JULY 16 - 22 , 2015
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WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM
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Campaign trail cuts Exchanging portraits, through city celebrations building connections Page 17 Page 4
The Braveheart Way Beyond baseball, players learning about life
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The Worcester Bravehearts’ race to a baseball championship in their inaugural season, followed by a struggle to replicate the same success in their sophomore campaign, is reminiscent of the ill-fated former inhabitants of Holy Cross’ Fitton Field – the Worcester Tornadoes. But the players who took the field this summer look nothing like their predecessors. That is especially apparent to me, a kid who was playing summer ball this time a year ago. These college kids on summer break are hustling in and out of the dugout between innings and having fun; they are playing the right way and trying to move up to the major leagues. For this week’s cover story, I set out to learn what this team that made such a big splash in Worcester was all about. I sat in the dugout, ate dinner with a host family and players, and took a 12-hour road trip to Martha’s Vineyard with the team, learning about them, about the team and life as a Braveheart. What I discovered was a mission tied into the Bravehearts’ vision of players wearing a uniform on the field. For a few months out of the year, they are part of something different, something special and something bigger than baseball. - Anthony Rentsch
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4 City Desk 8 Worcesteria 10 Editorial 10 Letter 11 Cover Story 17 Night & Day 20 Krave 22 Film 23 Event Listings 28 Sports Listings 29 Classifieds 39 2 minutes with… About the cover Gavin Tristan greets a fan. Photo by Steven King Design by Kim Miller
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July 16 - 22, 2015 n Volume 40, Number 46
Election campaign trail cuts through city celebrations Tom Quinn
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esidents entering East Park for Worcester’s fireworks show earlier this month were greeted by the usual festive atmosphere of vendors selling trinkets and food - and local politicians selling themselves to potential voters. For Worcesterites, city celebrations are a chance to kick back, relax and enjoy life. For politicians in an election year, they are can’tmiss opportunities to get exposure to wouldbe voters, and hopefully curry their favor. The recent fireworks show, which drew tens of thousands of people, is representative of a larger campaigning strategy that goes beyond street corners and neighborhood meetings and into holiday festivities. At-Large Council candidate Juan Gomez, who said he expected to greet around 4,000 people outside East Park the night of the fireworks, stressed the importance of getting in front of voters at festive events, such as Independence Day. as well as at regular, routine campaign events, such as standing out at rotaries and intersections. “If you rely on one or the other you’re missing out,” said Gomez, who served three terms on the City Council from 2000 to 2005. At-Large City Councilor Moe Bergman said events like the fireworks show are important for visibility and gaining exposure to voters. He also said there are advantages in going to a holiday celebration that the more
traditional neighborhood meetings or crime watch groups cannot match. “It’s also a happy event, a chance to meet people in a less stressful situation,” Bergman said. The first-term councilor said he does not feel like he misses out on holiday events by using the time to campaign, because he has become adept at multi-tasking. “I brought my kids and my wife, so I try to do both, but if you’re going to dedicate yourself to Council you have to balance things,” Bergman said, ticking off a list of other can’t-miss holidays, including St. Patrick’s Day and the next big holiday weekend in Worcester, Columbus Day. First-time candidate Tina Zlody said events like the fireworks show and others were important, not only for meeting voters, but for holding up signs and letting Worcesterites know what their options are. “It’s a nice place to get your name out,” Zlody said. “People don’t always know who’s running for City Council.” Of course, voters have probably caught a glimpse of the names of the candidates running for Council at some point, since supporters take advantage of any well-traveled area of the city to stake out a spot and let people know about their favorite candidate. At-Large Council candidate Bill Coleman, who has run for office various times since 1979 in Worcester, said standouts are important for getting exposure in different neighborhoods.
LOUIE DESPRES
“The more you stand out, the more mobile you are,” Coleman said, noting many candidates will stick around one area for 30 minutes to an hour, before moving to another spot. Coleman said some of the best spots to stand out with signs include Park Ave., at its intersection with Salisbury and Chandler streets, as well as Belmont Street and Webster Square. What qualifies a best spot varies from candidate to candidate, of course, although there are some traditionally well-trafficked sites. Rotaries are especially popular in election season for providing plenty of space and exposure to many passing cars, with spots such as the Union Station rotary at Washington Square attracting a variety of politicians and supporters. With 16 candidates running for six at-large Council seats, 10 School Committee candidates fighting for six seats and eight candidates in contested District Council races, there is some overlap when politicians decide to try for the same spot, exemplified by the Independence Day celebration, in which six candidates competed for the same stretch of sidewalk. At-Large City Council candidate Matt continued on page 7
WOO-TOWN INDE X
No, Bernie Sanders is not running for City Council in Worcester - but he has supporters here
A weekly quality of life check-in of Worcester
Community helps out local barbershop after flooding, as detailed in a T&G story. +2
Holy Cross goes high-profile with Amanda Belichick named its new women’s lacrosse coach. Yes, of that “Belichick” family. +3
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Proving once again we are afraid of our own shadow, someone calls police for unattended briefcase near Elm Park. It was empty. -2
By all accounts, the annual Bow Wow Luau was a rousing success for the Worcester Animal Rescue League (WARL). +1
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Total for this week:
On the flip side, it’s truly the dog days of summer as the city flounders on dog park issue. -3
Speaking of Elm Park, the snail’s pace progress on upgrades there, combined with the debris-ridden and stench-filled waterways are not befitting the country’s oldest stretch of land for public use. -2
They may be struggling to recapture that first-year magic, but the Worcester Bravehearts remain a great way for families to chill out and have fun. +1
With medical marijuana facilities headed for Worcester, one potential site is a former fast-food joint. Fitting, isn’t it? +1
-2 +1 -3 -2 +1 +1
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Common Core ballot question has Worcester roots Tom Quinn
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orcester’s school kids are on summer vacation, but the adults are still dealing with heavy educational questions. Chief among them is whether the state should jettison the controversial federal Common Core standards. A group of activists and legislators is hoping to accomplish that via a ballot question campaign launched earlier this month. Common Core standards are designed to outline what students in grades K-12 should know in English and math at each grade level, and 43 states and Washington D.C. have signed on to a system that, in theory, creates cohesion between school districts across the country and a better set of guidelines to make sure children everywhere are being taught correctly. The standards are backed by the National Governors Association and the Council of Chief State School Officers, with considerable private funding from organizations, including the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. Donna Colorio, the founder of the Common Core Forum, is chairing the End Common Core Massachusetts ballot question campaign, seeking public votes to get a question on the ballot in November to overturn the 2010 Department of Elementary and Secondary Education vote in favor of Common Core. “The impact would be to restore Massachusetts standards to the 2010 standards,” Colorio, who served on the Worcester School Committee from 2011 to 2013 and is running again this year, said. “They were the number one standards, the gold standard.” At the center of the debate about Common Core is the Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers assessment, commonly known as the PARCC assessment. It fulfills a similar role to the MCAS (Massachusetts Comprehensive Assessment System) test, used for years to evaluate students – and by extension, teachers and
school districts. Opponents have said the test is a step backwards for Massachusetts, which is often listed as among the best states in the country for middle and high school education. Dave Perda, the Chief Research and Accountability Officer for Worcester Public Schools, said the district does not have an official stance for or against Common Core standards or PARCC. “We’re cooperating with what the policy makers at the state level want to do,” Perda said. “They don’t really ask us what we think.” Last year, the School Committee voted, 5-2, to adopt a “hybrid” approach to PARCC as one of the state’s largest school districts, with members saying they felt the switch to PARCC was inevitable. The city was allowed to choose, school by school, whether to administer the PARCC test or MCAS during the two “pilot” years of PARCC. PARCC practice test from the 4th-grade Scores are not yet publicly available, but Perda said one incentive offered to schools The remaining 16 schools stuck with MCAS. opting into PARCC during the trial period They are Belmont Street Community, Burncoat was the promise that the state would not Street, Canterbury, Chandler Elementary downgrade the status of the PARCC testing Community, Flagg Street, Grafton Street, Heard schools (for example, from Level 3 to Level 4). Street, Jacob Hiatt Magnet, Midland Street, Only five of the city’s 39 schools serving Nelson Place, Norrback Avenue, Rice Square, grades 3-8 administered the computer-based Tatnuck, West Tatnuck, Union Hill School, PARCC test (the PARCC test is online-only, Vernon Hill School and Sullivan Middle. although paper and pencil versions are Perda said there is potential in a available for school that are not equipped to computerized test format, while noting the handle the computer-based version), while 17 new standards have a lot of “overlap” with opted for the paper-based PARCC assessment. previous Massachusetts standards. Gates Lane, Quinsigamond, Roosevelt, “You’d like to think that it’s progress,” Claremont Academy and Burncoat Middle Perda said. “It allows them to get at some School gave students the PARCC assessment things through different item types that you on computers, the way it is designed to be couldn’t get at through paper and pencil.” taken. Chandler Magnet, City View, Clark Still, he said, not every Worcester school is Street Community, Elm Park Community, equipped to handle the rigors of administering Columbus Park, Francis J. McGrath the PARCC test online. Elementary, Goddard School, Lake View, “We don’t have as much technology for our Lincoln Street, May Street, Thorndyke Road, students to use as I’d like to see,” Perda said. Wawecus Road School, Woodland Academy, “It’s been a good process for the district for us Worcester Arts Magnet, University Park to try this out. It allowed us to test capacity Campus, Forest Grove Middle and Worcester and find bugs.” East Middle gave students a paper-based PARCC follows in the steps of MCAS in version of the test. terms of controversy over stressful testing
PEARSON.COM
math test. and a focus on evaluations, with opponents saying both tests encourage teachers to “teach to the test” rather than focus on a more wellrounded education for their students. Last month, the School Committee unanimously supported a teachers union resolution calling for a moratorium on high-stakes testing. The proposed ballot measure to overturn Common Core is gaining traction with local politicians and residents, because it speaks to an idea many support – exerting local control over local institutions, especially schools. “The state has invested a lot of resources into PARCC. They kind of anticipated that this is the way we’re going, we might as well get a head start,” Perda said. “But a lot of the controversy stems from the idea that education is a matter of local control.” Colorio said she is looking forward to local parents and residents getting a say in a process she says they have not had enough input in. “This is a great opportunity for the people in the state, for our voices to be heard,” Colorio said.
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Summer programs give students another chance S Tom Matthews
chool is out, but not for everyone. For roughly 2,000 students, class is still in session in the form of nine different summer school programs aimed at preventing academic regression and improving the MCAS scores of students who did not achieve proficiency on the most recent round of testing. Indoors and outside, the programs offer a chance for students literally struggling to make the grade to learn in a more relaxed environment than what they will find themselves in when schools reopen later this year. “There is a level of success because students are engaged with the material they need to be,” Worcester Chief Academic Officer, Marco Rodriguez said of the summer programs. He stressed the importance of continued learning for the students over summer break. “The pleasure of this is, for a lot of students it is one place they can continue to learn and socialize,” Rodrigues said. “We make it interactive and something that is enjoyable, but also an environment of learning.” This summer, 1,400 students are enrolled in the Summer Academy, an 18-day, reading-
STEVEN KING
Meera Gurung asks Worcester teacher Kirwin Matthews a question about her MCAS practice test.
focused program for students in grades 1-6. Students in the program have the option of participating in the Youth Opportunities City Recreation Summer Afternoon program, which is held at 10 different city parks. Students in that program can meet and interact with other summer school students in activities such as soccer, basketball and swimming. Parents are not an afterthought, either, with the afternoon program allowing them to pick up their kids at a reasonable time later in the day. Students needing to improve their MCAS scores take part in Summer Camp at Worcester Tech, Claremont Academy, North, South, Doherty and Burncoat high schools. Based on need, students receive threeand-a-half hours of daily instruction in biology, math or English Language Arts (ELA). The 2014 program served 451 students and boasted an attendance rate of more than 89 percent. This year’s program serves more than 300 kids. Students over the age of 16 who need to improves their MCAS scores can take part in the College Community Connection Program. Similar to the MCAS Summer Camp, the continued on page 7
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{ citydesk } In-Vest-ing in dogs
The Worcester County Sheriff’s Office recently received two over-heat detector/alarm systems for its K-9 Unit. The heat alarm systems send an alert to the K-9 handler should the interior of the vehicle exceed a pre-set limit. A beeper on the handler’s duty belt goes off and the windows automatically roll down. Safety measures, including a window fan, light bar and car horn are also activated during the alert. Officers Derek Peck and Peter Campo, and their K-9 partners, Jaxx and Molly, received the alarm systems. “Hearing about canines dying from heat stroke while in the line of duty is an unacceptable tragedy,” Sheriff Lew Evangelidis said. “We are very appreciative of the Massachusetts Vest-a-Dog Organization for their generous donation of two heat alarm detector systems for our K-9 cruisers to help keep our hardworking dogs safe.” CAMPAIGN continued from page 4
Wally said standing out near other politicians is not as tense as voters may think. There is no jockeying for position, and the firsttime candidate said he never feels like other candidates have any animosity toward him or his campaign team. “It’s competitive, but at the same time, we all respect each other, because running for public office, it’s hard work, it takes commitment, so we respect each other,” Wally said. Like Bergman, Wally also said he did not feel like he was missing out on any of the festivities, saying he would feel like he was missing out on something only if he wasn’t campaigning. PROGRAMS continued from page 6
program provides three-and-half hours of instruction in math, biology or ELA. In addition to the academic instruction, students spend two-and-a-half hours in an internship at one of 11 designated spots around the city. Students earn $9 an hour working at sites such as the Greater Worcester Land Trust (GWLT), WCAA TV 13, UMASS Medical School, and Habitat for Humanity RESTORE. Eighty-four students completed the program in 2014, with an attendance rate of 91.6 percent. Of them, 74 percent passed the MCAS later that year. While the program’s success relies on
Collared
St. Michael’s-on-the-Heights Episcopal Church on Burncoat Street has a new priest, with the ordination of Rev. David Woessner recently. Woessner had served as deacon-in-charge of the church. Bishop Doug /Fisher ordained him to the sacred order of priests earlier this month.
Driven
Reliant Medical Group Foundation’s “Drive for a Difference” charity auction and golf classic raised more than $500,000 for its grant making program this year. The event was held at Pleasant Valley Country Club, and featured a live auction with items such as trips to Monte Carlo, Costa Rica and Buenos Aires, and packages for Red Sox and Patriots games. Bidders together raised a record-setting $70,000 for the event’s Fund-A-Need item: a 10-bay infusion center for Reliant’s new ReadyMED Plus location, which is set to open on Shrewsbury Street by the end of the year.
“This is one of the most fun things I’ve ever done,” Wally said. Jennithan Cortes, making his second run at the District 2 Council seat, said appearing at events like the fireworks show and other major city celebrations was about letting voters know candidates support the neighborhoods they are asking to represent. “It’s a matter of showing people you’re dedicated to the community,” Cortes said. “It’s supporting a huge event in District 2.” Zlody agreed, saying she was looking forward to enjoying the food and fireworks at East Park. “It’s not just a campaign event,” Zlody said. “It’s a celebration of our city.”
It is not just local candidates represented at Worcester events, though. Community organizers can seize opportunities to get their favorite national candidate extra exposure. Worcester is no exception to the rule, as a group of Bernie Sanders supporters proved outside East Park, dressing up as minutemen and handing out flyers. “We have a nationwide grassroots movement that pushed him to run,” Chris Horton said of the candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination, “and it morphed into a 50 states campaign.” Grassroots “Feel the Bern” movements aside, using celebrations and events as campaign opportunities is not limited to
local candidates in Worcester. Nationally, nearly every candidate for the Republican and Democratic presidential nominations marched in a parade over the July 4 weekend, with a few candidates managing to squeeze in two parades in the key primary state of New Hampshire. Democratic hopefuls Hillary Clinton and Lincoln Chafee and Republican contenders Jeb Bush, Rick Perry, Chris Christie, Marco Rubio and Lindsey Graham were all in New England to celebrate Independence Day with important voting citizens. Labor Day will likely be no exwception - locally or nationally. Worcester’s preliminary election is Sept. 8. The general election is Nov. 3.
the students attending and putting forth the effort - two areas of success for the programs over the past few year - funding is critical. “The biggest challenge this year was getting the funding,” said Stephanie Stockwell, the schools’ Academic Support Coordinator. The summer programs typically receives $200,000 in funding. A 40-percent decrease in funding to $140,000 this year led to fewer teachers hired to teach in the programs. The majority of funding for the summer programs comes from federal and state grants, including Title I and Title III. The decrease in funding forced summer school
program coordinators to get creative to make sure the proper funding would be allocated to the programs. “We had to scramble to find other funding,” said Stockwell, noting they had to dip into the school district’s budget in order to secure enough funding. The stress and worry of obtaining funding is worth it, Stockwell said, noting her interaction with one particular student battling anxiety. “The student was anxious about the number of students in the classroom,” Stockwell said, “but when I followed up with her a few days later, she said she loved the
College Community Connection Program, and that she’s never been so excited before because she finally knows what she wants to be. She said she wants to be a screenwriter after working on a video featuring all the different summer programs.” When asked about personal rewards gained from working with students in the summer program, Stockwell said, “Helping kids gain confidence through work and learning, and in special cases helping students find out what they want to do with their lives.”
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1ST ANNUAL CITY OF SUMMER BLUES BLAST THURSDAY JULY 23 • 7PM
Viva Bene’ Italian Ristorante 144 Commercial St, Worcester 508-799-9999 $10 Admission Tickets available in advance or at the door. It’s sure to be a sold out show!
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Tom Quinn
GONE TO THE DOGS:
Dog owners have been locked in conflict with the city since a parks security guard letting people know about a city ordinance prohibiting dogs from city parks crashed through a makeshift barricade at Boynton Park, scaring dogs and owners alike on July 5. The people who complained to the city before and after that incident has a simple solution – just stop enforcing the ordinance at Boynton Park, which is already an unofficial dog park. But shouldn’t a dog park be centrally located to allow maximum accessibility for all dog lovers? Turns out Boynton Park, which is so far Worcester West Side that it’s literally in Paxton, might actually be the perfect spot. There are 5,503 registered dogs in the city – that’s dogs, not dog owners. The top two wards in the city are District 1’s Ward 1 with around 925 pooches and District 5’s Ward 9 with around 830. Those wards are by far the closest to Boynton Park, encompassing neighborhoods like Indian Lake and Tatnuck. To put the numbers in perspective, the two wards in District 4 collectively are home to fewer than 500 registered dogs. So West Siders have an argument against siting the potential dog park in Main South. Districts 1 and 5 combined have more than 3,000 dogs, well over half the city’s total, showing there are some areas of the city more suited to dog ownership than others. Rounding out the puppy power rankings are District 3 with around 1,000 dogs and District 2 – home of Green Hill Park, which has been suggested as a potential dog park site – with around 900.
WAITING FOR THE WORD: Alain Deflandre, the parks employee at the center of the Boynton Park controversy, says he has not been fired yet, despite dog owners in an uproar (and having been in an outraged state for weeks after multiple complaints) over what they say is an overbearing manner when giving notice about the city’s anti-dog policy. However, he is not actively patrolling the city’s parks, since he says he has been put on administrative leave. The city would not comment on personnel issues, but Deflandre said he thinks he is still getting paid, although the incident just happened on July 5, so he says he hasn’t seen a check yet. Some dog owners would love to see him fired, although everyone agrees most of the blame falls on the city for passing a strange ordinance and trying to enforce it after more than a decade-long policy of “don’t ask, don’t tell.”
RETIREMENT ENDORSEMENTS: The Coalition of Worcester Retirees has released its endorsements for the upcoming City Council race, and it appears the city’s elderly want a shakeup from the same old politics. Only two incumbent at-large councilors got the nod from the Coalition – Mayor Joe Petty and Moe Bergman. Three challengers – Khrystian King, Matt Wally and Linda Parham – also got the baby boomer bump ahead of the September 8 preliminary election. Astute observers who can count to six will notice the Coalition did not recommend enough people to fill the whole at-large slate. That in itself is not unusual, but the Coalition endorsed two candidates – Candy Carlson and Jennithan Cortes – for District 2. Voters can elected only one councilor per district (Ana Sequera and Larry Shetler are also running in District 2). The Coalition endorsed incumbent Tony Economou in District 1, over challenger Cindy Nguyen, but didn’t take sides in the District 4 clash between incumbent Sarai Rivera and challenger Jackie Kostas. For completeness sake, the at-large councilors who didn’t earn an endorsement are incumbents Kate Toomey, Konnie Lukes and Mike Gaffney, and challengers Carmen Carmona, Tina Zlody, George Fox, Juan Gomez, Phil Palmieri, Rob Sargent, Ron O’Clair and Bill Coleman. A BELICHICK IN WORCESTER: Congratulations are due to Amanda Belichick, who was named the women’s lacrosse coach at Holy Cross last week. Some sympathy is also probably due, since media coverage of her hiring tended to lead with the fact that her dad, Bill, coaches a football team in Foxboro, and not with her coaching credentials (two years as the head coach at Wesleyan after assistant stints at Ohio State and UMass) or her strategy for turning the Crusaders, who were 4-14 last year, around. To its credit, Holy Cross saved the Bill Belichick bomb until the last sentence of its press release, and you can’t really blame people for getting excited about the fact that The Hoodie might pay a visit to the Heart of the Commonwealth, but it must be nice for all those other women’s lacrosse coaches to be publicly praised for their work instead of their parents. In any case, expect a surge in attendance for Holy LaCrosse games. And yes, I am going to continue calling it that until it catches on.
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FORECAST: SUNNY AND WARM!
CORRECTION: In last week’s cover story about neighborhood associations, it appears I made an error in recording the age of the Tatnuck Neighborhood Association. It has been around for about 27 years, not 37. Impressive longevity, still, but not quite middle-aged. BREAKING POOS: There was a suspicious package on Russell Street on July 12, causing Worcester police to shut down the road – or as Worcester Magazine editor Walter Bird Jr. Tweeted it, the road was “being shit down by Worcester PD.” We apologize for shitting the bed on that particular breaking news tweet. BOOKENDS OF RACISM: As multiple media outlets have reported, another brutality case involving race has been filed against Worcester police officers. WPD officers Michael Ryder and James Guittar, who both made six figures in gross pay last year, are named in the lawsuit. The allegation is that almost exactly three years ago, on July 15, 2012, the two officers beat a Hispanic man on Charlton Street, and swore at his girlfriend, specifically calling out the fact that she is Puerto Rican as part of the insult. The complainant’s lawyer called out WPD Chief Gary Gemme specifically, saying he leads a department that has not met its duty of investigating injuries caused by its officers. The new lawsuit comes near the end of the Department of Justice race relations talks. The talks have been bookended by revelations of alleged police brutality, with WPD officer Michael Motyka getting arrested close to the announcement of the race discussions for getting caught on video allegedly beating an unarmed prisoner and hurling racial slurs at the man (Motyka is white, the plaintiff in that case is black). It appears, when defenders of the WPD asked for specific examples of police brutality back when prescient protesters were calling attention to the department’s alleged racism, they should have been careful what they wished for. EVERYBODY VOTES: Attendees of the last DOJ race talk on July 13 may have noticed the city set up a table for people to register to vote in the upcoming municipal City Council and School Committee elections. It was a great idea, considering Worcester’s abysmal voter participation – statistically, around 100,000 Worcesterites are registered to vote, and 86 percent of them stayed home last election cycle. But everyone who went to the race talk was already registered to vote, said the eternal optimist. The Election Commission reported three registrations Monday night, but even a drop in the bucket was worth lugging the folding table out. BEGGING FOR CHANGE: Panhandlers, rejoice. The Massachusetts ACLU got some ammunition in its fight against Worcester’s panhandling ordinance, which criminalizes begging at night, near gathering spots like ATMs, or during the day if you’re being aggressive. Homeless residents and others have argued the rules infringe on free speech, and the First Circuit Court of Appeals seems to be leaning in that direction by vacating two decisions denying an injunction that would prevent the city from enforcing the ordinance. Forget the courts – get the police to start enforcing the ordinance for panhandling politicians asking for votes and the City Council will boot the law on its own. WORCESTER INDEPENDENCE: Did you know Worcester, not Boston, was the site of the first public reading of the Declaration of Independence in Massachusetts? Isaiah Thomas read the document – which was big news at the time, considering it announced the formation of a new country and set off a war with the most powerful empire in the world – on the steps of what is now Worcester City Hall on July 14. City Council candidate Bill Coleman did not let the occasion go unmarked this year, hosting a reading of the Declaration in front of City Hall on Tuesday. Some of it is a bit dated – a reference to “merciless Indian Savages,” in particular, is wince-worthy in retrospect – but the general message of freedom from tyranny is still something everyone can get behind.
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REC STATS: Recreation Worcester, the new free summer program to keep the city’s youth occupied, is going gangbusters in its first few weeks. The city says attendance is hanging around an average of 425 kids per day across the 11 participating parks. The program goes from 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. daily, and welcomes kids ages 7-13 for a day of fun, food and friendship. 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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The final session of Worcester’s race dialogues was, in a word, interesting. In another few words, it was a study in contrasts. There was talk of coming together and finding the commonalities among us, race be damned, to help bridge divides and conquer prejudices. There was talk of not allowing cowardly anonymous bloggers to frame the discussion and promote hate disguised as free speech. There was a rather accurate description of a dialogue not being a monologue. Not long after that, the many dozen folks who had gathered at the DCU Center for what was billed as a “reflection on dialogues” that would review the previous six sessions and look forward to the next steps in boosting race relations in Worcester, heard monologues, including one speech addressed directly to white people. It is not that there was no measure of truth in what the speakers said, or that there was not eloquence in their words. But only some folks were brought up to the stage in a corner of the DCU Convention Center and given a forum for their personal observations, musings, and in some cases grievances. The first six sessions gave all who took part the chance to speak their minds, to air the frustration, anger and expectations of a people who for too long have felt shut out of the process. This last piece of the equation - which actually should only be the beginning of continued dialogues - was framed as a look at what comes next. That there would be some level of reflection was to be expected. We did not anticipate that a forum whose overarching goal was to rid our city, our society, and in a much larger context, the nation, of racism and discrimination, would involve the singling out of one group of people for the city’s ills. The words spoken by those who stood before the microphone at the DCU Center were delivered well. Speakers acquitted themselves nicely, and left their souls bare with impassioned deliveries. We should understand that six public sessions do not a solution to racism make. What we expected going into this last community dialogue was more of a tone of conciliation and hope; of unity and single-minded purpose. There was some of that, but there was also more than a hint of the separation and division of races. Perhaps, then, it was an accurate portrayal. You could be forgiven, however, if you left that night wondering whether, in fact, any progress had been made. In the end, maybe that was precisely the message being delivered. It is something we all should deliberate, because if some of us leave believing nothing good emerged from the previous month and a half, and others think it did, we have a long, long ways to go toward closing any gaps.
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Voters beware and be diligent about knowing who is managing your township and what decisions are being made while other important issues slip through the cracks. A recent visit on July 6 to a Town of Sturbridge Board of Selectmen meeting was an eye-opening experience for this taxpayer. In a short time it became clear our selectmen do not always keep town meeting voters or experts as a priority, nor do they wish to know or allow time for those who don’t agree with them. According to Selectman Mary Dowling, her mind was made up on a buffer zone surrounding the newly acquired Plimpton property and she didn’t want to hear from residents (voters), nor consider state recommendations. It seemed her insistence, personal preference and interests to add the buffer zone to a permanent document was all that mattered, while opinions, objections and recommendations from those who knew better seemed to mean nothing. Board of Selectmen members seemed undeterred by adding something to a permanent document differing from what was voted on by Sturbridge residents. On another issue with a solar provider whose original deal was no longer on the table at Monday’s meeting, Dowling and other selectmen seemed outraged and pressured to review a new deal by a given deadline, even though Selectmen Chair Mary Blanchard admitted the issue “fell through the cracks”
hungry
1,001 words
dialogues closed the gaps?
To the Editor:
By Steven King
Editorial Have city’s race
Selectmen should have voters’ interests at heart itor d E e o th t s r e Lett
and did not make it on the warrant for June’s town meeting. Deadlines are a factor when deals/agreements are made, and our selectmen should be accountable to meeting those deadlines and perhaps finding less time and reason to delay the process. One should also expect selectmen to be professional enough and ethical enough to follow through with voter’s decisions despite their own personal beliefs, opinions or conflicts. After all, they were elected to do just that. With power comes responsibility to elected officials, and while our selectmen are not experts on a subject and are not expected to be, they should have enough ethical and personal conviction to make good decisions, while doing their best to act promptly on the recommendations of experts and decisions of voters whenever necessary - despite their personal preferences. TRISH MCCLEARY Sturbridge
Guidelines for candidate submissions
Worcester Magazine offers all candidates for election to the City Council and School Committee in Worcester the opportunity to submit one (1) letter to the editor announcing their candidacy or campaign. They should be emailed to wbird@worcestermag.com, with “Municipal Election 2015” in the subject line. Letters should be no more than 400-500 words in length, and must not contain any libelous remarks, insults or personal attacks. The candidate’s name and phone number should be included for verification purposes, but phone numbers will not be published. What you write is up to you, but please include the office you are seeking, whether you are the incumbent or challenger, and if you are currently serving, how long you have served. Worcester Magazine has already begun its coverage of the 2015 Worcester Municipal Elections, and will continue to do so right up to and through the Nov. 3 election. We will reach out to all candidates for profiles and other election-related issues. In the meantime, we encourage all candidates to use this opportunity to reach potential voters in your own words. Worcester Magazine reaches thousands of readers in Worcester proper, with a demographic largely composed of voting-age residents. Let them know why you deserve their vote. Any questions may be directed to the editor, Walter Bird Jr., by calling 508-749-3166, ext. 322, or emailing wbird@ worcestermag.com.
The Braveheart Way: Beyond baseball, players learning about life
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inaugural campaign, and setting the bar sky-high for their second season - the Bravehearts were in the middle When the Worcester Bravehearts of a 10-game losing skid. For college hosted the Bristol Blues in a Futures’ kids who came to Worcester looking to Collegiate Baseball League (FCBL) play baseball after their school season game early last month, players had ended, refine their game and improve something to prove. The defending champions of a league they joined just their future prospects, such a stretch was beyond frustrating. last year - winning the title in their continued on page 12 By Anthony Rentsch
Derek Gibree warms-up before his first at bat of the season. STEVEN KING
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Breaking out of the funk was the top priority. On the backs of players’ minds was the recent Major League Baseball (MLB) Draft, in which infielder Stevie Mangrum of Virginia, pitcher Jacob Stevens of Connecticut, and infielder Dante Ricciardi of West Boylston were selected. There were expectations to live up to for some, major league scouts to try to impress for others. Despite the pressure, players were loose heading into the game. Pitcher Bobby Maxwell of New York belted out a line from a country song as he walked toward the bullpen before the game. Players lined the stands along the left field line, chatting with fans and family. Infielder Gavin Tristan of Texas pretended that he had not tossed a ball in the vicinity of two teammates who were not paying attention.
Playing 55 games in 67 days makes for a grueling season, and the last thing these players want is for the fun to escape from the game. Heading into the bottom of the ninth inning against the Blues, the Bravehearts were in position to pull out a win. They were down three runs and momentum was swinging in their favor, even though they would go on to lose the game. As players returned to the dugout before the home half of the ninth inning, some players had more on their minds. While their teammates excitedly high-fived and whooped, Tristan pulled infielder Zack Tower of Auburn aside. A young fan had asked Tristan for a souvenir and he wanted Tower’s help to make sure he kept his end of the deal. It was small, maybe even insignificant. STEVEN KING
Bobby Maxwell pitches against the Wachusett Dirt Dawgs Tuesday night at Doyle Field in Leominster. STEVEN KING
Greg Stagani signs a program for one of his fans.
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But in that one gesture the Braveheart way shone through: these young men are growing, developing and learning how to be much more than just baseball players.
ALL ROADS LEAD TO WORCESTER
Before any game could be played at Hanover Insurance Park at Holy Cross’ Fitton Field, the Bravehearts had to build a roster, something they did not need to do last year because they were an expansion team and the FCBL compiled a roster for them. This time, general manager Dave Peterson, manager Justin Edwards and assistant coach Kevin Hartigan did most of the work to get the right guys to play in Worcester. The search started locally, as the FCBL requires at least half of a team’s roster to consist of players who live or attend school near the host city. Peterson said they reached out to Holy Cross baseball coach Greg DiCenzo for recommendations. Then came Assumption College, which was high on the Bravehearts’ list, since the Greyhounds play in a league that uses wood bats, unlike most other collegiate baseball leagues. From there, the team expanded the search radius, hitting Northeastern University in Boston, UMass-Lowell and the University of Connecticut, among others. Right around that time, they reached out to those who had played their high school baseball locally and left to play their collegiate ball outside of New England. Once the first 10 to 15 local players had been secured, Peterson said the search turned national in grand fashion. “We researched all 301 NCAA Division I programs, found the head coach and assistant coaches and put together a nice mailer that talked about the experience here, how we treat our players, the fact that you’re playing in front of Major League Baseball scouts and then we sent that mailer to all those coaches,” Peterson said. Out of 301 letters sent out, Peterson said the team received between 30 and 35 responses from coaches, who in turn sent a handful of players to the Bravehearts. To fill the remaining slots, Peterson said he turned to former Tornadoes players-turnedcoaches, a network stretching from Worcester to Long Island to northern Colorado and many places in between. “We know that every year we can go to someone that we have a close connection with and get two great players on his roster,” he said. In fact, that is how second-year catcher from New York TJ Riccio landed on the team. “Actually it’s a funny story,” Riccio says. “I was doing a homework project and I called up Alex Trezza (the former manager of the Bravehearts and a former assistant coach at the University of New Haven) to ask him some
questions about the homework. At the end of the conversation he asked me where I was playing.” Riccio said without hesitation he wanted to play with Trezza and, after Trezza made a couple of phone calls, he was all set.
BUILDING THE BRAND
Although the FCBL is a relatively young league and takes a backseat to more prestigious leagues, such as the Cape Cod Baseball League, Peterson said the Bravehearts strive to land the most talented players from top-flight collegiate programs. He admitted it can be tough to get coaches to send those players to the FCBL. Instead, coaches tend to recommend their developing prospects. “(The coach) looks at the next tier down and says, ‘How many of these guys actually want to play college baseball rather than staying at home for the summer and who would be a good fit, who might have an opportunity to meet some scouts, to play in front of some scouts and to learn about what it takes to play in the minor leagues,’” Peterson said. “Whenever I talk to a coach he already has three or four guys in mind that he wants to send to us.” Many of the Division I players just completed their freshman year and did not play much. Some are transferring from junior colleges to Division I schools. Others, such as Mangrum, are highly-touted recruits who just finished up their high school careers and are looking to get a feel for the next level of baseball before beginning their collegiate careers. In Mangrum’s case, the next step is at Virginia Tech. Worcester is still a marquee place to play baseball, as highlighted by its three draftees. “Everyone in our dugout has a goal of getting drafted or signing a professional contract,” Edwards said. “All these guys want to move up or else they wouldn’t be here playing summer ball.” For a team that cares about the player’s full developmental experience, not just where he goes on to play, character is just as important as skill set. “From my perspective we are looking for guys that are going to be true team players, that aren’t going to be problems,” Peterson says. “We are looking for quality guys. The thing that impresses me the most is if I’m talking to a player directly and he addresses me as sir and he says please and thank you. They are just small things, but it makes a big difference. You don’t have an opportunity to meet your roster before they show up. So you’re looking for anything you can to see if they’re good, quality students.” These “quality kids” and “true team players” epitomize the youthful hustle that owner John Creedon Jr. said is characteristic of blue-collar, college-city Worcester. “[The] pure brand of baseball resonates in
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the city,” he told players, families and host families when they met for the first time at the end of May. As the Bravehearts plod ahead in year two, they are striving to connect with a city in a way that a professional team may not be able to.
LEARNING HOW TO BE A PRO
The meat of a Bravehearts summer is not what the coaches and ownership see in players, however. The focus of summer ball is not to deal players like a 10-year-old boy does trading cards or to use them as pawns in a successful campaign. It is what the players get from the Bravehearts: a chance to learn. That learning experience hits hard and fast. During their school seasons, Bravehearts players typically have between three or five games a week, including two doubleheaders, usually on weekends, and occasionally another game mixed in. This summer, they are playing six days a week. While the number of games they play is roughly the same, the grind of showing up to the ballpark every day, ready to play is a new beast to handle. “Baseball is a job,” said pitcher Dylan Collett of New York.
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Bobby Dragon high-fives his teammates during a recent game. continued from page 13
“Here it literally is like playing for a minor league team,” Riccio says. “Coming from college ball to here, it was different in the beginning.” There is, Edwards acknowledged, a period of adjustment for players. “The kids, especially the position players, in this league and most kids in summer ball they’ll experience usually a week or two worth of failure, where they are getting used to wooden bats or the pitching is a little bit better in the summer leagues up here,” he said. The physical adjustment is the easier one for these young men to make. As 18-, 19-, 20and 21-year-olds, Edwards said their bodies can get used to playing so much. The much larger aspect is the mental adjustment - getting up, traveling to the ballpark and putting in at least eight hours of work, six days a week is an exhausting process. But it is one many players aspire to as they eye professional baseball careers. “When you’re playing six games a week… you can’t be too high on your highs and can’t be too low on your lows,” Riccio said. The process is an individual one, as structured pregame practice time can only do so much to “get their minds right,” as Edwards called it. For a player, it is all about learning what it takes to get ready every day. “Some kids might sign [professional contracts] out of high school and might get overwhelmed playing every day,” Edwards said. “These kids are going to play multiple years in college and in these summer leagues that play every single day for two and a half months. And they’re going to go back home and say, ‘This is what I need to do to get ready: I need to throw on this day when I’m pitching four days from now and I need to workout on these days.’ They get a routine and a plan.”
Players and coaches agree part of the plan has to be to relax and stay loose out on the field, to take the unceasing wave of games in stride. “I don’t want my guys to be do or die every single pitch of every single game. You’ll exhaust yourself mentally, you can’t do that,” Edwards said. The dugout reflects the coach’s sentiment: everyone in it is focused, but it is a calm focus. Players spend most of the game leaning on the railing, tossing up occasional celebratory or supportive cheers, but also shooting the breeze and joking around about baseball etiquette, professional sports and the winners and losers from the in-betweeninning fan races from first to third base during home games. “We got a bunch of jokesters,” Riccio said. “But at the same time they are always ready to play.” Added Edwards: “These guys are getting a feel for what they need to do day in and day out, how they need to get their minds right, how to get their bodies right, how to take care of themselves, how to plan, and all that stuff. It’s really beneficial for those kids.”
OFF THE FIELD
Summer ball in Worcester also comes with an expectation of players to be representatives of their team - both on and off the field. “They’re learning how to become professional athletes, just as they’re learning how to hone their baseball skills,” Peterson said. A major chunk of the pseudo-professional experience comes from what Peterson calls the “minor league experience” – using players for promotional purposes at the ballpark. Pictures of current and former Bravehearts players are emblazoned on posters that hang up outside the concourse. A handful of players sign autographs and interact with
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Michael Logsdon, fourth from right, stands with his teammates for the “Star Spangled Banner.” young fans before each home game. After the Bravehearts’ Father’s Day game was postponed due to rain, players and kids played catch in the outfield. Off the field, the players are also pushed to be role models for the community. Last summer they visited a few day camps and held a clinic for the South Community High School baseball team. In addition to visiting a few camps this summer, the team will also host two weeks of baseball camps for local kids – as it did last summer - highlighted by a chance for campers to warm up with players on the field before a game. Hartigan said the team has plans to go and help out at a local soup kitchen. This season players on the team have taken one particular young fan, a boy with special needs, under their wing, as a part of a partnership the FCBL has with You’re With Us! “They might not say it or admit it, but they are like mini-celebrities around here,” Edwards said. “People are going to know when you walk in Worcester if you are wearing a Worcester shirt or a hat or something like that they are going to know that’s one of the players. [The players] have to keep that in mind, too.” Even though they are just boys – boys who tease each other endlessly during long days of travel, get frustrated every time they don’t get a hit and bring along giant tubs of peanut butter, jelly and fluff to make sandwiches before away games - they do keep it in mind. “I actually loved going into the community and just showing them that Worcester Bravehearts is all about the community,” said Tyrone Miller, an assistant coach who pitched for the team last year. “I would also see [those kids from camps] at games. They’d call me by my last name and I’d just go up to them and talk to them a little bit about what
they’ve been up to today and then we’d just talk and I’d give them autographs and foul balls and whatnot.” The players do their best to make the in-between inning kids’ games festive as well, excitedly cheering on youngsters participating in the frog toss or the outfield sprint. Talk of handing out foul balls and broken bats as souvenirs pops up sporadically in the dugout. Not too long ago, many of the players were idolizing the pros. Now, they want to step up into that role. “It was awesome to help out some little kids and getting them better as baseball players,” Riccio said. “That’s one of my most favorite things around here: seeing the little guys come up to you and saying ‘thank you’ and shaking your hand and saying ‘you’re my favorite.’ It’s awesome, it really is.” Peterson said the team wants its players to do more than excel on the field. A Bravehearts player is very much a part of the community. “We want our players to be public athletes and we are training them as that,” Peterson said. “That is part of the experience of being with the Worcester Bravehearts. It’s not just what happens on the field, it’s what happens off the field too.”
NEW FAMILY
While players learn how to be positive role models in the community, they are simultaneously growing into a community of their own. Bravehearts players come from all across the country: from southeastern Texas to New York City, from northern Ohio to the western coast of Florida. As such, most continued on page 16
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STEVEN KING
Miss Greater Worcester 2015 Samantha McGraw gets high-fives after singing the National Anthem at the Bravehearts home-opener. continued from page 15
have no idea who their teammates are until they arrive in Worcester. Unlike collegiate baseball, where teammates have the entire fall semester and winter to get to know one another before the official spring season, the FCBL season begins less than a
week after the team’s first meeting. Edwards describes that week as a “whirlwind.” Also unlike the college season, there are virtually zero external commitments beyond the scope of the team. That dynamic, combined with the large number of hours the players spend traveling and playing together every week, allows for those relationships to develop quickly.
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Even on off days, the players try to coordinate activities – golfing and bowling outings, trips to the beach and even going to Fenway Park for a game, something high on the list of almost every out-of-towner. “It’s a different group of guys. You have guys coming from all over the place and we first get to meet them at the beginning of the summer and then we really create a good bond and friendships through the year,” Riccio said. “We’re like brothers in there,” Tristan says, nodding at the clubhouse, before a home game on June 24. During the rare moments the players are not together, they are spending time and building a relationship with the other side of their Bravehearts community: the host families. Before the season starts, local families sign up to host one or several players at their homes, providing them with a place to sleep, clean up and eat a few meals in return for a stipend from the team. Of course, the relationships often go much deeper. Luanne Gallagher, who hosted three players last year, in addition to Collett and infielder Derek Gibree this summer, is a perfect example. Gallagher goes to nearly every home game and tries to know everyone on the team, regularly hosting team bonfires at her house and taking players to the beach on off days. “I do (feel like their actual mom),” she says laughing over dinner one night a few weeks into the season. “Because I yell at them when they strike out. [Their parents] aren’t there, you know?” The boys feel like part of the family, too. They shoot hoops with her three sons and drive her youngest son, Owen, to school when he wakes up late. Miller, one of the players Gallagher hosted last summer, still spends time at the Gallagher household and even helps her cook. Edwards, who played in similar summer leagues during his playing days, said the connections are often long lasting. “I know I still keep in touch with my host family and that was in 2005,” he says. “I still drop them a Facebook message or something like that every once in a while. “ Gallagher also understands that, as a host
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Gavin Tristan tags second and throws to first for a double play.
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mom, she is one of the primary links between the players’ families and their sons. One night Collett came on to pitch an inning unexpectedly and she videotaped his outing on her phone and sent it to his mom. “She was like, ‘What do you mean he is pitching?’” Gallagher said. “She didn’t even know because he only went in for one inning. The parents who aren’t here all the time for games really appreciate those little things.” The players, their families and their host families often forge a tight bond, according to Edwards. “[Host families and actual families] usually establish some sort of pretty cool relationship,” he said. “They bring you in as one of their own family and they really help you out getting acclimated to the city and the new surroundings. They’re really just great people.”
A TEACHING POINT
It is no secret that Worcester is struggling to find its sports identity. Between the departing Worcester Sharks, the pending launch of the Worcester Football Club, the possibility of Olympic handball at the DCU Center in 2024 and talks of the Boston Red Sox Triple A affiliate landing here, it is safe to say the second largest city in New England does not really have a distinct sports identify. The Bravehearts want to provide some stability to that ever-shifting landscape. Moreover, they want to do it in a way that makes sense to a city is a home to nine higher education institutions and tens of thousands of students each year: by acting as a teacher. They want to teach their players to become better baseball players on one hand, and on the other hand, how to become professionals – representatives of a community organization and role models for aspiring youngsters. “Summer collegiate baseball is a natural fit,” Creedon told players and families at the first team meeting in May. “Worcester is a great spot for baseball,” Peterson says. “The Bravehearts have a very promising future in this city. We’re not going anywhere. We think that the Bravehearts will provide that product to Worcester for years to come.” STEVEN KING
art | dining | nightlife | July 16 - 22, 2015
night day &
Exchanging portraits, building connections
STEVEN KING
Joshua Lyford
Good taste tends to dictate we humans – living in a more or less regulated society – don’t spend a lot of time staring at one another. It’s rude, frankly, and it’s a bit weird. Looking deeply into someone’s face can be a surprisingly intimate experience, and noticing those tiny imperfections we each carry in our features has a tendency to open folks up in a way they may not expect. On Friday, July 17 Worcester artist Greg Hamilton and ArtsWorcester plan to connect those dots and bring the community together in an intriguing way, the Worcester Portrait Exchange Pop Up Exhibition and Party.
Taking place at ArtsWorcester, 660 Main St., Hamilton and crew will provide the necessary materials and assistance for those individuals excited about both community and the arts. Participants are asked to sign up in advance, online, at Worcesterportrait.org., though it is likely pop-ins will be able to join as well. Those that sign up will be paired with another enthusiast and the two will create portraits of one another. “For social reasons, we don’t sit and stare,” said Hamilton. “This gets you to really look at people. That experience makes small connections and starts relationships. The event is designed to allow for every level of comfort. It’s going to be hugely unserious and unstuffy. It’s more about art for community, not art for art. This is a social opportunity.” Hamilton grew up in Central Mass before spending 13 years in Baltimore, Maryland. After recently making the move back to Worcester, he decided he wanted to do something to bring the city’s arts community together and, perhaps, even attract some new people in the process. “Worcester has a bunch of cliques that don’t always mix with each other,” Hamilton explained. “I want folks to feel engaged enough to come to this.” Hamilton’s own studio is housed within the creationfocused space at 97d Webster St. and he fits right in alongside the blacksmithing, woodworking, leather-working, art and music-driven individuals throughout the classic brick, industrial building. Hamilton’s studio, at the far corner of the dark and emotive facility is perfectly cluttered; the paintings and drawings hung on the wall are indicative of a man more focused on honing his craft than keeping a tidy space. In a roundabout way, Hamilton was inspired for the event through his own portrait-creation experiences at Worcester’s annual stART on the Street. He assumed a handful of people would be interested in their portrait being crafted, but found instead a wildly enthusiastic crowd. “Each of the drawings took about five minutes and my hands were cramped as the day went on,” he said. “I think people were expecting caricatures and then they were pleasantly surprised.” Artist Piya Samant will be participating in the event, and as a professional artist herself, she knows the benefit of creating connections throughout the community. Samant said Hamilton
Piya Samant and Greg Hamilton was the first artist she has met in the area through ArtsWorcester, and hopes those connections continue to develop. “I used to work full time in IT,” recalled Samant. “I could no longer see myself not paint every day. It is my meditation. I do it because it makes me connect. You connect to the people you paint, you notice those perfect imperfections.” “It’s all under the surface, hidden in nooks and crannies,” said Hamilton of Worcester’s bubbling-just-beneath-thesurface arts scene. “Then once you learn that, it’s everywhere. It is pure community here.” In addition to the portrait crafting, there will be food
provided by Chickpea, Living Earth and Birch Tree Bread Company as well as music by Mickey O’Hara and a live drawing demonstration featuring Worcester’s Niki Luparelli and illustrator Peter James Glenn. Sign up in advance and check out the Worcester Portrait Exchange online at Worcesterportrait.org and head to ArtsWorcester, 660 Main St., on July 17 at 6 p.m. Reporter Joshua Lyford can be reached at 508-749-3166, ext. 325, or by email at Jlyford@worcestermagazine.com. Follow Josh on Twitter @Joshachusetts. J U LY 16 , 2 0 15 • W O R C E S T E R M A G A Z I N E . C O M
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Hardcore steps outside at Ralph’s LOUIE DESPRES
Joshua Lyford
Hardcore and punk music spends most of its time indoors, in dimly-lit basements and makeshift venues, back-alley bars and hidden warehouse space. While the community weaved through and around the community is just as bright and vibrant as you’d expect a scene of like-minded fans of music to be, there is a certain sense of home in watching musicians go to work in those confined spaces they are most known to frequent; that familiar ringing in your ears as the harsh buzz of full stacks bounce off the mildewed concrete walls.
What you don’t often see is that environment mobilized to the outdoors. Hardcore and punk shows tends to shy away from the open air, but that will change on Tuesday, July 21 as Ralph’s Diner welcomes some of the best area hardcore punk bands to feel the wind on their faces. “Ralph’s is like a Worcester institution,” said Anthony Bridgford, who alongside Ryan Jarvis, is responsible for the upcoming show. “For around here, rock is not as popular as far as main stream culture is concerned, but this is still a place that highlights and promotes rock music. Aesthetically, look at the style of the place and the things inside, it’s a really cool place. Not that there aren’t amazing places in Worcester for music, there are tons, but there is something really special about this place. Where else can you do an outdoor show?”
Ryan Jarvis and Anthony Bridgford at Ralph’s. This is not the first time the duo have attempted an outdoor show at Ralph’s, having first tried with New Orleans band Short Leash and local guys Cuban Rebel Girls and Truth Decay back on June 9. Unfortunately, the weather was a bit too feisty and rain forced the show indoors, rendering the July 21 show the real kickoff to what could potentially become a regular Tuesday event throughout the summer. “It’s cool to see people go nuts at a show,” said Jarvis. “When people are outside and not confined to a little area, it might make people a little uncomfortable. And the sound is always a little questionable, but it makes it easy and accessible for everybody.”
While the bands will most certainly be fantastic and Ralph’s Diner recently added the affordable $1.25 Genesee can as a beer option, the real star of the show will be that seasonal summer breeze attending the outdoor event. If all of that isn’t quite enough to sell you (you fickle old curmudgeon, you), Bridgford will be combining elements from his weekly movie nights that take place outdoors every Sunday by projecting images on the wall behind the bands. “Years of doing the movie night, I’ve amassed a huge collection,” said Bridgford. “All my stuff is on a hard drive so I can pick
and choose different scenes or imagery or things that I just think are cool and play them on the wall.” As for expectations, the pair have reeled those back just enough to lend a healthy dose of surprise to the evening. “It being the first show like this, who knows how it’s going to turn out,” said Bridgford. “I remember when I started the movie night, I figured 15 friends would show up and we’d watch a movie, but instead 50 or 60 people showed up and it was packed. It was way more than I anticipated. It could be like that, or it could just be our friends.” And besides, as Jarvis himself will point out, the reality of the usual basement haunts these sorts of shows take place in is that many of the show goers end up hanging out outside between, and occasionally during, sets. With nowhere to escape to, why not enjoy the music beneath the night sky? “It’s a good release for everybody,” said Jarvis. “If there weren’t shows, there wouldn’t be bands after awhile and that would be miserable. It’s hard to sustain, you need the occasional weeknight shows. You can’t just sustain it on a really good Saturday show once in awhile.” Head to Ralph’s Diner, 148 Grove St., Tuesday, July 21 to check out Cleansing Wave, Cinderblock and Truth Decay with the wind in your hair. The show is $6 and begins at 9 pm. There are plenty of beers available if you’re feeling classy, or Genesee cans for $1.25 if you are the more economical type. Reporter Joshua Lyford can be reached at 508-749-3166, ext. 325, or by email at Jlyford@worcestermagazine.com. Follow Josh on Twitter @Joshachusetts.
The second Doyle Bramhall doing just fine, thank you
Jim Perry
It’s rare that a first-rate blues guitarist is a left hander. Rarer still is the left-hander who doesn’t bother to learn on a southpaw guitar, choosing instead to just flip around a traditional right-handed guitar, and play it upside down.
songs from my upcoming release,” Bramhall said recently. “ I’ve had to work on it piecemeal. I’m going to try to release an EP in the next few months.” Bramhall has been in such demand that it has actually been 14 years since his last CD was released. “I’ve written hundreds of songs, and I’m realizing there’s some really good ideas,” he said. “It would be nice to get some of that stuff out and create a body of work.” Born and raised in Texas, Bramhall grew up around blues royalty. His father, Doyle Bramhall I, played drums for blues legends Lightning Hopkins and Freddie King. The elder Bramhall was also an in-demand singer, and collaborated with childhood friends, the Vaughan brothers, Jimmie and Stevie Ray, writing the classic blues songs “Change It” and “Life By the Drop.”
Doyle Bramhall II is one of those rare birds, and his career has been in flight for some time now. Bramhall and his band come to the Bull Run in Shirley Tuesday, July 21. He is currently on tour with the Tedeschi/Trucks band, and is squeezing in a few shows to promote his own career, which is rolling along at a dizzying pace. “On the off days, I’m trying to finish the 18 W O R C E S T E R M A G A Z I N E . C O M • J U LY 16 , 2 0 15
Young Bramhall followed in his dad’s footsteps, choosing guitar instead of drums as his means of expression. While still a teenager, he was recruited by the Fabulous Thunderbirds to play alongside Jimmie Vaughan. Immediately, his reputation grew. A few years later, Bramhall formed a band with guitarist Charlie Sexton, and employed the late Stevie Ray’s rhythm section. Called the Arc Angels, the band enjoyed wide popularity. Later, Bramhall released the highly-acclaimed solo CDs “Jellycream” and “Welcome,” all the while grabbing the attention of major guitarists, most notably Eric Clapton. Bramhall’s ongoing collaborations with Clapton have produced some fine music, including the Clapton albums “Riding With the King,” “Me and Mr. Johnson” and “Searching for Robert J.” Bramhall also
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Crossing the country for a cause Joshua Lyford
Crossing the U.S. has become one of those dreams, the bucketlist sort of accomplishment that marks a sense of lifetime achievement. A cross-country road trip is an epic undertaking, but it is certainly attainable. Particularly when you have the advantage of making the journey in an air conditioned vehicle, sipping a Slurpy and smiling your way to the opposite coast. Depending on the route taken, the journey from the Atlantic to the Pacific is nestled somewhere between 2,600 and 3,200 miles. Attempting that journey on a bike ramps up the difficulty significantly: now that is a journey. You can cross a trek like that off your bucket list, or that trek might just make you kick the bucket.
Central Mass musician Eric Widing had that exact dream. His desire to make the voyage kept itching at the back of his brain and he knew he wouldn’t be satisfied until it was done. Further, like many, his family instilled in him a desire to “do right by others.” Widing knew what he had to do, so he set up an online charity where friends and strangers alike could donate money to some good causes, while he crossed the country in support of that goal. “I don’t really know what possessed me to do this,” Widing told Worcester Magazine recently by phone from a cafe in Boulder, Colorado - a destination he had only just reached. “I knew I wanted to ride my bicycle across the country. I poked around and did my research, I noted people had set up Gofundme accounts. I thought it was kind of cheesy when I saw it, but I worked hard this year and had some money and time to do something like this. I wanted to continue BRAMHALL continued from page 18
contributed songs to Clapton albums “Reptile” and “The Road to Escondido.” Bramhall’s many skills include album production. Clapton gave him the helm on his latest two CDs, “Clapton” and “Old Sock.” Bramhall also has produced albums by other artists, including Sheryl Crow. Meanwhile, Bramhall has become one of
doing cool stuff, whether that’s touring with a band, or the next logical thing, doing some good and raising money for foster care programs and our brothers and sisters in the armed forces.” The collection of charities represented by Widing’s cross-country journey is significant, as the money raised by the charity ride will be split between the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention, The Wounded Warrior Project, the California Drought Organization, the Rise Above Foundation and the John Burton Foundation. “I’ve been touched by suicide, more so I’ve seen good friends go through that with their family and the foster care thing, helping kids out, it’s honestly one of the best things you can do,” said Widing. The overarching focus of Widing’s journey is charity, but the nature of a trip like this is in the experiences along the way. Widing spoke to Worcester Magazine from Boulder, after just making the harsh uphill ride through the Rocky Mountains. He said he generally averages between 50-100 miles a day, depending on conditions, with the longest ride being 157 miles. He is 1,200 miles in on his journey, which began roughly 18 days ago in San Francisco, and will end in Boston. Widing is quick to point out he has begun to lose track of time. “There is a good aura about the whole thing,” said Widing. “It’s something people like to hear and see happen. Though they’re not necessarily able to do something like that. Almost everyone says they wish they could do something like this and end up contributing in some way. It’s cool getting that support from people. I’ve loved taking it slow on all the old roads through all the old towns. It’s a beautiful experience and it is super motivating and gratifying.” Along the way, Widing said he has had some incredible experiences. He has set up camp wherever he can and recalled a particularly intoxicating experience, sleeping under the stars on a rock perched at the bend of an unknown river. He has met great people, including a man riding to New York City; the pair have been riding together, offering motivation and friendship. the most sought-after guitarists in the music business, content to ride side saddle to many of the world’s greatest, including Derek Trucks, with whom he currently sharing the stage in a selection of summer shows. “I grew up being a foil to someone else onstage musically,” said Bramhall. He refers to that part of his persona as “a really important element. It’s what keeps my ears really strong. It’s like being a
ERIC WIDING
He even met actor Luke Wilson upon reaching Boulder. “It allows you to draw all the connections between how populations of people scatter across America,” he said. “It’s a pretty rich and interesting history. You think about this country, where it’s headed and where it’s from. I think about my family all the time. I’ve lost a few friends while I’ve been out here so I’ve been thinking about them and their families. I think about where I’m from and where I’ve been and I think about the people who will benefit from the money that will be raised.” You can donate to Eric Widing’s cross country ride for charity online, at Gofundme. com/ericrideforcharity and you can keep up with his journey at Ericridesforcharity. wordpress.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.
counterpuncher. There’s a lot of beauty in that.” On the current Tedeschi/Trucks tour, Bramhall’s own band is the opener, followed by Sharon Jones & the Dap Kings. Bramhall refers to the whole tour as “a family thing. I wouldn’t want to give that up.” He calls Trucks’ guitar playing “stunning.” Referring to his approach as spiritual, Bramhall says of Trucks, “That’s where we really connect.” A relatively young 47, Bramhall has an old
soul, playing his guitar with the feel of the great blues masters, yet with his own unique phrasing. To see him live is to see why he is constantly sought out by the best. Bramhall recalls ending his last East Coast tour at the Bull Run, referring to it as a great show. “I’m really looking forward to playing there again,” he said of the upcoming gig. J U LY 16 , 2 0 15 • W O R C E S T E R M A G A Z I N E . C O M
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krave
El Patron
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FOOD HHHH AMBIENCE H H H 1/2 SERVICE HHH1/2 VALUE HHHH1/2 192 Harding St., Worcester • 508-757-8000
El Patron goes beyond tradition Zedur Laurenitis
El Patron is the ideal restaurant for the Canal District neighborhood – a tasty overachiever that strikes a balance between authentic and the kind of indulgence Americans have grown to not only love, but expect from Mexican restaurants.
chorizo topped with gobs of melted, real cheese accompanied by a bowl of chips with which to scoop it up. While it is reminiscent of something your roommate in college would have cooked up when his meal plan ran out – it is just as tasty as it sounds, with the spicy chorizo (Mexican sausage) playing nicely with the sharp cheese and the diner being given The restaurant that opened in January is the power to find the perfect topping to chip located at 192 Harding St. In addition to the ratio. This is pure, unapologetic over-the-top assortment of indoor seating arrangements, American-Mexican food. three outdoor tables add to the selection and The other “appetizer” of a single ($3) beef prove too tempting on a warm summer day tongue taco shows the range of El Patron. The to pass up. The two appetizers that appear in fact that tongue is even a part of the menu is front of us perfectly sum up the dual character impressive, but this braised beef tongue has the of this Mexican restaurant. fall-apart texture of the perfect 12-hour brisket, On the one hand there is the choriqueso while giving you a pure beef taste along ($7.50), which is quite simply spicy, diced with a kick of fresh cilantro and slightly soft
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onions. The moist tongue needs no additional sauce for either flavor or texture, as the simple combination allows the tongue to do all the talking. Choosing the tongue taco was an easy decision, not only because of the delicious nature of the meat, but because it isn’t a common offering on most menus. The same can be said for the two entrees – a mole burrito and chili relleno plate (both $9.98). These meals are something you simply do not see on every Mexican menu. They are a little more traditional, but in this case served with a heaping helping of Americanization. The mole burrito offers up a huge helping of rice, beans and veggies wrapped up in a tortilla and topped with mole sauce. The mole chocolate sauce had a strong coco flavor along with a medium spice on the back end. Working through the massive burrito was added to by the filling of turmeric-enhanced yellow rice. The stuffed chili relleno brought mildlyseasoned ground beef, cheese and a fresh pop of pepper to the mix. It would be easy to lose the taste of the pepper in this dish,
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but it shone through, augmented by a fluffy breading around the baked poblano pepper. What looks initially overwhelming in both size and content is revealed to be a fairly delicate dish in flavor and texture from the very first bite. As good as it is, the food at El Patron does not break any new ground. But you don’t expect or need it to. In addition to providing commanding if not complex flavors, the portions are simply mountainous. Adding to the value is the reasonable price of every dish – leading to a meal that results in plenty of leftovers. The total was $32 before tip. The ambiance inside the restaurant and in the small outside dining area is casual and comfortable – with the restaurant now serving beer. Service was a tad on the slow side, even though the waitress was friendly and attentive – with the appetizers taking some time to get to the table. This is a fun, inexpensive location to grab something just slightly outside of the normal fair in the canal district or “social” Worcester restaurants such as those along Shrewsbury Street. Factor in the shortage of Mexican restaurants in Worcester and you have a solid new option when it comes to dining the city.
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CRICKETS, CRICKETS Wayback Burgers, which you can visit in the Wal-
Mart plaza off Tobias Boland Way in Worcester, is serving up two high-protein milkshakes through Sept. 30. The Oreo Mud Pie Cricket Protein and Jerky milkshakes deliver 24 and 20 grams of protein each, respectively. The Jerky is served with one or two Slim Jim Snack Sticks, depending on the size of the milkshake, while the Cricket is made with hand-dipped vanilla bean ice cream, Oreo Cookie Crumbles, Peruvian Chocolate Cricket Protein power, chocolate and other flavors. “We are excited to announce our most unique milkshake flavors yet – the Jerky Milkshake and the Oreo Mud Pie Cricket Milkshake,” said John Eucalitto, president of Wayback Burgers. “Back in March, we thought it would be fun to launch a protein milkshake made with crickets as an April Fool’s Day joke. Much to our surprise, the feedback from our guests was incredibly positive. As a result, we started developing new and unique milkshake flavors that were high in protein and calcium. We tested them at select locations and found that they were a hit. As a result, Wayback Burgers’ Jerky Milkshake and Oreo Mud Pie Cricket Milkshake were born. We think our guests will really enjoy them.” Jiminy Crickets!
DAY? EM! TIL 9 PM Y N I RA PROBL ME UN NO S WELCO GE ALL A
For more information, visit WaybackBurgers.com.
UP THE CREEK
BITE SIZED Swish
Niche Hospitality’s Test Kitchen, 30 Major Taylor Boulevard, Worcester, serves up two separate events highlighting local oysters. The Raw Bar Party will be held Friday, July 17, 7-10 p.m., and Saturday, July 18, 2-5 p.m. There is a 50-person maximum for each event. The cost is $40 per person. There is a cash bar. On Saturday, July 18, 6:30-9 p.m., A Shellfish Dinner will feature oysters, clams, shrimp, ceviche, lobster and other summer favs. The cost is $85, and includes beer, wine and cocktails. There is a 20-person limit. RSVP at rsvp@nichehospitality. com or call 508-612-1137.
LOBSTERFEST
It’s that time again! Check out LobsterFest
at Blissful Meadows Golf Club, 801 Chockalog
Road, Uxbridge, Friday, July 17, 5-9 p.m. Enjoy fresh Main lobsters, a pound of steamers, fish chowder, New England clam chowder, local sweet corn on the cob and baked potatoes. A single lobster dinner is $24.99, a twin is $35.99. Visitblissfulmeadows.com or email sbliss@blissfulmeadows.com.
krave Raising a glass to wine everywhere
Made In Moldova Al Vuona
Nestled between Ukraine and Romania is a wine region that perhaps many of you have never heard of. I’m talking about Moldova, where wine making dates back to 3000 BC. In spite of century old traditions, Moldova continues to modernize its wine industry while producing terrific wine at reasonable prices. That should have wine lovers here in America very excited. I must admit I approached these wines with a certain level of apprehension and skepticism. After all, it’s never easy to leave your comfort zone, right? But after tasting a number of them I’ve become a fan of Moldovan wines. In fact, I’d like to share with you a few of the wines I found most impressive. The ET Cetera Cuvee Rouge 2013 is a blended wine with Rara Neagra, Saperavi, Cabernet Sauvignon and Merlot. This medium-bodied wine has fresh cherry and raspberry flavors. It glides over the palate with a soft, velvety feel and pairs well with food. It retails for about $18. Next up, the 2014 Chateau Vartley, Feteasca Regala is a refreshing white. A light-bodied wine with aromas of apple, pear and hints of citrus. The wine displayed good acidity on the sharply focused finish. Best of all the wine is reasonably priced for about $10.
Lastly, the 2013 Vinaria din Vale, also made from the Feteasca grape. Crisp and clean, with lemon, green apple and pineapple flavors. You can usually pick this terrific white up for $12. Moldova offers wine lovers both traditional grape varieties, such as Chardonnay and Cabernet, as well as indigenous ones, such as Feteasca Regala, Feteasca Neagra, Plavai and Viorica. In recent years, the country has made great strides to compete globally with other wineproducing nations. One such move was to establish the National Office for Vine and Wine or (NOWV). The organization is responsible for the administration and promotion of Moldovan wines abroad. So, if you’re looking for new wines to try, perhaps one made in Moldova might be just the place to start.
WINE
OF THE WEEK
2014 Pinot Grigio, Italy. Fresh and vibrant with pear, melon and grapefruit flavors. Mediumbodied, with good balance and plush finish. $16
Coors Light Pint & Cheese Pizza Only $6 during EVERY Red Sox Game
$3 Coors Light pints
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They tried to make her go to rehab Jim Keogh
Last week a piece of click-bait popped up onscreen advertising a site that details how drugs and alcohol ravaged the appearances of famous people. The ad showed a before and after photo of Amy Winehouse illustrating her startling physical decline thanks to the booze, cocaine and heroin that eventually killed her. She seemed the perfect cover girl for this ghoulish web site.
But over the weekend I watched “Amy,” the powerful documentary chronicling the singer’s life, and it left me saddened that she has become an Internet punch line. Yes, Winehouse is the most recent member of the 27 Club, that elite group of musicians counting Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin, Jim Morrison and Kurt Cobain among them, who succumbed to their demons at the fartoo-early age of 27. Yet this film humanizes her in a way the traditional media never could (the paparazzi flat out dehumanized her) so that you find yourself urging Amy to pull out of her tailspin despite knowing exactly how it all ends. Director Asif Kapadia tells Winehouse’s story chronologically, largely through a stash of video footage — remarkable both in its sheer amount and its intimacy — shot by friends and others beginning with a 14th birthday party in North London. When the camera alights on laughing Amy and she breaks into a rendition of “Happy Birthday,” we get an earful of the big voice that would elicit favorable comparisons to jazz legends Billie Holiday and Sarah Vaughan. The footage of Winehouse in her teens and very early 20s is heartbreaking. She is all potential, fresh and eager to perform her music, but leery of fame, which she feared would drive her mad. At one point Winehouse is described as “an old soul in a very young
body,” perhaps the most apt description of a singer whose soulful smoky ballads about life’s peaks and valleys sound as though they should be delivered by a woman twice, maybe even three times, her age. (Listening to Winehouse and Taylor Swift lament lost love is the difference between listening to someone sawing off her own leg and the other clipping her toenails.) So what caused Amy Winehouse to selfdestruct so completely? Clearly, she was an addictive personality whose love of Camels, weed and whiskey helped fuel her early recording sessions before she graduated to harder stuff. She also had no lack of enablers. As childhood friends and trusted advisers — the ones who truly grounded her — fell by the wayside they were replaced by parasitic types, including her husband, Blake Fielder-Civil, who, it is theorized, was intent on keeping Amy hooked on hard-core drugs to retain some measure of control. The most confounding figure in the film is Amy’s father, Mitchell Winehouse, who publicly fancied himself her protector, but who instead exploited her, even at her lowest ebb (he understandably has disowned the movie). In a particularly damning sequence, Amy seeks refuge in Saint Lucia to dry out and get her head together. She muddles through pretty well until Mitchell shows up with a camera crew to film what appears to be his own reality show about his relationship with Amy. The circumstances make her visibly uncomfortable and even as she quietly argues with her father about the appropriateness of his enterprise, the cameras continue rolling. The woman who once famously protested “They tried to make me go to rehab, but I said … no, no, no” did in fact go several times, but it never stuck. Her notorious final concert in Belgrade, when she took the stage too trashed and upset to sing a coherent note, was the humiliating conclusion to a saga that had been launched with boundless promise. As one of her idols and musical collaborators, Tony Bennett, observes about Amy’s tragic trajectory, “Life teaches you how to live it, if you can live long enough.”
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music >Thursday 16 Sean Fullerton “Fully” Acoustic. Sean Fullerton specializes in Acoustic Blues, Rock ‘n’ Roll, Memphis Soul, Fingerstyle Guitar and his own original music using 6 String, 12 String and resonator guitars, harmonicas, live guitar looping, Bose and UltraSound sound systems. Sean has been a successful musician, singer/songwriter, recording engineer and producer since 1995, and performs in a wide variety of venues and for many weddings, parties, charitable and corporate events throughout New England. Fullerton was voted the 2010 Worcester Music Awards “Best Solo Act”, nominated “Best Blues/R&B Act” in 2010 and 2011, nominated “Best Solo Act” in 2012, and was most recently nominated “Best Blues/R&B Act” and “Best Solo Act” in 2015. 3:30-6:30 p.m. Lancaster Farmers Market, Main St and Thayer Memorial Dr, Lancaster. 978-257-3938 or find them on Facebook. Live Blues and Roots-rock: Free outdoor concert with Jumpin’ Juba. Jumpin’ Juba mixes blues from Chicago, Memphis and New Orleans with roots-y rock & roll, jazz, calypso, & Latin flavors. Steve Hurl’s guitar playing draws from great blues, & early rock & roll. Bruce Ward’s piano work recalls such greats as Prof. Longhair & Albert Ammons. Drummer Rob Rudin knocks out a solid beat. Slap Happy is their 2nd CD offering of upbeat, varied blues/roots tunes. stevehurl. com reverbnation.com free. 6-8 p.m. Sturbridge Town Common, Main St., Sturbridge. 508-347-2500. Mark Robie. 6:30-8:30 p.m. Nu Cafe, 335 Chandler St. 508-926-8800. Oakes & Smith Concert. All are welcome to join us for a free concert featuring folk artists Oakes & Smith. Oakes and Smith perform gentle, acoustic folk with voices blending in close harmonies. They sing soothing and soulful tunes inspired by nature, love, spirit, art and poetry. The harmonious blend of their voices creates an ethereal sound and unique quality not often heard in today’s popular music, and their songs evoke a sense of wonder, expressing themes such as love, beauty, innocence and mystery. Their debut album, First Flight, mixed by Grammy-winning engineer Oz Fritz and released in November 2013, has been received warmly by listeners and critics alike. Free. 6:30-7:30 p.m. Jacob Edwards Library, Reading Room, 236 Main St., Southbridge. 508-764-5426 or engagedpatrons.org Clamdigger “Walk & Rock”. 7 p.m.-1 a.m. Rivalry’s Sports Bar, 274 Shrewsbury St. 774-243-1100. Summer Concert Series. Gather on the lawn for our annual sunset Summer Concert Series and help us celebrate the 30th year of music on Fruitlands’ outdoor stage! This year we welcome back the Concord Band, a group of 65 musicians from 40 area towns who have been performing since 1959. This year, Concord Band will treat concert-goers to a deep roster of timeless music, including pieces memorializing historic events, show tunes, holiday favorites and more. ia l!al!group that is quickly TheuJuly 30therconcert back iacianother ecl! pS Sbring pe mm mSerpwillec
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Scott Babineau. 8 p.m.-1 a.m. Blueprint New American Bar & Grill, 9 Village Square, Westminster. 978-668-5580. The Two Schus, Concert 2. Join the Summer Music Camp faculty for two fabulous concerts this summer. Chamber music gems such as the Bach Cello Suite in G Major and Mozart Sinfonia Concertante are bookended by Schumann’s Piano Quartet in Eb Major and Schubert’s beloved “Death and the Maiden” quartet. Our featured guest this summer is internationally acclaimed pianist Sonya Fensome Ovrutsky. Adults $30, Seniors $27, Camp Participant Families $15, Students $8, Youth under 17 free. 8-10 p.m. Clark University: Traina Center for the Arts, Razzo Hall, 92 Downing St. 508-217-4450 or worcesterchambermusic.org Audio Wasabi - Hosted by Brian Chaffee. 8:30 p.m.-1 a.m. Gardner Ale House, 74 Parker St., Gardner. 978-669-0122. Classic Rock Karaoke. Looking for something a little different ? Primo’s Rock and Sports Bar at 102 Green St gives a new twist to Thirsty Thursday! Classic rock videos and Karaoke hosted by one of the areas best Karaoke DJ’s : DJ Matty J...kitchen open for $5 bar menu until 10pm, patio open weather permitting. 8:30 p.m.-1 a.m. Primos Lounge, 102 Green St. 508-459-8702 or find them on Facebook.
becoming a concert tradition: The Love Dogs. With its mix of jazz and jive, this energetic band brings the crowd to its feet every year. Black Marmot will close the summer on Thursday, August 6. Delight in the infectious folk rock tunes. Experimenting with ukulele, complicated harmonies, and even the addition of the rare bass VI, Black Marmot is bound to cast a spell over one and all. When you come: Music begins at 7:15PM Admission is $10/car for Museum Members, $15/car for Nonmembers Season discount passes are available: $50 Members, $75 Nonmembers; pick any 6 concerts to attend. If you have any concerts left on last seasons’ pass it will work for this season too! Bring your blanket, lawn chairs, and picnic basket, or purchase food from one of our food vendors. Beer and wine available on site. $10/car Museum
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Live Band Karaoke with Fingercuff $1000 Contest. Angry Idol 5 is back! You could win $1000! Live Band Karaoke has over 300 songs to choose from. Come sing with a live band and unleash your inner Rock God! Visit www.loveshackmusic.com for more info. 9 p.m.-midnight Angry Ham’s Garage Restaurant & Pub, 2 Beacon St., Framingham. loveshackmusic.com Metal Thursday CCLXXX: Faces of Bayon, Cactus Hag, Oxblood Forge, Cazador. 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Ralph’s Chadwick Square Diner, 148 Grove St. 508-753-9543. Chris Reddy Acoustic Loops from Hell. 9:30 p.m.-2 a.m. Michael’s Cigar Bar, 1 Exchange Place. 508-459-9035. College Night w DJ Xkaliber. 10 p.m.-2 a.m. Perfect Game Sports Grill and Lounge, 64 Water St. 508-792-4263. DJ (21+) Canal. N/A. 10 p.m.-1:30 a.m. Canal Restaurant & Bar, 65 Water St. 508-926-8353. Vin & Sean. 10 p.m.-1 a.m. Compass Tavern, 90 Harding St. 508-304-6044.
>Friday 17 Dan Kirouac. Dan has been part of the regional music scene for Phil Vassar heads lakeside for a show at Webster’s Indian thirty years. When not busy with the tribute band BEATLES FOR SALE, Ranch, 200 Gore Road, Sunday, July 19, 2 p.m. Vassar has his solo performances showcase vocals accompanied by a six-string scored hits as a singer (“Carlene,” “Last Day of My Life,” “American acoustic guitar. From the one-hit wonders to the lost classics, from Child,” “In a Real Love”) and songwriter (“My Next Thirty Years” by the 1960s to today, every show is a different experience, drawing Tim McGraw and “She’s Right on the Money” by Alan Jackson). from almost 500 contemporary and oldie songs. More information at Tickets are $47.50, $42.50 and $30. Kids are $20. visit event.etic. dankirouac.com. Free. 5-8 p.m. Janine’s Frostee, 149 East St., Ware. com. For more information, email adam@callananklein.com. Live Blues and Roots-rock: Free outdoor concert with Jumpin’ Juba. Jumpin’ Juba mixes blues from Chicago, Memphis and New Orleans with roots-y rock & roll, jazz, calypso,& Latin flavors. Steve Hurl’s guitar playing draws from great blues, & early rock & roll. Octobrists, Levity, A Mirror’s Embrace, The Ben Cote Band, and Demonic Requiem. Looking for something to do after Bruce Ward’s piano work recalls such greats as Prof. Longhair & Albert Ammons. Drummer Rob Rudin knocks out a solid beat. Slap Happy is the 4th of July and National Smores Day (August 10th)? Come see Octobrists Levity A Mirror’s Embrace The Ben Cote Band and Demonic their 2nd CD offering of upbeat, varied blues/roots tunes. stevehurl.com Requiem at Lucky Dog Music Hall in Worcester, on July 16th. It is only reverbnation.com free. 5:30-7 p.m. Pearle L. Crawford Memorial Library, 40 Schofield Ave., Dudley. 508-949-8021. $5 for 5 bands. Pretty damn sweet if you ask me...well not as sweet as National Smores Day but you can pre-game at the show.... $5. 8:30 Thank Friday It’s Dr. Nat. Let Dr. Nat start your weekend with p.m.-2 a.m. Lucky Dog Music Hall, 89 Green St. 508-363-1888 or find jazz, swing, blues, soul, samba, R&B, Broadway, original songs about Worcester, and other surprises, such as special guest vocalists and them on Facebook. Canopy, Stuarts Giants. 21 plus, find them on Facebook. 9 p.m.-1 instrumentalists. Dancers welcome! Ask about Thank Friday It’s Dr. Nat (TFIDN) menu bargains in the cabaret room! No cover charge, tips a.m. Electric Haze, 26 Millbury St. 508-799-0629. appreciated. 5:30-7:30 p.m. Nick’s Bar and Restaurant, 124 Millbury St. Grade “A” Fancy’s Third Thirsty Thursday at Nick’s. Every Third Thirsty Thursday at Nick’s in 2015. Swing on by and check out our 508-753-4030 or natneedle.com “Special Guests”, the amazing food and ambiance as you ease into your Bill McCarthy’s Friday After Work Party at Plaza Azteca! weekend with a little foot stomping and our special brand of stabby love Since the 1980’s, Bill McCarthy has performed with and fronted such songs! 9-11:30 p.m. Nick’s Bar and Restaurant, 124 Millbury St. 508bands as: The Zones, The RefleXion, The Bill McCarthy Band, McCarthy 753-4030 or find them on Facebook. & Mullet, and McCarthy & Fullerton. He has performed at Mechanics Karaoke with DJ Curtis. 9 p.m.-1 a.m. Padavano’s Place, 358 Hall, Washburn Hall, The Worcester Auditorium, and The Centrum and Shrewsbury St. 774-823-3022. has opened for: The Drifters, The Marvelettes, and Beatlemania. Bill was
Members, $15/car Nonmembers. 7-9 p.m. Fruitlands Museum, 102 Prospect Hill Road, Harvard. 978-456-3924 or fruitlands.org. Thirsty Thursday Open Mic Night @ Dark Horse Tavern with Mark & Wibble. *Calling all fellow musicians & artists alike!* Join us down at the Dark Horse & bring your Guitars, Banjos, Mandolins, Trumpets & Xylophones & let’s have some fun :) Showcasing real live local music & talent! To RSVP a time slot in advance please send your name/time slot you’d like and e-mail (optional) to darkhorseopenmic@yahoo.com. To all other players that want to come up to jam and don’t want to RSVP... there will be a sign-up sheet so you get to play your tunes accordingly, so don’t fret (no pun intended). Here are the times: 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 Free. 7-10 p.m. Dark Horse Tavern, 12 Crane St., Southbridge. 508764-1100 or find them on Facebook. Karaoke. Karaoke by Star Sound Entertainment 7:30 p.m.-midnight Hirosaki Prime, 1121 Grafton St. 508-926-8700. Jay Graham. 8 p.m.-1 a.m. Rye & Thyme, 14 Monument Sqare, Leominster. 978-534-5900. Jittery Jack Rockabilly. 8 p.m.-midnight Beatnik’s, 433 Park Ave. 508-926-8877. Over Over Over 40 COlOrs 40COlOrs COlOrs 40 On On sale Onsale sale
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>Saturday 18
Jazz Saxophone Lessons for Beginners. Anyone can learn voted: “Best Solo Artist: 2001” by the Worcester Phoenix’ Peoples Poll, to play the saxophone! In this course, you will learn how to do the and, over the years, has been nominated “Best Male Vocalist,” “Hardest following: how to purchase a saxophone, correct breathing, embouchure Working Act,” and “Lifetime Achievement Award” by the Worcester and mouthpiece techniques, sax care and repair, long tones, fingering PULSE and Worcester Magazine. He has been the voice of many local charts, scales and chords, playing tips, learn to read music, and New England and national radio and television commercial characters playing in an ensemble. Your level of proficiency depends on your as well as writing and performing one of the last Spag’s jingles. Having determination, the amount of time invested, and the amount of your the ability to “mold his voice” to whatever artist he’s covering -- be it natural ability. These traits work together to determine your success. Elvis Costello or Elvis Presley, Tom Petty or James Taylor, John Lennon Learning to play the saxophone, especially jazz saxophone, is an or Billy Joel -- Bill keeps his performances fresh and never fails to adventure that you can enjoy the rest of your life. One of the greatest please his audience! Free. 6-9 p.m. Plaza Azteca, 539 Lincoln St. joys of this experience is knowing you can learn more about the BillMcCarthyMusic.com instrument, the music, and yourself, every day that you practice. $169. The Drunken Uncles. Your favorite uncles play your favorite songs! Noon-3 p.m. Quinsigamond Community College, 25 Federal St. 508Free. 6-9 p.m. Park Grill and Spirits, Bar, 257 Park Ave. 508-756-7995 751-7900 or trainnow.qcc.edu or find them on Facebook. Free Butch Bazillion Show. Every Saturday & Sunday ~ 1-5 PM Grade “A” Fancy plays Hyland Orchard’s Songwriter’s Free Butch Bazillion Show Playing Your Favorite Rock & Pop Hits. 1-5 Pavilion Series. Slip on out to Hyland Orchard & Brewery’s Pavilion p.m. Kimball Farm, 400 Littleton Road, Westford. 978-486-3891 or find for a Friday night of original music. Featuring a set of music by Grade them on Facebook. “A” Fancy and then a jam with the houseband! Always a great time Chris Young. 2-7 p.m. Indian Ranch, 200 Gore Road, Webster. 508-943-3871. in Fiskdale! 7-10 p.m. Hyland Orchard & Brewery, 199 Arnold Road, New Bay Colony - July 18 - Micky McAuliffe Goes South - End Sturbridge. 508-347-7500 or find them on Facebook. An Era, Begin An Error - Uxbridge VFW. It’s been coming awhile but Karaoke. Karaoke by Star Sound Entertainment 8 p.m.-12:30 a.m. the banks have finally forced Micky and Doreen McAuliffe to go south. Chooch’s Food & Spirits, 31 East Brookfield Road, North Brookfield. The snow banks. On Saturday July 18, from 3:00pm till whenever, 508-867-2494. outside (inside if it rains) the Uxbridge VFW, we “End an Era, Begin an Karaoke & Dance Party. DJ & Dancing 12:30am - 2am Free. 8 Error”. Tickets are $20 from friends and members of the band. Email p.m.-12:30 a.m. Speakers Night Club, 19 Weed St., Marlborough. 508newbaycolony@charter.net and we’ll hook you up with someone. 439-9314. We’re all gonna miss his solid sound, wise ass remarks and his smile Katie O’Brien. 8 p.m.-1 a.m. The Mill 185, 185 West Boylston St., when he screws up. For directions to 13 Cross St., Uxbridge: http:// West Boylston. 774-261-8585. www.socialweb.net/Places/3876.lasso $20. 3-11 p.m. Veterans Of Mike Lynch Trio. 8 p.m.-2 a.m. Rivalry’s Sports Bar, 274 Shrewsbury Foreign Wars (VFW) Post 1385 Uxbridge, 13 Cross Road, Uxbridge. St. 774-243-1100. 508-278-7540. Robbie Fulks and Redd Volkaert. Robbie Fulks is one of the Open Mic. Open to musicians, poets, comedians or anyone with a best songwriters this country has to offer, period. Redd Volkaert is talent! Hosted by Stephen Wright. 6-9 p.m. Nu Cafe, 335 Chandler St. among the top Telecaster guitar-slingers you will find anywhere. To 508-926-8800 or nucafe.com have them both together on one stage is a monumental event. Robbie Chris Reddy Acoustic Loops from Hell. 7-11 p.m. The GazBar Fuchs plays by nobody’s rules, except the ones he hears in his head. Sports Grill, 1045 Central St., Leominster. $22 advance; $25 day of show. 8-11 p.m. Bull Run Restaurant, Shelley King Band - WCUW Frontroom Concert Series Sawtelle Room, 215 Great Road, Shirley. 978-425-4311 or tickets. 2015. Austin Texas singer/songwriter and great friend to WCUW, Shelley bullrunrestaurant.com King - Bring your favorite snack or a covered dish to share with your Zack Slik. 8 p.m.-1 a.m. Rye & Thyme, 14 Monument Sqare, friends - Texas Proud $7 - $5 members. 7-10 p.m. WCUW 91.3 FM Leominster. 978-534-5900. Worcester’s Community Radio Station, 910 Main St. 508-753-1012. Live Music. 8:30 p.m.-2 a.m. Gardner Ale House, 74 Parker St., DRM Band. DRM - some of the very best in Christian Classic Rock! $5 Gardner. 978-669-0122. Donation. 7:30-10 p.m.!Cafe con Dios!, Main Room, 22 Faith Ave., Auburn. The 25th Anniversary show for Touch 2 Much with Bill McCarthy. 8 p.m.-1 a.m. The Mill 185, 185 West Boylston St., special guests Rage Against The Machine tribute Gorilla West Boylston. 774-261-8585. Radio and openers The Raw. 25 years of Touch 2 Much here in Ken Macy. 8 p.m.-1 a.m. Blueprint New American Bar & Grill, 9 Worcester. This is gonna be big. Huge stage production. Gorilla Radio Village Square, Westminster. 978-668-5580. the ultimate Rage tribute is back again along with The Raw! $8. 8:30 Pants on Fire. 8 p.m.-1 a.m. Rye & Thyme, 14 Monument Sqare, p.m.-2 a.m. Lucky Dog Music Hall, 89 Green St. 508-363-1888 or Leominster. 978-534-5900. theluckydogmusichall.com Take Two. 8 p.m.-2 a.m. Rivalry’s Sports Bar, 274 Shrewsbury St. Dysfunctional Advocate, Slitstitch, Speak Well Of The Dead, 774-243-1100. and Hellitosis! 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Ralph’s Chadwick Square Diner, 148 Grove Three Little Birds. Free! 8-11 p.m. The Westender, 493 Boston St. 508-753-9543. Post Road West, Marlborough. 508-485-1185. Airspray: Queer Dance Party. 21 plus, find them on Facebook. 9 Toby Walker (Ballroom). Roots music fingerstyle guitar virtuoso p.m.-1 a.m. Electric Haze, 26 Millbury St. 508-799-0629. Toby Walker, who blends blues, ragtime, country, bluegrass, rock and DJs - Karaoke. 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Jillian’s - Worcester, 315 Grove St. 508-793-0900. old time jazz into his own unique style, has toured the US, England, Fossil Funk & Guests. 9 p.m.-1 a.m. Beatnik’s, 433 Park Ave. 508-926-8877. Wales, France, Germany, Belgium and Holland. He has been featured in How Bizarre! The area’s newest 90’s tribute! 9 p.m.-12:30 a.m. JJ’s the New York Times, the London Sunday Times, the London BBC, SiriusSports Bar and Grill, 380 Southwest Cutoff, Northborough. 508-842-8420. XM radio and was the 1st place recipient of the International Blues Karaoke. 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Partner’s Pub, 970 South St., Fitchburg. 978-345-5051. Challenge Award - Solo division - given out by the Blues Foundation Prizm. $5. 9 p.m.-1 a.m. Greendale’s Pub, 404 W Boylston St. 508-853-1350. in Memphis TN. $16 advance; $20 day of show. 8-11 p.m. Bull Run Andy Cummings & Swingabilly Lounge. 9:30 p.m.-2 a.m. Restaurant, Ballroom, 215 Great Road, Shirley. 978-425-4311 or tickets. Michael’s Cigar Bar, 1 Exchange Place. 508-459-9035. bullrunrestaurant.com City Boys Band. Rock out with the City Boys Band, always a good time. 10 Classic metal with M.U.Y.A. and tba w/ sideshow p.m.-1 a.m. Carlin’s Restaurant , 7 Depot Square, Ayer. loveshackmusic.com performer. Muya is .....Metal! playing old school metal music. Priest, DJ (21+) Canal. N/A. 10 p.m.-1:30 a.m. Canal Restaurant & Bar, Maiden, Megadeth, Metallica, Slayer, Sabbath, Ozzy Pantera,...you get 65 Water St. 508-926-8353. the idea. $7. 8:30 p.m.-2 a.m. Lucky Dog Music Hall, 89 Green St.
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has a resume full of accolades including two ASCAP Songwriter of the Year trophies, Billboard Country Songwriter of the Year, countless hits as a singer and songwriter and a mantle full of awards. Known as one of Nashville’s top tunesmiths, his songs other artists have taken to #1 include “My Next Thirty Years” by Tim McGraw, “She’s Right On The Money” by Alan Jackson, and Jo Dee Messina’s “Bye, Bye” and “I’m Alright.” David Nail had a hit with Phil’s “The Sound of a Million Dreams,” which Billboard named the #1 song in their Top 10 Country Songs of 2012. Reserved tickets: $47.50 and 42.50 General Admission: $30 Adv. General Admission: valid until July 5: $35 Children’s Tickets: $20. 2-7 p.m. Indian Ranch, 200 Gore Road, Webster. 508-943-3871 or event.etix.com Salem Trayned Band. This re-enacting group accurately recreates a 17th-century English colonial militia unit from Salem, Massachusetts. The militia organization in Salem dates back to 1628 and was a continuation of typical European military practices of the day. Dressed in period clothing and equipped with historically correct arms and armor, the Salem Trayned Band will show you how our colonial ancestors defended themselves.(Program subject to change) Free with Museum admission. 2:30-3:30 p.m. Worcester Art Museum, Conference Room or Stoddard Court Yard, 55 Salisbury St. 508-799-4406. The Recliners. 4-8 p.m. Rivalry’s Sports Bar, 274 Shrewsbury St. 774-243-1100. Erin Ollis - Acoustic on the Patio! 5-8 p.m. Padavano’s Place, 358 Shrewsbury St. 774-823-3022. Jeff Mac & the Oochie Wally Wallies. 5-9 p.m. Beatnik’s, 433 Park Ave. 508-926-8877. Jim’s Sunday Blues Jam. Every week, Jim Perry hosts the best blues jam around, and brings in very special guest performers. No cover. 6-10 p.m. Greendale’s Pub, 404 W Boylston St. 508-853-1350. Open Mic Sundays @ Plaza Azteca! 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”)* 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 Think the force is with you? Prove it by testing your Pro’s or Semi-Pro’s * Regularly Gigging Paid-Performers * Published Star Wars knowledge during the ultimate fan trivia contest at Songwriters * Recording Studio Owner/Operators * Combinations of any Barnes & Noble Booksellers, 70 Worcester Providence Turnpike, and/or all of the above. To check the schedules and open slots visit Millbury on Saturday, July 18, 3-4 p.m. Come as you are Facebook. Any slot marked as “open” usually is! Free! 6-9 p.m. Plaza or dress up as your favorite Star Wars character (“Star Wars: Azteca, 539 Lincoln St. Return of the Jedi” Princess Leia meets Jabba the Hut might Funky Jazz Jam Sundays. 21 plus First, and Third Sundays! be a bit too revealing. there is no cost to participate. For more More info on Facebook. Free. 7-11 p.m. Electric Haze, 26 Millbury St. information, email crm2206@bn.com or call 508-865-2801. 508-799-0629. Massachusetts Symphony Orchestra Summer Family Concert. Myron Romanul will conduct the orchestra in a program of classical, Broadway, and rock music, including pieces such as Old Time plays Sahara Restaurant every 4th Saturday! Deconstructed Standards Rock’n’Roll, Children of Sanchez, and Rock Around the Clock; the title and Originals. Free. 10 p.m.-2 a.m. Sahara Cafe & Restaurant, 143 is Bach to Rock. Performing with the orchestra will be Cliff Goodwin, Highland St. 508-798-2181 or worcesterjazzcollective.com guitar, and Mitch Chakour, keyboard and vocals. They are both known >Sunday 19 for their performances with the Joe Cocker Band. The announcer will Special Sunday Show Upstairs: American Verse, Spectre Shores, be Bobbie Chase. Rain date is Sunday, July 26. free but donations Feeble Contenders (TX), and Backwards Dance and Jonas The Cloud! accepted. 7-9 p.m. Institute Park, Salisbury St. and Park Ave. 5089-2 a.m. Ralph’s Chadwick Square Diner, 148 Grove St. 508-753-9543. 754-1234. Free Butch Bazillion Show. Every Saturday & Sunday ~ 1-5 PM Worcester Jazz Collective @ Electric Haze. Worcester Free Butch Bazillion Show Playing Your Favorite Rock & Pop Hits. 1-5 Jazz Collective plays Electric Haze every 2nd Sunday! Deconstructed p.m. Kimball Farm, 400 Littleton Road, Westford. 978-486-3891 or find Standards and Originals. Free. 8-11 p.m. Electric Haze, 26 Millbury St. 508-799-0629 or worcesterjazzcollective.com them on Facebook. Emerging Musician: Daniel Kim - Pianist. Included with Funky Jazz Jam. 21 plus, find them on Facebook. 9-11 p.m. admission.. 2-3 p.m. Tower Hill Botanic Garden, 11 French Drive, Boylston. Electric Haze, 26 Millbury St. 508-799-0629. Phil Vassar. Indian Ranch in Webster, MA announced that Phil Karaoke. 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Partner’s Pub, 970 South St., Fitchburg. Vassar will return to the lakeside concert venue on Sunday, July 19th 978-345-5051. at 2PM. As a singer/songwriter, Phil has hit the Top 5 seven times >Monday 20 with songs like “Carlene,” “Last Day of My Life” and “American Child” Blue Mondays. Guitarist/Singer Nate Flecha plays the blues every and topped the charts with “In A Real Love” and the perennial favorite “Just Another Day in Paradise.” With eight albums under his belt, Vassar Monday. Free. 7-9 p.m. starlite, 39 Hamilton St., Southbridge. 772-4028777 or find them on Facebook.
508-363-1888 or find them on Facebook. Linda Dagnello Jazz Quintet. 8:30 p.m.-midnight Nick’s Bar and Restaurant, 124 Millbury St. 508-753-4030. Live Music. 8:30 p.m.-2 a.m. Gardner Ale House, 74 Parker St., Gardner. 978-669-0122. Elemental. 9 p.m.-1 a.m. Beatnik’s, 433 Park Ave. 508-926-8877. Grade “A” Fancy Returns to Micheal’s Cigar Bar. We’ll be preserving our meat the old fashioned way (smoke it baby). Swing on down and take a tour of the walk in humidor while we provide the ambiance to your evening out. 9-11:59 p.m. Michael’s Cigar Bar, 1 Exchange Place. 508-459-9035 or find them on Facebook. Live Bands. 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Partner’s Pub, 970 South St., Fitchburg. 978-345-5051. Magic Island. 21 plus, find them on Facebook. 9 p.m.-1 a.m. Electric Haze, 26 Millbury St. 508-799-0629. Silverbacks. $5. 9 p.m.-1 a.m. Greendale’s Pub, 404 W Boylston St. 508-853-1350. The Plagiarists. 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Jillian’s - Worcester, 315 Grove St. 508-793-0900. The Roadtrash Band! 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Ralph’s Chadwick Square Diner, 148 Grove St. 508-753-9543. DJ (21+) Canal. N/A. 10 p.m.-1:30 a.m. Canal Restaurant & Bar, 65 Water St. 508-926-8353. The Flat Five *Dancing*. 10 p.m.-1 a.m. Padavano’s Place, 358 Shrewsbury St. 774-823-3022. Worcester Jazz Collective @ Sahara. Worcester Jazz Collective
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Open Mic/Open Decks. Sign up is at 7pm for half hour or less slots. Use our PA system, Mics, controller and sound tech. Anything is welcome! 21plus Free. 7 p.m.-1 a.m. Electric Haze, 26 Millbury St. 508-799-0629. Blue Mondays - Live Blues. 8:30 p.m.-1 a.m. Gardner Ale House, 74 Parker St., Gardner. 978-669-0122.
Help ring the bell on the end of an era, as Micky McAuliffe and the New Bay Colony Band, which has been playing since 1973, rock VFW Post 1385 Uxbridge, 13 Cross Road, Saturday, July 18, 3-11 p.m. McAuliffe is headed south, so this is technically a farewell show, but maybe fans can sway him. There will be food, too, as chicken is cooked up and served along with the tunes. Tickets are $20. For more information, email newbaycolony@charter.net.
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Music Together - Music and Movement - Early Childhood Mommy & Me Classes. Have some summer fun making music with Pakachoag. Our W. Boylston Summer Sampler is a great way to get a taste of our School year Music Together program. We’ll be singing, clapping, playing with the drums and shakers, dancing around (informally) with the music. Summer samplers are also offered in Sterling and Auburn. $60 / $45 for siblings. 9:30-10:15 a.m. First Congregational ChurchPakachoag Music School satellite location, Lower Hall, 26 Central St., West Boylston. 508-791-8159. Tuesday Night at the Movies. 7-10 p.m. Beatnik’s, 433 Park Ave. 508-926-8877. Vertigo Trivia Game Show - Free to Enter. Vertigo hits Shrewsbury Street! This is not your typical pub trivia! An eight round interactive team event, complete with visual, audio, and other specialty rounds that are anything but boring! Prizes for the top finishers, and fun for all who participate. Visit and ‘Like’ the Facebook page listed below for a free answer the day of the event. Teams can have up to six players, so grab your friends or family and come out for a night of fun competition and great food! Free. 7-9 p.m. Vintage Grille, 346 Shrewsbury St. 508-7520558 or vertigotrivia.com Doyle Bramhall II. Stepping aside from his “Wheels of Soul” Summer Tour with the Tedeschi Trucks Band and Sharon Jones & the Dap Kings, Doyle Bramhall II will once again raise the roof at Bull Run.
$40 advance; $45 day of show. 7:30-10:30 p.m. Bull Run Restaurant, Sawtelle Room, 215 Great Road, Shirley. 978-425-4311 or tickets. bullrunrestaurant.com 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. 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. Chad Clements. 8-11 p.m. Compass Tavern, 90 Harding St. 508-304-6044. C.U.Next Tuesday! Tunes in the Diner with DJ Poke Smot and Special Guests every Tuesday Night! No cover. 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Ralph’s Chadwick Square Diner, 148 Grove St. 508-753-9543. Disturbia Tuesdays: Outerspace of AOTP. 21 plus, find them on Facebook. 9 p.m.-1 a.m. Electric Haze, 26 Millbury St. 508-799-0629. Every Tuesday: Jon Bonner and Boogie Chillin’. 9 p.m.midnight Vincent’s Bar, 49 Suffolk St. 508-752-9439. Hip Hop Tuesdays. Every Tuesday is different! Check our Facebook
Full Day of Folk Music Contra Dance picnicking on the lawn Family Activities Art Making Food Trucks Fw/mRusEeuEm ...And More!
page, under events for more details! $5-$15. 9 p.m.-1 a.m. Electric Haze, 26 Millbury St. 508-799-0629. >Wednesday 22 Beatles For Sale the Tribute. Back by popular demand! Beatles For Sale returns to the Gale Free Library on Wednesday, July 22nd at 6pm for a free outdoor concert. Bring your lawn chairs and blankets. Hear all your favorite Beatle hits and Beatle B-sides performed completely live by New England’s #1 Beatles Tribute band, Beatles For Sale! A splendid time IS guaranteed for all! In case of rain, the concert will be held at the Holden Senior Center, 1130 Main Street (route 122-A) Concerts have been supported by The Friends of the Gale Free Library. See galefreelibrary.org, for more information. Free. 6-7 p.m. Gale Free Library, 23 Highland St., Holden. 508-829-0230. Jazz at Twig’s Café. Enjoy the sounds of jazz this summer with a series of talented musicians while you dine at Twig’s Café. This evening will feature Mark Jodice. Mark’s passion for guitar playing has been cultivated over the past 25 years. Having studied with some of the finest teachers in New England, including Mick Goodrick and Tim Miller, Mark has taken the knowledge and forged his own path. Mark has performed at some of the area’s premier jazz clubs, including Scullers in Boston, Ryles in Cambridge, The Center for Arts in Natick, the
Community
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Acton Jazz Café, and The Press Room in Portsmouth, NH. Visit Mark’s website at: http://markjodice.weebly.com Included with admission. Free for members. 6-9 p.m. Tower Hill Botanic Garden, 11 French Drive, Boylston. 508-869-6111. Ladies Night. 7-11 p.m. Beatnik’s, 433 Park Ave. 508-926-8877. Dr. John & the Night Trippers. On March 14, 2011, one week after his last show at Bull Run, Dr. John was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in a gala ceremony held at The Waldorf Astoria in New York and broadcast on Fuse. Joining Dr. John at the ceremony was The Alice Cooper Band, Neil Diamond, Darlene Love, and Tom Waits. If you missed that show - buy early this year! $75 advance; $80 day of show. 7:30-10:30 p.m. Bull Run Restaurant, Sawtelle Room, 215 Great Road, Shirley. 978-425-4311 or tickets.bullrunrestaurant.com Summer Concert- Broadway Melodies (Greater Worcester Opera). Join GWO for their 12th Annual Summer Concert Series. Enjoy a comfortable and air-conditioned atmosphere, while experiencing engaging performances by some of the area’s finest singers, accompanied by Olga Rogach and narrated by Rick Kimball. The music is exquisite, the price reasonable and the refreshments complimentary- it’s a great way to support the arts while having a wonderful time! Concerts include Broadway Melodies (July 22), American Songbook (July 29), Gilbert and Sullivan and More! (August 5), and Opera Gala (August 12). $10 general admission ($5 student). 7:30-9:30 p.m. Briarwood Community Center, Birches Auditorium, Briarwood Circle. 508-930-7062 or greaterworcesteropera.org 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
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day
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MUSIC
10am-5pm featuring
ADMISSION
10am-1pm
WORCESTER ART MUSEUM
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WORCESTER BRAVEHEARTS PLAYER OF THE WEEK
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! 7:30-10:30 p.m. Guiseppe’s Grille, 35 Solomon Pond Road, Northborough. 508-3934405 or find them on Facebook. Karaoke. Karaoke by Star Sound Entertainment 8 p.m.-midnight Dark Horse Tavern, 12 Crane St., Southbridge. 508-764-1100. Karaoke. 8 p.m.-1 a.m. Compass Tavern, 90 Harding St. 508-304-6044. Worcester Jazz Collective @ Nick’s. WJC returns for exciting blend of original jazz compositions and weirdo versions of standards free. 8 p.m.-midnight Nick’s Bar and Restaurant, 124 Millbury St. 508753-4030 or worcesterjazzcollective.com Karaoke. 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Partner’s Pub, 970 South St., Fitchburg. 978-345-5051.
RES
LOUIE DESP
What do you do when you aren’t playing baseball? I like to hang out. On off days I like to get my mind off the game a little bit, relax. If I’m not doing that, hanging out with friends or just trying to get better every day. What’s one thing that most people don’t know about you? I’m a big soccer fan – huge soccer fan. I like to follow it pretty closely. Yeah, I didn’t want to know (the result of the Women’s World Cup final between the USA and Japan), because I had it recorded at home. What are you looking forward to about this summer? It’s awesome to get to know a bunch of the guys from all over the country. You’ve got guys from Texas, Ohio, and Virginia – everywhere – playing at all different colleges. I’m learning a lot from them, and I hope they’ll learn a little from me. It’s good to meet people from all around.
museums/ galleries
ADC Performance Center (@ The Artist Development Complex), 18 Mill St., Southbridge. 508-764-6900 or adcmusic.com Anna Maria College, 50 Sunset Lane, Paxton. 508-849-3300 or annamaria.edu ArtsWorcester, “Cropped” by Susan Paciello, Wednesdays, Thursdays, Fridays, Saturdays, through Oct. 9; Call for Artists- Worcester Portrait Exchange, Through July 18; Worcester Portrait Exchange 2015, Friday. 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, 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: 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 508-793-7113 or clarku.edu Clark’s Cafe and Art On Rotation Gallery, Hours: 6 a.m. to 1 p.m. Sunday - Saturday. Admission: Free for 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 Dark World Gallery, Hours: closed Sunday, 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday - Saturday. 179 Grafton St. darkworldgallery.com EcoTarium, Wild Music: Experience the Sounds and Songs of Life , Sundays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thursdays, Fridays, Saturdays, through Sept. 6; Soundtastic Saturdays, Saturdays, through Sept. 5; Preschool and Toddler Wednesdays, Wednesdays, through Dec. 16. Hours: noon-5 p.m. Sunday, closed Monday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday - Saturday. Admission: $14.00 adults; $10 for children ages 2-18, college students with IDs & senior citizens. Children under 2 & EcoTarium members free. Additional charges apply for Tree Canopy Walkway, Explorer Express Train, planetarium programs & other special program. 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
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Name: Mike Coggeshall Hometown: Shrewsbury Number: 27 Position: Infielder School: Assumption College Major: Organizational Communications
What’s your most proud moment as a baseball player? Probably my freshman year of high school, when we went to (the state tournament) in (American) Legion. That was a great group of guys I played with and that was awesome. Who is the most influential person in your life? Might sound a little cheesy, but my dad. He’s been by my side my whole life and has taught me everything I know about the game. He’s always there to help whenever I need it and to give me pointers. He’s a little pain sometimes, but that’s what dads are for.
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 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, Hours: 12:30-4 p.m. Sunday, closed Monday, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday - Saturday. 414 Massasoit Ave. 508-753-6087 or massaudubon.org Museum of Russian Icons, Byzantium to Russia, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thursdays, Fridays, Saturdays, through Sept. 12. 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 978-5985000x17 or museumofrussianicons.org Old Sturbridge Village, Discovery Adventures: Fuzzy Friends, Through July 17; Kindred Spirits: A.B. Wells, Malcolm Watkins, and the Origins of Old Sturbridge Village, Through Jan. 15, 2016; Summer Work & Play, Saturday - Sunday; Discovery Adventures: Ox-Tales, Monday - Friday. 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, Hours: closed Sunday, 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Monday - Saturday. 1 Boston Post Road, Marlborough. 508-4852580 or postroacenter.com
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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 Quinebaug Valley Council for the Arts & Humanities, the Arts Center, Hours: 2-4 p.m. Sunday, closed Monday - Friday, 2-4 p.m. Saturday. 111 Main St., Southbridge. 508-346-3341 or qvcah.org Quinsigamond Community College: Administration Building, 670 West Boylston St. qcc.edu Rollstone Studios, Hours: 11-4 p.m. Sunday, closed Monday Wednesday, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Thursday - Saturday. Admission: 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, Loom in Essence, Through July 26. 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, 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 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: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday, closed Monday, 9 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, Africa’s Children of Arms, Through Sept. 20; Armor Interpretation - Knights! Gallery, Wednesdays, Thursdays, through July 29; Art Since the Mid-20th Century, Through Dec. 31; Nagasawa Rosetsu, Bamboo, Through Aug. 9; Nude Drawing in the Galleries, Thursdays, through July 30; Samurai: Japanese myth and tradition in the contemporary imagination, Through Sept. 6; Armor Interpretation - Knights! Gallery, Fridays, through July 31; Armor Interpretation - Samurai! Gallery, Fridays, through July 31; Tour of the Month: Sand, Surf, Summer, Saturday; Zip Tour: Joan Snyder: Dark Release, Saturday; Sunday Tours, Sundays, through June 26; Armor Interpretation - Samurai! Gallery, Wednesdays, through July 29; Art Cart!, Wednesdays, through July 29. Hours: 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday,
You’re in for no ordinary experience when you see “Ordinary Days” at 1870 Town Hall, 12 Woodward Ave., Berlin Friday, July 17 through Sunday, July 19. Performances are 2-4 p.m. and 8-10 p.m. Portions of the proceeds benefit the Domestic Violence Support Network (DVSN). Tickets are $30 ($20 for Berlin residents). Visit flyleaftheatre.com, email general@flyleaftheater.com or call 508-443-4359.
You Deserve It. PLATINUM CHECKING
Commerce Bank’s New Platinum Checking Account1 Benefits Include:
• Unlimited free ATM withdrawals anywhere in the USA • Free stop payments on checks • No charge for incoming wires • Our best rates on Certificates of Deposit • Free basic check order • Free money orders, travelers’ checks and treasurers checks • Free small safe deposit box for one year2 Take advantage of this great opportunity today! See your personal Commerce banker for details.
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Customers must maintain a minimum combined deposit balance of $25,000 in one or more Commerce Bank accounts and have a checking account. If your account balance falls below the required combined minimum balance of $25,000 there will be a $15.00 monthly service charge. See personal banker for terms & conditions. Annual fee waived for one year on either a 5x5 safe deposit box at our Fenway branch or 3x5 safe deposit box at any of our other locations, or $40 credit applied to another rental for one year. Commerce Bank is a registered service mark in Massachusetts of Commerce Bank & Trust Company. ©2015 Commerce Bank & Trust Company. Commerce Bank member FDIC. Equal Housing Lender. All rights reserved.
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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, Alden Family Gallery, Through Dec. 31; In Their Shirtsleeves, Through Dec. 31; Stories They Tell, Through Dec. 31; The Sky Is Not The Limit - 80 years anniversary of David Clark Company, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thursdays, Fridays, Saturdays, through Sept. 12; WHM is a Blue Star Museum, Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thursdays, Fridays, Saturdays, through Sept. 7. Hours: closed Sunday - Monday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday - Saturday. 30 Elm St. 508-753-8278 or worcesterhistory.org Worcester Public Library, 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
Sunday Night Cinemageddon! Movies Shown Every Sunday Night in the Diner! - Sundays, Sunday, May 13 - Thursday, December 31. Facebook: Ralphs Diner Free. 9 p.m.-1 a.m. Ralph’s Chadwick
Square Diner, 148 Grove St. Call 508-753-9543. American Folk Art, Lovingly Collected - Wednesday, July 15 - Sunday, November 29. One of the most important private collections of folk art in the country has been assembled near Worcester, with an unusual focus on Central Massachusetts portraits and painted furniture. The work remains little known and will be examined in light of the growing economic development in the region during the 1800s and the market for itinerant artists. Free with Admission . Worcester Art Museum, PDP Gallery and American Decorative Arts Gallery, 55 Salisbury St. Call 508-799-4406 or visit worcesterart.org Romeo and Juliet - Thursday, July 16. Join us for a performance of the Alumni Company’s touring production of Romeo and Juliet at Worcester’s own NU Cafe. Admission is free. Check out the Alumni Company’s Facebook page: shakespeareacademystratford.org RSVP on the Facebook Event. For more information on Nu Cafe and their delicious menu, visit: nucafe.com. Four actors. Two families. One story. Love born from hate. Running time: 70 minutes Free admission. 6-7:15 p.m. Nu Cafe, 335 Chandler St. Call 508-926-8800 or visit shakespeareacademystratford.org Romeo and Juliet - Saturday, July 18. Join us for a performance of the Alumni Company’s touring production of Romeo and Juliet at Worcester’s Crompton Collective. Come watch some theater and enjoy the Farmers’ Market! Bring your own chair or blankets. Admission is free. Check out the Alumni Company’s Facebook page. RSVP on our Facebook event. For more information on Crompton Collective, visit: cromptoncollective.com. Four actors. Two families. One story. Love born from hate. Running time: 70 minutes Free admission. Please bring a chair or blanket to sit on.. 10-11:15 a.m. Crompton Collective, 138 Green St. Call 5087537303 or visit shakespeareacademystratford.org Romeo and Juliet - Saturday, July 18. Join us for a performance of the Alumni Company’s touring production of Romeo and Juliet at Worcester’s Sprinkler Factory. Admission: Suggested donation of
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Come cheer on the Worcester Bravehearts as they try to beat the Blues of Bristol Friday, July 17, 7:05 p.m., at the HIP at Fitton Field, Holy Cross, 1 College St., Worcester. Enjoy free fireworks after the game. Tickets are $5-$9. Visit worcesterbravehearts.com.
$10. Proceeds go to benefit both the Alumni Company and Sprinkler Factory. Check out the Alumni Company’s Facebook page. RSVP to our Facebook Event. For more information on Sprinkler Factory, visit: sprinklerfactory.com. Four actors. Running time: 70 minutes $10 Suggested Donation . 7-8:15 p.m. Sprinkler Factory, 38 Harlow St. Visit shakespeareacademystratford.org Mister Smarta** Theater’s Live comedy take on a really terrible film. - Wednesday, July 22. Mr. Smartass Theater is a live homage to the classic television program Mystery Science Theater 3000. A cheesy public domain film is projected onto the Lucky Dog’s lovely movie screen. Three of Worcester’s most notorious smart-alecs give the film a new soundtrack laced with puns, dirty jokes, sound effects, pop culture references, and even a few facts thrown in for good measure. So stick around and you just might learn something. Every show is unique, every
show starts at 9:30, and it’s always free to get in. And it’s especially free if you’re wearing a tube top. Ladies? Free 8:30 p.m.-1 a.m. Lucky Dog Music Hall, 89 Green St. Call 508-363-1888 or visit Facebook.
baseball
Worcester Bravehearts Thursday, July 16 vs. Wachusett Dirt Dawgs, Hanover Insurance Park, 7:05 p.m. Friday, July 17 vs. Bristol Blues, Hanover Insurance Park, 7:05 p.m. Saturday, July 18 at Bristol Blues, 7 p.m. Sunday, July 19 at Pittsfield Suns, 4 p.m. Tuesday, July 21, 2015 FCBL All Star Game, North Shore, 7 p.m.
www.centralmassclass.com
JONESINâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;
"We're On the Air"--and the path is clear. by Matt Jones
Across 1 Where SSTs used to land 4 Curve segment 7 Come in 12 Indie rock band ___ Kiley 13 Mayday call 14 Insect with a 17-year life cycle 15 Rent-___ (airport service) 16 "Uh-oh," in kiddie talk 18 Chase doggedly 20 Spread over 21 American-born former queen of Jordan 22 Coloring agent 25 Assoc. formed in Bogota 26 "Wanted" initials 29 Go paragliding 30 Little round hill 32 Planet explored by Voyager I 34 It has its ups and downs 37 Truck stop purchase 38 Back twinge 39 Lofty poems 40 Angular preĂ&#x20AC;x 41 "Much ___ About Nothing" ("Simpsons" episode) 44 Chinese cooking need 45 Euro fraction 49 "Green Acres" costar Eva 51 "Dallas" spinoff 54 Island resort town in South Carolina 57 "GarĂ&#x20AC;eld Minus GarĂ&#x20AC;eld" character 58 Balance sheet heading 59 Wayne LaPierre's org. 60 Walter ___ Army Medical Center 61 Big serving spoon 62 In the closet, or out of it 63 Suspicious element? Down 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
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Fun By The Numbers Like puzzles? Then youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll love sudoku. This mind-bending puzzle will have you hooked from the moment you square oďŹ&#x20AC;, so sharpen your pencil and put your sudoku savvy to the test! Hereâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;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 ďŹ ll each row, column and box. Each number can appear only once in each row, column and box. You can ďŹ gure 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! A
Yard Sale & Flea Market Directory 8 "First in Flight" st. 9 Mai ___ (bar order) 10 Cutting crew, for short? 11 "A drop of golden sun" 12 "Midnight Cowboy" hustler Rizzo 14 ___ Institute (D.C. think tank) 17 Airport northwest of LAX 19 Fake-tanned 22 Gloomy 23 Needlework supply 24 Geographical sufĂ&#x20AC;x 27 1980s-'90s chancellor Helmut 28 Ctrl-___-Del 29 Flute part 30 What X may mean 31 Old albums 32 Walk of Fame award 33 Punctuation in an email address 34 Cousin of Rover 35 Bulbed vegetable 36 On target 37 Financial barometer, with "the" 41 "The Dude ___" 42 Small horses 43 Pushed hard
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Last week's solution
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OPEN EVERY SUNDAY OUTDOOR/INDOOR
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D A PRINCETON-12 Boylston Ave. Saturday, July 18th, 9am4pm. Rain or shine. Camping gear, small appliances, dolls, collectibles, books, and lots of other stuff!
B
Come to the FLEA at 242 Canterbury St. Worcester MA 01603. Open EVERY Saturday from 8:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. Rain or Shine! CLASSIC CAR CRUISE EXPO7/11, 8/8, 9/12/2015 We have vintage items, one of a kind items, new items, building materials, office furniture, records, old books, etc. Dealers welcome - $15.00 per table, set up at 7:00 a.m.
â&#x20AC;˘ Acres of Bargains â&#x20AC;˘ Hundreds of Vendors â&#x20AC;˘ Thousands of Buyers â&#x20AC;˘ 46th Season Rte. 140, Grafton/ Upton town line Grafton Flea is the Place to be! Selling Space 508-839-2217 www.graftonflea.com SUTTON-339 Putnam Hill Rd. July 18, Saturday, 9am-3pm. Granite, tools, furniture, school supplies, perennial plants, kid toy-clothes, kitchenware, artwork, electronics, home decor.
Puzzle Solution On Service Directory Page J U LY 16 , 2 0 15 â&#x20AC;˘ W O R C E S T E R M A G A Z I N E . C O M
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LOOK TO US FOR... Service Directory â&#x20AC;˘ Help Wanted Legal Notices â&#x20AC;˘ Items for Sale Yard Sale & Flea Market Directory Adopt-A-Paws â&#x20AC;˘ Paws-N-Claws Real Estate â&#x20AC;˘ Autos Sudoku & Crossword & Much More! READERS NOTICE
Readers Notice:
This newspaper will never knowingly accept any advertisement that is illegal or considered fraudulent. If you have questions or doubts about any ads on these pages, we advise that before responding or sending money ahead of time, you check with the local Attorney Generalâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Consumer Fraud Line and/or the Better Business Bureau. Also be advised that some phone numbers published in these ads may require an extra charge. In all cases of questionable value, such as promises or guaranteed income from work-at-home programs, money to loan, etc., if it sounds too good to be true â&#x20AC;&#x201C; it may in face be exactly that. This newspaper cannot be held responsible for any negative consequences that occur as a result of doing business with these advertisers. Thank you.
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BUILDING/ REMODELING
Licensed Plumber Needed Central MA We are looking to hire a full time LICENSED plumber for a busy plumbing business in Central MA. Applicants must have at least 7 years plumbing experience. Wages will be determined by experience. Proof of valid driverâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s license will be required at time of interview. Please remit resume and cover letter to Gasparoni7714@me.com
AUTOMOTIVE
SERVICES
REAL ESTATE
DRIVEWAYS
EXCAVATION
ASPHALT PAVING
Ruchala Chimney Sweeping -Caps -Cleaning -Waterproofing -Chimney Liners Serving the Wachusett Area. Certified and Insured. ruchalachimney.com 978-928-1121
CARUSO PAVING Residential & Commercial Driveways - Parking Lots Sealcoating OSHA & Highway Certified Free Estimates 508-886-4736 carusopavingcompany.com
CLEANING SERVICES
ELECTRICAL SERVICES
BBC EXCAVATING Site work for new homes/additions. Septic system installation repair. Driveway maintenance/repair. Drainage/grading. Sewer/water connections. Stump removal. Snow Plowing. Sanding/Salting. 15 Years in Business. NO JOB TOO LARGE OR small. Brian Cheney 978-464-2345
Accurate Asphalt Paving "Our Reputation Speaks For Itself" Paving, Excavating, Driveways, Seal Coating, Parking Lots, Sub-Divisions. Commercial & Residential. Our Free Estimates Include Tonnage So You Know Exactly What You Are Getting. www.accurateasphalt paving.com 508-885-2581
Virtueâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Cleaning Cleaning is a virtue. Meticulous, reasonable, reliable. Call me at 508-925-5575
DESIGN /BUILD Professional Remodeler
CARPET CLEANING
Years of talent and experience in kitchens, bathrooms, mud rooms, laundry rooms & outdoor living. Free consultations. www.RickmanCompanies.com 508-459-8722
Is Your Home True Pro Clean? True Pro Cleaners. Monthly Specials. Call Today@ 978-987-3911 Steam Cleaning, Carpets, Upholstery, Tile & Grout. Free Est. www.trueprocleaners.com Phillipston, MA 978-987-3911
Email: qaplacleaningservices@gmail.com Phone:(774) 535-9329
CHIMNEY CLEANING Chimney Cleaning $99 $50 Off Caps or Masonry. Free Inspection. All Types of Masonry. Water Leaks. Quality Chimney 508-410-4551
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PHONE: 978-728-4302 FAX: 508-829-0670
CHIMNEY CLEANING
Jeff Downer Carpentry For all your building & remodeling needs. Lic. & ins. Free estimates. 508-835-4356 www.jeffdownercarpentry.com Email: jtdowner@yahoo.com
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PLACE ADS: ONLINE: www.centralmassclass.com EMAIL: sales@centralmassclass.com
Roy Harrison Asphalt Paving Excavating-Parking Lots-Private Roads-Asphalt Driveways-Commercial & Residential. 508-753-0779/774-696-5696 sales@royharrisonpaving.com. Put quality and experience to work for you.
BUILDING/REMODELING
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Reaches Over 90,000 Readers in Print and Online â&#x20AC;˘ Ads post immediately! New postings every day!
BUILDERS/CONTRACTORS
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â&#x20AC;˘ Residential & Commercial â&#x20AC;˘ One Time, Weekly, Biweekly, Once a Month â&#x20AC;˘ Green Cleaners â&#x20AC;˘ Insured & Bonded â&#x20AC;˘ 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed â&#x20AC;˘ Free Estimates
DISCOUNT OIL Midnight Oil 508-853-2539 Lowest Possible Pricing Most major credit cards accepted. Burner Service Contracts MidnightOilService.com OLD MAN OIL Why Pay More? Serving Wachusett Region. Scott Landgren 508-886-8998 24 hour service (774-234-0306 service only) Visa, MC, Discover, Cash. www.oldmanoil.com
Ambitious Electrician Established 1989, fully insured. Master license #A14758. Call David Sachs 508-254-6305 or 508-886-0077 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
A.C.G. Excavation Site Work. Drainage & Grading. Additions & Cellar Holes. Hardscape, Landscape, etc. Fully Insured, Free Estimates. Will beat any legitimate written quote by 10%! 508-829-0089 visit our website: www.acgexcavation.com
HEALTHH, MINND & BEAUTYY MASSAGE & PRENATAL
â&#x20AC;˘ Stress â&#x20AC;˘ Anxiety â&#x20AC;˘ Abdominal Weight Reduction â&#x20AC;˘ Pain From Work & Traveling Get a massage today with Helen Nguyen for only o ly $49 on $49 4 (reg ((re regg $65) $ 5)) $6 for
INSPIRATION
Need a friend? Call Dial-A-Friend
508.852.5242
Inspirational Messages Recorded Daily
Massage and Prenatal Therapy 500 West Boylston Street Worcester, MA 01606
508-400-1977
24 Hours Everyday
www.centralmassclass.com FENCE & STONE
FLOORING/CARPETING
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
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
GLASS Central Glass Co. A Complete Line of Glass. Automotive-Residential. Window Glass Repairs, Screen Repairs/Pet Screens, Tub & Shower Glass Enclosures, Table Tops, Mirrors & More. Family Owned Over 50 Years. 127 Mechanic St. Leominster 978-537-3962 M-F 8-4 HEATING & PLUMBING
FLOORING/CARPETING FURNITURE RESTORATION C & S Carpet Mills Carpet & Linoleum 30 Sq. Yds. $589 Installed with Pad. Free Metal Incl’d. Berber, Plush or Commercial. Call Tom: 800-861-5445 or 508-886-2624
Paul G. Hanson Furniture Repair. Major/Minor Repairs. Chair regluing. Touch ups. Pick-up & delivery. Call Paul (978)464-5800 GARAGE DOORS Allied Services Garage doors & electric operators. Bulkheads. Installed & repaired, residential. Call 508-829-3226
SCOTT BOSTEK PLUMBING & HEATING Small Jobs Is What We Do Residential Repair Specialist Water Heaters-DisposalsFrozen Pipes-Remodels & AdditionsDrain Cleaning-Faucets Ins. MPL 11965 Free Estimates 25 yrs Exp. Reliable 774-696-6078
HEATING/AIR CONDITIONING Rutland Heating & A/C SERVICE & INSTALLATION "We cater to the independent oil customer!" Rutland, MA Call 774-234-0306 HOME IMPROVEMENT Johanson Home Improvement Licensed, insured and HIC registered. Interior painting. Bathroom remodeling and repair. Door and window install. Decks and sheds. Rotted siding, drop ceilings, light fixtures, tiling, toilet and faucet repair and much more. Over 20 years experience Chad (508) 963-8155 website: johansonhome improvement.com
C&R, Remodeling, additions, & all home improvements, 25yrs exp. new & historic, David, 508-829-4581
BATHTUB REFINISHING
HOME REPAIR/ RESTORATION
Don’t Replace,
Refinish! t 5)064"/%4 -&44 5)"/ 3&1-"$&.&/5
“Yesterday, my bathtub was ugly.
Today, it’s beautiful!”
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Call for a FREE Estimate! 508-655-2044 Each Miracle Method franchise independently owned and operated.
See our work at MiracleMethod.com/
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
PAINT/WALLPAPER
POOLS
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
J.C. Pools Call NOW to schedule your installation! Service, Chemicals & Supplies. In-ground & Above ground. www.jcpools.net 508-8823913 978-355-6465
Interior Painting Only $149 average 12x16 room. Prompt service. Reliable. Refs. Dutch Touch Painting 508-867-2550 PAINTING/REPAIRS Painting services Quality interior painting & minor exterior. Wallpaper stripping and wall repairs. Clean and respectful female owner/operator company. Fully insured. Call SL Painting 978-257-1400 Painting Unlimited Services, Inc. Skilled, Reliable, Reputable. Meticulous prep & workmanship. Int.& Ext. Painting/Staining. Power-washing. Gutters. Rotted Trim Replacement. Free Estimates. Fully Insured. HIC #163882 Call: 508-340-8707
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 Mark R. O’Donnell, Inc. Roofing Experts Licensed & Insured Residential, Commercial & Industrial Specialize in Shingle, Flat Rubber & Metal Roofs Prices as Low as $2 per Square Foot! Free Estimates 978-534-3307 modonnell@mrogc.com www.mrogc.com
LANDSCAPING
Peace and Tranquility in your own Backyard
MASONRY Cornerstone Masonry Master Stone Masons Brick & Block Stone Walls, Walkways, Patios, Fireplaces. We do repairs. 978-580-4260 Major credit cards accepted 30 Years Experience
ROOFING
508-885-1088
Full landscaping service & so much more! Full Lawn Planting & Maintenance Ponds built & maintained Clean-ups • Mum Installation Pond Closings • Fall Pruning & Shearing Waterfalls • Walls | Patios & Walkways House Cleanout, Attics, Cellars Bobcat Work | Backhoe Work | Gutter Cleaning
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SERVICE DIRECTORY
SIZE PER BLOCK 1.75 X 1.75
Call Carrie at 978-728-4302 to place your ad or e-mail sales@centralmassclass.com
CHIMNEY CLEANING
FENCE, STONE & CONCRETE
$99
$50 Off Caps or Masonry • Free Inspection All Types of Masonry • Water Leaks
NEW ROOFS
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508-410-4551
FLOOR COVERING
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!
SEALCOATING
Flooring 30 Years in Business
C&S YOUR COMPLETE FENCE & STONE WORK COMPANY
• CONCRETE SPECIALISTS - Walkways, Patios, Sidewalks & Pool Patios... • FENCE ALL TYPES - Vinyl, Chain link, Ornamental & Wood... • STONE HARDSCAPES - Patios, Stone Walls, Pavers, Walkways & Pool Patios...
508-835-1644 for free estimate
Carpet Mills
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Bob Fahlbeck • 508-839-3942
Free Metal Included Call Tom
The Service Directory is a cost effective way to advertise your business! Call 978-728-4302 for information! 32
WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM
WELLS
• J U LY 16 , 2 0 15
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
ANSWERS TO TODAY’S PUZZLE
CHIMNEY SERVICES
8 weeks ........... $32.75/week = $262 12 weeks ......... $27.75/week = $333 20 weeks ......... $26.20/week = $524 36 weeks ......... $24.50/week = $882 52 weeks ......... $23/week = $1196 Minimum commitment of 8 weeks.
PLACE YOUR AD ONLINE ANYTIME, 24/7. www.centralmassclass.com (Excludes free ads, legals & Service Directory ads)
www.centralmassclass.com RUBBISH REMOVAL
We get the job done. We remove junk, trash, furniture and appliances. Call 508-983-4155 Today! Lee Skoglund Services 10, 15, 20-yard container service. Yard & building materials. Office equipment & materials. Attics, cellars & estates cleaned, guaranteed by your closing date! Free estimates. Lee Skoglund 508-757-4209
TREE SERVICES Ross A. McGinnes Tree work, Stump removal, pruning & removals. Free estimates. Fully insured. Call 508-829-6497 WELLS 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
SEALCOATING
LAWN & GARDEN B & F Sealcoating Hot Crack Sealing Free Residential Estimates 13 Years Exp. Fully Ins. Quality Work Reasonable Price Bob Fahlbeck 508-839-3942 WACHUSETT SEALCOATING Protect against the elements. Since 1995. 508-886-2969 Eddy Mac & Daughters Asphalt Paving Driveway Sealer Coating Worc. County. Millbury, MA 508-523-7290/35+ Yrs Exp Veteran Owned & Operated
IRRIGATION/ SPRINKLERS
Carney & Sons Irrigation Holden, MA 508-829-4310 Service & Repair All Makes, Complete Installations, Spring Start Up/ Winterize Lawn Installations, Hydroseeding carneyandsons@charter.net LANDSCAPE CONSTRUCTION
TREE SERVICES Arborvitae Summer Sale! Green giants, or emerald for beautiful privacy borders. FREE delivery and planting. Starting at $59. 860-712-5359 or visit cttrees.com
Inside-Out Garden Design Mowing, Garden Maintenance, Soil Testing, Ornamental Tree/ Shrub Pruning, Landscape Design/Installation. NOFA Accredited Organic Care. $25 Off Pruning or Weeding. Time to prune your shrubs! Call/Text: (508) 335-3702 Email: cher@insideoutgarden.biz Monette Landscaping & Construction, Inc. Specializing in Hardscape Installation. Retaining Walls, Stone, Interlocking Block & Timber Patios and Walkways, Brick & Stone Pavers. Landscape Design. Lawn Maintenance. Serving Central Mass for more than 50 years. 508-885-2579 www.monette landscaping.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
EMPLOYMENT
FOSTER PARENTS
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
FOSTER PARENTS WANTED
BUSINESS PARTNER WANTED Be part of the solution! Teach others the path to wellness FT or PT. We provide the tools and training so you can participate in this multimillion dollar market and create your own economy. Get started today. Call for a personal interview 774.614.1206
BUSINESS FOR SALEStart Your Own Balloon Delivery Business! Balloons, Helium, Ribbons, plus Super Deluxe Costumes! For more info: 978-534-5982/978-660-5411 HELP WANTED Preschool Teacher EEC Cert. Princeton. Tue & Thr. School year schedule. Send resume: pcpkids1@verizon.net Driver, School Van Growing company! Routes in your area available. Rewarding part-time position w/great bonuses & competitive wages. Must be available Monday thru Friday split shift. Keep the van at home. Will train. Please call Echo. EEO. 978-355-2121
MULCH & LOAM HELP WANTED LOCAL
Thompson Landscaping & Construction
SIDING SEV-CO SIDING & WINDOWS Vinyl Siding. Windows. Doors. Trimwork. Free Estimates. Call Today: 978-632-7937 Over 25 yrs exp. See our work: www.sevcosiding.com Find us on Facebook!
LANDSCAPING & LAWN MAINTENANCE
-Mowing, hardscapes, spring cleanups, mulching. 508-523-7790 LANDSCAPING & LAWN MAINTENANCE Burnham Maintenance Spring Clean-ups. Lawn Maintenance. Shrub Pruning. Bark Mulch, Screened Loam & Compost. Patios & Walkways. Fertilization Programs. Deliveries Available. Please call 508-829-3809
*Composted Loam* 3/8 screened, $22/yd del’d, 10 yd min; 3/4 screened, $20/yd del’d 15 yd min. No additives, fillers or byproducts. Local delivery only. Call Eliot Starbard 508-882-0140 Sterling Peat Inc. Quality Screened Loam. Mulches. Compost- w/Loam Mix. 2"-Gravel, Fill. Fieldstone. -Firewood available978-422-8294
AUTO BODY TRUCK BODY SHOP LOOKING FOR AUTO BODY TECHS, MUST HAVE OWN TOOLS, EXPERIENCE HELPFUL BUT WILL TRAIN. BENEFITS AVAILABLE, PAY BASED ON EXPERIENCE. 508 -752-2313 Rutland Nurseries, Inc. is seeking full-time seasonal general laborers. Apply in person at, 82 Emerald Road, Rutland, MA 01543 (508) 886-2982 Servers/Setters/Bus Staff Wanted Upscale Wedding facility looking for servers, setters and bussers, weekends part time. Must be professional in appearance and attitude. john@harringtonfarm.com
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 BONUS
Call for Details (Must mention this ad during inquiry)
688 Main Street, Holden, MA Toll Free ( 877 ) 446-3305
www.devereuxma.org
HELP WANTED LOCAL
NOW HIRING
FULL-TIME & PART-TIME NURSING POSITIONS Montachusett Home Care Corporation, a full social service agency serving elderly and the disabled has an opening for a full-time Registered Nurse. This position will complete in-home assessments of service need, determine program eligibility, explore community options for elders including expansion of in home services to delay nursing home placement. RN staff work closely with case managers/social workers to best meet the needs of local elders. Candidates with either an Associates or BSN are encouraged to apply. Diploma RN should have one year of clinical and two additional years of either long term care setting or community-based nursing experience. BSN RN must have at least one year of clinical experience and/or nursing in a community or long term care setting. A Massachusetts RN license and driver’s license, as well as a fully registered and insured automobile are a must. Computer experience is necessary. MHCC offers a family friendly work environment, 35 hour work week, no weekends, flexible work schedules, generous vacations, 13 paid holidays. Benefits include health insurance, STD/LTD, Life, up to 7% 403 B match, flexible spending etc. Hourly rate of pay is $23.55. Older workers, minorities, and Spanish speaking individuals are encouraged to apply. Send resume to: Montachusett Home Care Corporation Human Resources Department 680 Mechanic Street Leominster, MA 01453 Or via e-mail: mhcc@mhcc-1.org AA/EOE Part time Retail Sales Position Local upscale Package Store. Some evenings and weekends may be required. Apply at Holden Wine & Spirits, 140 Reservoir Street, Holden or send resume to Sue@ holdenwineandspirits.com
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MERCHANDISE
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Worcester County Memorial Park, Paxton MA 2 lots in Heritage II w/vaults. $2,500.00 for both. Call Rick at 508-450-7470 Worcester County Memorial Park Paxton, Ma. Lot Number 297-B Space 1 and 2, Garden Of Valor Section. Current value is $8,400.00 including 2 concrete burial vaults. $4,000.00 or B/O 508-375-0080
Worcester County Memorial Park Paxton, MA. 2 Lots in the Garden of Faith. $2500.00 for both. Near the feature. Mary 508-886-4334. Worcester County Memorial Park Paxton, MA. Heritage II, Lots 665 1&2 w/vaults. No reasonable offer refused. Call 508 -852-1690 or 774-454-0259
Savvy Staffing Solutions is hiring; -Order Selectors -Forklift Drivers -Mechanical Assemblers -Solders -Molding & Press -Machine Operators -Carpenters -General Labor Come down and apply or call!! 45 Linden Street Worcester, Ma 01609 Phone: 508-799-7171 or 853 North Main St. Ste 202 Leominster, Ma 01453 Phone: 978-840-3333
Worcester County Memorial Park, Paxton MA Garden of Heritage II. 2 Lots w/vaults. Current value $8300.00 Asking $3950.00 for both or B/O. Call Jim 508-769-8107
Riverside Cemetery Winchendon #RH 63 Lots 1-4. Beautifully situated burial plots. $2500.00 each. All 4$8000.00. Before Nov 2015. 978-534-5982/978-660-5411 Worc. County Memorial Park Paxton. Garden of Faith, 2 plots, Section #347-A 1&2. Worth $3,900.00 for both. Asking $1,500.00 total for both. 508-882-3421 or 909-7140064 508-882-3421
FOR SALE Driver/School Van (North Central MA) Growing company! Looking for a rewarding part time position w/great bonuses & competitive wages? Van Pool is for you. Must be available Monday thru Friday split shifts. Routes in your area available. Keep the van at home. Will train. EEO. Please call Erica at (978) 400-7811 after 9:30 AM.
Samsung 55" TV w/ nice stand. Best offer. Great for lvg rm or basement. Exc. cond. $300 508-797-6068* John Deere 318 Garden Tractor 18HP, 48" MWR Deck, PWR STRG, Hydro Trans, PWR Lift $2000.00 Oakham 508-882-3963* ITEMS UNDER $2,015 Curtis plow - 7 1/2 ft w/electric hoist. Like new condition. A great deal at $525. Contact Steve. 774-573-8848
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FURNITURE
NOVENAS
Maytag Advanced Cooking System Electric Stove. Asking $250. Call anytime. 978-3903432
Henredon 7 pc Ebony BR Set King bed & mirrored oval backboard. 2 end tables, 9 drwr dresser w/oval detached wall mirror, mens wardrobe & 3 drwrs. Orig. $15,000. Asking $5,000.00, but all offers considered. Must sell. 508-7910770*
PRAYER TO THE BLESSED VIRGIN (Never known to fail) O most beautiful flower of Mt. Carmel, fruitful vine, splendor of Heaven, Blessed Mother of the Son of God, Immaculate Virgin, assist me in this my necessity, O Star of the Sea, help me and show me where you are my mother. O Holy Mary, Mother of God, Queen of Heaven and Earth, I humbly beseech thee from the bottom of my heart to succor me in my necessity, (make request). There are none that can withstand your power, O Mary, conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee (three times). Holy Mary, I place this cause in your hands (three times). Say this prayer for three consecutive days and you must publish it and your request will be granted to you. DB/LB
Adult Electric Tricycle $750. New is $1400, must see! 508865-4352 Foreign German Scrabble Never used. Asking $30.00. Call 508 -752-3371. Room cedar closet oak finish, portable, 40" wide X 5 feet high, Excellent condition. $150.00. 508-425-1150 Piano for sale Spinet model, walnut finish, must see. $650.00. Tel. 508-756-5828 Entertainment Center Excellent condition, maple. 48"H x 41" L x 27" W. 11 side-front cabinet space. $50.00. 508-853-3444. Hydroponic grow kit for herbs/ plants (6 pods) with grow light. Nice indoor set-up. $150. 508769-5110. Shredder Takes up to 3 inch branches. $350. 508-752-1172 Leather chair (green), from Bloomingdale. Like new. $325. 781-718-5962 White wicker hardwood highboy bureau 47 1/4"H x 32"W, 5 sturdy drawers. Pristine! $40. 508-869-6960
Whirlpool bathtub 7 jets New, solid fiberglass with pump. Ready to go. $175. 813-5415951
Collectible Die Cast Hot Wheels Over eleven hundred cars. $2000. Call 413-967-7932 Hand weights 2-5 lbs., 2-10 lbs., 2-15 lbs. All for $50. 978534-4182
NEW QUEEN pillow top mattress set - $149
New in plastic, Can deliver Call Luke 774-823-6692 Wing chair Newly upholstered high back wing chair in evergreen w/ small red/orange accent. $45. 978-602-2288
Pets, Pet Supplies, Services & More!
YARD SALES & FLEA MARKETS Come to the FLEA at 242 Canterbury St. Worcester MA 01603. Open EVERY Saturday from 8:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. Rain or Shine! CLASSIC CAR CRUISE EXPO7/11, 8/8, 9/12/2015 We have vintage items, one of a kind items, new items, building materials, office furniture, records, old books, etc. Dealers welcome - $15.00 per table, set up at 7:00 a.m. PRINCETON-12 Boylston Ave. Saturday, July 18th, 9am4pm. Rain or shine. Camping gear, small appliances, dolls, collectibles, books, and lots of other stuff!
SUTTON-339 Putnam Hill Rd. July 18, Saturday, 9am-3pm. Granite, tools, furniture, school supplies, perennial plants, kid toy-clothes, kitchenware, artwork, electronics, home decor.
FREE CONSULTATION SERVING CENTRAL MA PRIVATE IN-HOME TRAINING
REAL ESTATE Paige Smith, Certified Dog Trainer
508-867-6901
Call 978-728-4302 to place your ad PETS & ANIMALS ANIMAL FEED & SUPPLIES 2002 Exiss XT/300 G.N. 3 Horse Trailer. Good cond. All alum. S.S. nose. For pics craigslist. $10,200 508-7570887*
OTHER
EDUCATION
NOVENAS
DANCE INSTRUCTION
PRAYER TO THE BLESSED VIRGIN (Never known to fail) O most beautiful flower of Mt. Carmel, fruitful vine, splendor of Heaven, Blessed Mother of the Son of God, Immaculate Virgin, assist me in this my necessity, O Star of the Sea, help me and show me where you are my mother. O Holy Mary, Mother of God, Queen of Heaven and Earth, I humbly beseech thee from the bottom of my heart to succor me in my necessity, (make request). There are none that can withstand your power, O Mary, conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee (three times). Holy Mary, I place this cause in your hands (three times). Say this prayer for three consecutive days and you must publish it and your request will be granted to you. KB
Shake it up Dance Umlimited
Antique Singer Sewing Machine Pedal type in cabinet w/ drawers. $20 or b/o. 978-5340711 FURNITURE
& Cl ws
Summer Dance Camps!! Learn to dance, playing games and HAVE FUN!! Go to: shakeitupdanceunlimited.com to view our schedule and get registered! 508-865-3372
Publisherâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;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
APARTMENT FOR RENT Rutland-Countryside Estates -Studio apt for rent cozy 380 sq. ft. apt for rent, ground floor, 1 room studio, kitchenette, stove & refridg., 2 closets, walk -out patio. laundry room in bld. $475/month, utilit. not included, security deposit. No pets. 774-364-0353
www.centralmassclass.com Our Adopt-A-Paws feature runs the second full week of each month. With the support of our sponsors, we feature dogs and cats available for adoption at local nonproďŹ t shelters. TO SEE ALL THE ANIMALS AVAILABLE FOR ADOPTION CHECK OUT THEIR WEB SITES:
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STERLING ANIMAL SHELTER INC. 17 Laurelwood Road Sterling, MA 978-422-8585 SterlingShelter.org
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WORCESTER ANIMAL RESCUE LEAGUE 139 Holden Street Worcester, MA 508-853-0030 Worcester-arl.org
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SECOND CHANCE ANIMAL SHELTER 111 Young Road East BrookďŹ eld, MA 508-867-5525 SecondChanceAnimals.org
Creative Floors, Inc. Max - 3 yrs 4 mos Male/Neutered Basset Hound/Beagle
Ceramic â&#x20AC;˘ Carpet â&#x20AC;˘ Vinyl â&#x20AC;˘ Marble â&#x20AC;˘ Granite Laminate â&#x20AC;˘ Pre-finished Hardwood â&#x20AC;˘ Wallpaper
Creating Custom Gifts & Windows For You Studio & Shop Hours Tues. & Wed. 6:30-9:00pm
Sales â&#x20AC;˘ Design â&#x20AC;˘ Installation
or call for appointment!
Nanaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Stained Glass 441 Marshall Street, Leicester MA 01524
Residential & Commercial â&#x20AC;˘ Carpet Binding
Moonbeam - 10 mos Female/Spayed Hound/Mix
Financing Available â&#x20AC;˘ Free Estimates
Open Tuesday-Saturday | 1653 N. Main St., Holden, MA FREE ESTIMATES
50 8 - 892 - 0369
www.nanamomma.webs.com
508-829-7444
www.creativefloorsinc.com
Domestic Short Hair / Mixed Male/Large/Senior No Kids & No Cats
FINANCING AVAILABLE
Thank you for supporting our local shelters and rescue groups! Let me help YOU ďŹ nd a new home this year. Buying, selling, or listing your property for rent, it would be my pleasure to represent you. Adopt from a shelter â&#x20AC;&#x201C; gain a best friend! Baby Miniature Pinscher / Mixed Female /Small
Didi - 5 yrs 8 mos Domestic Shorthair/Mix Female/Spayed
Georgia - 2 yrs 6 mos Female/Spayed Domestic Shorthair/Mix
Lisa Hugo Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage 6 Park Avenue Worcester, MA (508) 723-4029
Shamrock Dog Collars
9 Crescent St., West Boylston 508-835-6677 wexfordhouse.com
Jewelry Belleek Sweaters Giftware
Paula K. Aberman Associates, Inc. Paula Savard ABR, CRB, CRS, GRI
(978)-660-9548
Gail Lent ABR, CRS, GRI
(978)-660-9538
Sandra DeRienzo
Mark Gerber
Tracy Page
(857)Â 891-0502Â
(978)-413-0118
Tracy Sladen (978)Â 870-7572
John Keefe (508)-259-3998
ABR, GRI
(978) 537-4971 â&#x20AC;˘ 1-(800) 924-8666 *DUGQHU and your own private beach area! Enjoy swimming, canoeing, ďŹ shing and the beauty of a sunset--summer is coming! This adorable 2 bedroom bungalow is waiting for you with a great yard ~ perfect for a garden (complete with mature blueberry bushes!) Hot water tank, electric baseboards and pellet stove all within last 2 years ~ close and convenient to Rt 2 ~ donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t miss out on this darling waterfront property! As-Is. Aberman Assoc Inc Tracy Sladen 978-537-4971 x17
Yasmin Loft (706)Â 870-4000
New Conference Center 486 Chestnut Street, Suite 11 Gardner MA 01440
(508)-783-5782
Live on lovely Kendall Pond and enjoy walking out your front door right to the water
2086 Main Street, Lancaster www.paulasavard.com
23(1 +286( 21 '(0$1' Our sellers are standing by for short notice showings from 11am -1pm every Sunday WE ARE NOT ON SITE. Please call us at 978 537 4971 x 0.  In most instances, we will call you back in 10 minutes. Properties are listed on www.paulasavard.com
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4 br 2 bath Cape. Â Great Single family home on a corner lot. This spacious house features four bedrooms and two full bathrooms. The kitchen is updated, one car garage and above ground pool. Aberman Assoc Inc. Moises Cosme 978-537-4971 x23
Neat well maintained 8 room colonial. Beautiful fenced gardens and patio. First ďŹ&#x201A;oor ofďŹ ce possible. Aberman Assoc Inc. Paula Savard 978-537-4971 x14 www.paulasavard.com
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Waterfront on Lake Wyman. Family owned for several years. Summer fun on the lake and winter ski lodge for nearby Wachusett Mountain. Open concept ďŹ rst ďŹ&#x201A;oor with updated kitchen and living room with ďŹ eldstone ďŹ replace. Second ďŹ&#x201A;oor with 3 full bedrooms and additional family room area overlooking the lake. Walk out basement. FHA by oil heating system. Storage shed. 42â&#x20AC;&#x2122; waterfront. Aberman Assoc Inc Gail Lent 978-537-4971 x15 www.gaillent.com
This is a Must see Ranch located on a Cul-de-Sac, It has been updated in the last 5 years, with Granite Countertops, Custom Cabinets, New windows, New roof. It has a ďŹ nished basement with a workshop. Hardwood ďŹ&#x201A;oors throughout, it also has a wood stove, all appliances are included and it has rights to a private beach on lake Whalom, which is walking distance. This is a move in home that has Pride of Ownership. Lake Whalom association fee $200.00 yearly. Aberman Assoc Inc Mark Greber 978-537-4971 x63
Anna Mary Moises Cosme Kraemer CRS (978)Â 502-7309 (508)Â 713-5172
Tara Sullivan
Linda Barry
Sherry Crocker
(774)-266-6096
(508)-868-9628
(978)-868-8760
Robin Dunbar Bain
Carrie Arsenault
(978)Â 501-0426
(508)Â 596-8469
/HRPLQVWHU
Attention mechanics, landscapers, tradesman, or hobbyist. 1800 SF detached garage with 12â&#x20AC;? ceilings, steel I beam, 1/2 ton hoist, brand new rubber roof, new chimney, sep. elec. Plenty of room to store equipment or provide winter garage space. Home has recent insulation, siding, roof, windows, plumbing, heating system, hot water heater, completely re-built chimney, new bulkhead, new doors, three porches re-built with composite decking and custom lighting, professionally landscaped with custom masonry walkways and walls, irrigation system. Interior offers a ďŹ replace living room with gas insert, eat in kitchen and formal dining room, 3 large bedrooms, heated basement. One full and two half baths. Opportunity for at home business. Aberman Assoc Inc. Gail Lent 978-537-4971 x 15 www.gaillent.com
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Custom built contemporary colonial nestled on 2 1/2 acres. Home sits back from tree lined driveway. Three or 4 bedrooms, 3 1/2 baths, stainless steel applianced kitchen, ďŹ rst ďŹ&#x201A;oor laundry, spacious living/dining room separated by brick ďŹ replace, full unďŹ nished basement, oversized two car garage. Energy efďŹ cient propane heating system with instant hot water. 3 room approved rental unit for income, in-laws, or home ofďŹ ce with private entrance. Yard has several young fruit trees and 2 year old 10 x 16 shed with loft and 54â&#x20AC;? double doors. Aberman Assoc Inc Anna Mary Kraemer 978-537-4971 x25
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Gorgeous waterfront townhouse in Quinsigamond Shores features private deeded
dock, patio, swimming pool, clubhouse and beautiful landscaping. Interior features upgraded eat-in kitchen with hardwood ďŹ&#x201A;oors, newly painted cabinets, granite counters and stainless steel appliances. Sunken living room with hardwood ďŹ&#x201A;oors opens to large dining room. 1/2 bath and laundry room on ďŹ rst ďŹ&#x201A;oor. Master bedroom with wall to wall carpeting, solar ski light, master bath, and large walk-in closet. The large loft family room could be used as a third bedroom.Aberman Assoc Inc Anna Mary Kraemer 987-537-4971 x25
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3 br 1 1/2 bath colonial. Original owner selling house. Cozy Colonial with3
Family Neighborhood, has 1.5 baths and 3-4 bedrooms. French doors on the dinning room. All enclosed fence in yard with Deck and above ground pool. Aberman Assoc Inc. Sherry Crocker 978-537-4971 x 62
bedrooms and 1 and 1/2 bath. Fenced in yard. Aberman Assoc Inc Sherry Crocker 978-537-4971 x62
Vacation at home every day. Panoramic views of Lake Waushacum, Wachusett Reservoir and Worcester. Long Winding drive studded with apple trees brings you to this light ďŹ lled dream home. Warm and beautifully in harmony with nature from every room. Open ďŹ&#x201A;oor plan, inspiring entry fouer, granite and cherry kitchen, warm wood ceilings, post and beam construction. Master bedroom with sliders to deck overlooking lake and pastoral acerage. Wrap around deck, fully ďŹ nished lower level, separate covered proch for hot tub, 2 car heated garage, young two story barn with additional 2 car garage and room for your favorite hobby or mini farm occupants. Abutting conservation and walk to Town beach from your back yard. Beautifully landscaped. Aberman Assoc Inc. Gail Lent 978-537-4971 x 15 www.gaillent.comÂ
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www.centralmassclass.com REAL ESTATE
AUTO/MOTORCYCLE
AUTOS
BOATS
CAMPERS/TRAILERS
Pequoig House Apartments
2008 Honda Metropolitan Scooter Black and gray. Mint cond. 469 miles. Asking $1650.00. Includes helmet. 207-289-9362 OR 207-450-1492.
1999 Toyota Corolla Excellent condition throughout. Automatic, p/s, p/b, p.l, a/c. 96K Please call 508 829-3705 $3,149 508-829-3705
Kayak Perception Sole Includes many accessories. $500.00 978-424-6315 *
Truck Camper 1985 Bought new in 1991. Real Life brand. Bathroom, shower, self contained. 8ft truck bed. $2900.00 B/O 774-287-0777
AUTO/SUV
1930 Ford Model A Huckster 22 Woodland Rd. Holden, MA 508-829-2282
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2011 Ford Escape 6 cyl. Leather, moon roof, Insync. Very clean. Michelin tires. $12,750.00 508-829-3363 AUTO/TRUCK
APARTMENT FOR RENT
HOUSE FOR SALE
Worcester 1, 2 and 3 Bedroom Apartments 508-852-6001
CHARMING RANCH STYLE HOME (COMPLETELY FURNISHED) $224,900.00 JEFFERSON, MA
2 BR Townhouse in Holden 1.5 BA, Dining Room, Fully Applianced Kitchen, Family Room w/Fireplace, Full Cellar w/ W/D $1,400/m 508-395-7298
HOUSE FOR SALE Classic Contractorâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s House 7 RMS, 2 BD, Study, 2BA, in-law apt, large, manicured yard, screen house, close to Umass/ I-90. $255K 508-425-1150
Leominster-George Terrace Large Ranch 9RMS, 4BD, 2.5BA, 2 car garage. 2200 sq. ft. And many extras! A must see! $375,000 Call 978-5345982/978-660-5411
SUNDIN HOME FOR SALE BY OWNER CRANBROOK DRIVE HOLDEN
Nicely furnished house with three bedrooms, one bath, in Jefferson. New roof and paint inside and outside. Two finished basement rooms, recent kitchen appliances, new asphalt double driveway, large rear deck with canopy, BBQ grill with attractive deck furniture. Well landscaped property. For showing call Cliff at 508-829-9882
ROOMMATE WANTED
Worcester - Semi-Retired man seeking roommate for sober 2 br. apt. Shrewsbury St. area. Cable, a/c, washer/dryer inc. $600/mo. 508-769-2834 TIMESHARES FOR RENT
9RM, Colonial, 3BR, 4 Full BA. 1.6 acres, AC, laundry room on 2nd FL, large kitchen with pantry, hardwood fls, carpeted BRâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s, tile BAâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s. 3400sq. ft., 1200sq ft. finished BSMT. Formal DR, library. Custom builtins in FR & library, negotiable. Town water & sewer. Pre-approved only. $670K 774-345-4355
36
WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM
Pompano Beach FL timeshare for rent (800) or sale(1500) on beach 2/19-2/26 studio sleeps 4. Deeded 978808-6035
2000 Ford F150 Flareside Pickup Showroom condition inside and out. 100K miles. All power, needs nothing. $7000.00 Call 978-466-6043 1992 GMC Pickup Custom new tires, 366 motor, gas automatic, no rust. Harley black & orange. Asking $7,500 or B/O Call 508-768-8505 Jon 1994 Dodge Ram 1500 4X4 5.2 V8 Auto, 142K Miles. Regular cab. Black. Cap, hitch. Good shape. $3975.00 978-422-8084 2005 Chevrolet SSR 6 speed trans, 17,500 miles. Loaded. Silver. Never saw rain or snow. $28,500.00 508-769-3436 AUTO/VAN 2003 Dodge Ram Van w/chair lift. 78K orig miles. Excellent condition. $3500.00 or B/O Leominster 978-840-2662 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. $14,999.00 508-829-2907
AUTOMOTIVE AUTOS AUTO/MOTORCYCLE 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
â&#x20AC;˘ J U LY 16 , 2 0 15
1958 Chevrolet Impala Convertible, Tuxedo Black, factory 348cid V-8 280hp, Powerglide, AC, $15,000, swetfarm@gmail.com / 774315-3468
1988 MercedesBenz 300 SEL 6 cylinder gas. Very good cond. Runs exc. $3200.00 195k miles. Located in Sutton, MA 774-287-0777
Thunderbird 17.6 Fiberglass 90HP Power Trim outboard. Roller trailer, Elec winch and all equipment. Great for fishing or diving. $1450.00 Call Stan 508-853-5789
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
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
2004 Toyota Corolla Maroon, grey interior. AC, PS, PB, PW, PL Toyota dependability. Low 137K miles. $5875.00 508-581-7967 2002 Chevrolet Corvette 39,000 miles Red with black interior. Car is in excellent condition! $26,000 or best offer. Call: 774-823-0466. 2009 Mazda CX-7 Blackcherry with gray & black interior. 48,000 miles $9,500. 774-8230466 2006 Toyota Corolla 84K miles. Good condition. Light green. $7,000.00 Leominster 978-227-5111
2012 Keystone Res. 403FK 40â&#x20AC;&#x2122; Dest. Trlr, Immac. Cond., deck, shed, land. site, just move in! 2015 Seasonal Rate paid for! Camp Coldbrook Barre, MA, $35,000 or BO! 603-233-0889 RUN YOUR AD UNTIL IT SELLS ONLY $20 FOR SIX LINES! Reaching 90,000 readers in PRINT & ONLINE Contact Carrie at 978-728-4302
AUTOS
Over 40 Acres! Over 3000 Vehicles! <:,+ 5,> (<;6 7(9;:
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FREE Nationwide Parts Locator Service +LWVZP[Z JVU]LUPLU[S` [HRLU V]LY [OL WOVUL Â&#x2039; -VYLPNU +VTLZ[PJ Â&#x2039; ,HYS` 3H[L 4VKLS Â&#x2039; ,UNPULZ Â&#x2039; ;YHUZTPZZPVUZ Â&#x2039; 5L^ 9HKPH[VYZ Â&#x2039; .HZ ;HURZ Â&#x2039; >OLLSZ Â&#x2039; ;PYLZ Â&#x2039; )HSHUJLYZ Â&#x2039; ,_OH\Z[ 4HUPMVSKZ Â&#x2039; >PUKV^ 4V[VYZ
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1985 Cadillac Eldorado 74K miles. Never been in snow. Mint condition. Gray w/landau top. Bonus 2 Free Air tickets & 5 star condo for a week in FL. $5,000.00 Oakham 407-3753917 1990 Chevrolet Corvette ZR-1 Performance Coupe. 25K miles. 2 tops. LT5, 375HP. 6SPD, ZF Manual trans. Fully optioned. Fair weather only, always stored. $21,000 OBRO 978-422-6624
Need a cheap dependable used car? Call now! Cars starting $1,295 to $4,500. FIRST TIME USED CARS 2 Putnam Lane Worc Big Dog 508-667-3434
We buy vintage vehicles & antique auto related garage contents. ROTHERS BROOKS
USED AUTO PARTS
508-792-6211 Worcester, MA
www.centralmassclass.com LEGALS/PUBLIC NOTICES
CAMPERS/TRAILERS 2001 Layton 40 Ft. Park Model Trailer. Bedroom has over sized bed. Kitchen complete with stove, refrigerator, and dining set. Living room area has two sleep sofas. Full attached deck, with screen room and hard top roof. Trailer is located in Wells, ME. Must be removed from site. Reason for selling moving to Florida. Price $5,000. Call 413-433-3646
TRY BEFORE YOU BUY!
• Class A, B, C Motor Homes • Travel Trailers Parts • Propane • Service Transportation • Temporary Housing
Fuller RV Sales & Rentals 150 Shrewsbury St., Boylston 508-869-2905 www.fullerrv.com BBB Accredited A+ Rating JUNK CARS We Buy and PICK UP Your junk or wrecked cars or trucks. We Sell New and Used Parts. Specials on Batteries and Tires. New and Used! Airport Auto Parts, Inc. 56 Crawford St. Leominster, MA 01453 978-534-3137
Town of Sutton Invitations for Bid Elementary School/Early Learning Center Entryway Reconstruction Project Sealed bids are being solicited under MGL Ch 30 section 39M, for Elementary School/Early Learning Center Entryway Reconstruction Project in accordance with specifications. Specifications may be obtained at the Town Administrator’s Office, Second Floor, 4 Uxbridge Road, Sutton, MA 01590, starting on Wednesday July 15, 2015 between 8:00am and 4:00pm each business day excluding Fridays when proposals may be obtained between 9:00am and 12:00noon, until scheduled opening of bid. Bids must be in duplicate and enclosed in a sealed envelope addressed to the Town Administrator, 4 Uxbridge Road, Sutton, MA 01590 no later than 11:00am Wednesday August 12, 2015 at which time they will be opened and read aloud. The town of Sutton reserves the right to waive any informalities or irregularities in the proposals received, or to reject any and all proposals, or to accept proposals deemed to be in the best interest of the town of Sutton. The Town Administrator will award the contract on behalf of the Town of Sutton no later than sixty (60) working days after the date of the bid opening. James Smith Town dministrator 7/16/2015 MS
Town of Sutton Planning Board & Department Sutton Planning Board Public Hearing Notice In accordance with the provisions of the Zoning Bylaw sections: III.A.4. – Use Regulations, IV.C. – Site Plan Review, and V.D. – Route 146 Overlay District Bylaw, the Planning Board will hold a public hearing on the following applications submitted by Galaxy Sutton LLC, 826 Southbridge Street, Auburn, MA 01501 for property known as Pleasant Valley Crossing located at 1 Galaxy Pass formerly 171Worcester Providence Turnpike. 1. To grant a Special Permit for a restaurant with drive-thru window service. 2. To amend a previously approved site plan by including a drive-thru restaurant queue lane and exit lane. 3. To amend a previously approved special permit by changing the proposed exterior building materials and colors of the three multi-tenant buildings including a change from brick/ stone to hardy plank. The hearing will be held at the Sutton Town Hall, third floor, on Monday, August 3, 2015 at 7:30 P.M. A copy of the application can be inspected in the office of the Town Clerk during normal office hours. Robert S. Largess Jr. Chairman 7/16, 7/23/2015 MS
GROW YOUR BUSINESS PARTS & ACCESSORIES 2 Storage Shelves for a Cargo Van Like New. (1) 42 x 46 and (1) 54 x 46 $100 B/0 Call Box 508-752-2768 (Paxton)* 508-752-2768 SNOWMOBILES Snowmobile trailer/tilt blk steel, 8’ long, 3’ wide. New Hitch cap, $175. Call 978-582-4692 noon-6. *
Be Seen in our Service Directory and let us help build your business For more information, contact Carrie Arsenault Classified Sales Manager 978-728-4302 or email carsenault@centralmassclass.com
Commonwealth of Massachusetts The Trial Court Probate and Family Court Worcester Probate and Family Court 225 Main St. Worcester, MA 01608 508-831-2200 CITATION ON PETITION FOR FORMAL ADJUDICATION Docket No. WO15P2172EA Estate of: Joanne F Juskavitch Date of Death: 03/21/2015 To all interested persons: A Petition for Formal Probate of Will with Appointment of Personal Representative has been filed by: Todd R Juskavitch of Oxford MA requesting that the Court enter a formal Decree and Order and for such other relief as requested in the Petition. The Petitioner requests that: Todd R Juskavitch of Oxford MA be appointed as Personal Representative(s) of said estate to serve Without Surety on the bond in an unsupervised administration. You have the right to obtain a copy of the Petition from the Petitioner or at the Court. You have a right to object to this proceeding. To do so, you or your attorney must file a written appearance and objection at this Court before: 10:00 a.m. on 08/04/2015. This is NOT a hearing date, but a deadline by which you must file a written appearance and objection if you object to this proceeding. If you fail to file a timely written appearance and objection followed by an Affidavit of Objections within thirty (30) days of the return date, action may be taken without further notice to you. UNSUPERVISED ADMINISTRATION UNDER MASSACHUSETTS UNIFORM PROBATE CODE (MUPC) A Personal Representative appointed under the MUPC in an unsupervised administration is not required to file an inventory or annual accounts with the Court. Persons interested in the estate are entitled to notice regarding the administration directly from the Personal Representative and may petition the Court in any matter relating to the estate, including distribution of assets and expenses of administration. WITNESS, Hon. Lellah A Keamy, First Justice of this Court. Date: July 06, 2015 Stephanie K. Fattman, Register of Probate 07/16/2015 MS Commonwealth of Massachusetts The Trial Court Probate and Family Court Worcester Probate and Family Court 225 Main St. Worcester, MA 01608 508-831-2200 CITATION ON PETITION FOR FORMAL ADJUDICATION Docket No. WO15P2188EA Estate of: Evelyn Mae Bowler Also known as: Evelyn M Bowler Date of Death: 05/28/2015 To all interested persons: A Petition for Formal Probate of Will with Appointment of Personal Representative has been filed by: Nancy M Haig of Millbury MA requesting that the Court enter a formal Decree and Order and for such other relief as requested in the Petition. The Petitioner requests that: Nancy M Haig of Millbury MA be appointed as Personal Representative(s) of said estate to serve Without Surety on the bond in an unsupervised administration. You have the right to obtain a copy of the Petition from the Petitioner or at the Court. You have a right to object to this proceeding. To do so, you or your attorney must file a written appearance and objection at this Court before: 10:00 a.m. on 08/04/2015. This is NOT a hearing date, but a deadline by which you must file a written appearance and objection if you object to this proceeding. If you fail to file a timely written appearance and objection followed by an Affidavit of Objections within thirty (30) days of the return date, action may be taken without further notice to you. UNSUPERVISED ADMINISTRATION UNDER MASSACHUSETTS UNIFORM PROBATE CODE (MUPC) A Personal Representative appointed under the MUPC in an unsupervised administration is not required to file an inventory or annual accounts with the Court. Persons interested in the estate are entitled to notice regarding the administration directly from the Personal Representative and may petition the Court in any matter relating to the estate, including distribution of assets and expenses of administration. WITNESS, Hon. Lellah A Keamy, First Justice of this Court. Date: July 07, 2015 Stephanie K. Fattman, Register of Probate 07/16/2015 MS
Keep it Legal J U LY 16 , 2 0 15 • W O R C E S T E R M A G A Z I N E . C O M
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SALE DATES: Thurs. July 16 - July 22, 2015
STORE HOURS: Mon-Sat 8am-9pm; Sunday 9am-8pm Neutrogena Suncare
16" 3 Speed Pedestal Fan
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Reebok® Mens & Ladies T-Shirts
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Highrise Self-Inflating Queen Size Air Mattress
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Two minutes with...
Harrison Neylon
In 1946, when Harrison Neylon was discharged from his coastal artillery post in the Army, he told his dad he wanted to be a hairdresser. After a long pause his father said, “Well, at least you’ll be something.” And so began the only career Neylon would ever know. A Hardwick native with roots stretching back to the Mayflower, Neylon moved to Worcester while still in high school. When asked about the best part of being a hairdresser, Neylon said you can always learn more and even now at just shy of 90 he continues his education. We talked with Neylon this week about his roughly 69 years in the business. How long have you been a hair stylist? Since
1946, I’ve been a hairdresser. When I went to school I had to learn marcelling. Can you believe it that was popular in the '20s, making waves in hair with a curling iron? Marcel was a stylist, I guess he was French or something. When I took my practical exam in say 1948 I went into the Statehouse. It so happens the inspection that particular day, they were having a tradeshow in town and people came up from New York to work in the trade show and they had to have a Mass license to work. One of my questions was to demonstrate marcelling. I couldn’t believe it. I’ve been involved in everything in the hairdressing line. In 1971 I opened my own shop … finally. In ’78 the property was sold and I went to the Highland House and I was there until last October. I’m semi-retired now I met Cheryl, and she set me up here at the Top Shop (in Tatnuck Square). What could be better that I’ve got my own little domain here?
You’re just shy of 90 years old. Most people have been retired for years at this point in
their life. Why do you still work? What keeps you coming back? What am I going to do?
Like yesterday I wasn’t booked. I still have lady friends, we took a ride I had to get some new tires for the car. After, we took a ride to Princeton and drove up the mountain to see how the tires worked. I do things like that. I’ve traveled in the past, but I happy being at home. I’m very active in many things, my church. I’m still active with the hairdressing program at the trade school. I keep busy and I still like to do hair.
Do you plan on retiring? Not really. I’m
semi-retired now, and fortunately I can survive if I don’t work. A lot of people that retire don’t know what the hell to do with themselves. You have to keep your mind going. God forbid you get senility or Alzheimer’s. You’ve got to have an interest to do something, to be something when you’re retired.
How do you keep yourself healthy? Drink a little scotch now and again. Actually, I don’t drink I guess I’m just lucky. My dad lived to be about 83 his heart had
STEVEN KING
weakened. My mother died. She was a smoker, always had a butt hanging out of her mouth. She was a strong-willed woman. She really thought she ran the roost. My father did, but she really thought she did. She was about 88 when she died. She was a worldly individual.
You have a great perspective on hair trends over the years. The late ‘80s to me seemed like a low point for hairstyles, especially when I look back at my high school yearbook. Which styles and maybe decades were your favorite as a stylist? People used to have
a standing appointment every week. I had waiting lists to get an appointment with me on Friday mornings. People would come every week to get their hair washed and set. They were standing appointments. I’ve been very lucky. I’ve enjoyed a very good reputation. People have gotten away from that. Hair coloring, which is my forte - I’m known for my coloring - even that has changed to a degree. If you came to me and said I want to color my hair I would make you look like you did 10 years ago. My theory was to always make a person look natural.
Talk to me about your clients. I have a client on every Saturday. She started coming to me 1970 and she’s always stayed with me. I’ve always hung on and catered to my clients. I’ve had the cream of Worcester in my clients, I now have the honor of doing Sen. (Harriette) Chandler’s hair. She was here this morning. What keeps you coming in: the work or your clients? Hair cutting is very important to
some stylists to me it’s shaping the hair to make it come out the way you want the style to look. I have one client who goes to some guy in Newton to get her hair cut. She’s gone to him, I think, before she started coming to me. She doesn’t know what she’ll do if he ever gives up cutting hair. I said, “Well I could try it.” She wouldn’t let anybody in the world tint her hair, but me. I have a client who goes to Florida in the winter. She makes the colorist call me to talk about the formula. It’s the work and the clients. – Steven King
J U LY 16 , 2 0 15 • W O R C E S T E R M A G A Z I N E . C O M
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