second: Jenny Pacillo, Romaine’s romainesrestaurant.com
WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHER FIRST: JOE GONZALES-DUFRESNE helloimjoe.com
Second: Mike Hendrickson unitymike.com
CITY LIFE ART GALLERY FIRST: WORCESTER ART MUSEUM
BANK
FIRST: COMMERCE BANK 386 Main St., Worcester 11 Park Ave., Worcester 560 Park Ave., Worcester 993 Grafton St., Worcester 451 Lincoln St., Worcester 1057 Main St., Holden 226 Boston Turnpike, Shrewsbury 5 East Main St., Westborough 320 West Boylston St., West Boylston 508-797-6800 (customer care number) bankatcommerce.com
321 Main Street Worcester, MA 01608 508-752-5608 www.mechanicshall.org
Second: Webster Five 266 Chandler St., Worcester 100 Front St., Suite 150, Worcester 400 Southbridge St., Auburn 208 West Main St., Dudley 343 Main St., Oxford 261 Grafton St., Shrewsbury 800-696-9401 web5.com
55 Salisbury St., Worcester 508-799-4406 worcesterart.org
Second: Sprinkler Factory sprinklerfactory.com
continued on page 38
AA TRANSPORTATION CO. HAS IMMEDIATE SCHOOL BUS AND VAN DRIVER OPENINGS IN SEVERAL DISTRICTS. FREE CDL training with employment agreement. Must be 25 years or older with a good driving record, 3 years driving experience (any type), a clean CORI and can pass a DOT physical. Qualified applicants will be paid while training for their CDL. School bus, van, and coach bus driving positions available. Up to $19.00 to start, health insurance, dental, 401K and great hours. Perfect for parents, retirees and anyone who likes to drive. Call Lori: 508-791-9100 x2
APRIL 21, 2016 • WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM
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{ BESTof }
BEST MASSAGE THERAPIST
JULIE BOVENZI
TRUTH ORGANIC SPA 38
WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM
• APRIL 21, 2016
STEVEN KING
{ BESTof }
ELM PARK
BOWLING ALLEY
FIRST: COLONIAL BOWLING ALLEY 248 Mill St., Worcester 508-754-7645
Second: AMF Auburn 101 Southbridge St., Auburn 508-791-5700 amf.com/location/amf-auburn-lanes-ma/
COLLEGE/ UNIVERSITY
FIRST: WORCESTER STATE UNIVERSITY 486 Chandler St., Worcester 508-929-8000 worcester.edu
Second: Clark University 950 Main St., Worcester clarku.edu
BEST PLACE TO GET OUTSIDE
May 6-8
Save 10% off all Saturday Night Fever tickets. Use promo code CHEERS at checkout.
CREDIT UNION
FIRST: DIGITAL FEDERAL CREDIT UNION 131 Gold Star Blvd., Worcester 225 Shrewsbury St., Worcester 11 Tobias Boland Way, Worcester 18 Lyman St., Westborough 508-263-6700 dcu.org
Second: Millbury Federal Credit Union 460 West Boylston St., Worcester 117B Stafford St., Worcester 50 Main St., Millbury 56 Auburn St., Auburn 337 Providence Road, South Grafton 508-865-7600 (main office number) millburycu.com
DANCE CLUB
FIRST: MAXWELL SILVERMAN’S Lincoln Square, Worcester 508-755-1200 maxwellmaxine.com
Second: The Ranch 70 James St., No. 138, Worcester 508-459-1127 thecountrymusicranchsaloon.com
DANCE STUDIO
FIRST: H&H DANCE ACADEMY 175 West Main St., Millbury 508-865-0083 hhdanceacademy.com
Second: Charlotte Klein 1122 Pleasant St., Worcester 508-753-6110 ckdancecenters.com
continued on page 40
June 7-12
GIRLS NIGHT OUT! Save $20 per ticket on Dirty Dancing tickets for Tues - Thurs performances. Use promo code CHEERS at checkout.
TheHanoverTheatre.org • 877.571.SHOW (7469) 2 Southbridge Street • Worcester, MA 01608 Discounts available for students, members, groups of 10+ and corporate partners. half_page_best of Worcester4-21-16.indd 1
A P R I L 2 1 , 2 0 1 6 • W O R C E S T E R M A G4/12/2016 A Z I N E . C4:10:34 O M PM 39
STEVEN KING
{ BESTof } continued from page 39
FESTIVAL
BEST BOWLING ALLEY
FIRST: START ON THE STREET startonthesteet.org
Second: Italian Festival Our Lady of Mt. Carmel mtcarmelfestival.com
FUN PLACE TO TAKE THE KIDS FIRST: ECOTARIUM
222 Harrington Way, Worcester 508-929-2700 ecotarium.org Second: The Art Lab and Gallery 716 Southbridge St., Auburn 508-789-7035 theartlabandgallery.com
GOLF COURSE
FIRST: GREEN HILL GOLF COURSE 1929 Skyline Drive, Worcester 508-799-1359 greenhillgc.com Second: Cyprian Keyes 284 Eeat Temple St., Boylston 508-869-9900 cypriankeyes.com
INSURANCE AGENCY
FIRST: TJ WOODS INSURANCE 20 Park Ave., Worcester 508-755-5944 Woodsinsurance.com
COLONIAL BOWLING ALLEY
Second: JJM Insurance 623 Chandler St., Worcester 508-791-1141 jjminsurance.com
continued on page 42
Our large variety of homemade bagels, great staff and cozy atmosphere will have you leaving with a smile on your face and a desire to come back for more. Gourmet Bagels Made from Scratch Daily, Boars Head Deli, Roll Ups, Smoothies, Good As Gold Locally Roasted Coffee, Homemade Vegan Sandwiches and Cream Cheese
194 B Park Avenue • Worcester • 508.798.0440 40
WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM
• APRIL 21, 2016
WINNER OF BEST OF WORCESTER FOR 22 YEARS!
TURN YOUR CHILD’S DENTAL APPOINTMENT INTO A PLAY DATE!
KIDS ZONE DENTAL PROVIDES • A comfortable and relaxing dental experience for your child. • A focus on educating you and your child about good oral hygiene. • Preventive care to give your child a healthy, natural and beautiful smile. • Specialized procedures and methods we use to treat your child’s dental needs. Dr. Veeranna and Associates
113 Sutton Ave., Oxford, MA 01540 • 508-731-0808 • mykidszonedental.com APRIL 21, 2016 • WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM
41
continued from page 40
LIMO SERVICE
FIRST: KNIGHT’S LIMOUSINE SERVICE 390 Hartford Turnpike, Shrewsbury 508-839-6252 knightslimo.com
Second: Joey’s Limousine Service 76 West Mountain St., Worcester 508-754-9575 joeyslimousine.com
LIVE MUSIC VENUE FIRST: RALPH’S
95 Prescott St., Worcester 508-753-9543 ralphsrockdiner.com Second: Palladium 261 Main St., Worcester 508-797-9696 thepalladium.net
Second: Stageloft Theater 450 Main St., Fiskdale 508-347-9005 stageloft.org
BEST YOGA/HOLISTIC
LOCAL CABLE TV SHOW FIRST: CHANNEL 3 NEWS chartertv3.com
Second: Rosen’s Roundtable wccatv.com/video/rosens-roundtable
MUSEUM
FIRST: WORCESTER ART MUSEUM 55 Salisbury St., Worcester 508-799-4406 worcesterart.org
Second: Ecotarium 222 Harrington Way, Worcester 508-929-2700 ecotarium.org
NEIGHBORHOOD BAR FIRST: VINCENT’S
LIVE THEATRE
49 Suffolk St., Worcester 508-752-9439
2 Southbridge St., Worcester 508-831-0800 thehanovertheatre.org
Second: Smitty’s Tavern 611 West Boylston St., Worcester 508-852-5560
FIRST: HANOVER THEATRE
STEVEN KING
{ BESTof }
METROWEST YOGA
SORE THROATS,
SNIFFLES... AND EVERYTHING IN BETWEEN
PEDIATRICS • FAMILY PRACTICE
WELCOMING NEW PATIENTS! 42 O R C E S Thalf E R page.indd M A G A Z I N1 E . C O M 16-066WLandmark
• APRIL 21, 2016
reliantmedicalgroup.org 508 - 425 - 5857 3/28/2016 1:18:41 PM
{ BESTof }
STEVEN KING
BEST BIKE SHOP
NEWS (RADIO OR TV)
SPORTS BAR
wtag.iheart.com
64 Water St., Worcester 508-792-4263 perfectgameworcester.com
FIRST: WTAG RADIO
FIRST: PERFECT GAME
Second: Fox 25 myfoxboston.com
Second: The Banner 112 Green St., Worcester 508-755-0879 thebannerbar.com
PLACE TO GET OUTSIDE FIRST: ELM PARK
284 Highland St., Worcester worcesterma.gov/dpw/parks-rec/city-parks/elm-park Second: Tie Greenhill Park 50 Skyline Drive, Worcester worcesterma.gov/dpw/parks-rec/city-parks/green-hill-park Tower Hill Botanic Garden 11 French Drive, Boylston 508-869-6111 towerhillbg.org
RADIO STATION FIRST: WTAG
WEDDING VENUE
FIRST: THE WHITE ROOM, CROMPTON COLLECTIVE 138 Green St., Worcester 508-753-7303 cromptoncollective.com/the-white-room
Second: Tower Hill Botanic Garden 11 French Drive, Boylston 508-869-6111 towerhillbg.org
wtag.iheart.com
BARNEY’S BICYCLE
Second: 100.1 The Pike pikefm.com
continued on page 45
Grumpy Cat. Experience Sponsored by:
Supporting sponsor:
Media Partners:
On view May 21-Sept. 4 Opening Party Friday, May 20, 8 -11pm Buy tickets at worcesterart.org/meow
WORCESTER ART MUSEUM APRIL 21, 2016 • WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM
43
Home Equity Lines of Credit. Put your home to work for you. No fees. No closing costs. No minimum withdrawal at opening. No surprises. You’ll love our Bank and our great rates! Call 800.698.BANK, visit us online or stop by any of our convenient locations for details.
www.BankAtCommerce.com
Commerce Bank NMLS ID #410623 Home Equity Variable Rate Line of Credit: The Annual Percentage Rate (APR) may vary monthly and will be based on the Prime Rate as listed in The Wall Street Journal (Prime.) The APR will not be less than 2.74% APR or more than 18% APR. As of 03/01/16 the Prime Rate is 3.50%. Property insurance will be required. The consumer should consult a tax advisor for further information regarding the deductibility of interest and charges. Offer subject to change without notice. See a Personal Banker for additional terms and conditions. Home Equity Fixed Rate Line of Credit: The Annual Percentage Rate (APR) will be fixed for the draw period of the Line of Credit at the Prime Rate as listed in The Wall Street Journal (Prime) plus 1.74% (currently 5.24 APR% as of 01/08/16). The Annual Percentage Rate during the repayment period will be fixed at the Prime Rate as listed in The Wall Street Journal (Prime) as of the date that the repayment period begins plus 1.74% (currently 5.24 APR% as of 03/30/16). Property insurance will be required. The consumer should consult a tax advisor for further information regarding the deductibility of interest and charges. Offer subject to change without notice. See a Personal Banker for additional terms and conditions. Commerce Bank is a registered service mark in Massachusetts of Commerce Bank & Trust Company. ©2016 Commerce Bank & Trust Company. Commerce Bank member FDIC. Equal Housing Lender. All rights reserved.
44
WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM
• APRIL 21, 2016
RETAIL AUTO DETAILING
{ BESTof }
215 Grove St., Worcester 579 Millbury St., Worcester erniescarwash.com Second: ScrubaDub Auto Wash Centers 575 Park Ave., Worcester 980 Grafton St., Worcester 11 Jennings St., Worcester 143 Shrewsbury St., Worcester scrubadub.com/locationshours/worcestercarwash.html
FIRST: HADDAD AUTO DETAIL 466 Harding St., Worcester 508-755-5250 haddadautodetail.com
Second: 3B Auto 18 Canterbury St., Worcester 508-762-9740
CLOTHING BOUTIQUE FIRST: GRIME
356 Shrewsbury St., Worcester 508-755-5055 grimeworcester.com
BIKE SHOP
FIRST: BARNEY’S BICYCLE
Second: French Twist 1098 Pleasant St., Worcester 774-437-9192
582 Park Ave., Worcester 508-799-2453 barneysbicycle.com
CONSIGNMENT SHOP
Second: Fritz’s Bicycle Shop 328 West Boylston St., Worcester 508-853-1799 fritzsbicycleshop.blogspot.com
FIRST: TRUNK & DISORDERLY 122 Main St., Worcester 508-459-1049 trunk-disorderly.myshopify.com
CAR WASH
Second: Alexis Grace Consignment 7 Harrison St., Worcester 508-799-4700 alexisgraceconsignment.com
FIRST: ERNIE’S CAR WASH 888 Southbridge St., Auburn 1 Meadow Road, Spencer 114 West Boylston St., West Boylston
Personal service, sound advice,
and the best insurance products available.
DOG GROOMER
FIRST: DOG DAYZ GROOMING SALON 1110 Pleasant St., Worcester 508-793-0022 dogdayzgrooming.com
CUSTOM PICTURE FRAMING & art galler y
Second: Bark of the Town Grooming Studio 17 Riverlin St., Millbury 508-865-2898 barkmillbury.com
min g! r a F a l F rug
ETHNIC MARKET
Up to 11Choice x 14 . $39.95 of Up to 18 x 24 . $69.95 Frames Up Select to 16 x 20 . $59.95 Up to 22 x 24 . $79.95 Up to 26 x 32 . $89.95
FIRST: ED HYDER’S MEDITERRANEAN MARKET
*Includes Glass, Hinge Mount, and Hanging Hardware with Premium Single Mat
408 Pleasant St., Worcester 508-755-0258 edhyders.com
CUSTOM PICTURE FRAMING 1099 Pleasant St. | Worcester &508-770-1270 art galler y
mi ng! a F r a l g F ru
Up to 11 x 14 ������������$39.95 www.FramedInTatnuck.com Up to 16 x 20 ������������$59.95 Up to 18 x 24 ������������$69.95 Up to 22 x 24 ������������$79.95 Up to 11 xUp 14 . $39.95 18 x������������$99.95 24 . $69.95 to 26Upxto32
Second: Bahnan’s 344 Pleasant St., Worcester 508-796-5365 bahnans.com
FLOWER SHOP
Up to 16 x 20 . $59.95 Up to 22 x 24 . $79.95 Up to 26 x 32 . $89.95
FIRST: PERRO’S
284 Grafton St., Worcester 508-755-7744 perrosflowers.com
*Includes Premium Glass, Hinge Mount, and Hanging Hardware
continued on page 53
1099 Pleasant St. | Worcester 508-770-1270
www.FramedInTatnuck.com
FAMILY HEALTH CENTER OF WORCESTER Quality primary care, behavioral health, dental care, vision care, and health benefits assistance for the entire family.
AUTO
Insurance
LIFE
Insurance
HOME
Insurance
BUSINESS Insurance
Protecting the people and business of Worcester County since 1949.
Free Health Insurance Assistance Are you uninsured? Do you have questions about health insurance? We can help! Talk with one of our Health Benefits Advisors/Navigators today. 26 Queen Street | Worcester, MA 01610 | (508) 860-7700 Advisors available weekdays 7:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m. Advisors available Saturdays 8:00 a.m. - 1:00 p.m. www.FHCW.org
20 Park Ave., Worcester • 508-755-5944 • Fax 508-791-9841 • woodsinsurance.com
APRIL 21, 2016 • WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM
45
SHREWSBURY STREET The Prizio Family is Proud to Bring You ...
A WARM THAI WELCOME
THE WONDER BAR
Welcome! There’s no place finer than the...
Boulevard Diner
Pizza • Salad • Pasta and more
HHHH Review
Worcester Magazine
Featuring Jazz 1st Thursday of the month ~ Reservations Recommended ~
Open Mon. - Sat. for Lunch & Dinner Facebook.com/TWBPizza
121 Shrewsbury St, Worcester 508-752-9909
299 Shrewsbury St.
774-317-9986
basilnspice.com
Member of the National Register of Historic Places
Since 1936
155 Shrewsbury Street ∙ Worcester
508∙791∙4535 Celebrating Our 80th Anniversary
BELLO OPTICIANS
RESTAURANT Over 75 Years Serving Italian Cuisine Italian Cuisine • Private Parties Open at 5PM; Closed Mondays 157 Shrewsbury St., Worcester 508-754-1057 piccolos157.com
Join us for Mother’s Day! Open at Noon Featuring our regular menu and Specials! Live Piano music in the lounge
92 Shrewsbury St., Worcester 508-796-5915 • nuovoworcester.com 46
WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM
• APRIL 21, 2016
508.798.2421 348 Shrewsbury St. Worcester
Banquets • Private Functions Business Meetings • Mercy Meals 11 Leo Turo Way, Worcester 508-753-9490 leosristorante.net
OUTDOOR DINING
Always in Style Outdoor Seating Available!
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Enjoy an authentic Greek cuisine experience in Worcester
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156 Shrewsbury St. Worcester
BEST WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHER
{ BESTof } STEVEN KING
JOE GONZALES-DUFRESNE
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BEST RETAIL WINE SELECTION
BEST LIQUOR STORE
AUSTIN LIQUORS 50
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• APRIL 21, 2016
The British Beer Company thanks the City of Worcester for the
Congratulations to all the winners of the
Cheers! Britishbeer.com | 225 Shrewsbury Street | 508.799.5100 BBC Worcester Magazine BOW Ad 2.indd 1
A P R I L 2 1 , 2 0 1 6 • W O R C E S T E R M A G A Z I 4/15/16 N E . C O M4:1751 PM
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BEST HAIR STYLIST
ROBERT WILLIAMS
HEADSHOP HAIR FACTORY
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continued from page 45
Second: La Jolie Fleur 263 Park Ave., Worcester 508-752-2272 lajoliefleur.com
BEST PAWN SHOP
FRAME SHOP
FIRST: FRAMED IN TATNUCK 1099 Pleasant St., Worcester 508-770-1270 framedintatnuck.com
Second: C.C. Lowell Art Supply Co. and Custom Framing 258 Park Ave., Worcester 508-757-7713 cclowell.com
GIFT SHOP
FIRST: CROMPTON COLLECTIVE 138 Green St., Worcester 508-753-7303 cromptoncollective.com
PLEASANT STREET PAWN
Second: Seed to Stem 174 Shrewsbury St., Worcester 508-890-0933 seedtostemstyle.com
continued on page 56
YOUR JOB:
Eat right. Exercise more. Sleep longer.
OUR JOB:
Keep it simple. Keep it safe.
Keep it FUN.
Worcester Fitness is MORE than a gym... visit us and see why.
APRIL 21, 2016 • WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM
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CANAL DISTRICT
VOTED WORCESTER’S BEST SPORTS BAR IN 2012, 2013, 2014 & 2015!
97 WATER ST. • WHISKEYONWATER.COM
Catch your favorite Baseball Team here with the MLB Package WED: TRIVIA NIGHT THURS: LIVE MUSIC • 20 Cent Wings All Day Sunday and Monday Nights
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Over
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• APRIL 21, 2016
ROADWAY 100 WATER ST., WORCESTER 508.755.3233 broadway-caterers.com
BEST COLLEGE/UNIVERSITY
{ BESTof } STEVEN KING
WORCESTER STATE UNIVERSITY
APRIL 21, 2016 • WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM
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HARDWARE STORE
FIRST: BARROWS HARDWARE 15 Webster St., Worcester 508-752-7191 barrowshardware.com
Second: Jed’s Hardware 450 Main St., Holden 508-829-4321 jedsonline.com
HEATING COMPANY FIRST: DILEO GAS INC 630 Sunderland Road, Worcester 508-797-5878 dileogas.com
Second: Scavone Plumbing & Heating 17 A Tallawanda Drive, Worcester 508-756-1318 scavoneplumbing.com
JEWELRY STORE
FIRST: SHARFMANS JEWELERS 19 Glennie St., Worcester 508-791-2211 sharfmansjewelers.com
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Second: Pucci’s Fine Jewelry 205 West Boylston St., West Boylston 508-835-6855 puccisjewelers.com
LIQUOR STORE
FILE PHOTO/STEVEN KING
NEW RETAIL BUSINESS
FIRST: AUSTIN LIQUORS 117 Gold Star Blvd., Worcester 508-853-8953 370 Park Ave., Worcester 508-754-0149 20 Boston Turnpike, Shrewsbury 508-755-8100 austinliquors.com
Second: Julio’s Liquors 140 Turnpike Road, Westborough 508-366-1942 juliosliquors.com
NEW CAR DEALER
FIRST: LAMOUREUX FORD 366 East Main St., Rte. 9, East Brookfield 855-892-5795 lamoureuxford.com Second: Harr 110-112 Gold Star Blvd., Worcester 508-852-5212 harr.com
• APRIL 21, 2016
WORCESTER WARES
3/16/16 11:08 AM
{ BESTof } Treat Mom this
NEW RETAIL BUSINESS
Second: Cash Exchange 130 West Boylston St., Worcester 508-853-1800 cashexchangeonline.com
Door 22, DCU Center, 50 Foster St., Worcester 508-929-0561 worcesterwares.com
SALVAGE YARD
continued from page 19
FIRST: WORCESTER WARES
Mother’s day ...
FIRST: STANDARD AUTO WRECKING
Second: The Art Lab & Gallery 716 Southbridge St., Auburn 508-789-7035 theartlabandgallery.com
257 Granite St., Worcester 508-755-8631 standardautoinc.com Second: Linder’s 211 Granite St., Worcester 508-756-5125 lindersinc.com
NURSERY/ GARDEN CENTER FIRST: BIGELOW NURSERIES 455 West Main St., Northborough 508-845-2143 bigelownurseries.com
Offer Expires May 7, 2016
D’Iorio’s
THRIFT STORE FIRST: GRIME
Second: Jed’s Hardware 450 Main St., Holden 508-829-4321 jedsonline.com
356 Shrewsbury St., Worcester 508-755-5055 grimeworcester.com
hair • nails • face • body Walk-ins Welcome or by Appointment
508.756.7791
Second: Crompton Collective 138 Green St., Worcester 508-753-7303 cromptoncollective.com
PAWN SHOP
FIRST: PLEASANT PAWN SHOP 334 Pleasant St., Worcester 508-798-3333 pleasantpawn.com
Manicure & Pedicure Special Only $40!*
355A Plantation St., Worcester dioriossalon.com
Gift Certificates Available continued on page 58
*Same day service. By Appointment, with this AD.
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CLASSES: Learn the amazing craft/art of sheet metal shaping Next one day class: April 23 Next four-day class: May 20-23 See website for full schedule. Call for more Info. APRIL 21, 2016 • WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM
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TIRE STORE
*COMPUTER DISPATCHED *CREDIT & DEBIT CARDS ACCEPTED
508.754.3211
FIRST: C & R
111 Randolph Road, Worcester 508-852-6464 649 Main St., Sturbridge 508-347-2124 crtire.com
Second: Town Fair Tire 320 Southbridge St., Auburn 508-832-6227 376 Boston Turnpike, Shrewsbury 508-845-6699 townfairtire.com
TOBACCONIST
Second: Standard Auto 257 Granite St., Worcester 508-755-8631 standardautoinc.com
VAPE SHOP
FIRST: WORCESTER VAPOR 649 West Boylston St., Worcester 774-823-3733 Second: Green Zone 84 Green St., Worcester 508-755-1878 Greenzonesmokeshop.com
FIRST: OWL SHOP
WINE SELECTION (RETAIL)
Second: Julio’s Liquors 140 Turnpike Road, Westborough 508-366-1942 juliosliquors.com
117 Gold Star Blvd., Worcester 508-853-8953 370 Park Ave., Worcester 508-754-0149 20 Boston Turnpike, Shrewsbury 508-755-8100 austinliquors.com
416 Main St., Worcester 508-753-0423 owlshop.com
Download our ne app free smartpho p Store or Ap e th at available t service ge d Google Play an clicks! w fe a st ju with
508-756-5125 lindersinc.com
USED CAR DEALER FIRST: LINDER’S 211 Granite St., Worcester
FIRST: AUSTIN LIQUORS
Second: Julio’s Liquors 140 Turnpike Road, Westborough 508-366-1942 Juliosliquors.com
continued on page 60
MORE THAN 1500 CRAFT BEERS TOCK L ARGE S T OF CRAF ! SPIRITS
21 Franklin St., West Boylston wachusettliquors.com 508-835-3131 Open Mon. - Sat.: 9:00 am - 10:00 pm Sun.: 10:00 am - 8:00 pm
10% DISCOUNT WHEN YOU MIX AND MATCH YOUR OWN SIX PACK OF BEER! CHECK OUT OUR 1000 SQ. FT. BEER CAVE! 58
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STEVEN KING
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LAMOUREUX FORD
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HEALTH & BEAUTY BARBER SHOP FIRST: DANA’S BARBER SHOP 75 West Boylston St., Worcester 508-373-2333 Second: D’Iorio’s 335 Plantation St., Worcester 508-756-7791 dioriossalon.com
BODY PIERCING SHOP
FIRST: PIERCING EMPORIUM & TATTOO 400 Shrewsbury St., Worcester 508-754-0564 piercingemporium.com
Second: Miraculous Creations 387 Park Ave., Worcester 508-755-1379 miraculouscreations.com
Bentkover Facial Plastic Surgery & Laser Center 123 Summer St., No. 675, Worcester 508-363-6500 drbentkover.com Second: Dr. Frank Fechner 428 Shrewsbury St., Worcester 508-754-4000 drfechner.com
SPA
FIRST: TU MODA
574 Pleasant St., Worcester 508-754-1513 tumodaspa.com
888-845-5072 myboostfitness.com
TANNING SALON
Second: Worcester Fitness 440 Grove St., Worcester 508-852-8209 123 Summer St., Worcester 508-363-7000 worcesterfitness.com
50 Boston Turnpike, Shrewsbury 508-421-GLOW 70 Providence Turnpike, Millbury 508-865-TAN5 glowtanningcenter.com
FIRST: D’IORIO’S
335 Plantation St., Worcester 508-756-7791 dioriossalon.com Second: Paul Conzo Day Spa & Hair Salon 490 Shrewsbury St., Worcester 508-754-5418 paulconzo.com
MARTIAL ARTS
FIRST: HANMI TAE KWAN DO 98 West Boylston St., Worcester 508-770-1187 Hanmitaekwondo.com
Second: McCoy’s Action Karate 770 Southbridge St., Auburn 508-832-4110 mccoysactionkarate.com
OPTICIAN
FIRST: BELLO OPTICIANS 348 Shrewsbury St., Worcester 508-798-2421 belloopticians.com 4/14/2016 11:46:59 AM
FIRST: DR. STUART BENTKOVER
GYM/ HEALTH CLUB
HAIR SALON
• APRIL 21, 2016
PLASTIC SURGEON
Second: Paul Conzo Day Spa & Hair Salon 490 Shrewsbury St., Worcester 508-754-5418 paulconzo.com
FIRST: BOOST FITNESS
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Second: Premier Optical 591 Lincoln St., Worcester 508-852-3636 premier-optical.com
FIRST: GLOW TANNING CENTER
Second: Sun City Tanning 846 West Boylston St., Worcester 508-852-0900 tanatsuncity.com
TATTOO PARLOR
FIRST: PIERCING EMPORIUM & TATTOO 400 Shrewsbury St., Worcester 508-754-0564 piercingemporium.com
Second: Zaza Ink 291 West Boylston St., West Boylston 508-835-6559 zazaink.com
YOGA/HOLISTIC
FIRST: METROWEST YOGA 69 Milk St., No. 100, Westborough 508-366-5025 metrowestyoga.net Second: Hot Power Yoga 1438 Grafton St., Worcester 508-353-8363 hotpoweryogacenter.com
MARTIN WEBB
art | dining | nightlife | April 21 - 27, 2016
night day &
Music is the ‘lifeblood’ page 62
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night day &
{ music }
Music is the ‘lifeblood’ for Jethro Tull’s Barre
Joshua Lyford
Martin Barre spent nearly 50 years as the dynamic guitarist in British group Jethro Tull, a band that did a number on rock genre purists and broke down walls between rock, ELAYNE BARRE folk, progressive and everything in between.
A man who never shied away from the utilization of any number of unique instruments in any given recording, Barre has also had an impact as a solo musician and will be taking his guitar wiles to the Hanover Theatre, 2 Southbridge St., for a show Friday, April 29. For Barre, who hails from Birmingham, England, much of the satisfaction in creating music is continuing to learn your craft, which is obvious on his new solo album, “Back to Steel,” which keeps one foot in the blues, one foot in rock and about a dozen other limbs in everything between, like a rock and roll Shiva. “I’m learning how to write music all the time,” said Barre, while sipping coffee in a New York City hotel room. “I’ve written music for many years, but not the quality I’m writing now. It’s great, it’s a new lease on life. I have a real strong reason to get up in the morning and pick up the guitar and write. Some days, I just put on a CD and jam along, other days I’m rehearsing, and other days I’m writing and it’s all fun. There are no bad days when you’re playing guitar. I’ve got a lot to learn, but I’m hoping that I’m improving, particularly with lyrics. It’s a difficult job for me, it’s a new area that I’m involved in.” While guitar and instruments like the bouzouki, mandolin and flute are within Barre’s wheelhouse, the musician said lyric
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writing is an entirely different beast; writing them can be more difficult in adulthood than as a younger, perhaps more angst-ridden man. “I think maybe it’s so much easier when you’re a young kid, you’re living in a real horrible place, you’ve got no money, maybe no friends,” said Barre. “You’re angry, you’ve got angst. There’s so much to write about. The best lyrics come from people in a really tough
“I love layering up music and I love the sound quality of the different instruments,” he said. “I love working with acoustic instruments, I particularly like the mandolin family. The tuning and structure, the chord shapes, adds musically to what I’ve written. I really do love those instruments. I don’t play a lot of flute, but all those differences give you a different angle. if I hear the sound quality in
place with a great passion inside them to write about where they are and what they want to do or who they want to be. “On the other side, you have people that are cozy, you’ve got a wonderful wife and family. It’s hard to find an area where lyrics are really going to communicate with people. I don’t want my lyrics to be soft. I want them to be hard. It’s the most difficult aspect for me.” Having a versatile library of instruments tends to lend itself to diverse harmonization, something Barre finds particularly enjoyable in songwriting.
the music, I’ll use it.” While Barre has been lauded as a legendary figure in guitar playing and instrumentation, he doesn’t see things quite the same way; he just likes to see where the rhythm takes him. “I’ve got no agenda when I start,” Barre explained. “It might be electric guitar, or acoustic guitar, or bouzouki. I might write a rock riff on a mandolin. There’s no normality. I like to go left of center. I’ll riff ideas on an old cassette player I’ve got and leave it for a day and come back to it. If I like it, I’ll work on it, if I don’t, I’ll discard it.”
• APRIL 21, 2016
With Barre’s writing style, complexity isn’t what he’s after, it’s workable harmonies and melodies, though complexity is an occasional byproduct. “I like to think that the music sounds simple, but isn’t,” said Barre. “That’s a good result. If the music sounds complex for no reason, that’s not a good result. Just because somebody discovered that you can write in 13/8, that’s not what I’m looking for. I’ve found that it detracts from the experience. I like 4/4, I like 3/ 4, I like the complications to be subtle, not a lot of hard work. I love harmonies, a lot of the work in my music writing, looking at the harmonic structure of the piece. I think those things are really beautiful in music.” And that music is integral to the makeup of Martin Barre. It’s a component of his life, like breathing air. “It’s who I am, it’s what I am,” he explained. “I don’t tire of it. I don’t want to sound pretentious, but it’s my lifeblood. I love a lot of things in life, but I love music. I like running and table tennis and wake boarding and being outdoors, but I try to have a really good balance in my life. It’s what I go back to. Whenever I have spare time, I’m working on my music. When I’m on holiday, I have a guitar in my room. I’m always playing. Anywhere somebody might pick up a book or go for a walk, my first choice outside of my family is picking up my guitar and playing it. I like … inspiring people and giving people energy through the music.” Head to the Hanover Theatre, 2 Southbridge St., Friday, April 29, to check out Martin Barre for yourself. To find out more, check out Martinbarre.com. Reporter Joshua Lyford can be reached at 508-749-3166, ext. 325, or by email at Jlyford@worcestermagazine.com. Follow Josh on Twitter @Joshachusetts.
night day &
THE
Lyford F iles
GETTING RAILED IN WORCESTER: I’ll keep this fairly brief since I’ve referenced them a number of times in this column, but having a hockey team coming to the city is huge. Also, since I’ve heard so much about how “silly” the name is (“rail” can be a term to describe both having sex or a giant line of coke, tee-hee. Apparently, we’re not all adults here), there you go. The headline says it all. Now that we’re all moving on from this, the economic boon of having a team here is a big factor, and besides all that hockey is just awesome to watch and I am excited to have it back.
Joshua Lyford
Our yearly Best of Awards issue. It’s always interesting to see the winners (and hear from the losers), though I have no real dog in the race. Of course, I have my favorite people, places and things spread out throughout the city and it is always nice to see them do well, but, realistically, this an online vote and I’d be lying if I said I paid a lot of attention to it. Still, I do support the concept of supporting businesses in the area through whatever means necessary. I won’t publicly congratulate the winners or besmirch the losers: congratulations to everyone that did well. With all that being said, I am compiling a list of my own personal Bests of Worcester and one Worst.
PIZZA AND BEER JUST OUSIDE MY DOOR: I live
off Chandler Street. I’ll keep it relatively vague considering the amount of hate mail I get (my personal favorite is still the voicemail that said “I look like a redheaded stepchild that should be slapped in the f*****g face,” that I must be “stupid enough to believe Obama is not a Muslim” and ended with “white power.” Keep it classy, anonymous stranger), but it’s close to the majesty of Beaver Brook Park (shout out to the great blue heron that flies around now and again). Just beyond my front porch, there is a dull gray triumph being erected and promised for opening this very spring. Antonio’s Pizza, which I would normally make the pilgrimage to Western Mass for, is nearly complete. For those that don’t know, Antonio’s makes absolutely absurd slices that defy traditional pizza logic, a potato pizza? Sure. Pasta? Taco? Yup and yup. This time around, they’re taking it a step further as well, adding a pizza drive-thru and bar. Do I have any stake in the success of this place? No, I just really like pizza. Particularly pizza that breaks the mold. If I can walk across Beaver Brook, see a great blue heron, be handed a whiskey nip by a kindly stranger, pet two dogs and get a beer and pizza all on one walk, color me stoked.
CITYWIDE POW WOW: We got to make the media announcement on the coming of Pow
Wow Worcester and we couldn’t have been more excited. I still feel that way (and you will absolutely be reading more on the goings on, artists coming through, etc., as they come out) and I am absolutely on the side of the fence saying, “Hey, 20 large walls throughout downtown with large-scale murals painted by internationally acclaimed artists sounds perfect!” Especially when viewed through the lens of what is happening downtown in Worcester currently (more on that below). Let’s face it, by the very nature of having a city based in mills and industrial buildings, there are plenty of walls that could use some beautification and–hell yeah!–many of them will get it. Local artists are promised to get some space in this deal as well, another big win, and everyone gets to see how beautiful and awesome our city is.
DOWNTOWN IT IS A-CHANGING: We’ve all heard the chatter: there are a lot of big projects going on in and around downtown. A lot of of things that can be, generally, considered a net positive for the city. CitySquare is (I’m told) nearing completion and the $565-million public-private development project promises to dial in downtown. Provided the space isn’t empty like many of downtown’s other buildings in 10 years, this could be a fantastic addition to the area. Hotels, a potential new parking garage, new businesses and the slow uptick of the area’s economics all signal a changing landscape. ... BUT IS IT FOR THE BETTER?: Of course, the retooling of downtown isn’t necessarily all
peaches and cream. It’s probably pretty obvious if you follow my column or much of what I choose to write about, I am very pro-Worcester and love seeing its growth. I hope to see Worcester become the city it has potential to be in my lifetime, but the inklings of a dark side have also begun to peek through the cracks. We’ve all read the articles about how Worcester is becoming one of the places to live in Massachusetts, and has been attracting Boston residents (and developers) in droves and that’s great. The more the merrier, but at some point you have to ask, at what cost? In this case, a very steep one. Worcester is a very livable city and, comparatively, fairly affordable (though I have absolutely no idea how people afford to live without roommates in 2016). I’m not here to talk about the gentrification boogieman, I am however going to call certain housing projects into question. I was ecstatic to see the incoming Loomworks building heralded as “affordable,” mixed-income housing, with a number of dignitaries on hand to congratulate all involved. The Main South building, which was crafted by The Community Builders, received $17 million in financing from MassHousing as well as contributions form other incentive programs and the city of Worcester to make up the funding of the $27 million-project. All that public money for affordable housing. Something we can all laud, right? Well, go ahead, check out their website and see for yourself what they consider “affordable.” Units start at $984 for a one bed, one bath. As of 2014, the average per capita income in Worcester is $24,470, a number below the national average. I’m a failure at math, but $984 a month for 12 months is $11,808, significantly higher than the prescribed 30 percent income considered “affordable.” The state and the city gave Community Builders a lot of money to help out our city with affordable housing that individuals still won’t be able to afford without subsidies and that money goes back into their pockets and that’s a real shame. For a minute, I thought maybe we could all reap the benefits of an improved downtown. I love the growth and I can’t wait to see where the city goes from here, I just hope we can all afford to stick around and see it. Reporter Joshua Lyford can be reached at 508-749-3166, ext. 325, by entering a time machine to pre-journalism career and publicly decrying the media, leading to a savage, difficult to describe, but generally helpful conversation that eventually begins a small drip of thought on the subject that sets in motion a raging torrent of ideas which, 10 or so years later, becomes the initial concept for a book that grows into a game-changing reflection on the purpose of information in general, within which you will receive a one-line credit, or by email at Jlyford@worcestermagazine.com. Follow Josh on Twitter @Joshachusetts.
CELEBRATING 35 YEARS
1993 • 1996 • 2000 • 2001 • 2002 2004 • 2005 • 2006 • 2007 • 2008 of the Regatta 2009 •Home 2010 • 2011 • 2012 • 2013 Club • 2014 • 2015
REGATTA DELI 28 LAKE AVENUE, WORCESTER
508-756-6916 FAX 508-754-1883 508-366-8958 FAX 508-836-4757
3A COLONIAL DRIVE, WESTBORO
VISIT OUR WEBSITE: REGATTADELI.COM APRIL 21, 2016 • WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM
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• APRIL 21, 2016
night day &
{ film }
The sad song of Mme. Dumont Jim Keogh
Marguerite Dumont is a baroness in post-WWI France, but she would have been right at home in contemporary U.S. culture, where talent is a subjective construct and everybody gets a trophy for effort. Marguerite fancies herself a singer. Unfortunately, she’s not just bad, she’s Roseanne Barr-singingthe-National Anthem bad. Her screeching could wake the dead, who, once they’d gotten a true earful, would promptly take their own afterlives.
That’s a problem, because she’s also incredibly wealthy, which means nobody in her circle is willing to tell Marguerite the truth lest the gravy train stop running — not her husband, not her house staff, not the music society she funds, whose members politely applaud her dreadful arias while wearing frozen smiles. Floral arrangements from secret admirers arrive on her doorstep, their authenticity unquestioned. “Marguerite” pays heavy dues to “Sunset Boulevard” with its portrait of a woman gradually imprisoned within her self-delusion — except rather than crave the close-up, Marguerite pines for the stage. Her loyal manservant, Madelbos (the brooding Denis Mpunga, recalling Erich von Stroheim’s Max from “Sunset”), hides negative newspaper reviews from her and photographs Marguerite in costume as legendary characters of the opera, indulging her fantasy that stardom is just around the corner. Sweetening the pot is the rave one of her private performances has received from a cheeky music critic, Lucien (Sylvain Dieuaide), who wrote it as a prank to escalate Marguerite’s obliviousness. She agrees to sing in a cabaret where Lucien and his buddy use her as a prop for a cruel joke. The newspaperman, sensing the vulnerability in Marguerite, begins to regret his callousness. The film is surprisingly gripping,
especially once Marguerite decides her talent is too imposing to be confined to her stately mansion and she schedules a public concert in a Paris hall. What now? Husband Georges (André Marcon) is unfaithful but still protective, so he’s eager to prevent his wife’s humiliation either by keeping her off the stage or finding a miracle worker who can make her a passable singer. The latter effort is handed to a washed-up, though hilariously pompous, opera star, whose face can barely mask his pain the first time Marguerite lifts her voice in his presence. The singer clearly is flirting with madness, and “Marguerite” offers pointed questions about who may be to blame for nurturing it. The movie is a play on the old The Emperor Has No Clothes story, in which sycophants fashion an alternative reality for their monarch. (One almost suspects Kim Jongil truly believed he shot 11 holes-in-one in a single golf round, something he claimed to have accomplished. What North Korean would have dared contradict him?) Catherine Frot portrays Marguerite as a woman burdened with a fragile soul, which makes the deception almost understandable. If she were a pure diva, watching her being brought down could actually be fun. Yet Marguerite is so likable, you’re concerned what might happen if she’s forcibly removed from her bubble (“The truth would destroy her,” is a common sentiment among her people). Still, it’s a risk you gotta take. In a famous scene from “Citizen Kane,” publishing magnate Charles Foster Kane writes a scathing review of his wife’s opera performance, the ultimate act of tough love. As Marguerite descends more deeply into her inner world you wish someone could have shown similar spine earlier in her life. But now, well, the opera ain’t over til the mad lady sings. “Marguerite” will be shown at 7:30 p.m. Thursday and Saturday, and at 1 and 3:25 p.m. Sunday in the Jefferson Academic Center at Clark University. The film is part of the Cinema 320 series.
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APRIL 21, 2016 • WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM
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Piccolo’s FOOD: ★★★★ VALUE: ★★★★ SERVICE: ★★★★ ATMOSPHERE: ★★★★
308 East Main St., East Brookfield • 774-449-8333
157 Shrewsbury St., Worcester • 508-754-1057 piccolos157.com
Located in south central Worcester County, this friendly lakeside restaurant wishes to adapt to your personal comforts, as well as treat you like a regular. Their warm hospitality is bound to reel you in and allow you to relax as not just a customer, but a friend.
Oli’s Italian Eatery FOOD: ★★★★ VALUE: ★★★ SERVICE: ★★★1/2 ATMOSPHERE: ★★★1/2 339 West Boylston Street A, West Boylston • 508-8541500
Italian specialties, like their famous thin crust pizza, served in a casual and family-friendly atmosphere. Order from Oli’s catering menu for your next party or head in between 11 a.m. and whenever they decide to close.
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For almost 11 years, Piccolo’s has been providing customers with cozy architecture and high-class food. Quality cuisine with a “quirky” atmosphere.
Fatima’s Cafe FOOD:★★★★ VALUE: ★★★★ SERVICE:★★1/2 ATMOSPHERE: ★★★★1/2 43 West Boylston St., Worcester • 508-762-9797
for a great place to kick back or bring your family.
Blackstone Bistro FOOD:★★★★ 1/2 VALUE:★★★ 1/2 SERVICE:★★★★★ ATMOSPHERE:★★★★1/2 35 Blackstone River Road, Worcester • 774-243-7285 Theblackstonebistro.com
Authentic African cuisine with a familyfriendly feel. Quality homemade food for an affordable price.
Peppercorn’s Grille & Tavern FOOD: ★★★★1/2 VALUE: ★★★ SERVICE: ★★★1/2 ATMOSPHERE: ★★★1/2 455 Park Ave., Worcester • 508-752-7711, peppercorns. com
If you’re looking for a quality laid-back meal and a place to watch the game, Peppercorn’s is your go-to. With lots of options available, and a selection of Wormtown brews, it makes
Blackstone Bistro offers an interesting combination of both Italian fare and Puerto Rican food - both are done to perfection. They do not over-complicate anything and keep the flavors of both styles of food simple, flavorful
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and to the point. This is a great restaurant to check out if you can’t commit to one style of food.
Barre Mill Restaurant FOOD:★★★★ VALUE:★★★1/2 SERVICE:★★★★ ATMOSPHERE:★★★★ 90 Main St., Barre • 978-355-2987 • barremill.com
Showing up at this restaurant is like going back to the 1950s with its aesthetic. Their food aligns with this atmosphere, but does not disappoint in flavor or buttery sauces. If you are out in Barre and feeling nostalgic, this is the restaurant for you.
One Eleven Chophouse FOOD:★★★★★ VALUE:★★★★1/2 SERVICE:★★★★★ ATMOSPHERE:★★★★1/2 111 Shrewsbury St., Worcester • 508-799-4111 • 111chophouse.com
You would be mistaken to pass up One Eleven if you are looking for a great steak cooked to perfection. The service and atmosphere invite the diner in and facilitates conversation. This is a great place to go for a special night out.
With an emphasis on soul food, this restaurant will keep you full and recharge your heart. You can taste the love put into the food here, and for a low price it is a luxury that most people can afford to have.
The Wonder Bar Restaurant FOOD:★★★★1/2 VALUE:★★★1/2 SERVICE:★★★★1/2 ATMOSPHERE:★★★1/2
121 Shrewsbury St., Worcester • 508-752-9909
The pizza at Wonder Bar is what keeps bringing patrons back every time. They get it right, keeping the thin crust pizza crispy without being overdone. If you are feeling a little adventurous, try the white clam and garlic pizza. You will not be disappointed during your visit here.
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Nutella French Toast: “A Dish Worth Driving To” as seen on The Phantom Gourmet
Addie Lee’s Soul Food FOOD:★★★★1/2 VALUE:★★★★ SERVICE:★★★★★ ATMOSPHERE: ★★★★ 596 Main St., Worcester • 508-752-0569
Shop Yourself Healthy
Serving Brunch Everyday Monday - Saturday 7am-3pm || Sunday 8am-3pm
Book your private party or special event today!
1394 Main St., Worcester 508-926-8861 LiviasDish.com APRIL 21, 2016 • WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM
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Follow @ActionWoo on Twitter for updates about happenings for Worcester’s young professionals. Action Worcester is dedicated to connecting people by facilitating introductions and coordinating events. The
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organization recently announced POW! WOW! Worldwide, an international mural festival that will take place Aug. 26 through Sept. 4. Subscribe to Clark Meets Worcester on Youtube, a series of videos hosted by Shaun Holt, assistant director of admissions for marketing and communications at Clark University. Holt urges students to get to know their community, beginning with the likes of Annie’s Clark Brunch, Crompton Place and The Cascades. Like The Fashion Cookbook on Facebook for blog updates from Worcester native Patricia De Carvalho and Clark grad Hannah Martin. Worcester r Sa has never looked better. with Patricia and Hannah showcase local businesses with stunning visual force. Recent posts include Seed to Stem, Volturno and Crust Artisan Bakeshop. Follow @silversandbynes on Instagram for a vintage perspective on the city and a plethora of natural light. Photographers Kayte Silvers and TJ Bynes capture Worcester’s diners, street corners, and telephone booths with artistic whimsy. Recent posts include Corner Lunch and Trunk & Disorderly. ah
The Internet listicle circuit is brimming with inspiring accounts that promise to help us jump start our businesses, fitness routines, personal aesthetics, even our relationships. I’m quick to follow anyone whose account highlights opportunities for building cultural capital and engaging in new experiences in the city of Worcester. It’s “best of” season at Worcester Magazine, so this week, I’m chronicling my favorite social media taste-makers for Date Night inspiration.
Follow @ugly_cat_sweaters on Instagram to track the adventures of illustrator Danielle Montgomery, who penned “Worcester: A Coloring Adventure” (available at Worcester Wares). Montgomery unearths the city’s hidden gems as her urban discoveries unfold like the pages of her original coloring book. Recent posts include Mechanics Hall, Elm Park and Bancroft Tower. Follow @WorcCulturalCoalition on Twitter to hear the voice of Worcester’s arts community and receive updates about events on the Common. Expect food truck alerts and exhibit info about the likes of Worcester Art Museum, Worcester Center for Crafts and Tower Hill Botanic Garden. Follow @_wormfood on Instagram for a peek at Worcester’s culinary landscape. Feast your eyes on the city’s most tantalizing drinks and dishes in what amounts to a superlative visual menu. Each month, @_wormfood selects a theme March showcased cocktails and April delivers desserts. Recently featured spots include Sweet, Wholly Canoli, and The Bean Counter. *As a public service announcement, I firmly urge you to add John Mayer on Snapchat. You don’t have to like johnthekangaroo’s music to appreciate the man’s brilliant mastery of a truly bizarre social media platform. If nothing else, his Snaps are sure to give you and your date something clever to talk about over dinner. Trust me.
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Cheng Du FOOD:★★★★ VALUE:★★★★1/2 SERVICE:★★★★ ATMOSPHERE:★★★★ 157 Turnpike Road, Westborough • 508-366-7489, chengdurestaurant.com
Cheng Du elevates typical Chinese dining to a new level, providing the diner with more
traditional food at a casual price. The menu offers more exotic dishes and also has the more commonly known ones, like lo mein. The food here brings out new flavors in dishes that could be bland elsewhere.
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Fins & Tales FOOD:★★★★1/2 VALUE:★★★★ SERVICE:★★★1/2 ATMOSPHERE:★★★★
Funky Murphy’s Bar & Grille FOOD:★★★★ VALUE:★★★★★ SERVICE: ★★★★ ATMOSPHERE:★★★1/2
858 Main St., Southbridge • 508-764-3349 • finsandtales858.com
305 Shrewsbury St., Worcester • 508-753-2995 • murphysirishbar.com
This is the type of place you go to watch the sports games, but besides just being a good bar, they provide great food and service. Friendly wait staff and an expansive menu sett Funky Murphy’s apart from some of the other places on Shrewsbury Street.
Eighty Ates Bar & Grille FOOD:★★★★ VALUE:★★★★★ SERVICE:★★★ ATMOSPHERE:★★★ Fins & Tales is in an old, three-story Victorian and has exposed brick inside, which adds to the cozy atmosphere of the restaurant. Great steaks and seafood are the stars of the restaurant, but you would be remiss if you did not order the creamy New England Clam Chowder.
8 Airport Road, Dudley • 508-949-8888 • eightyates.com
Walking into Eighty Ates you notice the eclectic styling of this family -friendly bar and grille. The food will not disappoint with a wide range of offerings. You will get a good bang for your buck here.
$5 LUNCH SPECIALS Burgers • Fish • Chicken • Hot Dogs • Kids Meals • Combo Meals Salads • Artisan-style Sandwiches Cones • Banana Splits • Blizzards • Floats • Freezes • Moo Lattés Premium Smoothies • Edible Image Cakes
NO SUGAR ADDED TREATS: DQ Fudge Bar • DQ Vanilla Orange Bar • Arctic Rush • DQ Quart Fresh Baked Waffle Cones • Hot Desserts a la Mode Waffle Cone Blizzards
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BEAUTIFULLY DECORATED FROZEN CAKES for Any Occasion. Order online at DQCakes.com
FRESH PREMIUM SMOOTHIES
MIDDLE EASTERN TAVERNA
3 Locations In Westboro & Worcester ElBashaRestaurant.com
Use our Drive-thru for Quicker Service
291 Main St. • Route 9 • Spencer
508-885-2748 Gift Cards Available
10% Senior Discount Debit & Credit Cards Accepted
APRIL 21, 2016 • WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM
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SMALL PIZZAS FOR LUNCH
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EVERY DAY IS SPECIAL AT PEPE’S Tuesday
10¢ Tenders at the Bar
$12.99 pitcher of Pepe’s Brew and a large cheese pizza
Chuan Shabu FOOD:★★★★ VALUE:★★★★1/2 SERVICE:★★★★ ATMOSPHERE:★★★★1/2 301 Park Ave, Worcester • 508-762-9213 shabuworcester.com
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The Inn At Woodstock Hill Restaurant & Lodging FOOD:★★★★★ VALUE:★★★★ SERVICE:★★★★★ ATMOSPHERE:★★★★★ 94 Plain Hill Road, Woodstock, Connecticut 860-928-0528 • woodstockhill.com
Wednesday - Buy any pizza get one half off Thursday - Buy one pizza get one free cheese pizza *Dine-in only on all specials
274 Franklin St., Worcester
508-755-1978
Tues-Thurs 11am-11pm • Fri 11am-1am • Sat 2pm-1am
If you want a dining experience under your control, check this place out. It boasts a large list of options to create your own soup, and if you need help the wait staff will help you come up with a combination that will suit your needs.
Dining at The Inn at Woodstock Hill is like traveling back in time, with an old-time decor and amazing wait staff that will help you pick the best meal for you. It is worth the drive to Woodstock for a meal you will not forget and service you will want at every restaurant you go to.
BAR & LOUNGE
COME ENJOY OUR PATIO!
A modern, luxurious seating area for you to sip your drink by the fire pit!
WEDDINGS/EVENTS
BOOK US FOR YOUR NEXT EVENT! Private Events & Weddings from 30-260 guests!
206 SOUTHBRIDGE RD., NORTH OXFORD • 508.832.9705 • JANTHONYSGRILL.COM 70
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Darkhorse Tavern FOOD:★★★★ VALUE:★★★★ SERVICE: ★★★★ ATMOSPHERE: ★★★★1/2
VALUE:★★★★★ SERVICE:★★★★★ ATMOSPHERE:★★★ 157 Belmont St., Worcester • 508-798-8898 belmontvegetarian.com
Belmont Vegetarian provides the diner with different flavors and textures of soy products that can easily stay the same. The rich mac and cheese is the star of the show here, but don’t skimp out on all the other options.
12 Crane St., Southbridge • 508-764-9200 darkhorsetavern.net
The Darkhorse Tavern is a bright and cozy hideaway in Sturbridge, with good food and a large selection of beers. It takes cozy comfort food to a new level, great service and live music. This is a good spot if you want to escape Worcester for a little bit.
Flying Rhino FOOD:★★★★ VALUE:★★★1/2 SERVICE:★★★★ ATMOSPHERE:★★★1/2 If you want a good burger, the Flying Rhino is a place you shouldn’t pass up. With a large menu that offers different sized appetizers, bite, double-bite, and super-bite, the food is not lacking in flavor.
1121 Grafton St., Worcester • 508-752-1668 yummysteakhouse.com
A fun experience for a large group of friends. You are getting a full show and a meal when you opt for the steakhouse experience. The in-
Westender Restaurant & Bar FOOD:★★★★ VALUE:★★★★ SERVICE:★★★★ ATMOSPHERE:★★★
SPANISH FLAVORED
93 Boston Post Road West, Marlborough • 508-485-1185 thewestendermarlboro.com
Hospitality’s Bocado Signature Wine Dinners. You get a five-course meal, paired
The Westender is a great neighborhood place to go and eat. Not only do they do the classics right, like the nachos, they give you options for something new and fun, like the beersteamed pastrami sandwich. If you visit the enough you, too, can become a regular.
278 Shrewsbury St., Worcester • 508-757-1450 flyingrhinocafe.com
BITE SIZED
Yummy Steak House FOOD:★★★★ VALUE:★★★★ SERVICE:★★★★ ATMOSPHERE: ★★★★
VIA Italian Table FOOD:★★★★ Belmont Vegetarian Restaurant VALUE:★★★★ SERVICE: ★★★1/2 FOOD:★★★★ ATMOSPHERE: ★★★★ 89 Shrewsbury St., Worcester • 508-754-4842 viaitaliantable.com
At VIA you will walk in hungry, but you will not leave feeling that way. With large portion sizes that put an emphasis on Italian comfort, you might be rolling your way out of the restaurant. Both the meats and seafood excel at leaving the customer happy and full.
If you read Bite-Sized regularly – and we know you do – you’ve read about Niche
teraction between you and your chef is always fun, and while you are having fun you get a great meal too.
with regional Spanish wines, for $65 each. A couple more are coming up. Check out Bocado Worcester, 82 Winter St., Worcester Monday, April 25, 7 p.m. Or head on down to Providence, Rhode Island Thursday, April 28, 7 p.m., for the Bocado experience at 60 Valley St. Visit nichehospitality.com for tickets.
HIGH THYME
Join Rye & Thyme, 14 Monument Square, Leominster Thursday, April 21 for a
Luciano’s FOOD:★★★★ VALUE: ★★★★ SERVICE: ★★★★ ATMOSPHERE:★★★★
Dogfish Head Beer Dinner
Union Station, 2 Washington Square, Worcester 508-755-6408 • maxwellsilvermanbanquet.com
Dining here is like stepping back into the ’20s or ’30s, with some smooth jazz playing in the background. The menu items are tied in with the mob-theme with names like “The Heist.” The food will keep you satisfied with big portions that also deliver on the flavor.
at 7 p.m. Enjoy a four-course dinner with beer pairings, featuring Dogfish Head Craft-brewed ales of Delaware. The $55 is all-inclusive. Visit nichehospitality.com for tickets.
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’S P U B Y L L I B Biggest Pork Chops in Town The Best Double Cheeseburgers Around Fridays - Fresh Seafood Specials Early Bird Specials 3-6pm
Function Room Available for all Occasions at No Charge! Call Today! 81 Clinton St., (Rte 70) Shrewsbury 508-425-3353 Open Daily at 11am •
•
Great Food . . . Great Entertainment . . .
All Close to Home!
Karaoke every Friday Night April 23 - Tequila Mockingbird • April 30 - Mindrift May 7 - Dale LePage 7-10PM May 14 - Drums and Wires • May 17 - Paint Night Sushi • Gluten Free Entrees Available
Function Rooms • Gift Certificates Take-Out • Keno
176 Reservoir St. Holden • 508.829.2188 • www.wongdynasty-yankeegrill.com APRIL 21, 2016 • WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM
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Black & White Grille FOOD:★★★★1/2 VALUE: ★★★★ SERVICE:★★★★1/2 ATMOSPHERE:★★★1/2 206 North Spencer Road, Spencer • 508-855-5018 Blackandwhitegrille.com
If you can’t decide what you want for dinner, the Black & White Grille will help you figure it out. The menu offers a wide array of dishes without dropping the quality to support the large menu.
Anokye Krom FOOD:★★★★ VALUE:★★★★ SERVICE:★★★ ATMOSPHERE:★★★★
Ceres Bistro FOOD:★★★★ VALUE:★★★ SERVICE:★★★★ ATMOSPHERE: ★★★★★
687 Millbury St., Worcester • 508-753-8471
363 Plantation St. , Worcester • 508-754-2000 ceresbistro.com
Anokye Krom brings to the table a whole different type of dining experience. This AfricanAmerican restaurant opens your taste buds to different flavor combinations you’ve never had before. You might get a little messy during the meal (since you eat with your hands for some meals), but it is totally worth it.
Udupi Bhavan FOOD:★★★★1/2 VALUE:★★★★ SERVICE:★★★★ ATMOSPHERE:★★★★
Once you walk into Ceres Bistro you will notice the illuminated bar and the decor; it lends a classy feel. Friendly service will help you find the best meal for you and maybe even a great drink to go with it. Anything you order off the menu will be sure to satisfy your appetite.
The Duck FOOD:★★★★ VALUE:★★★★ SERVICE: ★★★ ATMOSPHERE: ★★★★★
378 Maple Ave., Shrewsbury • 508-459-5099 theudupi.com
Once you walk into The Duck you will be enveloped by the live music. The bar is home to a wide range of different spirits that will lead you to a great drink. The menu has a variety of choices sure to satisfy any appetite. Overall,
The Grill by Day ... Open to the Public. Serving Lunch and Dinner Daily!
1929 Skyline Drive, Worcester off Belmont Street
508-854-1704 WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM
• APRIL 21, 2016
If you want to have great and fresh seafood, you need to check out 85 Main, which boasts about providing the freshest seafood. The atmosphere at 85 Main will draw you in with beautifully painted walls and lavish wine cellar. The food, drink and service will not keep you there. - Compiled by Eli Flagg
... and Night!!!
NOW Open Year Round! Starting April 25th Rain or Shine!
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85 Main FOOD:★★★★★ VALUE:★★★★★ SERVICE: ★★★★ ATMOSPHERE: ★★★★★ 85 Main St., Putnam, Connecticut • 860-926-1660 85main.com
502 Main St., Sturbridge • 508-347-2321 theducksturbridge.com
As a vegetarian Indian restaurant, Udupi sets itself apart, particularly with the range of flavors provided. From intense spice to sweet coconut flavors in their soups, curry and other dishes, they will make you forget there is no meat at all.
the atmosphere, bar and food are why The Duck earns four stars.
grillonthehillworcester.com
Sponsored by
Congratulations to
Hoops Hysteria
Sweepstakes
WINNER FRED SCHWARTZ! Pictured here with Mike Erlich (left) and Mark Erlich (right)
392883 HoopsHysteriaWinner 0421.indd 1
A P R I L 2 1 , 2 0 1 6 • W O R C E S T E R M A G A Z I N4/13/16 E . C O M 3:15 73 PM
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{ listings}
music >Thursday 21
Pakachoag Music School Summer Programs. Summer Programs at Pakachoag Music School Registration for summer programs begins March 15th! Programs include: *Music and Movement Samplers *Musical Theater *Private Lessons *Fiddle Band *Suzuki Violin and Cello For complete information visit us at pakmusic.org, email info@pakmusic.org, or call 508-791-8159. Pakachoag Music School of Greater Worcester, 203 Pakachoag St., Auburn. 508-791-8159 or pakmusic.org RAQ. RAQ is back in the Woo! Thursday April 21st Electric Haze 26 Millbury Street Worcester, MA Members: Jay Burwick - Bass/ Vocals Chris Michetti - Guitar/Vocals Todd Stoops - Keyboards/ Vocals Neal Evans - Drums 21+ Doors 6pm Music 9pm $15 ticket electrichaze.bigcartel.com/product/raq-thursday-april-21st $15. 6 p.m.-2 a.m. Electric Haze, 26 Millbury St. 508-799-0629 or find them on Facebook. Bluegrass Jam w/ Victor! Open to all skill levels! Jam out with musicians in search of the elusive Bluegrass. Host & instructor, Victor Evdokimoff will guide the group through songs, chord changes and leads. Hosted in the Union Music Performance Center. Meet, greet, and jam at 6:30PM. Always the 3rd Thursday of every month! Free. 6:30-8 p.m. Union Music, Performance Center, 142 Southbridge St. 508-753-3702 or find them on Facebook. Open Mic Most Thursdays @ Barbers North. To check the schedules and open slots visit: Bill McCarthy’s Open Mic World on Facebook Bill McCarthy (originator of the “Half-Hour Sets!”) is your host at another great Open Mic Night! Email Bill McCarthy to reserve it at: openmcc@verizon.net (make sure you put “open mic” in the email’s “subject box” so I know you’re not selling Viagra or something!) Network * Collaborate * Learn. Over sixty different musicians regularly support my open mic nights all are friendly and supportive -- and many are: * Former or currently signed recording artists * Award-winning pro’s or semi-pro’s * Regularly gigging paid-performers * Published songwriters * Recording studio owner/ operators * Combinations of any and/or all of the above. To check the schedules and open slots visit Facebook. Any slot marked as “open” usually is! Free! 6:30-9:30 p.m. Barbers Crossing (North), 175 Leominster Road, Sterling. 978-422-8438. Keith McLinden from Elemental. Join us for this rare solo performance 7-11 p.m. Beatnik’s, 433 Park Ave. 508-926-8877. Open Mic. Attention Performers, Amateurs and Experts! Do you sing or play an instrument? Are you looking for a crowd that will appreciate your incredible sense of humor? Maybe you have some secret talent that you’re ready to share with the world (or at least your local coffee house). Drop in for Open Mic! Full Sandwich Menu Desserts Coffee & Espresso BYOB beer & wine only $0. 7-10 p.m. Cake Shop Cafe, 22A West St., Millbury. 508-865-9866 or cakeshopcafe.com Foo Topia - A tribute to the Foo Fighters w/ Dodeca at the Cove. 21+ Doors at 8pm Show at 9pm $7 at the door or free with college ID $7 at the door or free with College ID. 8 p.m.midnight The Cove Music Hall, 89 Green St. 508-363-1888 or find them on Facebook. Black Sheep Idol $500 Live Band Karaoke Contest –Fingercuff. You could be $500 richer, Live Band Karaoke with Fingercuff Black Sheep Idol Contest. Come on down and rock out with a real band. 9 weeks to qualify. Over 300 songs to choose from. 8pm 8-11:30 p.m. Black Sheep Tavern, 261 Leominster Road, Sterling. 978-422-8484. Jay Graham. 8 p.m.-1 a.m. Rye & Thyme, 14 Monument Square, Leominster. 978-534-5900.
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Joe Reidy. 8 p.m.-1 a.m. Blueprint New American Bar & Grill, 9 Village Square, Westminster. 978-668-5580. Open Mic’ Night with David Bazin. Acoustic style Open Mic’, bring your acoustic instrument and we’ll plug in it in or mic’ it for you and also we provide mic’s for vocals. Signups for order of performers starts at 7:30. At 8:00 David Bazin kicks the night off with a quick set and then the night is open from there! No Cover. 8-11 p.m. A & D Pub Function Room, 60 Elm St., Millbury. 508-865-9013. Sam James Performs at Loft, Thurs at 8. No cost. 8-11 p.m. Loft 266 Bar & Lounge, 266 Park Ave. 508-796-5177. The cold soldier band. Dwight Perry-Ron Sloan-Bob BerryGeorge Dellomo play the whatnot blues for youse no cover charge. 8-10:30 p.m. Dunny’s Tavern, 291 East Main St., East Brookfield. 508-867-5925. Thursday Open Mic Night. Now the frost is on the pumpkin, it’s the time for guitar plunkin...Join a decades old tradition of sharing and musical camaraderie in an old-fashioned fun roadhouse! P.A. and support of all sorts provided, be part of the fun....Hosted by Ed
>Friday 22
Pakachoag Music School Summer Programs. Summer Programs at Pakachoag Music School Registration for summer programs begins March 15th! Programs include: *Music and Movement Samplers *Musical Theater *Private Lessons *Fiddle Band *Suzuki Violin and Cello For complete information visit us at pakmusic.org, email info@pakmusic.org, or call 508-791-8159. Pakachoag Music School of Greater Worcester, 203 Pakachoag St., Auburn. 508-791-8159 or pakmusic.org Thank Friday It’s Dr. Nat. Let Dr. Nat start your weekend with jazz, swing, blues, soul, samba, R&B, Broadway, original songs about Worcester, and other surprises, such as special guest vocalists and instrumentalists. Dancers welcome! No cover charge, tips appreciated. 5:30-7:30 p.m. Nick’s Bar and Restaurant, 124 Millbury St. 508-753-4030 or natneedle.com Don’t Let Go | A tribute to the Jerry Garcia Band. 21 plus doors 6pm/show 9pm $8 Don’t Let Go is a Massachusetts based jam band that focuses on all the best music Jerry played in his various projects including The Jerry Garcia band, Legion of Mary and The Grateful Dead. Please join us for a special show celebrating Jerry The Ecotarium, with two full sets at The Electric Haze. We will have special guest 222 Harrington Way, John Brigham from The Knot, Way Up South and Mr Charley and The Worcester, hosts Saints of Circumstance filling in on bass and more! Its 4/20ish, The its Earth Day Electric Haze is a Hookah lounge, kind brews, friends, break dancing, Celebration Friday, the electric slide and more. $8. 6 p.m.-2 a.m. Electric Haze, 26 April 22, 10 a.m. to Millbury St. 508-799-0629 or find them on Facebook. 4 p.m. Don’t miss the The Drunken Uncles! Playing all your favorite songs! Come have fun, with indoor and a drink with your favorite uncles! Free. 6-9 p.m. Park Grill and Spirits, outdoor activities, local Bar, 257 Park Ave. 508-756-7995 or find them on Facebook. green organizations and food vendors. Earth Bill McCarthy Every Friday at Barbers Crossing North. Day admission is $7.50 Now catch Bill McCarthy playing his heart out every Friday at Barbers for adults, $5 for kids North (Sterling, MA) @6:30pm Visit: BillMcCarthyMusic.com for info. 2-18, free for seniors Free! 6:30-9:30 p.m. Barbers Crossing (North), 175 Leominster Road, and students with ID. Sterling. 978-422-8438. The event is free for EcoTarium members under 2. For more Amici e Musica Chamber Ensemble - Beethoven information, visit ecotarium.org, email info@ecotarium.org or and Wood septets. Free with goodwill donation. 7-9 p.m. First call 508-929-2700. Unitarian Church, 90 Main St. firstunitarian.com Jim Devlin. 7-10 p.m. Compass Tavern, 90 Harding St. 508-304-6044. Mychael David - In 1986 he joined a rock band and found himself back in front of audiences once again. That’s when he knew Sheridan. 8-11 p.m. Blue Plate Lounge, 661 Main St., Holden. 508he had found what he was meant to do. During a five year run with 829-4566. the rock band, Mychael spent alot of time writing and recording in the Audio Wasabi. 8:30 p.m.-1 a.m. Gardner Ale House, 74 Parker St., studio. Performing in clubs and various venues throughout the Boston Gardner. 978-669-0122. area taught him how to express his feelings through his music to his College Night w/DJ XTC & DJ Scotty P. 9 p.m.-2 a.m. audiences. Soon after, Mychael found himself listening again to the Industry Bar Room, 109 Water St. 508-756-2100. music he grew up with. He found his inspiration through artists like DJ/Karaoke with DJ Bruce *Dancing*. 9 p.m.-1 a.m. Merle Haggard, Johnny Cash and Waylon Jennings, just to name a Padavano’s Place, 358 Shrewsbury St. 774-823-3022. few. N/A. 7-10 p.m. Canal Restaurant & Bar, 65 Water St., 65 Water Grade “A” Fancy. 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Nick’s Bar and Restaurant, 124 St. 508-926-8353. Millbury St. 508-753-4030. Spring Pipes - WorcAGO April Celebration. Concert by Karaoke w/ Royal Crown. 9 p.m.-1 a.m. Classic’s Pub, 285 International Artist James Kibbie on the 56-rank J W Walker Pipe Organ Central St., Leominster. 978-537-7750. Free. 7-8:30 p.m. Our Lady of the Angels Church, 1222 Main St. The Promise is Hope. The Promise is Hope is the WorcesterJohn Henry’s Hammer Open Mic. Join us every 2nd & 4th based folk/rock duo and married couple. Ashley & Eric L’Esperance Friday of the month! Music, poetry & good ol’ fun! In the best open formed The Promise is Hope on the day of their engagement in mic ‘listening room’ venue in the city! $2 Donation. 7:30-10:30 p.m. March 2014, and have been playing and touring in New England First Unitarian Church, 90 Main St. 508-757-2708. and the mid-Atlantic ever since. Their debut album, The Wedding P.E. James performing at Fiddler’s Green! Come on down EP (September 2014), is a two-song preview of their debut 9-track to Worcester’s favorite Irish pub for a night of entertainment! P.E. will LP, Where We’ve Been & Where We’re Going, which they released 7 be playing your favorite acoustic songs from the 50s, 60s, and 70s! months later. Live Worcester, Love Worcester calls them “Worcester’s Full bar, and food will be available. A great time will be had by all! acoustic power couple” and says that “The duo has captured Free! 7:30-10:30 p.m. Fiddlers’ Green Pub & Restaurant, 19 Temple something exceedingly personal and eerily familiar to anyone who St. 508-792-3700. has ever fallen in love in the city of Worcester.” 9 p.m.-noon Michael’s White Rose Confession, A King in Wait and More at Cigar Bar, 1 Exchange Place. 508-459-9035. The Cove! $7 at the door 21+ Doors at 8pm Show starts at 9pm DJ (21+) Canal. N/A. 10 p.m.-1:30 a.m. Canal Restaurant & Bar, $7 at the door. 8 p.m.-midnight The Cove Music Hall, 89 Green St. 65 Water St. 508-926-8353. 508-363-1888 or find them on Facebook. Brian Chaffee. 8 p.m.-1 a.m. Blueprint New American Bar & Grill,
• APRIL 21, 2016
9 Village Square, Westminster. 978-668-5580. Freedom Tour: Taina Asili y La Banda Rebelde & Michael Reyes. Live in concert Tickets: at the door, at www. StoneSoupWorcester.org or call 774-242-3889 $7 suggested donation adult, $5 youth. All ages. tainaasili.com reyespoetry. com Taína Asili is a US born Puerto Rican vocalist and songwriter carrying on the tradition of her ancestors, fusing past and present struggles into one soulful and defiant voice. Her newest artistic work is as band leader of Taina Asili y la Banda Rebelde, a six piece ensemble based in Albany, NY. Taina has taught writing workshops for over 10 years. Beginning as a poetry workshop facilitator at Taller Puertorriqueño, a Puerto Rican cultural center based in North Philadelphia, Taína has since taught poetry writing workshops for both children and adults, with a focus on marginalized populations including incarcerated women, refugees and union workers. She has her MA in Transformative Language Arts from Goddard College. Taina organizes with the Capital Area Against Mass Incarceration in Albany, New York and helped to found the New York State Prisoner Justice Network (nysprisonerjustice.org). For many years, she has worked on the campaign to free former death row political prisoner Mumia Abu-Jamal (freemumia.com) and many other types of movement work such as Puerto Rican independence, indigenous rights, environmental justice, and holistic health movements. And she considers parenting to be her most important activist work. Michael Reyes As a poet, artist and organizer, Reyes performs internationally and facilitates educational performances and workshops by merging creative expression and critical thought. His mission is to provide a participatory educational environment through poetry and hip-hop to address issues of social justice and cultural identity. The grandson of migrant workers and having worked in the fields of Michigan himself he knows all too well the inequalities that exist in the U.S. Combined with community activism and artistic contributions in both Chicago and Detroit his work has added to the multiple layers of Chican@/ Latino identity. Michael is a founding member of Café Teatro Batey Urbano Chicago, IL where he organizes youth hip-hop/spoken word cd’s, poetry chatbooks, and summer programs offering creative arts and community organizing workshops focused on the principles of participatory democracy. He is also a Freelance Journalist with Chicago Public Radio (Ear to the Ground Program). $7 suggested donation adult, $5 youth. 8-11:30 p.m. Clark University: Jonas Clark Hall, Jonas Clark Room 001, 950 Main St. 774-242-3889 or stonesoupworcester.org Honkey Tonk Hangover. 8 p.m.-1 a.m. Tavern on Central, 3 Central St., Ashburnham. 978-827-1272. Jodee & Brian. 8 p.m.-1 a.m. The Mill 185, 185 West Boylston St., West Boylston. 774-261-8585. Scott Babineau. 8 p.m.-1 a.m. South Side Grille & Margarita Factory, 242 West Broadway, Gardner. 978-632-1057. Sean Fullerton “Fully” Acoustic! Sean Fullerton has been a successful musician, singer/songwriter, recording engineer and producer since 1995. Specializing in Acoustic Blues, Rock ‘n’ Roll, Memphis Soul and Fingerstyle Guitar using 6 String, 12 String and resonator guitars, harmonicas, live guitar looping, Bose and UltraSound sound systems, Sean performs in a wide variety of venues and for many weddings, parties, charitable and corporate events throughout New England. For more information, please visit seanfullertonmusic.net Dinner, Drinks, Music. 8-10:30 p.m. Tavern on the Common, 249 Main St., Rutland. 508-886-4600 or tavernonthecommonma.com The Two Timers. 8 p.m.-1 a.m. Rye & Thyme, 14 Monument Square, Leominster. 978-534-5900. Tim Rollo. 8 p.m.-1 a.m. McNally’s Grille & Pub, 88 Sargent Road, Westminster. 978-874-1444. Topher Brew. 8 p.m.-1 a.m. Happy Jack’s, 785 North Main St., Leominster. 978-466-3433. Fuzbrains Presents: Wormtown Rock Revue. Flashback to the old Wormtown days when Worcester had a thriving music scene.
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Fuzbrains Fanzine covered all the local bands and kept the city in touch with the hottest grange bands in the area. Classic Wormtown legends; Sheez Late, the Time Beings and The Preformers and new to the scene If We Go At All will be rocking like it’s 1990! TBD. 8:30 p.m.-2 a.m. Ralph’s Chadwick Square Diner, 148 Grove St. 508-753-9543. We & Mrs Jones at Sahara. We & Mrs Jones rock out at the Sahara! Don’t miss the roomy dance floor, great drinks, vibe & grab some dinner before or some hummus between songs! 8:30 p.m.midnight Sahara Cafe & Restaurant, 143 Highland St. 508-798-2181. Box of Rain. Grateful Dead tribute band. $5. 9 p.m.-1 a.m. Beatnik’s, 433 Park Ave. 508-926-8877 or youtube.com DJ Dre & DJ Frost. 9 p.m.-2 a.m. GD Lounge, 2 Washington Square. 508-755-6555. Karaoke. Karaoke by DJ Nancy of Star Sound Entertainment 9 p.m.-1:30 a.m. Danger Zone Saloon, 948 Main St., Warren. 413436-7115. Tequila Bonfire. 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Jillian’s - Worcester, 315 Grove St. 508-793-0900. The Brumbletones. 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Michael’s Cigar Bar, 1 Exchange Place. 508-459-9035. Tony Soul Project. $5. 9 p.m.-1 a.m. Greendale’s Pub, 404 W Boylston St. 508-853-1350. Lavender Restaurant Karaoke. Join Magic Mike Entertainment DJ’s for Karaoke Night every Friday & Saturday Night! Free. 9:30 p.m.-1 a.m. Lavender Restaurant, 519 Boston Post Road, Sudbury. magicmikeentertainment.com Take Two. 9:30 p.m.-12:30 a.m. Padavano’s Place, 358 Shrewsbury St. 774-823-3022. DJ (21+) Canal. N/A. 10 p.m.-1:30 a.m. Canal Restaurant & Bar, 65 Water St. 508-926-8353. Safe House Radio Show. This is a live radio broadcast with 2 living DJs hoping to drag you out of your lonely IPods and phone apps to hear the local & national metal, thrash, screamo, punk and alternative you wont hear on mainstream radio. Tune into WCUW 91.3FM in the Worcester and surrounding areas. Or stream live on wcuw.org (hit the listen live button in the upper left corner of screen) Join your DJs Summi and Momma Bear for an hour of metal, thrash, screamo, punk & alternative. You’re not alone in your digital world. Were out here live! Call in to let us know your listening @ (508)7532284 after 11pm. Hope you tune in to hear local and national metal and more! 91.3fm or wcuw.org It’s your community radio! So enjoy it already! Sheesh! 11 p.m.-midnight Find them on Facebook.
>Saturday 23
Pleasure in Tragedy, Mucklers Circle, Psych Asylum, 6 Foot Silence, Affliktion, A King in Wait, Whisky Fyre. The Raven, 258 Pleasant St. 508-304-8133 or find them on Facebook. Pakachoag Music School Summer Programs. Summer Programs at Pakachoag Music School Registration for summer programs begins March 15th! Programs include: *Music and Movement Samplers *Musical Theater *Private Lessons *Fiddle Band *Suzuki Violin and Cello For complete information visit us at pakmusic.org, email info@pakmusic.org, or call 508-791-8159. Pakachoag Music School of Greater Worcester, 203 Pakachoag St., Auburn. 508-791-8159 or pakmusic.org Worcester’s Ethnic Mosaic 2016 presents: The Jolly Beggars. The Jolly Beggars bring the rich tradition of Celtic folk music and storytelling to modern day audiences. Based out of Connecticut, their traditional songs and musical arrangements have exposed many to the joys of Celtic music. They ell traditional stories from Irish folklore and intersperse their musical arrangements with traditional reels and jigs. Characterized by their tight harmonies and use of guitars, mandolin, tin whistles, octave mandolin, mandola, tenor banjo, double bass, bodhran, spoons, and more, The Jolly Beggars have quickly built a solid following and continue to spread their music around the east coast. The band performs music that is
largely Celtic in origin (Irish and Scottish), with some pieces coming from an extension of that music into other cultures. This performance is part of the Library’s Worcester’s Ethnic Mosaic 2016 series. This program is administered by the Worcester Arts Council, for the Local Cultural Council - an agency supported by the Massachusetts Cultural Council, a state agency. Free. 2:30-3:30 p.m. Worcester Public Library, Saxe Room, 3 Salem Square. 508-799-1655, ext. 3. Open Mic. Open to musicians, poets, comedians or anyone with a talent! Hosted by Stephen Wright. 6-9 p.m. Nu Cafe, 335 Chandler St. 508-926-8800 or nucafe.com Dan Kirouac & Steve Kirouac. Dan has been part of the regional music scene for thirty years. When not busy with the tribute band Beatles For Sale, his solo performances showcase vocals accompanied by a six-string acoustic guitar. From the one-hit wonders to the lost classics, from the 1960s to today, every show is a different experience, drawing from almost 500 contemporary and oldie songs. Steve Kirouac is the former lead guitarist for Rock Ave and Yellow Submarine. More information at dankirouac.com. Free. 7-10 p.m. Tavern on the Common, 249 Main St., Rutland. 508-886-4600. Jim Perry Acoustics Rock ‘n’ Roller at Heart” Jim Perry. Jim Perry has been a musician almost his entire life. While he began with a piano, his journey would take him on a veritable
show at 9pm $10 at the door. 8 p.m.-1 a.m. The Cove Music Hall, 89 Green St. 508-363-1888 or find them on Facebook. Belit. 8 p.m.-1 a.m. The Mill 185, 185 West Boylston St., West Boylston. 774-261-8585. Chris Reddy Acoustic Loops from Hell. 8-11 p.m. The GazBar Sports Grill, 1045 Central St., Leominster. Ken Macy Performs at Loft, Sat at 8. No cost. 8-11 p.m. Loft 266 Bar & Lounge, 266 Park Ave. 508-796-5177. Lizzy Marquis. 8 p.m.-1 a.m. Happy Jack’s, 785 North Main St., Leominster. 978-466-3433. Scott Babineau. 8 p.m.-1 a.m. Tavern on Central, 3 Central St., Ashburnham. 978-827-1272. Whitney Doucette. 8 p.m.-1 a.m. Rye & Thyme, 14 Monument Sqare, Leominster. 978-534-5900. Auntie Trainwreck. Your favorite Auntie returns to rock the KasBar on Saturday, April 23rd, 2016, so come wear a hole in the KasBar dance floor with us! Those of you who know and love the Kas know that when the Trainwreck pulls in, we bring our own brand of music and mayhem to the KasBar stage- won’t you join us for Classic Rock, Blues, Alt Rock and Party Favorites you can dance to all night long? Join the entire KasBar staff as they party with us, and make sure you ask them for one of the KasBar’s famous Fishbowls. When Auntie and the Kas get
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Lavender Restaurant Karaoke. Join Magic Mike Entertainment DJ’s for Karaoke Night every Friday & Saturday Night! Free. 9:30 p.m.-1 a.m. Lavender Restaurant, 519 Boston Post Road, Sudbury. magicmikeentertainment.com The Norm Tonelli Trio. 9:30 p.m.-12:30 a.m. Padavano’s Place, 358 Shrewsbury St. 774-823-3022. DJ (21+) Canal. N/A. 10 p.m.-1:30 a.m. Canal Restaurant & Bar, 65 Water St. 508-926-8353.
>Sunday 24
Pakachoag Music School Summer Programs. Summer Programs at Pakachoag Music School Registration for summer programs begins March 15th! Programs include: *Music and Movement Samplers *Musical Theater *Private Lessons *Fiddle Band *Suzuki Violin and Cello For complete information visit us at pakmusic.org, email info@pakmusic.org, or call 508-791-8159. Pakachoag Music School of Greater Worcester, 203 Pakachoag St., Auburn. 508-791-8159 or pakmusic.org Clark University Senior Recital. Three graduating music performance majors present their capstone performances, on cello, Ringling Bros and Barnum & Bailey presents guitar and a vocalist, with repertory ranging from baroque and folk “Legends” at the DCU Center, 50 Foster St., Worcester, to 21st-century. Free and Open to the Public. 3-4:30 p.m. Clark Friday, April 22 through Sunday, April 24. This is your last chance University: Traina Center for the Arts, Razzo Hall, 92 Downing St. to catch the circus’s Asia elephants, who are being moved to the Fellowship Of The King. An Elvis Tribute Band that rocks the Ringling Bros Center for Elephant Conservation in Florida by May. house every time. A don’t miss event. Welcome new Lead Guitarist, Performances are Friday, April 22, 7 p.m.; Saturday, April Jacob Aubin! Rock ‘n’ Roll, Blues, Rockabilly, Soul $5. 3-6 p.m. 23, 11 a.m. and 3 p.m.; and Sunday, April 24, noon and 4 Beatnik’s, 433 Park Ave. 508-926-8877 or find them on Facebook. p.m. Opening night tickets start at $10. For more information, visit Walnut Hill School for the Arts - Tickets Required. Ringling.com. Tickets may be bought at ticketmaster.com or by Tickets are available on a first-come first serve basis at the reception calling 508-755-6800. desk beginning at noon on the day of the concert. Walnut Hill School for the Arts Music Department presents a showcase of chamber musicians, solo instrumentalists and vocalists drawn from their “what’s what” of musicianship. While a classic six string may be together it’s always a crazy good time- be there! 21+, no cover, music exceptionally talented high-school musicians from around the world. his primary weapon of choice, the depth and breadth of his musical starts around 9 pm! 9 p.m.-1 a.m. Club KasBar, 234 Southwest Cutoff. The program will include well-known masterpieces of chamber music literature along with thrilling Art Songs and audience-pleasing solo underpinnings lends itself well to a sturdy understanding of musical 508-798-8385 or find them on Facebook. works. Free with admission but tickets required. 3-4 p.m. Tower Hill theory - not in the sense of schoolboy-letterhead strictness, but of Bees Deluxe. Bees Deluxe unique repertoire include over three Botanic Garden, 11 French Drive, Boylston. 508-869-6111. the very much ingrained knowledge of music. With that comes a sets of floorboard-stomping originals and 60s, 70s, and 80s covers. looseness in style, a liquid drip-drip-drip through any and all genres. Bees Deluxe is a full-tilt, acid blues/funk/rock collective. $5. 9 p.m.- Musicians of the Old Post Road: “Green With Envy”. As a part of its 2015-16 “green” concert series - its 27th - Musicians of N/A. 7-10 p.m. Canal Restaurant & Bar, 65 Water St., 65 Water St. 1 a.m. Beatnik’s, 433 Park Ave. 508-926-8877 or beesdeluxe.com 508-926-8353. Best - Live Bands. 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Speakers Night Club, 19 Weed the Old Post Road presents “Green With Envy,” passionate cantatas by Handel, Hasse, and Ristori, plus turbulent instrumental works by Blue Cat Groove. Blues Rock $5 Donation. 7:30-10 p.m. !Cafe St., Marlborough. 508-439-9314. con Dios!, Main Room, 22 Faith Ave., Auburn. 508-579-6722. Gale County. 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Blueprint New American Bar & Grill, 9 Tartini and Vivaldi. With soprano Lianne Coble. About the season This year, Musicians of the Old Post Road - a chamber music ensemble Howard Brubeck Dialogues for Jazz Combo, featuring Village Square, Westminster. 978-668-5580. specializing in period instrument performances of music from Pamela Hines Quartet. Indian Hill Orchestra under the direction Go Gadget Go. 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Classic’s Pub, 285 Central St., the Baroque, Classical, and early Romantic eras - marks its 27th of Bruce Hangen Pamela Hines- piano Bill Jones- sax Justin Leominster. 978-537-7750. Meyer- bass Dave Fox- drums 20- 35. 7:30-10 p.m. Littleton high Karaoke. shangrilarestaurant.net/ Chinese & Japanese Restaurant season with a musical exploration of the color “green”. In concert with this thematic and programmatic venture, the group is pairing school auditorium, Ma, 56 King St., Littleton. 978-952-2555 or 9 p.m.-midnight Shangri La, 50 Front St. 508-798-0888. with the following four local environmental organizations to raise indianhillmusic.org Live Band Karaoke with Fingercuff. Come rock the Mic with awareness around the work that they do to keep this region green: Wicked Pissa Promotions Inaugural Show. Presented a real band! Over 300 songs to choose from. We ain’t yo momma’s Sudbury Valley Trustees, Tower Hill Botanic Garden, Mass Audubon’s by: Wicked Pissa Promotions in conjunction with The Raven karaoke! 9 p.m.-1 a.m. Hot Shotz Bar Grill, 1293 Main St., Leominster. Moonshine. Moonshine playing all of your favorite Top 40 Country, Drumlin Farm Wildlife Sanctuary, and The Gardens at Elm Bank (theravenrockclub.com) This is an 18+ event, featuring wicked Massachusetts Horticultural Society. Members of these participating Blues and Rock at the newest hot spot in the Canal District. Melissa pissa hard rock and metal acts from the MA area. Tickets are only organizations receive $5 off admission to any concert during the Perkins lays it down all night! Cover. 9 p.m.-12:30 a.m. Whiskey On $10 at the door! Seven awesome local metal and hard rock bands 2015-16 season. $30 / $25 senior / $10 student (with ID). 4-6:30 Water, 97 Water St. find them on Facebook. are coming to this show! Drinks, pool tables, plenty of parking (tons p.m. Worcester Historical Museum, 30 Elm St. 781-466-6694 or No Alibi. $5. 9 p.m.-1 a.m. Greendale’s Pub, 404 W Boylston St. of street parking, a lot in back, and another lot less than a half oldpostroad.org 508-853-1350. block away) in a great venue make this show a must see! Load In 6:30-7:00 1: Pleasure in Tragedy -Pit. 7:00-7:25 2: Mucklers Circle Russo Bros Jazz Quintet. 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Michael’s Cigar Bar, 1 Big Jon Short. 5-8 p.m. Vincent’s Bar, 49 Suffolk St. 508-752-9439. The Dale LePage Trio. 5-8 p.m. Padavano’s Place, 358 Exchange Place. 508-459-9035. 7:30-8:00 3: Psych Asylum 8:10-8:45 4: 6 Foot Silence 9:00-9:45 Shrewsbury St. 774-823-3022. Tyra Penn & Her Army of Snakes. 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Nick’s Bar 5: Affliktion 10:00-10:45 6: A King in Wait 11:00-11:45 7: Whisky Open Mic Sundays @ Plaza Azteca! To check the schedules Fyre 12:00-12:45 $10 @ Door. 7:30 p.m.-1:30 a.m. The Raven, 258 and Restaurant, 124 Millbury St. 508-753-4030. Windfall. Come on down and enjoy the music of Windfall! Check us and open slots visit: Bill McCarthy’s Open Mic World on Facebook Pleasant St. 508-425-1644 or find them on Facebook. out at windfallrock.com Free. 9 p.m.-1 a.m. JJ’s Sports Bar and Grill, Bill McCarthy (originator of the “Half-Hour Sets!”) is your host at The Britwits at the Cove! Get ready for an Invasion when the another great Open Mic Night! Email Bill McCarthy to reserve it at: BritWits hit the stage at the Cove! $10 at the door 21+ Doors at 8pm 380 Southwest Cutoff, Northborough. 508-842-8420. APRIL 21, 2016 • WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM
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openmcc@verizon.net (make sure you put “open mic” in the email’s “subject box”) Network * Collaborate * Learn. Over sixty different musicians regularly support my open mic nights all are friendly and supportive -- and many are: * Former or currently signed recording artists * Award-winning pro’s or semi-pro’s * Regularly gigging paid-performers * Published songwriters * Recording studio owner/ operators * Combinations of any and/or all of the above. To check the schedules and open slots visit Facebook. Any slot marked as “open” usually is! Free! 6-9 p.m. Plaza Azteca, 539 Lincoln St. Mikey Lynch’s Sunday Jam w/ feature artist Jim Perry! Mikey Lynch hosts the Sunday Jam with great special guests every week. This week’s feature artist is Jim Perry! 7pm start. No cover. 7-11 p.m. Greendale’s Pub, 404 W Boylston St. 508-853-1350. Jon Short Brunch. 8 p.m.-1 a.m. Rye & Thyme, 14 Monument Square, Leominster. 978-534-5900. Andy Cummings. 8:30 p.m.-2 a.m. Nick’s Bar and Restaurant, 124 Millbury St. 508-753-4030. Karaoke w/ Royal Crown. 9 p.m.-1 a.m. Classic’s Pub, 285 Central St., Leominster. 978-537-7750.
>Monday 25
Pakachoag Music School Summer Programs. Summer Programs at Pakachoag Music School Registration for summer programs begins March 15th! Programs include: *Music and Movement Samplers *Musical Theater *Private Lessons *Fiddle Band *Suzuki Violin and Cello For complete information visit us at pakmusic.org, email info@pakmusic.org, or call 508-791-8159. Pakachoag Music School of Greater Worcester, 203 Pakachoag St., Auburn. 508-791-8159 or pakmusic.org Blue Mondays - Live Blues. 7 p.m.-1 a.m. Gardner Ale House, 74 Parker St., Gardner. 978-669-0122. Martin Gohary Ensemble. 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Nick’s Bar and Restaurant, 124 Millbury St. 508-753-4030.
>Tuesday 26
Pakachoag Music School Summer Programs. Summer Programs at Pakachoag Music School Registration for summer programs begins March 15th! Programs include: *Music and Movement Samplers *Musical Theater *Private Lessons *Fiddle Band *Suzuki Violin and Cello For complete information visit us at pakmusic.org, email info@pakmusic.org, or call 508-791-8159. Pakachoag Music School of Greater Worcester, 203 Pakachoag St., Auburn. 508-791-8159 or pakmusic.org ALFA presents World Music: Beyond Borders. The 2016 ALFA Shirley Pick Spring Series hosts internationally renowned world music artist and world fusion pioneer Randy Armstrong for a free event entitled World Music: Beyond Borders. Armstrong has appeared on more than 30 albums and film scores, at Carnegie Recital Hall, and festivals at Lincoln Center as well as sharing the stage with such music greats as Dizzy Gillespie, the Paul Winter Consort, King Sunny Ade, Eddie Palmieri, Babatunde Olatunji, Michael Hedges, Richie Havens, and others. 11 a.m.-noon Fitchburg State University: Hammond Hall, Ellis White Lecture Hall, 160 Pearl St., Fitchburg. Storytime. Join us every week for storytime. Visit bn.com for details. Free. 11-11:30 a.m. Barnes & Noble Booksellers - Millbury, 70 Worcester Providence Turnpike, Millbury. 508-865-2801 or bn.com Check, Please. The Mount Players present the one-act comedy, Check, Please by Jonathan Rand. Two shows will be held in the North Café at MWCC on Tuesday, April 26 at 12:30PM and 7:00PM. Admission is free. Dating can be hard. Especially when your date happens to be a raging kleptomaniac, or your grandmother’s bridge partner, or a mime. Check, Please follows a series of blind dinner dates that couldn’t get any worse - until they do. Could there possibly be a light at the end of the tunnel? The running time for the show is
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30 minutes - bring your lunch and enjoy the show! Free Admission. 12:30-1 p.m., 7 p.m.-7:30 p.m. Mount Wachusett Community College: Main building, North Cafeteria, 444 Green St., Gardner. 978-630-9162. Chillin Tuesday & Wild Wednesday. At Beatniks it’s all about you! Tuesdays tend to be more chill, Wednesday’s more wild, but you never know what will be going on. Indoor Cornhole boards, Darts, Board games, Cards, Jukebox wars and more. Thursdays thru Sundays are about music of all kinds, but no matter what we have going on its always a great vibe! Come on down anytime and make our place your place. 7-11 p.m. Beatnik’s, 433 Park Ave. 508-926-8877. Davey Suicide, The Funeral Portrait, Rhetoric, and Devlyn Sydus. $10 Tickets available in advance at showclix.com 21+ Doors at 7:30 $10 advance tickets available at showclix.com. 7:30 p.m.-midnight The Cove Music Hall, 89 Green St. 508-363-1888 or find them on Facebook. Tuesday Open Mic Night @ Greendale’s Pub with Bill McCarthy Local Musicians Showcase! To check the schedules and open slots visit: Bill McCarthy’s Open Mic World on Facebook Bill McCarthy (originator of the “Half-Hour Sets!”) is your host at another great Open Mic Night! Email Bill McCarthy to reserve it at: openmcc@verizon.net (make sure you put “open mic” in the email’s “subject box”) Network * Collaborate * Learn. Over sixty different musicians regularly support my open mic nights all are friendly and supportive -- and many are: * Former or currently signed recording artists * Award-winning pro’s or semi-pro’s * Regularly gigging paid-performers * Published songwriters * Recording studio owner/operators * Combinations of any and/or all of the above. To check the schedules and open slots visit Facebook. Any slot marked as “open” usually is! Free. 7:30-11:30 p.m. Greendale’s Pub, 404 W Boylston St. 508-853-1350 or find them on Facebook. Patrick Murphy. 8 p.m.-2 a.m. Nick’s Bar and Restaurant, 124 Millbury St. 508-753-4030.
>Wednesday 27
Pakachoag Music School Summer Programs. Summer Programs at Pakachoag Music School Registration for summer programs begins March 15th! Programs include: *Music and Movement Samplers *Musical Theater *Private Lessons *Fiddle Band *Suzuki Violin and Cello For complete information visit us at pakmusic.org, email info@pakmusic.org, or call 508-791-8159. Pakachoag Music School of Greater Worcester, 203 Pakachoag St., Auburn. 508-791-8159 or pakmusic.org Rhythm Kids at Pakachoag Music School. Rhythm Kids at Pakachoag Music School New drumming class for kids ages K to Gr. 2 Free demo class - April 6th 8 week inaugural session begins April 13th Discounted tuition - $150 Wednesdays 5:30 to 6:15 pm Pakachoag Music School 203 Pakachoag Street Auburn, MA 01501 Please e-mail info@pakmusic.org to reserve a space in the free demo or visit pakmusic.org/register to register for the spring session! free demo. 5:30-6:15 p.m. Pakachoag Music School of Greater Worcester, 203 Pakachoag St., Auburn. 508-791-8159 or pakmusic.org Chillin Tuesday & Wild Wednesday. At Beatniks it’s all about you! Tuesdays tend to be more chill, Wednesday’s more wild, but you never know what will be going on. Indoor Cornhole boards, Darts, Board games, Cards, Jukebox wars and more. Thursdays thru Sundays are about music of all kinds, but no matter what we have going on its always a great vibe! Come on down anytime and make our place your place. 7-11 p.m. Beatnik’s, 433 Park Ave. 508-926-8877. Wednesday Night Open Mic/Local Musicians’ Showcase w/ Bill McCarthy @ Guiseppe’s. To check the schedules and open slots visit: Bill McCarthy’s Open Mic World on Facebook Bill McCarthy (originator of the “Half-Hour Sets!”) is your host at another great Open Mic Night! Email Bill McCarthy to reserve it at: openmcc@ verizon.net (make sure you put “open mic” in the email’s “subject box”) Free! 7:30-10:30 p.m. Guiseppe’s Grille, 35 Solomon Pond Road, Northborough. 508-393-4405 or find them on Facebook.
• APRIL 21, 2016
AriBand. 8:30 p.m.-2 a.m. Nick’s Bar and Restaurant, 124 Millbury St. 508-753-4030. Subterra: Twist of Fate (The Mutiny). Welcome to Subterra! by Kick It Recordings & The Cove Music Hall We’ve teamed up with the best concert style venue in the city to bring you the biggest and best names and will cater to all Genres of Dance music, so we’ll have something for everyone. Please be on your best behavior. $5 / 21+ w/ Proper ID Open: 9PM-2AM Ladies Free before 10pm $5 at the door- Ladies free until 10pm. 9 p.m.-2 a.m. The Cove Music Hall, 89 Green St. 508-363-1888 or find them on Facebook. Jim Devlin Performs at Loft, Weds at 9. No cost. 9-11 p.m. Loft 266 Bar & Lounge, 266 Park Ave. 508-796-5177. Karaoke w/ Royal Crown. 9 p.m.-1 a.m. Classic’s Pub, 285 Central St., Leominster. 978-537-7750. Open Mic - hosted by Amanda Cote. All genres and acoustic instruments welcome. 21+ or with guardian. Sign-up begins at 8:30 Free. 9-11:30 p.m. Legends, Airport Road - Fitchburg Ma, Fitchburg. 978-895-5883. Ralph’s Karaoke Wednesdays! Every Wednesday night DJ Matt R hosts Worcester’s best karaoke night with a wide selection of songs for you to choose from! Come on by and join the Ralph’s gang and all of the fun! Free! 9 p.m.-1:30 a.m. Ralph’s Chadwick Square Diner, 148 Grove St. 508-753-9543. Ricky Duran. 9 p.m.-1 a.m. Michael’s Cigar Bar, 1 Exchange Place. 508-459-9035.
arts
ADC Performance Center (@ The Artist Development Complex), 18 Mill St., Southbridge. 508-764-6900 or adcmusic.com ArtsWorcester, 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 $7-10 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 Booklovers’ Gourmet, “A Time for All Seasons”, paintings & photographs by Sharon Lindgren, Through April 30; “A Time for All Seasons”, paintings & photographs by Sharon Lindgren, Through April 30. Hours: closed Sunday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday, 10 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Tuesday - Friday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday. 55 East Main St., Webster. 508-949-6232 or er3.com Clark University: Schiltkamp Gallery, Studio Art Senior Thesis Exhibit, Wednesday - Sunday. 92 Downing St. 508-793-7349. Clark University: University Gallery, Hours: noon-5 p.m. Sunday, closed Monday - Tuesday, noon-8 p.m. Wednesday, noon-5 p.m. Thursday - Saturday. 950 Main St. 508-793-7349 or 508-7937113 or clarku.edu Clark’s Cafe and Art On Rotation Gallery, Hours: 6 a.m. to 1 p.m. Sunday - Saturday. Admission: Free for gallery. 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 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 EcoTarium, Earth Week: Energy for You and Me, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thursdays, Fridays, through April 22. Hours: noon-5 p.m. Sunday, closed Monday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday - Saturday. Admission: $15.00 adults; $10 for children ages 2-18, college students with ID & senior citizens. Children under 2 & EcoTarium members free. Additional charges apply for Tree Canopy Walkway, Explorer Express Train, planetarium programs & other special event. 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 Fitchburg Art Museum, Hours: noon-4 p.m. Sunday, closed Monday, noon-4 p.m. Tuesday - Saturday. 25 Merriam 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. 978-345-1157 or fitchburghistory.fsc.edu Fitchburg State University: Hammond Hall, VISIONS 2016 Gallery Exhibit, Wednesday. 160 Pearl St., Fitchburg. fitchburgstate.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 framedintatnuck.com Fruitlands Museum, 102 Prospect Hill Road, Harvard. 978-4563924 or fruitlands.org Gallery of African Art, Hours: closed Sunday, 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Monday - Wednesday, 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Thursday, 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Friday, 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Saturday. Admission: Donations accepted. 62 High St., Clinton. 978-265-4345 or 978-598-5000x12 or galleryofafricanart.org Highland Artist Group, 113 Highland St. highlandartistgroup.com Mass Audubon: Broad Meadow Brook Conservation Center and Wildlife Sanctuary, Art Exhibit: Genevieve Grenier’s “New England Landscapes”, Through May 15. Hours: 12:304 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, 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: Adults $10; Seniors (59 +), $7; Students, $5; Children 3-17, $5; Children <3, Free. 203 Union St., Clinton. 978-598-5000 or 978-598-5000x17 or museumofrussianicons.org Old Sturbridge Village, Admission: $7 - $20 charged by age. Children under 3 free. 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. 774-696-0909. Post Road Art Center, Call to Artists: Cultural Influence Exhibit 2016, Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thursdays, Fridays, Saturdays, April 21 - April 28. 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. 508-754-8760 or preservationworcester.org Prints and Potter Gallery: American Arts and Crafts Gallery, Hours: closed Sunday, 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Monday Tuesday, 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Wednesday - Thursday, 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Friday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday. 142 Highland St. 508-7522170 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 Rollstone Studios, Hours: 11-4 p.m. Sunday, closed Monday Wednesday, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Thursday - Saturday. Admission: free. 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. 508-7538278 or worcesterhistory.org SAORI Worcester Freestyle Weaving Studio, 18 Winslow St. 508-757-4646 or 508-757-0116 or saoriworcester.com Sprinkler Factory, The Marvelous Dissection of [Hu]Man - Open Gallery, Sundays, Saturdays, through April 29. Admission: Free. 38 Harlow St. sprinklerfactory.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,
night day A day of music and friends { listings} for Cancer Awareness &
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 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 978-297-4337 or topfunaviation.com Tower Hill Botanic Garden, Hours: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday, closed Monday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday - Saturday. Admission: $12 Adults, $9 Seniors & $7 Youth, free to Members & Children under. 11 French Drive, Boylston. 508-869-6111 or towerhillbg.org Worcester Art Museum, Cyanotypes: Photography’s Blue Period, Through April 24; Pierre Bonnard, Dining Room in the Country, Through June 19; Veiled Aleppo, Through June 5; Arms and Armor: The Viking Age!, Saturday; Tour of the Month: Asian Mythology, Saturday; Zip Tour: Whistler: Arrangement in Black & Brown, Saturday; Arms and Armor: Aethelflaed: Lady of the Mercians (New!), Sunday. 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, 10am-noon. 55 Salisbury St. 508-799-4406 or worcesterart.org Worcester Center for Crafts, Hours: closed Sunday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday - Saturday. 25 Sagamore Road. 508-753-8183 or worcestercraftcenter.org Worcester Historical Museum, Hours: closed Sunday Monday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday - Saturday. 30 Elm St. 508-7538278 or worcesterhistory.org Worcester Public Library, Historical Documentation Of The Armenian Genocide, Through April 30. Hours: 1:30-5:30 p.m. Sunday, 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Monday, 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Tuesday - Wednesday, 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Thursday - Saturday. 3 Salem Square. 508-799-1655 or worcpublib.org WPI: George C. Gordon Library, 100 Institute Road. wpi.edu
theater/ comedy
Hamlet, by William Shakespeare - Thursday, April 21 - Saturday, April 23. This provocative, modern-dress production explores the angst of a young man trying to find his way in a corrupt world filled with dissembling politicians, paranoia and surveillance -- perhaps a bit like the one we inhabit today. Directed by Edward Isser. $10 HC Community / $15 General Public. College of the Holy Cross: O’Kane Hall, Fenwick Theatre - 2nd Floor, 1 College St. Call 508-793-2496. Ellis Island - Friday, April 22. Gateway Players Theatre in conjunction with the Southbridge Bicentennial Committee will present “Ellis Island” - book, music & lyrics by Cheryl Kemeny. Show dates are April 22 & 23 at 7:30pm and April 24 at 2:00pm. This spring musical will directed by Lou-Ellen Corkum and produced by Kathi Grenier. Gwen O’Brien is stage manager and Chris Rubenacker is music director. David Corkum is the Technical Director, John Turpin is set builder, Suzanne Adams is responsible for props and Jeanne Dupuis will assist with costumes. Gateway Players is very excited that this production will be part of the Southbridge Bi-Centennial Celebration. This production is funded in part by a grant from the Southbridge Cultural Council, a local agency, supported by the Massachusetts Cultural Council, a state agency. This epic show gives a sense of the joys, fears and hardships that our immigrant
forefathers experienced. $15 for Adults, $13 for Seniors and Youth 17 and under. 7:30-10 p.m. Southbridge Middle/High School, 132 Torrey Road, Southbridge. To purchase tickets please call 508-764-4531, or online starting at brownpapertickets.com/event/2520523. Call 508764-4531 or visit Facebook. The Pirates of Penzance, presented by the Assumption College Dept. Of Art, Music and Theatre - Friday, April 22. Set during the reign of Queen Victoria, “The Pirates of Penzance” tells the story of Frederic, who was mistakenly indentured as an apprentice to a pirate. On a journey to discover his destiny, Frederic and his band of pirates find adventure, love, comedy and amazing music! “The Pirates of Penzance” is W.S. Gilbert and Arthur Sullivan’s most popular comic opera. Since opening in New York City and London in 1879, the musical has been performed by theater and opera companies worldwide and is filled with timeless classics, including “Major General’s Song.” Pirates is Assumption’s eight annual spring production on The Hanover Theatre stage. Directed by Richard Monroe ‘85, the show features Assumption College students, faculty, alumni and friends of the College. $20. 7:30-10 p.m. Hanover Theatre for the Performing Arts, 2 Southbridge St. Call 877-571-7469 or visit thehanovertheatre.org El Delantal Blanco (The White Apron) - Friday, April 22 Saturday, April 23. The Fitchburg State theater program in association with its Humanities Department present the American premiere of El Delantal Blanco (The White Apron) by Sergio Vodanovic and translated by Luz Elena Osorio. The short play, running about 20 minutes, will be presented twice each night, once each in Spanish and English. The performances will be at 6 p.m. Wednesday, April 20 and Thursday, April 21, and at 7:30 p.m. Friday, April 22 and Saturday, April 23. This production celebrates the rich teaching career of Dr. Maria Jaramillo of the Humanities Department who will be retiring this spring. The play tells the story of how a lady and her maid, enjoying a day at the beach, turn their worlds inside out and upside down by the exchange of clothing, specifically the white apron emblematic of the serving class. Percival Auditorium. 7:30-8:30 p.m. Fitchburg State University: Percival Hall, 160 Pearl St., Fitchburg. The Pirates of Penzance, presented by the Assumption College Dept. Of Art, Music and Theatre - Sunday, April 24. Set during the reign of Queen Victoria, “The Pirates of Penzance” tells the story of Frederic, who was mistakenly indentured as an apprentice to a pirate. On a journey to discover his destiny, Frederic and his band of pirates find adventure, love, comedy and amazing music! “The Pirates of Penzance” is W.S. Gilbert and Arthur Sullivan’s most popular comic opera. Since opening in New York City and London in 1879, the musical has been performed by theater and opera companies worldwide and is filled with timeless classics, including “Major General’s Song.” Pirates is Assumption’s eight annual spring production on The Hanover Theatre stage. Directed by Richard Monroe ‘85, the show features Assumption College students, faculty, alumni and friends of the College. $20. 7:30-10 p.m. Hanover Theatre for the Performing Arts, 2 Southbridge St. Call 877-571-7469 or visit thehanovertheatre.org “Alexander, Who’s Not Not Not Not Not No Going to Move!” - Wednesday, April 27. Recommended for grades K-4. Alexander has just received some really bad news. His dad has taken a job in a city a thousand miles away, which means that he and his family are going to have to move to a whole new city. And even though his mom says, “Wait, you’ll like it,” Alexander already knows that he’ll hate it. He can’t bear to leave the people and places he loves, so he decides that he won’t move. First he tries to live with three different neighbors. Then he tries to build a tent so he can live by himself. Then he decides he’ll hide so that his parents will never find him, but that doesn’t work out either. With a little help from his
A special event to benefit the
15-40.org
SUNDAY APRIL 24TH NOON TO 10PM Live music all day featuring the area’s best bands including Chad Clements • Blue Light Bandits • Flock of Assholes Shady Armadillo • The Ed Sullivans • Custard Pie Tony Soul Project • Flat Five Band
AND MORE TO BE ANNOUNCED!
THIS IS AN ALL-AGES EVENT! Drink and Food Specials AMAZING RAFFLE PRIZES! $10 Donantion at the door 100% of the proceeds go to 15
40 Connection
Intersection of Rtes. 20 & 9, Northboro
508-842-8420 www.jbag.biz
Early Cancer Detection Saves Lives APRIL 21, 2016 • WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM
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Metal and Hardcore Festival 2016
The New England Metal and Hardcore Festival XVIII was at The Palladium this past weekend, April 15 & 16. Photos by Paul Bobkowski.
Killswitch Engage
Memphis May Fire
Jesse Leach, Killswitch Engage
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â&#x20AC;˘ APRIL 21, 2016
Ringworm
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mom and dad and even his bossy older brothers they help him to understand that home is “where your family is, where you’re with the people who love you best of all.” Contact theatreworksusa.org for ticket information. 10-11 a.m. Mechanics Hall, 321 Main St. Call 800-497-5007 or visit mechanicshall.org
classes >Thursday 21
Cabinet of Curiosity. Do you like to collect and store things? In Alexander Von Humboldt’s day, Cabinets of Curiosity were the way people organized and saved their natural treasures and they became the earliest natural history museums. Learn how to make your own and join us for a natural treasure hunt in the woods of Tower Hill. Member $8, Non-member $12. 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Tower Hill Botanic Garden, 11 French Drive, Boylston. 508-869-6111, ext. 124 or towerhillbg.thankyou4caring.org Death and Imperanence: How to Inspire Practice. For our April talk, Kyle Davis, from the Atisha Center in Providence RI., will help us take a close look at the Buddha’s fundamental teachings on death and impermanence. In our culture here in the United States, and in the modern western world generally, thinking about “old age, sickness, and death,” (the three messengers) is often seen as being a morbid or negative thing to do. Instead, we are taught directly and indirectly to push the reality of aging and death out of our consciousness, to assume that death will happen sometime down the road but not very soon, and that, in any case, we’ll just deal with it when and if we have to. The Buddha’s teachings advise a radically different approach. The Buddha was acutely aware that the reason human beings engage so completely in basically meaningless activities, spending so much time and effort in the endless pursuit of momentary sense pleasures, is precisely because we do not have in our awareness a correct or realistic understanding of impermanence and death. Contemplating the reality of both, meditating on them wisely, bringing them very close and keeping them close immediately begs the question - how and to what end are we living our lives now? What is the meaning of life, the purpose of a human life in particular, given the fact that we know without doubt we will very shortly die? Far from being a morbid preoccupation, such a wise focus can infuse life with profound meaning and purpose, preventing us from wasting the precious and rare opportunity we now have as conscious beings in human form to wake up and become fully enlightened. Free. 7-8:30 p.m. Worcester Friends Meeting House (Quaker), 901 Pleasant St. 508-754-3887.
>Thursday 21 – Friday 22
{ listings}
a yoga mat and a warm blanket. Space is limited. To register, contact programming@fruitlands.org or call (978) 456-3924, ext. 239. $85 Members, $100 Nonmembers. 6:30-7:30 p.m. Fruitlands Museum, 102 Prospect Hill Road, Harvard. 978-456-3924 or fruitlands.org
>Thursday 21 – June 9
Yoga Power with Nina Cerviatti begins Thursday 04/21/16. Yoga Power Thursday From 04/21/16 to 06/09/16 From 7:00- 8:00 AM At : Pathways to Wellness 50 Elm St, 2nd floor Worcester, MA 01609 $99.00 / 8 week session or $15.00 for drop-in class To register call 508-208-4743 or email nlcfitness1@gmail. com This class is a flowing blend of powerful and graceful Yoga poses, transforming your body, mind and spirit. Bring mindfulness into your everyday life with this practice. $99 / 8 week session or $15 for drop-in class. 7-8 a.m. Pathways to wellness, 90 Elm St . 5082084743 or nlcfitness.com Tai-Chi / Qi-Gong with Nina Cerviatti Starts 04/21. Tai-Chi / Qi-Gong Thursday From 04/21/16 to 06/09/16 From 8:30- 9:30 AM At : Pathways to Wellness 50 Elm St, 2ndfloor Worcester, MA 01609. $99.00 / 8 week session or $15.00 for drop-in class. To register call 508-208-4743 These exercises can be described as “meditation in motion.” The participants will learn the graceful magical movements of this practice and feel empowered, energized and calm. They will learn to center themselves anytime and anywhere. The practice has proven to benefit mental, emotional and physical health, agility, balance and flexibility. This practice improves the quality of sleep, strengthens the immune system, and lessens anxiety. These exercises are suitable for anyone regardless of age or ability. $99 / 8 week session or $15 for drop-in class. . 8:30-9:30 a.m. Pathways to wellness, 90 Elm St. nlcfitness.com Tai-Chi Made Easy for Adolescents (Ages 10-14) with Nina Cerviatti Starts 04/21. Tai-Chi Made Easy for Adolescents (Ages 10-14) Thursday From 04/21/16 to 06/09/16. From: 3:004:00 PM At : Pathways to Wellness 50 Elm St, 2ndfloor Worcester, MA 01609 $99.00 / 8 week session or $15.00 for drop-in class To register call 508-208-4743 Come and use your magic to heal your body and your life. The participants will learn the graceful magical movements of this practice and feel empowered, energized and calm. They will learn to center themselves anytime and anywhere $99 / 8 week session or $15 for drop-in class. 3-4 p.m. Pathways to wellness, 90 Elm St. 508-208-4743 or nlcfitness.com
>Friday 22
Girl Scout Leader Appreciation Day. Girls, show your appreciation to your troop leaders by bringing them to Wachusett Meadow for the day. Admission is free for all Girl Scout leaders on Leader Appreciation Day. Explore over 1,000 acres of meadows, woodlands, and wetlands. Play in the nature play area. Hike up Brown Hill. Go on a nature scavenger hunt and receive a prize. Leaders: Kristin Steinmetz, Education Coordinator, and Sanctuary Staff. Free for Leaders and Child Members, $3 Child Nonmembers. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Mass Audubon: Wachusett Meadow Wildlife Sanctuary, 113 Goodnow Road, Princeton. 978-464-2712 or massaudubon.org Earth Day Crafts. Celebrate Earth Day while making a fun craft out of re-usable and natural materials. Your imagination is the limit >Thursday 21 – May 26 - piggy banks, nature journals, vases, gift boxes and more! Free with Candlelight Yoga at Fruitlands. This six-week course is Admission. 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Tower Hill Botanic Garden, 11 French intended for those new to yoga and for those who would like to Drive, Boylston. 508-869-6111, ext. 124. strengthen their practice. Come quiet your mind, relax your body, and Tall Iced Tea Glass. Get ready for warmer days by learning to allow your spirit to be filled with peace as you explore meditation, make an elegant tall glass for iced tea or your favorite beverage. After asana and breath work. Instructor Diane Borton has been practicing studio etiquette and safety are discussed, students will watch a brief yoga for over a decade. Her instruction will help you strengthen your demonstration of this 2000 year old art before making their very body, center the mind, and create a peaceful spirit in this gentle yoga own tall iced tea glass. Students will be guided through the process class. Students should wear comfortable exercise clothing and bring April Vacation Kid’s Workshop. (Two Day Workshop) Thursday April 21st & Friday April 22nd, 9:30am-12:30pm Ages 6-12, $125 Bring young artists to explore all types of art in this two day workshop! Students will experiment with mixed media from sketching and drawing to collaging, painting and sculpting. Multi-step projects will inspire conceptualized ideas and visual planning. Students will feel empowered to create in new ways, developing confidence through artistic self expression. With the support of our creative team of artists, anything is possible! $125. 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. C.C. Lowell Art Supplies & Framing, 258 Park Ave. 508-757-7713 or cclowell.com
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of gather hot glass, blowing the bubble into a mold, and shaping the lip to create each unique iced tea glass. All materials included, all levels welcome $85. 6:30-9:30 p.m. New Street Glass Studio, Hot Glass Studio, 35B New St. 508-753-8183, ext. 301 or register. worcestercraftcenter.org
>Friday 22 – Friday May 13
No Sweat Lunch Yoga. Kripalu yoga at an easy pace to stretch and strengthening the body and relax the mind. You can even do this in your work clothes. This class runs from noon - 1pm, but, we know you will need to arrive late and leave early so we will leave open mats at the back of the class! $15 Class $55 Series. noon-1 p.m. Pathways to Wellness, Sakura Yoga Studio 2nd Floor, 50 Elm St. . 508-556-7022 or sakura.pathways2wellnessllc.com
attendees will have an opportunity to tour the clinic, which provides outpatient treatment for both males and females, ages 12 and up. The presentation is part of a spring speaker series developed to answer questions parents have about eating disorders, including how best to involve family in the recovery process, communication strategies with children and the role of genetics in eating disorders. Healthcare providers and mental health professionals will learn new innovative treatment strategies from some of the region’s top eating disorder specialists and clinicians. Free. 9-10:30 a.m. Walden Behavioral Care of Worcester, 335 Chandler St. WaldenEatingDisorders.com Credit Reports and Credit Scores: Getting the most mileage from credit. Today is the first day of Money Smart Week®! Learn more about how to manage your money with this
Crafts, 25 Sagamore Road. 508-753-8183, ext. 301 or register. worcestercraftcenter.org Understanding Glaze Color. Learn about how ceramic color is developed in glazes while creating 27 of your own glaze colors through alteration of a tried and true studio glaze. Using a simple method you will create a biaxial blend that once fired will yeld new glaze colors and illuminate to you how colorant oxides interact. Students will learn the role of colarnt oxides and how the concentration and blending of the oxides effect the outcome for cone ten reduction of fired glazes. Test tiles will be available to pick up two weeks after the workshop. $59. 1-5 p.m. Worcester Center for Crafts, 25 Sagamore Road. 508-753-8183, ext. 301 or register. worcestercraftcenter.org
Worcester State University’s 2015 Student Thesis Art Exhibit opens Thursday, April 21 and runs through May 13 during regular gallery hours. Work will be shown at The Gallery, Ghosh Center, 486 Chandler St., Worcester. Hours are Tuesday through Friday, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Saturday, 1-5 p.m. Visit worcester.edu, email Gallery@worcester.edu, or call 508-929-8651.
>Friday 22 – Friday May 13
Yoga for Kids (3-6). This is a time of fun, focus and relaxation. We integrate yogic breathing and postures into an interactive story, followed by a brief meditation and ending in relaxation. Class size is limited to attend to each child. This is a 45 minute class with a ten minute window after class for feedback, questions, pick up, etc. Caregivers are welcome to observe at no charge. $15 Class $55 Series. 3-3:45 p.m. Pathways to Wellness, Sakura Yoga Studio 2nd Floor, 50 Elm St. 508-556-7022 or sakura.pathways2wellnessllc.com Yoga for Health and Well-being. This class is a classic Kripalu yoga experience. We begin by centering and coming into a relaxed state and calming the body. We will practice traditional yoga breathing exercises, pranayama, and slowly and thoughtfully move through the postures stretching and strengthening the body. $15 Class $55 Series . 4-5 p.m. Pathways to Wellness, Sakura Yoga Studio 2nd Floor, 50 Elm St. 508-556-7022 or sakura. pathways2wellnessllc.com Relax & Restore Yoga. Retreat in a deeply relaxing and supportive environment. Cushions and blankets are used to support the body as we move through the major muscle groups for full relaxation. Using the breath we continue to ease the body and shift the focus from the busy mind and into meditation. This class is perfect to wind down from a busy week and revitalize for the weekend. $15 Class $55 Series. 5:30-6:30 p.m. Pathways to Wellness, Sakura Yoga Studio 2nd Floor, 50 Elm St. 508-556-7022 or sakura.pathways2wellnessllc.com
>Friday 22 – Friday May 27
Art Class: Painting Materials and Methods with Jill Pottle. This course is for beginning and returning painters who want to acquire fundamental painting skills and new approaches to painting with oils or acrylics. A dynamic and accomplished artist, Pottle’s instruction includes weekly exercises and one-on-one teaching geared to all levels of experience. Whether picking up the brush for the first time or the hundredth, students emerge from this six week class with greater confidence and a passion for painting. Space is limited. To register, contact programming@fruitlands.org or call (978) 456-3924, ext. 239. $200 Members, $250 Nonmembers. 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Fruitlands Museum, 102 Prospect Hill Road, Harvard. 978-456-3924 or fruitlands.org
>Saturday 23
Walden’s Worcester Clinic Announces Presentation to Help Parents of College-Age Children with Eating Disorders. Walden Behavioral Care, one of the country’s leading hospitals for treating eating disorders, will feature, “Help! How Do I Support My College-Aged Child with an Eating Disorder this Summer?” Laura Roias, Worcester program director, will provide a presentation for parents and providers. The presentation is free and
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program on managing your credit. Your credit report and credit score, when used together, provide an inspection report of your past use of credit. Lenders determine your credibility by looking at your credit report and credit score; therefore, accurate information in your credit report is key to obtaining the best credit terms and rates. Are you getting the most mileage you can from credit? Find out what your credit report and credit score say about you. Presented by Money Management International, a nonprofit, full-service credit counseling agency as part of their Journey to Financial Security Series. Free. 10-11 a.m. Worcester Public Library, Saxe Room, 3 Salem Square. 508-799-1655, ext. 3. Mangiare means to eat. Knowing other languages and understanding other cultures is a 21st Century must. Come revamp, rehearse, reset your Italian at the Circolo di Conversazione Italiana. All are welcome. Meetings are the second and fourth Saturday of the month from January to May. We try to speak only in Italian for two hours with a 15 minute English coffee break. Free of charge. 10 a.m.noon Beaman Memorial Public Library, muriel stiles reading room, 8 Newton St., West Boylston. 508-835-3912. Oxidative Stress Seminar. A presentation on anti-aging and natural scientific breakthrough that is proven to reduce oxidative stress will be given by guest speakers and wellness ambassadors Mia Krishnaswami and Murielle Montione. Free but please register by calling 508-949-6232. Free. 10:30 a.m.-noon Booklovers’ Gourmet, 55 East Main St., Webster. 508-949-6232. Metal Clay Workshop: Earring or Pendant. Ever wanted to try metal clay? Come and discover metal clay and learn some new skills in this 5 hour, one day workshop! Metal Clay can be molded, shaped, textured, and carved just like regular clay, but once it’s dried an fired in becomes 100% copper, silver, or bronze depending on the type used. We will start by creating either simple earrings or pendant and use commercial findings to attach them. If you have some metal-smithing experience you may also solder your findings. All materials are included. $177. 1-6 p.m. Worcester Center for
• APRIL 21, 2016
Reading by Judith Ferrara “The Little O, the Earth: Travel Journals, Art and Poems”. Celebrate National Poetry Month & Earth Day Free, books available for purchase. 2-4 p.m. Booklovers’ Gourmet, 55 East Main St., Webster. 508-949-6232.
how to produce your own quality videos and be a producer for WCCA TV! You’ll learn how to work with high quality video and television studio equipment as well as some ways to enhance your video. You can take the Saturday morning or afternoon class and become a producer Member for only $75! Yes, you read that correctly, only $75! $75. Worcester Community Cable Access (WCCA TV - Channel 13), 415 Main St. 508-755-1880, ext. 10 or wccatv.com
>Saturday 23 – Friday May 6 EMT Basic. 1850. 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Quinsigamond Community College, 345, 25 Federal St. 508-751-7900.
>Monday 25
Free peoples workshop meeting. The virtues of a free peoples artists workshop The Free Peoples Artists Workshop is not only a feedback group for creative people, but also an instrument for the refining of taste. The writer, painter, musician or other creative person who presents a work in progress will benefit from comments and suggestions by artists from other disciplines, as well as comments from laymen art lovers who may be present. These same art lovers, however, also benefit from the aesthetic experience of thinking about the praiseworthy qualities in the artwork, and possible suggestions for improvement. It is by exercise that aesthetic taste develops, and individual personality is formed. After all, what are we but collections of likes and dislikes? Artistic taste can influence taste in all other areas of our experience. The exercise of taste by thinking about and expressing personal interpretations of creative art works helps to form our views of the world. No other group, presently active, is designed to bring together creators from many spheres of the art spectrum to present their most recent productions for valuable feedback insights from a varied audience of knowledgeable people in the arts. The result of this interaction should be better art by better artists, and a better society. Sid Solomon, Ph.D., art theory & crit. 508-852-8860 free. 7-9 p.m. Annie’s Book Stop, 65 James St. 508-852-8860.
>Tuesday 26
How to Build Your Own Personal LinkedIn Page. Have you been meaning to set up a professional profile on LinkedIn, but aren’t sure where to start, why it’s important, or what kind of >Saturday 23 – Sunday 24 information to share? Join the Chamber of Central Mass South Daffodils: Botanical Sketching & Painting. Instructor: for an informative, hands-on seminar on the Basics of LinkedIn. Helen Byers Join botanical artist Helen Byers this weekend for a two-day workshop-when the daffodil field is spectacularly in bloom!- LinkedIn is an extremely fast growing social media network with to study the features of narcissi and paint them in detail. We’ll begin over 410 million active users, and focuses on highlighting a person’s professional accomplishments, work experience, and volunteering by dissecting individual flowers to observe their intriguing internal accomplishments. This seminar, presented by Venly fellow and structures, and make sketches of what we find. From there we’ll social media expert Emily MacWilliams, will cover the purpose of progress to creating a detailed watercolor portrait of a single flower. LinkedIn, help attendees create a winning LinkedIn Profile, and teach Helen’s demos, tips, and individualized instruction will guide you in users how to successfully interact with others on LinkedIn. This traditional botanical art techniques. To see galleries of Helen’s work, visit her website: helenbyers.com. Member $120, Non-member $140. seminar will cover LinkedIn Facts & Stats, and move on to teach Tower Hill Botanic Garden, 11 French Drive, Boylston. 508-869-6111, attendees how to Build a Public Profile and Optimize Work, Education and Volunteering Experience. The hour-long session will also offer ext. 124 or towerhillbg.thankyou4caring.org Hydraulic Press: Silhouette and Pancake Dies. Learn how a Practical on Connecting with others, an overview of the Skill Endorsement feature, and a brief summary on requesting and giving to use the hydraulic press to create small-scale dimensional pieces Recommendations. A digital copy of your resume or CV will be helpful to take your jewelry, small sculpture or enameling to the next level! Through instructor-guided demos, you’ll learn how to safely use and to have at this seminar, as well as a digital copy of a professional headshot. Bring your laptop computer. Computers will be provided care for the press, understand urethane and durometers, use and cut your own silhouette dies and quickly punch multiples from sheet by Bay Path to those who are unable to bring a laptop with them. When registering, please indicate if you will be bringing your own using pancake dies. Students will learn to add surface textures to laptop or tablet. Please arrive at 8:00am for a prompt 8:15am start. their designs using the rolling mill, hammers and press and how to Bay Path University’s Sturbridge campus is located at 1 Picker Road. match 2-sided forms to create 3D objects. Students will have the opportunity to practice each technique and make samples and notes All are welcome to attend. The LinkedIn seminar is free of charge for for future projects. Basic metalsmithing required. $215. 10 a.m. to 5 CMS Chamber members and $50 for non-members (this fee can be p.m. Worcester Center for Crafts, Metals Studio, 25 Sagamore Road. applied toward a new Chamber membership.) Please RSVP by noon on April 25. Space is limited! Seats will be filled on a first come, 508-753-8183, ext. 301 or register.worcestercraftcenter.org first served basis. Free for CMS Chamber Members or $50. 8-9:15 a.m. Bay Path College Central Mass Campus, 242 Sturbridge Road, >Saturday 23 - May 21 Charlton. 508-347-2761 or cmschamber.ning.com WCCA TV Studio Production Certification Class. Learn
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HMEA Shared Living Open House- Franklin. Home is where the heart is. Learn how you can become a Shared Living Provider through HMEA Tuesday, April 26, 2016 _ 6pm to 8pm HMEA, 8 Forge Park East, Franklin, MA 02038 - hmea.org HMEA’s Shared Living Program matches providers who wish to open their homes to people with disabilities. The providers--families, individuals or couples--offer support, assistance and companionship in return for a generous tax-free stipend. You’ll help them reach for independence, and they’ll help you see a world full of hope and possibilities. HMEA helps over 4,000 children and adults in 110 Massachusetts communities with Autism and special needs in achieving a meaningful life. Hear from current Shared Living Providers - Discover HMEA’s cutting-edge services - Learn how the match--and the relationship--between the person needing the support and the provider is handled with the utmost care and consideration - Attendees will be entered into a drawing for a $25 AMEX gift card! Check out HMEA.org for more information! For questions or information on becoming a Shared Living Provider email SharedLivingServices@HMEA.org Free. 6-8 p.m. HMEA Administrative Office, 8 Forge Park Way, Franklin. 5082981102 or Hmea.org
>Wednesday 27
Rainbow Lunch Club. The Rainbow Lunch Club meets the 2nd & 4th Wednesdays of each month and offers LGBTIQA seniors age 60+ a nutritious meal and an opportunity to socialize with friends and enjoy various activities including programs, entertainment and educational series. Advance reservations are required. Please call or email by the previous Wednesday: (508)756-1545 ext.404 or wlen@eswa.org All are Welcome: LGBTIQA 60 years old and older; younger partners, friends, and allies! $2.50 suggested donation for those age 60+; the fee for younger individuals is $5.50. 11:45 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Unitarian Universalist Church of Worcester, 90 Holden St. 508-853-1942 or meetup.com The Value of Trees in the Urban Landscape. Presenter: Ruth Seward, Worcester Tree Initiative In celebration of Arbor Day, learn about the many environmental and economic benefits of trees in this interactive indoor and outdoor presentation. Free with Admission, Pre-registration required. 3-4 p.m. Tower Hill Botanic Garden, 11 French Drive, Boylston. 508-869-6111, ext. 124 or towerhillbg.thankyou4caring.org Guided Mindful Meditation. Interested in trying meditation? Please join our meditation practice! We will meet on the 2nd and 4th Wednesday of each month. This will be a guided meditation led by Jeannie Light, with the goal of shifting our state of being from lower frequency feelings of stress and anxiety to a more elevated state of love and gratitude. Jeannie Light is an advanced student studying under Dr. Joe Dispenza,author of “Breaking the Habit of Being Yourself” and “You Are the Placebo”, and practices mindful meditation. There is no fee for patients, survivors, and family member/caregiver. Fee for all others is $10. 6:30-8 p.m. Generations Healing Center, 250 Main St., Oxford. 508-987-3310.
family >Thursday 21
Art Carts: Family Fun - Antioch, the Hunt Mosaic & WAM. Ever wonder how our wonderful collection of mosaics got here? How they were made? Where they came from? Where is Antioch? Learn about all this and try your hand at making a mosaic! (Programming subject to change) Free with Museum admission. 1-2 p.m. Worcester Art Museum, Renaissance Court, 55 Salisbury St. 508-799-4406.
>Thursday 21 – Friday 22
Art Carts: Family Fun - Arms and Armor. Knightly armor is nice and shiny, but how does it feel? How heavy is the armor? Is it comfortable? How and why did they decorate it? Discover the
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answers to these questions and more with our hands-on armor activity! (Programming subject to change) Free with Museum admission. 2:30-3:30 p.m. Worcester Art Museum, Knights! Exhibition, 55 Salisbury St. 508-799-4406.
Salisbury St. 508-799-4406.
>Friday 22
Free Tour Friday. Take a free wagon-ride tour around the farm during the kids’ school vacation week free. 10:30 a.m.-noon Whittier Farms, 90 Douglas Road, Sutton. 508-865-1053 or whittiers.com Art Carts: Family Fun - Tapestry Weaving. Take a close look at the Tapestry Depicting Godfrey of Bouillon, about 1500 to discover the colors and details woven into the design. Learn how tapestries were made and used in Medieval Europe, touch tapestry fabric, and try your hand at weaving on a loom! (Programming subject to change) Free with Museum admission. 1-2 p.m. Worcester Art Museum, Tapestry outside Knights! Exhibit, 55 Salisbury St. 508-799-4406.
Dance of the Woodcock. Love is in the air as the sun sets in early spring and the male American woodcock, a member of the sandpiper family, performs his aerial mating display. We will visit breeding grounds at River Bend Farm in Uxbridge to view the performance of this spring ritual. As sunset nears, you can hear the male woodcock peenting before he spirals 300 feet up into the night sky. Don’t miss the spectacular show of this amazing shorebird! For ages 8 and older. For more information and to register, call 508.753.6087. $5 Mass Audubon Adult Members, $7 Adult Non-members. 7-8:30 p.m. Mass Audubon: Broad Meadow Brook Conservation Center and Wildlife Sanctuary, 414 Massasoit Ave. 508-753-6087 or massaudubon.org
>Friday 22 – Sunday 24
>Saturday 23
Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Presents Legends. Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey® Presents LEGENDSSM unveils the unbelievable to Children Of All Ages®. Experience legendary circus artists from around the globe perform awe-inspiring feats of daring, spectacles of strength and thrills of wonder. Join us for an unforgettable family night of legendary proportions at Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Presents Legends at the DCU Center from April 22 to April 24, 2016. Performances of Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Presents Legends in Worcester will also provide your family with the opportunity to see our amazing Asian elephants perform one last time before they move to their permanent home at the Ringling Bros. Center for Elephant Conservation® in Florida by May 2016. Free to all ticketholders, the All Access Pre-show starts an hour before the show. Meet the performers of The Greatest Show On Earth®, get autographs, take photos and enter to win a one-of-a-kind Pachyderm Painting. Ticketholders can purchase an upgrade and go backstage with a VIP Behind the Scenes Tour of Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey. To take advantage of this once-in-a-lifetime experience, just log on to ringlingbros.expapp.com from your iPhone or Android smartphone, and provide your name, e-mail and phone number to become a VIP circus insider. For more information visit Ringling.com. Performance Schedule: Friday, April 22 at 7:00 PM, Saturday, April 23 at 11:00 AM and 3:00 PM and Sunday, April 24 at 12:00 PM and 4:00 PM. Opening Night tickets for Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Presents Legends start at $10. All seats are reserved, and tickets are available by visiting ticketmaster.com or calling (508) 755-6800. For group rates and information, call (508) 929-0125. Opening Night tickets start at $10. 11 a.m.-1, noon-2 p.m., 3 p.m.-5 p.m., 4 p.m.-6 p.m., 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. DCU Center- Arena and Convention Center, 50 Foster St. 508-755-6800 or ringling.com
>Saturday 23
Where’s the Party? Georgie the cat loves throwing parties for his friends. All his parties have balloons, lights, delicious cake, and most importantly, everyone has an unforgettable time. One day, Georgie decides to throw the ultimate bash, so he puts on his party hat and races through the city to invite his best buds... who are all too busy to come. But Georgie soon learns that you can always count on your friends to be there for you... and sometimes they might even bring cake! Free. 11-11:30 a.m. Barnes & Noble Booksellers - Millbury, 70 Worcester Providence Turnpike, Millbury. 508-865-2801 or bn.com
>Saturday 23 – Sunday 24
Art Carts: Family Fun - Arms and Armor. Knightly armor is nice and shiny, but how does it feel? How heavy is the armor? Is it comfortable? How and why did they decorate it? Discover the answers to these questions and more with our hands-on armor activity! (Programming subject to change) Free with Museum admission. 2-3 p.m. Worcester Art Museum, Knights! Exhibition, 55
outdoors >Thursday 21
Birding at Fruitlands. Join us on the Fruitlands landscape as we look for local residents and early arrivals including Blue-winged Warblers, Chipping Sparrows, and Bluebirds. This guided birding walk covers about two miles on maintained trails passing through meadow and wooded glens with some steep sections. Meet at the upper parking lot for this early morning exploration. Free. 7-10 a.m. Fruitlands Museum, 102 Prospect Hill Road, Harvard. 978-456-3924 or fruitlands.org
fundraisers >Saturday 23
1st Annual Mattress Sale to benefit Master Singers of Worcester. Need a new mattress? Want to support a local nonprofit arts organization? The Master Singers of Worcester is holding a unique Mattress Sale fundraiser. Over 20 mattress sets in all sizes and styles, along with luxury pillows, will be available for sale. Cash, check or charge accepted. Layaway and delivery available. There’s no charge to come and browse. Email info@mswma.org to receive a coupon for $50 off. Proceeds support the Master Singers, who for 40 years has performed choral music old and new from around the world, including the popular Boar’s Head Festival. None. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. First Congregational Church of Shrewsbury, Gifford Hall, 19 Church Road, Shrewsbury. 508-842-1349 or find them on Facebook. Swing Dance with Reminisce. Premiere doo-wop band will play dance music from 8-11 PM. All proceeds benefit local charities. $20. 7-11 p.m. Auburn/Webster Elks Lodge 2118, 754 Southbridge St., Auburn. 508-864-5222 or find them on Facebook.
>Sunday 24
SHEVA...my precious Treasure. AID Boston presents Upasana’s “Sheva...my precious Treasure”, the premier of an ingenious original production featuring breathtaking and refreshing new choreography, featuring over 40 performers. This production choreographed in the authentic Odissi style, has a refreshing perspective on the elements of nature, explored through poetry, music, drama, yoga and digital experience. When: Sunday, April 24, 2016 (4:30pm) Where: Wilmington High School, 159 Church Street, Wilmington, MA 01887 Proceeds from the concert will go towards supporting grassroots sustainable and equitable development in India. Event website: aidevents.org/ Facebook Event: https://www. facebook.com/events/943618439006672/ Any questions: events@ aidboston.org Association for India’s Development is a volunteer movement promoting sustainable, equitable and just development. AID supports grassroots organizations in India and initiates efforts in various interconnected spheres such as education, livelihoods, natural resources including land, water and energy, agriculture, health, women’s empowerment and social justice. Learn more: www.aidboston.org Upasana is a 501 c 3 non-profit organization
committed to promoting and preserving the lesser known Indian Classical dance style, Odissi. Upasana engages observers and participants through concerts, affordable classes and demonstrations thereby promoting cultural understanding and appreciation. Upasana also interacts with the community by participating in fundraising events organized by philanthropic organizations. Learn more: upasanaodissi.org 4:30-6:30 p.m. Wilmington High School, 159 Church St., Wilmington. 617-520-4666 or aidevents.org
fairs/ festivals >Thursday 21
Undergraduate Conference on Research and Creative Practice. Continuing a tradition of highlighting academic excellence, Fitchburg State University will host its annual Undergraduate Conference on Research and Creative Practice on Thursday, April 21 in Hammond Hall. The conference’s opening ceremony will begin at 8:30 a.m. in Ellis White Lecture Hall in Hammond Hall. Oral presentations will follow from 9 to 10 a.m. throughout Hammond, followed by poster presentations, student artwork exhibitions and puppetry performances between 10 and 11 a.m. There will be a creative writing showcase and oral presentations from 11 a.m. to noon, with a performance by the university’s Jazz Band from 11:45 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. in the Falcon Hub. Lunch will be served in the Falcon Hub at noon, with the closing ceremony at 12:30 p.m. 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Fitchburg State University: Hammond Hall, 160 Pearl St., Fitchburg. fitchburgstate.edu
>Friday 22
Earth Day Celebration. Don’t miss Worcester’s annual Earth Day Celebration with lots of indoor and outdoor Earth-friendly happenings, hands-on activities and entertainment. Local green organizations and food vendors will be onsite. While you are here, be sure to explore the EcoTarium’s beautiful trails, ponds, woods, and our expansive exhibit, Nature Explore,® which are all bursting with new life! Earth Day Celebration is presented by the EcoTarium and the Regional Environmental Council of Central Massachusetts. Earth Day Admission: $7.50 adults; $5 children ages 2-18, seniors and students with ID; free for EcoTarium members and children under 2. Since admission is half price, coupons and discounts do not apply on Earth Day. Regular fees apply for planetarium show. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. EcoTarium, 222 Harrington Way. 508-929-2700 or ecotarium.org
>Saturday 23
Worcester Bravehearts Coaches Clinic. This is a free event. Two Braveheart coaches along with Tim Cummins and Jeff Bercume will introduce proper coaching techniques, and show drills to teach young players how to play the sport. Free. 9 a.m.-noon College of the Holy Cross: Hanover Insurance Park at Fitton Field, 1 College St. 508-438-3773 or WorcesterBravehearts.com Worcester Bravehearts Job Fair. This event is open to all applicants. Free. 9 a.m.-noon College of the Holy Cross: Hanover Insurance Park at Fitton Field, 1 College St. 508-438-3773 or WorcesterBravehearts.com Worcester Bravehearts Fan Fest. Fan Fest is a Free event. Activities include: Scavenger hunt, kids run the bases, a chance to win season tickets and free hot dogs and popcorn to the first 1000 fans. Also, this is the day All-Star experience tickets go on sale. Free. Noon-3 p.m. College of the Holy Cross: Hanover Insurance Park at Fitton Field, 1 College St. 508-438-3773 or WorcesterBravehearts.com
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>Saturday 23 – Sunday 24
African Violet Show. See hundreds of blooming, specimen African Violet plants in a variety of displays. Participate in guided tours; get tips on African violet care and culture, including re-potting and propagation demonstrations. Many unusual African violets and Gesneriads will be available for sale, as well as pots, soils, fertilizers, and more! Bay State African Violet Society Workshops/Walkthroughs Saturday April 23 / 10:00am-5:00pm 11am and 1pm-Lecture Demonstration: How to repot, propagate, identify and general care of a violet. Educational Display: A member will be available at the Educational Table to answer questions and give more informal demonstrations to smaller groups of people. African Violet Basic Care Video will be played in the workshop/education room. Sunday, April 24 / 10:00am-4:00pm 1pm-Lecture Demonstration: How to repot, propagate, identify and general care of a violet. Educational Display: A member will be available at the Educational Table to answer questions and give more informal demonstrations to smaller groups of people. African Violet Basic Care Video will be played in the workshop/education room. Free with admission. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tower Hill Botanic Garden, 11 French Drive, Boylston. 508-869-6111.
>Tuesday 26
Spring-Tacular! Presented by Counseling and Assessment Clinic of Worcester and Bay State Savings Bank A Food and Wine Tasting Event Honoring Our 40 Year Partnership with The College of the Holy Cross with Guest Speaker Dr. Matilde Castiel Silent Auction and Live Music by Joy of Music Program Featured Restaurants include: Café Reyes, Eller’s Restaurant, EVO Dining, Hangover Gastropub, Not Your Average Joe’s, College of the Holy Cross, Figs & Pigs Kitchen and Pantry, Pepper’s Fine Food Catering, Struck Catering, Twisted Fork Bistro & Twisted Tee and Worcester Technical High School’s Culinary Arts Program. All proceeds benefit the Abby’s House shelter, housing and advocacy programs for women and children Thank you to our generous sponsors: TJX Companies, Unum, Worcester Business Journal, C & R Tire, Curry Printing, Hanover Insurance Group, Masterman’s, Notre Dame Health Care, Reliant Medical Group, Southbridge Savings Bank, Unibank $65. 6-9 p.m. College of the Holy Cross: Hogan Campus Center, 1 College St. 508-756-5486 or abbyshouse.org
poetry >Saturday 23
Barnes & Noble 4th Saturday Poetry Open Mic. National Poetry Month features Poet and Author Dan Lewis, reading from his just published second poetry collection, “Intimations of the Focal Plane.” Lewis lives on the edge of Patch Reservoir in Worcester, MA. Winner of the 2012 Frank O’Hara Prize, he is the author also of “This Garden” and two chapbooks. Open mic precedes the feature so be sure to share your work. Group usually enjoys coffee and at the in store café after the reading. Hosted by Carle Johnson. Free and open to the public. 7-9 p.m. Barnes & Noble Booksellers - MA/ Worcester, In the stacks, 541 D Lincoln St. 508-853-6994 or worcestercountypoetry.org
>Sunday 24 – Monday 25
Manifesto. “Manifesto” is a jazz / poetry performance, featuring poets Dan Lewis and Jonathan Blake and a three piece ensemble of Chinese flutes, clarinet, trumpet, percussion and acoustic bass Free. 1:30-4 p.m., 1:30 p.m.-4 p.m., 1:30 p.m.-4 p.m., 4 p.m.-6:30 p.m., 4 p.m.-6:30 p.m. Worcester State University: Student Center, Foster Room, 486 Chandler St.
>Tuesday 26
MegaSlam2016: The Battle for Worcester III: Revenge
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of the Librarians. Celebrate National Poetry Month as we host this raucous and fun poetry slam. Revenge is ours - librarians will be judging! Sponsored by the Friends of the Worcester Public Library. Free. 6:30-8:30 p.m. Worcester Public Library, Saxe Room, 3 Salem Square. 508-799-1655.
college sports
baseball
Holy Cross April 23 @ Bucknell, 12 p.m. and 2:30 p.m. April 24 @ Bucknell, 12 p.m. and 2:30 p.m. April 26 vs. Connecticut, 5:05 p.m. Assumption April 23 vs. Franklin Pierce, 12 p.m. and 3 p.m. April 24 vs. Franklin Pierce, 1 p.m. April 26 vs. Bridgeport, 1 p.m. April 27 vs. Merrimack, 3:30 p.m. Nichols April 23 vs. Endicott, 12 p.m. and 1:30 p.m. April 24 @ Western New England, time TBA WPI April 22 @ Springfield, 3:30 p.m. April 23 vs. Springfield, 3:30 p.m. and 6:30 p.m. April 24 @ Johnson & Wales, 3:30 p.m. Becker April 23 @ Newbury, 5:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. April 24 vs. Newbury, 12 p.m. April 25 @ Worcester State, 3:30 p.m. Worcester State April 21 vs. Mass-Boston, 3 p.m. April 23 @ Salem State, 12 p.m. and 2:30 p.m. April 25 vs. Becker, 3:30 p.m. April 26 vs. Fitchburg State, 2 p.m. and 4:30 p.m. Clark University April 22 vs. Coast Guard Academy, 3:30 p.m. April 23 @ Coast Guard Academy, 12 p.m. April 25 vs. Johnson & Wales (Rhode Island), 6 p.m. Anna Maria April 23 @ St. Joseph’s (Maine), 12 p.m. and 2:30 p.m. April 24 vs. Suffolk, 4 p.m. and 6:30 p.m.
softball
Holy Cross April 23 vs. Army West Point, 12:05 p.m. and 2:05 pm. April 24 vs. Army West Point, 12:05 p.m. Assumption April 22 vs. Saint Anselm, 4 p.m. April 23 vs. Saint Anselm, 12:30 p.m. and 2:30 p.m. Becker April 23 vs. Regis (MA), 12 p.m. and 2 p.m. April 24 vs. Lesley, 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. Nichols April 21 @ Fitchburg State, 3 p.m. and 5 p.m. April 23 @ Gordon, 1 p.m. and 3 p.m. April 24 vs. Salve Regina, 12 p.m. and 2 p.m. April 25 @ Endicott, 3 p.m. and 5 p.m. WPI April 22 @ MIT, 3 p.m. April 23 @ WPI, 12 p.m. Anna Maria April 23 vs. Johnson & Wales (Rhode Island), 12p.m. and 2p.m. April 24 @ Rivier, 12pm.m and 2p.m. April 26 vs. Suffolk, 3:30 p.m. and 5:30 p.m. Worcester State April 23 @ Salem State, 12 p.m. and 2 p.m. April 26 vs. Fitchburg State, 5 p.m. April 27 vs. Trinity (Connecticut), 5 p.m. and 7 p.m. Clark University
• APRIL 21, 2016
April 22 vs. Babson, 3 p.m. and 5 p.m. April 23 @ Emerson, 3 p.m. and 5p.m.
Women’s
Holy Cross April 23 @ Patriot League Championship April 24 @ Patriot League Championship
Holy Cross April 21 @ TBA (First Round of Patriot League Tournament, time TBA) April 22 @ TBA (Quarterfinals of Patriot League Tournament, time TBA) April 23 @ TBA (Semifinals of Patriot League Tournament, time TBA) April 24 @ TBA Championship Match of Patriot League Tournament, time TBA) Nichols April 25 vs Clark, 5 p.m. Worcester State April 23 vs. Salve Regina, UMass-Dartmouth, Johnson & Wales (at UMass-Dartmouth), 10:30 a.m. Clark University April 23 @ MIT, 1 p.m. April 27 vs. Coast Guard Academy, 4 p.m.
lacrosse Men’s
rowing Men’s
golf Men’s
Holy Cross April 23 @ Connecticut Invitational April 24 @ Connecticut Invitational Nichols April 21 @ Western New England Invitational, 10 a.m.
Women’s
Holy Cross April 22 vs. Boston University, 7:05 p.m. April 26 @ TBA (Quarterfinals of Patriot League Tournament, time TBA) Assumption April 23 @ Pace, 12 p.m. Nichols April 23 @ University of New England, 1 p.m. April 26 vs. Wentworth, 7 p.m. Clark University April 23 vs. Babson, 1 p.m. April 27 @ Springfield College, 7 p.m. Becker April 23 vs. Wheelock, 10 a.m. Anna Maria April 23 vs. Lasell, 1 p.m. April 27 vs. Johnson & Wales (Rhode Island), 5 p.m.
Women’s
Holy Cross April 23 vs. American, 1:05 p.m. Nichols April 23 @ University of New England, 4 p.m. April 26 vs. Wentworth, 4 p.m. Assumption April 21 vs. Bridgeport, 4 p.m. April 23 vs. Adelphi, 1p.m. April 27 @ Saint Anselm, 7 p.m. Becker April 21 @ Daniel Webster, 4 p.m. April 23 vs. Mitchell, 1 p.m. Worcester State April 21 @ Rhode Island College, 6:30 p.m. April 23 @ Fitchburg State, 1 p.m. April 27 vs. Mass. Maritime, 7 p.m.
tennis Men’s
Holy Cross April 23 vs. Lehigh, 11 a.m. Assumption April 22 @ Merrimack, 2 p.m. April 23 vs. Le Moyne, 11 a.m. Nichols April 23 @. Gordon, 11 a.m. April 24 @ Middlebury, 2:30 p.m. April 26 vs. Eastern Nazarene, 4 p.m. Clark University April 23 @ MIT, 1 p.m. April 27 vs. Coast Guard Academy, 4 p.m.
Holy Cross April 23 vs. Trinity & Wesleyan, 11 a.m. WPI April 23 @ McCarthy/McGee Challenge Cup vs. BC, UMass & Coast Guard, 10:10 a.m. Clark University April 24 vs. Amherst, Bowdoin, Connecticut College, Massachusetts Maritime, URI (at Lake Quinsigamond)
Women’s
Holy Cross April 23 @ Rutgers w/ Lehigh, time TBA April 24 vs. MIT & Rhode Island, 10:30 a.m. Assumption April 23 @ Northeast-10 Championship, 9:30 a.m. WPI April 23 @ NEWMAC Championships, 8:30 a.m. Clark University April 24 vs. Amherst, Bowdoin, Connecticut College, Mass. Maritime, URI (at Lake Quinsigamond)
track & field Men’s Holy Cross April 20-21 @ Holy Cross Decathlon, time TBA April 24 @ Hold Cross Invitational, time TBA April 26 vs. New Hampshire, Rhode Island & Worcester State, time TBA Assumption April 23 @ Sean Collier invitational Nichols April 23 @ J. Elmer Swanson Invitational, time TBA WPI April 23 @ Tufts Invitational, 10 a.m. Worcester State April 21 @ Holy Cross Decathlon April 23 @ Springfield Invitational April 26 @ Hold Cross
Women’s
Holy Cross April 24 @ Holy Cross invitational, time TBA Assumption April 23 @ Sean Collier invitational Nichols April 23 @ J. Elmer Swanson Invitational, time TBA WPI April 23 @ Tufts Invitational, 10 a.m. Worcester State April 23 @ Springfield
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Chimney Cleaning $99. $50 Off Caps or Masonry. Free Inspection. All Types of Masonry. Water Leaks. Quality Chimney. 508-410-4551
Fitzy’s Junk Removal and House Clean Outs No job too big or small! Basements, attics, etc. Cheapest rates around! Call 774-578-5239 or 508-854-1035
Clean Slate Estate Complete Estate & House Cleanouts Complete Cleanouts of Estate, House, Attic, Cellar, Garage, Barn or Items on Property No Job Too Big or Small! 800-989-4521 Fully Insured/Bonded Free House Calls FREE ESTIMATES CASH Buyouts Available CREDIT for Resaleable Items CleanSlateEstate.com
Kurt Smollin, Electrician All your electrical needs. Additions, pools, spas, service upgrades. 30 yrs exp. Quality work. Masters Lic. 20050A Insured. Call (508)829-5134
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BATHTUB REFINISHING
MUNDIAL CLEANING SERVICES LOOKING FOR HOUSE CLEANING? GOOD REFERENCES, FULLY INSURED, 12 YRS EXPER FREE ESTIMATE CALL LUCIA AT 774-535 2576
Don’t Replace,
Refinish! • THOUSANDS LESS THAN REPLACEMENT!
Virtue’s Cleaning Cleaning is a virtue. Meticulous, reasonable, reliable. Call me at 508-726-4567 Esther’s Home Cleaning 19 years exp in Shirley, Leominster area. Please call 978-728-4284.
Ambitious Electrician Established 1989, fully insured. Master license #A14758. David Sachs 508-254-6305
“Yesterday, my bathtub was ugly.
Today, it’s beautiful!”
After! ALL WORK GUARANTEED
DISCOUNT OIL Al’s Oil Service Best Prices, Full Service Serving Worcester County for 50 Years! 24 Hour Expert Burner Service 508-753-7221 alsoil.com
We Also Repair and Refinish: • Countertops • Tile Showers & Walls • Sinks & Vanities • Fiberglass Tubs & Showers
Call for a FREE Estimate! 508-655-2044 Each Miracle Method franchise independently owned and operated.
See our work at MiracleMethod.com/
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JONESIN’
"Err Guitar"--definitely not a solid instrument. by Matt Jones
Across 1 Hoover, e.g. 4 He came back for a "Big Holiday" in 2016 10 Participates in an auction 14 Roswell craft 15 ___-Lorraine (area in northeast France) 16 "A Streetcar Named Desire" director Kazan 17 ___ de mer 18 Veteran Marine, in slang 20 Cold one 22 Corleone patriarch 23 A year in Paris 24 Lawsuit 26 Pair with a lot of pull? 27 Spherical treat that comes from a toroid 32 Bowler's place 33 Hockey Hall of Famer Cam 34 Kal Penn's costar John 37 Hitchcock title word 38 ___ au poivre 39 "The Grapes of Wrath" family name 40 Neither's partner 41 Graphics program included with Windows 1.0 42 Carried, as by the wind 43 Sprays some sticky stuff as a prank 45 Answer sharply 48 Plasma particles 49 Not mine, in bucolic comic strips 50 Carpenter's leveler 53 Autocorrect target 56 Poopo or Titicaca, e.g. 59 Empty (of) 60 About, formally 61 "I can't hear you!" 62 Four-color card game 63 King with three daughters 64 John Doe, e.g. 65 Part of rpm Down 1 Like some mistakes 2 In the distance
Fun By The Numbers Like puzzles? Then you’ll love sudoku. This mind-bending puzzle will have you hooked from the moment you square off, so sharpen your pencil and put your sudoku savvy to the test! Here’s How It Works: Sudoku puzzles are formatted as a 9x9 grid, broken down into nine 3x3 boxes. To solve sudoku, the numbers 1 through 9 must fill each row, column and box. Each number can appear only once in each row, column and box. You can figure out the order in which the numbers will appear by using the numeric clues already provided in the boxes. The more numbers you name, the easier it gets to solve the puzzle!
3 Like some small biological projects? 4 Chum 5 Late hour, for some 6 "Caprica" star Morales 7 Light bulb unit 8 Reverb (and a cliche when a character thinks it's someone else) 9 Ultra-wide shoe size 10 He was associated with the Jets 11 "Mr. Belvedere" actress Graff 12 Vegetable cutter 13 Fermented rice drinks 19 Recover from a setback 21 Final Jeopardy! amount 25 Not forthcoming 26 Eleventh U.S. president 27 "Shoot!" 28 It's sold in bars and tubs 29 No later than 30 Pint-sized 31 Events at meets 34 Sweetener under recent scrutiny 35 Install in a gallery, maybe 36 Neruda works 38 Seasonal addition? 39 It usually gets rolled 41 Schroeder's prop
42 ___-country (2010s music genre) 43 Comparatively agile 44 Opportune 45 Emmy-winning title role for Sally Field 46 All's opposite 47 Tony-winning actress McDonald 50 Graceful swimmer 51 Xbox series since 2001 52 "Was ___ inside job?" 54 Maine's state tree 55 Paper factory side effect 57 Ft. Lauderdale locale 58 Aries' animal
Last week's solution
©2016 Jonesin’ Crosswords (editor@jonesincrosswords.com) Reference puzzle #776
84
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• A P R I L 2 1, 2 0 16
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CHIMNEY SERVICES
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CHIMNEY SERVICES
building • restoration • remodeling
TOP HAT CHIMNEY SWEEP
Regen
New Homes • Additions Kitchen & Bath Remodels Complete Restoration Fully Licensed & Insured
774-696-7437
CHIMNEY CLEANING
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$50 Off Caps or Masonry • Free Inspection All Types of Masonry • Water Leaks
Professional Cleaners Since 1982
Quality Chimney
NEW ROOFS
Randy Moore 508-839-9997
ASK about double blocks (size 3.75” x 1.75”) and COMBO pricing into our other zone and reach 40,600 households in 26 towns in Central Mass each week. FREE line ad included with each block purchased. Book for 52 weeks and receive a Spotlight Business of the Week! Ask for details!
ELECTRICAL SERVICES
Bob Yaylaian
CONCRETE, FENCE & STONE FENCE, STONE & CONCRETE
"Small Jobs My Specialty" CALL
YOUR COMPLETE FENCE & STONE WORK COMPANY
508-839-1157 LIC. #E23477
• CONCRETE SPECIALISTS - Walkways, Patios, Sidewalks & Pool Patios... • FENCE ALL TYPES - Vinyl, Chain link, Ornamental & Wood... • STONE HARDSCAPES - Patios, Stone Walls, Pavers, Walkways & Pool Patios...
nick@regenbuilders.com www.regenbuilders.com P.O. Box 3192 | Worcester, MA 01613
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ELECTRICIAN
508-835-1644 for free estimate
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LANDSCAPING LANDSCAPE SERVICES
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MILLER’S LANDSCAPING
LE’S PROFESSIONAL LANDSCAPING
Flooring 30 Years in Business
C&S
Carpet Mills CARPET & LINOLEUM 30 Sq. Yds. $585 Installed with Pad Berber, Plush or Commercial Free Metal Included Call Tom
800-861-5445 or 508-886-2624 LAWN CARE
Green Junk Removal Moving & Storage
• Spring Cleanup • Mulch • Lawnmowing/ Fertilizing • Tree/Bush Trimming • Tree Removal •Walkways, Patios & More
We Buy, Move or Remove Everything Antiques to Modern Licensed & Insured Call Peter (978)
774-230-0422
835-2601
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Fully Insured Free Estimates www.millerslandscapingma.com
• WATER DAMAGE • • WATER STAINS •
✰✰✰✰✰
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LAWN MAINTENANCE & LANDSCAPE PROJECTS
Foundation Repairs Brick • Block • Stone Basement Waterproofing
Clean ups, Edging, Mulching Professional Service TOTALLY INSURED
SEALCOATING
B&F Sealcoating Hot Crack Sealing Free Residential Estimates 13 Years Experience Fully Insured • Quality Work Reasonable Price
Bob Fahlbeck • 508-839-3942
508-835-4729 • West Boylston
Owner Operator Insured
The Sharpening Guy Serving Central Mass Mobile and Pickup & Delivery Select Residential Items | Call for Details
RESIDENTIAL
Knives • Scissors • Garden Tools Axes • Chain Saws • Mower Blades Electric Trimmers & Knives Push Mowers • Machetes
COUNTRYSIDE PAINTING
INTERIOR & EXTERIOR Call Jim Charest 508-865-4321 or Cell 508-277-9421 TREE WORK
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SPECIAL: 6 Items $25!!
MR. LE 508.865.4248
Donald F. Mercurio BULKHEADS
508-826-2338
508-476-1436 watsonslandscape.biz
PAINTING SERVICES
Spring Cleanup - Dethatching - Lawn Cutting and more!
508-865-8539
Steve Watson Douglas, MA
PAINTING SERVICES
A Better Cut Lawn!
A professional lawn service company serving Sutton and Millbury residents for 25 years
Perennial Gardens & Lawn Care
MASONRY
LAWN CARE
A.B.C. LAWN
COMPLETE LAWN MAINTENANCE Mowing • Weeding • Fertilizing • Trimming Aerating • Thatching Spring & Fall Cleanup Auto Sprinklers & Drip Systems • Sod & Seeding New Mulch (Bark, Hemlock & Pine) • Rock Gardens Steps • Retaining Wall • Flagstone • Pavestone Brick • Decking & Fencing • Patio FREE ESTIMATES ALL WORK GUARANTEED
Watsons Landscape
WE ALSO SERVICE:
Barbers, Beauty Salons, Groomers, Vets, Tailors, Farmers, Restaurants ALL TYPES OF SCISSORS INCLUDING:
Japanese Style, Barber, Groomer & Specialty Scissors, Clipper Blades, Knives & More
Five Star Painting Interior/Exterior Painting & Staining • Powerwashing Concrete Epoxy Fully Licensed and Insured Grafton Resident
508-479-8040 WELLS No Water? Stop Wishing For It! Well & Pump Installation & Filtration Service
978-422-7471 24 Hr Emergency Service 877-816-2642 Mobile: 978-815-3188
CALL OR TEXT MIKE 978-855-9800 A P R I L 2 1, 2 0 16 • W O R C E S T E R M A G A Z I N E . C O M
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SNEADE BROS. VINYL SIDING & REPLACEMENT WINDOWS Fully licensed & Insured
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Richard Sneade
508-839-1164
www.sneadebrothers windowandsiding.com
SPRING FLING FAIR & FUNDRAISER
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C & S Carpet Mills Carpet & Linoleum 30 Sq. Yds. $589 Installed with Pad. Free Metal Incl’d. Berber, Plush or Commercial. Call Tom: 800-861-5445 or 508-886-2624
Wachusett Painting Co. Let our skilled painters complete your painting needs. Exteriors & Interiors Competitive prices. Call or email today for an appointment for your free estimate. 508-479-6760 Email: wachupainting@gmail.com Credit Cards Accepted
New England Tree Experts Tree Removal, Tree Trimming Stump Grinding 508-842-3393
Creative Floors, Inc. Ceramic-Carpet-Vinyl Marble- Granite- Laminate Wallpaper Pre-finished Hardwood Sales-Design- Installation Residential & Commercial Free Estimates. Carpet Binding Financing Available Come visit our showroom! 508-829-7444 www.creativefloorsinc.com
HEATING/ AIR CONDITIONING
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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
• A P R I L 2 1, 2 0 16
Rutland Heating & A/C SERVICE & INSTALLATION "We cater to the independent oil customer!" Rutland, MA Call 774-234-0306 HOME IMPROVEMENT C&R Remodeling Additions & all home improvements, 25 yrs exp. New & historic David 508-829-4581 HOME REPAIR/ RESTORATION Need it Fixed? General Home & Small Business Repairs Light Construction No Job Too Small Call Bob at 978-422-8632 or 978-790-8727 CELL email: fixit@callbobhill.com www.callbobhill.com
NO WATER? Stop wishing for it! A&W Welltech Corp. WELL & PUMP Installation & Filtration Service 978-422-7471 24hr Emergency Service 877-816-2642 Mobile 978-815-3188
PLUMBING
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JOSH SHEA PLUMBING
GRASS MOWING A.B.C. LAWN
FURNITURE RESTORATION Paul G. Hanson Furniture Repair. Major/Minor Repairs. Chair regluing. Touch ups. Pick-up & delivery. Call Paul (978)464-5800
Let our skilled painters complete your painting needs Exteriors & Interiors
Interior Painting Only $149 Average 12x16 room. Prompt service. Reliable. Refs. Dutch Touch Painting 508-867-2550
WELLS
Specializing in plumbing service and repairs.18+ years of experience. Licensed & Insured Master Plumber #13680 joshsheaplumbing.com 508-868-5730 POOLS J.C. Pools Call NOW to schedule your installation! Service, Chemicals & Supplies. In-ground & Above ground. www.jcpools.net 508-882-3913 978-355-6465 ROOFING ROOFING SPECIALIST John Hickey Const. Free estimates, call for the best roof at the best price. Fully insured. MA Reg#103286 Shingle or rubber, seamless gutters. 1-800-435-5129 or 978-537-1641 Commercial and Residential jhickey6019@yahoo.com SEALCOATING
A Better Cut Lawn! Spring Cleanup, Dethatching, Lawn Cutting & more! A professional lawn service company servicing Millbury & Sutton residents for 25 years! Free estimates! 508-865-8539
LANDSCAPE CONSTRUCTION BobCatBob
$ 80- per hour, 2 hour minimum. 508-579-4670
LANDSCAPING & LAWN MAINTENANCE Better Yards & Gardens LLC Spring/Fall Clean-Ups, Dethatching, Mowing, Aeration, Slice Seeding, Fertilizer Programs, Mulching, Edging, Planting, Pruning, Landscape Design & Installation. Fully Licensed & Insured 508-641-5687 Free Mowing Offer!
B & F Sealcoating Hot Crack Sealing Free Residential Estimates 13 Years Exp. Fully Ins. Quality Work Reasonable Price Bob Fahlbeck 508-839-3942
Mow, Clean Up, Prune, Mulch! Financing & Prepay Discount Estimates within 24 Hours
LANDSCAPING & LAWN MAINTENANCE
Landscape Design & Maintenance
(508) 410-2756 Clean ups, Walkways/Patios, Bobcat Services, Lawn Renovation, Yard Expansion and more!! lawnbz@gmail.com Dave’s Tree & Landscaping Enhancing the view from your home. Custom & Ornamental Pruning. Mulching. Planting. Lawn Mowing. Tree Removal. Certified Arborist. Call for consultation & free estimate. (508)829-6803. davestreeandlandscaping.com Burnham Maintenance Clean-ups. Lawn Maintenance. Shrub Pruning. Bark Mulch, Screened Loam & Compost. Patios & Walkways. Fertilization Programs. Deliveries Available. Please call 508-829-3809 MULCH & LOAM Sterling Peat Inc. Quality Screened Loam. Mulches. Compost- w/Loam Mix. 2"-Gravel, Fill. Fieldstone.
EMPLOYMENT HELP WANTED Preschool Teacher Here We Grow Preschool in Clinton is hiring a full time preschool teacher. Must be at least EEC Teacher cert. Contact Rose 978-368-7400 Exp Bulldozer Operator Hoisting License Required. Call (508) 881-1600. Ask for Mary x306 or Larry x321
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HELP WANTED LOCAL Asphalt Laborers & Drivers Wanted CDL Drivers and Laborers with experience FT. Caruso Paving 508-886-4736
LIVE-IN CAREGIVERS NEEDED IMMEDIATELY We are a very well-established and respected Home Care Agency. Requirements 1. Active CNA/HHA 2. You must be authorized to work in the U.S. 3. Letters of Recommendation / References 4. You must pass a drug screening test 5. Must pass a background check 6. Live-In homecare experience a plus Please send resume and cover letter to Email Address Jobs@myguardianangelshomecare.com or call 203-439-7707, to be considered. Applications are accepted by appointment only.
ARCHway, Inc. An agency serving adolescents and adults on the autism spectrum is seeking energetic and creative people to fill the following positions: Part Time Residential Instructor positions available to teach activities of daily living and social skills. Hours available are: 2nd and 3rd shifts Mon-Fri, 1st, 2nd and 3rd Shifts Sat and Sun Starting Pay is $13.00/hour To apply: Fax/mail a letter of interest and resume along with salary requirements to:
ARCHway, Inc.
77 Mulberry St. Leicester, MA 01524 Fax: 508-892-0259 Email: scombs@archwayinc.org
FOSTER PARENTS
FOSTER PARENTS WANTED 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 SIGNING BONUS Call for Details (Must mention this ad during inquiry)
688 Main Street, Holden, MA Toll Free (877) 446-3305
www.devereuxma.org
Expert Staffing in partnership with Injectronics, has openings for Production Associates SEVERAL JOB OPENINGS- Clinton, MA Expert Staffing is hiring for 12 hour rotating shifts! Are you seeking a new full time career opportunity? If you have good work history and reliable transportation call Expert Staffing today at (978)798-1610 Job Summary: Clean room and assembly production workers. Requirements: High School Graduate or GED Must be able to read, write and communicate in English Basic Math and computer skills needed Detail oriented Must be able to pass a pre-employment drug test EOE Quality Technicians for a Friday-Sunday 12 hour shift (am and pm)- Work 36 hours get paid for 40 Production Associates for new 12 hour rotating shifts, both days and nights. 7am-7pm and 7pm-7am These positions will be strictly working in the clean room on a 3 person assembly line. Apply in person at: EXPERT STAFFING 557 Lancaster Street, Leominster, MA 01453 Walk ins welcome Please send resumes to: sharon.wyatt@expert-staffing.com
JOB FAIR AT EXPERT STAFFING WE HAVE JOBS FOR EVERYONE!!!!
Job Opportunities Available in Gardner, Fitchburg, Leominster, Devens, Sterling, Clinton, Westborough, and Westminster.
SATURDAY, APRIL 23RD, 2016 • 9AM TO 3PM POSITIONS AVAILABLE: • Machine Operators • Assemblers • Press Feeder Operators • Packers • Production Line • Forklift Operators/Warehouse • Air Hammer Operators • Conveyor Tenders • Baggers, Blenders and Rollman
• Production Line Operators • Quality Inspectors • Maintenance Mechanic • Process Technician • Quality Technician • Days & Night Shifts • 8 & 12 Hour shifts • Temporary and Temp to Hires
557 LANCASTER ST. LEOMINSTER, MA 01453
978-798-1610
Banquet Servers - Bus Staff Harrington Farm is seeking part-time servers and bussers to join our exceptional banquet team. Must have scheduling flexibility that includes weekends and holidays. Previous banquet serving experience preferred but not required for the right person, must be very hands-on, self-motivated, and team oriented. Great working environment with world class team. Contact: cindy@harringtonfarm.com or 978-464-5600 Seasonal Helper/Laborer Full time for Holden Public Works Dept. (May - Sept. 1st). Must possess valid Mass. Driver’s license & be 18 years of age. $10.00/hr. Apply at Office of Town Manager, 1204 Main Street, Holden, MA 01520 or visit www.holdenma.gov Employment Opportunities for further information. EOE/AA
MERCHANDISE CEMETERY PLOTS
Jobs, Jobs, Jobs
North Central Mass At Operon, you can be proud to play a part in creating products that improve the quality of life for others--even saving lives. We have Quality Inspector, Assembler, Packer, Machine Operator & Shipping/Receiving positions open immediately. To apply, please visit our website: www.operonresource. com; or call (978) 937 8887.
Sigler Machine Company Part time office work in small family run company. Knowledge of Quickbooks preferred. Flexible hours, days. 978-422-7868
Worcester County Memorial Park, Paxton, MA Garden of the Cross - 2 Lots Value $10,500 - asking $5000 OBO 774-239-9189 Worc. County Memorial Park, Paxton Garden of Honor, 2 plots, Plot 17, Unit C, Graves 3 & 4. Today’s cost is $8,800 for both. Asking $3500 total for both. Call 978-582-9309 Worcester County Memorial Park Paxton, MA Garden of the Cross Premier Location, Must sell Value $5250 Asking $4000 OBO 508-799-5678 Worc. County Memorial Park Paxton. Garden of Faith, 2 plots, Section #347-A 1&2. Today’s cost is $3,900.00 for both. Asking $1,500.00 total for both. Call 508-882-3421 or 909-714-0064
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www.centralmassclass.com
Special Events Directory 35 Park Ave., Worcester, MA 01605 508-791-2383 • www.ToomeyRents.Com
FOR SALE
WANTED TO BUY
C-13 Zeppelin Stamp Flag Cancelled $200. Got Stamp Questions? Call Ron at 413896-3324
Veteran Will Buy Military Items American, German, Japanese, Italian etc. From Vietnam, Korea, WW2, WW1 and earlier. Please call 978-928-1238.
Piano Mahogany, upright, w/bench. 1st flr., easy move. Perfect for aspiring musicians.Free! 508245-8830 Golf clubs, bag, cart (used) Asking $250. 508-865-5726*
Tables • Chairs • China • Linen
Knee Scooter - Like New Tierod steering and brake. Metal basket. $175 OBO. 978-6977964. Lane Furniture Maroon Queen bed frame Head Board / Foot Board & Rails $300/bo 978-305-4784 Leave Mg
Food Service Equipment … TOOLS, TOO!
Rent Quality ... Rent Toomey’s!
For the Perfect Wedding
L
#1
Voted Best Bakery in Worcester 45 Times!
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
Delicious Fresh Gluten-Free Cookies & Cakes
133 Gold Star Blvd., Worcester
508-852-0746
www.thecrownbakery.com
ESTATE SALE 12 Applewood Rd W. Boylston Saturday, April 23, 9am-2pm. Furniture, appliances and other household items.
HAPPY MOTHER’S DAY
WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM
Two tires 205-65-15, new on rims. $35 for both. 978-5018541. Mario. Golf Cart Sun Mountain three wheel push cart, used. $40 firm. Call 508-813-3737. Pasta Machine Never used. $25 OBO. 508-752-2425
In Bloom
8 Ft. Coleman Inflatable kayak. $30. 508-829-0322
Fresh Floral Designs & Silk Arrangements
Mens Bicycle Like new, hardly used. Paid $450, will sell for $300 obo. Helmet incl. 774285-0598
Designs by Lisa Lisa Marks Floral Designer www.Inbloomdbl.com Lmarks29@yahoo.com 508-280-8605 Holden, MA
FOR SALE Motorized Wheelchair
Pride Jazzy Select 6 Ultra used only 3 weeks. Great stability on 6 wheels, tight turn radius, elevating pwr seat, fully adjustable foot platform, 300 lb wgt capacity. Asking $3500 OBO. 508-783-5431
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Single Bed Electric adjustable with side bars & pressure pad. $450. 774-262-7714
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C-13 Zeppelin Stamp Flag Cancelled $200. Got Stamp Questions? Call Ron at 413896-3324 Ariens Snow Blower Elec. start, service records. Manual/ parts. $400 508-245-8803 MISC HUSKY POWER WASHER 7150 PSI $90.00,HOOVER STEAM VAC DELUXE MODEL F5865-900 $90.00 508-9814641 FURNITURE Corner Hutch Solid pine - 4 doors - 48" x 76". Accommodates 42" television. $250. Photo available. 508-829-6792
YARD SALES & FLEA MARKETS Saturday, April 23rd 61 Apple Tree Ln - Holden. 8 am - 1 PM, no early birds please. A bit of everything; furniture, clothing, household items, & golf stuff EVERYTHING MUST GO!
REAL ESTATE
PAXTON: $469,900
RUTLAND: $262,400
HOLDEN: $132,900 (CONDOMINIUM)
Yard Sale & Flea Market Directory
GRAFTON FLEA MARKET, INC. OPEN EVERY SUNDAY OUTDOOR/INDOOR
Happy Spring!
If this is the year you plan to buy a home, I can help. Call me to see these and other great homes currently available. Are you thinking of selling? Curious what your home is worth in today’s market? It would be my pleasure to prepare a complimentary market analysis. With more buyers and fewer available properties, this is an ideal time to sell.
Lisa Hugo
Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage 6 Park Ave, Worcester MA 01605 Lisa.hugo@nemoves.com (508) 723-4029
6am - 4pm • Acres of Bargains • Hundreds of Vendors • Thousands of Buyers • 47th Season Rte. 140, Grafton/ Upton town line Grafton Flea is the Place to be! Selling Space 508-839-2217 www.graftonflea.com
EDUCATION MUSIC INSTRUCTION Instrumental, Vocal, Jazz Improv Lessons available on most instruments. Lou Borelli 508-752-6213
HEALTHCARE SERVICES HEALTHCARE SERVICES MISCELLANEOUS Certified Pharmacy Technician Certified Pharmacy Technician for busy Independent Pharmacy in Rutland-full or part time position available. Retail experience preferred. Fax resume to 508-886-2443. 508-886-6261
LAND FOR SALE IN STERLING BY OWNER
Residential building lot of 2.8 Acres of hardwood forest. Has 321 ft. frontage which allows for a two family or duplex home. South facing hillside overlooking East Waushacum Lake. Excellent orientation for active or passive solar system with walkout basement. Located on dead end road with low traffic, and a two minute walk to town-residents only beach. Priced at $179,900.00. Shown by appointment only. Please call 978-422-3566.
Publisher’s Notice All real estate advertised in this publication is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968, the Massachusetts Anti Discrimination Act and the Boston & Cambridge Fair Housing Ordinances which make it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation, or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, national origin, ancestry, age, children, marital status, sexual orientation, veterans status or source of income or any intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis. To complain of discrimination call HUD toll free at 1-800-827-5005. For the NE area call HUD at 617-994-8300. The toll free number for the hearing impaired is 1-800-927-9275 or 617-565-5453
www.centralmassclass.com REAL ESTATE
AUTOS
VACATION PROPERTY FOR RENT
2012 Ford Focus SE Auto/ P w r R o o f /B l u e t o o t h /S y n c / Cruise/AC/Sirius/Snow Tires 59,900 $8,500 508-353-7766
Moody Beach, ME Beautiful ocean views and short walk to Moody Beach. New three bedroom, two bath home on Ocean Ave. $2200/ week. For information call 774-292-9184, or e-mail: wkdubovick@comcast.net
AUTOMOTIVE AUTO/MOTORCYCLE 2001 Suzuki Intruder 1500cc, showroom condition, lots of chrome, Vehix pipes. $4000. Call John at 978-466-6043. 2007 Suzuki Boulevard Cruising Motorcycle C90T; 1474cc; 6300 miles, 1 owner, perfect cond. accessories and new battery. Garaged, covered & serviced. $6,000 508-8498635 1999 Road King Under 8,000 miles. Too many extras to list. Always stored in room temperature. $13,000 obo 978-4645525 or 781-879-8275 cell
2008 Honda Metropolitan Scooter Black and gray. Mint cond. 469 miles. Asking $1650.00. Includes helmet. 207-289-9362 OR 207-450-1492. 2005 Harley Davidson heritage classic Mint condition motor cycle with many extras and a boat load of spare parts. Must see to appreciate. Just over 18,000 miles. $9,295 978365-2660 AUTO/SUV 1997 Chevrolet Blazer SUV, 171,895 miles. Blue. Can be seen at A&P Auto, 1298 Water St., Fitchburg. $1,500 OBO AUTO/VAN 2008 Ford E250 Extended Van 3dr, A-T/AC, Power package. Roof racks. Int. shelving, tow package, 6 rims, 8 tires in good cond. Exc. overall cond. 57K miles. $11,499. 508-8292907
AUTOS
* WE PURCHASE WELL USED/FORGOTTEN ITEMS & CONTENTS OF OLD BUILDINGS * industrial items • machine lights steel furniture • carts • brackets trucks • signs • shelf stock barn & garage items and more...
1999 Pontiac Grand Am 6 Cylinder, automatic, needs work or use for parts. 159,903 miles. $675. 978-422-8084
2003 Volkswagen Beetle One owner. Dark blue. 102,000 miles. Owner’s manual. Excellent condition. 5 speed, disc music, title. Call 508-829-3752 $3,500 508-829-3752 2008 Ford Mustang 8 cyl, 300HP. 21K miles. Never driven during winter. Always garaged. Perfect cond. $21,900 negotiable. 508-865-3528 after 3pm. 2002 Chevrolet Corvette 39,000 miles Red with black interior. Car is in excellent condition! $24,000 or best offer. Must sell! Call: 774-823-0466.
Blue Collar Vintage Salvage
508-892-5211
468 Auburn St., Leicester, MA
Call BEFORE you get a dumpster or discard anything!
25 HP Suzuki (Like New) with Boat & Trailer with Bonus 2 Free Air Tickets to Orlando and 5 star condo for a week. Disney anyone? Pete 407-3753917 $4,000 Will Trade Toro El start 724 Snowblower for boat, w/motor, any size. 724 $1200 sailboat OK must run fixer-upper $1 508-765-3570 CAMPERS/TRAILERS 3 Horse Trailer 2002 Exiss XT/ 300 Gooseneck. Great condition. All alum. S.S. nose. On craigslist pics. $9,000. Paxton. Call Robert at 508-757-0887*
FREE !!!
With any Car Purchase
• Class A, B, C Motor Homes • Trailers Parts • Propane • Service Transportation • Temporary Housing
BUDGET AUTO SALES 100 Shrewsbury St.
Visit our NEW WEBSITE to see Inventory & Prices
budgetautosales1.com
Fuller RV Rentals & Sales 150 Shrewsbury St., Boylston 508-869-2905 www.fullerrv.com BBB Accredited A+ Rating
FREE Nationwide Parts Locator Service Deposits conveniently taken over the phone. • Foreign & Domestic • Early & Late Model • Engines • Transmissions • New Radiators • Gas Tanks • Wheels • Tires • Balancers • Exhaust Manifolds • Window Motors
Amherst-Oakham AUTO RECYCLING
91 DAY GUARANTEE
Trust us to do it right! Toll Free1-800-992-0441 Fax 508-882-5202 Off Rte 122 • 358 Coldbrook Rd., Oakham, MA www.amherstoakhamauto.com
Worcester No.
508-799-9969
LEGALS/PUBLIC NOTICES
BOATS
TRY BEFORE YOU BUY!
32” FLAT SCREEN TV
USED & NEW AUTO PARTS
Bought & Sold
1988 MercedesBenz 300 SEL 6 cylinder gas. Very good cond. Runs exc. $3200.00 195k miles. Located in Sutton, MA 774-287-0777
2012 Cadillac CTS AWD, 21,800 miles. Crystal red. Heated black leather seats. Panoramic roof. Dealer maintained. Under warranty. $24,500.00 978-534-8860
Over 40 Acres! Over 3000 Vehicles!
WORCESTER HOUSING AUTHORITY ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS April 21, 2016 SEALED BIDS shall be received at the Purchasing Office, 69 Tacoma St., Worcester, MA 01605 IFBs maybe picked up at the location above or may be downloaded from our website: www.worcester-housing.com/purchasing, or call (508) 695-3203, TDD (508) 798-4530. Bidders are responsible for ensuring they have received any/all addenda prior to submitting a bid. Separate awards will be made for each IFB. WHA reserves the right to reject any all responses, in whole or in part, deemed to be in their best interest. Award of all contracts is subject to the approval of the WHA Executive Director or Board of Commissioners. The Operating Agency shall indemnify and hold harmless the WHA and its officers or agents from any and all third party claims arising from activities under these Agreements as set fort in MGL c.258, section 2 as amended. Bid No. Release Date Project Title Bid Surety Bid Opening 16-11 4/21/2016 Locksmith Services N/A 10:00 AM May 5, 2016 Re Cappoli Chief Procurement Officer Visit our website at: www.worcester-housing.com/purchasing
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 May 5, 2016 at 7:35pm on the petition of Michael Niejadlik for a home business special permit. The property that is the subject of this petition is located at 337 Central Turnpike, Sutton MA on Assessors Map #24, Parcel # 37. 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 Filed in the Town Clerk’s Office
Public Hearing Notice Sutton Planning Board In accordance with the provisions of Chapter 41, Sections 81T and 81U, M.G.L. and Section VI. H. of the Sutton Zoning Bylaw, the Planning Board will hold a public hearing on the application of Ron & Diane Novak, 13 Chase Road, Sutton, MA. The application is for a definitive subdivision plan entitled “Tefta Drive” prepared by Hawk Consulting Inc. Sutton, MA showing a new private road with two (2) proposed lots and a new 5.5 acre retreat lot with 103’ of road frontage for the existing home at the end of Chase Road. The hearing will take place on the third floor of the Sutton Town Hall on May 2, 2016 at 7:15 PM. A copy of the plan and application can be inspected in the Office of the Town Clerk during normal office hours. Any person interested, or wishing to be heard on the proposed plan, should appear at the time and place designated. Miriam Sanderson, Chair Published April 14 & 21, 2016
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 May 5, 2016 at 7:30pm on the petition of George McGuirk for a variance from Sect. III(B)(3)(Table II) of the town’s bylaws for side yard setback relief. The property that is the subject of this petition is located at 87 Dudley Road, Sutton MA on Assessors Map #5, Parcel # 110. The property is located in the Industrial 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 Filed in the Town Clerk’s Office
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www.centralmassclass.com LEGALS/PUBLIC NOTICES LEGAL NOTICE COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS ENERGY FACILITIES SITING BOARD
Commonwealth of Massachusetts The Trial Court Probate and Family Court Worcester Probate and Family Court 225 Main St. Worcester, MA 01608 Docket No. WO97P3558GR1 CITATION GIVING NOTICE OF PETITION FOR APPOINTMENT OF GUARDIAN FOR INCAPACITATED PERSON PURSUANT TO G.L. c. 190B, §5-304 In the matter of: Darrell Nelson Of: Worcester, MA RESPONDENT Alleged Incapacitated Person To the named Respondent and all other interested persons, a petition has been filed by Dept. of Developmental Services, of Worcester, MA in the above captioned matter alleging that Darrell Nelson is in need of a Guardian and requesting that Joanne Evans of Worcester, MA (or some other suitable person) be appointed as Guardian to serve Without Surety on the bond. The petition asks the court to determine that the Respondent is incapacitated, that the appointment of a Guardian is necessary, and that the proposed Guardian is appropriate. The petition is on file with this court and may contain a request for certain specific authority. 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 5/17/2016. 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 abovenamed person cannot afford a lawyer, one may be appointed at State expense. WITNESS, Hon. Leilah A Keamy, First Justice of this Court. Date: April 11, 2016 Stephanie K. Fattman Register of Probate 04/21/2016 WM
PUBLIC AUCTION NOTICE Notice is hereby given pursuant to provisions of M.L. c255 sec.39A the following vehicles will be sold April 30, 2016 at a private sale to satisfy our garage lien thereon for towing and storage charges and expenses of sale and notice. 2004 Dodge Stratus V.I.N. 1BEL36R84N266266 2004 Acura TSX V.I.N. JH4CL96814C003708 2004 Lexus RX330 V.I.N. JTJHA31U840048268 2005 Chevy Aveo V.I.N. KLITD52685B337826 Sale held at Early’s on Park Ave.,Inc., 536 Park Avenue, Worcester, MA 01603
ANSWERS TO TODAY’S PUZZLE
Town of Millbury BOARD OF APPEALS In accordance with Chapter 40A of the Massachusetts General Laws and the Zoning Ordinances of the Town of Millbury, a public hearing will be held in the hearing room of the Municipal Office Building, 127Elm Street, Millbury, MA on: Wednesday, April, 27, 2016 At: 7:00 p.m. To act on a petition from: Elite Home Builders, P.O. Box 1205, Westboro, MA 01581 For a Variance in the Millbury Zoning Ordinance relative to: property at Howe Avenue., Millbury, MA – Map# 45 - 37 Lot# 219222 - 80-84. Applicant desires to construct six, three story residential apartment buildings with a total of 72 units. Applicant seeks a variance to install sloped roofs on 6 three story residential buildings which would exceed the maximum height allowance of 30 feet, per Millbury Zoning By-law 22.3; buildings with sloped roof will be 36’ 10” high. All interested parties are invited to attend. Paul Nigosian, Chairman Millbury Board of Appeals April 14, 2016, April 21, 2016
The Millbury Board of Selectmen will hold a Public Hearing on Tuesday, May 10, 2016 at 7:30 p.m. in the Conference Room, Municipal Office Building, 127 Elm Street, Millbury, MA to act upon the application for a Transfer of License and Change of Manager from Trann, LLC to T&P Liquor, LLC, 123 Main Street, Millbury, Millbury Liquor.
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NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARINGS TO BE HELD BY MASSACHUSETTS ENERGY FACILITIES SITING BOARD STAFF REGARDING PROPOSED CONSTRUCTION OF NATURAL GAS PIPELINES, COMPRESSOR STATIONS, AND AN LNG STORAGE FACILITY IN WORCESTER, NORFOLK, AND BRISTOL COUNTIES, MASSACHUSETTS Algonquin Gas Transmission, LLC Federal Energy Regulatory Commission Docket No.: PF16-1-000 Algonquin Natural Gas Transmission, LLC(“Algonquin”) has proposed to construct new natural gas pipelines and related facilities in New Jersey, New York, Connecticut, Rhode Island, and Massachusetts. The facilities would comprise the Access Northeast Project (“Project”). In Massachusetts, the Project would include approximately 55.51 miles of new pipeline, plus additional facilities, both of which are described in more detail in the tables below. Proposed New Pipeline Facilities in Massachusetts Facility Name
Diameter
Location(s)
Length (in miles)
Q-1 Loop
30-inch
Medway, Bellingham, Franklin, Millis, Norfolk, Walpole, Sharon, Canton, Stoughton
21.68
I-8 Loop
30-inch
Braintree, Weymouth
4.19
Westboylston Lateral
16-inch
Medway, Milford, Upton, Grafton, Sutton, Millbury, Shrewsbury, Boylston, West Boylston
26.78
Acushnet
24-inch
Freetown, Acushnet
2.86
Additional Proposed Facilities in Massachusetts Facility Type
Location(s)
Add 10,320 horsepower (“hp”) to a compressor station that has been proposed to be constructed as part of the Atlantic Bridge Project, FERC CP16-9, which is under review.
Weymouth
Build a new 10,320 hp compressor station
Rehoboth
LNG liquefaction, storage, and vaporization installation, including two LNG storage tanks with a total combined capacity of 6.8 billion cubic feet
Acushnet
New metering and regulation station
Acushnet
New metering and regulation station
West Boylston
The Project is currently being reviewed by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (“FERC”) in what is called the Pre-Filing Process. FERC will prepare an Environmental Impact Statement (“EIS”) to satisfy the requirements of the National Environmental Policy Act. The EIS will be used by FERC to consider the environmental impacts that could result if it approves the Project. FERC is required to review and recommend measures to avoid, minimize or mitigate such impacts. The Massachusetts Energy Facilities Siting Board (“Siting Board”) participates in FERC proceedings involving natural gas pipelines in order to represent the interests of the Commonwealth and its residents. The Siting Board will hold four public hearings to hear directly from residents, officials, and other interested persons about their concerns relating to the Project. The Siting Board hearings, set forth below, are separate and distinct from the public hearings being held by FERC. Monday, May 2, 2016, 7:00 pm Grafton High School Auditorium 24 Providence Road Grafton, MA 01519
Thursday, May 12, 2016, 7:00 pm Ford Middle School Auditorium 708 Middle Road Acushnet, MA 02743
Monday, May 9, 2016, 7:00 pm Walpole High School Auditorium 275 Common Street Walpole, MA 02081
Wednesday, May 11, 2016, 7:00 pm Abigail Adams Middle School Auditorium 89 Middle Street East Weymouth, MA 02189
The Siting Board also seeks written comments concerning the proposed Project. Comments should be sent by email to BOTH robert.j.shea@state.ma.us and dpu.efiling@state.ma.us or by U.S. mail to: Energy Facilities Siting Board, One South Station, Boston, Massachusetts 02110, Attention: Robert Shea, Presiding Officer. The comments should be sent to the Siting Board by May 20, 2016. The Siting Board will use the comments it receives, whether oral or written, in drafting a comment letter on the Project to FERC. If you have any questions, please contact Robert Shea at the e-mail or physical address above. Additional information about the Project is available on the FERC website (http://www.ferc.gov). Click on the eLibrary link, click on “General Search” and enter the FERC docket number “PF16-1.” For assistance, please contact FERC Online Support at ferconlinesupport@ferc.gov or call FERC at 1-866-208-3676.
Two minutes with...
Jim Bender
STEVEN KING
When he was 10, Jim Bender won a fly rod while attending a Trout Unlimited meeting with his dad and uncle. He was, if not quite literally, hooked from that moment on, and hasn’t stopped fly fishing since. A city kid, Bender attended Saint Peter’s, then Nichols College, where he played two sports: hockey and baseball. Bender continued to fly fish into adulthood and didn’t heed the advice from friends not to mix your passion with your job, going on to open Lower Forty Outfitters in Worcester. After 28 years selling fly fishing gear, hosting workshops and speakers, Bender is calling it a career and retiring in June. Kelley Square seems like an unlikely spot for a fly fishing shop. Why did you decide almost 28 years ago to set up shop here at 134 Madison Street? Not really. I think it’s
easy access to 146, to 290 and to the Mass Pike. It wasn’t important to me in the beginning. Fly fishers will seek me out. I don’t need the visibility. I’m not a skier. Ask me where the ski shops are… I don’t know. I don’t ski.
Most people have seen the movie “A River Runs Through It,” with Brad Pitt casting what looks like 50 feet of looping, dancing fishing line onto a sun dappled river. Is fly fishing a difficult skill to learn? I don’t think so. You
just have to have patience. I never thought that way. You need some good advice starting out, and it would help if you had a friend or a relative who fished, but I think you could pick it up pretty easy.
Fly fishing had a real resurgence a few years back. Is it still as popular? No. The youth of
this country do not fly fish anymore. It’s very rare that you see a kid in here. and never a teenager. They have social lives and school or whatever. They’re doing other things. We don’t have customers between the ages of 13-22. I’m about as far west as you could go and still take advantage of the salt water market. We used to have guys who were solely saltwater fly fishermen, but now they do both. I was told one time, I’m not sure how true it is, but out of a population of 10,000 there’s only one fly fisherman. It’s a small community.
Talk about some of the different types of artificial flies and their applications. There
are only three insects you have to concern
yourself with when fly fishing for trout: mayflies, caddisflies and stoneflies. Those are the major ones. You deal with the different stages of those insects: pupas, emergers and adults. The intrigue to fly fishing is figuring out what they’re taking. Once you do, then you get the reward. that’s populated, that river will be hit. Most of those insects are subsurface and Like the Quinapoxet in Holden, I call it the some are surface. You never stop learning. Quinapoxet Worcester’s River because it’s Do people still hand-tie flies? Out of all the easily accessible. departments in this store, that is the one Are mercury levels still high in in free-fall right now. People just don’t do Massachusetts’s fish? You used to hear a lot it anymore. People buy flies; most people about acid rain as well, but you don’t hear don’t have the time to do it. It’s therapy, about it anymore. Before they stock, they that’s what it is. I’m a daydreamer; I did a check the PH levels in the rivers. They lot of Bone and Tarpon fishing in Belize. won’t put fish in them if they are not up I could be tying flies in the middle of to standards. I haven’t heard of any issues winter, but in my mind I’m there. Most … even in the Millers River, which used of the companies that sell flies are U.S.to have a terrible problem. If you leave a based, but they set up plants all over the river alone, over time it will clean itself. world. They might be made in Kenya. The I’m a catch-and-release guy. Every once quality is superior, it isn’t what it was 20 and a while, I’ll take a striper. If I take two years ago. You could take a dozen flies and a year, that would be a lot, and it would put them on a counter and they would be have to be at the end of my session. I fish exactly a like. The appeal to tying your in a kayak. What am I going to do, babysit own fly is that you can tie a fly that you this thing for four hours? If I take one, can’t buy. The flies I use in salt water, I fillet it and eat it that night. I can’t see there’s no pattern for them, and they’re taking them and freezing them. my flies. Plus, it’s a way to vent some creativity … it’s a good way to do it. You’re As a fisherman, talk about you best day on not going to save money tying flies, a guy the water. The day that I think about the who ties flies always buys more material most, I was in Belize. A hurricane had than he needs and can ever use. passed the week prior to me getting there.
Where are some of the better fly fishing rivers and ponds in Mass? You have to go
really west of here, The Swift River, the Ware River, the Millers River, the Green River, the Deerfield River, The North River, The Quinapoxet, the Still Water, all to varying degrees. If it’s next to an area
You have to take a puddle jumper from Belize City north to Ambergris Caye. It’s a 12-minute flight. You could look down at the water and it was just chocolate. I rely on sight. I do very little casting unless I have a target to cast at. You could be standing on the bow of the boat for hours
and see nothing. In the morning, when I went out to fish the clarity of the water was not good. The guide took me to a cut between two keys. It was a little deeper water. That day I hooked seven Tarpon and landed four. I was on from the moment I got there to the moment I left. The guide wanted to stay, but I told him I couldn’t do it. I had a black and blue from the butt of the rod. Every fish was between 50-60 pounds and took an hour. Tarpon can be nudgy. They’re not the most receptive to a fly, but that day there you just had to cover because that Tarpon was going to take. I was so sore. Two years ago, I landed a Tarpon from a kayak in Key West. The thing was probably 30 pounds, but still I don’t know too many people who have done that.
Come June you’re retiring and closing Lower Forty Outfitters. Will you make up for lost time and all the fishing you’ve missed while manning the store for 28 years? That is the
plan right there. That’s plan A. It’s not the hours I’m here, it’s the days. I can’t put two in a row. I do it twice a year: Memorial Day and Labor Day. It’s beaten me up the last three or four years. To some extent, I’ll miss the shop, but I’m ready for it. People ask me what I’m going to do when I retire … I just tell them don’t worry about me. - Steven King APRIL 21, 2016 • WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM
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