Report finds city facing peril from ocean

Transcription

Report finds city facing peril from ocean
abcde
Th u r s d a y, Ju n e 2 3 , 2 0 1 6
DEMOCRATS SIT IN OVER GUN BILLS
Report
finds city
facing peril
from ocean
Impact of climate change
could be much worse than
predicted, researchers say
By David Abel
GLOBE STAFF
OFFICE OF REPRESENTATIVE JOHN LEWIS
Representatives Katherine Clark and John Lewis, shown flanking Senator Elizabeth Warren, led a protest Wednesday in the House
to demand that the leadership allow votes on gun legislation. Republicans ignored them during unrelated late-night business. A2.
A 2nd Boston Latin administrator resigns
Says Walsh, Chang
gave poor support
By James Vaznis
and Meghan E. Irons
GLOBE STAFF
The fallout from the resignation
of the Boston Latin School’s headmaster deepened Wednesday, as
Pair held
in slaying
near school
Two men were charged
with fatally shooting Raekwon Brown, a student at
Jeremiah E. Burke High
School, near the Dorchester school on June 8.
Authorities did not describe a motive. B1.
Donald Trump ripped Hillary
Clinton as a ‘‘world class liar’’
who amassed profits as secretary of state. A8.
Social Security and Medicare
trustees warned that Washington needs to act soon to
shore up the programs’ finances. A10.
The Islamic State maintains
a stubborn resilience even as
another top administrator resigned
and unleashed a blistering critique
of Superintendent Tommy Chang
and Mayor Martin J. Walsh for
what he called their tepid support
for a school in crisis.
Assistant Headmaster Malcolm
Flynn, the school’s head of discipline who has worked at Boston
Latin for more than a half century,
Grill, interrupted
Thursday: Midday shower;
high 72-77, low 58-63
Friday: Sunny and pleasant;
high 74-79, low 59-64
High tide: 1:40 a.m., 2:18 p.m.
Sunrise: 5:08 Sunset: 8:25
Complete report, B9
Complaints rise in South Boston over a proposal for a
fright-themed entertainment
venue to operate on Castle Island. C1.
hopes of averting a one-day
strike on Monday. C1.
The Colombian government
and the FARC rebel group
agreed to a cease-fire in their
but otherwise would face little change under a state Senate bill. B1.
long conflict. A6.
A man charged with manslaughter in the drowning of
a friend the Charles River
apologized and said the death
was an accident. B3.
New England Revolution owner Robert Kraft would need to
satisfy major stakeholders
Doctors described two cases
of ‘‘transient smartphone
blindness” caused by looking
before he could build a soccer
stadium at the old Bayside
Expo Center site. C1.
at the devices with one eye
while in the dark. A7.
For breaking news, updated
stories, and more, visit our website:
BostonGlobe.com
VOL . 289, NO. 175
*
Suggested retail price
$1.50
$2.00 outside Metro Boston
$2.50 in Florida
By Tim Logan
GLOBE STAFF
Fourteen years after he began planning a major development in the air
over the Massachusetts Turnpike at
Kenmore Square, developer John
Rosenthal says he’s finally ready to
start work.
Construction would commence
with the part of the project that would
sit on firm ground.
On Wednesday, Rosenthal and his
development partners said that they
have raised $230 million in financing
and expect to soon begin construction
of two apartment buildings on parking
lots near Fenway Park. That would be
BOSTON LATIN, Page A10
the first phase of the long-delayed Fenway Center, a nearly $600 million complex that’s to include three other structures over the turnpike between Beacon Street and Brookline Avenue,
including a 27-story tower.
The project has long promised to
accelerate the transformation of Kenmore Square. But for more than a decade it has struggled, largely because
of the cost of constructing a massive
deck over one of the busiest highways
in Boston, as well as over a commuter
rail line.
So Rosenthal and the Portland,
Ore.-based development firm Gerding
FENWAY, Page A9
Ty Burr
Rising sea levels
Report map shows even a 3-foot rise may have
dramatic effect:
Probability of flooding
1%
10%
10.5 foot rise
Low probability
of happening,
but it would put
about 30 percent
of Boston under
water
Boston
Common BOSTON
7.4’
Boston’s risk of
flooding with a
3-foot sea level rise
3.1’
2.4’
Relative rise above
2000 levels
8”
7.5 feet
The point
at which
Copley
Square
would
flood
5 feet
Faneuil
Hall’s
flood
point
QUINCY
1.5’
1.3’
2050
* Likely
under
moderate
to high
emission
scenarios
SOURCE:
Climate
Ready
Boston
8”
4”
2030
2070*
2100* GLOBE STAFF
COMMENTARY
Stars departing, but
the show will still shine
N
o one’s irreplaceable. Second up hardly means second best.
Baseball fans don’t go home after the lead-off hitter, do they?
But I understand. You’re bummed at the news that LinManuel Miranda has announced he’ll be leaving “Hamilton,”
the Broadway musical phenomenon he wrote and in which
he stars. It’s dispiriting, too, that when Miranda goes on July 9, he’ll be
taking with him his fellow Tony winner Leslie Odom Jr., the show’s Aaron
Burr. Also departing around the same time is Phillipa Soo, who plays Eliza
Hamilton to Miranda’s Alexander. Jonathan Groff, the show’s comic secret
weapon as a preening, patter-singing King George III, moved on in April.
But, come on, they’re supposed to hang on until 2032, when you finally
get a ticket? Cut Miranda a break. This project has been obsessing him for
HAMILTON, Page A8
POINT OF VIEW:
DAN SHAUGHNESSY
“As we sit here on the
threshold of the 2016
NBA Draft — with the
Celtics in need of help and
holding the third overall
pick — it is comforting
that we have Red’s basketball progeny calling the
shots. Danny Ainge is Red
Auerbach’s basketball
son.” D1.
SEA LEVEL, Page A14
Range of
predicted
rises
Brigham and Women’s Hospital and its nurses union will
negotiate again on Friday in
Ride-hailing companies
would be required to pay an
assessment to municipalities
day before Britons vote on
whether to withdraw from
the European Union. A4.
The second resignation came as
the school community reeled from
headmaster Lynne Mooney Teta’s
unexpected announcement Tuesday that she was resigning after
nine years. Teta said in her resignation letter that the school and its efforts to combat racism “have been
unfairly judged” by outside individ-
Stalled project above Pike
may be split into two parts
it loses ground in Syria, Iraq,
and Libya. A3.
Both sides went all out the
criticized the public characterization by certain black leaders that
the school is a culturally dangerous
and unsafe environment.
“What I am doing is telling the
superintendent that I believe it was
his job to get out in front and tell
the truth about our school, but he
didn’t,’’ Flynn, 74, said in an interview with the Globe.
The consequences of climate change on Boston are expected to be far more calamitous than
previous studies have suggested, a new report
commissioned by the city says.
In the worst-case scenario, sea levels could
rise more than 10 feet by the end of the century
— nearly twice what was previously predicted —
plunging about 30 percent of Boston under water. Temperatures in 2070 could exceed 90 degrees for 90 days a year, compared with an average of 11 days now.
And changes in precipitation could mean a
50 percent decline in annual snowfall, punctuated by more frequent heavy storms such as
nor’easters.
The report, by scientists from the University
of Massachusetts and other local universities,
has raised concerns in City Hall just two weeks
after Mayor Martin J. Walsh attended a climate
summit in Beijing.
“The updated climate projections confirm
that we must work together to take bold approaches to prepare Boston for the impacts of
climate change,” Walsh said in a statement.
The report, he said, is part of the city’s effort
Creator Lin-Manuel Miranda (left) leaves “Hamilton” next month,
but Javier Munoz is a high-wattage replacement.
Brigham doctors
warn on unproven
stem cell therapies
By Liz Kowalczyk
GLOBE STAFF
When Jim Gass suffered a stroke in 2009, it
soon was clear that standard rehabilitation
would not repair the damage. Unwilling to accept
life in a wheelchair, Gass decided his only option
was to fly overseas for experimental stem cell
treatment.
At clinics in Argentina, China, and Mexico,
doctors injected Gass with what they described
as stem cells from several sources, including fetal
tissue, in attempts to reverse his partial paralysis.
Clinics tout the treatments online as cutting edge
and curative.
What happened to Gass next is a cautionary
tale for other desperate patients seeking unproven and unregulated treatments in the murky
world of “stem cell tourism,’’ warned a group of
Brigham and Women’s Hospital doctors in a letter to the New England Journal of Medicine, published online Wednesday.
After scans showed something unfamiliar on
Gass’s spine, where the latest round of stem cells
had been injected, a Brigham doctor discovered a
strange sticky fibrous growth there.
“It looked like nothing I had ever seen,’’ said
STEM CELLS, Page A11
T h e
A2
B o s t o n
G l o b e
T H U R S D A Y, J U N E 2 3 , 2 0 1 6
The Nation
Democrats in House sit-in demand vote on guns
Ryan dismisses
demonstration as
‘publicity stunt’
By Tracy Jan
GLOBE STAFF
WASHINGTON — Several
dozen lawmakers, led by Representatives Katherine Clark of
Massachusetts and John Lewis,
a longtime civil rights leader,
disrupted the US House
Wednesday by staging a sit-in
on the floor of the chamber to
demand that the Republican
leadership allow votes on gun
legislation.
The protest — over bills
blocked by House leaders that
would expand background
checks and attempt to prevent
suspected terrorists from buying guns — came more than a
week after the Orlando nightclub massacre, the country’s
worst mass shooting in modern
history with 49 victims.
House Speaker Paul Ryan,
the chamber’s top Republican,
dismissed the sit-in as a “publicity stunt’’ in a CNN interview
and said the House GOP had no
intention of passing measures
that he said would erode gun
ownership rights.
His position seemed likely to
keep the standoff going as the
evening wore on Wednesday. At
1 0 p . m ., Ry a n g av e l e d t h e
chamber into session, and Republicans proceeded to vote on
unrelated legislation, ignoring
the Democrats even as they
stood in the well of the House
holding signs and loudly chanting, “No bill, no break!’’
Outside the House chambers, a crowd swelled in the
Capitol plaza into the early
morning.
Democratic representatives
said they were prepared to occupy the chamber until Friday,
when the House is scheduled to
adjourn for more than week in
observance of Independence
Day. It follows last week’s filibuster by Senate Democrats
over gun legislation and is another sign the party senses an
opening as public opinion
shifts, while acknowledging a
tough road ahead to actually
pass the bill.
The unusual scene of House
members, dressed in suits and
skirts, sitting with their ankles
or legs crossed on the blue carpet of the House of Representatives, unfolded shortly before
noon Wednesday.
“I brought my suitcase. I
have snacks and a toothbrush
in my purse with me on the
floor,” Clark said in a telephone
interview. “I’m committed to
being here as long as we remain
in session.’’
House members were joined
by a few Senate Democrats, including Elizabeth Warren and
Edward Markey of Massachusetts, presidential candidate
Bernie Sanders of Vermont, and
Charles Schumer of New York.
Republicans, who control
the House, declared a recess as
the sit-in began and immediately cut off the C-SPAN video feed
showing the House floor. Representative Scott Peters of California responded by streaming
the speeches live on Periscope.
C-SPAN circ umvented the
blackout by broadcasting the
sage at the bottom of the
screen: “ALERT: HOUSE CAMERAS ARE NOT PERMITTED
TO SHOW SIT-IN.’’
Ho w a r d Mo r t m a n , a C SPAN spokesman, said the
blackout would have impeded
the “basic core of our mission,”
which is to “show what’s happening in Congress,” were it not
for the social media feeds.
‘I brought my suitcase. I have
snacks and a toothbrush. . . .
I’m committed to being here
as long as we remain in
session. ’
KATHERINE CLARK, Massachusetts Democrat
feeds of Peters and other lawmakers from Periscope and Facebook, drawing tens of thousands of viewers.
A spokeswoman for Ryan,
AshLee Strong, said in a statement that the House recessed
because it “cannot operate
without members following the
rules of the institution.”
Strong did not immediately
respond to Democrats’ complaints of censorship by GOP
leadership. C-SPAN, by agreement with the House leadership, does not have control of
when the cameras are turned
on. As it streamed live Facebook video of the sit-in captured by Democratic lawmakers, C-SPAN displayed a mes-
Though the C-SPAN cutoff
highlighted the cable network’s
restrictive access agreements
for coverage of congressional
debates, the goal of the House
Democrats was to focus on gun
control in the wake of the Orlando shooting.
Inaction on gun legislation,
Democrats said, is costing lives.
“We don’t have a filibuster
procedure in the House, but we
are going to disrupt the proceedings the best we can to
show that this issue is critical to
the American people and we
have to act,’’ Clark said. “Let’s
get ourselves on record. Let’s
have the debate, and let’s try to
start and craft a solution.”
Clark, on the House floor
earlier, ticked off the numerous
mass shootings in recent years:
First-graders and their teachers
shot in their elementary school.
Students and their professors
shot in their college classrooms.
Parishioners shot after Bible
study and fellowship in their
church. Social workers and disabled clients shot at holiday party. A congresswoman shot while
meeting with constituents.
“Many of our sanctuaries
have been violated by gun violence. It is a grisly routine,”
Clark said on the House floor.
“Let’s vote. Let’s put it out there
for people to judge.”
Clark last week drew criticism from Republicans when
she and a handful of other
Democrats walked out of a moment of silence held in memory
of the Orlando victims.
“These moments of silence
we have is the only action that
we take,” Clark said in the
Globe interview Wednesday. “It
should only be the beginning,
but we never get to the debates
and the votes.”
“Rise up, Democrats. Rise
up, America. This cannot
stand,” said Representative
John Larson of Connecticut,
where 20 children and six
adults were killed in a Newtown elementary school shooting in 2012.
Lewis, a 15-term congressman from Georgia and major
leader of the civil rights movement who had organized sit-ins
to protest segregation across
the South, tweeted on Wednesday, “We will use nonviolence to
fight gun violence and inaction.”
In a letter to House Speaker
Ryan, Clark and Lewis urged
the Republican leader to keep
the House in session through its
planned July Fourth recess to
debate and vote on the gun violence legislation.
Ryan said during his weekly
press conference that he was
waiting for the Senate to advance a compromise gun bill
before proceeding in the House.
T he Senate, following a
nearly 15-hour filibuster led by
Democrat Christopher Murphy
of Connecticut, defeated similar legislation Monday.
Joining Clark in Wednesday’s sit-in were all of Massachusetts’ all-Democratic House
delegation: Stephen Lynch,
Richard Neal, Michael Capuano, Jim McGovern, Bill Keating, Niki Tsongas, Joe Kennedy,
and Seth Moulton.
Clark acknowledged that
even if the House were to vote
on the proposed measures, they
are unlikely to pass.
“That’s not where we are politically,” she said. “But we have
to start taking those votes and
recording where members of
Congress stand on these issues.”
Tracy Jan can be reached at
[email protected].
Daily Briefing
Michigan sues
engineering firms
in Flint water case
FLINT, Mich. — Michigan’s
attorney general filed a civil
lawsuit Wednesday against
two water engineering companies, saying their negligence
caused and exacerbated Flint’s
lead-tainted water crisis, and
demanding what could total
hundreds of millions of dollars
in damages.
Lockwood, Andrews &
Newnam, also known as LAN,
and Veolia were sued in Genesee County Circuit Court. The
firms already are facing suits
from Flint residents over the
disaster, in which improperly
treated water from the Flint
River scraped toxic lead from
pipes into tap water.
Houston-based LAN —
whose Flint office in 2013 and
2014 helped the city of nearly
100,000 switch to the Flint
River as its primary water supply — was accused of professional negligence and public
nuisance. Veolia, a French
multinational corporation
with US offices, faces the same
allegations along with a fraud
count.
The firm was hired in 2015
after Flint began encountering
numerous water problems but,
according to the suit, it and
LAN didn’t detect the lack of a
corrosion control chemical
and instead recommended the
addition of a chloride that
made the problem worse.
‘‘In Flint, Veolia and LAN
were hired to do a job and
failed miserably,’’ Schuette said
at a news conference in Flint.
‘‘They basically botched it,
didn’t stop the water in Flint
from being poisoned. They
made it worse.’’
In a statement, Veolia
North America said it ‘‘will vigorously defend itself against
these unwarranted allegations
of wrongdoing.’’
‘‘The attorney general has
not talked to Veolia about its
involvement in Flint, interviewed the company’s technical experts or asked any questions about our one-time, onemonth contract with Flint,’’
Veolia said.
A LAN spokesman said
Schuette ‘‘blatantly mischaracterized’’ its role. The decision
to not add corrosion controls
was made by the city and state
regulators, not LAN, according
to the company, which said it
had regularly pushed for corrosion control.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Ex-House speaker begins prison term
MIKE SEGAR/REUTERS
CHICAGO — Former US
House speaker Dennis Hastert
arrived at a Minnesota prison
on Wednesday to serve his 15month sentence in a hushmoney case involving revelations that he sexually abused
at least four boys when he
coached wrestling at an Illinois high school.
The 74-year-old Illinois Republican — one of the highestranking US politicians to ever
go to prison — arrived at noon
at the facility in Rochester.
Hastert, who uses a wheelchair, wore a black shirt and
camouflage-style pants as he
wheeled himself into the complex between high, razor-wire
fencing. A woman followed
him carrying crutches, a plastic bag, and a brown box.
At sentencing in April, US
District Judge Thomas M.
Durkin cited the abuse that
dated back more than 35 years
and branded Hastert ‘‘a serial
child molester’’ in imposing a
sentence that went beyond
federal guidelines, which recommended no more than six
months behind bars.
Hastert wasn’t charged
with child abuse because statutes of limitation ran out; he
coached at Yorkville High
School from 1965 to 1981. Instead, Hastert was charged
with and pleaded guilty to violating banking law in trying to
pay $3.5 million in hush money to one victim, referred to in
court papers only as ‘‘Individual A.’’
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Senate blocks expansion of data access
CHUCK BURTON/ASSOCIATED PRESS
ON THE TRAIL — Republican Donald Trump delivered a speech at the Trump Soho
Hotel in Manhattan, while Democrat Hillary Clinton greeted supporters in Raleigh,
N.C., Wednesday. The rhetoric between the two presumptive presidential nominees
continued to be heated, with Trump accusing Clinton of lying to the American people
and Clinton saying Trump offers no substance. A8.
cent sightings and officials
asked the public for help in locating it.
Lawrence Hajna, spokesman for the state Department
of Environmental Protection,
said officials expect the bear to
make it through next winter.
‘‘The bear has an indomitable spirit,’’ Hajna said.
Last year, supporters
pushed for Pedals to be moved
to a sanctuary in New York
State, but New Jersey officials
have said they won’t allow the
bear to be captured and transferred to the facility. Hajna
said at the time that the bear
would do better in its natural
habitat and the agency would
step in if its condition deteriorated.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
ing in Orlando on June 12 left
49 dead and 53 injured. The
gunman had pledged allegiance to the Islamic State and
other militant groups.
But the Senate rejected the
amendment 58-38, two votes
short of the 60 needed to move
ahead with the bill that would
give federal law enforcement
direct access to e-mail and text
message logs, internet browsing histories, and other potentially sensitive online data.
‘‘We aren’t asking for content; we’re asking for usage,’’
said Senator John McCain, an
Arizona Republican.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Southwest steps up heat warnings
TUCSON — Last year, a
French couple died while trying to make sure their 9-yearold son had enough water on a
summertime outing in a New
Mexico national park.
Over the weekend, two Germans visiting Tucson died after taking a hike amid recordbreaking temperatures.
Following a string of heatrelated deaths in the US
Southwest, officials are in-
Walking bear reappears in N.J.
OAK RIDGE, N.J. — A New
Jersey black bear that walks
upright on its two hind legs
and has become a social media
darling has reemerged and has
been captured on video
months after its last sighting.
The bipedal bear nicknamed Pedals was spotted in
the town of Oak Ridge, NJ.com
reported Wednesday. The bear
appeared to be in relatively
good health and was moving
briskly in a video posted to Facebook. The man who posted
the video wrote that he spotted
the bear Monday.
Pedals apparently has an
injured leg or paw that doesn’t
allow it to walk comfortably
on all fours, according to experts. Prior to the latest video,
there had been no reported re-
WASHINGTON — The Senate on Wednesday blocked an
expansion of the government’s
power to investigate suspected
terrorists, a victory for civil libertarians and privacy advocates emboldened after a National Security Agency contractor’s revelations forced
changes in how the communications of Americans are monitored.
After the massacre at a gay
nightclub in Orlando, senior
Republicans had pressed for
allowing the FBI to obtain a
person’s digital fingerprints
without first securing a judge’s
permission. The mass shoot-
creasing their efforts to alert
visitors to the perils of being
outdoors in extreme heat.
Local governments and
businesses are improving signs
and brochures — including
making warnings and vital information available in different languages — amid another
staggering heat wave. They’re
also educating hotel staff on
what to tell tourists.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
For the record
R Correction: Because of an editing error, a photo accompanying
a story in Wednesday’s Business section about the purchase of
American Science and Engineering by OSI was not of Deepak
Chopra, the CEO of OSI.
Animal control officials
said that the videos seems
to show that the bear has
an injured paw.
The Globe regrets the error and welcomes information about
errors that call for corrections. Information may be sent to
[email protected] or left in a message at 617-929-8230. A
listing of other contacts can be found on Page B2.
T h e
T H U R S D A Y, J U N E 2 3 , 2 0 1 6
B o s t o n
G l o b e
A3
The World
Daily Briefing
Islamic State,
pressed on all
fronts, shows
resilience
Losses have not
crippled group
Fighting heavy in
Iraq, Syria, Libya
By Philip Issa
and Susannah George
ASSOCIATED PRESS
TOBY MELVILLE/REUTERS
POLITICIAN HONORED — People held hands at a service for murdered Labor Party Member of Parliament Jo Cox
at Trafalgar Square in London on Wednesday. Cox opposed leaving the European Union. United Kingdom voters go
to the polls Thursday to decide on the Brexit. A4.
Zika fear spurs abortion pill requests
NEW YORK — Online requests for abortion pills spiked
dramatically this year in Brazil, Ecuador, and some other
Latin American countries that
ban abortions, an indication
that women may be choosing
to end pregnancies rather than
risk birth defects stemming
from a Zika virus outbreak.
Researchers reported the
trend after trying to understand how pregnant women
are responding to the threat of
Zika in countries where abortion is banned but the government is warning women to
avoid pregnancy because of Zika outbreaks.
The study, which was published Wednesday, has some
major limitations. Researchers
analyzed requests for abortion
pills from just one online service, which is not believed to
be representative of all the
women in any of the nations
studied. And the research does
not answer how many abortions actually occurred.
In the United States, the
states where Zika outbreaks
are considered most likely —
like Florida and Texas — are
places where abortion restrictions have been increasing.
‘‘If Zika does begin to transmit locally, you’re looking at
situations for [US] women
that may not be that different
from countries like Brazil or
Ecuador,’’ said the lead author,
Dr. Abigail Aiken of the University of Texas.
The Zika virus, which is
spread mainly by a tropical
mosquito, causes only a mild
illness, at worst, in most people. But scientists determined
that infection during pregnancy has led to severe brain-related birth defects.
For every 100 pregnancies
involving women infected early in their pregnancy, an estimated 1 to 15 will result in severe birth defects, according to
the US Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Jordan seals off camp, water scarce
AMMAN, Jordan — Syrian
refugees stranded along the
Jordanian border said
Wednesday that clean water is
getting scarce in their desert
tent camp after the area was
sealed by Jordan in response
to a deadly cross-border attack.
Cellphone footage taken in
the Ruqban camp showed refugees chanting, ‘‘We want water.’’ Three Ruqban residents
said by phone that people have
begun drinking polluted water.
Some 64,000 Syrians live in
two encampments along the
border, awaiting admission to
Jordan. Many have been in the
camps for months and depend
on daily deliveries of food and
water by international aid
agencies based in Jordan.
Jordan declared the area a
‘‘closed military zone’’ after a
car-bomb attack launched
from the Ruqban area killed
six Jordanian troops and
wounded 14 at dawn Tuesday.
There has been no claim of responsibility, but Jordan says it
has evidence that militants, including Islamic State fighters,
are present in the camps.
King Abdullah II warned
after the attack that Jordan
will ‘‘respond with an iron fist’’
to anyone harming its borders
or security.
Jordan-based international
aid officials confirmed
Wednesday that the border area was sealed and that they
couldn’t send aid there. However, they gave conflicting accounts of whether any water
had been delivered to the
camps since the attack. The officials spoke on condition of
anonymity because they were
not authorized to brief reporters.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Risky South Pole rescue succeeds
WASHINGTON — A small
plane with two sick workers
has arrived at a British research station in Antarctica,
safely finishing the first leg in
a daring rescue mission from a
remote US South Pole station,
officials said.
National Science Foundation spokesman Peter West
confirmed that the Twin Otter
turboprop landed Wednesday
afternoon at Rothera, a station
on the Antarctic peninsula run
by the British Antarctic Survey, after a 1,500-mile flight
from the South Pole.
‘‘It’s all going according to
plan,’’ said British Antarctic
Survey spokesman Paul Seagrove. The plane arrived
around 1:30 p.m. EDT.
West said it’s likely that the
rescue team will rest and fly
out Thursday. But a second
small plane, also owned by a
Canadian company, and its
flight crew are available if the
weather is good, the patients
are up to it, and officials decide to fly to southern Chile,
the closest and most likely
spot for medical treatment.
‘‘It’s ready to fly them right
off to Punta Arenas,’’ Seagrove
said. The flight to Chile takes
seven or eight hours, he said.
A webcam showed partly
sunny skies in Rothera. The
temperature was a balmy 27.5
degrees. That’s toasty compared to the Amundsen-Scott
research station at the South
Pole where it was minus 75 in
the morning.
The US agency won’t identify the sick workers or their
conditions, citing medical privacy. It wasn’t known until
Wednesday whether the second ailing worker would also
be evacuated.
Before they left, there were
48 people — 39 men and nine
women — at the station for the
winter.
Normally planes don’t go to
the polar outpost from February to October because of the
dangers of flying in the pitchdark and cold. The first day of
winter in the Southern Hemisphere was Monday — the sun
will not rise at the South Pole
till September.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Nigerian refugees dying of starvation
LAGOS, Nigeria — Nearly
200 refugees from Boko
Haram have died of starvation and dehydration in the
northeastern Nigerian city of
Bama in the past month, Doctors Without Borders said
Wednesday.
The refugees ‘‘speak of
children dying of hunger and
digging new graves every
day,’’ according to a statement
from the group.
‘‘A catastrophic humanitarian emergency’’ is unfolding at a makeshift camp on a
hospital compound where
24,000 people have taken refuge, it said.
The doctors referred 16
emaciated children at risk of
dying to their special feeding
center in Maiduguri.
One in five of the 15,000
children are suffering severe
acute malnutrition, the group
found.
‘‘We see the trauma on the
faces of our patients who
have witnessed and survived
many horrors,’’ said Ghada
Hatim, head of the Doctors
Without Borders mission in
Nigeria.
Her team reached Bama
on Tuesday following a military convoy from Maiduguri,
the Borno state capital that is
the headquarters of Nigeria’s
military campaign.
The refugees in Bama are
among 1.8 million Nigerians
forced from their homes and
living inside the country, with
another 155,000 in neighboring countries, according to
the United Nations.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
N. Korea missile test shows progress
SEOUL — North Korea
launched an intermediaterange ballistic missile into high
altitude Wednesday, demonstrating that the country was
making progress after five consecutive failures in just over
two months, analysts said.
The projectile, a Musudan
missile, took off from Wonsan,
a port city east of Pyongyang,
the North Korean capital, and
flew about 250 miles over the
sea between North Korea and
Japan, South Korea’s Office of
Joint Chiefs of Staff said in a
statement.
Although the missile fell far
short of its estimated full range
of more than 2,000 miles — far
enough to reach US military
bases in the Pacific — the test is
the first for the Musudan that
was not immediately dismissed
as a failure by the United States
or South Korea.
South Korea said that in the
North’s previous five Musudan
tests, including one earlier
Wednesday, the projectiles had
all crashed into the sea or exploded in midair soon after liftoff.
The progress the North
demonstrated with its sixth test
was disconcerting enough for
South Korea to convene a
meeting of top security-related
ministers later Wednesday.
NEW YORK TIMES
YONHAP VIA REUTERS
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un watched a long-range
rocket test earlier this year.
BEIRUT — Even as internationally backed forces chip
away at Islamic State-held territory in Syria, Iraq and Libya,
the militants have demonstrated a stubborn resilience this
week in the face of recent losses.
The Islamic State forces
dealt an embarrassing setback
to the Syrian army near the
militants’ self-styled capital of
Raqqa with a swift counteroffensive that rolled back incremental gains by troops loyal to
President Bashar Assad.
Pockets of extremist fighters north and west of Fallujah
continued to hold off elite Iraqi
special forces Wednesday, preventing them from making significant advances one month
after the government launched
its campaign to retake the city
west of Baghdad.
And in the battle for the
Libyan city of Sirte pro-government forces besieging the Islamic State stronghold were
stunned by renewed clashes
there, with 36 people killed, a
hospital spokesman said.
Just two weeks ago, the Islamic State had suffered setbacks in all three countries in
the region where the Sunni
militant group captured large
tracts of territory in Iraq and
Syria two years ago.
Seesaw battles raged in Syria’s Raqqa province, with Islamic State fighters retaking
areas from government forces
Tuesday. Two days earlier, the
Syrian troops briefly seized an
IS-held oilfield in Thawra and
threatened to retake the Tabqa
air base, which would have
opened a direct line for troops
to the city of Raqqa.
The government began its
highly publicized campaign to
retake Raqqa on June 2.
On Sunday, the troops advanced to within 6 miles of the
Tabqa base, which is about 28
miles from Raqqa and holds
strategic and symbolic value
for the government. It was the
last position held by government forces in Raqqa province
before the militants overran it
in August 2014, killing scores
of detained Syrian soldiers in a
massacre documented on Islamic State video.
The commander of an elite,
pro-government militia known
as the Desert Hawks explained
the government’s rapid withdrawal from large parts of
Raqqa province.
‘‘It is vital to understand
that [the Islamic State] adopted new tactics to fight the Desert Hawks in this area,’’ said retired General Mohamad Jaber.
Writing on his Facebook
page Tuesday, he said the militants were sending explosivespacked vehicles at the pro-government line, and he predicted
the battle for Tabqa would be
‘‘harsh and mighty.’’
Activists gave conflicting
casualty counts for civilians
killed in airstrikes on the city
of Raqqa, with death tolls
ranging from 18 to 32. Differing casualty figures are common in reporting from Syria’s
civil war, now in its sixth year.
The activists said the Syrian
air force, backed by warplanes
from its ally, Russia, had pummeled the Islamic State extremists after government
losses earlier this week.
The US-led coalition also
has been bombing Raqqa. Colonel Christopher Garver, the
ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILE 2014
Islamic State fighters
celebrated the downing of a
jet near Raqqa, Syria,
during an earlier battle for
the city.
Baghdad-based spokesman for
the coalition, told The Associated Press that four airstrikes
were carried out Tuesday near
Raqqa. They targeted an Islamic State tactical unit, a finance center, a headquarters
and an oil facility, Garver said.
He had no reports on casualties.
The activist group known
as Raqqa Is Being Slaughtered
Silently said at least one of the
airstrikes targeted a neighborhood popular among ‘‘foreign
fighters’’ — militants who have
traveled to Syria to fight with
the Islamic State group.
In n o r t h e r n S y r i a , US backed Syrian Kurdish forces
encircled Islamic State militants in the town of Manbij, a
vital position that connects the
Turkish border to Raqqa.
As the Iraqi military offensive to retake Fallujah entered
its second month Wednesday,
clashes continued to try to dislodge Islamic State militants
from besieged neighborhoods.
Iraqi special forces pushed
into the center of the city last
week and retook a government
compound and the central hospital. Officials said they are still
working to secure the territory.
At the central hospital, Corporal Ahmad Ahmad warned
that only parts of the first floor
were fully cleared of homemade bombs because teams
specializing in defusing the explosives are in short supply and
have been mostly deployed to
help troops on the front lines.
Ahmad said his forces had
not preformed house-to-house
searches in surrounding buildings, including the Khalifa
Mosque along Fallujah’s main
highway.
Prime Minister Haider alAbadi said Friday that Fallujah
had ‘‘returned to the embrace
of the nation,’’ and that remaining Islamic State pockets
would be ‘‘cleaned out within
hours.’’ Clashes have persisted,
however, with militants holed
up in dense residential neighborhoods along the city ’s
northern edge.
On Tuesday, the US-led coalition said only a third of Fallujah has been ‘‘cleared,’’ and other parts remain contested. Iraqi
commanders say 80 percent of
the city is under their control.
Fallujah is one of the last Islamic State stronghold in Iraq.
At the height of its power, the
group held nearly a third of the
country, but a string of territorial losses has left only pockets
of territory in Iraq’s north and
west under Islamic State control. The second- largest city of
Mosul is the group’s last remaining urban holdout.
In Libya’s coastal city of
Sirt, fierce fighting with Islamic State militants killed 36 militiamen aligned with the U.-brokered government. The militias, mainly from the western
town of Misurata, have been
battling since May to try to
take full control of Sirt, the last
bastion of the Islamic State
group in the North African
country.
A4
T h e
The World
B o s t o n
G l o b e
T H U R S D A Y, J U N E 2 3 , 2 0 1 6
Bitter Brexit campaign could turn on record number of voters
Polls offer little insight into UK voter preferences day before referendum
By Stephen Castle
and Sewell Chan
NEW YORK TIMES
L O N D O N — Po l i t i c i a n s
campaigning for and against
British withdrawal from the
European Union fanned out on
Wednesday in a final, frenetic
effort to build support on the
eve of a referendum that could
reshape the nation’s place in
the world and upend the Continent’s dreams of closer integration.
With polls showing a statistical dead heat, both sides went
all-out to motivate their supporters to vote on Thursday,
while financial markets and European leaders braced for the
possibility that Britain could be
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the first nation to leave the 28member bloc. Reflecting the
stakes and the tension about
the outcome, the tone of the
campaigning remained negative to the end, complete with
invocations of economic ruin
and an allusion to the Nazis.
Voters will be asked a single,
simple question in the referendum: “Should the United Kingdom remain a member of the
European Union or leave the
European Union?”
A record number of voters —
just shy of 46.5 million — have
registered to take part. Polls
will be open from 7 a.m. to 10
p.m. British time. The country’s
Electoral Commission said it
anticipated a result on Friday
morning “around breakfast
time,” but cautioned that there
was “considerable uncertainty”
around the timing.
The issue of a British exit, or
Brexit, has deeply divided the
governing Conservative Party,
split families and neighborhoods, underscored the shortcomings of the Brussels bureaucracy, and fueled the hopes of
anti-EU populists across the
Continent.
Prime Minister David Cameron closed out the campaign
for remaining in the European
Union with an argument that
Britain will be more prosperous
if it stays in the single European
market of 500 million people —
and he warned that there was
no going back from a decision
to leave.
“You can’t jump out the airplane and then clamber back
through the cockpit hatch,” he
told the BBC.
In a last-minute controversy, Michael Gove, the justice
secretary and a leader of the
campaign to leave the bloc, likened economists who warned
of the dire consequences of
withdrawal to Nazi-financed researchers who once denounced
Einstein. (Cameron said that
Gove had “lost it,” and Gove
apologized on Wednesday.)
Some polls showed the Remain side with a slight edge
EPA/STR
FACUNDO ARRIZABALAGA/EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY
Former mayor of London Boris Johnson (top) campaigned
for the Leave side. British Prime Minister David Cameron
(above) urged Britons to remain in the European Union.
and others showed the Leave
side ahead, but in most cases
surveys showed the race within
the margin of sampling error. A
“poll of polls” compiled by The
Financial Times found that the
campaign was ending close to a
dead heat.
Financial markets have been
more confident that Britain will
vote to stay in the bloc, with the
pound rising in value against
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the dollar this week. On
Wednesday, the pound held
steady, close to its high against
the dollar this year.
Bettors, too, have been putting their money on the Rem a i n c a m p’s w i n n i n g . O n
Wednesday afternoon, the odds
implied an 80 percent chance
of Britain voting to stay with
Europe.
One sign of hope for the Remain campaign: Most polls before the September 2014 referendum on whether Scotland
should secede from the United
Kingdom showed that contest
to be neck-and-neck, but voters
broke fairly decisively — 55.3
percent to 44.7 percent — in favor of the status quo. Some analysts say the same tendency of
late-deciding voters to break toward the safety of the status
quo and away from the risk of
change will be at play this time
around.
Scotland is also strong territor y for the Remain camp,
though there is some evidence
of political fatigue there.
“My worr y is turnout in
Scotland and UK-wide,” said Alyn Smith, a member of the European Parliament for the Scottish National Party, who backs
the Remain camp. “It is quite
clear that the people who have
committed themselves to leave
will crawl across glass to get to
the polling stations and on the
Remain side it’s much more,
‘Why are we doing this?’”
Matthew Goodwin, a professor of politics and international
relations at the University of
Kent, has written that the Remain camp was apparently
more strategic in focusing its efforts on areas of strong support, while the Leave campaign
had not done enough to lure
votes in working-class areas of
northern England where its
message has resonated.
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T H U R S D A Y, J U N E 2 3 , 2 0 1 6
Rebels, Colombia
reach truce to end
decades of battles
ALL EYES ON
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premier
agricultural
exhibitions and
features thousands
of exhibitors
displaying livestock
and machinery.
FARC pledges
to lay down arms
and rejoin nation
By Nicholas Casey
NEW YORK TIMES
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NEW YORK — The Colombian government and the country’s largest rebel group said
Wednesday they had agreed to
a cease-fire, clearing a major
hurdle in the effort to end one
of the world’s longest-running
conflicts.
In a joint statement, the two
sides said they had overcome
some of the most intractable
parts of a peace deal, which
they have been negotiating in
Havana since 2012.
In addition to a cease-fire,
the rebels — known as the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or the FARC — agreed
to lay down their arms.
T h e tw o s i d e s s a i d t h e y
would hold a ceremony in Havana on Thursday to mark the
cease-fire, attended by Colombia’s president, Juan Manuel
Santos, FARC leader Rodrigo
L ondoño, and other L atin
American leaders. Negotiators
hope a final peace deal will be
reached in the weeks to come.
“Tomorrow will be a great
day,” Santos said in a statement.
“We worked for peace in Colombia, a dream which is now
becoming reality.”
On Twitter, the FARC responded: “ We made it. The
path to peace must continue,
because it’s not an illusion now,
it’s a promise.”
The agreement sets in motion an end to the region’s oldest conflic t . An estimated
220,000 people have been
killed in more than 50 years of
fighting between the guerrillas
and the government. More than
5 million people are estimated
to have been displaced.
The agreement to lay down
arms sets the stage for what will
be one of the largest demobilization of guerrilla fighters in
years. An estimated 7,000
FARC foot soldiers and commanders would be expected to
disarm. Many were kidnapped
as children by the guerrillas
and know no other life than one
with the rebels.
Under a related agreement
reached last year during the negotiations, FARC soldiers
would enter into a “transitional
justice” system, with reduced
sentences for those who confess
to crimes that took place during
the conflict. In many cases, the
punishments are expected to be
limited to community service.
UNICEF, the UN Children’s
Fund, will assist in reintegrat-
ing hundreds of child soldiers
who the FARC agreed in May to
release.
Many quarters of Colombia
celebrated the steps announced
Wednesday.
“ T his is a transcendent
step,” said Alejo Vargas, a political scientist who heads a group
that brought war victims to Havana to speak with negotiators
during the talks. “Even if it’s not
the final deal, we can say without a doubt the process is irreversible now.”
Others lent support, but
voiced concerns about how the
deal would be enacted.
Luis Mendieta, a former
chief of Colombia’s National Police who was kidnapped for 12
years by the FARC, said he worried that many guerrillas would
simply join criminal gangs rather than disarm. He also said
that while the FARC had agreed
to lay down arms, he believed
the group was continuing to extort Colombians in the countryside they control.
“The FARC must now not
just begin a cease-fire but end
all their hostilities,” he said.
“ T h e t w o a r e n’ t t h e s a m e
thing.”
The FARC, whose origins
date to the early 1960s, was
founded as a Marxist-Leninist
group that vowed to defend the
country’s peasants from rightwing governments in Colombia. But as the years wore on,
the group found a potent
source of revenue in kidnapping city dwellers, earning a
reputation among many Colombians as a criminal gang.
By the 1990s, the FARC had
also expanded into the lucrative
coca trade, earning millions by
taxing growers, and according
to US and Colombian officials,
trafficking cocaine. In 1999, the
two governments announced
Plan Colombia, an aid package
in which the United States
poured some $10 billion into
Colombia in the succeeding
years to fight drug traffickers.
Many FARC leaders have
been killed and the group has
suffered from mass desertions
in its ranks. It counted 17,000
members in the early 2000s, a
number that is estimated at
7,000 or fewer today.
During the negotiations, the
Colombian president, Santos,
said he would hold a popular
referendum on the agreement,
letting his people ultimately decide whether to approve his
plan. A peace plan remains generally popular among most Colombians, with recent polls
showing a considerable majority — around 60 percent — saying they would vote for such a
deal.
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T h e
T H U R S D A Y, J U N E 2 3 , 2 0 1 6
Using smartphones
in the dark could
lead to vision loss
G l o b e
The World
A summer savings
triple play..
Temporary
blindness is
easily prevented
By Maria Cheng
ASSOCIATED PRESS
LONDON — Warning: Looking at your smartphone while
lying in bed at night could
wreak havoc on your vision.
Two women went temporarily blind from constantly checking their phones in the dark,
say doctors who are now alerting others to the unusual phenomenon.
The solution: Make sure to
use both eyes when looking at
your smartphone screen in the
dark.
In Thursday’s New England
Journal of Medicine, doctors
detailed the cases of the two
women, ages 22 and 40, who
experienced ‘‘transient smartphone blindness’’ for months.
The women complained of
recurring episodes of temporary vision loss for up to 15
minutes. They were subjected
to variety of medical exams,
MRI scans and heart tests. Yet
doctors couldn’t find anything
wrong with them to explain the
problem.
But minutes after walking
into an eye specialist’s office,
the mystery was solved.
“I simply asked them, ‘What
exactly were you doing when
this happened?’ ” recalled Dr.
Gordon Plant of Moorfield’s Eye
Hospital in London.
He e x p l a i n e d t h a t b o t h
women typically looked at their
smartphones with only one eye
while resting on their side in
bed in the dark — their other
eye was covered by the pillow.
“So you have one eye adapted to the light because it’s looking at the phone and the other
eye is adapted to the dark,” he
B o s t o n
PATRICK SISON/ASSOCIATED PRESS
Use both eyes when looking
at your screen in the dark, a
New England Journal of
Medicine report said.
said.
When they put their phones
down, they couldn’t see with
the phone eyes. That’s because
“it’s taking many minutes to
catch up to the other eye that’s
adapted to the dark,” Plant said.
He said the temporary blindness was ultimately harmless,
and easily avoidable, if people
stuck to looking at their smartphones with both eyes.
One of the women was relieved the short-term blindness
didn’t signal a more serious
problem like an imminent
stroke. He said the second
woman was more skeptical and
kept a rigorous monthslong diary tracking her fleeting vision
loss before she finally believed
him. But she couldn’ t stop
checking her phone for messages from bed, he said.
D r. R a h u l K h u r a n a , a
spokesman for the American
Academy of Ophthalmology,
called it a fascinating hypothesis but said two cases weren’t
enough to prove that one-eyed
smartphone use in the dark
caused the problem. He also
doubted whether many smartphone users would experience
the phenomenon.
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T h e
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T H U R S D A Y, J U N E 2 3 , 2 0 1 6
Trump makes aggressive — and polished — attack on Clinton
NEW YORK — Donald
Trump delivered a blistering attack on Wednesday against Hillary Clinton,
CAMPAIGN calling her unNOTEBOOK reliable and
more concerned with herself than with
the American people as he
sought to regain his footing after a tumultuous month that
imperiled his candidacy.
In a 41-minute speech seeking to build his case against the
presumptive Democratic presidential nominee by labeling her
a “world-class liar,” Trump
moved to soothe concerns
among Republicans alarmed by
gaping self-inflected wounds
after his racial attacks on a federal judge and his self-congratulatory boast after the terrorist
shooting in Orlando, Fla.
He said Clinton would not
create jobs, portraying her as a
scandal-tarnished former secretary of state who “may be the
most corrupt person ever to
seek the presidency.”
“The choice in this election
is a choice between taking our
government back from the special interests, or surrendering
our last scrap of independence
to their total and complete control,” Trump said.
The professionalized presentation, with two teleprompters flanking the lectern
in a third-floor ballroom of the
Trump SoHo hotel in Manhattan, represented a stark contrast to how Trump has handled the last month of his campaign, and came two days after
he fired his much-maligned
campaign manager, Corey Lewandowski.
Since securing the Republican nomination, Trump has allowed himself to be pummeled
by Democrats, doing little to
fashion an overarching message or even to frame his view
of the race.
But on Wednesday, he
moved to regain the offensive,
making a forceful case that he
chose to enter public service
because of his concerns for the
country, a contrast he tried to
draw with Clinton.
“She believes she is entitled
to the office,” Trump said. “Her
campaign slogan is ‘I’m with
her.’ You know what my response to that is? I’m with you,
the American people. She
thinks it’s all about her. I know
it’s all about you.”
The remarks were welcomed by Trump’s supporters,
who have fretted that he is
turning the campaign into a
referendum on himself instead
of President Obama and
Clinton.
Carl Paladino, a Trump ally
who was in the room for the
speech, said that the candidate
“likes to speak extemporane-
Views of opposing parties
hit new highs of negativity
JOHN LOCHER/ASSOCIATED PRESS
CHUCK BURTON/ASSOCIATED PRESS
Donald Trump said of Hillary Clinton on Wednesday: “She
thinks it’s all about her. I know it’s all about you.” She said
his speech was part of an effort to distract voters from his
lack of substance or policy depth.
ously” but that his more scripted approach on Wednesday
was necessary.
“He told everybody why Hillary shouldn’t be there, he gave
a factual foundation for those
statements,” Paladino said.
“That type of speech has to be
scripted.”
Trump has promised turnarounds in his undisciplined
approach before, only to undercut his own remarks in a day or
two with a Twitter blast or provocative public remarks. And
on Thursday, he heads to Scotland, a business trip tied to his
golf courses that aides have
feared will derail his message
once again.
The Manhattan address
highlighted an intensifying lev-
el of combat between Trump
and Clinton, who in Raleigh,
N.C., on Wednesday shot back
at the Manhattan businessman
for questioning her commitment to her faith just a day before.
“As we Methodists like to
say,” she told hundreds of supporters, pausing for effect and
knowing applause, “do all the
good you can for all the people
you can in all the ways you
can.”
Later, she suggested that
Trump’s speech on Wednesday
was part of an effort to distract
voters from his lack of substance or policy depth.
“That’s even why he’s attacking my faith,” she said. “Sigh.”
NEW YORK TIMES
NEW YORK— Democratic
and Republican views of the
opposing political party have
sunk to such lows that many
say their rivals make them feel
afraid, a major public opinion
poll released Wednesday found.
Though party-line division
is nearly as old as the republic
and polls have long shown unfavorable views of the opposition, the newest Pew Research
Center survey shows a worsening of opinions of political adversaries. A majority of Americans in both parties now hold
very unfavorable views of the
opposing political party, the
poll found, a first since Pew began probing the issue.
Majorities in both parties
see those on the other side as
closed-minded, while significant minorities describe them
as immoral, dishonest, and unintelligent, the poll found. Sizeable minorities — 45 percent of
Republicans and 41 percent of
Democrats — see the opposing
party’s policies as so misguided
they threaten the country’s
well-being, up significantly
from two years ago.
‘‘The intensity of the feeling
is stronger now, this antithetical
feeling toward the other party,’’
said Carroll Doherty, director of
political research at Pew.
Highly negative views of the
other party have grown steadily
since Pew began gauging them
in 1994, when 21 percent of Republicans and 17 percent of
Democrats held very unfavorable opinions of the other side.
In the latest poll, 58 percent of
Republicans and 55 percent of
Democrats said the same, a 12percentage-point jump on both
sides in just the past two years.
Those most engaged in the political process — people who say
they regularly vote and either
volunteer for or donate to campaigns — expressed even more
negative views of the other party.
The negativity spilled over
into voters’ feelings about their
own parties as well. An overwhelming number — 87 percent
on both sides — said their own
party either made them feel
frustrated, afraid, or angry or
some combination of the three.
Majorities on both sides — 64
percent of Republicans and 73
percent of Democrats — said
their party made them hopeful,
but far fewer said they felt enthusiasm or pride. Among Republicans, 23 percent said their party
made them enthusiastic, versus
26 percent of Democrats. Sixteen
percent of Republicans and 26
percent of Democrats said their
party made them proud. Republicans were far more likely than
Democrats to express frustration
with their own party.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
In reversal, Marco Rubio to seek reelection
By Jeremy W. Peters
NEW YORK TIMES
NEW YORK — Senator Marco Rubio of Florida said
Wednesday that he has decided
to seek reelection to the Senate
after months of insisting he
would not run again, a reversal
that will reshape one of the
most competitive races in the
country.
Rubio, 45, who is said to be
reluctant to give up the high
profile that a Senate seat offers,
will enter the race with the formidable advantages of incum-
bency, national name recognition, and strong ties to the Republican Party’s donor base.
But he also faces numerous
hurdles. He is coming off a
bruising race for president that
ended with an embarrassing
loss to Donald Trump in his
home state on March 15 — one
that focused in no small part on
his frequent absence from the
Senate and from his duties in
Florida as he campaigned.
He also made no secret of
his distaste for Washington and
the often glacial pace of busi-
ness on Capitol Hill, words he is
certain to see turned against
him in attack ads from Democrats who had been optimistic
about their chances at taking
back Rubio’s seat before he entered the race.
S p e a k i n g t o Fox Ne w s
Wednesday, Rubio acknowledged his about-face and tried
to explain himself in part by
saying, “I changed my mind.”
“I think it’s clearly outlined
that I’m frustrated by what’s
happening here in the Senate —
most Americans are,” he added.
Then, in a dig at the presumptive nominees of both political parties, Rubio said he ultimately believed that no matter who is elected president, the
Senate has the vital role “of being able to act as a check and
balance on bad ideas from the
president.”
The senator has told colleagues and advisers that he
would like to run for president
again. But he increasingly came
to think that doing so from the
private sector would be difficult.
Stars going, but show will shine
HAMILTON
Continued from Page A1
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almost a decade, ever since he
picked up a paperback copy of
Ron Chernow’s Hamilton biography while on vacation in
2007. Live theater in general
and this show in particular are
e x h a u s t i n g , a n d , a ny w ay,
Miranda always said he’d be
leaving at a certain point. To
some people it may seem like a
major cultural crisis, but take
comfort in the lyrics to “One
Last Time,” George Washington’s farewell number in “Hamilton”: “If I say goodbye, the nation learns to move on/It outlives me when I’m gone . . . /I
want to sit under my own vine
and fig tree.”
In other words, we’ll manage to pull together and weather this crisis. Anyway, Miranda’s not actually going to go off
and sit under a vine and a fig
tree. He’s going to be playing
opposite Emily Blunt in the upcoming Disney remake of
“Mary Poppins,” among many
other projects. We’ll be seeing
more of him, not less.
But, sure, he’s still the star of
this show, even to people who
haven’t seen the show — sales of
the cast album and Miranda’s
ubiquity on TV and YouTube
have seen to that. And we never
take kindly to the poor schmoes
who have to step into the footprints of the stars.
Examples are all over our
pop culture history. How long
did The Who last after Kenney
Jones replaced the late Keith
Moon? Two albums and one
Cincinnati concert disaster.
“E.R.” ran for 10 more seasons
af ter G eorge Cloone y lef t ,
“M*A*S*H*” for eight following
Wayne Rogers’s departure, and
“Charlie’s Angels” for four after
Farrah Fawcett-Majors bailed
after just one season. But who
associates those shows with the
actors’ replacements, respectively Goran Visnjic, Mike Farrell, and Cheryl Ladd?
The point is that when a cultural property gets stamped
with the indelible personas of
those first associated with it, we
mere mortals often aren’t interested in associating with anyone else. And that’s unfair, be-
cause there are alternate examples — of bands and TV shows
and Broadway musicals — that
found their sails filling with
fresh winds when a new crew
came aboard.
Back to classic rock: The
Beatles’ original Liverpool fan
base was outraged when drummer Pete Best was sacked in
1962, but I think we all agree
that his replacement, Ringo
Starr, worked out OK. When
Dave Gilmour joined Pink
Floyd in 1967, one onlooker
commented, “Enjoy it while
you can, because without Syd
[Barrett], that band’s going nowhere.” How right he wasn’t.
“Cheers” managed just fine
when Shelley Long left for a
film career that didn’t happen
and Kirstie Alley took her place
behind the bar. Same with
“NYPD Blue” when David Caruso departed for his film career
(with the same result) and Jimmy Smits ascended to stardom
in his stead. You can play this
game all over cultural history.
Who wouldn’t want to have
been in the audience at New
York’s Carnegie Hall on Nov. 13,
1943, when star conductor Bruno Walter called in sick and an
unknown 25-year-old assistant
conductor named Leonard
Bernstein took his place and
launched a brilliant career?
(The nationally broadcast concert and the kid made frontpage news.)
It happens on Broadway, too
— especially on Broadway, with
its deep, deep bench of singing
and dancing talent. The household names that sell tickets to
big shows always move on to
other projects sooner or later,
leaving the way clear for lesserknown but possibly more
skilled troupers. So you missed
seeing Glenn Close in the 1990s
stage musical version of “Sunset Boulevard.” Those who saw
her replacement as Norma Desmond, Betty Buckley, are still
talking about it.
The 2009 revival of Stephen
Sondheim’s “A Little Night Music” starred Hollywood royalty
Catherine Zeta-Jones as Desiree
and the ageless Angela Lansbury as Madame Armfeldt. It
made pots of money. But their
2010 replacements, Bernadette
Peters and Elaine Stritch, were
the stuff of theater legend.
And, personally, I’m here to
tell you that you have nothing
to fear from the “Hamilton”
cast changes. When I saw the
show last March, it was at a Saturday matinee, unbeknownst
to me the ongoing weekly slot
for Miranda’s alternate, Javier
Munoz, to take the lead as Alexander Hamilton. An alternate is
an understudy who appears on
a regular basis, as opposed to
filling in as needed; Munoz has
been serving as Miranda’s alternate (among other projects)
since the latter’s previous musical, “In the Heights.”
Still, I read the playbill with
the inward groan reserved for
everyone who’s received the old
switcheroo. I wanted the name
brand, not the generic!
How foolish can you get?
Munoz came on and for three
hours he held the show and the
audience in the palm of his
hand. Munoz is leaner and
more avid than Lin-Manuel
Miranda; he lacks Miranda’s
softer edges and soulful eyes.
Munoz is sexier, edgier, more
intense, and that’s exactly why
his Hamilton works as a statement about the perils of ambition — about the great
strengths and great flaws of our
great men. Ten minutes into the
show, I didn’t miss Lin-Manuel
Miranda in the least. To be honest, what he wrought as the
show’s creator is stronger than
any individual performer in it.
The play in this case really is
the thing.
Of course, Munoz can sing
and dance like no one’s business. If you’re able to see “Hamilton” with him in it, by all
means do so. And if you have to
wait until the national company comes to Boston or wherever
you live, rest assured that some
supremely talented working actors you’ve probably never
heard of will be working their
tails off to bring the show to
life. Change happens. Don’t let
them throw away their shot.
Ty Burr can be reached at
[email protected]. Follow him
on Twitter at @tyburr.
T h e
T H U R S D A Y, J U N E 2 3 , 2 0 1 6
B o s t o n
G l o b e
City & Region
A9
*
THE ARCHITECTURAL TEAM
Developers hope to start work soon on phase one of Fenway Center — the two mid-rise
buildings at right. The rest of the development would rise later, above the Mass. Pike.
Stalled project above Pike
may be split into two parts
FENWAY
Continued from Page A1
Edlen are breaking it in two.
First, the apartment buildings
— 313 units in all — on the corner of Beacon and Maitland
streets. Rosenthal was adamant
that he will still build the more
difficult part over the turnpike.
But splitting such a large endeavor into two is a way to
make that happen, he said.
“We thought this makes a lot
of sense,” he said. “It’s extremely challenging to finance the
whole project with a deck over
the Pike. It always has been.”
The plan hinges on state officials letting Rosenthal change
course. The developer’s current
longstanding deal with the
Massachusetts Department of
Transportation calls for a first
phase that includes building
over the turnpike. He’s been
talking with MassDOT about
amending the agreement ,
which expires at the end of this
month, to include the revised
building plan. State officials
have been receptive, he said.
A MassDOT spokeswoman
declined to comment, citing the
ongoing talks.
‘When you get
further in you
realize that
building a
structure above
the highway is
really expensive.’
haps profits — from phase one
will help attract more deep
pockets to pay for the more expensive phase over the turnpike. He’s hopeful the deck will
be under construction by the
time the apartment buildings
are done, in two years.
Fo r n o w, e v e n 3 1 3 n e w
apartments would be a big addition to a neighborhood that’s
changing fast. Just a few blocks
away, Samuels & Associates has
built a line of high-rise apartment buildings along Boylston
Street. On the other side of Fenway Park, Trans National Properties recently proposed a 340foot condo and apartment tower. And in the heart of Kenmore
Square, Boston University is
shopping two blocks worth of
buildings that could soon an-
chor a major new development.
But building over a highway
is a much bigger challenge. So if
Rosenthal’s two-step approach
succeeds it could provide a
playbook for more building
along the turnpike, real estate
attorney Bob Ruzzo said.
“We need to see action on
one of these air-rights deals.
There needs to be proof of case,”
said Ruzzo, who worked on airrights projects for the Turnpike
Authority in the 1990s and is
now at Holland & Knight. “If
we don’t do something soon,
people are not going to believe
it’s feasible. I believe it is.”
Tim Logan can be reached at
[email protected]. Follow
him on Twitter at
@bytimlogan.
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MATT KIEFER, an attorney
To help make their case,
Rosenthal and Gerding Edlen
are offering to speed up payments on their 99-year lease,
giving the state $20 million upfront. They also noted they
have already spent $15 million
to build a new Yawkey commuter rail station at the site.
Rosenthal’s long slog to
build Fenway Center highlights
how hard it is to build over the
turnpike, which has seen several high-profile “air rights” deals
stall out in the 40 years since
Copley Place was built.
“On the surface it seems very
appealing,” said Matt Kiefer, a
development attorney with
Goulston & Storrs. “But when
you get further in you realize
that building a structure above
the highway is really expensive.
You could get the land for free
and you’d still have trouble
making the deal work.”
Rosenthal‘s decade-plus of
work on Fenway Center has
taken him through lawsuits, a
huge recession, and various investors and partners. Nearly
two years ago, he teamed up
with Gerding Edlen, which has
built several housing developments in Bos ton in recent
years, and launched a new push
to find investors and get started. They recently signed deals
with two large institutional investors, whom Rosenthal declined to name, and said they
could start construction by
year’s end.
The hope, Rosenthal said, is
that momentum — and per-
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A10
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T h e
B o s t o n
G l o b e
T H U R S D A Y, J U N E 2 3 , 2 0 1 6
Report urges action on Social Security, Medicare
Says waiting
to fix fiscal woes
will hurt many
By Ricardo AlonsoZaldivar and
Stephen Ohlemacher
ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON — Millions
of Social Security beneficiaries
would get a tiny increase in
monthly payments next year —
less than $2.50, about enough
to buy a gallon of gas.
Meanwhile, Medicare is expected to go bankrupt sooner
than expected — 12 years from
now. And some beneficiaries
could face higher monthly premiums next year.
The annual report from the
trustees of the government’s
two bedrock retirement programs warned that politically
gridlocked Washington needs
to act sooner, rather than later,
to shore up finances and avoid
upending the lives of millions of
retirees and their families.
Social Security’s trust funds
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are expected to be depleted in
2034, unchanged from the
trustees’ projection a year ago.
Medicare’s trust fund for inpatient care will be exhausted in
2028, two years earlier than
previously projected.
If Congress allows either
fund to run dry, millions of
Americans living on fixed incomes would face steep cuts in
benefits.
‘‘Lawmakers should address
these financial challenges as
soon as possible,’’ said the trustees’ report. ‘‘ Taking action
sooner rather than later will
p e r m i t c o n s i d e rat i o n o f a
broader range of solutions and
provide more time to phase in
changes so that the public has
adequate time to prepare.’’
The projected 0.2 percent increase in Social Security payments would come a year after
beneficiaries got no increase.
By law, increases are based on a
government measure of inflation, which has been low. The
official 2017 cost-of-living adjustment, or COLA, won’t be
determined until the fall.
Advocates complained that
the government’s measure of
inflation doesn’t adequately reflect the prices older Americans
pay. ‘‘Seniors continue to see
their modest Social Security
benefits eaten away by growing
health care costs,’’ said Max
Richtman, who heads the National Committee to Protect Social Security and Medicare.
Over 60 million retirees, disabled workers, spouses, and
surviving children get Social Security benefits. The average
monthly payment is $1,232.
After Social Security’s trust
funds are depleted, the program would collect enough in
payroll taxes to pay only 79 percent of benefits.
Medicare’s problem is more
immediate and more complicated, because health care costs
can change unpredictably.
Medicare provides health insurance for more than 55 million
people, including seniors and
the disabled. After its inpatient
care fund runs dry in 2028, it
would only be able to pay 87
percent of projected costs.
Another Boston Latin administrator resigns
BOSTON LATIN
Continued from Page A1
uals or organizations.
“It is my belie f that our
school and our efforts here have
been unfairly judged, for reasons that go well beyond the
walls of BLS,” Teta wrote in the
letter to Chang, dated June 21,
which the Globe obtained
Wednesday.
“It is unfortunate that at a
time when Boston Latin School
has made tangible progress to
combat racism in our community through constructive dialogue fostered by the student
body, others outside the school
continue to condemn us, denounce us, and hold us responsible for district policies and
practices over which the school
has no control,” Teta added.
Te t a , w h o c o u l d n o t b e
reached for comment, did not
name any individuals or organizations.
Her resignation sparked
questions from her supporters
about whether she chose to resign or was forced out. Teta had
been fending off calls for her
ouster from civil rights organizations for months, insisting she
was the right leader to guide the
nation’s oldest school through
Boston’s latest racial crisis that
made national headlines.
Walsh rejected any suggestion Wednesday that he or
Chang had asked Teta to resign.
“I did not ask her to step
down,” Walsh said. “I did not
put pressure on her.”
Walsh said he met with Teta
three times since two students
took to YouTube in January to
allege racial discrimination at
the school and inadequate responses by the administration.
The mayor said he had met
with Teta twice in his office in
recent months and once last
week during Latin School’s
commencement.
“You’ll have to ask her why
she turned in her resignation,”
he said after an unrelated press
event at City Hall. “Obviously,
she had a very difficult year.
That had a lot to do with it.
Lynne Mooney Teta did a nice
job in Latin School.”
JESSICA RINALDI/GLOBE STAFF
Concerns raised by students sparked investigations.
Chang told the School Committee on Wednesday night he
was surprised that Teta resigned, saying “she loved this
school and was a graduate of
this school.”
Teta said her resignation
would be effective July 15.
Chang is still identifying an interim leader and will conduct a
national search for a permanent replacement.
The concerns raised by the
two Latin School students —
Kylie Webster-Cazeau and Meggie Noel — sparked investigations by the School Department
and the office of US Attorney
Carmen M. Ortiz.
The internal review found
that the BLS administration
properly handled six race-based
incidents, but faulted the administrative team for failing to
adequately address a seventh
incident in which a female
black student was threatened
last year by a male student of
another race.
In that case, the boy threatened in class to lynch the girl
while holding an electrical cord
and called her a racial epithet.
The review faulted school administration for failing to notify
the girl’s parents of the incident.
The federal investigation remains ongoing, as does a separate ongoing inquiry by the
school department’s Office of
Equity.
In response to the allegations, Latin School assembled
an action plan to foster greater
racial harmony at the school,
which has already lead to a se-
ries of race dialogues with students and faculty.
Flynn submitted a threepage resignation letter to the
School Department on Wednesday. The School Department
confirmed that it had received
Flynn’s resignation but declined to comment further.
In an interview, Flynn described a tense and torturous
scene at the school, where he
said in the past few weeks at
least 15 to 20 teachers have been
questioned by Office of Equity
officials — and federal investigators — about “every little thing a
student said or a teacher said.’’
Some of the complaints were
five or six years old, he added.
He said he was grilled by the
Office of Equity three times and
spent seven hours with federal
investigators, who questioned
him about how he handled discipline at the school.
Flynn said he had been considering resigning for about a
month. He said he shared his
plans with Teta. He has been at
the school for 52 years, serving
34 as an English teacher. His
voice choked up as he described
his decision to leave.
He made his decision, he
said, because he believed the
School Department and the Office of Equity have been unfairly and punitively questioning
teachers and administrators.
He also said Chang and Walsh
did not vigorously and effectively defend against criticim that
the school did nothing to address students’ complaints.
Flynn dismissed assertions
that school administrators “did
nothing” to discipline students
or address their complaints. He
said some might not have been
satisfied with the discipline.
Ginny Brennan, a parent of a
former Latin School student, said
she thinks Teta is being unfairly
blamed, noting that racial unrest
unfortunately has existed across
the school system for decades.
“It appalls me that Lynne
Mooney Teta was thrown under
the bus or is being made an example,” Brennan said. “The
people who wanted to make
this happen pushed and
pushed. They are making someone accountable for a societal
problem.”
She added, “Her departure
from BLS only sends a wrong
message . . . that education is
about politics and not about
learning.”
Civil rights activists made a
push Wednesday afternoon for
black community leaders to be
involved in the headmaster
search and stressed that all city
officials should be held accountable for racial inequity in
the schools.
Darnell Williams, the local
Urban League president, denied that Teta was being treated
as a scapegoat.
“For someone to say that
[Teta] was targeted — the only
thing that was targeted was her
inaction,” Williams said.
Kevin Peterson, director of
New Democracy Coalition, said
that Teta’s assertion that the
school’s efforts were unfairly
judged was “absolutely unfair
and false.”
As students returned to
school, many said that they
hoped Teta’s resignation would
offer closure to a controversial
chapter.
“I felt like there wasn’t a lot
she could do, but she tried her
best with the time she had left,”
said Michael Egbueze, 15.
Correspondent Miguel Otárola
contributed to this report.
James Vaznis can be reached at
[email protected].
Meghan E. Irons can be reached
at [email protected].
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T h e
T H U R S D A Y, J U N E 2 3 , 2 0 1 6
B o s t o n
G l o b e
The Nation
A11
Man’s experience a cautionary tale on stem cell therapies
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I promised Dad I’d
keep him home.
Dad was lonely. He didn’t get out as much, and ate dinner by himself most nights.
He worried he was burdening me, but really, I just wanted the best for him.
leg, too.
“I still think it will work
someday,’’ he said. “I just don’t
know when.’’
800.368.3778
treatments in Tijuana, Mexico,
in December 2014 — treatments that his family credited
with helping prolong his life after a debilitating stroke about
two months earlier. He died
early this month at age 88.
Yet, bone marrow transplant, a treatment for leukemia, is the only approved stem
cell therapy in the United
States.
In t h e m o n t h s a f t e r h i s
stroke, Gass researched potential treatments constantly.
“I couldn’t accept where I
was. A life lying down in bed is
not the place to be,’’ he said.
“The consensus was stem cell
therapy was going to be the future of treatment for stroke. I
read all the cautionary tales
even though I didn’t believe
them.
“I thought it would work,’’
he added.
Dr. Aaron Berkowitz, director of global neurology at the
Brigham and the letter’s lead
author, said it is hard to know
how many people undergo unproven stem cell therapy.
A paper published in 2014
in the journal Travel Medicine
and Infectious Disease identified 224 websites advertising
stem cell clinics in 21 countries.
They most often pushed treatments for multiple sclerosis,
antiaging, Parkinson’s disease,
stroke, and spinal cord injury
— diseases and conditions for
which there is no evidence that
stem cell therapy is effective,
though some are being studied.
In the United States, dozens
mates he spent $150,000 to
$200,000 on the therapies
alone. And while he lost most of
the movement in his left arm
and foot after the stroke, nerve
damage from the tumor has left
him with paralysis in his right
B U R L I N G TO N
Stroke victim Jim Gass
decided to try experimental
stem cell treatments, with
unfortunate results.
and tested you and the doctor
says to his team ‘ look how
much be tter he is doing.’ I
wasn’t doing better,’’ Gass said.
In the end, his body grew
weaker after treatment and his
wallet grew lighter. He esti-
B O STO N
Dr. John Chi, director of the
neurosurgical spine cancer at
the Brigham, who co-wrote the
letter to the journal. “It was
stuck onto the nerves and had
an odd consistency.’’
Gass, 67, the former general
counsel for Osram Sylvania in
Wilmington, had chosen a particular clinic in Mexico in part
because former San Francisco
49ers quarterback John Brodie
had stroke treatment there that
he considered successful.
But in the year after he returned from Mexico in September 2014, when he had his last
treatment, he began experiencing extreme back pain and additional paralysis in his right
leg, which had not been affected by the stroke, he said in an
interview. That was what led
him to the Brigham doctors for
surgery last year.
Now Gass is more disabled
than he was prior to stem cell
therapy.
Brigham pathologists tested
the tissue taken from Gass’s
spine and determined it was a
tumor-like growth but did not
have mutations associated with
cancer and therefore could not
be treated with chemotherapy.
Mo s t o f t h e c e l l s w e r e n o t
Gass’s but from another source.
“It’s hard to know what to
call it,’’ Chi said.
Doctors have treated Gass
with radiation to shrink the
mass, which has helped somewhat, but they are also searching for other solutions.
Doctors have been increasingly warning that stem cell
clinics are proliferating around
the world with little oversight.
They are promoting their methods to patients suffering from
strokes, amyotrophic lateral
sclerosis (also known as Lou
Gehrig’s disease), Alzheimer’s,
and other conditions for which
there are few good options. Professional athletes have helped
popularize the clinics by seeking out stem cell therapy for
strokes and shoulder and knee
injuries.
Hockey legend Gordie Howe
received experimental stem cell
of clinics have sprung up in recent years, largely avoiding regulation because they use cells
extracted from a patient’s own
body. But the US Food and
Drug Administration signaled
earlier this year that it planned
to crack down on these clinics
and issued draft guidelines explaining that even procedures
using a patient’s own cells require approval by the agency.
Clinics overseas have more
leeway and use stem cells from
donors as well as fetal tissue.
Medical journals are increasingly writing about the
phenomenon of stem cell tourism and have published reports
of at least two other cases involving tumors, Berkowitz said.
“This is very risky,’’ he said.
“It looks exciting that professional football players do it. But
these are private clinics and
they may be having a lot more
complications that are not being disclosed. We don't know
whether it’s working or not.’’
Gass, who is in the process
of moving to San Diego, said his
case is not only a warning to patients considering overseas
treatment. He also hopes that
discussing his experience publicly will light a fire under the
federal government to quickly
fund research into what could
be a promising area of medicine.
For now, patients are relying
on what they read online and
athletes’ anecdotal accounts.
Gass said he picked clinics that
had positive or neutral reviews.
But in some cases those testimonials came from doctors,
speaking for patients.
He tried several clinics because they each claimed to use
slightly different approaches,
he said. At the clinics, which
operate like small private hospitals, doctors were careful not
to promise positive results but
said they expected Gass to show
significant improvement. In Argentina, doctors said they injected him with his own stem
cells. He did not getter better.
He stayed three months in China, where physicians claimed
to use fetal tissue cells.
“Every week they come by
N AT I C K
STEM CELLS
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A12
Editorial
T h e
B o s t o n
T H U R S D A Y, J U N E 2 3 , 2 0 1 6
G l o b e
Opinion
BOSTONGLOBE.COM/OPINION
Editorial
A
Paul Ryan, what are you afraid of ?
CLUMSY ACT of censorship by House
Republicans Wednesday says more
about the party’s timidity than it could
possibly have intended. The Republican leadership abruptly shut down the
video feed from the House floor to prevent CSPAN
viewers from seeing a protest by House Democrats,
who were pressing for action on gun control.
The same House has endured debates on war,
impeachment, taxes, and any number of other
contentious issues — all with the cameras rolling.
A call to action on guns, though, was apparently
too much for the tender feelings of Speaker Paul
Ryan, whose office shut down CSPAN’s access.
It was a telling move. Censorship is not something that politicians who are confident of the
righteousness of their beliefs bother with. If anticontrol lawmakers genuinely believe their abject
fealty to the gun lobby is in the public interest,
they should have no problem with debating guncontrol proponents in front of the cameras. Likewise, if the Democrats who support gun control
were really so misguided, the Republicans would
presumably want the American people to see them
Wednesday as they argued for a bad cause.
Rather, turning off the camera is a desperation
move for those who know they have no excuse and
need to hide from the public. Pulling the plug on coverage of the gun protest was uncomfortably similar to
the actions of a much earlier Congress, which forbade
members from even discussing the issue of slavery
out of deference to the powerful cotton lobby.
In those days, Massachusetts representative and
former president John Quincy Adams led the fight
against the so-called gag rule, which led to calls for
his ouster from the House. He was admonished for
breaking the rules of the House — just as a spokeswoman for Ryan justified the shut-off on Wednesday
by saying, “the House cannot operate without members following the rules of the institution.”
Proslavery interests in those days were afraid of
even allowing discussion on the House floor, and the
supine agreement of politicians of the day has gone
down in history as evidence of that lobby’s power.
The gun lobby is not as vicious, but the damage it enables in contemporary America certainly ranks it
among today’s gravest problems, and it seems to have
a similar stranglehold on lawmakers and a similar
ability to command unprecedented crackdowns on
the airing of dissenting views in Congress.
History proved why 19th-century proslavery politicians had good reason to fear what would happen if
they didn’t go to such extraordinary lengths to prevent debate. Mr. Speaker, what are you afraid of?
Turning off
the camera is a
desperation
move for those
who know
they have no
excuse and
need to hide
from the
public.
A FOREIGN HAND
IN AMERICAN DEMOCRACY
B y L a u r e n c e H . Tr i b e a n d S c o t t G r e y l a k
Regulators take aim
at the political purchasing power of foreigninfluenced corporations
T
HE FEDERAL Election Commission, the agency
charged with overseeing US elections and yet paralyzed by partisanship, will host a first-of-its-kind public forum today on the threat posed by foreign-influenced corporations that spend on American elections. The meeting comes less than one month after
the kingdom of Saudi Arabia announced it would make a $3.5 billion investment in Uber, the US-based ride-hailing service and ubiquitous election spender. Now, as the specter of foreign influence
comes to haunt even our local elections, the government entity with
the most to do — at a time when its power is declining — has put the
issue squarely before the public-policymaking consciousness.
America’s Founders were rightly worried about foreign powers
influencing our democracy. The Constitution bans anyone who
holds “any office of profit or trust” from accepting any foreign
“present, emolument, office, or title . . . without the consent of the
Congress.” Current federal law — upheld by the Supreme Court as
recently as 2012 — prohibits foreign governments, foreign-based
companies, and people who are not US citizens or permanent residents from contributing or spending money in connection with any
federal, state, or local election. But there’s a loophole: These foreign
entities can invest money through US-based corporations that, per
the Citizens United ruling, can then spend as much of that money
as they want on American elections.
This possibility is well past hypothetical: On June 1, Uber disclosed
an unprecedented $3.5 billion investment from the Saudi Arabian
government. Aside from its stock ownership, which totals more than 5
percent, the kingdom bought itself a seat on the company’s board of
directors. That’s disturbing for many reasons that have already attracted national discussion, such as Saudi Arabia’s atrocious human rights
record. But what many people don’t realize is that the investment
opens up an “Uber loophole” for the kingdom, through its share of the
ownership and control of Uber, to spend unlimited amounts of money
on American elections. Last month, Uber teamed up with fellow ridehailing service Lyft to unload $9 million on an election in Austin, Texas. The tech giants fought, unsuccessfully, to overturn a local law requiring drivers to submit to fingerprint-based criminal background
checks. Nine million dollars can go a long way in a local election — it
crushed Austin’s previous record for election spending seven-fold.
Austin wasn’t Uber’s first fight, and it won’t be its last. The company recently spent roughly $600,000 on a voter referendum in Seattle,
nearly $700,000 in California, $300,000 in Washington, D.C.,
$200,000 in Maryland, and $70,000 in Oregon. It’s engaged fleets of
lobbyists — 250 by one count, nearly one-third more than Walmart —
in 45 of the nation’s 50 state houses, and it has invested heavily on
multiple fronts in major US cities, from New York City to Los Angeles,
Chicago to Atlanta.
Uber isn’t the only company to flood local elections with corporate cash. Facing a multimillion-dollar lawsuit over a refinery fire
that caused more than 15,000 people to seek medical treatment for
respiratory problems, Chevron spent more than $3 million to back
sympathetic city council and mayoral candidates in Richmond, Calif., in 2014.
We’ve known about this possibility ever since Citizens United. In
2010, a bipartisan group in Congress tried to update federal law to
limit foreign-influenced corporations from spending money in elections, but the bill died in the Senate. Now FEC Commissioner Ellen
Weintraub is trying to persuade her colleagues to close the Uber loophole. As she wrote recently, “It defies logic to allow groups of foreigners, or foreigners in combination with American citizens, to fund political spending through corporations.”
Today’s forum is a milestone for addressing the problem, but the
FEC, deadlocked into irrelevance by partisan interests, is in no position
to lead the fight. Instead, local governments can raise the flag by passing laws that prohibit foreign-influenced corporations from spending
money on their elections. Record-breaking engagement from average
Americans would provide the issue with a ready-made base of support.
For if the past is any guide, corporations like Uber will continue to try
to steer American elections, regardless of who’s sharing the wheel.
Laurence H. Tribe is university professor and professor of
constitutional law at Harvard Law School. Scott Greytak is counsel
at Free Speech for People.
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T H U R S D A Y, J U N E 2 3 , 2 0 1 6
Climate change’s perils are
vast, Boston report suggests
Continued from Page A1
TAKE AN ADDITIONAL
%
G l o b e
to assess its vulnerability and
to seek solutions. Next year,
Boston will host the same climate conference that Walsh attended, with leaders from
some 60 US and Chinese cities.
“We take climate change seriously, because we take the
health and resilience of our
city seriously,” Walsh said. “We
will continue to focus on using
the best data to inform decisions and understand future
investments.”
The updated projections for
Boston take into account new
research that suggests the accelerating melt of the ice
sheets covering Antarctica will
have a disproportionate impact on cities along the East
Coast.
As ice melts on the South
Pole, the resulting gravitational pull on the ocean, as well as
the gradual sinking of land in
the Northeast, means that Boston and other nearby communities are likely to experience
about 25 percent higher increase of sea levels than other
parts of the planet, according
to the new research.
“Boston is a bull’s-eye for
more sea level damage,” said
Rob DeConto, a climate scientist at UMass Amherst who
helped develop the new Antarctica research and who cowrote the new Boston report.
“ We have a lot to fear from
Antarctica.”
If high levels of greenhouse
gases continue to be released
into the atmosphere, the seas
around Boston could rise as
much as 10.5 feet by 2100 and
37 feet by 2200, according to
the report.
Even under optimistic forecasts that factor in significant
cuts to carbon emissions, sea
levels are projected to rise as
much as 6 feet by 2100 and
nearly 12 feet by 2200.
Such a dramatic rise would
be devastating to Boston. Fa-
neuil Hall, for example, now
floods at 5 feet and Copley
Square at 7.5 feet above today’s
high tides, city officials say.
“If seas rise that much, the
New England coastline would
look very different from space,”
said DeConto, referring to the
worst-case scenarios. “There
would be huge impacts on our
ecosystems, and we would be
talking about a managed retreat from the coastline rather
than engineering a way to
harden our coastline.”
‘In a word, this is
awful. It’s so stark
it’s hard to wrap
one’s head
around.’
JULIE WORMSER, a vice
president at Boston Harbor Now
The most comprehensive
previous projection of the impact of climate change on Boston was released two years ago
in a report by the federal government called the National
Climate Assessment.
That report found that the
Northeast was already bearing
the brunt of climate change,
with prolonged heat waves,
torrential rains, and increased
flooding, which it attributed to
the burning of fossil fuels and
other human activity.
It noted that over the past
century average temperatures
in Northeastern states have risen by 2 degrees Fahrenheit. It
also found that the region’s
precipitation has risen by more
than 10 percent, while the
worst storms have brought significantly more precipitation.
But the federal report forecast that seas would rise, under the worst case, between 3
and 6 feet by 2100 and project-
ed that the southern states in
the Northeast, by midcentury,
would experience about 60 additional days per year of temperatures above 90 degrees.
The new report, submitted
to city officials this month,
raises the stakes for policymakers to curb emissions, said
Julie Wormser, vice president
for policy and planning at Boston Harbor Now, a local advocacy group.
“In a word, this is awful,”
she said of the new projections. “It’s so stark it’s hard to
wrap one’s head around.”
She noted that the increased storm surge and high
tides could bring significant
damage and flooding to the
city far sooner than the end of
the century, just as Tropical
Storm Sandy devastated parts
of coastal New Jersey and New
York in 2012.
“We will need to come together to prevent Boston’s people and places from flooding
where we can, and learn to live
with more water where we
can’t,” she said.
On the bright side, Carl
Spector, commissioner of the
city’s Environment Department, said the worst scenarios
remain unlikely and a historic
agreement reached last year in
Paris offered hope that nations
around the world could work
together to reduce emissions.
But he said the new data
about Boston underscore why
the city has to consider taking
action in the coming years to
build barriers and other defenses against the rising seas,
revise its building codes, and
find other ways to adapt to the
changing climate.
“We know even relatively
small amounts of sea level rise
affect us,” he said. “All the
models we’re seeing are concerning.”
David Abel can be reached at
[email protected]. Follow him
on Twitter @davabel.
Metro
B
T H E B O S T O N G L O B E T H U R S DAY, J U N E 2 3 , 2 01 6 | B O S T O N G L O B E .C O M / M E T R O
Yvonne Abraham
Senate
bill may
aid Lyft,
Uber
Ferry didn’t
get a chance
LYNN — State Senator
Tom McGee is mad as
hell, and who can
blame him?
For 15 years, the
poor guy pushed for a
ferry service from Lynn
to Boston. That boat, he
said, could be the impetus for developing 305 acres of prime
but ramshackle waterfront in a city that
has struggled for decades. For a long
time, anybody familiar with that postapocalyptic landscape — and just about
everybody else — thought he was crazy.
But eventually, McGee got his Lynn
ferry, complete with a beautiful new
wharf and a rented boat. And for two
summers, it was a thing of surpassing
loveliness. Instead of wanting to gnaw
off their own arms in frustration on
what is arguably the state’s ugliest, most
maddening commute (disclosure: It is
also my commute), passengers got to
glide along a sunlit harbor and land
right at the Aquarium. Just 30 minutes,
no matter how bad traffic was on the
godforsaken Lynnway.
Now, it’s back to limb-gnawing. After
trying to find alternate sources of funding, the state Department of Transportation said there would be no money to
run the summer ferry, which it estimates
would cost $700,000. The state puts the
subsidy per rider at $44 (much of that
the boat lease), way more than the $5 or
so for the phenomenally successful and
long-established Hingham ferry.
But supporters say the Lynn ferry has
been the victim of a chicken-and-egg conundrum. They say the two-year pilot
was successful, with 15,000 rides last
season, though the state says there were
only 200 regular riders on the two morning and two evening runs. Congressman
Seth Moulton helped swing a deal to get
$4.5 million to buy a ferry. And there is
finally movement on a couple of longfallow lots on that blighted waterfront.
Spurred, say McGee and Moulton, in
part by the appeal of the ferry, two large
new apartment buildings will bring hundreds of residents.
“The state said to everybody, ‘This
would be a lot easier if you owned a ferry,’ and we came through with a grant
for a ferry, and now they’re backing out
of their end of the deal,” Moulton said.
Now he and McGee worry the state will
pull the plug on the ferry permanently.
“That great excitement has dissipated,” McGee told a State House hearing
earlier this month.
You would think Lynn’s mayor, Judy
Flanagan Kennedy, would be trying to
whip that excitement up again. But she
has simply rolled over, telling the Lynn
Daily Item she’d never ask the state to
reverse a decision. “If I want to have a
say in how the state budget gets spent,
maybe I should run for governor,” she
said, utterly abdicating her duty. (She’s
had no similar compunction about seeking a say in federal immigration policy.
Perhaps she’s running for president.)
Maybe the ferry will return in a year
or two, but the setback has been revealing. As with the debate over the now-defunct late night T service, the state is
way too focused on the cost of the public
service it should be providing and not
mindful enough of its benefits.
“It’s frustrating,” McGee said. “The
discussion is skewed away from what we
need to do.”
Yes, the first years of a new service
are often expensive. But ridership would
have grown, benefiting all commuters
and the environment. Development
would have accelerated in a moribund
city the state has singled out for a turnaround, in an initiative announced with
great fanfare last fall.
The Lynn ferry mess reflects the haphazard, piecemeal way we do water
transportation in this state. Other places
use their waterways brilliantly — Sydney, for example, and New York, where
Mayor Bill de Blasio has just announced
an ambitious initiative to create a fleet of
ferries connecting all five boroughs. The
water is the best hope for relief for North
Shore commuters. The Blue Line won’t
be extended in our lifetimes. But it’s not
just us. Plenty of places could be transformed by water travel: East Boston,
Gloucester, Quincy.
We have this massive, beautiful, blue
resource out there. Why are we so shy
and shortsighted about using it?
Globe columnist Yvonne Abraham can
be reached at
[email protected].
Legislation seems
to keep status quo
By Joshua Miller
and Nicole Dungca
GLOBE STAFF
MATT WEST/POOL
Jonathan Aguasvivas (left) and Benzy Bain were barely visible, wearing Tyvek suits with hoods and
standing outside of the courtroom, as they were arraigned at Dorchester District Court on Wednesday.
2 arrested in teen’s slaying
outside Burke School
By John R. Ellement
and Jan Ransom
GLOBE STAFF
Inside the Dorchester district courtroom, relatives of Raekwon Brown
struggled to catch a glimpse of the two
men being charged with fatally shooting the 17-year-old Jeremiah E. Burke
High School student.
Benzy Bain, 24,
of Mattapan and
Jonathan M.
Aguasvivas, 23, of
Roxbury were
shielded from public view during the
brief hearing
Wednesday, leading one family
member to call them “cowards.”
Brown’s sister, Latasha Allen, 31,
said she and her family badly wanted to
see the accused men’s faces and to ask:
Why?
“He didn’t do nothing,” she said outside the courthouse. “He was a good
kid. . . . We all miss him and love him
very much.”
During the hearing, Suffolk Assistant District Attorney David Fredette
did not describe a motive for the 1 p.m.
June 8 shooting near the Burke School,
nor did he identify which of the two
men allegedly fired the shots that killed
Brown on Washington Street. Two other
HEARING, Page B5
JESSICA RINALDI/GLOBE STAFF
Raekwon Brown’s mother, Wanda Graddy, and father left court
Wednesday. Brown (inset), 17, was shot to death June 8.
In an apparent victory for the
ride-for-hire industry and defeat
for taxi drivers, the Senate will
unveil legislation Thursday that
would broadly maintain the status quo for companies such as
Uber and Lyft and their passengers.
Drivers could continue to pick
up passengers at Logan International Airport and the Boston
Convention & Exhibition Center
and would not be subject to stateconducted background checks or
fingerprinting, according to a senator briefed on the bill and a summary of legislation obtained by
The Boston Globe.
But ride-hailing companies,
which would be overseen by the
Department of Public Utilities,
would be mandated to provide a
tipping option on their apps (Lyft
already has such a feature; Uber
does not).
And those companies would
be forced to pay what the Senate
is calling an “assessment” of 10
cents per ride to the cities and
towns where the rides originated.
Companies would be prohibited
from passing that fee onto consumers, and the money would
have to be used by municipalities
for transportation-related spending. Cities could use the money
for everything from road repairs
to compensation for taxi owners
whose required medallions have
lost value.
Uber and Lyft had decried a
version of the bill already passed
by the House — which prohibited
some pickups at Logan and convention center properties and required state certification and
background checks for each driver — as overly bureaucratic and
too burdensome.
The senator briefed on the bill
said it was fair to characterize the
new legislation as a “pro-Uber approach.”
“The red flags raised by [ridehailing companies] on everything
from fingerprints, duplication of
background checks done both privately and by the state, to where
they can pick up — none of those
provisions are in this bill,” the
UBER, Page B5
Island mourns fisherman’s death
Luke Gurney remembered for a natural ability to make a catch
and was swept overboard. His body
was recovered after a massive search
by air and sea led by the Coast Guard.
A spokesman for the Nantucket
Police Department said a cause of
death must still be determined by the
state medical examiner’s office.
Gurney’s death created a ripple of
sorrow that ran through his hometown of New Bedford and his adopted
home of Martha’s Vineyard.
By Kathy McCabe
GLOBE STAFF
Maybe it was the gear he hauled,
the bait he placed, or the conch pots
he dropped into Nantucket Sound.
Luke Gurney had a natural ability
to catch fish. But, tragically, fishing
also killed him.
On Monday, while dropping two
50-pound conch pots near Nantucket,
Gurney became entangled in the lines
“He almost seemed to have a sixth
sense about where to find and catch
fish,” said Greg Skomal, a marine biologist for the state in New Bedford,
who once hired Gurney to conduct research on sharks.
On a charter trip out of Gloucester
several years ago, Skomal recalled,
Gurney reeled in cod, haddock, and
pollock while others got barely a
GURNEY, Page B4
Fisherman Luke Gurney’s
death has touched many.
Monkey turns doorknob, and voila! Freedom
S
By Reis Thebault
Dizzy was
spotted atop
the leopard
enclosure at
The Zoo in
Forest Park
on Tuesday
shortly after
his escape,
enjoying his
time away
from his
cage.
GLOBE CORRESPONDENT
PRINGFIELD — Dizzy the monkey
discovered exactly what those opposable thumbs are good for: evolutionary
blessings, sure, but also escape tools
that he put to good use when turning
the doorknob to his enclosure at a zoo
here.
Dizzy has been on the loose in and around The
Zoo in Forest Park since his Tuesday afternoon escape. As of Wednesday evening, zoo workers knew
Dizzy’s location, but were still working to recapture
him.
Officials said the mission could take days. But,
they said, Dizzy and his small frame pose no threat to
the public.
Zoo workers have spotted the 12-pound Guenon
monkey several times and have come close to recapMONKEY, Page B4
DON TREEGER/THE REPUBLICAN
B2
Metro
T h e
B o s t o n
G l o b e
T H U R S D A Y, J U N E 2 3 , 2 0 1 6
New England
in brief
BOSTON
Sheriff ’s department officer suspended
An officer with the Suffolk County Sheriff’s Department was
suspended amid allegations of misconduct on the job, officials
said. In a news release, the department revealed little about the
nature of the accusations against the officer, who has not been
identified. The matter remains under review by Boston police
and the Suffolk district attorney’s office. According to the office
of Sheriff Steven W. Tompkins, the suspension was issued
Wednesday after a “disciplinary hearing resulting from internal
and external investigations into allegations of on-duty misconduct.” The sheriff’s department is responsible for maintaining
custody of inmates and pre-trial detainees in the county.
BU student cut by shattered vial
A Boston University student doing research in one of the
school’s labs was sent to the hospital Wednesday afternoon after he was injured by a broken vial, fire officials said. The man
suffered a cut to his hand and a small cut to his neck and is expected to survive, Boston Fire spokesman Steve MacDonald
said. The victim, a graduate student, was working with nitric
gases in a lab on Cummington Mall at about 2:30 when a bad
chemical reaction took place, MacDonald said. A hazmat situation was declared, but the chemicals were contained to that lab,
he said.
PHOTOS BY JOHN TLUMACKI/GLOBE STAFF
PARK IN USE — A celebration
was held Wednesday to open
the newly renovated Elliot
Norton Park in Bay Village,
which includes a new
children’s play area, tables,
and walkways. Adrian Guan
(above), 2, happily tried out
new playground apparatus
with his grandfather, Guan
Zhu. Women rested on a wall
as they watched the activity
during the celebration. Free
coffee was served courtesy of
Mayor Martin J. Walsh, who
spoke at the park opening.
A former postal service worker who stole sports cards valued at
$68,000 being sent through the mail while working at a Boston
post office has been sentenced to three years of probation.
Venecia McLaren was also ordered by a federal judge Tuesday
to pay nearly $11,000 in restitution for stealing and selling
many of the cards stolen in January 2015, Masslive.com reported. The 23 cards she stole included a LeBron James card valued
at $25,000, which the judge said is likely worth more now, an
apparent reference to the Cleveland Cavaliers’ NBA championship. Prosecutors said McLaren, 30, stole the cards and her siblings sold them online. (AP)
NEWTON
Driver hurt after car crashes into home
Mass. Navy reservist dies of injury in Africa
By Travis Andersen
GLOBE STAFF
A Navy reservist from Massachusetts who was stationed
at a base in Africa died on Tuesday after suffering a “non-combat related injury,” the Department of Defense said.
In a statement, the Defense
Department identified the victim as Petty Officer 2nd Class
Andrew J. Clement, 38, and
said the “incident is under investigation.” He was supporting
Operation Enduring Freedom
at Camp Lemonnier in Djibou-
Probation for ex-postal worker in thefts
ti, in the eastern part of the
continent, the military said.
The statement provided no
details about Clement’s injury,
and a Navy spokeswoman did
not respond to a request for further comment. Officials did not
say where he lived.
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Clement was assigned to Navy Reserve Unit Tactical Air
Control Squadron 22, Navy Operational Support Center in
Quincy, before being deployed
to Djibouti, the Defense Department said. It was not clear
when he had arrived in Africa.
Phone numbers for Clement’s family could not be located. The Defense Department
did not say whether he was survived by a spouse or children.
Elected officials in Massachusetts lamented the news on
Wednesday.
“We are deeply saddened to
learn of the loss of Petty Officer
2nd Class Andrew Clement and
our thoughts and prayers remain with his family and their
loved ones during this very difficult time,” Governor Charlie
Baker said in a statement.
His comments were echoed
by US Representative Stephen
F. Lynch, a South Boston Democrat.
“I am deeply saddened to
learn of the death of Petty Officer Andrew Jerod Clement
USN, in the service of our nation,” Lynch said in a statement. “While we await further
details from Camp Lemonnier,
our hearts and prayers go out to
Andrew and his family during
this extremely difficult time.”
State Representative Jerald
A. Parisella, House chair of the
Joint Committee on Veterans
and Federal Affairs, also reacted to the news.
“I am sorry to learn about
Petty Officer Clement’s passing,” Parisella wrote in an email. “My thoughts and prayers
go out to his family. There are
service members from Massachusetts serving all over the
globe and whenever we lose
one, it reminds us of the service
and sacrifice they and their
families make every day.”
Camp Lemonnier supports
approximately 4,000 US, joint,
and allied forces, as well as civilian personnel and defense
contractors, according to its
website.
The camp “provides, operates and sustains superior service in support of combat readiness and security of ships, aircraft, detachments and
personnel for regional and
combatant command requirements; and enables operations
in the Horn of Africa while fostering positive US-African Nation relations,” the website says.
Travis Andersen can be reached
at [email protected].
Follow him on Twitter
@TAGlobe.
A driver was hospitalized Wednesday morning after a car
crashed into the front porch of a house in Newton, officials
said. The incident began when two cars collided, and one
wound up striking the home on the 1100 block of Boylston
Street, according to Lieutenant Eric Fricke of the Newton Fire
Department. One of the drivers was taken to Newton-Wellesley
Hospital, he said. Occupants inside the house were not injured,
Fricke said.
ARLINGTON
Naked swimmer allegedly resists help
A 20-year-old man allegedly attempted to go for a swim naked
in the Mystic Lakes Wednesday morning while under the influence of drugs, police said. Four Arlington police officers, as well
as members of the Fire Department, arrived at the scene at
about 10:35 a.m., minutes after a report of a swimmer in distress near Lake Shore Drive, authorities said. The man was aggressive and resisted rescue efforts, according to police, and officers had to keep him from jumping back in the water following the rescue. Police did not identify the man, but said he was
taken to a Boston hospital.
SUDBURY
Arbitrator backs town in firing
An arbitrator has ruled that the town of Sudbury was justified
when it fired a municipal employee who missed too much work
after his son’s shooting death. Former Sudbury public works
employee Anthony Zanco missed work following the March
2014 death of his 17-year-old son, Tyler, during a drug robbery,
The MetroWest Daily News reported Wednesday. Zanco used
up all his sick, vacation, and personal time, as well as a monthand-a-half leave, then had 41 unexcused days off. A town lawyer said Zanco experienced ‘‘an unimaginable tragedy’’ but that
‘‘you have to report to work to keep your job.’’ (AP)
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T H U R S D A Y, J U N E 2 3 , 2 0 1 6
B o s t o n
G l o b e
Metro
B3
Child
started
Peabody
blaze
By Mina Corpuz
GLOBE CORRESPONDENT
A young child with a lighter started a four-alarm fire in
Peabody that displaced 14 residents Friday, officials said.
No one was injured in the
blaze at the three-story home
on Littles Lane, but investigators said the incident is an example of the dangers of children and fire. Officials did not
release the child’s exact age.
The child in this case will
be referred to the Lynn Juvenile Firesetter Intervention
Program, which educates
young people about responsible conduct, State Fire Marshal Peter J. Ostroskey said.
There are similar programs
around the state, he said
“Whether a child is merely
curious about fire, making a
cry for help, attempting to
control the adult world, or engaging in delinquent behavior,
it is extremely dangerous for
children to use fire,” Ostroskey’s office said in a statement. “Children and youth
who use fire can be helped,
but they must receive the right
kind of help.”
Juveniles set 617 fires between 2010 and 2014, according to the fire marshal’s office.
In those fires, one person died
and 71 were injured. The estimated loss was $7.6 million.
More than half of fires
started by children involve
matches and lighters, the fire
marshal’s office said.
“It is not a phase that they
will grow out of, it is not a
matter of boys being boys or
yelling at them or burning
their fingers or other such
methods,” Ostroskey’s office
said.
“The reason a child uses
fire must be identified by a
trained professional and addressed.”
The fire marshal’s office
suggests keeping matches and
lighters out of the reach of
children and teaching them to
alert an adult when they see
them.
Peabody fire, police, and
State Police investigated the
fire.
Mina Corpuz can be reached
at [email protected].
Follow her on Twitter
@mlcorpuz.
PAT GREENHOUSE/GLOBE STAFF
After his arraignment in Charlestown Municipal Court, Lenny Quintero-Flores spoke with defense attorney M. Barusch in the prisoner lockup. QuinteroFlores was charged with manslaughter in the drowning death of his friend Mitchell Harrison in the Charles River on Tuesday.
Suspect calls friend’s death an accident
Man arraigned
in river drowning
By Trisha Thadani
GLOBE CORRESPONDENT
The man accused of pushing his friend into the Charles
River and causing his death
apologized Wednesday as he
entered court to face a manslaughter charge, telling reporters “it was an accident.”
“He was my best friend,”
said Lenny Quintero-Flores,
27, who is accused of pushing
26-year-old Mitchell Harrison
into the water Tuesday. “I was
playing around.”
Quintero-Flores allegedly
pushed his friend into the river about 5 p.m. Police said the
two were “heavily intoxicated”
during the incident, and authorities later recovered a
nearly empty bottle of Svedka
vodka from the scene.
Witnesses said Harrison, of
Watertown, was submerged 10
to 30 minutes before dive
crews pulled him from the riv-
er. He was taken to Brigham
and Women’s Hospital, where
he died several hours later.
Quintero-Flores, of Malden,
was initially arrested Tuesday
on charges of assault and battery causing serious bodily injury but is now facing the
more serious charge of manslaughter, officials said. He
was ordered held on $25,000
bail at his Wednesday arraignment in Charlestown Municipal Court.
Quintero-Flores appeared
in court in handcuffs and with
chains around his ankles. As
the complaint was read, he
cupped his hands in front of
him and gazed toward the
ground.
Defense attorney M. Barusch said she was the one who
told Quintero-Flores that Harrison died.
She said the two did not
have ill will toward each other,
and Quintero-Flores was devastated to learn of the death of
his friend.
After the hearing, Barusch
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described the incident as “a
tragedy involving one of Lenny’s best friends.”
Quintero-Flores’s mother,
Carmen Flores, said in a telephone interview that her son
and Harrison had been best
friends for many years. She described Harrison as a second
son and a member of the family who was always full of jokes.
“Joking, laughing, that’s
the way he was,” she said.
“There wasn’t a fight or anything like that. Lenny did not
want to kill him — it was a
tragic accident.”
Flores said her son has a
history of alcohol abuse and
had been in and out of rehab.
Before the incident, she said,
he was doing better.
“This is an experience that
has impacted the family and
the community, so I hope he
learns from it,” she said. “He is
not a criminal, and he is not a
guy going around and killing
people in the community.”
Videos from the scene provided to the Globe by a wit-
ness, Julie Dubela, show about
a dozen people peering over
the edge of the dock. One video shows a man, who appears
to be the suspect, sitting with
his hand on his head while
watching the search crews in
the water.
Dubela, 25, said she passed
by the dock shortly after the
man was pushed in the water.
When she arrived, Dubela
said, some people were still
sunbathing and reading, and
she said it did not seem like a
“drunk, rowdy commotion.”
“It wasn’t a ferocious panic,” she said. “But then about
five to 10 minutes went by,
and they couldn’t find him,
and then there started to be a
bit more of a commotion.”
Dubela said the suspect appeared distraught while authorities searched for his
friend.
Sid Turner, the father of the
victim, said he had never
heard of Quintero-Flores before Tuesday’s incident. He
said his son struggled with
Martignetti
substance abuse in the past
but was released from rehab a
few months ago and was on
“the straight and narrow.”
In a telephone interview
from his home in Texas, he described his son as “the epitome
of a good father” to his 8-yearold son.
“He had made it through
several [rehab] programs and
had come out clean,” Turner
said. “He was always there for
his boy, always taking him
places. I’m not saying he was a
saint, but he was a good man
and showed that toward his
son.”
T he cause of Harrison’s
death is still under investigation. Quintero-Flores is to appear again in court at a later
date.
John R. Ellement of the Globe
staff contributed to this report.
Trisha Thadani can be
reached at
[email protected].
Follow her on Twitter
@TrishaThadani.
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B4
Metro
T h e
B o s t o n
G l o b e
T H U R S D A Y, J U N E 2 3 , 2 0 1 6
MBTA bus driver carries gifts for homeless children
Desired meeting
has yet to happen
By Steve Annear
GLOBE STAFF
Debbie Crasco arrives every
morning early to work as an
MBTA bus driver to give herself
plenty of time to wedge three
gift bags filled with bubbles,
Play-Doh, flashcards, crayons,
and Cracker Jacks, behind her
bus seat.
And every shift, as Crasco
sits in her chair, lumbering
along in the Route 64 bus, she
hopes to run into the mother
and three children, who Crasco
believes are homeless and living in a hotel, so she can surprise the kids with the neatly
wrapped packages.
“They’re wonderful children, and the mother, she is a
sweetheart,” Crasco told the
Globe in a telephone interview.
Crasco, who has worked for
two years at the MBTA, has
chatted with the mother, whose
name she doesn’t know, and
her young children on numerous trips. The family have become somewhat regular customers, she said, and call her
the “candy lady” because she
gives them “gummies” and other candies Crasco keeps in her
pocket.
Last week, Crasco asked the
mother if she could put together the gift packages for the children. The mother replied, “I
think that would lift their spirits,” Crasco said.
But more than a week has
gone by and Crasco hasn’t seen
the family. So the 51-year-old
California native has been driving her route, between Kendall
Square in Cambridge and Oak
Square in Brighton, with the
polka-dotted bags stuffed with
goodies and pink tissue paper
ever since.
“I have to keep bringing the
packages every day to work. I
can’t leave the packages on the
bus,” she said. “But I safely
stow them behind my chair.”
This week, a passenger took
notice of the bags, and asked
Crasco why they were there.
When Crasco told the rider,
Samuel M. Gebru, about the
mother and her children, he
was so moved that he shared
the story on Twitter and Facebook.
“I am inspired by Debbie’s
act of random kindness,” Gebru
wrote. “It’s the little things that
can really brighten up someone’s life, especially in hard
moments.”
After Gebru shared his encounter with Crasco on social
media, the MBTA was quick to
MBTA
Debbie Crasco, a Route 64
driver, keeps the wrapped
packages behind her seat.
praise its employee, taking a
picture of the driver as she sat
in front of the care packages.
The transit agency later shared
the image on Twitter.
Frank DePaola, general
manager of the MBTA, said in a
statement that Crasco’s unsolicited act of kindness “represents the very best in public
service.”
“We couldn’t be prouder of
her,” he said.
Crasco on Friday said she
was taken aback by the sudden
recognition, and modestly
brushed off the praise. She said
she merely wanted to bring a
slice of joy to her young passengers the next time she picks
them up near the hotel.
“I’ll keep them with me until I do see them,” she said, as
she prepared for a recent afternoon shift. “I just thought I
would do something nice.”
Steve Annear can be reached at
[email protected].
Follow him on Twitter
@steveannear.
At zoo, all hands on deck to capture a monkey
MONKEY
Continued from Page B1
turing him. But for more than
24 hours, Dizzy has dodged
tranquilizer darts, eluded a
cherry picker, and largely ignored the allure of his mate,
Mitzy, and apricots, his favorite
food.
“This is like losing a family
member,” said Meghan Rothschild, a volunteer who handles
the zoo’s marketing.
Dizzy is 8 years old and has
lived at the zoo for two years.
Until this week, he had been a
pretty laid-back monkey, Rothschild said.
No zoo employee held a position too lofty to be enlisted in
the search Wednesday — from
volunteers to the zoo director,
John Lewis Jr., who at one
point wielded one of the zoo’s
two tranquilizer rifles. The zoo
even enlisted the help of the
Springfield Police Department.
Lieutenant Phil Tarpey carried
the second tranquilizer gun.
“He’s got a very good shot,” said
one of Tarpey’s colleagues on
the scene.
With Dizzy in their sights,
officials have two options: use a
tranquilizer to immobilize him
and, eventually, bring him to
safety, or use food to coax him
from the trees.
Z o o w o r ke r s t r i e d b o t h
Wednesday. They shot at Dizzy
twice with a tranquilizer gun
and missed. They also fed the
primates in the enclosures adjacent to Dizzy’s, hoping the clatter of food plates would trigger
DON TREEGER / THE REPUBLICAN
Bystanders watched Dizzy climb a tree on Tuesday. The 12-pound Guenon monkey is no
threat to the public, zoo officials said, but they were eager to return him to his quarters.
a Pavlovian response.
For about 30 minutes, the
latter method was working.
The food had his attention,
and he was lingering in a tree
near his enclosure, said Darlene
Blaney, the zoo’s business manager.
“We can tell he wants to get
home,” she said.
“It’s a waiting game now.”
Dizzy spurned both Mitzy
and the food and swung from
tree to tree before landing on
an oak branch near the zoo’s
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Below him, kangaroos, leopards, and camels all behaved,
staying put in their respective
areas or enclosures.
All eyes were trained on Dizzy.
That was a level of attention
not present at the time of Dizzy’s escape.
A zoo worker, Blaney said,
was cleaning Dizzy’s cage when
the worker stepped out to assist
a visitor. The zoo worker shut
the door behind him, but forgot
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to lock it.
Dizzy was able to turn the
doorknob, open the door, and
make a run for it.
Zoo officials say they’ve never seen such an escape.
Dizzy was closest to being
recaptured Tuesday, after he descended from a treetop. But,
Blaney said, a child who tossed
a hat at the monkey scared him
off.
This prompted officials to
release a statement, asking visitors and the media to let them
handle the search: “We are now
pleading with the public and
the media to stay away from the
zoo until Dizzy is returned safely. This could take days, so we
appreciate your cooperation.”
Nikki Harvey, 32, of North
Brookfield, went to the zoo with
her sisters and her two children
Wednesday. Six Flags was too
crowded, they said.
The zoo was closed, but the
park in which it sits remained
open. The children were romping on a playground adjacent to
the zoo when they saw Dizzy in
a tree. Authorities then shut
down that swath of the park.
The zoo will remain closed
for the duration of the search,
officials said. If the search continues into the night, Springfield police officers will use infrared cameras to track Dizzy.
Harvey’s sister Tabitha Audette, 28, of Ashford, Conn.,
said the children were disappointed the zoo was closed.
They were excited to see the animals, she said.
The family was planning to
wait out the search at a nearby
cafe. As they walked, Audette
took the hand of one of her
nieces and said, “We’re going to
go find that monkey ourselves.”
From a distance, one of the
children could be heard asking
whether the monkey was a biter. “Don’t worry,” one of the
adults said. “We won’t let the
monkey get you.”
Reis Thebault can be reached at
[email protected].
Firefighters rescue
donkey stuck in hole
By Andy Rosen
GLOBE STAFF
Ruby Lake came outside
Wednesday morning and discovered that her family’s pair of
“escape artist” donkeys had
hopped through an opening in
their barn wall and into an enclosed outdoor area. One of
them, Valentino, was still in
their Hamilton yard, but Buddy
was missing.
Lake, 17, soon learned
where Buddy had gone when
she saw his nose poking
through a hole in the ground.
The hole was only about a footand-a-half wide, but it was several feet deep, and the diminutive Buddy was wedged in the
muddy water up to his neck.
“It was pretty scary,” said
Lake, whose family recently adopted the donkeys as rescues.
At the time, she was the only
one home. “Luckily, I had my
phone on me because I couldn’t
have left him.”
She summoned firefighters
and police, who arrived around
noon and quickly hatched a
plan to rig the 200-pound animal up with a system of straps
and pull him out with the power of their bodies alone. Minutes later, Buddy slid out of the
hole — covered in mud, but
alive.
“We got him out a lot faster
than I expected,” Hamilton Fire
Chief Philip W. Stevens Jr. said
in an interview.
A veterinarian soon arrived
and checked Buddy over. The
donkey was very cold, Lake
said, so they gave him blankets
and fluids. Other than that, she
RUBY LAKE
Buddy was stuck in muddy
water up to his neck before
being rescued.
said, he was OK.
She said the family didn’t
even know the hole was there,
and that it’s probably for drainage, but that it had been covered with rotted wood. They’ve
placed a rock over it to prevent
Buddy from falling in again.
Lake said she plans eventually to train Buddy and Valentino as therapy animals.
Chief Stevens said he’s rescued a horse before and plenty
of young birds that have fallen
through storm drains, but
Wednesday’s rescue was an unusual one.
“Usually we get ducks,” he
said. “That’s the first time we’ve
ever had a donkey.”
Andy Rosen can be reached at
[email protected].
Follow him on Twitter at
@andyrosen.
‘I don’t think I
ever saw him tired.
He was just an
upbeat, happy guy.
Every fifth word
out of his mouth
was “Dude.” . . . He
had a zillion
friends. He was
respected by the
fishermen. I’d like
to think that he
would have no
regrets.’
JOHN CUSTER
West Tisbury School principal
Island
mourns
death of
a friend
GURNEY
Continued from Page B1
nibble.
“He was the only guy hooking up fish,” he said. “He was
an incredible fisherman.”
The death of Gurney
touched many, but it especially
hit home for Martha’s Vineyard’s close-knit fishing community.
“It’s very somber here,” Jeffrey Canha, a friend of 25
years, said by telephone. “He
treated everybody he met as if
they were family.”
Gurney, 48, lived in Oak
Bluffs with his wife, Robyn,
and their sons, Jacob, 13, and
Samuel, 11.
Neither his wife nor his father, John Gurney of Mattapoisett, could be reached for
comment on Wednesday.
Gurney’s 40-foot boat, No
Regrets, was docked at the
town wharf in Vineyard Haven
on Wednesday. A wreath made
of laurel, holly, and grapevine
was placed on the door to the
wheelhouse.
Friends are encouraged to
leave a note of condolence, or
a memento such as a fishing
hook, Canha said.
“ We want people to pay
their respects to the captain
and his vessel,” he said.
Gurney shared his passion
for fishing with his family,
Canha said.
“He was a great dad and
husband, a real family man,”
he said. “He had his wife and
two sons out on the boat on
Saturday for a fun day on the
water.”
A fund-raising page has
been set up by friends on Martha’s Vineyard to help his family. Robyn Gurney is a special
education teacher at the Tisbury School.
“ When something tragic
happens here, people pull together,” said Susan Rogers, a
neighbor who lives across the
street from the Gurney family.
“His loss is tragic and it’s going
to be difficult for his family.”
Gurney had an infectious
smile and a high energy level
that made him a welcome
presence on the island, said
another friend, John Custer.
“I don’ t think I ever saw
him tired,” said Custer, principal of the West Tisbury School
who previously worked with
Robyn Gurney. “He was just an
upbeat, happy guy. Every fifth
word out of his mouth was
‘Dude.’ ”
As a recreational fisherman, Custer admired Gurney’s
ability to earn a living as a
commercial fisherman.
“It’s not an easy business,”
he said.
He also takes solace in the
name Gurney chose for his
boat — No Regrets.
“He really loved the community here,” said Custer, who
last saw Gurney two months
ago at a lip-sync contest at the
island’s Portuguese-American
Club. “He had a zillion friends.
He was respected by the fishermen. I’d like to think that he
would have no regrets.”
Kathy McCabe can be reached
at
[email protected]
. Follow her on Twitter
@GlobeKMcCabe.
T h e
T H U R S D A Y, J U N E 2 3 , 2 0 1 6
B o s t o n
G l o b e
Metro
B5
Bill could help Uber
UBER
Continued from Page B1
senator said.
Asked about the new proposed “assessment,” which opponents might describe as an
Uber tax, the senator said it is a
common-sense measure.
The senator said there are a
lot of vehicles using ride-forhire apps that create wear and
tear on the road. So the proposal would help cities and towns
pay “for everything from funding transportation infrastructure to, if they wish, compensation for medallion owners” who
have seen them lose value.
“But that’s a choice municipalities will make,” the senator
said. “The only requirement is
that it is transportation-related
spending.”
Under the new legislation,
oversight would be handled by
a division in the Department of
Public Utilities, and companies
would issue decals for drivers to
mark their cars when they are
picking up passengers. Companies would need to keep a roster of their drivers, which could
be handed to law enforcement
upon request.
It’s unclear how the bill
would deal with restrictions on
some ride-for-hire drivers at Logan. Currently, only Uber drivers with commercial plates and
MassPort certification are allowed to pick up passengers
there.
Taxi industry supporters will
likely push back against the bill,
arguing that the state is allowing ride-for-hire companies to
operate with unfair advantages.
Advocates for the taxi industry slammed the Senate bill as
leaving residents “vulnerable
and unprotected,” and said they
intend to push for changes.
“They are jeopardizing jobs,
taxes, and the very livelihoods
of an entire industry,” said Scott
Solombrino, the spokesman for
Ride Safe MA, a coalition of taxi
and livery industry supporters
urging the state to approve
more ride-for-hire regulations.
“To cast a blind eye to the taxi
and livery industry and allow
[companies such as Uber and
Lyft] to operate with impunity
borders on neglect.”
Reached Wednesday night,
Tim Buckley, a senior adviser
for Governor Charlie Baker,
said “the administration looks
forward to reviewing the bill.”
Spokesmen for Speaker Robert A. DeLeo and Senate President Stanley C. Rosenberg did
not yet offer comment. Nor did
a spokeswoman for Uber.
Lyft spokeswoman Chelsea
Wilson did not respond directly
to the details of the Senate bill
Wednesday but panned the
House bill in a statement.
“The legislation passed by
the House limits consumer
choice, restricts competition,
and doesn’t serve the best interests of people across the Commonwealth,” Wilson said. “We
hope the Senate will propose a
reasonable bill that allows Lyft
to provide safe, affordable rides
at Logan Airport and the Boston Convention and Exhibition
Center.”
Senators are expected to engage in a contentious debate
over the bill next week.
Governor Charlie Baker earlier released a ride-hailing regulation bill mostly lauded by
ride-hailing companies.
PHOTOS BY CRAIG F. WALKER/GLOBE STAFF
IN PREPARATION — Competitor SSG Travis Ugarte
dragged SPC Kyle Collins (above) of the Delaware
Army National Guard, who was playing the part of
an injured soldier, to a medevac helicopter during
the Warrior task and battle drills portion of the
Army National Guard’s 2016 Best Warrior
Competition at Camp Edwards Joint Base in Bourne
on Wednesday. The fourteen elite soldiers
competing are challenged both physically and
mentally during the four-day event. Collins, who
would be treated by 14 troops as he played the part
of an injured soldier, said, “It’s kind of funny. They
look a little nervous when they’re doing it. If I was
in their shoes I’d be nervous, too. People watching
you…I’m glad it’s them and not me.” Competitor SSG
Gerald Ritter of the Oklahoma Army National Guard
(left) joked with Collins on the stretcher.
Nicole Dungca can be reached
at [email protected].
Joshua Miller can be reached at
[email protected].
Two arrested in teen’s slaying
Diverse. Distinguished. Dependable.
HEARING
Continued from Page B1
teens, ages 16 and 17, one of
whom was Brown’s cousin,
were injured and taken to hospitals; a fourth victim, a 67year-old woman, suffered minor injuries and was treated at
the scene.
Fredette said investigators
have tracked down and reviewed 100 hours of surveillance video that linked Bain
and Aguasvivas to Brown’s
death. Lawyers for both men
said their clients were not involved in the shooting.
Fredette said both served
identical sentences — three
years and one day in state prison — on firearms convictions.
Aguasvivas, according to law
enforcement officials, was also
in a car with Angelo West when
West shot Boston Police Officer
John Moynihan point-blank in
the face in March 2015, an attack that Moynihan survived.
West was shot to death by Boston police officers in what Suffolk prosecutors concluded was
a justified use of deadly force.
Aguasvivas was not charged
in that case.
Court records show Aguasvivas was charged in Suffolk Superior Court in 2011 for illegal
gun possession after a firearm
was found in a vehicle that he
was in with three other men.
He pleaded guilty in 2013
and was sentenced to two years
of probation, which was set to
e n d Mon d ay . He h a d b e e n
scheduled to appear in court on
that case Friday.
Court documents describe
Aguasvivas as a “known member” of a gang, who had a history of domestic violence arrests.
Bain was indicted in February 2013 on a gun charge. He
pleaded guilty in July of that
year and was given credit for
182 days he spent in jail awaiting trial.
As a condition of probation
in that case, Bain was ordered
to stay away from five men, including two who associated
with Aguasvivas. Those two
men were in the same vehicle
Aguasvivas was in when police
arrested him on firearm charges in 2011.
But Bain violated his probation when he contacted one of
those men and after he had fallen three months behind on his
probation supervision fee. Bain
was instructed to surrender Friday. A warrant for violating
probation was outstanding at
the time of his arrest for
Brown’s murder, court records
show.
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‘They killed my little brother for no
reason. My heart’s empty; my mother’s
heart is empty.’
LATASHA ALLEN, Raekwon Brown’s sister
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Aguasvivas and Bain were
ordered held without bail during Wednesday’s hearing.
Allen, Brown’s sister, said
police called her mother
Wednesday morning and told
her the men had been arrested
at 5 a.m. Her mother was elated, she said.
But Allen said the arrests
will not bring her brother back.
“There’s no justice just because they got somebody and
they’re in custody — because
my little brother is still dead,”
she said after the hearing.
“They killed my little brother
for no reason. My heart’s empty; my mother’s heart is empty.”
B a i n’s a t t o r n e y, Ja m e s
Greenberg, said his client insists he was not involved in the
shooting that caused Brown’s
death.
“My client adamantly denies” any role in Brown’s death,
he said.
Aguasvivas’ attorney, Brian
A. Kelley, said he had just been
appointed and had no information about the case. “Everyone
recognizes this is a tragedy, but
why are these two young men
under arrest? We don’t know.”
Officials said more charges
could be forthcoming in the
case. In a joint statement, Boston Police Commissioner William B. Evans and Suffolk District Attorney Daniel F. Conley
said investigators had done
painstaking work over the last
two weeks but were not yet finished.
“These arrests mark a step
toward justice for Raekwon’s
family, but it is not the last
step,” Conley said. “We will not
rest until those responsible for
his homicide have been held to
account for it.”
Evans said those responsible
for the shooting showed “absolute disregard for the safety and
well-being of every person living or working in that neighborhood.”
Students at Jeremiah E.
Burke High School greeted
news of the arrests with cautious relief, and said they were
hopeful there might be justice
for Brown.
“I feel like he can rest in
peace now, but he’s resting in
peace for no reason because he
got his life taken away for somebody else’s selfish reasons,” said
Carida Pizarro, 17, who said
she and Brown had dated. “It
makes me happy that the y
know who did it, that his family
is getting justice. But at the
same time, I still lost a friend;
his mother lost her baby.”
Students said they were glad
that suspects had been caught
but were doubtful the arrests
would prevent future violence.
Daavon Holiday, 17, a friend
of Brown’s, also said he was
afraid to go to school in the
days after the shooting. Even
the increased police presence
did little to ease his fears.
“Regardless of whe ther
there are police or not, people
can still get shot,” he said.
Evan Allen and Vivian Wang
contributed to this report. John
R. Ellement can be reached at
[email protected]. Follow
him on Twitter @JREbosglobe.
Jan Ransom can be reached at
[email protected]. Follow
her on Twitter at
@Jan_Ransom.
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DEATH NOTICES
ANDOVER
ARTHUR, Cecilia “Cia”
ARLINGTON
ARTHUR, Cecilia “Cia”
JUDD, James L.,
OHANIAN, Elizabeth
“Bette”
RIESZ, Alda E.
ATTLEBORO
HASENFUS, Charles J.
SCANLAN, Paul William
BEDFORD
HOPKINS, David T.
BELMONT
DiGIOVANNI, Gaetano P.
“Guy”
OHANIAN, Elizabeth
“Bette”
BEVERLY
BURKE, Paul Thomas
BILLERICA
BUCKLEY, John J., Jr.
DOHERTY, John P.
SIMMONS, Robert J.
BOSTON
BRITT, Michael Anthony
GLOVER, Ronald Curtis
PERRY, Winsome M.
BRIGHTON
BURGESS, Warren “Skip”
BURLINGTON
BUCKLEY, John J., Jr.
HOPKINS, David T.
LOCICERO, Marie G.
NARDONE, Kathleen A.
CAMBRIDGE
BARRETT, Mary June
CRAGWELL, Leroy L.
JUDD, James L.,
CANTON
HOMANS, James Amory
Perkins
CHELMSFORD
BIONELLI, Mary F.
CHELSEA
CONWAY, Maureen F.
HANNABURY, Marie D.
MARTIN, Walter J., Jr.
CONCORD
DiGIOVANNI, Gaetano P.
“Guy”
B o s t o n
DEATHS
By city or town
FRAMINGHAM
DiSTEFANO, Rose
GLOVER, Ronald Curtis
PEABODY
GOLDSTEIN, Bennett E.
VIGLIOTTI, Lois M.
WESTON
FRANKLIN
HASENFUS, Charles J.
QUINCY
BRITT, Michael Anthony
PYNE, James D.
WESTWOOD
HULL
GUINEY, Mary T.
REVERE
CONWAY, Maureen F.
RIZZO, Maria G.
VIGLIOTTI, Lois M.
HYDE PARK
GUINEY, Mary T.
OWENS, Madeline L.
IPSWICH
AMUNDSEN, Maureen Ann ,
KINGSTON
MOORE, Theresa
LEXINGTON
ERICKSON, June Anderson
HOPKINS, David T.
LOCICERO, Marie G.
RANKIN, Louise Firth
LYNN
HANNABURY, Marie D.
OGAR, Catherine L.
FLEISCHER, Aaron
ASBRAND, Steven
WILMINGTON
NARDONE, Kathleen A.
SIMMONS, Robert J.
WOBURN
ROSLINDALE
OWENS, Madeline L.
BURGESS, Warren “Skip”
SAGAMORE
MARZILLI, Elizabeth G.
OHANIAN, Elizabeth
“Bette”
SALEM
RIZZO, Maria G.
SALISBURY
AMUNDSEN, Maureen Ann ,
RIZZO, Maria G.
SCITUATE
BURGESS, Warren “Skip”
MARZILLI, Elizabeth G.
LOWELL
DOHERTY, John P.
G l o b e
SHARON
GUINEY, Mary T.
OUT OF STATE
CALIFORNIA
GUINEY, Mary T.
CONNECTICUT
PHILBEN, Eleanor Frances
ERICKSON, June Anderson
Age 95, died Friday, June 17,
2016. Husband of
the late Joan Frances DuPrey Burke
of Boston. He was
a WWII decorated
military officer, most notably he
fought with General G. Patton
in The Battle of The Bulge. He
was a life long supporter of the
Republican National Committee. He is survived by his daughters and son-in-laws Kimberly
A. Begien and Julien F. Begien
of Wenham and Courtney A.
Mehm and Robert F. Mehm of
Geneva, Switzerland and South
Hamilton; Grandfather of Olivia L. Mehm and Maximilian R.
Mehm and Austin C. Begien. A
Funeral service will be held privately and he will be interred
in the family plot in Hamilton
Cemetery. Arrangements by the
Campbell Funeral Home, 525
Cabot Street, BEVERLY 01915.
In lieu of flowers, contributions
can be made to The Alzheimer
Association, Watertown, MA &
The Veterans Inc. Association
which serves veterans and their
families across America. Information, directions and condolences at
www.campbellfuneral.com.
87, of Needham, May 16, 2016.
Beloved wife of the late Alan
Erickson. She is survived by
daughter Kim Erickson Myers
and her husband James Myers
of Berwick, ME, John Erickson
and his wife Jeri Erickson of
Yarmouth ME, Martha Erickson
and her husband John Kepler
of Lexington MA and Bill Erickson and his wife Mary Ann
McCurdy Erickson of Ithaca NY.
She will be dearly missed by her
ten grandchildren, Nathan and
Jennifer Myers, Emily, Alex and
Peter Erickson, Alana and April
Kepler and Julie, Daniel and
Martha Erickson. Sister of the
late Betty Anderson Robinson.
Visiting hours will be held in
the Eaton Funeral Home, 1351
Highland Ave., NEEDHAM on
Saturday, June 25 from 4-6 PM.
A private family memorial celebrating her life will be held
in the future. Donations in lieu
of flowers may be sent to the
Alzheimer’s Association. (Alz.
org) Graduate of Needham
High School, Class of 1946 and
Middlebury College. Longtime
member and former President
of the Needham Garden Club.
June was a person who loved
to hear other’s life stories, and
even living with Alzheimer’s,
was known by the Staff at Briarwood Nursing Care Center as
the “Mother Theresa” for her
caring, kind words and gentle
touch. For obit, directions or to
share a memory of June, please
visit eatonfuneralhomes.com
STACEY, Marion E.
SOMERVILLE
BIONELLI, Mary F.
MARTIN, Walter J., Jr.
FLORIDA
ASBRAND, Steven
SOUTH BOSTON
PYNE, James D.
CONWAY, Maureen F.
MAYNARD
DiGIOVANNI, Gaetano P.
“Guy”
MARZILLI, Elizabeth G.
GISMONDI, William A.
STONEHAM
HOPKINS, David T.
“Rich”
MEDFORD
DOHERTY, John P.
GISMONDI, William A.
NARDONE, Kathleen A.
STACEY, Marion E.
STOUGHTON
ROSENBERG, Lester E.
82, of Revere, MA, passed away
in Boston on June 5, 2016.
Maureen was born in Revere
on February 3, 1934 to Frances
and Harold Parsons. She was
an avid reader and loved music. Mother of Susan Corea and
Husband Joseph of Pelham, NH,
Nancy Conway of Chelsea, MA,
Richard H. Conway (deceased)
and wife Leslie of Lewiston,
ME, Paul Conway of Revere MA,
Frank Conway and wife Maureen of Derry, NH, Maureen
Dingee and husband David of
Chicopee, MA. Grandmother
of 10. Great Grandmother of
6. Aunt of many nieces and
nephews. Maureen is survived
by sisters, Jean Gonzales of
Tewksbury, MA, Margeret Parsons of Haverhill, MA. Maureen
was predeceased by Richard H.
Conway (son), David Parsons,
Ella Gleitzman. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made in
Maureen’s name to: The Home
For Little Wanderers, 10 Guest
St., Boston, MA 02135. Private
services.
MELROSE
HANNABURY, Marie D.
RIESZ, Alda E.
VIGLIOTTI, Lois M.
MILLIS
PHILBEN, Eleanor Frances
MILTON
BARRETT, Mary June
NATICK
PHILBEN, Eleanor Frances
DEDHAM
HASENFUS, Charles J.
NEEDHAM
ERICKSON, June Anderson
HASENFUS, Charles J.
DOVER
CRUMP, Darlene
NEWTON
RICHARD, Steven Robert
EAST BOSTON
RIZZO, Maria G.
NORFOLK
CRUMP, Darlene
FOXBOROUGH
HASENFUS, Charles J.
NORTH END
RIZZO, Maria G.
AMUNDSEN, Maureen Ann
(MacKinnon),
Of Ipswich, June 21, 2016, the
beloved wife of the late Howard “Bud” Amundsen. Survived
by a daughter, Stephanie Johnson and her husband Michael
of Salisbury; three sons, Paul
Amundsen and his wife Jeanette of Ipswich, Mark Amundsen and his wife Lisa of Eliot,
ME, Erik Amundsen and his
wife Cindra of South Hampton, NH; thirteen grandchildren; five great grandchildren;
a brother Robert MacKinnon
CA; many nieces; nephews
and dear friends. She was the
mother to the late Bradley
Amundsen formerly of Ipswich
and sister of the late Carol Michaud formerly of Nashua, NH.
Her funeral will be held 8 am
Saturday, June 25,
from the
Whittier-Porter Funeral Home,
6 High Street, IPSWICH followed the celebration of a Funeral Mass of Christian Burial
at 9 am in Our Lady of Hope
Church, Linebrook Rd., Ipswich.
Family and friends are respectfully welcomed. Visiting hours
are Friday 4 to 8 pm. Memorial
contributions in her name may
be made to the charity of one’s
choice. For directions and or to
leave a condolence please visit
www.whittier-porter.com
SUDBURY
HANSBERRY, John J.
HANSBERRY, John J.
UXBRIDGE
PHILBEN, Eleanor Frances
MARTIN, Walter J., Jr.
Rogers & Hutchins Funeral Homes
Arlington & Cambridge
www.rogersfuneralhome.net
MAINE
AMUNDSEN, Maureen Ann ,
ERICKSON, June Anderson
WATERTOWN
BUCKLEY, John J., Jr.
HOPKINS, David T.
KARAKASHIAN, Haig
OHANIAN, Elizabeth
“Bette”
RICHARD, Steven Robert
AMUNDSEN, Maureen Ann ,
WELLESLEY
ERICKSON, June Anderson
WEST ROXBURY
GUINEY, Mary T.
PHILBEN, Eleanor Frances
DEATHS
BARRETT, Mary June
Of Milton, formerly of Cambridge, June 21, 2016. Beloved
daughter of the late Joseph
and Catherine(Hayes). Cousin
of Jean Margaret Godfrey and
many other cousins. Also survived by her beloved friends,
the Sisters of Saint Joseph. Funeral Mass in St. Peter’s Church,
100 Concord Ave., Cambridge,
Friday at 10am. Relatives and
friends kindly invited. Mary
was a dedicated First Grade
Teacher for over 40 years at the
Martin Luther King School in
Cambridge. She was a pioneer
in her field of education, opening new areas of thought and
development for her students.
Online guestbook
www.brownandhickey.com
Brown & Hickey Funeral Home
617-484-2534
617-547-1500
BIONELLI, Mary F. (Shields)
Born in Sweden, currently of
Arlington, formerly of Andover
passed away on June 21st, 2016.
She was the loving mother of
Victoria and the late Peter Arthur, Beloved mother-in-law of
Thomas Cloherty and Jennifer
Arthur, cherished grandmother
of Jeffrey Arthur, Jane, Eva and
Peter Cloherty, former wife of
Michael Arthur and sister of
Marianne, Margareta, Christina and the late Elisabeth. She
is also survived by many nieces,
nephews, and other loving
relatives and friends, in Sweden, England and the U.S. Cia
worked for many years as a visiting occupational therapist at
many regional nursing homes.
The family is asking that in lieu
of flowers donations be made
to J.F.C.S. Parkinson’s Family
Support Program, 1430 Main
St., Waltham MA 02451 where
Cia was a member of the Tremble Clefs singing group as well
as the dance and drumming
groups. Visiting hours will be
held at the Rogers & Hutchins
Funeral Home, 292 Massachusetts Ave., ARLINGTON on Sunday, June 26th, 2016 from 1:00
to 3:00 pm.
ILLINOIS
WALTHAM
BUCKLEY, John J., Jr.
GISMONDI, William A.
HANSBERRY, John J.
KARAKASHIAN, Haig
RICHARD, Steven Robert
Whittier-Porter Funeral Home
Ipswich, Massachusetts
ARTHUR, Cecilia “Cia”
(Sterky)
GEORGIA
WAKEFIELD
OGAR, Catherine L.
RIESZ, Alda E.
MIDDLEBORO
MOORE, Theresa
DEATHS
STACEY, Marion E.
83, a longtime resident of
Chelmsford passed away on
June 18, 2016 at Lowell General Hospital. She was the loving wife of Emery W. Bionelli,
Sr. of Chelmsford who survives
her. Born in Somerville, MA
on December 25, 1932, she
was the daughter of the late
Thomas and Josephine (McCarthy) Shields.Mary enjoyed
collecting dolls and knitting.
She followed the Boston Bruins
and was an avid New York Yankees fan. Being a grandmother
brought so much joy to her
life. In addition to her beloved
husband, Mary is survived by
her children and their spouses,
Emery W. Bionelli, Jr. and his
wife, Ruth of Lowell, Steven V.
Bionelli and his wife, Deborah
of Billerica, Nancy J. (Bionelli)
Eaton of Dunedin, FL, Richard
E. Bionelli and his wife, Tammy
of Madison, VA; a sister-in-law,
Norma Howard of San Marino, CA; 9 grandchildren and
4 great-grandchildren.Funeral
Services will be held privately.
For those who wish, donations
in loving memory of Mary may
be made to: Lowell General
Hospital Cancer Center, 295
Varnum Avenue, Lowell, MA
01854. Arrangements entrusted to Blake Funeral Home, 24
Worthen Street, CHELMSFORD,
MA 01824. For condolences,
visit blakefuneralhome.com
Blake Funeral Home
978-256-5251
KALAGHER, Richard F.
“Rich”
NARDONE, Kathleen A.
NEW HAMPSHIRE
DOHERTY, John P.
NARDONE, Kathleen A.
NEW YORK
ERICKSON, June Anderson
OUT OF COUNTRY
SWEDEN
ARTHUR, Cecilia “Cia”
DEATHS
BRITT, Michael Anthony
Age 59, of Boston, MA passed
away on Thursday, June 16,
2016 surrounded by family and
close friends. He was born on
September 20, 1956 in Boston,
MA, son of Vivian Joyce West
and the late Charlie Poole Britt.
He was the beloved husband
of Sandra Britt, his wife of 24
years. Michael is preceded in
death by his brothers, Dana
and Troy. Michael is survived
by his children, Aqueela Culbreath, Gwendowlyn Michelle
Stinson, Kissi Stinson, Christina
Maryland, Brandon Maryland;
his five grandchildren, Kayshell
Stinson Henderson, Kisshawna
King, My Asia Aitoro, Nijah
Baker, Dominic Culbreath; his
mother Vivian Joyce West and
his siblings, Deborah McIntosh,
Charles Britt, Joseph (Debra)
Britt. Cheryl Whayne, Jada,
Robyn, Corey and a host of
nieces, nephews, other relatives and friends. There will be
a Viewing on Saturday, June
25, 2016 from 10:00 to 11:00am
followed by Funeral Service at
11:00 O’clock at Twelfth Baptist Church, 150 Warren Street,
Roxbury, MA
02119. Interment: Cedar Grove Cemetery,
Dorchester, MA. Funeral arrangements
entrusted
to
Riley-Antoine Funeral Home.
For online condolences visit
www.
rileyantoinefuneralhome.com
BUCKLEY, John J., Jr.
Of Waltham, June 21, 2016.
Husband of the late
Vivian M. (Brown)
Buckley. Father of
Brenda L. Cahoon
and her husband,
Christopher, of Burlington and,
John J. Buckley, III of Billerica.
Grandfather of Jaime, Joshua
and Jason Cahoon and Brianna
and Brenden Buckley. Brother
of Genevieve Wilcox of Abington and the late Martha Hallissey, William Buckley, Elizabeth
Clark and Alice Hudson. Also
survived by many nieces and
nephews. Family and friends
will
honor
and
remember
John’s life by gathering for calling hours in The Joyce Funeral
Home, 245 Main Street (Rte.
20), Waltham on Friday, June
24th from 4 to 8 p.m. and again
at 9 a.m. on Saturday morning
before leaving in procession
to Our Lady Comforter of the
Afflicted Church, 880 Trapelo
Road, Waltham where his Funeral Mass will be celebrated
at 10 a.m. Burial will follow
in Newton Cemetery, Newton.
Memorial donations may be
made to Seasons Hospice and
Palliative Care, 20 Mall Rd.,
Burlington, MA 01803 or to
Atria Longmeadow, 42 Mall
Rd., Burlington, MA 01803.
For complete obituary, guestbook and directions please visit
www.JoyceFuneralHome.com
CRAGWELL, Leroy L.
Of Cambridge, Fri., June 17.
Devoted husband of Myrtle
(Wong). Beloved brother of
Melbourne E. Cragwell and
his wife Florine and the late
Olivia A. Morse. Beloved uncle
of Melbourne Jr., Kevin, Simon
Gray, James Morse, Jr., Pamela
Jean Morse, Sherine Pulloch,
and Lisa Shepard. Great Uncle
of Thompson. He also leaves
a host of other relatives and
friends. Funeral Service Mon.,
June 27, 10 a.m. at Christian
Mission Holiness Church, 789
Main St., Cambridge. Visiting hours Sun., June 26, 2-5
p.m. at the A.J. Spears Funeral Home, 124 Western Ave.,
CAMBRIDGE. Masonic Services
during the visiting hours. Late
member
of
Castle
William
Lodge #11, Board of Trustees
Mass Maritime Academy, Chair
of the African Heritage Trail
Committee, and many other
organizations. In lieu of flowers please make donations in
his name to the Christian Mission Holiness Church, 789 Main
St., Cambridge, MA 02139
A. J. Spears Funeral Home
Cambridge (617) 876-4047
53, of Tampa FL, passed away
suddenly on June 6, 2016. Steve
grew up in Westwood, but as
all who knew him will attest,
he was a Southern boy at heart.
He made Florida his permanent
home after graduating from
FSU in 1984. He loved sports,
gardening, cooking a great
meal, and all things Seminole.
Most of all, he loved being a
dad. His sons were the joys of
his life, and he took the greatest of pride in them. He will be
missed by all for his quick wit
and big heart. Steve is survived
by his sons, Justin and Jackson,
and his former wife, Sonia. He
is also survived by his mother
Claire (Scotton) of Westwood,
MA, and his sister Deborah of
Boston. He was the son of the
late Charles Asbrand. He will
be forever missed by a large extended family of aunts, uncles,
cousins, nieces, and nephews.
Friends and family are invited
to attend a Christian Mass of
Burial on Saturday, June 25, at
10am at St. Margaret Mary’s
Church in Westwood. Interment following at New Westwood
Cemetery.
Reception
immediately after at Fox Hill
Village, 10 Longwood Drive,
Westwood.
Holden-Dunn-Lawler
www.hdlfuneralhome.net
To submit a paid death
notice for publication in
The Boston Globe and
on Boston.com,
contact your funeral director,
visit boston.com/deathnotices
or call 617.929.1500.
To submit an obituary for
editorial consideration,
please send the information and a photo by e-mail to
[email protected], or
information by fax to
617.929.3186. If you need
further assistance about
a news obituary, please
call 617.929.3400.
To access death notices and
obituaries online, visit
boston.com/obituaries.
BURGESS, Warren “Skip”
Of Brighton and Woburn on
June 21,2016. Husband of Lillian (Bruno). Devoted father
of Frank M. of Scituate, and
Scott E. of Florida. Visiting
hours Friday June 24th from
4-8 pm. Funeral Mass Saturday in St Anthony Church at
9 am. For more information
please
visit
www.lehmanreen.com Complete notice
to appear on Friday, June 24,
2016.
CRUMP, Darlene
78, of Norfolk, MA, formerly of
Dover, MA, passed away Sunday, June 19th with her family
& close friends by her side. Beloved wife of Louis A. Crump.
Mother of Kelli Crump Capozzoli & her husband Chris of
Millville, MA & William Crump
& his wife Elizabeth Gringeri of
Norfolk, MA. Grandmother to
Madeline G. Crump, Katherine
G. Crump & William A. Crump.
A Celebration of Life Mass will
be held on Tuesday, June 28th
at 10 AM at the Most Precious
Blood Church, 30 Centre Street
in Dover, MA. In lieu of flowers, memorial gifts may be
made in her name to the David
Meador Scholarship Fund of
The New England Club Managers Association - www.necma.
org OR to The Thinking Moms
Revolution at www.teamtmr.
org. For additional information, tributes and guest book
please visit
www.duckett-waterman.com.
Duckett-J.S. Waterman & Sons
Sudbury, MA 978/443-5777 781/235-4110
FUNERAL
SERVICES
SERVICES
Affordable Cremation
1310 complete
617 782 1000
Lehman Reen & McNamara
Funeral Home
www.lehmanreen.com
Serving Greater Boston
500 Canterbury St.
Boston, MA 02131
617-524-1036
www.stmichaelcemetery.com
LOCAL UNION 103, I.B.E.W.
We regret to announce the
death of Brother John J. Buckley, Jr. (Ret), who was a member of the I.B.E.W. for 69 years.
Visiting hours will be held
4-8PM on Friday at the Joyce
Funeral Home, 245 Main St.,
Waltham. A Funeral Mass will
be celebrated at 10AM on Saturday at Our Lady’s Church,
Waltham.
Chuck Monahan
Financial Secretary
94, of Concord died Monday
June 20, 2016 at his
Concord home. He
was the beloved,
devoted and faithful
husband
of
65 years of the late Teresa E.
(Caruso) DiGiovanni, who died
in November 2011, and the father of Mary Ann of Belmont,
Mildred of Hyannis, Teresa
MacNutt of Belmont, Debra
Ann King and her husband Stephen of Andover, Elaine Canina
of Waltham, Ellen of NYC and
James of Concord. He is also
survived by eleven grandchildren; ten great-grandchildren
and was the brother of Rocco
and Silvio, both of Belmont,
Anthony of Lexington, Anna
Maguire of Belmont, Mary
DeStefano of Belmont and the
late Louis, Joseph, Vincent and
Charles. A graduate of Belmont
High School, he later received
a BA degree from Bentley College. Mr. DiGiovanni was a veteran of WW II in the U.S. Army,
landing on Omaha Beach in
Normandy, France on D-Day,
June 6, 1944.
Amongst his
many military awards received
were the Distinguished Unit
Badge and the Arrowhead
medal in recognition of being
one of the first soldiers landing on enemy held territory. In
2015 he was awarded by the
French Consul General on behalf of the French government,
a Chevalier de la Legion d’
Honneur, France’s highest civil
and military distinction, for his
courage during the Normandy
campaign in June 1944. He was
the founder and owner since
1964 of Period Realty Trust of
Concord. He was also the developer of Wedgewood Common,
Concord Crossing and Warner
Woods, all in Concord, amongst
other properties. In 1975 he received an award from the Concord Bi-Centennial Committee
for housing honored guests in
his properties on Bartlett Hill
Road during the April 19th celebration. One of the founders
of Concord Business Partnership, he was also a long time
member of Rotary Club of Concord where he was recipient of
the Paul Harris Fellow Award.
He was a former Treasurer of
Concord Lions Club, and was
awarded 1992 Business Person
of the Year by Concord Chamber of Commerce. In 1960, he
was one of the founding members of the Lexington Lodge of
Elks.He was a major contributor to many philanthropic endeavors including the Beede
Center in Concord, the “Concord Open” Golf Tournament
through the Recreation Commission, and the Teresa E. DiGiovanni Scholarship with the
Concord-Carlisle
Scholarship
Fund. Also was a long time contributor to Emerson Hospital
with the new Hospital entrance
recently dedicated to his late
wife Teresa, and to the Concord Free Public Library with
the new Sudbury Road Library
entrance also dedicated to his
late wife. He was a co-sponsor
of the Concord Fireworks display put on for the Town for
both Year 2000 celebration and
the Town’s 375th birthday celebration in 2010. Visiting hours
at the Dee Funeral Home, 27
Bedford Street, Concord Center will be held on Thursday
June 23rd from 3 to 8 pm. Funeral and burial are private.
Concord’s town flag will fly at
half-staff on Friday June 24th
in recognition of Mr. DiGiovanni’s service to his country
during World War II. Donations
in his memory may be made to
Emerson Hospital Foundation,
c/o Development Office, 133
ORNAC, Concord, MA 01742.
To share a remembrance in Mr.
DiGiovanni’s guest book please
visit deefuneralhome.com
DiSTEFANO, Rose
Lehman Reen & McNamara Funeral Home
617-782-1000
Brighton
ANNOUNCEMENTS
DiGIOVANNI, Gaetano P.
“Guy”
Dee Funeral Home of Concord
978-369-2030
Caring for families since 1868
$
ASBRAND, Steven
DEATHS
BURKE, Paul Thomas
MALDEN
DOHERTY, John P.
VERRENGIA, Lucy R.
KALAGHER, Richard F.
T H U R S D A Y, J U N E 2 3 , 2 0 1 6
DEATHS
CANNIFF MONUMENT
(617) 323-3690
800-439-3690 • 617-876-9110
531 Cummings Highway, Roslindale
583 Mt. Auburn Street, Cambridge
MON-FRI 9-9; SAT 9-5, SUNDAY 12-5
86, a longtime resident of
Framingham, MA, passed away
suddenly on Monday June 20,
2016 at Metro West Hospital in
Framingham. Born on October
7, 1929 in Brooklyn, NY, she
was the daughter of the late
Michael and Angelina DeCarlo
and beloved wife of 33 years
to the late Carl DiStefano, who
passed away in 1982. She lived
in Brooklyn NY for many years
until moving to Framingham
in 1955. She leaves three children, Patrick DiStefano of Las
Vegas, NV, Barbara DiStefano
of Southborough, MA, Thomas
DiStefano of Orlando, FL, one
grandson, Ryan DiStefano and
many nieces, nephews and
cousins. She was predeceased
by sisters, Mary Valtino and
Louise DeCarlo and brothers,
Anthony, Salvatore and Vincent DeCarlo.
Rose enjoyed
many special and memorable
gatherings with family both locally as well as in the New York,
San Pedro, CA and Las Vegas,
NV areas. Rose worked for
ten years with the Juniper Hill
School Lunch Program as well
as many years in child care for
several families, who she cared
for dearly. She was a dedicated member of the St. George
Catholic Church and a member
of the parishes’ senior group,
as well as a past member of
both the Framingham Lions
and Elks clubs. Rose was a very
kind and special person who
had many wonderful friends
and really enjoyed spending
time with them and attending various social events. She
was a very caring, thoughtful and charitable person and
was known to have a soft spot
in her heart for children, who
brought her much enjoyment.
Family will be greeting visitors
on Friday June 24th from 4- 8
PM at the McCarthy, McKinney
and Lawler Funeral Home, 11
Lincoln Street, FRAMINGHAM.
A mass of Christian burial will
be held on Saturday June 25th,
2016 at 10:00 at St. George
Catholic Church, 74 School
Street, Framingham (Saxonville). Directions and guestbook at www.mccarthyfh.com.
Donations in her memory may
be made to St. George Church,
American Heart Association,
American Cancer Society.
DOHERTY, John P.
Of Derry, NH, June 18. Beloved
husband of Rosalia (D’Ampolo)
Doherty. Devoted father of
Justin (18), Alyssa Grace (14),
and Sophia Theresa (8), all
of Derry, NH. Cherished son
of the late Theresa (Boisvert)
Doherty, John K. Doherty and
his wife Annamarie of Billerica.
Son-in-law of Gino and Grace
D’Ampolo of Derry, NH. Brother of Nancy Doherty and her
husband Terry of Lowell. Also
survived by dear friend Lanie
Cantorino, and many more loving relatives and friends. Funeral from the Dello Russo Funeral
Home, 306 Main St., MEDFORD,
Monday, June 27, at 10:30 AM
followed by a funeral mass
celebrated in St. Francis Of Assisi Church, 441 Fellsway West,
Medford, at 11:30 AM. Relatives and friends are respectfully invited to attend. Visiting
hours Sunday 4 - 9 PM. Services
will conclude with burial at
Holy Cross Cemetery, Malden.
In lieu of flowers contributions
may be made online at www.
gofundme.com/2aawuzpg. To
leave a message of condolence
visit www.dellorusso.net.
Dello Russo Family Funeral Homes
Medford-Woburn-Wilmington
Eaton Funeral Home
781-444-0201
FLEISCHER, Aaron
Of Weston, MA, on June 21,
2016.
Beloved
husband
of
Lois
(Bloom)
Fleischer.
Devoted father of
Andrew
Fleischer
and his wife Lauren, Daniel
Fleischer and his wife Valerie,
Elizabeth Rodman and her husband Craig, and the late Gary
Fleischer and his late wife Jennifer. Dear grandfather of Jill
Henley, Douglas, Alison, Jayme,
Robyn Adelman, Joseph, Jordan. Loving great grandfather
of Jaelyn, and Avery Adelman.
Dear brother of David Fleischer.
Services are private. Memorial
observance at Harnish House,
Village Road, Weston, Thursday, June 23, 3-5pm and 7-9pm.
In lieu of flowers remembrances may be made to a charity of
your choice.
Brezniak-Rodman Funeral Directors
brezniakrodman.com
“Family Owned”
GISMONDI, William A.
73, of Venice, FL, formerly of
Waltham, MA, peacefully passed away on Saturday, June 18, 2016 at the
Moffitt Cancer Center in
Tampa, FL, after a brief
illness. He is survived by his loving wife of 27 years, Paula Murphy-Gismondi, of Venice, FL
and formerly of Waltham, MA,
his faithful puppy, Riley, his
brother and sister-in-law, Alfred and Jeanne Gismondi of
Chapel Hill, NC, his sister-in-law
Alice Toomey of Medford, MA,
and his brother-in-law Richard
Murphy of Cohasset, MA. He
leaves
two
nieces,
Carol
D’Alessandro of Essex Fells, NJ
and Jennifer Mullahy of Cary,
NC and three nephews, Michael
Toomey of North Easton, MA,
Richard Toomey of Medford,
MA, and Christopher Toomey
of Erie, CO. Mr. Gismondi was a
proud veteran of the United
States Navy, serving aboard the
USS Wasp in the Caribbean during the Cuban Missile Crisis. He
later served as the chief air traffic control officer at the Los Angeles
International
Airport.
Visitation will be Friday, June
24 from 8:30 to 9:30 AM at the
Beals-Geake-Magliozzi Funeral
Home located at 29 Governors
Avenue, MEDFORD, MA, followed by a graveside service at
the Oak Grove Cemetery located at 230 Playstead Road, Medford, MA, at 10 AM. In lieu of
flowers, donations may be
made to the Moffitt Cancer
Center in Tampa, FL, or the
Sarasota Humane Society in
Sarasota, FL. For additional information, please visit, www.
magliozzifuneralhome.com.
GLOVER, Ronald Curtis, Esq.
Was born on December 4, 1951
in
Boston,
Massachusetts. He made his transition from this life to
Heaven
on
Thursday
June 16, 2016 at age 64.
Ronald graduated from St. Joseph’s High School in Danvers,
Massachusetts in 1969. Glover
graduated from Brandeis University with a Bachelors degree
in Political Science in May 1973.
After
graduating
from
Brandeis University, and during
law school, Glover worked as a
sales representative for AT&T.
Ronald graduated from Suffolk
University Law School in May
1978. Ron served as a Senior
Trial Attorney with the U.S. Department of Labor in the Office of the Solicitor. Ronald
then moved on to the Legal
Department at Digital Equipment Corporation, where he
worked as Corporate Legal
Counsel, and was promoted to
HR, later holding a variety of
HR management and executive
positions. Ron served as Vice
President, HR, Global IT Outsourcing at Compaq Computer
after Compaq acquired Digital.
Next, he served as Vice President, HR at i2 Technologies,
before joining IBM in 2003. At
IBM, Ron Glover served as the
Vice President, HR, Integrated
Supply Chain, and subsequently became Vice President, HR,
IBM Global Services-Americas
(and Global Vice President of
Diversity), until he retired in
2014. He will be missed by everyone who knew him and
whose
hearts
he
touched
around the world. Ronald Curtis Glover leaves behind to
cherish his tremendous legacy,
his loving wife of 41 years, Gail
Glover; his three daughters,
Nicola (Chad) Glover Horton,
Camille Glover, and Corinn
Glover; two siblings, a sister,
Jean Glover and a brother,
Mark Glover; three grandchildren, Amani, Grayson, and
Noah; and a host of aunts, uncles, cousins, nieces, nephews
and extended family, friends
and colleagues. Funeral services will be held Saturday, June
25, 2016 at 12PM at the Greater
Framingham
Community
Church, 44 Franklin Street,
Framingham.
Interment will
be private. Calling hours will
precede
the
service
from
10AM-12PM at the church. For
additional information, tributes and guestbook please visit: Duckett-Waterman.com
GOLDSTEIN, Bennett E.
Of
Peabody. A well known
and
loved
musician locally. Entered
into rest June 21,
2016 at the age of
89 years. Beloved
husband of the late Shirley
(King) Goldstein. Dear son of
the late Harry and Fanny (Komachevsky)
Goldstein.
Loving brother of the late Rose
Gould, Hyman Goldstein, Sara
Genne, Samuel Goldstein and
Eliott Goldstein. Dear uncle
of Laura, Judy, Marsha, David,
Betsy, Rob and Beth. Adored
companion of Ethel Wallace.
WW II U.S. Navy Veteran. Services at Stanetsky-Hymanson
Memorial Chapel, 10 Vinnin
St., SALEM, on Friday, June 24,
2016 at 12:30 PM. Interment at
Pride of Lynn Cemetery, Lynn.
Memorial observance will be
held privately. In lieu of flowers, expressions of sympathy in
his memory may be donated to
the charity of one’s choice.
Stanetsky Memorial Chapel
781-581-2300
www.stanetskyhymansonsalem.com
T h e
T H U R S D A Y, J U N E 2 3 , 2 0 1 6
DEATHS
DEATHS
B o s t o n
DEATHS
G l o b e
DEATHS
B7
DEATHS
DEATHS
GUINEY, Mary T. (Kelly)
MARTIN, Walter J., Jr.
PERRY, Winsome M.
RIESZ, Alda E. (Hodgdon)
Of Hyde Park, June 20, 2016.
Beloved wife of the late John
J. Guiney. Loving mother of
Marie Sullivan of Sharon, John
J. Jr. of CA, Thomas of Hull and
the late Dorothy Gill and Paul
Guiney. Devoted grandmother of Dawn O’Toole, Jeff and
Colleen Sullivan and Brittany
Guiney. Great-grandmother of
Aidan and Gavin O’Toole and
Cailyn Sullivan. Visitation will
be held on Friday, June 24th,
from 12pm – 1pm, followed
by a Funeral Service at 1pm at
the William J. Gormley Funeral
Home, 2055 Centre St., WEST
ROXBURY. Relatives and friends
invited. Interment St. Joseph
Cemetery. For guestbook and
directions please visit
www.gormleyfuneral.com.
Of Somerville, June 22, 2016 at
age 95.
Husband
of the late Ruth
(Janeek)
Dente
Martin.
Beloved
step-father of Edmund Dente and his wife Judith of Somerville, Marguerite
Dente Halford and
her husband Barry, Malcolm Dente all
of IL. Brother of the late Ruth
Vanaria and Virginia Natola. A
Prayer Service will be conducted
at the Cardinal Cushing Pavilion Chelsea Soldier’s Home, 91
Crest Ave., Chelsea, on Friday,
June 24 at 9:30 A.M. Visitation
will precede the Service from
8:30 - 9:30 A.M. Interment will
follow at Holy Cross Cemetery
in Malden. Late WWII US Army
Air Corps Veteran.
Retired
security guard at the former
Polaroid Corporation in Cambridge. Donations in Walter’s
memory may be made to the
Chelsea Soldier’s Home, Patient
Recreation Fund, 91 Crest Ave.,
Chelsea, MA 02150. Funeral arrangements entrusted to the
Carafa Family Funeral Home in
CHELSEA.
Of Boston, June 18, 2016. Wife
of Ernel D. Perry of Dorchester. Devoted mother of Patrick
and wife Pamela Perry of Richmond, VA, Steven Perry and
his wife Sharisse of Dorchester . Beloved
Grandmother
of Parker, Sophia and Summer
Perry. Loving sister
to Osra
Noble of Washington DC and
Hyacinth Black of Jamaica. She
also leaves a host of family
and friends. Funeral Mass Saturday at 10AM at The Parish
of All Saints, 209 Ashmont St.,
Dorchester. Interment Cedar
Grove Cemetery, Dorchester.
To post a sympathy message
please visit
www.DavisofBoston.com
A lifelong resident of Arlington, June 21st, 2016 at age 84.
Devoted wife of the late Arthur
P. Riesz. Loving step-mother of
Gail Riesz, Ronald Riesz and his
wife Teresa. Cherished grandmother of Michelle Ferguson
and her husband Anthony,
Matthew Riesz and his wife
Lisa. Adored great-grandmother of Nicholas Riesz. Visiting
hours will be held at the Rogers & Hutchins Funeral Home,
292 Massachusetts Ave., Arlington on Friday, June 24th, 2016
from 10:00 am to 12:00 pm,
with a prayer service to follow
in the funeral home. Burial will
be at Mt. Pleasant Cemetery
in Arlington. In lieu of flowers
the family is asking that donations be made in her memory
to Compassionate Care Hospice
of MA, 800 West Cummings
Park, Suite 3400, Woburn, MA
01801.
William J. Gormley Funeral Service
617-323-8600
HANNABURY, Marie D.
(LeBlanc)
Formerly of Melrose, 6/20/16.
Wife of the late Francis and
mother of Edward, James &
David. Visitation @ Gately Funeral Home, Melrose, Friday
6/24/16 from 4-7PM. Saturday
9AM Mass @ St. Mary’s Church.
Info @ 781-665-1949 or
www.gatelyfh.com
HANSBERRY, John J.
86, of Boston, formerly of Dunwoody GA and Sudbury, MA
died June 21, 2016. John was
born and raised in Waltham,
MA, the son of Doris (Sherman)
and Clarence Hansberry.
John was a 1947 graduate of
Waltham High School where
he lettered in Football, Hockey
and Baseball. He received his
B.S.B.A. from Boston College
where he helped to make “eastern collegiate hockey what it
is today” as a 3 year starter as
one of the lauded varsity “Kelleymen”.
John went on to serve a 4 year
tour of duty as a proud Marine
in Korea and Japan.
Mr. Hansberry enjoyed a 50
year career in hotel development and management which
afforded him the opportunity
to travel the world and live in
Cleveland, Washington, D.C.,
New York City, Boston, San
Francisco and Atlanta.
John
enjoyed managing and developing properties for Hotel Corporation of America, Sonesta,
Sheraton, Omni, Hyatt and The
Ritz Carlton.
John was a talented artist who
excelled at sculpting and drawing, enjoyed tennis with his
dear friends at the Dunwoody
Country Club and was active
in his local parish and with the
Veterans of Foreign Wars.
John’s love of athletics was lifelong and he was able to share
it with the Lincoln-Sudbury and
Georgia Tech students whom
he coached in ice hockey.
Predeceased by his wife of 36
years, Anne Jane Kelley, John
leaves behind a brother Joe of
Scituate, sister and brother in
law Mary (Kelley) & Jim Corr of
Boston, and a sister in law Linda Kelley of Assonet. John also
leaves five beloved nephews
and nieces; Shawn (Christine),
Beth, Lynn (Jim), Joe (Anne),
& Michael, as well as 10 great
nephews and nieces whom he
adored. John also leaves behind his dear friend Eileen Fox.
A Funeral mass will be celebrated at 9:00 AM on Saturday
June 25, 2016 at The Parish of
St. Ignatius of Loyola 28 Commonwealth Ave., Chestnut Hill,
MA. Memorial gifts in Mr. Hansberry’s memory may be made
to his Veterans of Foreign Wars
Dunwoody Post #10822 , PO
Box 889052, Atlanta GA 30356
HOMANS, James A.
James Amory Perkins Homans,
88, of Canton, Massachusetts,
Jimmy to his friends, died at
dawn on June 16th after a
brief illness. He is survived by
his wife of 28 years, Yvonne,
three sons from his first marriage, James, John and Sam,
seven grandchildren, Michael,
Catherine,
Daniel,
Caroline,
Charles, Stewart and Camilla,
and two stepchildren, Genevieve and Henry. Born at home
near Blue Hill in Canton, he attended Noble and Greenough,
Harvard College and Harvard
Law School, then served in
the Army in postwar Japan.
There he married his first wife,
Phoebe, with whom he raised
a family and remained friends
until her death. He had a long
legal career as a partner at
Peabody & Arnold in Boston
and also served as steward of
Homans Associates, the commercial
insulation
business
founded by his father. Named
for an ancestor who was killed
in the Civil War, he lived by the
moral and aesthetic code of his
Yankee forbears. The youngest
of five children, he was a loving brother, husband, father,
stepfather, and grandfather as
well as an attentive uncle to his
thirteen nieces and nephews.
In his later years he found deep
satisfaction in his role as family patriarch. He doted on his
dogs, who were inseparable
companions. A witty, compassionate, scrupulously fair man,
he was a lifelong supporter of
liberal causes and social justice who quietly helped those
around him in times of need.
His lifelong stutter was a challenge he surmounted every
day. He had many avocations,
gardening, music, golf, reading, sailing and Boston sports
among them. After his retirement, oil painting became his
consuming
occupation.
The
roughhewn beauty of the settings of his Ponkapoag home
and family cabin on Martha’s
Vineyard informed and inspired his art, a vivid vision of
the Massachusetts world that
had formed him and that he
loved all his life. Funeral services private. To sign guest book
see:
Dockrayandthomasfuneralhome.com
781-828-0811
HOPKINS, David T.
Of Bedford, June 21. Survived by
his wife, Elise (Cooper), three children,
Kimberly
Newton
of Stoneham, Beth
Wry and her husband, Steven of Norton and Eric
Hopkins and his wife, Darlene
of Burlington, seven grandchildren, Jeffrey and Jessica Newton, Gregory, Jillian and Bradford Wry and Emily and Evan
Hopkins. Predeceased by his
siblings Thelma Westlake, John
Hopkins,
Eleanor
MacLeod,
Richard, Bradford and Carolyn
Hopkins. Funeral service at the
Lutheran Church of the Savior,
426 Davis Rd., (Corner of Rt.
62) Bedford, on Mon., June 27,
at 11:00 A.M. Visitation at the
Bedford Funeral Home, 167
Great Rd., BEDFORD, on Sun.,
June 26, from 2:00 to 6:00 P.M.
In lieu of flowers, memorial
contributions may be made to
the Central Food Ministry, Inc.,
370 West Sixth St., Lowell, MA
01850. For obituary and directions visit www.bedfordfuneralhome.com
KALAGHER, Richard F. “Rich”
Of Bonita Springs, FL. and
Wells, ME. Died suddenly on
June 15, 2016 held by the love
of his family. He was born in
Fitchburg
Massachusetts
on
April 14, 1947, the son of Francis and Jeannette “Jint” Fraser
Kalagher.
A prominent businessman, Rich
was the Founder, Chief Executive Officer and Board Chairman of First Eastern Mortgage
and First Federal Savings Bank
of Boston. He began his long
career in banking at Charlestown Savings, now New World
Bank, and subsequently became a Vice President with
Warren Five Cent Savings Bank.
In 1983, he formed and incorporated First Eastern Mortgage and in 1989 completed
the acquisition of First Federal
Savings Bank of Boston. Dick’s
unwavering perseverance and
ethical practices formed strong
institutions and garnered the
respect and admiration of his
employees, many in his employ
for 25 years or longer.
Respected by his peers, he was
well known in the Massachusetts banking community. Over
the years, he served in leadership roles on the Fannie Mae
Regional Advisory Board, the
New England League of Savings Institutions, and was a past
President of the Massachusetts
Mortgage Bankers Association.
He was a graduate of the University of Massachusetts Lowell
and he served in the United
States Navy. An avid golfer,
for many years he played golf
daily. Rich enjoyed long-time
friendships with many at: Vesper Country Club in Lowell,
MA, Cape Arundel Golf in Kennebunkport and Old Marsh
Country Club in Wells, Maine,
and Pelican’s Nest Golf in Bonita Springs, Florida.
Formerly of Andover, Rich and
his wife of 47 years, Paulette
St.Onge Kalagher, made their
home together in recent years
in Wells, Maine and Bonita
Springs, Florida. He is also survived by his daughter Kellie
Jeanne Lally married to a man
very special to Rich, John Lally,
and their son Richard Patrick
Lally of Andover, MA; and his
son, R. Scott Kalagher of Haverhill, MA. He is survived also
by two brothers-in-law: Blair
St.Onge and Robert St.Onge
both of Texas, three aunts and
many cousins.
At the family’s request, private
services have been held. Those
wishing to make a contribution in honor of Rich are asked
to consider: Wounded Warrior
Project, 4899 Belfort Road Suite
300, Jacksonville, FL. 32256 or
online at:
woundedwarriorproject.org
J. A. Healy Sons Funeral Home
57 North Main Street
Westford, MA 01886
978-692-6502
www.healyfuneralhome.com
KARAKASHIAN, Haig
Of Waltham, formerly of Watertown, June 21, 2016. Beloved son of the late Hovsep
and Lucy (Samuelian) Karakashian. Loving brother of the
late Armen. Haig is also survived by many loving cousins
and friends. Funeral service at
Saint James Armenian Church,
465 Mount Auburn Street,
Watertown, on Monday, June
27 at 11:00 a.m. Relatives and
friends are kindly invited to
attend. Visiting hours will be
held at the Aram Bedrosian
Funeral Home, 558 Mount Auburn Street, WATERTOWN, on
Monday morning from 9:3010:30, immediately prior to
the church service. In lieu of
flowers, memorial gifts may be
made to Saint James Armenian
Church. Interment at Ridgelawn Cemetery, Watertown.
JUDD, James L.,
HASENFUS, Charles J.
Of Dedham, June 21, 2016. Beloved husband of
the late Marian E.
(Metcalf) Hasenfus.
Devoted father of
James
C.
Hasenfus and his husband William
Thompson of Bennington, VT,
Kathleen M. Black and her husband James of Attleboro, John
T. Hasenfus and his wife Laurie
of Northridge, CA, Diane M.
Ruhl and her husband David
of Foxboro, Joseph S. Hasenfus
and his wife Maureen of Attleboro, Charles J. Hasenfus Jr. and
his wife Melissa of Franklin, and
the late Michael Hasenfus. Also
survived by 13 grandchildren
and 1 great-granddaughter.
Brother of John Hasenfus of
Needham and the late Margaret Hamilton, George Hasenfus,
Robert Hasenfus, Bertha Drew,
Catherine Fitzpatrick, Marion
Doherty, and Eleanor Antherson. Funeral from the George F.
Doherty & Sons Wilson-Cannon
Funeral Home, 456 High St.,
DEDHAM, Saturday, June 25 at
8am followed by a Funeral Mass
in St. Mary Church, Dedham
at 9am. Relatives and friends
kindly invited. Visiting hours at
the funeral home, Friday, June
24 from 4-8pm. Interment in
Brookdale Cemetery, Dedham.
In lieu of flowers donations may
be made in Charles’ memory to
the Alzheimer’s Association,
480 Pleasant St., Watertown,
MA 02472. Online guestbook
and directions at
gfdoherty.com.
George F. Doherty & Sons
Dedham 781-326-0500
Honor your
loved one’s
memory with
a photo
in The
Boston Globe.
Ask your funeral
director for details.
Of Arlington, formerly of Cambridge. Passed away
on June 21, 2016.
Beloved husband of
Catherine
“Susie”
Judd (Wood). Loving Father of Christine Wright
and her husband David of Billerica. Devoted “Grampy” of
Brendan, Courtney, and Caleigh. Devoted son of the late
Francis X. Judd, Eleanor Judd
(Sheridan), and Margaret T.
Judd (Moore). Dear brother of
Marilyn Judd Fitzmaurice of
Somerville, Francis Judd and his
wife Louise of Arlington, Timothy Judd and Diane Caruso of
Waltham, Maureen Judd Corcoran of Cambridge, and the
late Patricia Scully and Edward
Judd. Also survived by many
loving nieces and nephews.
Late Vietnam Era Air Force Veteran. Longtime member of the
American Legion Arlington Post
39. Retired City of Cambridge
Public Works Dept. Proud employee of the Arlington Boys
& Girls Club. Visiting Hours
will be held from the Keefe
Funeral Home, 5 Chestnut St.,
Rt. 60 (adjacent to St. Agnes
Church) ARLINGTON on Sunday
from 2-5pm. Funeral Mass in St.
Agnes Church on Monday at
10am. Burial to follow. In lieu
of flowers donations in Jim’s
memory may be made to the
Arlington Boys and Girls Club,
60 Pond Ln, Arlington, MA
02474. For obituary, directions,
or to send a condolence visit
www.keefefuneralhome.com
Share your memories.
Celebrate a life and share
your thoughts and memories
in an online guestbook.
Visit boston.com/obituaries
LOCICERO, Marie G. (Crisafulli)
Of Burlington, formerly of Lexington, June 22nd; 80 years of
age. Beloved wife of the late
Louis A. LoCicero. Loving mother of Susan Finney and her husband Rick of Amesbury, Louis
LoCicero and his wife Elaine of
Billerica, David LoCicero and
his wife Jennifer of Burlington,
and James LoCicero and his wife
Kim of Woburn. Devoted sister
of John Crisafulli and his wife
Gretchen of Westford, Charles
Crisafulli and his late wife Phyllis, and David Crisafulli, both
formerly of Belmont and Port
St. Lucie FL. Devoted grandmother of Amber, Brett, Bella,
Alyssa, Livia, Milena, and James
Jr. A Funeral will be held from
the
Lynch-Cantillon
Funeral
Home, 263 Main Street, WOBURN on Saturday, June 25th at
9:00 a.m. followed by a Funeral
Mass in St. Barbara’s Church,
138 Cambridge Road, Woburn
at 10. Relatives and friends
are cordially invited to calling
hours at the Funeral Home on
Friday, June 24th from 4-8 p.m.
Interment in Oak Grove Cemetery, Medford. Remembrances
may be made in Marie’s memory to Catholic Television P.O.
Box 9196, 34 Chestnut Street,
Watertown, MA 02471.
Lynch-Cantillon Funeral Home
www.lynch-cantillon.com
781-933-0400
MARZILLI, Elizabeth G.
(LeGraw)
Age 95 of Humarock, formerly
of Maynard, passed away on
June 21, 2016. Beloved wife
of the late Paul J. Marzilli Sr.
for 63 years. Loving mother of
Caroline Borden of Sagamore
Beach and Paul J. Marzilli, Jr
and his wife Sandy of Maynard.
Cherished Nana of Ann Pruitt,
Caroline Bianco, Audrey MacLean, Suzanne Borden, Elizabeth Pearce, Paul J. Marzilli III,
Elizabeth DiTavi, Angela Marzilli and their families. Also survived by 14 great-grandchildren
and 1 great-great grandchild
and many nieces and nephews.
Sister of the late Mary Collins
and George F. LeGraw Jr. Family
and friends will gather to honor and remember Betty on Sat.,
June 25 from 9:00-10:30 am in
the Fowler-Kennedy Funeral
Home, 42 Concord St., Maynard. Her funeral mass will be
at 11:00 am in St. Bridget Parish, One Percival St., Maynard.
Burial will follow at Glenwood
Cemetery, Maynard. Donations
in her memory may be made
to: MSPCA 350 S Huntington
Ave, Jamaica Plain, MA 02130.
To share a memory or offer a
condolence visit, www.
fowler-Kennedy.com
Fowler-Kennedy Funeral Home
A Life Celebration Home
Maynard, MA 978-897-7343
MOORE, Theresa
Of Kingston on June 17
Beloved wife of the late Paul
J Moore.
Most Cherished
Mother of Thomas Moore and
his wife Sheila of Middleboro,
Louise Cook and her husband
Kenneth of Kingston.
Dearest Grandmother to Karen
Gibson of Middleboro, Kerry
Bean and her husband Jeffrey
of Otis, MA, Michelle Moore
of Pittsfield, James Cook and
his wife Amanda of Gloucester, Thomas Cook and his wife
Candice of Somerville, Daniel
Cook and his wife Jeanette
of Dorchester, Paul J Cook of
Kingston and 11 great grandchildren. Visiting hours will be
held at the Shepherd Funeral
Home, 216 Main St. Kingston on Sunday June 26, from
4:00 to 7:00PM. Funeral from
the Shepherd Funeral Home,
Monday June 27, at 9:00AM
followed by a Funeral Mass at
St. Joseph Church in Kingston
at 10:00AM. Internment will
be held at MA National Cemetery in Bourne at 1:45PM. For
online condolences and directions, please visit www.
shepherdfuneralhome.com
NARDONE, Kathleen A.
(Hansford)
Age 69, of Wilmington, formerly of Burlington, died peacefully at home on June 22, 2016.
Kathy was the beloved wife
of Frank A. Nardone, devoted
mother of Frank A. Nardone, Jr.
of Kingston, NH, James E. Nardone & wife Terry of Turner,
ME, and Shawn P. Nardone &
wife Stefany of Atkinson, NH.
Loving “Grandma” of Charlene,
Jessica, Travis, Nathan, Heaven,
Aiden, and great-grandson Deklan.
Cherished daughter of
the late Frances and Doreen
(McGuffy) Hansford, dear sister
of Billy Hansford & wife Susan
of Tewksbury and Robert Hansford & wife Sally of Medford.
Aunt of Kendra Pacella, Shauna
Hansford, and Jarred Hansford.
Kathy was also very special to
Jill Cohen and is also survived by
her beloved dog Maddie. Family and friends will gather for a
Funeral Service at the Nichols
Funeral Home, 187 Middlesex
Ave. (Rte. 62), WILMINGTON,
on Saturday, June 25th at 10:30
a.m. followed by Interment in
Wildwood Cemetery, Wilmington. Visiting hours will be held
at the Funeral Home on Friday,
June 24th from 4:00-8:00 p.m.
Nichols Funeral Home
978-658-4744
www.nicholsfuneralhome.com
OGAR, Catherine L. (Lemmon)
Of Wakefield. June 21. Wife of
the late George W. Ogar. Loving mother of George W. Ogar,
Jr., Elizabeth M. Ogar & husband Mark Jacobs, Catherine
E. Ruiz, Peggy Kennedy & her
late husband William P. Kennedy, Jr., Patricia E. Beane & husband Donald & Marie T. Brown
& husband Peter. Sister of the
late Francis Lemmon. Also survived by 10 grandchildren & 1
great-grandchild. Funeral from
the McDonald Funeral Home,
19 Yale Ave., WAKEFIELD Saturday at 9am followed by a
Funeral Mass in St. Florence
Church, 47 Butler Ave., Wakefield at 10:00. Interment, St.
Mary Cemetery, Lynn. Visitation for relatives and friends
at the Funeral Home, Friday
4-7pm. In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made to the
Sawtelle Family Hospice House,
320 Haverhill St., Reading, MA
01867.
For obit/directions/
guestbook, www.mcdonaldfs.
com
OHANIAN, Elizabeth “Bette”
Of Watertown June 21, 2016.
Complete notice to follow.
www.brownandhickey.com
OWENS, Madeline L. (Wallace)
Of Roslindale, June 21, age 89.
Beloved wife of the late Adam
J. Owens Jr. Devoted mother
of Adam J. Owens III of Salem, Ohio. Cherished sister of
Joseph Wallace of FL, and the
late Irene, Dorothy, Jack, and
Bill. Loving grandmother of
Mary Owens, Anna Ley, and
Brian Gloekler and his wife Alison. Great grandmother of Violet Gloekler. Also survived by
many loving nieces, nephews,
inlaws and friends. Funeral
from The Carroll-Thomas Funeral Home, 22 Oak St., HYDE
PARK, Monday morning at 9,
followed by a Mass of Christian
Burial at Most Precious Blood
Church, Hyde Park, at 10. Relatives and friends invited. Visiting hours Sunday evening from
4-8. Children’s room available.
Interment at Mt. Wollaston
Cemetery, Quincy. For directions and guestbook please
visit thomasfuneralhomes.com
Carroll-Thomas Funeral Home
Hyde Park (617) 361-3216
PHILBEN, Eleanor Frances
(Glavin)
Age 91, of Natick, passed away
June 21, 2016. Devoted wife
of the late Paul Leo Philben,
Sr. Loving mother of Nancy
Philben of Natick, Paul Philben, Jr. and his wife Dorine
of Trumbull, CT, Richard Philben of Natick, Michael Philben of Bel Air, MD, and Mark
Philben and his wife Vickie
of Millis. Grandmother of Dr.
Heather Philben of Brookline,
Mark Philben, Jr. of Millis, Lily
Philben of Stamford, CT, Paul
Philben III of Boston, and Ellie
Philben of Bel Air, MD. Sister
of Gail Glavin of West Roxbury and the late Jean Ward.
Also survived by brother-in-law
John Ward of Uxbridge, longtime family friend Virginia McCarthy of Yarmouth Port, and
many nieces and nephews and
their families. A Mass of Christian Burial will be celebrated in
Saint Linus Church, 119 Hartford Street, Natick, on Saturday, June 25th at 10:00AM.
Relatives and friends are respectfully invited to attend.
Interment will be at St. Joseph
Cemetery, West Roxbury. Expressions of sympathy may be
made in Eleanor’s memory to
the Resident/ Employee Fund
at Mary Ann Morse Health Care
Center, 45 Union Street Natick,
MA 01760. For the obituary
and guest book, please visit
www.everettfuneral.com
John Everett & Sons
Natick (508) 653-4342
PYNE, James D.
Age 82, of Quincy, formerly
of South Boston, passed away
June 22, 2016. Beloved husband of Marion M. (Kulas)
Pyne. Brother of the late Rose
Collins, Anne Sullivan, Katherine O’Brien, William, Edward,
Joseph, John, Robert, Francis,
Patrick and Mary. At his request
private arrangements will be
handled by C. C. Shepherd Funeral Service, 134 Pleasant St.
(Columbian Sq.) S. Weymouth.
RANKIN, Louise Firth
Of Nashua, NH, formerly of
Lexington, MA, died after a
brief illness on June 15, 2016 at
age 93. She was born on July
17, 1922 in Chicago, Illinois to
Norman Charles Firth and Mary
Parker Firth. Louise graduated
from Columbia High School,
Maplewood, NJ in 1940 and
enrolled in Mount Holyoke College, South Hadley, MA.
In 1944 after completing her
Bachelor of Science Degree in
Chemistry, Louise joined the
Navy WAVES. Ensign Firth was
assigned to the Naval Annex in
Washington, DC where Japanese code was deciphered. After WWII ended, she conducted
exit interviews with Naval personnel at the Armed Guard
Center in Brooklyn, NY.
Louise completed the management training program at Radcliff College in 1947. She moved
to Princeton, New Jersey and
became the assistant personnel director at the Educational
Testing Service.
In Princeton, she met her future
husband, John Bruce Rankin.
Louise and Bruce’s two sons
were born in Princeton before
the family moved to Lexington,
Massachusetts in 1962. Louise
worked for the Boston Redevelopment Authority and for
many years in community mental health.
Louise was a dedicated volunteer and served as Den Mother,
Church Deacon, METCO host
and School Tutor.
She loved
crafts, gardening and researching family genealogy.
In retirement, Louise enjoyed
hiking, boating and spending
time with her family at their
home in Squam Lake, NH. Louise is survived by sister Elizabeth
Rogers of Wakefield, RI; Sister
in-law Mary of Helena, MT; son,
John and wife Anne Barati of
Richmond, VT; grandsons, Ted
and Eli; and four nieces, Molly,
Betsy, Kathy and Andi. She was
predeceased by Bruce, her beloved husband of 57 years and
her son Edward (Ted). Services:
A Memorial Service will be
held at Hancock United Church
of Christ in Lexington, MA on
Saturday July 9 at 2:00 PM .The
Davis Funeral Home, One Lock
St, NASHUA has been placed in
charge of arrangements, www.
davisfuneralhomenh.com,
(603-883-3401)
RICHARD, Steven Robert
Of Waltham, June 19th, 2016.
Beloved son of Robert J. and
Lucille Marie (Landry) Richard
of Waltham. Devoted & loving brother of Nancy (Richard)
Karaguezian
and
her
husband Raffe of Waltham and
Lisa (Richard) LeBlanc and her
husband Thomas of Waltham.
Adored uncle of Derek Hogan
and his wife Sarah, Brandon
and Olivia Karaguezian, Sophia, Renee and Rhea LeBlanc,
and adoring great uncle of Addison Hogan. In addition he
is survived by many cherished
aunts, uncles, cousins, close
& dear friends. Relatives &
Friends are respectfully invited
to attend Funeral Services from
the Mary Catherine Chapel of
Brasco & Sons Memorial, 773
Moody St, WALTHAM, on Saturday morning at 9:00 am with
a Mass of Christian Burial in
celebration of Steven’s Life in
Sacred Heart Church, 311 River St., Waltham, at 10:30 a.m.
Committal services will follow
at Mount Feake Cemetery. Visiting Hours will be held in the
Mary Catherine Chapel of Brasco & Sons on Friday from 3 - 8
p.m. Parking attendants will be
on duty. In lieu of flowers expressions of sympathy may be
made in his memory to the St.
Jude’s Children’s Research Hospital, 501 St. Jude Pl., Memphis,
TN 38105. For complete obituary guestbook & additional information please refer to;
www.BrascoFuneralHome.com
Waltham (781) 893-6260
“Creating Meaningful Memories”
Rogers & Hutchins Funeral Homes
Arlington & Cambridge
www.rogersfuneralhome.net
RIZZO, Maria G. (DiPierro)
Unexpectedly at 87 years on
June 21st, of Revere. Devoted wife
of 65 years of Raffaele G. “Ralph”
Rizzo. Loving mother of Antonietta Picardi & her
husband Robert & Ermelindo
“Lenny” Rizzo & his wife Maria, all of Revere. Cherished
grandmother of Amy Salvati
& her husband Joseph of Salisbury, Robert A. Picardi, Raffaele
“Ralph” Rizzo & his wife Melissa, Anthony Rizzo, Johnny Rizzo, all of Revere & Linda (Rizzo)
Fillion & her husband David of
Salem. Adored Nonna of Julia,
Ava, Dylan, Ryder, Jeannette
& Melinda. She was the beloved sister of 9 late siblings.
Also lovingly survived by many
nieces, nephews, grand nieces,
& grand nephews. Family &
friends are invited to attend
the funeral from the Vertuccio
& Smith Home for Funerals, 773
Broadway (RT. 107) REVERE on
Friday at 10:30 a.m. followed by
a Funeral Mass at 11:30 a.m. in
St. Anthony of Padua Church,
250 Revere St., Revere. Visiting
hours are Thursday only from
4 to 8 p.m. Parking is available
in the lot left of the funeral
home. Entombment will be in
Woodlawn Versailles Community Mausoleum, Everett. For
more info visit www.vertuccioandsmith.com.
ROSENBERG, Lester E.
Of
Stoughton, MA. Entered
into rest on June 22, 2016 at
the age of 66. Beloved husband
of Linda (Koss) Rosenberg.
Devoted father of Suzanne
Rosenberg. Dear son of the
late Samuel and Kay (Baden)
Rosenberg. Loving brother of
Gloria Wolsky and the late Gerald Rosenberg. Adored uncle
to several nieces; will be missed
by many friends both personal
and business. Services to be
held at Stanetsky Memorial
Chapel, 475 Washington Street,
CANTON, on Friday, June 24,
2016 at 12 Noon. Interment
to follow at Sharon Memorial
Park, 40 Dedham Street, SHARON. Memorial Observance to
be held immediately following
services at the home of Linda
Rosenberg and continuing on
Sunday from 2-7 PM. In lieu of
flowers, donations in Lester’s
memory may be made to the
American Heart Association,
P.O. Box 417005, Boston, MA
02241-7005.
Stanetsky Memorial Chapels
781-821-4600 www.stanetsky.com
SCANLAN, Paul William
81, of Attleboro, peacefully
passed away in his home surrounded by his family on
Monday, June 20, 2016.
He
was the beloved husband of
the late Carol Marie (Haskell)
Scanlan. Born on February 14,
1935 in Dorchester, MA, he was
the son of the late Maurice V.
Scanlan and the late Dorothy
L. (Gambell) Scanlan. Paul was
raised and educated in Boston,
and graduated from the Boston High School of Commerce,
Class of 1952. He proudly and
honorably served in the United
States Army from 1955 to 1957.
He worked in the insurance
business for over fifty years,
and was the owner of the
Harry J. Boardman Insurance
Agency in South Attleboro,
and also the Scanlan Travel
Agency in Attleboro. He was
an active member of St. John
the Evangelist Roman Catholic Church in Attleboro, a past
President of the Rotary Club of
Attleboro and of the Independent Insurance Agents of Massachusetts. He was an active
member of Highland Country
Club, a member of the Board
of Directors of Attleboro Enterprises, Inc., the YMCA, and
the Anawon Council, and generously participated in many
civic and community affairs. He
enjoyed golf, racquetball, and
valued time spent with his family. Paul is survived by his children: Kathleen Scanlan Jones
and her husband, Andrew
Jones, of North Attleboro, MA;
Maura Scanlan DiMarco of
Attleboro, MA; Thomas Joseph
Scanlan and his wife, Sushayla
C. Scanlan, of Weston, FL; and
Paul William Scanlan, Jr. and
his wife, Yuri Abdala Scanlan,
of Kirkland, WA. He leaves
eleven grandchildren whom he
adored; and was the brother
of William Scanlan of Quincy,
MA; Dorothy Perry of NH; and
James Scanlan of Eliot, ME. He
leaves many nieces, nephews,
friends, and extended family.
Family and friends are cordially
invited to attend a Visitation
on Friday, June 24, 2016 from
4:00 – 8:00 p.m. in the “Memorial Chapel” of the DyerLake Funeral Home, 161 Commonwealth Avenue, NORTH
ATTLEBORO. All are cordially
invited to celebrate his life at
the Funeral on Saturday, June
25, 2016 at 8:30 a.m. from the
Dyer-Lake Funeral Home, followed by a Mass of Christian
Burial at 10:00 a.m. at St. John
the Evangelist Roman Catholic
Church, 133 North Main Street
– Route 152, Attleboro. Burial
with military honors will be
private in St. John Cemetery,
Attleboro, at which time Paul
will be laid to rest alongside his
late wife, Carol. In lieu of flowers, memorial donations may
be made in Paul’s name to the
St. Vincent de Paul Society of
St. John the Evangelist Church,
1 Saint John’s Place, Attleboro,
MA 02703. For additional information or to send the family
a written expression of sympathy, please visit an online guest
book at www.dyer-lakefuneralhome.com.
Arrangements
are under the direction of the
Dyer-Lake Funeral Home, 161
Commonwealth Avenue, Village of Attleboro Falls, North
Attleboro. (508) 695-0200
T h e
B8
B o s t o n
DEATHS
G l o b e
Obituaries
SIMMONS, Robert J.
Age 69, of Billerica, cherished
husband of Janice,
died peacefully at
the Spaulding Hospital and Rehabilitation of Cambridge
on June 22, 2016. Bob was born
in Medford on April 2, 1947
and was the dear son of the
late William and Janet (Ball)
Simmons; brother of Carolyn &
her husband Bill Gable, Joseph
& his wife Melissa (Glencross)
Simmons. Beloved uncle to
Michael & Stefanie Gable and
Billy, Tommy & Jonathon Simmons all of Wilmington. Bob
was predeceased by his sister,
Mary and his brother Frank.
Family and friends will gather
for a Funeral on Monday, June
27th at the Nichols Funeral
Home, 187 Middlesex Ave. (Rt.
62) WILMINGTON, at 9:00 a.m.,
followed by a Funeral Mass at
St. Thomas of Villanova Church,
126 Middlesex Ave., Wilmington, at 10:00 a.m. Interment
with Military Honors to follow
in Wildwood Cemetery. Visiting hours will be held at the
Funeral Home on Sunday, June
26th from 1:00 – 5:00 p.m. In
lieu of flowers, Memorial Donations in Bob’s name may be
made to the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, P.O. Box 849168,
Boston, MA 02284-9168 or to
the Spaulding Rehabilitation
Network
Development
Office, 1575 Cambridge Street,
Cambridge, MA
02138. Bob
proudly served in the U.S. Air
Force for four years. He retired
from Raytheon after 30+ years
and was a member of the Elks
Lodge 2071 for many years; he
became Exalted Ruler in 2009.
Wayne Jackson, 74; half of
famed Memphis Horns duo
By Adrian Sainz
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Nichols Funeral Home
978-658-4744
www.nicholsfuneralhome.com
STACEY, Marion E.
88,
of
Avon/Simsbury,
CT,
passed away Monday, June
20, 2016. Born in Cambridge,
MA, daughter of the late
Herbert and Edith (Stimpson)
Stacey, she graduated from
Belmont High School in 1945.
She attended Bentley School
of Accounting, received her
BA with honors from Northeastern
University
in
1961
and her MA in 1968. She was
comptroller for Codman and
Shurtleff, surgical instruments
division of Johnson & Johnson.
She lived in Medford, MA, for
many years before retiring to
Dunedin, FL, then moving to
Avon, CT. Marion was a former
member and choir member of
the Wesley United Methodist Church, Medford, MA, and
Union Street United Methodist
Church, Dunedin, FL. She loved
to play golf. She leaves her beloved sister-in-law Lois Stacey
of Taunton, MA; 12 nieces and
nephews; 19 grandnieces and
nephews; and 15 great grand
nieces and nephews. She was
predeceased by brothers Edward Stacey (Dora Collomb),
Donald Stacey (Pearl Minty)
and Norman Stacey. Viewing
will be held Saturday, June 25,
2016 from 1-2 pm at Carmon
Funeral Home, 301 Country
Club Rd., Avon, CT, followed by
a Memorial Service at 3 pm at
New Life In Christ Fellowship,
250 Firetown Road, Simsbury,
CT. Burial will be Thursday,
June 30, 2016, 10 am at Mosswood Cemetery, Barnstable,
MA. Donations may be made
to the Alzheimer’s Association,
PO Box 96011, Washington, DC
20090-6011. For directions or
condolences please visit www.
carmonfuneralhome.com
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE/1996
Mr. Hyde ran against both Joseph Kennedy II and his uncle, Edward Kennedy, in quixotic
campaigns in 1996 and 2000. He sought to link workers’ hours to jobless rate.
Phil Hyde, Senate hopeful, ‘idea commando’
By Bryan Marquard
GLOBE STAFF
VERRENGIA, Lucy R.
Lifelong resident of Malden
May 17, 2016. Daughter of the
late Joseph and Rose (Novelli)
Verrengia. Loving sister of John
Verrengia of Malden & the late
Ann Cesario, Dominic, Jerry,
Frank, & Angelo Verrengia.
Dear aunt of Joseph & Ronald
Cesario & Glori Verrengia. Visitation will be held from the A.J.
Spadafora Funeral Home, 865
Main St., MALDEN on Saturday June 25th from 8:30 a.m.9:30 a.m. followed by a Mass
of Christian Burial in the Immaculate Conception Church,
600 Pleasant Street, Malden at
10:00 a.m. Relatives & friends
are respectfully invited to attend. Interment will be in Holy
Cross Cemetery, Malden. For
directions & guestbook visit
www.spadaforafuneral.com
Spadafora Funeral Home
781-324-8680
VIGLIOTTI, Lois M. (Burridge)
Of Peabody, formerly of Revere, died June 21, 2016, beloved wife of the late Robert
Vigliotti, Sr.
She is survived
by a son Robert Vigliotti, Jr. of
Peabody and his wife Patricia,
2 grandsons, Robert Vigliotti, III
and Philip & his wife Jennifer;
sister of Diane & her husband
John Brown of Salem, NH and
George & his wife Mae Burridge of Melrose and she leaves
many nieces and nephews. She
was sister of the late Vincent
Burridge, Jr., Donad, Richard,
David, and Barbara Burridge,
and Joyce Shea. Relatives and
friends are kindly invited to
gather on Friday June 24, 2016
from 10:30 AM to 12:30 P.M. in
the Conway, Cahill-Brodeur Funeral Home, 82 Lynn St., PEABODY, followed by a Funeral
Service at 12:30 P.M. in the funeral home. Burial will be in
Puritan Lawn Memorial Park,
Peabody. Memorial donations
may be made to the American Cancer Society, 30 Speen
St., Framingham, MA 01701.
Please visit www.ccbfuneral.
com for online obituary & sign
condolences.
Conway, Cahill-Brodeur Funeral Home
82 Lynn St.
Peabody, MA 01960
Have the
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Meaningful memorialization
starts when loved ones talk
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Download a free brochure
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T H U R S D A Y, J U N E 2 3 , 2 0 1 6
The last time Phil Hyde ran
against a Kennedy, he finished
with more than 8,400 votes,
which ultimately was less than
1 percent of the total cast. No
matter. He kept his eye on
numbers that had nothing to
do with such a lopsided result.
That US Senate contest in
2000 against Edward M. Kennedy, who easily prevailed over
several challengers, was Mr.
Hyde’s final race in a political
career that was more about
finding a public forum for his
economic theories than getting
elected.
“I’m an idea commando,” he
had told the Globe more than a
year earlier when he ran for
Somerville mayor. He lost that
race, too, and previously finished well behind the victors in
contests for Somerville alderman and in bids for the Eighth
Congressional District, when
he received nearly 16 percent
of the vote in a 1996 race
against Joseph P. Kennedy II.
With undiminished enthusiasm, Mr. Hyde championed
an economic proposal that had
as difficult a time gaining a
toehold as his campaigns. He
wanted to shorten the established work week to fewer than
40 hours and peg the length to
the unemployment rate. “If unemployment is too high, the
work week would shorten to
spread around employment
and create more jobs,” he once
wrote. “If unemployment falls
again, the work week would
lengthen.”
Mr. Hyde, who called his
proposal “timesizing , not
downsizing,” died April 15
when visiting New Zealand
with his wife. Police in Queenstown told media outlets that
an excursion bus backed into
him after he stepped off the vehicle at a tourist stop. Mr. Hyde
was 73 and lived in Somerville.
“In many ways, he wasn’t
afraid of what people thought.
If he believed in something, he
just went out and did it, which
is how he ended up running
all those campaigns with zero
budget,” said his wife, Kate Jurow. “He said, ‘If I have to run
against the Kennedys just to
get the word out, I’ll do it,’ and
he did.”
In 1996, Mr. Hyde billed
h i m s e l f “ t h e Un Ke n n e d y ”
when he took on five-term incumbent Joe Kennedy in the
Eighth Congressional District.
Mr. Hyde couldn’t have been
more distant from the Kennedy clan, even though their po-
litical beliefs intersected on
many points. For starters, Mr.
Hyde wasn’t a son of a Massachusetts dynasty. He hailed
from Toronto, where he had
grown up as the second of four
children, his wife said.
His full name was Richard
Philip Hyde and he often went
by Philip Hyde III.He also went
by Rich or Phil, his wife said,
and “called himself whatever
he felt like. It was part of his
wackiness.’’
Speaking with a Globe reporter in 2000, Mr. Hyde said
he thought of himself as a combination of the comedians
Robin Williams, Don Rickles,
and Tracey Ullman. He was, he
said, “a terminal Renaissance
person.”
His wife said that as a
young man he entertained
thoughts of going into the ministry. In 1964, he graduated
with a bachelor’s degree from
the University of Toronto,
where he studied ancient history and languages, according
to biographical information on
his website, www.timesizing.com.
Mr. Hyde recounted that he
also studied religion and psychology at Victoria University
in Toronto and served as president of the Student Christian
Movement of Canada before
receiving a master’s in linguistics in 1968 from the University of Toronto.
That last topic brought him
to the United States, where he
took graduate courses in linguistics at Harvard University
and studied at the Sloan
School of Management at the
Massachusetts Institute of
Technology. Mr. Hyde’s list of
college studies ran throughout
his life, including summer
courses at Tufts University.
He became a naturalized US
citizen and worked in administrative jobs at Boston University in the late 1970s and early
’80 s. He then taught at the
Cambridge Center for Adult
Education and worked as a researcher. He was editing for an
electronic news service in the
mid-1990s when he was downsized out of a job upon returning to work after a WGBH-TV
debate with Joe Kennedy in
October 1996.
“All I can say is this underscores the need for timesizing,”
he quipped to the Globe afterward, speaking of his proposal
to shrink the typical work week
in order to provide more jobs.
“You have to laugh,” he added.
Fo r h i s 2 0 0 0 c a m p a i g n
against Edward Kennedy, Mr.
Hyde ran under a Timesizing
Not Downsizing party designation.
“He was really passionate
about this,” his wife recalled.
“He said, ‘We’re working 60, 70
hours a week and so many people are unemployed,’ and it
didn’t make any sense to him
at all. And he felt very much
that income inequality was related to this in some way. He
was also very angry about income inequality.”
T he y had me t when Mr.
Hyde was living in Cambridge
in the late 1960 s and early
’70s. Mr. Hyde’s first marriage,
while he was living in Canada,
had ended in divorce, and so
did his first marriage to Jurow.
“We divorced,” she recalled,
“then we decided we couldn’t
find anyone who was better, so
we thought, ‘What the heck?’ ”
Their second marriage, she
said, “was the big white wedding,” and in keeping with the
mischievousness that Mr. Hyde
often braided with the seriousness in his life, “he used to tell
people, ‘This is Kate, my best
friend and occasional wife.’ ”
In addition to his wife, Mr.
Hyde leaves his siblings Donna
of Toronto, Glen of Kingston,
Ontario, and Linda of Florida.
Mr. Hyde was buried in Aurora, Ontario, a community
north of Toronto, and a memorial service will be announced.
Devoted to his “timesizing”
theory, Mr. Hyde worked every
week preparing and publishing
articles on his website and
“never considered himself retired,” his wife said.
By investing a few hours of
his own time each day, he promoted his ideas at a low cost,
much as he had spent little
while running his political
campaigns.
When preparing petitions
to run for office, “he walked every single street in Somerville
to get signatures,” his wife said.
“He got every single signature
himself. He didn’t hire anyone
else and didn’t ask anyone. He
just loved meeting people.”
For someone who cared
about numbers and cos ts,
there also was a numerical triumph in that approach, as he
recalled in a Globe interview
about his 1996 congressional
run.
“I got 16 percent of the vote
with $600,” he said “which was
1,000 times more votes per
dollar than Joe Kennedy.”
Marquard can be reached at
[email protected].
N E W Y O R K — Tr u m p e t
player Wayne Jackson, who
played standout horn lines on
rock ‘n’ roll, soul, R&B, and pop
mainstays along with Memphis
Horns partner and tenor saxophonist Andrew Love, has died.
He was 74.
His wife, Amy, said her husband died of congestive heart
failure Tuesday night at a hospital with her by his side. Mr.
Jackson had been hospitalized
and released June 7 before taking a turn for the worse Monday night and being readmitted.
“He led an incredible life,
and he left an amazing music
legacy,” Amy Jackson said.
Mr. Jackson and Love performed on recordings by numerous top-shelf artists, including Otis Redding, Elvis Presley,
Neil Diamond, and U2.
Mr. Jackson and Love — the
Memphis Horns — were awarded the Grammy Lifetime
Achievement Award in February 2012, only the second instrumental backup group in
history to receive the honor at
the time. According to his wife,
in his acceptance speech, he
said, “It’s been a dance of love
between me and that trumpet.”
Love died in April 2012.
Love, who was black, and
Mr. Jackson, who was white,
played together on 52 No. 1 records and 83 gold and platinum
records, according to Memphisbased Stax Records. Amy Jackson said her husband received
his first gold record in 1961 and
his last in 2005.
The duo backed up Aretha
Franklin, Elvis Presley, Otis
Redding, Neil Diamond, Isaac
Hayes, the Doobie Brothers,
U2, Jack White, Alicia Keys,
and many other American pop
music acts.
The Memphis Horns could
sound wistful and romantic on
one song, boisterous and uptempo on another. They provided the horn tracks on dozens of
well-known songs, including
Redding’s “Dock of the Bay,”
Franklin’s “Respect,” Diamond’s
“Sweet Caroline,” Presley’s “Suspicious Minds,” Sam & Dave’s
“Soul Man,” Al Green’s “Let’s
Stay Together,” Steve Winwood’s “Roll With It,” Peter Gabriel’s “Sledgehammer,” and
EPA FILE/2012
Mr. Jackson’s work can be
heard on pieces by U2, Elvis
Presley, and Otis Redding.
U2’s “Angel of Harlem.”
Mr. Jackson was born in
Memphis and was raised across
the Mississippi River in West
Memphis, Ark., according to his
website.
On his website, he described
the time when his mother gave
him a trumpet at age 11.
“I opened up the case, and it
smelled like oil and brass. I
loved that, so I put it together,
blew, and out came a pretty
noise,” he said.
Mr. Jackson said he first
heard Love play at the Manhattan Club with the Willie Mitchell band.
“I knew we would be perfect
together,” Mr. Jackson said in a
statement released after Love
died. “He had a big tone and I
had a big tone, and I knew that
they would blend in the most
natural, beautiful way.”
They were first paired together as part of the Stax Records’ Mar-Keys, which backed
most of Stax’s catalog of artists.
They played behind Redding,
Isaac Hayes, Rufus Thomas,
and Carla Thomas, among others.
In 1969, Mr. Jackson and
L ove formed the Memphis
Horns. Mr. Jackson later moved
to Nashville and spent three
years traveling with country
music performer Marty Robbins, according to Mr. Jackson’s
website.
In 2008, Mr. Jackson and
Love were inducted into the
Musicians Hall of Fame. Mr.
Jackson also wrote three books.
Funeral arrangements were
pending.
David Morgenthaler; helped
create venture capital field
By Katie Benner
NEW YORK TIMES
N E W Y O R K — D a v i d T.
Morgenthaler, a mechanical engineer who became an early figure in the modern venture capital industry, died on Friday in
Cleveland. He was 96.
His death was confirmed by
his son Gary.
Intrepid and intellectually
curious, Mr. Morgenthaler
worked in jet engine manufacturing and industrial metallurgy before he moved into investing, supporting nascent companies and entrepreneurs with his
own money. He later opened up
his fund to outside investors.
He founded his firm, Morgenthaler Ventures, in 1968,
making early investments in
several companies, including
Apple Computer.
But it was Mr. Morgenthaler’s investment in Manufacturing Data Systems, which provided programs to run machine
tools, that netted him his fortune. He invested $200,000 into the newly formed business in
1969, a stake that became
worth $20 million after the
company went public in 1976.
He helped orchestrate the company’s sale to the oil-field services giant Schlumberger for
just shy of $200 million in
1981.
Mr. Morgenthaler’s career
took a more political turn when
he worked with the National
Venture Capital Association.
As one of the organization’s
founding directors, he moved it
from Chicago to Washington,
where he helped push a legislative agenda that would shape
the industry. He helped persuade Congress to lower the
capital gains tax rate from 49
percent to 28 percent to encourage investment in small
businesses.
He also successfully pushed
to change laws in 1979 so that
pension funds could invest in
venture capital firms.
“Big business had lobbying
in D.C. and was influencing legislation, but it was small business that was creating new jobs
in the country,” Gary Morgenthaler said. “He pushed the
venture industry to have a mission and a purpose, to be the
voice of small business in
America.”
Mr. Morgenthaler’s passion
for investing overlapped with
his personal life after his eldest
son, David, died of cancer in
1989. He began to invest more
in biotechnology and life sciences companies that sought to
cure disease.
A native of South Carolina,
Mr. Morgenthaler attended the
Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, where he earned
bachelor’s and master’s degrees
in mechanical engineering, and
served with the Army Corps of
Engineers during World War II.
After the war, Mr. Morgenthaler worked at several startups before becoming an investor in new businesses.
Over the years, his firm has
been broken into four separate
investment groups. Morgenthaler Ventures is on its ninth venture fund and still makes investments in information techn o l o g y. C a n v a s Ve n t u r e s ,
another information-technology investment group, was spun
out of Morgenthaler in 2013.
The life sciences investment
arm merged with Advanced
Technology Ventures and is
now Lightstone Capital Partners. MPE Partners makes private equity investments.
For many years, Mr. Morgenthaler served on the board
of the Cleveland Clinic, a nonprofit teaching hospital.
T h e
T H U R S D A Y, J U N E 2 3 , 2 0 1 6
B o s t o n
G l o b e
B9
DAILY BRIDGE CLUB
Boston’s forecast
FRIDAY
TODAY
6 A.M.
NOON
6 P.M.
SATURDAY
6 A.M.
NOON
6 P.M.
6 A.M.
MONDAY
SUNDAY
NOON
6 P.M.
6 A.M.
NOON
6 A.M.
6 P.M.
NOON
BY FRANK STEWART
6 P.M.
East dealer — Both sides vulnerable
Mostly cloudy with a
shower around from
midday on. A storm
passing well to the south
will lead to a shower especially
across the Cape and Islands.
HIGH
72-77
LOW
58-63
Sunny and pleasant.
A large dome of high
pressure will lead to dry
weather with a warmer
afternoon. Clear overnight with
near-average temperatures.
Mostly sunny and warmer. As an area of high
pressure moves to the
east, southerly winds
will draw in warmer air. Mostly
clear at night.
HIGH
74-79
LOW
59-64
HIGH
78-83
LOW
60-65
Mostly sunny; breezy
in the afternoon. A cold
front will remain to the
west leading to a mild
flow of air. Some rain will arrive
overnight.
Warmer with more sunshine than clouds. The
weekend will end on a
warm note as high pressure continues to slide to the
east. Mostly clear at night.
HIGH
82-87
LOW
64-69
HIGH
80-85
LOW
60-65
North
♠ AK95
♥ A2
♦ 10 7 6 4 2
♣K2
West
East
♠ J8642
♥K9
♦ 853
♣863
♠Q3
♥Q J 7
♦AQJ9
♣ J 10 9 7
South
♠ 10 7
♥ 10 8 6 5 4 3
♦ K
♣AQ54
East
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
New England
forecast
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Tides
TODAY: Low pressure passing by to the south will cause
some showers over southern regions, while it stays mainly
dry for most other areas.
TOMORROW: High pressure building across the
region will provide a good deal of sunshine and
PRESQUE ISLE
afternoon temperatures will be seasonable.
70/45
60s
EXTENDED: High pressure to the east will
remain in control over the weekend, bringing
MILLINOCKET
sunshine and a warming trend each day.
A.M. P.M.
Boston high
Height
Boston low
Height
High tides
Old Orchard ME 1:23 2:03
Hampton
Beach NH
1:37 2:17
Plum Island
1:55 2:30
71/49
Ipswich
BURLINGTON
76/54
AUGUSTA
75/52
BERLIN
73/43
MONTPELIER
71/46
MT. WASHINGTON
47/35
LEBANON
78/49
RUTLAND
74/49
BAR HARBOR
68/50
LACONIA
76/50
MANCHESTER
PORTSMOUTH 77/55
BRATTLEBORO
79/56
76/48
NASHUA 79/54
PITTSFIELD
73/49
BOSTON 74/60
WORCESTER
PROVINCETOWN
SPRINGFIELD
NEW
74/56
78/53 PROVIDENCE
71/58
BEDFORD
77/56
76/59
HYANNIS 74/57
HARTFORD
78/56
NEWPORT
72/59
BRIDGEPORT
OAK BLUFFS NANTUCKET 70/58
73/57
75/63
New England marine forecast
Boston Harbor
Wind
Seas
Temp
S 4-8 kts.
1-2 ft.
74/60
East Cape
Yesterday
High/low
78/64
Mean
71
Departure from normal +1
Departure for month +17
Departure for year +294
7 p.m. rel. humidity 33%
PORTLAND 75/54


1:22 2:02
1:40
1:40
1:39
1:40
Plymouth
Cape Cod
Canal East
Cape Cod
Canal West
Falmouth
1:50 2:22
Degree days
Yesterday
Monthly total
Normal to date
Season total
Season normal
Last year to date
2:18
2:18
2:18
2:15
1:27 2:02
12:24 1:00
1:24 2:02
Temperatures are
today’s highs
and tonight’s lows.
2:41 3:27
2:05 2:34
10:4210:59
10:3510:52
(valid at 7 p.m. yesterday)
Heat
0
17
50
4804
5692
6017
Cool
6
74
84
119
107
126
June readings
Avg. daily high
Avg. daily low
YTD avg. temp.
Actual
75.7
58.8
46.2
Normal Temperatures
100
Record Temperatures
Yesterday’s high 78°
Wind
Seas
Temp
S 6-12 kts.
1-2 ft.
73/54
73/57
Nantucket
S 6-12 kts.
1-3 ft.
70/58
73/56
Provincetown
S 6-12 kts.
1-2 ft.
71/57
Normal
low
62
46
1940
20
23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22
May
June
1.2"
1.13
1.0"
0.91
For current Charles River Basin water quality, call (781) 788-0007 or go to http://www.charlesriver.org.
0.8"
0.6"
Moon phases
Mount Washington (7 p.m. yesterday)
Dense fog
0 miles
west at 56 m.p.h.
43/34
0.0”
0.4"
0.26
0.15
T
T
0.2"
0.02 T
0.0"
23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22
LAST
June 27
NEW
July 4
FIRST
July 11
FULL
July 19
May
June
Evening planets – A. MacRobert
24 Hr. Precipitation
The two brightest points in the sky at nightfall are
Mars, fiery yellow in the south, and Jupiter, shining
whitely in the west-southwest.
Yesterday
Precip days in June
Trace
7
(valid at 7 p.m. yesterday)
Month to date
1.22”
Norm. month to date 2.91”
Year to date
17.56”
Norm. year to date 21.20”
Climate data are compiled from National Weather Service records and are subject to change or correction.
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016
9
6
4 5
5 3
ACROSS
5
8
2
KENKEN
North
Pass
2 NT
3♥
J
I suppose Cy the Cynic is right when he says that mistakes
are proof that you’re trying.
In today’s deal, North-South bid to a reasonable vulnerable
game. West led the jack of clubs, and South hoped for only
three losers. He took the king and ace, ruffed his last low
club in dummy and cashed the ace of trumps.
But then South was marooned in dummy. He led a diamond to his king, but West took the ace and led his last club.
East ruffed with the king, and South also lost to West’s high
trumps. Down one.
“West had only two spades,” South noted, “so it wouldn’t
help me to take the A-K and ruff a spade. But at least I’m
trying.”
North didn’t say that playing with South was very trying.
At Trick Two South should lead a diamond to establish communication with his hand. If West wins and leads another
club, South wins with the ace, ruffs his last low club, takes
the ace of trumps, reaches his hand with a diamond ruff and
leads a trump. He loses two trumps and a diamond.
DAILY QUESTION You hold: ♠ A K 9 5 ♥ A 2 ♦ 10 7 6 4 2
♣ K 2. The dealer, at your right, opens one heart. What do
you say?
ANSWER: Few experts would pass. Some would risk an overcall of one spade. Most would double though the club support is weak. If partner responds two clubs, you must pass
since a further bid would show great strength. A bigger danger is that the next player will raise hearts, and partner will
bid clubs at the three level.
THIS DAY IN HISTORY
Today is Thursday, June 23, the 175th day of 2016. There are
191 days left in the year.
Today’s birthdays: Singer Diana Trask is 76. James Levine, former conductor of the Boston Symphony Orchestra and the
Metropolitan Opera, is 73. Actor Ted Shackelford is 70. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas is 68. Actress Frances
McDormand is 59. Writer-director Joss Whedon is 52. Rock
singer KT Tunstall is 41. Singer-songwriter Jason Mraz is 39.
Actress Melissa Rauch is 36.
ºIn 1904, President Theodore Roosevelt was nominated for a
second term of office at the Republican national convention.
ºIn 1931, aviators Wiley Post and Harold Gatty took off from
New York on a round-the-world flight that lasted eight days
and 15 hours.
ºIn 1960, the Food and Drug Administration approved Enovid as the first oral contraceptive for sale in the United States.
ºIn 1972, President Nixon and White House chief of staff H.R.
Haldeman discussed using the CIA to obstruct the FBI’s Watergate investigation. (Revelation of the tape recording of this
conversation sparked Nixon’s resignation in 1974.) Nixon
signed Title IX barring discrimination on the basis of sex for
education programs or activities receiving federal aid.
ºIn 1985, all 329 people aboard an Air India Boeing 747 were
killed when it crashed into the Atlantic Ocean near Ireland because of a bomb officials believe was planted by Sikh separatists.
ºIn 2015, WikiLeaks published documents it said showed the
National Security Agency had eavesdropped on the last three
French presidents.
HOUSE SITTERS BY TIMOTHY E. PARKER
4 7
1 9
7 6
West
1♦
Pass
Pass
All Pass
lead — ♣
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
2 7
6
5
9
0.12
0.02
SUDOKU
4
8
97
Yesterday’s low 64°
1-3 ft.
Weather
Visibility
Wind
High/low temperature
Snow depth at 7 p.m.
Record
high
78
Martha’s
1-2 ft.
5:08 a.m.
8:25 p.m.
15:17
10:39 p.m.
Norm.
74.7
58.3
44.3
Normal
high
40
S 4-8 kts.
Sunrise
Sunset
Day length
Moonrise
3:25
3:02
2:32
2:25
Record
low
S 4-8 kts.
©2016 KENKEN PUZZLE.
TRADEMARKNEXTOY,LLC/
DIST. BY UFS, INC.
WWW.KENKEN.COM
Nantucket
Harbor
Oak Bluffs
New Bedford
Newport RI
2:38
2:19
1:54
1:49
60
Buzzards Bay
Each row and
column must contain
the numbers 1
through 6 without
repeating. The
numbers within the
outlined boxes, or
cages, must
combine using the
given operation (in
any order) to
produce the target
numbers in the
top-left corners. Fill
in the single-box
cages with the
number in the
top-left corner.
A.M. P.M.
80
Cod Canal
Fill in the grid so
that every row,
every column, and
every 3x3 box
contains the digits 1
through 9. Puzzle
difficulty levels:
Easy on Monday
and Tuesday, more
difficult on
Wednesday and
Thursday, most
difficult on Friday
and Saturday. Tips
and computer
program at
www.sudoku.com.
High tides
Hyannis Port
Chatham
Wellfleet
Provincetown
1983
Actual Temperatures
Small craft advisory
Gale warning  Storm warning
Vineyard
Almanac
A.M. P.M.
Gloucester
Marblehead
Lynn
Scituate
Boston’s recent climate
BANGOR
76/52
NEWPORT
71/46
High tides
1:40 2:18
10.6 9.6
8:03 8:16
-0.3 0.7
South
Pass
1♥
3♣
4♥
Opening
6
4
1
3
1 Navigational aid
4 “FoxTrot”
cartoonist Bill
9 Bondservant
14 90-degree letter
15 Achier
16 Place for the
highborn?
17 Vast grassy area
18 Celebrator to the
extreme
20 Banana cluster
22 Mall lure
23 Opposites do it
26 Renounce, as a
family member
30 More replete
32 Channel of the sea
34 Daisy of “Li’l Abner”
36 LaGuardia lineup
38 Beginning of a
famous conclusion
39 Yemeni city
41 Dry riverbeds
43 Sign of things
to come
44 Took a horse
45 Roomy four-door auto
47 Fury
48 Bring into existence
51 Come back
53 Book corrections
55 Thrill to pieces
58 Rural hotels
60 One running easily
61 Handy
exterminators
67 Word before “carte”
or “mode”
68 1970 World’s Fair
site in Japan
69 Frightfully strange
70 Matchstickremoving game
71 Astronomer Hubble
72 Won every game of
a series
73 Mariner’s “Mayday!”
DOWN
1 Type of toast
2 Alaska Peninsula
native
3 Time-saver
for a gardener
4 Driveway material
5 Bygone bird of
New Zealand
6 Make a goof
7 Butterfly snarers
8 Tree nymph in
Greek myth
9 Most mentally fit
10 Souvenir from
Hawaii
11 What you have
up your sleeve
12 By way of
13 “Electric” fish
19 Boxers Muhammad
and Laila, for two
21 Grand ___ (wine
bottle words)
24 Hammerhead part
25 Things are bigger
there
27 Nabisco item
28 Some utensils for
chefs
29 African river or
country
31 Revere at midnight,
historically
33 Voicemail sound
34 Antony of
antiquity
35 Like a whole lot
37 Ending with “blind”
or “broad”
40 Able to get to
quickly
42 Fill beyond full
46 Group with no
members, in math
49 South China Sea
island
50 Volcano in Italy
52 Christ the Redeemer
city, briefly
54 Opening poker
stakes
56 Prefix meaning “sun”
57 Mine vehicles
59 Hearty soup
61 Enemy
62 1960s hits?
63 Go off course
64 Type of boot or lift
65 Long start, of old
66 Tear inelegantly
B10
T h e
B o s t o n
G l o b e
T H U R S D A Y, J U N E 2 3 , 2 0 1 6
HOROSCOPE
BLISS by Harry Bliss
IF TODAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY:
Take care of business and
figure out what you want
to accomplish as the year
progresses. Stay strong when
faced with opposition. Believe
in what you know you are
capable of doing. Your numbers
are 8, 13, 21, 23, 28, 34, 41.
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Take
on a physical challenge that will
boost your confidence and enthusiasm. Interacting with people
with a different point of view
than you will help you assess
your next move.
“Just give him the fish already.”
MISTER BOFFO by Joe Martin
CURTIS by Ray Billingsley
GET FUZZY by Darby Conley
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Show
greater consistency in what you
do and say, and you will find it
easier to make a decision. Keep a
steady pace. Your common sense
will help lead to victory.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Show
some stability. Stick to your plans
and follow through if you make
a promise to someone. Show
enthusiasm when helping relatives and you will help them be
less dependent on you. Don’t
overspend.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Make a
change, but get the approval of
those affected by your decisions
before you begin. You’ll feel less
stress knowing you have been
fair and taken others’ concerns
into consideration.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): A productive start to your day will pay
off. Ambitious projects coupled
with a healthy diet and regular
exercise will add to your success
as well as your health.
BIZARRO by Dan Piraro
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Make
a point to learn something new
or to discuss a concern you have
with the way someone is treating
you. A playful approach to love
will help smooth things over.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Make
personal improvements. Call on
people who are qualified to help
you make a decision that will
help you address a health concern. Don’t be too proud to ask
for guidance.
DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau
ADAM@HOME by Rob Harrell
MONTY by Jim Meddick
BIG NATE by Lincoln Peirce
POOCH CAFE by Paul Gilligan
FRAZZ by Jef Mallett
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Emotions will flare up if you aren’t
willing to listen. Decide what’s
important to you and head in
that direction. Getting rid of
items you no longer use will be
liberating.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21):
Get your facts straight before you
make an assumption. Acting on
hearsay will make you look bad.
Rely on past experiences to guide
you in making the right choice.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19):
Look for a good way to make
your money work for you. Invest
in the way you look or the skills
you have. Offering your very best
will impress others.
WHATZIT?
Find the phrase, saying or name in this
arrangement of letters.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18):
Don’t let anger take over. Use
your energy wisely and make
progress with matters concerning
the domestic changes you want
to make. Consider the moves you
have made in the past.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Being
with family, friends or those
who motivate you will lead to
permanent changes. A new look
or place to live will give you the
inspiration you need to follow
through.
TODAY’S PUZZLE
SOLUTIONS
Crossword
Sudoku
5
4
8
3
7
1
2
6
9
3
7
2
5
9
6
8
4
1
9
1
6
8
2
4
5
7
3
1
8
9
6
4
5
3
2
7
2
5
3
7
8
9
4
1
6
7
6
4
1
3
2
9
8
5
8
2
7
9
1
3
6
5
4
Kenken
WHATZIT?
Cry over spilt milk
DILBERT by Scott Adams
RED & ROVER by Brian Basset
BY EUGENIA LAST
6
3
1
4
5
8
7
9
2
4
9
5
2
6
7
1
3
8
T H U R S D A Y, J U N E 2 3 , 2 0 1 6
T h e
B o s t o n
G l o b e
B11
CORNERED by Baldwin
“Finally, a Real Non Sequitur” by Bill
ZIPPY Griffith
THE PAJAMA DIARIES by Terri Libenson
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE by Lynn Johnston
HEART OF THE CITY by Mark Tatulli
NON SEQUITUR by Wiley
ZITS by Jerry Scott & Jim Borgman
DUSTIN by Steve Kelley & Jeff Parker
PLUGGERS by Gary Brookins
You’re a plugger if you need your grandchild’s help accessing
your medical records online.
PRICKLY CITY by Scott Stantis
MOTHER GOOSE & GRIMM by Mike Peters
RHYMES WITH ORANGE by Hilary Price
JUMPSTART by Robb Armstrong
ROSE IS ROSE by Pat Brady & Don Wimmer
ARLO & JANIS by Jimmy Johnson
B12
T h e
B o s t o n
T H U R S D A Y, J U N E 2 3 , 2 0 1 6
G l o b e
Names
Mark Shanahan & Meredith Goldstein
with Emily Sweeney
Tyler: Aerosmith
farewell tour in 2017
Platten to perform
tribute to Orlando
It’s confirmed: Aerosmith will do a
farewell tour next year and then call it
quits. Appearing on Howard Stern’s
show, singer Steven Tyler said the
Boston band is planning to hit the
road for a final time in 2017. (He previously said such a tour was being considered.) “I love this band. I really do.
. . . We’re doing a farewell tour but it’s
only because it’s time.” Stunned, Stern
said: “Like, gone for good?” To which
Tyler responded: “Yeah.” Considering
that Aerosmith has broken up and reformed a few times over the course of
its four-decade career — remember
when Jimmy Crespo took over for guitarist Joe Perry? — perhaps fans
should be skeptical. It’s also true that
everyone from the Who to the Eagles
to Kiss have hit the road to say goodbye only to come back again and
again. Asked how long Aerosmith’s
farewell tour might last, Tyler said:
“Probably forever.”
Newton native Rachel Platten will
perform a musical tribute to the victims of the Orlando nightclub shooting during Logo’s third
annual “Trailblazer
Honors” awards
show, which airs Saturday. She’ll be singing “Fight Song” and
“Stand By You” when the
show is taped Thursday night in New
York City.
Other celebrities will present tributes to Orlando, including actor Wilson Cruz from ABC’s “Mistresses,” who
lost a relative — Brenda Lee Marquez
McCool — in the tragic shooting.
This year’s “Trailblazer” honorees
are tennis legend Billie Jean King, actor and playwright Harvey Fierstein,
Syrian refugee Subhi Nahas, and The
Advocate magazine. Transgender activists Marsha P. Johnson and Sylvia
Rivera will be honored posthumously.
Actress Emma Stone, who will portray King in the upcoming film “Battle
of the Sexes,” will present the Trailblazer award to King. The show will
include video tributes by actresses Laverne Cox, Judith Light, Bernadette
Peters, and Edie Falco, actors Matthew Broderick, Billy Porter, and Matthew Morrison, singer-songwriters
Troye Sivan and Cheyenne Jackson,
punk rocker Laura Jane Grace, and Jason Collins, the NBA’s first openly gay
player.The show will air on Logo and
VH1 Saturday at 8 p.m.
Baker, Teigen among
Under 30 speakers
What do Governor Charlie Baker, sex
therapist Dr. Ruth Westheimer, and
model Chrissy Teigen (inset) have in
common? Not much, we imagine, but
they will all be speaking at Forbes’ Under 30 Summit, which
will take place at various locations around
Boston Oct. 16-19.
The media company
is hoping to attract
thousands of people to
the event, which Randall Lane, editor
of Forbes magazine, has called “the
most influential gathering of young
global entrepreneurs.” Others set to
speak at the four-day event include
Nasty Gal founder Sophia Amoruso,
venture capitalist Jim Breyer, Rent the
Runway CEO Jennifer Hyman, and
Grooveshark founder Sam Tarantino.
BILL BRETT FOR THE BOSTON GLOBE
Gronk helps celebrate Scholar Athletes
Patriots tight end Rob Gronkowski was a surprise guest at the Scholar Athletes Celebration at TD Garden
Wednesday. The Patriots tight end and his girlfriend Camille Kostek (pictured next to Gronk) joined several
other notables in celebrating the academic achievements of inner-city high school kids. Scholar Athletes, a
nonprofit founded by Suffolk Construction’s John Fish (pictured with his wife, Cyndy) is conducted in partnership with Boston Public Schools and Springfield Public Schools. Others on the guest list were Scholar Athletes executive director Rebekah Salwasser, Red Sox owner John Henry and president Sam Kennedy,
Bruins CEO Charlie Jacobs, Pats president Jonathan Kraft and, of course, the scholar athletes.
Chef coming home
A familiar face from Boston’s culinary
scene is coming back to town. Chef
David Bazirgan is leaving San Francisco and returning here to work at
Bambara in Cambridge. Before he
went west in 2003, the Newburyport
native was chef de cuisine for Barbara
Lynch at No. 9 Park in Boston. “I am
so pumped to get back to cooking in
concert with New England’s seasons,
being around the peers that I started
my career with and having my family
in New England,” said Bazirgan.
“Baz” is slated to become Bambara’s
new executive chef in August, and
plans to unveil his menu this fall.
Brown doesn’t make
local book signing
As anyone who’s followed his career
knows, Bobby Brown can be unpredictable. So it was not even a little surprising that the R&B singer’s appearance at Newbury Street’s Trident
Booksellers & Cafe was canceled at the
last minute Tuesday. “His publicist
said he had food poisoning,” a Trident
employee told us. “It’s too bad because
we were probably going to have a big
turnout.” It seems unlikely the event
promoting Brown’s new, much-hyped
memoir, “Every Little Step,” will be rescheduled, which is also too bad. Especially for Brown’s fans, who’ve supported the 47-year-old singer since his
days in the pioneering Roxbury-bred
boy band New Edition, through his
breakout solo career, and even during
his tumultuous life off stage, including
Brown’s volatile 14-year marriage to
Whitney Houston and the eerily similar deaths of Houston and Brown’s
daughter Bobbi Kristina.
Read local celebrity news at
www.bostonglobe.com/names. Names
can be reached at [email protected]
or at 617-929-8253.
Dead ringer
LELANDS
$20,000 jersey isn’t even Bobby Orr’s
Why would someone pay almost $20,000 for a Bruins jersey? Because it’s a
No. 4 that was not worn by Bruins Hall of Famer Bobby Orr. The old-style
wool jersey worn in 1957 by hard-hitting Bruins defenseman Bob Armstrong
fetched $19,194.33, according to Lelands.com. Josh Evans, founder of the online auction house, says wool jerseys are hard to find these days, but the No. 4
on the back of the vintage Bruins sweater makes it especially valuable to collectors. Armstrong, a tough customer who dropped the gloves frequently during his playing days, skated for 11 seasons with the B’s. (There’s a spot of
what appears to be blood on the jersey.) Three more Bruins players — Pat Stapleton, Bob McCord, and Albert Langlois — would wear No. 4 before Orr
joined the team in 1967. The number was eventually retired.
A visit from Bratton
New York City Police Commissioner
Bill Bratton and his wife, CBS News
legal analyst Rikki Klieman, were
spotted dining out at Abe & Louie’s
on Tuesday. Bratton, who grew up in
Dorchester, was in town to speak at a
law enforcement conference at Boston University. They were accompanied by Chuck Wexler, executive director of the Police Executive Research Forum, NYPD Deputy
Commissioner for Counterterrorism
and Intelligence John Miller, and PR
man-about-town George Regan.
Wahlberg dances
Donnie Wahlberg posted a video of
himself busting out some old school
dance moves in Macy’s on Tuesday.
Our sources tell us he was on the
South Shore, visiting the Kingston
Collection. Dressed in a black Motörhead T-shirt, dark pants, and sunglasses, he becomes a dancing machine, doing the worm, a backspin,
and the moonwalk in the middle of an
aisle. The best part is when a woman
in the store witnesses the scene and
asks, “Is he all right?”
MORE CELEBRITY NEWS
HBO’s ‘Vinyl’ canceled
The TV drama ‘‘Vinyl’’ from Martin
Scorsese and Mick Jagger isn’t getting any more satisfaction from HBO,
which on Wednesday said it won’t
bring ‘‘Vinyl’’ back for season two and
reversing its previously announced renewal. HBO said the decision wasn’t
an easy one and expressed ‘‘enormous
respect’’ for those involved in making
the series and its cast. Scorsese and
Jagger created and produced ‘‘Vinyl,’’
about the music industry in the 1970s.
It starred Bobby Cannavale, Ray Romano, and Olivia Wilde. ‘‘Vinyl’’
launched with high expectations but
received middling reviews. Its cancellation follows a recent turnover in
HBO’s top ranks: Longtime programming president Michael Lombardo
stepped down and was replaced by
HBO executive Casey Bloys. (AP)
‘It came up on some Pandora algorithm — I don’t remember who the artist was. It
was a total, blind taste test.’ JOHN MAYER explaining how he first became a fan of the music of the Grateful Dead in 2011
Parton shows her ‘Pure & Simple’ brilliance at Wang
By Steve Smith
MUSIC REVIEW
GLOBE STAFF
It’s impossible to overstate what a
national treasure Dolly Parton is, but
attend one of her concerts and you’re
confronted with overwhelming evidence. So great is her fame, so indelible her image as a glitzy entertainer,
that it’s paradoxically easy to lose sight
of what a prodigiously skillful artist
she’s always been. At the Citi Wang
Theatre on Tuesday night you had to
squint past the ubiquitous rhinestone
glare, and cut through thrice-told
childhood tales and campy gags grown
kudzu-thick, but proof of her artistic
stature was abundant.
Parton’s present US trek, billed as
her most extensive in 25 years, is titled
“Pure & Simple,” after a forthcoming
album stated to include new tunes
alongside acknowledged hits. Tuesday’s show followed suit, with two
fresh songs — the album’s title track
during the first set; “Outside Your
Door” on the second — holding their
own among a generous sampling of selections spanning Parton’s career.
The onstage setup suited the billing
as well, at least by her glitzy standard.
DOLLY PARTON
At Citi Wang Theatre, June 21
Parton, 70, sang with flawless pitch,
and played guitar, banjo, dulcimer, autoharp, and piano for keeps — plus fiddle and saxophone, more for laughs.
Three longtime sidemen contributed
piano and keyboards, guitars, basses,
and harmony vocals. (Drums, when
needed, emerged loud and foursquare
from a machine.) The stage was bare,
save for a few set pieces — a humble
perch, a church pew — wheeled on and
off by Steve Summers, Parton’s creative director, who also supplied a few
stylish dance steps. A set break allowed for a single costume change.
By design, then, the show focused
attention on Parton and her songs,
which withstood the close scrutiny.
Barreling out of the starting gate, Parton & Co. surveyed indelible early
songs (“Jolene,” “Applejack,” “Coat of
Many Colors”), each accompanied by a
winding tale of its homespun concep-
JOSH REYNOLDS FOR THE BOSTON GLOBE
Dolly Parton performed old and new songs at the Citi Wang Theatre.
tion. Thereafter she offered country
chestnuts and gospel canon; a medley
of folk-rock covers (including “Blowin’
in the Wind” with “Dust in the Wind”
mashed into its crevices); and a pair of
selections from her glorious collaborations with Emmylou Harris and Linda
Ronstadt.
Those “Trio” tunes — planned for
reissue in September with previously
unreleased material, she announced —
came during a second set that touched
on her biggest mainstream successes.
But Parton also included songs from
the back-to-basics albums that reasserted her roots-music credibility:
“The Grass Is Blue,” played in the piano-lounge revision of Norah Jones’s
2003 cover, and “Little Sparrow,” a
stark, unadorned version of clockstopping intensity.
From there, it was pure pleasure to
the finish line: “Two Doors Down,”
“Here You Come Again,” “Islands in the
Stream,” and “9 to 5,” with “I Will Always Love You” reserved for the encore. That Parton could still sound
fresh after working so hard verged on
the supernatural; that she could joke
about being OK with Whitney Houston getting credit for her biggest song
so long as she got the cash, and then
deliver a rendition of quavering understatement and naked honesty, illustrated one last time her paradoxical
brilliance.
Steve Smith can be reached at
[email protected]. Follow him
on Twitter @nightafternight.
Business
C
T H E B O S T O N G L O B E T H U R S DAY, J U N E 2 3 , 2 01 6 | B O S T O N G L O B E .C O M / B US I N E S S
Kraft’s stadium plan
faces stiff competition...
Brigham,
nurses set
to resume
discussion
One-day strike still
threatened if no deal
By Priyanka Dayal McCluskey
GLOBE STAFF
PAT GREENHOUSE/GLOBE STAFF
There are other visions
for the site, and some
say no to a soccer venue
pull off the business equivalent of a fourteam trade, replete with cash considerations and parcels to be named later.
Here are the other stakeholders that
Kraft, who has declined to comment on his
efforts at Bayside, needs to appease before
he can break ground:
By Dan Adams and Katheleen Conti
‘We’re very hopeful
we can reach a settlement.’
DR. RON WALLS, Brigham CEO
UMASS BOSTON
GLOBE STAFF
It’s easy to see why Robert Kraft is eyeing
the old Bayside Expo Center as the site for
the soccer stadium he has long dreamed of
building in Boston.
Just around the corner, UMass Boston is
overhauling its once-grim campus. Interstate 93 and an MBTA Red Line station are
steps away. The surrounding area is experiencing an uptick in development. And the
views of Dorchester Bay are spectacular.
But those same qualities have invited
competing visions for the land — including
several projects that are years ahead of
Kraft in the process of winning city and
neighborhood support.
BILL BRETT/GLOBE STAFF/FILE 1997
And so, even after the death of an earlier
plan to put a Boston 2024 Olympics Athletes Village here, the owner of the New
England Patriots and the New England Revolution of Major League Soccer could hardly
have picked a site with more overlapping interests and potential conflicts. To build a
stadium for the Revolution, he will need to
A plan for a
South Boston
Patriots
stadium drew
foes in 1997;
demolition is
underway at
Bayside.
The state university campus, which is
working to improve its stature within the
University of Massachusetts system and
among Boston’s many colleges, bought the
Bayside property in 2010.
UMass officials have previously hinted
that they want to build a mixed-use development at the site, with dormitories, shops,
and academic buildings supporting an expanded College of Nursing and Health Sciences. A sports complex has also been floated.
Kraft would probably need to satisfy at
least some of those ambitions. UMass sports
STADIUM, Page C6
...as chills don’t thrill in Southie
Residents cool to plan
to ‘haunt’ Castle Island
By Jon Chesto
GLOBE STAFF
To most Castle Island fans, the seaside
park is a tranquil oasis to while away the
hours, snacking on Sullivan’s hot dogs or
watching the powerboats speed across the
water.
But to one imaginative entrepreneur, the
old fort’s granite walls are the perfect place
to scare the daylights out of thousands of
visitors by turning this normally quiet outpost into a “Spooky World”-style freak show,
with full-fledged zombie attacks, this fall.
The prospects of handing over a beloved
landmark to a for-profit venture known as
Fright Island has sent chills through many
long-time residents of South Boston.
Amid the standard trepidation about
traffic and public safety, there’s a deeper
fear: Fright Island’s critics worry the family-
friendly South Boston they cherish is under
siege as younger professionals flock to the
neighborhood, and handing Castle Island
over to blood-covered zombies and beerbuzzed millennials would just accelerate
that trend. This is, after all, a neighborhood
that just rebuffed a Starbucks in part to pro-
Hiawatha Bray
Spooky World,
which is in New
Hampshire, has
frights similar
to those sought
at Castle Island.
tect locally owned shops.
The issue will put to the test the Baker
administration’s desire to discover creative
revenue-producing activities for stateowned properties. The state Department of
Conservation and Recreation owns and
manages the historic fort, and commissioner Leo Roy said he hopes to make a decision
within the next 10 days about whether
Fright Island should be given a five-year
contract to operate.
The concept was roundly derided at a
Castle Island Association meeting Roy attended on Saturday. But he also knows
there are plenty of younger people who
would attend, just as they throng the nearby
Lawn on D on summer weekends. And he’s
eager to find new ways to draw millennials
to the state’s parks.
Roy said he understands a need for balance. He made a similar decision recently
by approving, over neighbors’ objections, a
Red Bull Flugtag event that will bring
omeday soon, you’ll come
home from a hard day’s
work, flop down on the sofa, switch on the TV, and
watch a little Facebook.
Yes, the world’s top social media
company now wants to be the
world’s biggest video company. And
Facebook is kick-starting the process
by putting millions of everyday users
on the air. That’s why you’re getting
Still, the Brigham, which is owned
by Partners HealthCare, continues to
prepare for a possible walkout. It has
started postponing surgeries, reducing
admissions, and transferring patients.
That includes 10 infants who were
transferred out of the 46-bed newborn
intensive care unit.
While the hospital would operate at
60 percent of capacity during a strike,
it would be able to accommodate the
usual number of births, officials said.
Brigham delivers more babies than
any other Massachusetts hospital.
The Brigham has contracted with a
staffing agency, Colorado-based US
Nursing, to hire 700 temporary nurses. The temp workers are starting to
arrive this week and will undergo
training and orientation. Brigham officials said all the temp nurses will be licensed to work in Massachusetts and
that their placement in the hospital
will be based on their education and
previous work experience.
Hospital officials declined to detail
exactly when and where the temp
NURSES, Page C3
INSIDE
FRIGHT ISLAND, Page C6
TECH LAB
Live from everywhere
to everywhere, it’s Facebook
S
Brigham and Women’s Hospital
and its nurses union will make a lastditch effort to avoid a strike.
Both sides have agreed to meet for
another round of contract negotiations
Friday. Without a deal, the nurses
union says it will stage a one-day strike
on Monday, and the hospital says it
will lock them out for another four
days while using temporary workers.
“We’re hoping this means the hospital is ready to make progress so that
we can move forward,” said Joe Markman, a spokesman for the Massachusetts Nurses Association, which represents 3,300 nurses at Brigham, one of
the city’s biggest teaching hospitals.
Dr. Ron M. Walls, Brigham’s chief
operating officer, said hospital officials
are committed to talking all day Friday
and through the weekend, if necessary,
to try to avoid a strike. “We’re very
hopeful we can reach a settlement,” he
said.
notified that a Facebook friend is
transmitting live from the beach or
his favorite nightclub.
The Facebook live video service
launched in August, with celebrities
such as Vin Diesel and Donald
Trump transmitting live videos to
their online fans from mobile devices. In January, Facebook started letting the rest of us in. Any iPhone or
Android user can start transmitting
videos simply by launching the Facebook app and tapping an icon.
It’s hardly a new idea. A once-hot
app called Meerkat lit the fuse in early 2015. Twitter Inc. soon struck
back with a similar product called
Periscope. It’s been reasonably successful, streaming 1 million hours of
video per day, according to Twitter. It
will do even better this fall, thanks to
a deal with the National Football
BOLD TYPES
League to livestream 10 Thursday
night games.
Yahoo Inc. also wants a piece of
the action. On Tuesday, its Tumblr
blogging service launched a live video offering. Tumblr is relying on video apps from four other companies
— YouTube, YouNow, Kanvas, and
Upclose. Users of these apps will be
able to send live video to all their
TECH LAB, Page C7
Jim Bildner takes a venture
approach to nonprofits C4
BETABOSTON
Bitcoin pioneer Circle bulks
up in China C4
STAT
At 31, she runs one of hottest
biotech firms in the US C4
Business
C2
T h e
B o s t o n
G l o b e
T H U R S D A Y, J U N E 2 3 , 2 0 1 6
TALKING POINTS
FRAUD
MORE THAN 300
PEOPLE THIS YEAR
CHARGED WITH
MEDICAL FRAUD
FAST FOOD
JIMMY JOHN’S TO
STOP NONCOMPETE
CLAUSES IN NEW YORK
Agenda
The US government charged 301 people this year in a series of medical fraud sting operations, the most ever, for allegedly running scams that bilked the government out of $900
million. Takedowns so far this year have involved medical clinics, home health care services, and shell companies that submitted fraudulent Medicare and Medicaid claims for tens
of millions of dollars at a time, Attorney General Loretta Lynch, Department of Health and
Human Services Secretary Sylvia Mathews Burwell, and other US officials announced
Wednesday. In one example, three individuals were indicted for operating clinics that gave
drug addicts prescriptions for controlled substances and narcotics and then billed Medicare
for $36 million in fraudulent claims for services that were never provided. — BLOOMBERG
New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman says
the Jimmy John’s sandwich chain has agreed to
stop including noncompete agreements in hiring
packets used for low-wage workers. Schneiderman
said Wednesday that such agreements ‘‘bully’’
workers into staying under threat of being sued,
and companies should stop using them for minimum-wage employees. The sample noncompete
agreements Jimmy John’s sent its franchisees prevented employees from working for any nearby
business that gets at least 10 percent of its sales from sandwiches for two years after they
left. Jimmy John’s said it assured Schneiderman’s office it wouldn’t support the enforcement of a franchisee’s noncompete agreement against a worker. — ASSOCIATED PRESS
ECONOMIC DATA
US mortgage rates
New numbers for the average 30-year,
fixed-rate mortgage will be released
Thursday. Last week, Freddie Mac
reported the average 30-year, fixed-rate
SHARING ECONOMY
CHICAGO PASSES
MEASURES TO
ADDRESS UBER, LYFT,
AND AIRBNB
FAST FOOD
BURGER KING TO SELL
MAC AND CHEESE
STICKS COVERED
IN CHEETOS
After weeks of debate, Chicago’s City Council approved compromise measures Wednesday
placing at least some restrictions on two ventures at the core of the sharing economy, ridehailing services like Uber and Lyft and short-term rental companies like Airbnb. In a
separate measure, aldermen approved licensing regulations for ride-hailing services after
the member who crafted the rules dropped an insistence on fingerprint background checks.
The mayor’s office said the regulations on short-term rentals are the first in the nation to
require companies to regularly share data on rental listings with the city so it can check if
they comply with the law. It also imposes new licensing fees to fund enforcement of the
rules and services for the homeless, and sets up a complaint hot line.
— ASSOCIATED PRESS
Burger King, the restaurant chain backed by 3G Capital
and Warren Buffett, will begin selling deep-fried sticks of
macaroni and cheese encrusted in Cheetos-flavored
breading, part of a trend toward blending fast food with
well-known snack brands. The new product, called Mac
‘n Cheetos, emerged from a partnership with PepsiCo
Inc.’s Frito-Lay, the snack empire that owns Cheetos,
Doritos, Ruffles, and other chips. The move mimics the
strategy of Yum Brands Inc.’s Taco Bell, which introduced a taco with a Doritos shell in 2012. Mac ‘n Cheetos
will be sold for about eight weeks or until supplies run
out, said Burger King. — BLOOMBERG
mortgage fell for a second straight week
to 3.54 percent from 3.60 percent the
week before.
EVENT
Writing for business
Harvard Ed Portal is sponsoring a
business writing workshop. Local
business owners are invited to attend the
morning workshop, where they will learn
how to become a more effective and
HOUSING
SALES IN MAY
STRONGEST IN
NEARLY A DECADE
ECONOMY
IMF DOWNGRADES
OUTLOOK FOR US
ECONOMY
Americans snapped up houses in May almost as soon as properties were listed, fueling the
strongest sales rate in nearly a decade. Sales of existing homes rose 1.8 percent last month
to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 5.53 million, the highest level since February 2007,
the National Association of Realtors said Wednesday. People remain intent on buying
homes, despite the low inventory of properties on the market that has caused prices to rise.
The elevated demand likely stems from low mortgage rates and a relatively healthy jobs picture with unemployment at 4.7 percent, even with a recent slowdown in hiring. — ASSOCIATED PRESS
The International Monetary Fund downgraded its forecast for the
US economy this year and said America should raise the minimum
wage to help the poor, offer paid maternity leave to encourage
more women to work, and overhaul the corporate tax system to
boost productivity. In its annual checkup of the US economy, the
IMF on Wednesday predicted 2.2 percent US growth this year,
down from 2.4 percent in 2015. In April, the international lending
agency had forecast 2.4 percent growth for 2016. Still, IMF managing director Christine Lagarde (right), citing a healthy job market,
says ‘‘the US economy is in good shape.’’ US unemployment fell last
month to an eight-year low of 4.7 percent. The United States is growing faster than most
other advanced economies. The IMF foresees 1.5 percent growth this year for the 19 countries that use the euro currency, and 0.5 percent growth for Japan. — ASSOCIATED PRESS
efficient writer. Friday, 8 to 11 a.m.,
Harvard Ed Portal, 224 Western Ave.,
Allston. Free.
CLASS
Java coding
for beginners
General Assembly Boston is hosting a
two-day workshop for beginners on
JavaScript coding. Attendees should bring
TELEVISION
VIACOM LAUNCHES
ONLINE VERSION OF
BET IN 100 COUNTRIES
Viacom Inc. introduced an online-only version of its BET cable TV network for international audiences in 100 countries, including China and Germany, a major expansion of a leading entertainment outlet for black viewers. Subscribers to BET Play will pay $3.99 a month
for live feeds of major events, beginning with this weekend’s 2016 BET Awards, along with
access to the BET Soul channel and a library of hit shows on-demand, the New York-based
company said Wednesday in a statement. Viacom is trying to turn another of its cable channels into a major force outside the United States. — BLOOMBERG
a laptop. A basic understanding of HTML
and CSS is required. Saturday, noon to 5
p.m., Sunday, noon to 5 p.m., 51 Melcher
St., Boston. $220.
EVENT
Take the financial reins
Willow Planning Group, a Boston-based
REAL ESTATE
AMITYVILLE
HORROR HOUSE
UP FOR SALE
In 1974, it was an expensive and stately Long Island estate, nestled in a vintage-home village, with white shutters on the windows, white lattice on the side, and a white sign out
front that read: ‘‘High Hopes.’’ But the house on
Ocean Avenue in Amityville was darkened that year
by a gruesome mass murder that claimed every
family member there — except one. Ronald J. DeFeo
Jr., the 23-year-old killer, was convicted of fatally
shooting his parents and four siblings and was given six concurrent sentences of 25 years to life. It inspired a best-selling book and two films titled ‘‘The
Amityville Horror.’’ Now, the infamous home where
DeFeo killed his family is on the market for
$850,000 — and was named Realtor.com’s ‘‘most
popular’’ house last week. The listing agent insists
that the property’s past isn’t hurting its marketability. — WASHINGTON POST
investment adviser, is hosting a financial
planning workshop. Attendees will learn
about maintaining credit, using debt
effectively, building savings, and more.
Monday, 5 to 6 p.m., WeWork, 745
Atlantic Ave., Boston. $45 to $80.
ROUND TABLE
Representative
Michael Turner
The New England Council is sponsoring a
round-table event with US Representative
Michael Turner, a Republican representing
Ohio’s 10th congressional district. Turner
serves on the House committees on
TECHNOLOGY
NEW YORK BILL TO
MAKE IT EASIER TO FIX
BROKEN IPHONES
DIES
A bill that could make it easier to fix broken phones, computers, and tablets was killed in
the New York state Legislature on Saturday when the session officially ended. Opposed by
tech giants such as Apple, Cisco, and Xerox, the bill would have forced companies to release
electronic parts and design manuals to independent repair shops. If passed, the bill could
have been a boon to repair technicians and ‘‘right-to-repair’’ advocates nationwide. Advocates for the Fair Repair Act argue that if big tech companies give repair shops access to official manuals and electronic parts for devices, such as the iPhone, consumers would have
more options to fix their phones and prolong a device’s life. — WASHINGTON POST
armed services; oversight and
government reform; and intelligence.
Tuesday, 8 to 9:30 a.m., The Hampshire
House, 84 Beacon St., Boston. Free for
members.
Events of note? E-mail us at
[email protected]
T h e
T H U R S D A Y, J U N E 2 3 , 2 0 1 6
B o s t o n
G l o b e
Business
C3
Yellen faces GOP
ire on Fed policies
Members of House
panel say strong
growth unrealized
By Martin Crutsinger
ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON — Federal Reserve chairwoman Janet Yellen came
under fire Wednesday from House
Republicans who charged that the
central bank’s policies to promote
low interest rates have not boosted
economic growth and have left financial markets confused about the Fed’s
next moves.
House Financial Services Committee Chairman Jeb Hensarling, a
Texas Republican, said that the Fed
and the Obama administration have
failed to produce the strong growth
the country has needed over the past
seven years since the 2007-2009 recession.
‘‘What is clear and verifiable is
that this weak economy doesn’t work
for millions of working Americans,’’
Hensarling told Yellen. ‘‘The Fed has
been the facilitator and accommodator of the administration’s disastrous
national debt policy and has regrettably lent its shrinking credibility to advancing the administration’s social
agenda.’’
While Republicans on the committee joined in Hensarling’s criticism, Democrats defended Yellen.
They noted that the unemployment
rate has fallen from 10 percent to 4.7
percent, and 14 million jobs have
been created despite modest overall
growth.
Yellen said the Fed has used the
tools it has available to keep interest
rates low as a way to bolster job creation.
Testifying for a second day before
Congress, Yellen reiterated that the
Fed plans to be very cautious in raising interest rates. She said the economy faces a mixed pic ture, with
growth restrained by lackluster investment spending but bolstered by a
solid rebound in consumer spending.
Yellen said she was ‘‘very hopeful’’
that job growth, which slowed sharply in April and May, will rebound in
coming months.
‘‘There are some headwinds but
we do have strengths. Consumer
spending is particularly strong,’’ Yellen said. ‘‘I don’t want to send a message of pessimism about the economy and where we are going.’’
The Fed left a key interest rate unchanged at a low level of 0.25 percent
to 0.5 percent at its meeting last
week. It was the fourth time it has
passed up a chance to raise rates after nudging rates up by a quarterpoint last December.
Hensarling and other Republi-
SAM MIRCOVICH/REUTERS/FILE 2016
Musk fails to calm investors on deal
Offer to buy
solar company
raises questions
By Dana Hull
and Christopher Martin
BLOOMBERG NEWS
SAN FRANCISCO — Wall
Street is questioning whether
Elon Musk’s $2.86 billion plan
to combine Tesla Motors Inc.
and SolarCity Corp. will go
through, even though Musk is
trying to persuade investors
the proposed marriage is brimming with benefits.
Tesla offered a range of
$26.50 to $28.50 a share for
the largest US solar provider,
about 50 percent less than
where the stock was trading six
months ago. SolarCity was up
less than 4 percent Wednesday
to $21.88, a 21 percent discount to the high end of the
buyout offer. Tesla shares were
down more than 10 percent to
$196.66, after falling as much
as 14 percent in extended trading Tuesday.
Tesla shareholders are concerned the carmaker is spreading itself too thin, while investors in SolarCity say the price
offered is too low. The potential
acquisition is setting up a battle for the heart and soul of Tesla, which has struggled to become a high-volume automaker and now is trying to
reposition itself as one-stop
shopping for clean-energy consumers.
“Tesla faces the most resistance because it’s clearly a big
pivot from their business model,” Patrick Jobin, an analyst at
Credit Suisse Group AG, said in
an interview Wednesday. “And
SolarCity is worth a lot more
than Tesla is offering. We give
it less than a 40 percent chance
of happening.”
Musk, the largest share-
CORPORATE-GOVERNANCE ISSUES
Tesla CEO Elon Musk serves
on the board of SolarCity, so he
did not cast a vote on the deal.
holder in both companies,
and Antonio Gracias serve on
both boards and recused themselves from Tesla’s Monday
vote to approve the proposed
deal. They also will recuse
themselves from the SolarCity
board vote on the proposal.
There are thorny corporategovernance issues related to
the deal because so many
board members at the two
companies are closely aligned,
analysts said. Musk’s cousin
Lyndon Rive, SolarCity’s chief
executive, also won’t participate in the voting.
“It’s clearly a corporate-governance mess,” Jobin said.
“There may be challenges in
getting shareholder approval,”
wrote Colin Langan, an analyst
at UBS, in a research note published Wednesday. “We don’t
see the premium as particularly rich.”
In a conference call with investors that lasted more than
90 minutes early Wednesday,
Musk stressed the importance
of solar power, batteries for energy storage, and electric cars
as the “Earth’s solution.”
“ I f a ny t h i n g , m ay b e w e
should have done this sooner,
but I don’t think we’re doing it
too early,” Musk said. Eventually, people will look back on gasoline-fueled cars as “a weird
phase. And now we want to get
out of that weird phase as soon
as we can.”
Musk owns 22 percent of
SolarCity and 21 percent of Tesla, the youngest and smallest
publicly held US automaker.
The two companies work closely together: SolarCity picked
batteries made by Tesla to provide 13 megawatts of electric
storage for an array of solar
panels to be built on the Hawaiian island of Kauai.
While it’s unusual to announce a proposed acquisition
rather than a definitive agreement, Musk’s holdings in the
two companies required him to
keep the market informed,
which benefits other shareholders, Todd Maron, Tesla’s
general counsel, said on
Wednesday’s call.
“ O n t h e Te s l a s i d e , t h e
board has approved going forward with the offer, which is
why we made the announcement,” he said. “We’ve delivered our offer to SolarCity.”
After due diligence and a
signed merger agreement,
there would be a shareholder
vote at both companies within
two months, Maron said during the Wednesday call. Tesla is
working with Evercore Partners Inc. as an adviser on the
deal, according to three people
familiar with the situation.
Tesla announced its bid for
SolarCity in a blog post Tuesday, saying the acquisition
would “complete the picture.”
The move comes as Tesla finishes construction of its battery-manufacturing gigafactory east of Reno and prepares to
begin output of the Model 3, its
more affordable electric car,
late next year. Musk has said he
wants to build 500,000 cars a
year by 2018, two years sooner
than originally planned.
If the deal is approved, SolarCity would become a unit of
Tesla.
Janet Yellen said she is hopeful
that job growth will rebound.
cans used Yellen’s appearance to criticize the Fed’s current operations. Republicans in the House are pushing
legislation that would require the
central bank to adopt a formula using inflation and other measures to
guide its decisions on interest rates.
Yellen has called such an approach unworkable. She has also
voiced objections to another GOP
proposal that would give congressional auditors the chance to review Fed
decisions on interest-rate policies,
saying that would impinge on the political independence the Fed needs to
conduct monetary policy.
But Hensarling said the current
confusion in markets about the central bank’s next move underscored
the need for reforms.
‘‘The Fed’s so-called forward guidance continues to provide little or no
guidance to the rest of us,’’ he told
Yellen.
Other Republican lawmakers
questioned whether it was over-stepping its legal authority by paying interest on excess reserves that banks
keep at the Fed that go beyond what
Congress envisioned.
Yellen defended the Fed’s payments, saying the practice helped the
Fed manage interest rate policies
with the difference between the interest being paid and the Fed’s
benchmark federal funds as ‘‘quite
small.’’
Some Republican lawmakers said
they were concerned that the Fed
could end up with losses on its massive bond holdings should interest
rates start rising rapidly. The Fed expanded its balance sheet more than
four-fold to $4.5 trillion currently by
buying government bonds as a way
to push long-term interest rates lower. Yellen called the risks it faced in
holding ultra-safe Treasury bonds
very low.
Other GOP lawmakers questioned
whether the Fed should stress test its
own balance sheet in the same way
that it conducts stress tests on the nation’s largest banks. Yellen said the
Fed had conducted such a test.
COMMERCIAL REAL ESTATE LOANS
Low Rates. Local Lenders.
Strong Bank.
Brigham,
nurses to
talk again
3
%
.875
NURSES
Continued from Page C1
nurses would be trained, citing
safety concerns. But they said
the nurses will learn Brighamspecific policies and technologies, including the hospital’s
complex electronic health records system.
The temp nurses will be paid
up to $75 an hour, for a minimum of 60 hours, if the strike
commences, according to the
staffing agency’s website. The
agency doesn’t name Brigham
but says it is actively recruiting
for a strike in Massachusetts.
Hospital officials said they’re
working to ensure that patients
receive safe care during a potential strike — in par t by
scheduling additional doctors
and other employees to work
alongside the temp nurses.
Brigham says the temp nurses
are skilled and fully qualified to
care for their patients.
But the union issued a statement arguing that Brigham is
putting patients at risk by hiring temp workers.
“History, academic studies,
and unionized registered nurses can all testify to the fact that
mercenary replacement nurses
cannot make up for the temporary loss of nurses who are spe-
A Tesla Model S
charged at a
Tesla
Supercharger
station in
Cabazon, Calif.
The potential
acquisition is
setting up a
battle for the
heart and soul
of Tesla, which
is trying to
reposition
itself as onestop shopping
for cleanenergy
consumers.
In a conference
call with
investors, Musk
stressed the
importance of
solar power,
batteries for
energy storage,
and electric
cars as the
“Earth’s
solution.”
ASSOCIATED PRESS
DAVID L. RYAN/GLOBE STAFF/FILE 2015
One of the walkways connecting buildings at Brigham and
Women’s Hospital in the Longwood Medical Area.
cialized in their fields and
knowledgeable of their patients
and the hospital systems,” the
union said.
The hospital and the union
have been negotiating a contract for the past nine months.
As those talks grew more bitter,
union members voted overwhelmingly to hold a one-day
strike. In response, the hospital
said it would lock out the union
nurses for five days for economic reasons and to ensure continuity of patient care.
Negotiators from both sides
spent more than 10 hours talking last Friday, and met again
on Monday. But the talks Monday ended early after progress
stalled.
The union and the hospital
remain at odds on several issues, including wages, benefits,
and staffing levels.
Brigham nurses receive 5
percent annual raises for their
first 18 years on the job. The
union has asked for an addi-
tional 4 percent raise for all
nurses over two years, but the
hospital has not agreed to that.
Both sides have proposed a new
step raise for nurses at the top
of the pay scale, but they disagree on how much the increase should be.
The average Brigham nurse
makes $106,000 a year plus
benefits, which the hospital
says is among the best nurses’
salaries in the nation.
The union also opposes the
hospital’s proposal to place
newly hired nurses into a different health insurance plan than
the one available to existing
nurses. And it has clashed with
Brigham on nurse staffing levels for a hospital unit that treats
patients recovering from thoracic procedures.
Priyanka Dayal McCluskey
can be reached at
priyanka.mccluskey
@globe.com. Follow her on
Twitter @priyanka_dayal.
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T h e
Business
BetaBoston
Jeremy Allaire, founder of Circle Internet Financial, said, “The West is
several years behind China in terms of ” social payment apps.
Bitcoin pioneer Circle bulks up in China
Boston company allows electronic money transfers
GLOBE STAFF
Circle Internet Financial Ltd., a
Boston company that uses the digital
currency Bitcoin to manage worldwide
money transfers, is getting a $60 million cash injection from a group of
Chinese and American investors. Circle also announced the launch of Circle China, an independent company
targeting the Chinese money transfer
market.
Circle allows users in the United
States and the United Kingdom to
send money free of charge from a computer or smartphone to people anywhere in the world. The system instantly translates US dollars or British
pounds into computer-generated bitcoins, and transmits the money electronically to a recipient’s e-mail address or phone number. The recipient
can get paid in dollars, pounds, or bitcoins.
Founder Jeremy Allaire said the
company has grown rapidly since its
launch in 2015. “We’re on track to
meaningfully exceed a billion dollars
G l o b e
T H U R S D A Y, J U N E 2 3 , 2 0 1 6
At 31, she runs
one of the hottest
biotech companies
in the country
GRETCHEN ERTL/NEW YORK TIMES/FILE 2013
By Hiawatha Bray
B o s t o n
in transaction volume this year,” Allaire said. Circle will soon launch operations in Spain and expand throughout the European Union.
Allaire said that the Chinese market is ripe for expansion because people in that country are already accustomed to using smartphones for money transfers. “This whole category of
social payment apps came out of China,” Allaire said. “The West is several
years behind China in terms of this behavior.”
Major Chinese investors including
IDG Capital Partners, Baidu, CICC Alpha, EverBright Investments, WangXiang, and CreditEase are participating
in the deal, as well as Breyer Capital
and General Catalyst Partners. In addition, former IBM Corp. chief executive
Sam Palmisano and Glenn Hutchins,
the cofounder of venture investment
company Silver Lake, have made personal investments in Circle.
Hiawatha Bray can be reached at
[email protected]. Follow
him on Twitter @GlobeTechLab.
Food
RACHEL ELLNER
Yasso frozen Greek yogurt was launched five years ago. Based in Quincy,
it is a sponsor of the Best Buddies charity, championed by Tom Brady.
Former Harvard undergrad now spearheads firm
pursuing commercial applications of gene-editing tool
B
B Y A N D R E W J O S E P H | S TAT
ERKELEY, Calif. —
The question on the
test was about
CRISPR, but Rachel
Haurwitz, then a
graduate student at
the University of
California Berkeley, botched it. She
had never heard the term.
Less than a decade later, Haurwitz
is the CEO of Caribou Biosciences Inc.,
one of the leading companies pursuing commercial applications of
CRISPR, a remarkable gene-editing
tool that could help scientists develop
new medical treatments and advance
other industries.
Haurwitz readily admits she
chanced into running a company at
the forefront of one of the hottest areas in science. While still a graduate
student, she happened to land in a lab
that was starting to explore CRISPR
systems, just a few years before the
field exploded.
“It makes me feel incredibly lucky,”
Haurwitz said. “I am here because I
was in the right place at the right
time, with the right people and the
right science around me.”
But even if she was the beneficiary
of some good fortune, Haurwitz, associates say, deserves ample credit for
helping to transform the company
from a one-person operation into a
growing enterprise with tens of millions of dollars in investment — all as
a 31-year-old woman working in an
industry still dominated by men.
Disciplined, competitive, and decisive, Haurwitz has been eager and
quick to learn new skills as an executive, growing as a leader as the company has advanced, people who know
her say.
“She was always cool under pressure — she never got rattled,” said Jennifer Doudna, a Caribou cofounder
and the UC Berkeley CRISPR pioneer
in whose lab Haurwitz did her PhD research. “I was always struck by that. I
think that plays to her strength in the
business world.”
Haurwitz acknowledges that much
ABOUT STAT
This story was
produced by STAT,
a national
publication from
Boston Globe
Media Partners
that covers health,
medicine, and life
sciences. Read
more at
Statnews.com.
of the excitement around the company is because it is working with CRISPR, considered a biotech darling.
That’s helped Caribou avoid the painful slogs that trip up many young biotech companies, though she added,
“No doubt that’s coming.”
Haurwitz, who grew up in Austin,
Texas, first caught the science bug as a
kid, and it was at Harvard where she
picked up an interest in ribonucleic
acid. She then headed UC Berkeley in
2007, where she spent time in a few
labs studying RNA before winding up
in Doudna’s in 2008.
It was there she met CRISPR again.
“She pitched to me the project that
she wanted me to join,” Haurwitz
said. “There was one scientist in the
lab working on it, and it was something she called CRISPR.”
At the time, Doudna told her that it
appeared to be a bacterial immune
system but that people were not sure
how it worked. It had some interesting biochemistry, structural biology,
and RNA components, and it became
Haurwitz’s job to help understand
parts of it.
“I felt, well, that sounds wacky. I
like wacky, let’s do it,” Haurwitz said.
Blake Wiedenheft, the postdoctoral
researcher with whom Haurwitz
worked, said Haurwitz jumped into
the research, demonstrating her determination and commitment to the
project during an experiment that required them to remain in the lab for
24 hours.
“Rachel would seem to get stronger, while I was certainly fading,” said
Wiedenheft, now on the faculty at
Montana State University.
Of course, scientists in Doudna’s
lab and others soon realized much
more was going on. Researchers discovered they could harness CRISPR
systems to cut and edit DNA in plant,
animal, and human cells. As scientists
uncovered more about CRISPR,
Doudna and Haurwitz started discussing the commercial possibilities.
Eventually in 2011, Doudna and
Haurwitz teamed up with Martin
“
I
I
p
ti
ri
th
a
”
RA
CE
pi
ny
A gag by Tom Brady, a hot treat for Quincy firm
Posting piques interest in producer of frozen yogurt bars
By Megan Woolhouse
GLOBE STAFF
If you spotted Patriots quarterback Tom Brady ’s Facebook post
Tuesday morning — the one that featured his dog playfully wedged in his
kitchen freezer, which just so happened to be stocked with Yasso frozen
treats — you might have wondered if
it was a promotional stunt.
The Quincy-based maker of frozen
yogurt bars promises it was not.
The fact that Brady’s children appeared to be perched atop the freezer
eating Yasso frozen bars is also a happy coincidence for the company, said
Drew Harrington, a co-chief and cofounder of Yasso.
“No, there’s no formalized business relationship,” Harrington added
Wednesday morning. “Although I’m
sure he’s seen the brand over the
years.”
The much-desired Brady effect, at
least in these parts, can be a lucrative
advertising boon. Brady has lent his
official advertising endorsement to
products that include Uggs, Beautyrest mattresses, and UnReal candy.
In 2014, Juice Press, the New York
based fresh-pressed juice chain, used
a candid photo of Brady drinking a
Juice Press mint chip protein shake
to boost its sales.
Harrington said Yasso employees
alerted him about the Facebook post
shor tly af ter it went viral. As of
Wednesday midday, the post had
been “liked” 43,000 times and was
the subject of 3,000 comments, including ones like:
“What is this Yasso? I keep seeing
it everywhere!! Must be time to try
it.”
Following the freezer post, Har-
rington said Yasso’s server crashed
for several hours as Brady fans
flocked to the company’s website. But
the founder promises the only Brady
connection is that the company has
been an in-kind sponsor to Best Budd i e s , a c h a r i ty t h a t ’s b o a s t s t h e
quarterback as one of its key spokesmen.
Harrington said the company,
which has never had a spokesperson,
is just 5 years old and has been growing 84 percent a year, making it one
of the fastest-developing frozen treat
brands in the country. Revenues are
projected to surpass $50 million this
year.
Harrington said he and his childhood friend Amanda Klane, both
from Easton, co-founded the company and expanded it after receiving an
undisclosed investment from Raptor
Group in Boston in 2013.
Today the company produces millions of yogurt bars annually at four
US plants (New Jersey, Utah, Minnesota, and Oregon), as well as two in
Canada.
It sells the bars in grocery stores in
every state and has a test kitchen inside its Quincy headquarters, where
in less than 24 hours it whipped up
avocado chocolate chip treats in honor of Brady.
Harrington said he’s just enjoying
the publicity. Well that and he’s in the
process of sending Brady the new flavor.
“I can tell you it’s very valuable
and it’s very cool,” he said. “New people are now familiar with the brand.”
Megan Woolhouse can be reached at
[email protected]. Follow
her on Twitter @megwoolhouse.
Bold Types
Social nonprofits wanted
For most of his career, Jim Bildner focused on growing
companies. Now his mission is growing nonprofits.
Bildner, 62, founder of the Boston-based gourmet
grocery chain J. Bildner & Sons and former chief executive
of California-based Tier Technologies, turned his focus to
nonprofits and philanthropy a decade ago.
He’s now chief executive of the Draper Richards
Kaplan Foundation, with offices in Boston and Menlo
Park, which takes a venture capital approach to finding
what it calls “the brightest stars of the nonprofit sector.”
It seeks out “social entrepreneurs” addressing complex
problems like gun violence, racial injustice, and the
digital divide.
Since its inception in 2002, the foundation has had two
major rounds of philanthropic funding and supported
about 100 organizations. On Thursday, it’s launching its
biggest round yet: a $65 million infusion of charitable
money that Bildner says will fund another 100
organizations over the next few years.
“We’re looking for big problems,” says Bildner, who
lectures at the Harvard Kennedy School and is a senior
research fellow at Harvard’s Hauser Center for Civil
Society. “We want to figure out how you really address
water safety. How do you really address homelessness?
What about climate change? These issues are only getting
worse.”
Historically, the foundation has mainly funded
nonprofits, but its new initiative will consider for-profit
entities that aim to benefit society as well as shareholders.
The organizations it selects will get $300,000 over three
years and management support.
Competition will probably be fierce; last year the
foundation received about 450 applications and funded
only 17. For investors, Bildner added, “there’s no economic
return,” just the satisfaction of social change.
— SACHA PFEIFFER
CHRIS MORRIS F
T H U R S D A Y, J U N E 2 3 , 2 0 1 6
“
am here because
was in the right
place at the right
ime, with the
ight people and
he right science
round me.
”
ACHEL HAURWITZ
EO of Caribou Biosciences,
ctured above in the compay’s Berkeley, Calif., offices
FOR THE BOSTON GLOBE
T h e
B o s t o n
G l o b e
Business
C5
Biotech
Biotechs a bright
spot in weak IPO year
Mass. firms help prop up
dramatically cooled market
By Robert Weisman
GLOBE STAFF
ELIZABETH D. HERMAN FOR STAT
Jinek, then a postdoctoral researcher,
and James Berger, then a professor at
UC Berkeley and now at Johns Hopkins University, to found Caribou.
None of the other three cofounders
wanted to leave academia, and Haurwitz had known she wanted to pursue
a career outside an academic lab. She
became Caribou’s CEO, and started
working on the company full time
when she finished her PhD in 2012.
(“Caribou” is a combination of Cas,
a term meaning CRISPR-associated,
and ribo, as in ribonucleic acid, or
RNA. Haurwitz’s boyfriend at the time
came up with it. He’s now her husband.)
Haurwitz’s first office was in a
startup incubator in the basement of
the same building as Doudna’s lab; it
lacked some of the lab equipment she
needed and didn’t have cell service.
Now with about 30 employees, Caribou has office and lab space in West
Berkeley, just a few blocks from the
bay.
The company has raised more than
$40 million.
“She really grew into [being CEO],”
said Jinek, now on the faculty at the
University of Zurich. “At the beginning, she worked at the bench when it
was really small. But then she transitioned and did this, I would say, flawlessly.”
Caribou is often described as the
nontherapeutic CRISPR company. It
helped launch a separate business, In-
tellia Therapeutics, in 2014 to build
treatments with CRISPR, a goal also
pursued by companies including Editas Medicine and CRISPR Therapeutics.
Caribou, meanwhile, has been focused on enhancing what CRISPR can
do and thinking about how the tool
could be adapted for use in agriculture, industrial biosciences, and other
fields. It has research partnerships
with Novartis Institutes for Biomedical Research and DuPont, and recently finalized a deal with the animal genetics company Genus that will allow
the company to use Caribou’s technology in some livestock.
Haurwitz said the goal for Caribou
is to strike more partnerships and licensing agreements, and possibly create more spinouts like Intellia. But it
also intends to pick a few fields to design and build its own products,
which Haurwitz said could include
human therapeutics.
Another issue that the company
will have to deal with is the dispute
over key CRISPR patents. Caribou licensed some of its technology from
the University of California and its research partners.
UC, however, is in a fight with the
Cambridge, Mass.-based Broad Institute and the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology before the US Patent
and Trademark Office over which side
deserves the intellectual property for
that technology.
The uncertainty used to cast a
cloud over companies working with
CRISPR. But if UC loses, Caribou
would likely license technology from
another institution. Executives at other companies have echoed that point,
and they say investors have come to
realize that as well.
“The last time we were out fundraising, the first five questions, the
middle five questions, and the last five
questions were always IP, IP, IP,”
Haurwitz said. Now, she added, investors see some risk, but “it’s just a question of who’s going to be paying a royalty to whom.”
Despite Caribou’s successes so far,
as a young woman leading a company,
Haurwitz stands out in the industry.
She said there have only been a few
times when she felt disrespected,
which she attributed more to her age
than her gender.
Still, she seems to take some pride
in making others realize they have a
gender imbalance.
“I have, multiple times, been in a
boardroom with a bunch of VCs who
are proudly going through their deck
of who their team is. . . . and at some
point they’ll be about halfway through
the slides and freeze,” Haurwitz said.
“Because they realize they’re showing
me a slide of [only] men.”
John Hancock economist
in the thick of Brexit fever
Boston Financial bets on
growth
Optometrists still battling
for treatment rights
While the rest of us have just clued
in to Brexit in recent days, Megan
Greene has been living it for months.
“It’s all Brexit all the time,” the
Boston-based chief economist for John
Hancock Financial says.
Greene testified about Europe’s
monetary and economic union in
January in front of the British House
of Lords and for the past week she’s
been in England taking the country’s
pulse as it prepares to vote on whether
to leave the European Union. Greene,
who went to high school in the Boston
area, lived in England for 10 years and
is also a British citizen. So, she also
gets to vote on the referendum
Thursday.
Greene says she plans to vote to
stay in the European Union. But she
expects the vote to be close.
In coffee shops and on the streets
around the United Kingdom, there’s
no way to avoid Brexit talk, Green
says.
“Everybody is tired of it,” she said
over the phone Tuesday. “They’re
calling it the neverendum.”
Still, it’s been hard not to draw
comparisons between the popularity
of the pro-Brexit camp, who are
upset over trade and immigration
issues, and the appeal of populist
candidates in US elections this year,
Greene says.
She was at an event last week with
conservative British Parliament
members bemoaning, “ ‘I don’t know
what’s happening to my country,’ ”
Greene says. “And I was thinking, ‘me
too.’ ” — DEIRDRE FERNANDES
As rival wealth management firms
get swallowed up, Boston Financial
Management chief executive Mike
Brown is determined to ensure his
business remains independent. Dick
Morse, the majority shareholder and
chairman, has no interest in selling.
“There are so many rollups going
on,” Brown says. “We wish to be the
last firm standing in Boston.”
To be sustainable for the next
several generations, Brown says, the
firm needed to get bigger. And to help
pull that off, he set off last year to find
the right acquisition target. Working
with Ken Fischer, a managing
director, Brown went down the list of
local registered investment advisers,
looking for a potential partner with a
similar culture and approach. That’s
how they came across Emerson
Investment Management.
The firms ended up merging:
Together, they manage about $1.8
billion for more than 800 clients.
Emerson’s team joined Boston
Financial’s headquarters at One
Winthrop Square a few weeks ago,
bringing the workforce to 45. Among
them is Emerson president Brad
Gardner, who joins as a vice chairman.
Brown says he’d like to do another
deal in the future. But finding the
right partner can be tough: A number
of these firms are run by wealth
managers who are at retirement age
but have no plans to actually retire:
“It’s remarkable how many people I
stay in touch with who are in their 70s
and 80s and they say, ‘Mike, not yet,
not now.’ ” — JON CHESTO
Matthew Forgues just took over as
president of the Massachusetts
Society of Optometrists, and already
he’s got a big task on his hands:
pushing a bill on Beacon Hill that
would allow optometrists — as
opposed to just physicians — to treat
glaucoma and certain other eye
ailments with drugs.
Some form of this legislation has
been kicking around for years. But the
Department of Justice and the
Federal Trade Commission registered
their support in February, saying that
leaving glaucoma treatment solely in
the hands of physicians could hamper
access and drive up costs.
The Senate again passed the
legislation last week. But the bill could
face resistance in the House.
Forgues, who has two offices in the
Worcester area, says nearly every state
allows optometrists to treat glaucoma,
and it can take months to see an
ophthalmologist here. There are fewer
than 400 in the state, he says, versus
more than 1,500 optometrists.
But the bill has been fiercely fought
by the Massachusetts Medical
Society and the Massachusetts
Society of Eye Physicians and
Surgeons. John Mandeville, a Quincy
doctor and president of the latter
group, says this is about protecting
patients, in part because of all the
training that physicians need to go
through, and the experience they have
with these ailments. — JON CHESTO
Andrew Joseph can be reached at
[email protected]. Follow
Andrew on Twitter @DrewQJoseph
Can’t keep a secret? Tell us. E-mail
Bold Types at [email protected].
Massachusetts biotechs are helping
prop up the weak market for new stocks.
Health care companies, mostly in
biotech, have accounted for 56 percent
of US initial public offerings this year,
according to Renaissance Capital.
Almost half of all biotech IPOs have
been by Massachusetts companies, data from Nasdaq show.
The trend continued this week, as
Selecta Biosciences Inc. of Watertown
raised $70 million and began trading
on Wednesday.
The IPO market overall has cooled
dramatically. Thirty-nine companies
have gone public this year, down 55 percent from the same period in 2015, Renaissance Capital says. Health care companies accounted for 22 of the deals.
“Biotechs have had an easier time
getting out” as public companies, said
Bob McCooey, senior vice president at
Nasdaq, the stock exchange that lists
most newly public companies.
“There’s a predisposition by investors
to invest in an area that can do some
good for humanity at large. In this sector, you have the social good and the
economic good joined at the hip.”
But Selecta’s IPO raised questions
about the market’s strength. The Watertown company priced its shares at $14
each, the low end of its specified range,
and the stock edged up 0.6 percent in
its opening session after trading up
more than 5 percent earlier in the day.
The benchmark Nasdaq Biotechnology Index is down about 35 percent
since its peak last July.
‘Biotechs have had an
easier time getting out”
as public companies.’
BOB MCCOOEY
Senior vice president at Nasdaq
A half dozen Massachusetts biotechs — Editas Medicine Inc., Intellia
Therapeutics Inc. and Proteostasis
Inc., all of Cambridge, along with
Spring Bank Pharmaceuticals Inc. of
Milford, Syndax Pharmaceuticals Inc.
of Waltham, and now Selecta — have
gone public so far this year, accounting
for 46 percent of all biotech IPOs since
Jan. 1, according to Nasdaq data. At
this time last year, five Massachusetts
biotechs had gone public.
Selecta, an eight-year-old company,
has drawn attention through its highprofile scientific founders, including
MIT institute professor Bob Langer
and Harvard Medical School professors Omid Farokhzad and Ulrich von
Andria. It is backed by venture capital
heavyweights Polaris Partners of Boston and Flagship Ventures of Cambridge, and is collaborating with
French drug giant Sanofi SA and the
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
The company has developed a
nanoparticle technology that it hopes
can lead to the production of customized vaccines and make biotech drugs
safer by neutralizing unwanted
immune responses.
Its lead drug candidate treats a
form of gout, which causes burning
joint pain, and it is also working on
gene therapies that replace defective
genes with healthy ones.
Selecta, whose stock symbol is
SELB, sold 5 million shares of
common stock at $14 a share before
underwriting discounts and commissions. Its underwriters were given a
30-day option to buy up to 750,000
additional shares at the same price.
Managing the IPO were UBS Investment Bank and Stifel Financial Corp.,
along with Canaccord Genuity and
Needham & Co.
Following the lead of other biotechs
that have gone public this year, Selecta
indicated in regulatory filings that
unspecified existing investors were
expected to buy about $40 million of
the shares, nearly 60 percent.
Such “inside club deals” suggest
companies aren’t confident about
demand from new investors, some
market watchers said.
“Specialist investors never left the
IPO market,” Les Funtleyder, health
care portfolio manager at E Squared
Asset Management in New York, said
at a Wednesday biotech investing forum sponsored by Bloomberg LP.
“Generalists are the ones who are doing the panicking. You need the generalist investor, you need the retail investor” to buy into IPOs.
Robert Weisman can be reached at
[email protected]. Follow
him on Twitter @GlobeRobW.
C6
Business
T h e
THE BOSTON GLOBE
25
Index of publicly traded companies in Massachusetts
Globe 25 index
B o s t o n
Stocks give up early-in-day gains
Stocks closed lower Wednesday as energy companies sank
with the price of oil and weak quarterly financial reports
weighed down tech companies. After two days of closing
higher, stocks rose in the morning but couldn’t hang on to
the gains. Trading was light as investors watched Federal
Reserve chair Janet Yellen’s testimony before Congress and
waited for Thursday’s vote on Britain’s European Union
membership. Yellen said the Fed will be cautious about
raising interest rates because of the mixed state of the economy. The government said crude inventories fell 900,000
barrels last week, less than expected. Benchmark US
crude’s price fell 1.4 percent to $49.13 a barrel. Health care
stocks rose after Medicare spending did not exceed levels
that would have required a cost-cutting board to act. Investors have worried the government will pressure drug makers to cut prices. Adobe had a larger-than-expected profit,
but analysts were less excited about its projections for the
current quarter. The stock lost 5.7 percent. HP forecast
strong quarter results but won’t offer as many discounts
and will carry reduced supplies. The stock fell 5.4 percent.
DOW JONES industrial average
NASDAQ Composite index
S&P 500 index
SOURCE: Bloomberg News
T H U R S D A Y, J U N E 2 3 , 2 0 1 6
Soccer stadium plan’s no easy win
STADIUM
Continued from Page C1
teams could use a soccer stadium, and the students could
learn from the Revolution’s
management and training staff,
for example. A stadium complex could also include some of
the academic or dorm space
UMass says it needs.
The school has been coy
about its dealings with Kraft,
saying only that it’s open to
ideas that serve its students and
don’t worsen the neighborhood’s traffic problems.
“The University of Massachusetts Boston looks forward
to working with leaders from
the UMass system office, the
city, and the Commonwealth to
determine the best plan for the
future use of the Bayside property,” a spokesman said in a
statement. “Any decisions moving forward must put our students’ needs first, and address
neighborhood and transportation concerns.”
CORCORAN JENNISON COS.
Markets
G l o b e
This development firm already has approval from the
Boston Redevelopment Authority to build an addition to the
Doubletree Hotel and a large
residential housing complex
dubbed University Place on crucial properties abutting the
Bayside land.
But the housing project is on
hold while the developer squabbles with UMass over who owns
the sort-of-famous Bayside Expo Center sign and other issues.
Michael Corcoran, a top
company executive, told the
Globe on Wednesday that he
was unaware of the discussions
between Kraft and UMass, and
sounded openly hostile to the
stadium plans.
“I understand the soccer stadium has been in the works for
months, but nobody from the
Krafts or the University has ever spoken to me about it, so I
can’t say how it would impact
us nor do I know how they in-
ARAM BOGHOSIAN FOR THE BOSTON GLOBE/FILE 2015
Any development plans must address the area’s traffic
problems, say UMass, which owns Bayside, and lawmakers.
tend to access the parcel,” Corcoran wrote in an e-mail. “Just
like our position with the 2024
[Olympics] bid, Corcoran Jennison intends to build on our
parcels per our BRA-approved
plans. We also intend on preserving all of our existing rights
and easements.”
BOSTON TEACHERS UNION
The union representing Boston’s public school teachers is
finishing off BRA-approved
plans for an expanded office
and training facility on its land,
which immediately abuts the
former Bayside building and
stands in the way of any large
development there.
Unlike Corcoran Jennison,
however, union president Richard Stutman seems open to
playing ball. The only catch:
The union wants to stay in the
area, so Kraft, perhaps working
with UMass or another property owner, would need to find
the group another suitable parcel nearby.
“We’ve had a handful of general discussions with UMass
and the Krafts,” Stutman said.
“If we found a better spot, we
wouldn’t be opposed to moving, but right now, we’re in the
best spot we know of.”
OFFICIALS AND RESIDENTS
Numerous interviews
Wednesday suggested Kraft has
a lot of work ahead if he hopes
to impress local officials and
residents. His quiet discussions
with UMass have already angered some.
“ I t ’s n o t e n o u g h t o s a y,
‘We’re going to make our inside
deals, and after the fact we’ll
just tell the community this is
coming,’ ” said state Senator
Linda Dorcena Forry, a Dorchester Democrat. “People are
saying, ‘Wow, why aren’t we at
the table?’ ”
Forry, along with Daniel J.
Hunt and Nick Collins, two
state representatives for the
neighborhood, said any stadium plan would need to address
chronic traffic problems at Kosciuszko Circle and win community approval.
Hunt noted that a five-yearold BRA master plan for the Columbia Point area calls for a
mix of retail, residential, and office buildings — all accessible
by foot, so as to discourage
more driving in the neighborhood.
“It doesn’t mean the master
plan is the be-all end-all, but it’s
a public process,” Hunt said.
Community groups, including the Columbia-Savin Hill
Civic Association, wouldn’t dismiss the idea of a stadium outright, but said it would need to
include significant benefits for
residents.
Paul Nutting, a Dorchester
community activist and candidate for Suffolk County register
of deeds, said he doubts a stadium would fit into the neighborhood unless it included retail
shops, restaurants, and other
amenities.
“A stadium surrounded by
parking lots does nothing for
the neighborhood or the waterfront,” he said.
Mayor Martin J. Walsh declined to comment Wednesday,
but is reported to have discussed past stadium plans with
Kraft. A spokesman for Governor Charlie Baker noted the discussions are in early stages, and
said only that the administration is open to new economic
development initiatives. The
state Department of Transportation said it has not studied
any road improvements in the
area.
THE BOTTOM LINE
Despite the tangle of interests, the Bayside property
might be as good as it gets for
Kraft. Even before the development boom of recent years,
Boston had few large, open parcels with access to transportation.
“This is what the next 50
years of development is going
to look like in Boston,” said
George Thrush, a veteran architect and planner who teaches at
Northeastern University. “You
don’t get to just buy a discrete
parcel that’s already part of the
fabric of a neighborhood and
put up a building. You have to
negotiate privately and publicly
— and spend enormous
amounts of money — to help
define a neighborhood and deal
with the overlapping interests
of large parcel owners.”
Dan Adams can be reached at
[email protected]. Follow
him on Twitter
@DanielAdams86. Katheleen
Conti can be reached at
[email protected]. Follow her
on Twitter @GlobeKConti.
A chilly
reception
for Castle
Island bid
FRIGHT ISLAND
Continued from Page C1
homemade flying machines to
the Charles River Esplanade.
Generating revenue for DCR is
important, he said, but exposing parks like Castle Island to
new audiences is an even bigger
priority.
“The neighborhood is changing and new people are moving
in, and I think longtime residents are adjusting to that
change,” Roy said of South Boston. “That’s natural. But I think
the important thing to remember is that the DCR facilities
there, Castle Island and the
beautiful beaches, belong to all
the citizens of the Commonwealth.”
That opinion is shared by
Fright Island creator Matthew
DiRoberto. It’s part of his argument for why he should be allowed to hold the event at the
1830s-era fort, which he says
will feature sets designed by
pros who typically build for major motion pictures.
DiRoberto said he expects to
attract about 800 people a night,
or about 15,000 people over the
course of 18 days, starting in
late September. Tickets would
likely sell in the $30 to $40
range, he said, and he also plans
to generate revenue by selling
wine and beer.
“I understand where the sentiment comes from,” DiRoberto
said of the neighbors’ caution,
“but I think there’s an opportunity to look beyond that to raise
money for the [Castle Island] association and for DCR to make it
more accessible. ... I truly believe we’re going to be reimagining the space for younger people, getting younger people to go
in there.”
Initially, DiRoberto was in
talks with DCR to stage Fright
Island — in partnership with Jason Egan of Fright Dome in Las
Ve g a s — i n t h e o l d f o r t o n
Georges Island. But the logistics
of pulling off such a project in an
offshore location proved to be
too difficult. So by 2015, he
Backers of transforming Castle Island offered promotional material to the state.
shifted his focus to Castle Island.
The talks continued at DCR
through 2015, initially as a project for radio station operator
Greater Media Inc., where DiRoberto worked as a general sales
manager at the time. Then DiRoberto branched out on his
own, launching a Boston-based
marketing agency and continuing to collaborate with Fright
Dome.
A DCR spokesman said the
proposal submitted by DiRoberto last year called for contributing $1 per ticket to the agency
but the agency is negotiating for
a much higher fee.
DiRoberto points to other
historic forts in the country that
are already used for revenuegenerating events — including
Newport’s Fort Adams, which
has been home to its own “Fortress of Nightmares” in October.
DCR officials recommended
that DiRoberto reach out to
neighborhood groups, to get
their support. That effort, taking place in recent weeks, hasn’t
gone as smoothly as DiRoberto
hoped. Both the Castle Island
Association — the nonprofit
group that acts as the fort’s caretaker and hosts its own free Halloween event for families in late
October — and the City Point
Neighborhood Association rebuffed the Fright Island concept.
Critics say they worry that
opening the doors to this private
venture would make it tougher
to close them for others. “How
can you then say ‘no’ to another
group that has something even
more outrageous?” said Robert
Allison, president of South Boston Historical Society.
DiRoberto said he is trying
to assuage concerns: He’ll have
off-site parking served by a shuttle bus, and he’s negotiating
with a ride-sharing service to offer a free ride to and from the
park to ticket buyers. Partiers
will be limited to a two-drink
maximum. And DiRoberto
wants to share some of his revenue with the Castle Island group
and the Harry McDonough Sailing Center.
In all, DiRoberto doesn’t expect to make money right away.
That’s why he wants a multiyear commitment from DCR, to
ensure he can recoup his upfront costs over time.
And he said he’s filling a
niche, offering a professionallevel “haunt” — a word the industry uses to describe a haunted attraction — that has essent i a l l y b e e n u n ava i l a b l e i n
Greater Boston for years.
Getting into the haunt business, apparently, isn’t for the
faint of heart. Spooky World coowner Michael Accomando
bought the business with a partner in 2008 and said he’s still
plowing profits back into the
seasonal business to build it up.
Spooky World was last based in
Massachusetts in 2007, when it
occupied the Bayside Expo Cen-
ter, although the owners tried a
version of it at Fenway Park in
2011. The Spooky World operation now occupies 70 acres of
land in Litchfield, N.H., about
an hour’s drive north of Boston.
Based on his experience, Accomando expects that Fright Island’s attendance would easily
exceed DiRoberto’s estimates if
it’s allowed to go forward. On a
busy weekend night, he said,
Spooky World can draw more
than 4,000 people. But it’s not
easy to turn a profit.
“Our market is starting to get
flooded because everybody
thinks they’re going to become a
millionaire in the Halloween industry,” Accomando said. “It
takes a ton of money to make
one of these shows happen.
We’re putting it all back in [to
the show] and we’re hoping that
later down the road, it really
turns into something huge for
us.”
As for Castle Island, it’s
worth noting that the place has
its own spooky history. Lore has
it that the fort served as the inspiration for Edgar Allan Poe’s
story “The Cask of Amontillado”
after he was stationed there in
the Army.
Still to be determined:
whether Poe’s buried antagonist
will make an appearance this
fall.
Jon Chesto can be reached at
[email protected]. Follow
him on Twitter @jonchesto.
T h e
T H U R S D A Y, J U N E 2 3 , 2 0 1 6
B o s t o n
G l o b e
Business
C7
Live from everywhere, it’s Facebook
TECH LAB
Continued from Page C1
Tumblr friends.
While Periscope can tap into
Twitter’s 310 million monthly
users and Tumblr claims an
audience of half a billion,
Facebook is fishing in a much
bigger pond — 1.65 billion users
every month. Get these
Facebookers hooked on live video,
and many of them will never
leave.
Facebook runs a Web page
where you can see hundreds of
live videos from around the
world. It’s a good place to find
popular stuff. But it’s also full of
dreary drivel — people talking to
themselves, mostly. That’s no way
to build up a loyal audience.
But you need never see this
stuff. Instead, Facebook Live
targets us with videos that matter.
You’re notified when one of your
friends goes live or when one of
your favorite pages hosts a
broadcast.
In addition, the company is
paying a total of $50 million to an
array of broadcasters who know
better than to bore us. New York
Times reporters showed
interviews of survivors of the
Orlando nightclub massacre.
Seattle Seahawks quarterback
Russell Wilson lets his fans watch
him train for the upcoming
season. TV chef Gordon Ramsay
referees cooking contests. And
comedian Kevin Hart serves up
jokes while maneuvering through
rush-hour traffic.
Facebook has locked down
exclusive deals for live videos
from 140 major newsmakers and
tastemakers. Millions of us have
already friended or liked some of
them. So when you get an invite
to a Facebook Live show, there’s a
good chance you’ll want to watch
it.
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LEGAL NOTICES
NOTICE OF HEARING
Pursuant to M.G.L. c. 30A and the authority granted
to the Commissioner of Insurance (“Commissioner”) under
M.G.L. c. 174A and c. 175, §177E, a hearing will be held at
10:00 a.m. on July 19, 2016, at the Division of Insurance
(“Division”), Hearing Room 1-E, 1000 Washington Street,
Boston, Massachusetts. The purpose of the hearing is to
afford all interested persons an opportunity to provide oral
and written statements regarding four regulations that are
the subject of proposed amendments or rescission. The
docket number assigned to each regulation and a description of the proposed actions to be taken follow.
Docket No. G2016-08
211 CMR 10.00. Nation-Wide Marine Definitions
211 CMR 11.00. Insurance on Outboard Motors and
Motor Boats
The existing 211 CMR 10.00 incorporates by reference
the definition of Inland Marine Insurance adopted by the
National Association of Insurance Commissioners (“NAIC”)
in 1977 and now widely used nationwide. 211 CMR 11.00
relates only to inland marine coverage applicable to particular types of property. The Division proposes to amend
211 CMR 10.00 to incorporate the NAIC definition in its
entirety, and to integrate the provisions of 211 CMR 11.00
into the amended 211 CMR 10.00, thereby creating a single
comprehensive regulation governing definitions of inland
marine insurance. Concurrently with amending 211 CMR
10.00, the Division proposes to rescind 211 CMR 11.00 because it is no longer necessary.
Docket No. G2016-09
211 CMR 15.00. Statistical Plans. The regulation now
identifies specific statistical plans, applicable to separate
lines of insurance that insurers must use to report data to
the Division. Many of those plans have been superseded
over time. The proposed amendment will delete references
to specific plans and replace it with language adopted from
a Model Regulation to Require Reporting of Statistical Data
by Property And Casualty Insurance Companies developed
by the NAIC to provide guidance to insurers and their statistical agents.
Docket No. G2016-10
211 CMR 50.00. Continuing Education for Insurance
Producers. The regulation sets out requirements for compliance with statutorily mandated continuing education
for Massachusetts resident insurance producers. The proposed amendments conform the regulation to legislative
changes to the enabling statute.
The proposed regulations may be inspected in the Division’s offices during normal business hours or viewed on
the Division’s website, www.mass.gov/doi. Persons who
wish to present unsworn oral or written statements at the
July 19, 2016 hearing are asked to submit a notice of intent to comment no later than July 15, 2016. Other persons
who wish to speak will be heard after those who notify the
Division in advance. The hearing record will remain open
for a week after conclusion of the July 19, 2016 hearing to
receive any additional written statements.
All notices and submissions must refer to the Docket
Number(s) for the particular regulation(s) that the person
intends to address. Notices and submissions in hard copy
may be sent by mail to the Docket Clerk, Hearings and Appeals, Division of Insurance, at the address above or by
electronic mail to [email protected].
June 14, 2016
_____________________________
Daniel R. Judson
Commissioner of Insurance
LEGAL NOTICES
LEGAL NOTICES
‘There has
to be a
critical
mass of
users
before you
can
monetize
it.’
ERNA ALFRED
LIOUSAS
Analyst at
Forrester
Research
LEGAL NOTICES
thousands.
With Facebook Live, any
amateur with something to say or
to show can draw a crowd —
sometimes by accident. A Texas
woman, Candace Payne, made a
live video of herself wearing a
Chewbacca mask. It’s been viewed
over 157 million times. And
Payne wasn’t even trying to
become famous. Wait till the
serious video buffs get busy. They
could bring millions of fresh
eyeballs to Facebook Live.
How will Facebook make video
pay? For now, the company is
hardly trying. But it will
eventually sell ads against its live
video offerings, once the audience
is big enough.
“There has to be a critical mass
of users before you can monetize
it,” said Erna Alfred Liousas, an
analyst at Forrester Research in
Cambridge. And just as there’s an
ad-free version of Google’s
LEGAL NOTICES
LEGAL NOTICES
YouTube video service for $10 a
month, Facebook might launch a
subscription service to support
more ambitious programming.
In all, Facebook has taken its
first steps toward the creation of a
full-spectrum video network. The
company did not say if it would
launch a slate of dramas and
comedy series, as Netflix, Hulu,
and Amazon have, but that’s the
way to bet. After all, the tech
news website The Information
reported this week that Facebook
engineers are working on ways to
stream video through living room
TVs. So don’t be surprised if the
remote for your next TV set
comes with a big blue “like”
button. For Facebook, it’s
showtime.
Hiawatha Bray can be reached at
[email protected].
Follow him on Twitter
@GlobeTechLab.
LEGAL NOTICES
LEGAL NOTICES
NOTICE OF HEARING
Notice of Agency Action
NOTICE OF HEARING
NOTICE OF HEARING
Pursuant to M.G.L. c. 30A and the authority granted
to the Commissioner of Insurance (“Commissioner”) under
M.G.L. c. 175, a hearing will be held at 11:00 a.m. on July
18, 2016, at the Division of Insurance (“Division”), Hearing
Room 1- E, 1000 Washington Street, Boston, Massachusetts. The purpose of the hearing is to afford all interested
persons an opportunity to provide oral and written statements regarding four regulations that are the subject of
proposed amendments or rescission. The docket number assigned to each regulation and a description of the
amendments follow.
Docket No. G2016-13
211 CMR 3.00. Motorcycle Insurance. The regulation
allows insurers to exclude from motor vehicle insurance
covering a motorcycle Personal Injury Protection for bodily
injury suffered by the operator of the motorcycle or a guest
passenger while operating or riding on the motorcycle. The
proposed amendments conform the language in 211 CMR
3.00 to definitions of motorcycle used by the Registry of
Motor Vehicles and remove outdated references to the
procedure to fix-and-establish motor vehicle insurance
rates.
Docket No. G2016-14
211 CMR 54.00. Procedure for Surrender and NonRenewal of Licenses by Insurers Authorized to Write Motor
Vehicle Insurance. The regulation governs the administrative process by which insurers authorized to write motor
vehicle insurance may initiate the surrender or nonrenewal of their licenses to write such coverage. The proposed
amendments conform the regulatory language to the current language in the Commonwealth Automobile Reinsurers Rules of Operation and remove obsolete references to
organizations that no longer exist.
Docket No G2016-15
211 CMR 92.00. The Safe Driver Insurance Plan [for
1994]. The regulation was one of many periodically promulgated to implement the Safe Driver Insurance Plan
(“SDIP”) that was approved as part of the process to fixand-establish motor vehicle insurance rates under M.G.L.
c. 175, §113B. In 1996, the Commissioner promulgated 211
CMR 134.00, which replaced all prior regulations relating
to the SDIP. The intent was to rescind 211 CMR 92.00, but
no formal rescission occurred. Rescission at this time removes an obsolete regulation that has not been used for
many years.
Docket No. G2016-16
211 CMR 97.00. Procedures for Cancellation and NonRenewal of Motor Vehicle Insurance Policies. The regulation establishes the procedures that insurance companies,
insurance producers and consumers must follow in order
to cancel or non-renew motor vehicle insurance policies.
The proposed amendments provide additional protections
for motor vehicle insurance policyholders, such as prohibiting non-renewal for any reason prohibited by law.
Subject: MassHealth: Notice of Submission of a Request
to extend the MassHealth Section 1115 Demonstration
(Updated date for submitting comments below)
Pursuant to M.G.L. c. 30A and the authority granted
to the Commissioner of Insurance (“Commissioner”) under
M.G.L. c. 175, c. 176A, c. 176B, c. 176D, c. 176E, c. 176F, c.
176G, c. 176I, c. 176J, c. 176O, and c. 176T, a hearing will
be held at 10:00 a.m. on July 26, 2016, at the Division of
Insurance (“Division”), Hearing Room 1-E, 1000 Washington
Street, Boston, Massachusetts. The purpose of the hearing
is to afford all interested persons an opportunity to provide
oral and written statements regarding eight regulations
that are the subject of proposed amendments or rescission. The docket number assigned to each regulation and
a description of the proposed actions to be taken follow.
Pursuant to M.G.L. c. 30A and the authority granted
to the Commissioner of Insurance (“Commissioner”) under
M.G.L. c. 175, c. 176A, c. 176B, c. 176E, c. 176F and c. 176O,
a hearing will be held at 11:00 a.m. on July 19, 2016, at the
Division of Insurance (“Division”), Hearing Room 1-E, 1000
Washington Street, Boston, Massachusetts. The purpose of
the hearing is to afford all interested persons an opportunity to provide oral and written statements regarding six
regulations that are the subject of proposed amendments
or rescission. The docket number assigned to each regulation and a description of the proposed actions to be taken
follow.
Docket No. G2016-17
211 CMR 38.00. Coordination of Benefits. The regulation
establishes a uniform order for payment of health insurance claims when a person is covered by more than one
plan that includes health benefits. Any plan that includes a
provision for coordination of benefits must comply with the
regulation. The Division’s proposed amendments, which
are primarily based on a Model Regulation on Coordination of Benefits developed by the National Association of
Insurance Commissioners, update, reorganize and clarify
the regulation.
Docket No. G2016-18
211 CMR 43.00. Health Maintenance Organizations.
The regulation addresses the administration and operations of health maintenance organizations authorized by
M.G.L. c. 176G. The Division proposes to amend the regulation to simplify administration by reducing regulatory duplication and enabling the Division, when possible, to obtain
HMO reporting information from sources other than the
particular regulated party.
Docket No. G2016-19
211 CMR 51.00. Preferred Provider Health Plans and
Workers’ Compensation Preferred Provider Arrangements.
The regulation addresses the administration and operations of preferred provider arrangements authorized by
M.G.L. c. 176I. The Division proposes to amend the regulation to reduce the administrative burdens on such plans by
providing greater flexibility with respect to their statutorily
required reporting requirements.
Docket No. G2016-20
211 CMR 52.00. Managed Care Consumer Protections
and Accreditation of Carriers. The regulation provides
managed care standards for health insurance through accreditation and procedures applicable to managed care
health insurance carriers. The Division proposes to amend
211 CMR 52.00 to implement requirements mandated by
the federal Affordable Care Act and Massachusetts legislative changes to the managed care statutes.
Docket No. G2016-21
211 CMR 63.00. Young Adult Health Benefit Plans. The
regulation defines health insurance coverage provided by
young adult health benefit plans authorized by M.G.L. c.
176J, §10. The federal Affordable Care Act (“ACA”) has now
preempted Massachusetts programs providing coverage to
an age-defined risk pool. The Division therefore proposes
to rescind 211 CMR 63.00.
Docket No. G2016-22
211 CMR 66.00. Small Group Health Insurance. The
regulation sets out the rules and procedural requirements
for health plans offered by carriers in the Massachusetts
small group/individual merged health insurance market
pursuant to M.G.L. c. 176J. The Division proposes to amend
the regulation as necessary to conform it to statutory
changes, many of which result from gradual implementation of the federal ACA since 2012.
Docket No. G2016-23
211 CMR 148.00. Registration and Reporting Requirements for Third Party Administrators. The regulation sets
forth registration and reporting requirements for third party administrators (“TPAs”). The Division proposes to amend
the regulation to simplify those requirements by enabling
the Division, when possible, to obtain TPA reporting information from sources other than the particular regulated
party.
Docket No. G2016-24
211 CMR 155.00. Risk Bearing Provider Organizations.
The regulation sets certification and reporting requirements for Risk Bearing Provider Organizations (“RBPOs”).
The Division proposes to amend the regulation to delete
references to the transition period for RBPOs and, among
other things, to place all RBPOs on an annual certification
schedule and to enable the Division to monitor risk associated with Medicare products except for Medicare Advantage products.
Docket No. G2016-02
211 CMR 8.00. Investments of Officers, Directors, and
Principal Stockholders of Domestic Stock Insurance Companies. The regulation provides forms that individuals use
to report investments, if required to do so pursuant to
M.G.L. c. 175, §193I. The information is now submitted in
filings required by M.G.L. c. 175, §§206-206D. The Division
proposes to rescind 211 CMR 8.00 because it is no longer
necessary.
Agency: Executive Office of Health and Human Services
The Massachusetts Executive Office of Health and Human
Services (EOHHS) announces its intent to submit a request
to amend and extend the MassHealth Section 1115 Demonstration (“Request”) to the Centers for Medicare and
Medicaid Services.
The MassHealth 1115 Demonstration provides federal
authority for Massachusetts to expand eligibility to individuals who are not otherwise Medicaid or CHIP eligible,
offer services that are not typically covered by Medicaid,
and use innovative service delivery systems that improve
care, increase efficiency, and reduce costs as a part of
MassHealth restructuring. Federal authorization and funding for key aspects of the current 1115 Demonstration are
only approved through June 30, 2017.
MassHealth plans to advance alternative payment methodologies and delivery system reform through accountable
care organizations and community partners for behavioral
health and long term services and supports. A significant
focus will be placed on improving integration and delivery
of care for members with behavioral health needs and
those with dual diagnoses of substance abuse disorder;
as well as integration of long term services and supports
and health-related social services. In addition, MassHealth
plans to expand treatment for individuals affected by substance use disorder and opioid addiction.
The Request does not affect eligibility for MassHealth. A
more detailed public notice can be found at MassHealth’s
home
page:
http://www.mass.gov/eohhs/gov/departments/masshealth/, and the Request documents can be
found at the MassHealth Innovations web site: www.mass.
gov/hhs/masshealth-innovations. Paper copies of the documents may be obtained in person from 9 am-5 pm at EOHHS, One Ashburton Place, 11th Floor, Boston, MA 02108.
Public Comment Period:
EOHHS will host two public listening sessions in order to
hear public comments on the Request. Stakeholders are
invited to review the Request in advance and share with
program staff at the listening sessions any input and feedback, or questions for future clarification. The listening sessions are scheduled as follows:
Listening session #1, in conjunction with a meeting of
the MassHealth Medical Care Advisory Committee and
the MassHealth Payment Policy Advisory Board:
The proposed regulations may be inspected in the Division’s offices during normal business hours or viewed on
the Division’s website, www.mass.gov/doi. Persons who
wish to present unsworn oral or written statements at the
July 18, 2016 hearing are asked to submit a notice of intent
to comment no later than July 14, 2016. Other persons
who wish to speak will be heard after those who notify the
Division in advance. The hearing record will remain open
for a week after conclusion of the July 18, 2016 hearing to
receive any additional written statements.
Date: Friday, June 24, 2016
Time: 2:30 pm – 4:00 pm
Location: 1 Ashburton Place, 21st Floor, Boston MA
Conference Line: 1-866-565-6580, Passcode: 9593452
All notices and submissions must refer to the Docket
Number(s) for the particular regulation(s) that the person
intends to address. Notices and submissions in hard copy
may be sent by mail to the Docket Clerk, Hearings and Appeals, Division of Insurance, at the address above or by
electronic mail to [email protected].
Communication Access Realtime Translation (CART) services and American Sign Language (ASL) interpretation
will be available at both meetings. Please contact Donna
Kymalainen at [email protected] or 617-8868247 to request additional accommodations.
June 14, 2016
notices
& more
LEGAL NOTICES
LEGAL NOTICES
Facebook has also done a deal
with video game maker Blizzard
Entertainment, creator of “World
of Warcraft” and “Overwatch.”
People who play Blizzard games
on a desktop PC will be able to
broadcast the games over
Facebook Live. Odd as it seems,
watching other people play video
games has become immensely
popular. Amazon.com’s Twitch, a
site that specializes in such
broadcasts, draws 100 million
unique visitors per month.
Events will also conspire to
raise the profile of Facebook Live.
On Wednesday, for instance,
Democrats in Congress held a
protest to demand a vote on gun
control legislation. The House
went into recess, shutting off the
live video feed on C-SPAN TV. So
members began streaming the
event on Facebook Live and
Twitter’s Periscope, and soon
attracted an audience of
_____________________________
Daniel R. Judson
Commissioner of Insurance
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
Notice is hereby given that a public hearing will
be conducted by the Massachusetts Development Finance
Agency (“MassDevelopment”) at 10:00 a.m., on Thursday,
July 7, 2016 at 99 High Street, Boston, Massachusetts, on
the proposal of Boston Medical Center Corporation (together with any parent, subsidiary or other affiliate, the
“Borrower”) that MassDevelopment:
(1) approve the following projects (collectively, the
“Project”) owned or to be owned and operated by the
Borrower for healthcare purposes and located, except as
otherwise described below, on the Borrower’s campus in
Boston Massachusetts, generally located within the boundaries of Harrison Avenue (North), East Newton Street (East),
Albany Street (South) and Massachusetts Avenue (West)
(the “Campus”):
Existing Part of the Project: completed projects originally financed with proceeds of the Massachusetts Health
and Educational Facilities Authority Revenue Bonds, Boston Medical Center Issue, Series B (2008), including: (a) the
demolition of 91 East Concord Street and construction of
a 245,000 square foot, 9-story new Ambulatory Care building at 725 Albany Street to house clinical services for outpatients; (b) construction of a 22,000 square foot, 2-story
addition to the Menino Pavilion (“Menino”) at 840 Harrison
Avenue for the expansion of radiology and emergency department services; (c) improvements to the Yawkey Ambulatory Care Center (“Yawkey”) at 850 Harrison Avenue
and the Dowling Building at 771 Albany Street, including
interior renovations, equipment acquisition and HVAC and
elevator repairs and replacement; (d) installation of a new
IT software system throughout the Borrower’s Campus; (e)
acquisition and installation of furniture and equipment at
each of the above-described locations; and (f) other routine capital expenditures of the Borrower included in the
Borrower’s capital budget for fiscal year 2009, 2010 and
2011; and
New Part of the Project: site development, construction or alteration of buildings or the acquisition or
installation of furnishings and equipment, or any combination of the foregoing, in connection with the following:
(a) renovation of approximately 200,000 square feet of
Menino, including the emergency department, radiology
diagnostic imaging, interventional procedure platform, cardiac catheterization labs, interventional radiology rooms,
electrophysiology labs, intensive care unit, adult medical/
surgical unit, pediatric medical/surgical unit, dialysis, respiratory therapy, kitchen, disaster preparedness storage
and morgue; (b) the acquisition and installation of equipment throughout the Borrower’s Campus, including cogeneration, radiology and CT equipment; and (c) other routine
capital expenditures of the Borrower included in the Borrower’s capital budget for fiscal year 2016, 2017 and/or
2018 to be located on the Campus.
(2) authorize the financing and refinancing of such
Project costs by the issuance by MassDevelopment, acting under and pursuant to Massachusetts General Laws,
Chapters 23G and 40D, of revenue bonds in an aggregate
principal amount not to exceed $210,000,000, which bonds
will not constitute a debt or pledge of the faith and credit
of MassDevelopment or of The Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
Interested persons wishing to express their views
on the Project and the proposed use of proceeds of taxexempt obligations to finance the Project will be given the
opportunity to do so at the public hearing or may, prior to
the time of the public hearing, submit their views in writing
to MassDevelopment at 99 High Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02110.
MASSACHUSETTS DEVELOPMENT
FINANCE AGENCY
..
..
..
.. Experience Globe.com
..
.
Listening session #2:
Date: Monday, June 27, 2016
Time: 2:00 – 3:30 pm
Location: Auditorium, Fitchburg Public Library, 610
Main Street, Fitchburg, MA
EOHHS will accept comments on the proposed Request
through July 17, 2016. Written comments may be delivered by email or mail. By email, please send comments
to
[email protected] and include
“Comments on Demonstration Extension Request” in the
subject line. By mail, please send comments to: EOHHS
Office of Medicaid, Attn: 1115 Demonstration Comments,
One Ashburton Place, 11th Floor, Boston, MA 02108. Comments must be received by July 17, 2016 in order to be
considered. Paper copies of submitted comments may be
obtained in person by request from 9 am-5 pm at EOHHS,
One Ashburton Place, 11th Floor, Boston, MA 02108. Comments will be posted on the MassHealth 1115 Demonstration website:
http://www.mass.gov/eohhs/gov/departments/masshealth/masshealth-and-health-care-reform.
html.
NOTICE OF HEARING
Pursuant to M.G.L. c. 30A and the authority granted
to the Commissioner of Insurance (“Commissioner”) under
M.G.L. c. 175 and c. 152, a hearing will be held at 10:00
a.m. on July 18, 2016, at the Division of Insurance (“Division”), Hearing Room 1-E, 1000 Washington Street, Boston,
Massachusetts. The purpose of the hearing is to afford all
interested persons an opportunity to provide oral and written statements regarding three regulations that are the
subject of proposed amendments or rescission. The docket
number assigned to each regulation and a description of
the proposed actions to be taken follow.
Docket No. G2016-11
211 CMR 67.00. Workers’ Compensation Self-Insurance
Groups. The regulation implements the provisions of
M.G.L. c. 152, §§25E through 25U, that governs the formation, operation and oversight of all workers’ compensation
self-insurance groups in Massachusetts. The Division proposes to amend 211 CMR 67.00 to revise definitions, to
further define the types of investments in which the group
may invest and acceptable forms of security, to revise the
requirement for experience rating for certain groups, to remove the authority to acquire actuarial services from the
group administrator, and to authorize the Commissioner in
certain circumstances to waive some requirements for the
purchase of reinsurance. Other amendments delete outdated provisions and make changes necessary to conform
211 CMR 67.00 to current Massachusetts insurance laws.
Docket No. G2016-12
211 CMR 113.00. Requirements Regarding Workers’
Compensation Insurance Deductibles.
211 CMR 115.00. Requirements Applicable to Workers’
Compensation Deductible Policies.
211 CMR 113.00, promulgated in 1992, established
conditions for offering reasonable claim deductibles and
premium credits on all workers’ compensation insurance
policies. 211 CMR 115.00, promulgated in 2003, established conditions specifically applicable to offers of “large
deductible” policies. The Division proposes to integrate the
provisions of 211 CMR 113.00 into 211 CMR 115.00, creating a single comprehensive regulation governing all workers’ compensation insurance policy deductible plans and
premium credits on small and medium deductible plans.
Concurrently with amending 211 CMR 115.00, the Division
proposes to rescind 211 CMR 113.00 because it is no longer necessary.
The proposed regulations may be inspected in the Division’s offices during normal business hours or viewed on
the Division’s website, www.mass.gov/doi. Persons who
wish to present unsworn oral or written statements at the
July 18, 2016 hearing are asked to submit a notice of intent
to comment no later than July 14, 2016. Other persons
who wish to speak will be heard after those who notify the
Division in advance. The hearing record will remain open
for a week after conclusion of the July 18, 2016 hearing to
receive any additional written statements.
All notices and submissions must refer to the Docket
Number(s) for the particular regulation(s) that the person
intends to address. Notices and submissions in hard copy
may be sent by mail to the Docket Clerk, Hearings and Appeals, Division of Insurance, at the address above or by
electronic mail to [email protected].
June 14, 2016
_____________________________
Daniel R. Judson
Commissioner of Insurance
The proposed regulations may be inspected in the Division’s offices during normal business hours or viewed on
the Division’s website, www.mass.gov/doi. Persons who
wish to present unsworn oral or written statements at the
July 26, 2016 hearing are asked to submit a notice of intent
to comment no later than July 22, 2016. Other persons
who wish to speak will be heard after those who notify the
Division in advance. The hearing record will remain open
for a week after conclusion of the July 26, 2016 hearing to
receive any additional written statements.
All notices and submissions must refer to the Docket
Number(s) for the particular regulation(s) that the person
intends to address. Notices and submissions in hard copy
may be sent by mail to the Docket Clerk, Hearings and Appeals, Division of Insurance, at the address above or by
electronic mail to [email protected].
June 14, 2016
_____________________________
Daniel R. Judson
Commissioner of Insurance
HEARING NOTICE
Docket No. G2016-03
211 CMR 20.00. Risk-Based Capital (RBC) for Insurers.
The regulation governs the formulation and filing of RiskBased Capital (“RBC”) reports by Massachusetts domestic
life, health, and fraternal insurers. The Division proposes to
amend 211 CMR 20.00 to incorporate recent changes to
the Model Regulation on Risk-Based Capital for Insurers
developed by the National Association of Insurance Commissioners (“NAIC”); the amendments include confidentiality provisions, a change in the RBC calculation factor,
and language clarifying its application to fraternal benefit
societies. The proposed amendments also delete Phase-In
provisions that are now outdated.
Docket No. G2016-04
211 CMR 23.00. Audits of Insurers by Independent
Certified Public Accountants for Years Ending 1991 and
Thereafter. The regulation requires insurance companies
doing business in Massachusetts to file annual CPA audited
financial statements with the Division. In 2010, the Division
promulgated 211 CMR 26.00, a regulation addressing comprehensive financial reporting requirements for insurers
doing business in the Commonwealth that is based on the
Model Regulation on Annual Financial Reporting developed
by the NAIC. Insurers are now required to comply with 211
CMR 26.00, Annual Financial Reporting for Years Ending
2010 and Thereafter, that incorporates the requirement to
file audited financial statements. The Division proposes to
rescind 211 CMR 23.00 because it is no longer necessary.
Docket No. G2016-05
211 CMR 25.00. Risk-Based Capital (RBC) for Health
Organizations. The regulation governs the formulation and
filing of Risk-Based Capital (“RBC”) reports by Massachusetts domestic health insurance organizations. The Division
proposes to amend 211 CMR 25.00 to incorporate recent
changes to the Model Regulation on Risk-Based Capital for
Health Organizations developed by the NAIC. The amendments include confidentiality provisions and language
relating to a trend test for health organizations’ financial
data.
Docket No. G2016-06
211 CMR 39.00. Annuity Mortality Tables for Use in Determining Reserve Liabilities for Annuities. The regulation
specifies the Annuity Mortality Tables for Use in Determining Reserve Liabilities for Annuities that are approved for
use in Massachusetts. The Division proposes to amend 211
CMR 39.00 by adding to that list the 2012 Individual Annuity Table and amending definitions and other provisions to
conform 211 CMR 39.00 to the Model Rule for Recognizing
a New Annuity Mortality Table for Use in Determining Reserve Liabilities for Annuities developed by the NAIC.
Docket No. G2016-07
211 CMR 130.00. Credit for Reinsurance. The regulation
prescribes the types of reinsurers, the quality of collateral
and the kinds of reinsurance arrangements that are acceptable from a financial perspective to permit a ceding insurance company to claim a surplus “credit” on its financial
statements for business it cedes to a reinsurer. In 2015,
legislation was enacted to amend M.G.L. c. 175, §20A, the
Credit for Reinsurance statute, to incorporate changes to
the Model Law on Credit for Reinsurance developed by the
NAIC. The legislation directed the Commissioner to promulgate regulations to implement those changes. The Division
proposes to amend 211 CMR 130.00 to comply with the recent statutory changes and to incorporate recent changes
to the Model Law and Model Regulation on Credit for Reinsurance developed by the NAIC.
The proposed regulations may be inspected in the Division’s offices during normal business hours or viewed on
the Division’s website, www.mass.gov/doi. Persons who
wish to present unsworn oral or written statements at the
July 19, 2016 hearing are asked to submit a notice of intent
to comment no later than July 15, 2016. Other persons
who wish to speak will be heard after those who notify the
Division in advance. The hearing record will remain open
for a week after conclusion of the July 19, 2016 hearing to
receive any additional written statements.
All notices and submissions must refer to the Docket
Number(s) for the particular regulation(s) that the person
intends to address. Notices and submissions in hard copy
may be sent by mail to the Docket Clerk, Hearings and Appeals, Division of Insurance, at the address above or by
electronic mail to [email protected].
June 14, 2016
PROPOSED REGULATIONS OF
THE DEPARTMENT OF LABOR STANDARDS
Tuesday, July 12, 2016
10:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m.
Charles F. Hurley Building
Minihan Hall
19 Staniford Street, 6th Floor
Boston, MA 02114
Thursday, July 14, 2016
11:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.
Western Massachusetts Office of Governor
State Office Building
436 Dwight Street, Room B42
Springfield, MA 01103
Pursuant to G.L. c. 30A and Executive Order No. 562, the Department of Labor Standards (DLS) has made revisions to its
Deleading and Lead-safe Renovation Regulations, 454 CMR
22.00. DLS is conducting two Public Hearings to seek comment from members of the regulated community and the general public on proposed amendments to 454 CMR 22.00. This
regulation establishes standards for renovation, repair and
painting work that disturbs paint, paint debris, plaster or other
materials containing dangerous levels of lead in target housing
and child occupied facilities built before 1978, which parallel
similar requirements of the Federal Environmental Protection
Agency (“EPA”). The proposed amendments clarify the requirements for electronic learning courses.
Interested parties may provide testimony at the hearing or
may submit written comments. All written comments must be
received no later than the close of business on July 22, 2016,
presented in a legible manner, and addressed to William D.
McKinney Director, Department of Labor Standards, 19 Staniford Street, 2nd floor, Boston, MA 02114.
Auxiliary aids and services or other reasonable accommodations for persons with disabilities are available upon request.
Please include a description of the accommodation you will
need, including as much detail as you can. Also include a way
we can contact you if we need more information. Please allow
at least two weeks (14 days) advance notice. Last minute requests will be accepted, but may be impossible to fulfill. Send
an e-mail to Dennis Johnson ([email protected]),
Executive Office of Labor and Workforce Development
/Diversity/ADA Office or call617/626-5111. For hearing-impaired relay services, call1-800439-0183 or 711.
A copy of the proposed regulations and a summary explanation is available upon written request to the above address, or
may be viewed online at http://www.mass.gov/dols.
_____________________________
Daniel R. Judson
Commissioner of Insurance
Town Of Framingham
Planning Board
Public Hearing
Pursuant to Section II.B,
III.E, IV.B, IV.E, V.G, VI.E, and
VI.F of the Framingham
Zoning By-Law and Article
VI, Section 8 of the General
By-Laws the Framingham
Planning Board, will hold a
public hearing on Thursday,
June 30, 2016 at 7:00 p.m. in
the Ablondi Room, Memorial Building, located at 150
Concord Street, Framingham, Massachusetts. The
public hearing will be held
to consider the application
of One Framingham Centre,
LCC for Site Plan Review
and Special Permits for
Reduction in the Required
Number of Parking Spaces,
Reduction in Parking Dimensional
Regulations
within the setback, and a
Public Way Access Permit
at the property located at
1, 5, 17 Edgell Road. The
applicant is proposing to
raze an existing 5,000 sf
restaurant building and to
construct a new 4,800sf
restaurant building. The
project will further revisions
to the public way access
on Edgell Road, associated
site improvements, and
landscaping. The property is
zoned Community Business
(B-2) and Highway Corridor
(HC) Overlay District and is
listed as Framingham Assessor’s Parcel ID: 90-440682-000. The application
and plan submittal is on file
for review in the Planning
Board Office, Room 205 of
the Memorial Building and
available online at www.
framinghamma.gov on the
Planning Board Webpage.
Christine Long,
Chair Framingham Planning
Board
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CITATION ON PETITION
FOR FORMAL
ADJUDICATION
Docket No. SU16P1373EA
Commonwealth of
Massachusetts
The Trial Court
Suffolk Probate and
Family Court
24 New Chardon Street
Boston, MA 02114
(617) 788-8300
Estate of: Alice D. Leary
Date of Death: 11/03/2015
To all interested persons: A
Petition for Formal Probate
of Will with Appointment of
Personal Representative has
been filed by Brian G. Leary
of Newton MA and Kevin
R. Leary of Dedham 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:
Brian G. Leary of Newton MA
and Kevin R. Leary of Dedham MA be appointed as
Personal Representative(s)
of said estate to serve on
the bond in an unsupervised
administration.
IMPORTANT NOTICE
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 the return day of
07/28/2016. 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 day, action may be
taken without further notice
to you.
UNSUPERVISED
ADMINISTRATION UNDER THE 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 the distribution of
assets and expenses of administration.
WITNESS, Hon. Joan P. Armstrong, First Justice of this
Court.
Felix D. Arroyo, Register of
Probate
Date: June 16, 2016
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Sports
TV HIGHLIGHTS
Baseball: White Sox-Red Sox, 1:35 p.m., NESN
PGA: Quickens Loan National, 3:30 p.m., Golf
Basketball: NBA Draft, 7 p.m., ESPN
Listings, D6
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T H E B O S T O N G L O B E T H U R S DAY, J U N E 2 3 , 2 01 6 | B O S T O N G L O B E .C O M / S P O RT S
Red Sox squander late lead
Reliever
Koji Uehara
reacts with
disgust after
allowing a
tying tworun homer
to the White
Sox’ Melky
Cabrera in
the eighth
inning.
Uehara gave
up a solo
shot to Brett
Lawrie two
batters
later.
Uehara allows pair of eighth-inning homers to White Sox
By Julian Benbow
GLOBE STAFF
White Sox 8 W h i l e X a n d e r B o gaerts was at third
Red Sox 6 b a s e c h a t t i n g u p
coach Brian Butterfield and White Sox
slugger Todd Frazier, Red Sox manager John Farrell was out of the dugout
trying to convince crew chief Dana
DeMuth to go to replay for a second
look at that the fly ball Bogaerts had
sent sailing toward the ledge of the
Green Monster with two outs in the
eighth inning.
It had been ruled a double on the
NBA
field, but with the Red Sox trailing,
7-6, after squandering up a two-run
lead in the top of the inning, whether
it was actually a tying home run was a
crucial call.
“From the dugout view, it looks like
contact made above the red line,” Farrell said. “Even what they showed on
the scoreboard kind of supported
that.”
Farrell also had reason to believe
the ball would have cleared the Wall if
two fans hadn’t reached over to try to
grab it. But in the short time DeMuth
took to look it over, he didn’t see it the
same way.
“John was challenging whether he
thought it was fan interference,” DeMuth said. “And then, actually he was
challenging the whole thing. We went
to replay and said, ‘Yes, the call is
overturned as far as no fan interference. Yes there was fan interference.
However, the ball was not going to be
a home run. It went off a fan and was
not going to leave the ballpark.’ ”
The reason the Red Sox were in
such a bind was because after behind
handed a two-run lead, setup man
JIM DAVIS/GLOBE STAFF
RED SOX, Page D2
Gary Washburn
DRAFT
F JAYLEN
BROWN
Celtics still
mulling
third pick
ON BASKETBALL
Had a second
workout with
Celtics on
Monday, where
he impressed;
questions about
his shooting
remain
G KRIS
DUNN
By Adam Himmelsbach
GLOBE STAFF
NEW YORK — There was an enduring consensus Ben Simmons and
Brandon Ingram would be the top two
picks in the 2016 NBA Draft, and
through workouts and interviews and
rumors, nothing shifted that narrative.
But identifying the No. 3 pick, the
Celtics’ pick, has been a much more
confusing exercise. There is no obvious candidate, and the quest for clarity
goes several picks deep.
Do you want experience or potential? Do you want shooting or size?
And then, of course, there is the question of whether the Celtics even want
to make the pick at all.
They have made no secret of their
willingness to trade the choice, most
likely as part of a package for an established veteran. On Tuesday night, ESPN reported that Boston was consistently being rebuffed in its attempts to
New London,
Conn., native
said he would
love to play
for Boston, but
didn’t participate in workouts
G BUDDY
HIELD
No questions
about his superb
shooting stroke,
but his defensive effort is
suspect
CELTICS, Page D4
Dan Shaughnessy
G JAMAL
MURRAY
Can Ainge
blend in some
shades of Red?
Sharpshooting
19-year-old has
high ceiling,
but may take
some time to
develop
At times like this we
need Red Auerbach.
Red always knew
what to do. Red was
thinking at a higher
level than the other
guys. Red knew how
to pick the pockets of
the other general
managers. Red knew how to get a better player with a lower selection.
As we sit here on the threshold of the
2016 NBA Draft — with the Celtics in
need of help and holding the third overall
pick — it is comforting that we have Red’s
basketball progeny calling the shots.
Danny Ainge is Red Auerbach’s
basketball son.
How could they be related, you
ask? Red was Brooklyn-born, a Jewish
man who lost his hair at a young age,
smoked cigars, swore like a sportswriter, and lived most of his professional career alone in a hotel on Boylston Street. Danny is Mormon, raised
in the great outdoors of the Pacific
Northwest, doesn’t smoke or swear,
and spends all of his free time in the
suburbs, surrounded by his wife, six
They
are in
control
Draft hinges on decision
to pick or parlay No. 3
While the Philadelphia 76ers and Los Angeles
Lakers already have determined their draft picks
in Ben Simmons and Brandon Ingram, respectively, it takes nothing away from the suspense of
Thursday’s NBA Draft.
And the man who controls the fate of many
draft prospects is Danny Ainge, whose Celtics
own the third overall pick. In a draft that has
been tabbed as Simmons, Ingram, and everybody else, the Celtics have to decide who the
third-best player is or, lacking a clear-cut choice,
parlay their draft slot into a potential cornerstone player.
But there is no real consensus.
Dragan Bender, the international prospect from Maccabi Tel Aviv in Israel, worked
out for the Celtics on Tuesday and a source
said he was impressive. There is Providence’s
Kris Dunn, who has not worked out with
Boston but could be the best point guard in
the draft.
Kentucky’s Jamal Murray is a splendid shooter but not an elite athlete and Oklahoma’s Buddy
Hield is NBA-ready but turns 23 years old in December.
There are myriad options for Ainge, who is
trying to trade the pick for an established veteran. With the New York Knicks’ acquistion
Wednesday of oft-injured guard Derrick Rose
from the Bulls, Chicago is expected to hold on to
ON BASKETBALL, Page D5
F MARQUESE
CHRISS
2016 MOCK DRAFT
1
PHI
F Ben Simmons, LSU
2
LAL
F Brandon Ingram, Duke
3
BOS
F Jaylen Brown, California
4
PHO
F Marquese Chriss, Washington
5
MIN
G Kris Dunn, Providence
6
NO
G Jamal Murray, Kentucky
7
DEN
F-C Dragan Bender, Croatia
8
SAC
G Buddy Hield, Oklahoma
9
TOR
C Domantas Sabonis, Gonzaga
F-C DRAGAN
BENDER
10
MIL
F Henry Ellenson, Marquette
11
ORL
F-C Skal Labissiere, Kentucky
7-foot-1 18-year
old has a unique
skillset as a
shooter and a
passer
12
ATL
C Jakob Poeltl, Utah
13
PHO
G Dejounte Murray, Washington
14
CHI
G Wade Baldwin, Vanderbilt
15
DEN
C Cheick Diallo, Kansas
16
BOS
F Deyonta Davis, Michigan State
Freakish
athleticism makes
him intriguing;
his tendency
to foul out of
games makes
him a liability
SHAUGHNESSY, Page D5
ASSOCIATED PRESS AND GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTOS
COMPLETE FIRST-ROUND MOCK DRAFT, D5
AHEAD OF THE GAME
Experienced Matthews is ready to be the NHL’s No. 1 pick
By Fluto Shinzawa
T
BRUCE BENNETT/GETTY IMAGES
Auston Matthews played in a top
Swiss league this past season.
GLOBE STAFF
he most peculiar thing about
Auston Matthews is not that
he’s from Scottsdale, Ariz., not
that he will be the first American taken
No. 1 in the NHL draft since Patrick
Kane in 2007, and not even that he’s
already projected to be the next ver-
sion of Anze Kopitar.
What makes Matthews so unusual
is his birthday, and what he did despite
it.
At 18 years old, Matthews is already
comfortable carrying the puck in all
quadrants of the hockey rink. But in
September of 1997, Matthews declared greater interest in his cozy in-
utero habitat than the delivery room.
Matthews was born on Sept. 17 —
two weeks after his due date. Mother
Ema and father Brian, naturally, never
dreamed at the time that being born in
overtime, so to speak, would affect the
puck drop on their son’s nascent NHL
career.
MATTHEWS, Page D7
INSIDE
Rose traded to Knicks
Bulls surprise by shipping out oftinjured guard for C Lopez and G
Calderon. NBA notebook, D4
Bergeron misses out
Bruins star a runner-up to Kings’
Kopitar for Selke Trophy. D6
No Rio for McIlroy
Star Irish golfer cites Zika fears for
pulling out of Olympics. D6
D2
Sports
T h e
B o s t o n
T H U R S D A Y, J U N E 2 3 , 2 0 1 6
G l o b e
June swoon may add up to trouble
Nick Cafardo
ON BASEBALL
Is it a June swoon or a sign
of rocky things to come?
That is the question as the
Red Sox leave Fenway after
Thursday afternoon’s game
against the White Sox and
head out on a six-game trip to
Texas and Tampa Bay. The
spike this team received in
April and May from its overthe-top offense has seemed to
go away, entering Wednesday
night’s game against the White
Sox 7-11 in June while their offensive numbers have plummeted.
Manager John Farrell said
before Wednesday’s game that
perhaps the hitters have
strayed from the all-fields approach that enabled them to
amass such gawdy numbers,
and perhaps they should be reminded.
Last night there was a bullpen problem, with Koji Uehara
coughing up two homers and
the lead in an 8-6 loss.
The Red Sox, who played
some teams at the right times,
taking advantage of their low
points (the Astros, for instance), are now seeing teams
closer to their high points (the
White Sox, for instance, and
previously the Orioles).
The offense masked Boston’s starting pitching problems in April and May, but in
June the massive run support
has gone away and they’ve paid
the price. With help from statistician Bill Chuck, let’s look as
some of the Red Sox’ numbers
month by month.
Through May, the Sox had
the best record in the American League at 32-20 (.615). In
all of baseball, their record was
only bettered by the Cubs at
35-15 (.700).
In April, the Red Sox went
14-10 and outscored the opposition, 126-105. In May, the Sox
went 18-10 and outscored the
opposition, 182-123. In June,
they are 7-12 (already more
losses than each of the previous two months) and have
been outscored, 93-90.
They also had seen a huge
dropoff in home runs from
May to June. Their batting average, on-base percentage, and
slugging percentage were also
down. They had been caught
stealing as many times in June
as they were in April and May
combined.
In April and May, they hit
.275 and .319, respectively,
with runners in scoring position. Before Wednesday’s game
they were hitting .250 with
runners in scoring position in
June.
Runs per game? They
scored an average of 5.25 in
April, 6.50 in May, and are at
4.78 for June. Their June ERA
is 4.33. In May, it was 4.07 and
in April, it was 4.15. The slight
spike hasn’t helped given less
offense. Yet the starting pitching has an ERA of 4.50 for June
after Eduardo Rodriguez went
six inning Wednesday night
and allowed three earned runs.
The starters’ ERA was 4.63 in
May and 4.49 in April. Red Sox
pitchers allowed 24 April homers, 27 May homers, and in
June they’ve allowed 32. They
allowed 4.38 runs per game in
April, 4.39 in May, and 4.78 in
June.
In terms of individual batters, Travis Shaw has picked it
up lately, but his .314 batting
average in April dropped to
.275 in May and is .222 in
June.
Jackie Bradley Jr. went from
.272 in April to .381 in being
named Player of the Month for
May to .229 in June.
Hanley Ramirez has also
taken a nosedive, from .284 in
April to .305 in May to .180 in
June.
Home and road splits have
also gone south.
In April, the Red Sox were
7-7 at Fenway with a 4.25 ERA
and .272 batting average. In
May, they were 11-3 at Fenway
with a 4.01 ERA and .341 batting average. And in June, the
Sox entered Wednesday 4-7 at
Fenway with a 3.42 ERA and
.250 average.
In April, the Red Sox were
7-3 on the road with a 4.00
ERA and .291 batting average.
In May, they were 7-7 away
from home with a 4.14 ERA
and .268 average. And in June,
the Red Sox are 3-4 on the road
with a 5.43 ERA and .295 average.
If this is their real offense,
then Dave Dombrowski needs
a hitter he can plug into left
field. If June is an aberration,
then Dombrowski still needs to
repair the pitching staff with at
White Sox 8, Red Sox 6
CHICAGO
Anderson ss
Eaton cf-rf
Abreu 1b
Cabrera lf
Frazier 3b
Lawrie 2b
Navarro c
García dh
Coats rf
a-Shuck ph-cf
Totals
BOSTON
Betts rf
Pedroia 2b
Bogaerts ss
Ortiz dh
Young lf
Bradley Jr. cf
HRamírez 1b
Shaw 3b
Marrero 3b
León c
Totals
At Fenway Park
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
5 0 0 0 0 3 .264
4 3 1 0 1 1 .277
4 0 0 0 0 3 .263
5 2 4 4 0 0 .291
4 1 1 2 0 2 .201
5 1 1 1 0 2 .226
4 0 1 0 0 1 .213
3 0 0 0 1 1 .246
3 1 1 0 0 0 .067
1 0 1 0 0 0 .197
38 8 10 7 2 13
AB
5
4
5
3
5
3
5
1
4
2
37
R H BI BB SO Avg.
1 2 0 0 0 .289
1 2 0 1 1 .306
1 3 3 0 0 .351
0 1 1 2 0 .339
0 0 0 0 1 .271
0 2 1 2 0 .305
1 1 1 0 2 .263
0 1 0 0 0 .275
0 1 0 0 1 .143
2 0 0 3 0 .556
6 13 6 8 5
Chicago.............................101 002 031 — 8 10 0
Boston............................... 004 002 000 — 6 13 1
a-singled for Coats in 9th. E—Shaw (10). LOB—
Chicago 7, Boston 12. 2B—Cabrera (16), Navarro
(8), Coats (1), Betts (17), Bogaerts (21). HR—Cabrera (7), off Uehara, Frazier (21), off Rodríguez,
Lawrie (8), off Uehara, HRamírez (6), off Quintana. Runners left in scoring position—Chicago 4
(Frazier, Lawrie 2, García), Boston 6 (Bogaerts,
Ortiz 2, Young, HRamírez, León). RISP—Chicago 1
for 7, Boston 6 for 13. Runners moved up—Eaton.
GIDP—HRamírez. DP—Chicago 1 (Anderson, Lawrie, Abreu).
Chicago
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Quintana
5‚ 8 6 6 6 1 111 3.04
Albers
‚ 2 0 0 0 0 17 4.75
Jnnings W 3-1 1‚ 1 0 0 1 0 22 2.01
Ynoa
1 1 0 0 1 2 18 0.00
Duke S 1
1 1 0 0 0 2 14 2.92
Boston
Rodríguez
Tazawa
Uhra BS2; L2-3
Hembree
Ross Jr.
IP
6
1
„
„
„
H
4
0
4
1
1
R ER BB SO NP ERA
4 3 2 7 102 6.41
0 0 0 2 14 2.93
3 3 0 2 17 4.78
1 1 0 1 12 2.25
0 0 0 1 19 2.82
Inherited runners-scored—Albers 1-1,
Jennings 2-0, Hembree 1-0, Ross Jr. 1-1. IBB—off
Ynoa (Ortiz). HBP—by Ross Jr. (Abreu, Frazier).
Umpires—Home, Mike Estabrook; First, Dana DeMuth; Second, Ed Hickox; Third, Greg Gibson.
T—3:38. A—37,413 (37,949).
HOW THE RUNS SCORED
JIM DAVIS/GLOBE STAFF
John Farrell (left) gave first base umpire Dana DeMuth a frightening look as he disputed
Xander Bogaerts’s double — which the Sox manager thought was a homer — in the eighth.
Red Sox squander late lead
RED SOX
Continued from Page D1
Koji Uehara couldn’t hold it together in the eighth. He gave
up a two-run homer to Melky
Cabrera, then a solo shot to
Brett Lawrie that put the Red
Sox in scramble mode on their
way to an 8-6 loss.
It was just the fourth time
as a reliever that Uehara had
given up multiple homers (and
the first time since Sept. 4
2014, just before he was shut
down for the season), the four
hits tied for the second most he
has allowed as a reliever, and
on a night when the Red Sox
offense rattled one of the White
Sox’ steadiest starters in Jose
Quintana, they still had to
swallow a loss.
In no mood to talk after the
game, Uehara answered questions quickly, his back to reporters, while he sorted
through things in his locker.
“I think if you look throughout my career, there were times
that I struggled,” Uehara said.
“I don’t think it’s anything unusual. I’m going to work out of
this.”
Starving for run support in
his last eight starts, Quintana
got an early 2-0 cushion on an
RBI double from Cabrera in
the first inning and an error by
Red Sox third baseman Travis
Shaw in the third that allowed
Jason Coats to score.
But Quintana had one of his
worst starts of the year. The six
runs allowed were a season
high and the eight hits he gave
up were one shy of the most he
has been tagged for this year.
The Red Sox got to Quinta-
na in the bottom of the third,
loading the bases with a leadoff
walk by Sandy Leon and a pair
of singles from Mookie Betts
and Bogaerts.
It was a bit of deja vu from
Monday, when the Red Sox
squandered a no-out, basesloaded situation in the ninth
inning of a 3-1 loss. But this
time, they capitalized.
Bogaerts lined a 1-and-2
curveball off the Wall in left
field for a two-run single. David Ortiz followed with a sharp
single to right field that plated
Dustin Pedroia. Two batters
later, Jackie Bradley Jr. shot
another ground ball through
the right side for a run-scoring
single that made it 4-2.
The White Sox, who haven’t
had the most explosive offense
this season, responded in the
sixth with a two-run homer
from Frazier, his 21st of the
season and second in as many
days.
But the Red Sox answered
swiftly in the bottom of the inning, getting a solo homer
from Hanley Ramirez — who
was dropped to seventh in the
batting order for the game —
and an RBI single from Bogaerts.
Red Sox starter Eduardo
Rodriguez was in line to pick
up his second win of the season
after giving up four runs (three
earned) in six innings and
striking out a season-high seven. Junichi Tazawa set down
the side in order in the seventh. But Uehara couldn’t follow suit.
“ H e ’s b e e n v e r y t o u g h
against us, probably even
tougher than [Chris] Sale over
the course of the last three or
four years,” Farrell said of
Quintana. “Tonight, uncharacteristic six walks on his part.
We were able to string some
hits together, particularly in
the third inning for four runs. I
thought we had a very good approach against him. We were
patient enough to build some
innings and get some base runn e r s . B u t y e a h , on a n i g h t
when the offense clicks, to give
back the lead a couple of times,
that’s a tough one.”
Last season, Uehara gave up
multiple runs a career-high five
times. He’s already done it five
times in 28 appearances this
season.
Because of it, the Red Sox
lost for just the third time this
season after being ahead
through six innings. They’ve
now lost seven of their last
nine games overall and 12 of
their last 19.
What it might mean for Uehara’s role going forward was a
question Farrell wasn’t ready
to answer so soon after the
loss, but he did say he’d have to
look at other bullpen options
such as Heath Hembree.
“I’m not here to say that
Koji’s out of the setup role,”
Farrell said. “But at the same
time, if we’re going to put
someone else in that spot,
we’ve got some work to do with
an attack plan for Heath —
against lefties in particular,
that’s got to improve, because
he’s been dominant against
righthanders. So unfortunatel y, t h i s i s a t o u g h n i g h t . A
tough loss.”
FIRST INNING
WHITE SOX — Ti.Anderson grounded out, third
baseman T.Shaw to first baseman H.Ramírez.
Eaton walked. Abreu struck out. Me.Cabrera doubled to center, Eaton scored. Frazier struck out.
THIRD INNING
WHITE SOX — Coats hit a ground-rule double
to right. Ti.Anderson struck out. Eaton grounded
out, second baseman Pedroia to first baseman
H.Ramírez, Coats to third. Abreu safe at first on
fielding error by third baseman T.Shaw, Coats
scored. Me.Cabrera grounded into fielder’s
choice, shortstop Bogaerts to second baseman
Pedroia, Abreu out.
RED SOX — S.León walked. Betts hit an infield
single to second, S.León to second. Pedroia singled to right, S.León to third, Betts to second. Bogaerts singled to left, S.León scored, Betts
scored, Pedroia to second. Ortiz singled to right,
Pedroia scored, Bogaerts to third. C.Young fouled
out to first baseman Abreu. Bradley Jr. singled to
center, Bogaerts scored, Ortiz to second.
H.Ramírez grounded into a double play, shortstop Ti.Anderson to second baseman Lawrie to
first baseman Abreu, Bradley Jr. out.
SIXTH INNING
WHITE SOX — Abreu struck out. Me.Cabrera
singled to left. Frazier homered to left, Me.Cabrera scored. Lawrie grounded out to third. Navarro
grounded out to shortstop.
RED SOX — H.Ramírez homered to right on a
1-2 count. Marrero fouled out to catcher Navarro.
S.León walked. Albers pitching. Betts flied out to
right fielder Coats. Pedroia singled to center,
S.León to third. Bogaerts hit an infield single to
shortstop, S.León scored, Pedroia to second.
Da.Jennings pitching. Ortiz grounded out, first
baseman Abreu unassisted.
EIGHTH INNING
WHITE SOX — Uehara pitching. Eaton singled
to center. Abreu struck out. Me.Cabrera homered
to right, Eaton scored. Frazier struck out. Lawrie
homered to left. Navarro doubled to left. Hembree pitching. A.García flied out to right.
NINTH INNING
WHITE SOX — Shuck pinch-hitting for Coats.
Shuck singled to center. Ti.Anderson struck out.
Ross Jr. pitching. Eaton grounded into fielder’s
choice, second baseman Pedroia to shortstop Bogaerts, Shuck out. Abreu was hit by a pitch, Eaton
to second. Me.Cabrera singled to center, Eaton
scored, Abreu to second. Frazier was hit by a
pitch, Abreu to third, Me.Cabrera to second. Lawrie struck out.
least one starter and one reliever, and to do that he has to be
willing to trade prospects.
There will be competition
for available starters such as
Rich Hill, possibly Sonny Gray
(who isn’t pitching well), Ervin
Santana, and Julio Teheran.
Forget about Jose Fernandez
and Chris Sale. That’s a pipe
dream. Both the Marlins and
White Sox are still in the hunt
and there’s no way the White
Sox are dealing a top pitcher
who is under their control at a
reasonable salary through
2019. So the Red Sox are left
with options they must think
twice about in terms of which
prospects are expendable.
With Brock Holt out, their
bench has been a problem.
They simply don’t have dependable options. They need a
veteran lefthanded bat off the
bench. Holt should solidify
their backup infield defense
when he returns. They probably should have given the
slumping Shaw more time off.
David Ortiz’s legs became
an issue about 10 days ago.
When you see he has trouble
legging out a single or going
first to third, that’s not a good
Dustin Pedroia makes the
catch on a soft liner by
Chicago’s Dioner Navarro.
Nick Cafardo can be reached at
[email protected].
Seventh spot
for Ramirez
Slugger dropped
in batting order
By Julian Benbow
GLOBE STAFF
Long after the 3-1 loss to the
White Sox Tuesday night, Hanley Ramirez could see the two
pitches, right
RED SOX
over the midNOTEBOOK dle of the plate,
that he
couldn’t hit.
An 0-for-4 night with three
strikeouts left him in the same
rut he has been trying to get
out of for most of the season.
He could only shake his head at
the five runners he left on base.
“You cannot miss two pitches right in the middle of the
plate,” he said. “Can’t happen.”
On Wednesday, Ramirez
found himself two spots lower
in the batting order. Manager
John Farrell dropped Ramirez
from his normal No. 5 spot to
seventh.
Ramirez responded by going
1 for 5 with a go-ahead homer
in the sixth inning, his sixth of
the season, but his second on
the home stand, in Boston’s 8-6
loss.
Ramirez also struck out
three times for the third
straight game, matching a
three-game stretch in 2012 for
the most times he’s fanned
three times in three consecutive games.
Ramirez insisted he’s
worked his way out of slumps
before and he’s been going over
things with hitting coach Chili
Davis. Ramirez made a slight
tweak to his stance before the
game, moving his hands closer
to his head.
“I’ve been working with him
in the cage,” Ramirez said. “I
listen to him and I try to pick
some things, but for me personally, I’m just trying to put
my hands to my head. Just simple man. Hitting’s never been
that hard for me. Sometimes
you just put too many things in
your head and sometimes
you’ve just got to let it go and
go out there and swing.”
Ramirez hadn’t started a
game so low in the batting order since his rookie year. But
with the offense scuffling and
Ramirez sorting through timing issues, Farrell moved up
Chris Young to the five-hole,
hoping to get a lift from Young,
who entered hitting .304 with
five homers and nine RBIs in
his last 19 games.
Holt update
JIM DAVIS/GLOBE STAFF
sign. Losing Ortiz would be a
disaster because there’s nobody
to take his place.
They have not been able to
straighten out Clay Buchholz,
Joe Kelly (now on the disabled
list in Pawtucket), or Eduardo
Rodriguez. Their bullpen could
use a reinforcement.
They have played some ugly
games lately. Bases loaded, nobody out, and can’t score, only
to lose the game when Craig
Kimbrel failed.
Baseball is a season of
tweaks and changes and welltimed alterations to the roster.
The Red Sox have played 71
games and they are trending
down. They are fortunate that
the Orioles and Blue Jays also
have issues. The Yankees keep
trying to get to .500 and do not
have a huge deficit for the third
week of June. The Rays have
had one good stretch and their
pitching keeps them from
drowning.
In some ways, even with a
June swoon, the Red Sox are in
better position than their rivals. And there’s always July.
After playing each of the last
two days with Triple A Pawtucket, Brock Holt was out of
the lineup on Wednesday.
Some of the symptoms from
the concussion he suffered a
month ago are lingering, but
Farrell said Holt came out of
both games in “pretty good
shape.”
“I can’t say that he’s 100 percent symptom-free,” Farrell
said. “He’s still experiencing
some . . . and that’s all been expected based on the information provided.”
Hold played five innings on
Monday, seven on Tuesday, and
will go seven innings on Thursday, splitting time between left
field and shortstop, as he
builds up to playing a full game
again in left field on Friday.
Farrell said he still didn’t
have a timetable for Holt’s return, “but we’re moving closer.”
Hanigan progressing
Catcher Ryan Hanigan will
begin a rehab assignment
Thursday in Triple A Pawtucket
after going through one last set
of evaluations on Wednesday.
On the disabled list since
June 5 with a strained neck,
Hanigan said he had an epidural injection to address a bulging disk in his neck but has
been pain-free since.
“It’s been a lot of work,
started with an injection to
calm it down,” he said. “I feel
good. No pain. I feel way better
than I did actually, just in
terms of the range of motion in
my shoulders and I’m ready to
start testing it in live action.”
The plan is to have Hanigan
as a designated hitter on Thursday, progress to catching duties, then see how he responds.
Hanigan guessed that the
rehab assignment would last
4-7 days.
Shaw exits early
Travis Shaw was in the lineup after fouling a ball off his
right shin Tuesday night and
suffering a contusion, but he
only made it three innings before leaving the game.
“He went out and took
ground balls to test it and be
sure of it,’’ Farrell said. “He got
through that OK, but as he got
into the game, obviously that
continued to tighten up on
him. He’s day to day. I don’t
know if he’ll be available tomorrow yet.
Shields up next
James Shields’s struggles
this season don’t wipe out Farrell’s memories of Shields’s past
performances against the Red
Sox. Shields, who will start
Thursday afternoon for the
White Sox, is 2-9 with a 6.28
ERA this season and 0-3 with a
24.62 ERA in his last four outings, but he has thrown three
complete games, including two
shutouts, and notched 142
strikeouts in 26 career starts
against the Red Sox. “Strong
competitor,” Farrell said. “A
putaway changeup. A guy that
would, I think, thrive on the
bigger stage or in the spotlight.’’
. . . Wednesday was Celtics
Night at Fenway. Legends John
Havlicek and Satch Sanders
were honored along with former general manager Jan Volk,
commemorating the 1986
championship. Each threw out
a ceremonial first pitch.
T h e
T H U R S D A Y, J U N E 2 3 , 2 0 1 6
BREWERS 4, ATHLETICS 2
MILWAUKEE
AHill 3b
Gennett 2b
Braun lf
Lucroy dh
Carter 1b
Nwenhuis cf
Maldonado c
Flores rf
Rivera ss
Totals
AB R H BI BB SO
5 0 1 0 0 0
5 1 3 2 0 0
5 0 2 0 0 3
5 0 0 0 0 2
3 0 0 0 1 1
4 1 1 1 0 2
4 0 3 0 0 1
4 1 2 0 0 1
3 1 1 1 0 1
38 4 13 4 1 11
Avg.
.268
.275
.320
.305
.222
.223
.151
.247
.204
OAKLAND
AB R H BI BB SO
Burns cf
3 0 0 0 0 1
Crisp lf
3 1 2 1 1 1
Lowrie 2b
4 0 0 0 0 0
Valencia 3b
4 0 1 0 0 0
Davis dh
4 0 0 0 0 2
Alonso 1b
4 1 1 0 0 1
Semien ss
3 0 0 0 1 1
3 0 1 1 0 0
Muncy rf
Alcntara pr-rf
0 0 0 0 0 0
Butler ph
1 0 0 0 0 0
Phegley c
2 0 0 0 0 2
Vogt ph-c
1 0 0 0 0 1
Totals
32 2 5 2 2 9
Avg.
.241
.227
.288
.328
.238
.245
.235
.250
—
.257
.273
.265
Milwaukee..........000 030 010 — 4 13 0
Oakland...............000 100 100 — 2 5 1
E—Crisp (1). LOB—Milwaukee 9, Oakland 6. 2B—Flores (5), Crisp (14). HR—
Gennett (7), off Mengden, Nieuwenhuis
(3), off Hendriks, Crisp (6), off Guerra.
SB—Alcántara (1). S—Rivera. DP—Oakland 2.
Milwaukee
IP H R ER BB SO ERA
Guerra W 4-1
7 5 2 2 1 8 3.67
Smith
„ 0 0 0 0 1 1.59
Thornburg S 2 1‚ 0 0 0 1 0 2.93
Oakland
Mngden L 0-3
Rodríguez
Hendriks
Rzepczynski
Axford
IP H R ER BB SO
6 7 3 3 1 9
1 1 0 0 0 2
„ 2 1 1 0 0
„ 2 0 0 0 0
„ 1 0 0 0 0
ERA
3.00
3.25
7.58
2.88
3.81
Inherited runners-scored—Thornburg
1-0, Rzepczynski 1-0, Axford 1-0. HBP—by
Smith (Burns). NP—Guerra 101, Smith 9,
Thornburg 20, Mengden 108, Rodríguez
17, Hendriks 12, Rzepczynski 7, Axford 6.
Umpires—Home, Jeff Kellogg; First, John
Tumpane; Second, Paul Nauert; Third, Alan Porter. T—2:53. A—13,586 (35,067).
ASTROS 3, ANGELS 2
JIM DAVIS/GLOBE STAFF
Travis Shaw bungled this grounder as Chicago
took a 2-0 lead on the error in the third.
AL
EAST
Baltimore
Boston
Toronto
New York
Tampa Bay
W
41
39
40
35
31
L
30
32
34
36
39
Pct.
.577
.549
.541
.493
.443
GB
—
2
2½
6
9½
Div. Last 10 Streak
18-13
5-5
W1
15-17
3-7
L3
23-19
6-4
W1
10-17
4-6
W1
12-12
3-7
L7
CENTRAL
Cleveland
Kansas City
Detroit
Chicago
Minnesota
W
41
38
37
36
23
L
30
33
35
36
48
Pct.
.577
.535
.514
.500
.324
GB
—
3
4½
5½
18
Div. Last 10 Streak
21-10
7-3
W6
21-11
7-3
L2
12-13
5-5
W3
12-18
5-5
W3
5-19
5-5
W3
WEST
Texas
Houston
Seattle
Los Angeles
Oakland
W
47
37
36
31
29
L
26
36
36
41
42
Pct.
.644
.507
.500
.431
.408
GB
—
10
10½
15½
17
Div. Last 10 Streak
26-13
8-2
W1
13-16
8-2
W5
15-19
2-8
L5
14-14
4-6
L3
11-17
4-6
L1
NL
W
43
38
38
30
24
L
29
32
34
43
47
Pct.
.597
.543
.528
.411
.338
GB
—
4
5
13½
18½
Div. Last 10 Streak
24-13
5-5
L4
14-13
4-6
W2
13-20
6-4
W1
14-16
1-9
L9
13-16
6-4
L1
CENTRAL
Chicago
St. Louis
Pittsburgh
Milwaukee
Cincinnati
W
47
38
34
32
28
L
23
33
38
40
44
Pct.
.671
.535
.472
.444
.389
GB
—
9½
14
16
20
Div. Last 10 Streak
21-9
5-5
L3
17-13
5-5
W3
12-17
2-8
L2
9-12
3-7
W1
10-18
4-6
L1
WEST
San Francisco
*Los Angeles
Colorado
Arizona
San Diego
W
46
40
34
34
30
L
27
33
37
40
43
Pct.
.630
.548
.479
.459
.411
GB
—
6
11
12½
16
Div. Last 10 Streak
24-13
9-1
W2
16-15
7-3
W5
19-18
6-4
L1
13-16
7-3
L1
13-23
4-6
L1
* — Not including late game
RESULTS
WEDNESDAY
at Boston 6
At Miami 3
Atlanta 0
At NY Yankees 9
Colorado 8
At NY Mets 4
Kansas City 3
At Houston 3
LA Angels 2
St. Louis 7
at Chi. Cubs 2
Milwaukee 4
at Oakland 2
At Toronto 5
Arizona 2
At Baltimore 7
San Francisco 7
San Diego 2
at Pittsburgh 6
At Detroit 5
Seattle 1
At Cleveland 6
Tampa Bay 1
At Texas 6
Cincinnati 4
At Minnesota 6
Philadelphia 5
Washington
at LA Dodgers
TUESDAY
Chi. White Sox 3
Colorado 8
San Diego 10
San Francisco 15
at Boston 1
at NY Yankees 4
at Baltimore 7
at Pittsburgh 4
Arizona 4
at Toronto 2
Atlanta 3 (10 inn.)
at Miami 2
At NY Mets 2
Kansas City 1
At Detroit 4
At Cleveland 6
Tampa Bay 0
Cincinnati 8
at Texas 2
St. Louis 4
at Chi. Cubs 3
At Houston 3
At Minnesota 14
LA Angels 2
Philadelphia 10
At Oakland 5
At LA Dodgers 3
Milwaukee 3
Washington 2
Seattle 2
THURSDAY’S GAMES
2016
W-L
ERA
Last
Team
2016 vs. opp ..................3 starts ...........................
rec.
W-L
IP
ERA
W-L
IP
ERA
SAN FRANCISCO AT PITTSBURGH, 12:35
Suarez (R)
Niese (L)
2-1
6-4
3.69
4.74
3-6
9-6
0-0
0-0
0.0
0.0
0.00
0.00
1-0
1-2
14.2
17.2
4.30
6.11
7.71
0.00
0-1
0-1
0-0
0-0
0.0
0.0
0.00
0.00
0-1
0-0
4.2
1.0
7.71
0.00
5-9
6-8
0-0
0-0
0.0
0.0
0.00
0.00
2-1
1-0
18.2
18.2
1.93
4.82
SEATTLE AT DETROIT, 1:10
Sampson (R)
Norris (L)
0-1
0-0
PHILADELPHIA AT MINNESOTA, 1:10
Eickhoff (R)
Nolasco (R)
4-9
3-4
3.49
4.91
CHICAGO AT MIAMI, 7:10
Lester (L)
Chen (L)
9-3
4-2
2.06
5.22
11-3
8-6
0-0
0-0
0.0
0.0
0.00
0.00
3-0
1-0
21.0
13.2
1.29
9.88
4.76
4.23
5-9
4-10
1-2
1-0
16.2
8.0
4.86
0.00
0-2
1-2
19.0
14.2
2.84
9.20
4-3
3-6
0-0
0-0
0.0
0.0
0.00
0.00
1-1
0-1
18.2
16.2
3.86
3.24
NEW YORK AT ATLANTA, 7:10
Harvey (R)
Wisler (R)
4-9
3-7
SAN DIEGO AT CINCINNATI, 7:10
Friedrich (L)
Lamb (L)
3-2
1-4
3.15
4.75
ARIZONA AT COLORADO, 8:40
Greinke (R)
Butler (R)
10-3
2-4
3.54
6.26
AB R H BI BB SO
5 0 2 1 0 0
5 0 3 1 0 2
4 0 0 0 1 1
3 0 0 0 1 1
4 0 0 0 0 2
0 0 0 0 0 0
4 0 0 0 0 0
4 0 0 0 0 1
4 1 3 0 0 0
3 1 2 0 1 1
36 2 10 2 3 8
Avg.
.311
.292
.297
.261
.293
.211
.268
.204
.321
.261
HOUSTON
Springer dh
González 1b
Altuve 2b
Correa ss
Rasmus rf-lf
Valbuena 3b
Gómez cf
Castro c
Kemp lf
Marisnick rf
Totals
AB R H BI BB SO
3 1 1 0 0 1
4 1 1 1 0 1
2 1 1 1 2 0
4 0 1 1 0 0
4 0 1 0 0 2
3 0 0 0 0 2
3 0 0 0 0 0
3 0 1 0 0 2
3 0 2 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 0 0
29 3 8 3 2 8
Avg.
.260
.259
.343
.262
.233
.249
.216
.209
.238
.180
LA Angels............001 000 001 — 2 10 0
Houston...............000 001 02x — 3 8 0
LOB—LA Angels 10, Houston 5. 2B—Calhoun (13), Correa (11), ColRasmus (10),
Castro (7). 3B—González (1). HR—Altuve
(12), off Shoemaker. SB—Calhoun (2),
Robinson (2). CS—Kemp (1). DP—LA Angels 2.
LA Angels
IP H R ER BB SO ERA
Shmker L 3-8 7‚ 8 3 3 2 7 4.43
Bedrosian
„ 0 0 0 0 1 1.46
Houston
IP H R ER BB SO
McCullers
5„ 6 1 1 3 6
Neshek
‚ 0 0 0 0 1
Feldman
1 1 0 0 0 0
Grgrson W 2-1 1 0 0 0 0 1
Harris S 6
1 3 1 1 0 0
ERA
3.91
3.22
3.27
3.73
0.83
Inherited runners-scored—Bedrosian
2-1, Neshek 1-0. IBB—off Shoemaker (Altuve). HBP—by Shoemaker (Springer).
WP—McCullers. NP—Shoemaker 111,
Bedrosian 8, McCullers 97, Neshek 5,
Feldman 9, Gregerson 8, Harris 24. Umpires—Home, Eric Cooper; First, Adrian
Johnson; Second, Ramon De Jesus; Third,
Gary Cederstrom. T—3:09. A—29,649
(41,676).
CARDINALS 7, CUBS 2
EAST
*Washington
New York
Miami
Philadelphia
Atlanta
Chi. White Sox 8
LA ANGELS
Escobar 3b
Calhoun rf
Trout dh
Cron 1b
Marte lf
Nava lf
Giavotella 2b
Simmons ss
Bandy c
Robinson cf
Totals
11-5
2-8
0-1
0-0
11.0
0.0
7.36
0.00
3-0
0-2
24.0
13.1
1.13
11.48
OAKLAND AT LOS ANGELES, 10:05
Graveman (R)
2-6
4.87
4-9
0-0
Lincecum (R)
1-0
1.50
1-0
1-0
Team rec. — Record in games started by pitcher
13.0
6.0
1.38
1.50
0-0
1-0
15.1
6.0
4.11
1.50
ST. LOUIS
Carpenter 2b
Diaz ss
Adams 1b
Piscotty rf
JhPeralta 3b
Moss lf
Molina c
Wong cf
Wacha p
Totals
AB R H BI BB SO
4 2 1 2 1 2
4 2 3 2 1 0
4 0 1 0 1 2
5 0 0 1 0 0
5 0 2 0 0 1
3 1 1 0 2 2
5 1 0 1 0 3
4 1 1 0 0 0
4 0 0 0 0 2
38 7 9 6 5 12
Avg.
.296
.310
.298
.298
.263
.251
.259
.224
.036
CHICAGO
Coghlan lf
Heyward rf
Bryant 3b-1b
Rizzo 1b
Russell ss
Zobrist 2b
Montero c
Contreras c
Báez ss-3b
Szczur cf
Patton p
Arrieta p
Almora Jr. cf
Totals
AB R H BI BB SO
3 0 0 0 1 0
4 0 0 0 0 0
3 0 0 0 1 0
2 0 1 0 0 0
2 1 1 0 0 0
3 0 0 0 0 0
2 0 0 0 0 1
1 1 1 2 0 0
3 0 0 0 0 2
2 0 0 0 0 1
1 0 0 0 0 0
1 0 0 0 0 1
1 0 0 0 1 0
28 2 3 2 3 5
Avg.
.250
.236
.267
.277
.239
.307
.197
.444
.263
.313
.000
.258
.286
St. Louis.............. 000 025 000 — 7 9 0
Chicago...............000 000 200 — 2 3 1
E—Zobrist (2). LOB—St. Louis 9, Chicago 2. 2B—Carpenter (22), JhPeralta 2 (6),
Moss (8), Russell (10). HR—Diaz (9), off
Edwards Jr., Contreras (2), off Wacha.
DP—St. Louis 2.
St. Louis
IP H R ER BB SO ERA
Wacha W 3-7 6„ 3 2 2 2 5 4.41
Maness
„ 0 0 0 1 0 6.08
Lyons
1 0 0 0 0 0 4.25
Broxton
„ 0 0 0 0 0 3.77
Chicago
IP H R ER BB SO
Arrieta L 11-2
5 4 2 1 4 6
Grimm
‚ 3 4 4 0 0
Edwards Jr.
1„ 2 1 1 0 3
Patton
2 0 0 0 1 3
ERA
1.74
6.04
5.40
4.50
Inherited runners-scored—Lyons 1-0,
Edwards Jr. 1-1. WP—Grimm. NP—Wacha 106, Maness 13, Lyons 7, Broxton 6,
Arrieta 106, Grimm 12, Edwards Jr. 32,
Patton 27. Umpires—Home, Quinn Wolcott; First, Paul Emmel; Second, Pat
Hoberg; Third, Mark Carlson. T—3:02.
A—41,058 (41,268).
YANKEES 9, ROCKIES 8
COLORADO
Blackmon cf
LeMahieu 2b
Arenado 3b
González rf
Story ss
Raburn dh
Reynolds 1b
Hundley c
Barnes lf
Totals
AB R H BI BB SO
5 0 2 2 0 0
4 0 0 0 0 1
3 0 1 0 1 0
4 1 0 0 0 2
3 2 1 1 1 2
4 1 1 2 0 2
4 1 1 0 0 1
4 2 2 3 0 1
4 1 1 0 0 2
35 8 9 8 2 11
Avg.
.297
.318
.295
.313
.264
.246
.288
.265
.171
NY YANKEES
Ellsbury cf
Gardner lf
Beltrán rf
Rodríguez dh
McCann c
SCastro 2b
Gregorius ss
Headley 3b
Refsnyder 1b
Davis 1b
Totals
AB R H BI BB SO
5 0 1 0 0 1
3 1 1 0 2 0
3 1 1 3 1 0
5 0 1 0 0 3
4 2 1 0 1 1
5 2 3 1 0 1
3 1 1 1 1 0
3 1 1 4 1 0
2 1 0 0 1 1
0 0 0 0 0 0
33 9 10 9 7 7
Avg.
.278
.259
.286
.215
.220
.257
.286
.251
.288
.214
Colorado..............002 330 000 — 8 9 1
NY Yankees........040 000 401 — 9 10 1
E—Hundley (3), Sabathia (2). LOB—Colorado 3, NY Yankees 9. 2B—Story (17),
Ellsbury (11), McCann (7). HR—Raburn
(7), off Swarzak, Hundley (4), off Sabathia, Beltrán (19), off Lyles, SCastro
(10), off Motte, Headley (4), off Gray. S—
LeMahieu. DP—Colorado 1.
Colorado
IP H R ER BB SO ERA
Gray
4 3 4 4 5 3 4.80
Lyles
2„ 2 3 2 0 2 8.34
Logan
0 1 1 1 0 0 1.89
MCastro BS 1 ‚ 2 0 0 1 1 5.02
Germen
1 1 0 0 1 1 4.56
Motte L 0-1
0 1 1 1 0 0 2.70
NY Yankees
IP H R ER BB SO
Sabathia
4‚ 7 6 5 2 3
Swarzak
1„ 2 2 2 0 2
Betances
1 0 0 0 0 2
AnMiller
1 0 0 0 0 2
Chpman W 1-0 1 0 0 0 0 2
ERA
2.71
4.00
3.15
1.17
3.00
Inherited runners-scored—Lyles 2-0,
MCastro 1-1, Swarzak 1-1. IBB—off Germen (Beltrán). HBP—by Gray (Beltrán).
Catchers interference—Hundley. NP—
Gray 80, Lyles 31, Logan 3, MCastro 16,
Germen 16, Motte 2, Sabathia 86,
Swarzak 25, Betances 14, AnMiller 16,
Chapman 18. Umpires—Home, Laz Diaz;
First, Marvin Hudson; Second, Chad
Fairchild; Third, Adam Hamari. T—3:25.
A—40,104 (49,469).
B o s t o n
METS 4, ROYALS 3
Avg.
.320
.249
.305
.283
.300
.354
.269
.252
.000
.294
NY METS
AB R H BI BB SO
Granderson rf 2 1 0 0 2 1
Cabrera ss
3 2 2 2 1 0
Céspedes cf
2 0 2 0 1 0
De Aza cf
1 0 0 0 0 1
Walker 2b
4 0 0 0 0 0
Flores 3b
4 0 0 0 0 2
Loney 1b
4 0 1 1 0 1
Reynolds lf
3 1 1 1 0 2
Rivera c
3 0 0 0 0 2
Syndergaard p 2 0 0 0 0 2
Conforto lf
1 0 0 0 0 1
Totals
29 4 6 4 4 12
Avg.
.222
.270
.290
.165
.257
.228
.289
.276
.180
.143
.227
Kansas City.........000 021 000 — 3 9 0
NY Mets.............. 000 121 00x — 4 6 0
LOB—Kansas City 5, NY Mets 5. 2B—
Pérez (15), Céspedes (12). HR—Cuthbert
(5), off Syndergaard, Cabrera (8), off
Duffy, Reynolds (1), off Soria. SB—Dyson
(12). S—Duffy. DP—Kansas City 1; NY
Mets 1.
Kansas City
IP H R ER BB SO ERA
Duffy
4„ 4 3 3 4 8 3.38
Soria L 3-3
1‚ 1 1 1 0 1 3.09
Flynn
1 1 0 0 0 2 4.32
Herrera
1 0 0 0 0 1 1.51
ERA
2.08
1.37
2.48
3.09
Inherited runners-scored—Soria 1-0.
WP—Syndergaard 2. NP—Duffy 103, Soria 19, Flynn 23, Herrera 16, Syndergaard
91, Blevins 15, Reed 23, Familia 16. Umpires—Home, John Hirschbeck; First, Vic
Carapazza; Second, D.J. Reyburn; Third,
Bill Welke. T—3:06. A—35,185 (41,922).
MARLINS 3, BRAVES 0
ATLANTA
Peterson 2b
Inciarte cf
Freeman 1b
Francoeur lf
Markakis rf
Flowers c
Pierzynski c
d'Arnaud 3b
Aybar ss
Gant p
Bonifacio ph
Totals
AB R H BI BB SO
4 0 1 0 0 0
3 0 0 0 0 0
4 0 1 0 0 1
4 0 0 0 0 2
4 0 1 0 0 0
3 0 0 0 0 1
1 0 1 0 0 0
3 0 0 0 1 0
3 0 2 0 0 0
1 0 0 0 0 0
1 0 0 0 0 1
31 0 6 0 1 5
Avg.
.256
.230
.275
.263
.243
.237
.194
.287
.209
.000
.250
MIAMI
AB R H BI BB SO
Suzuki rf
4 0 1 0 0 1
Hchavarria ss
4 0 0 0 0 1
Yelich lf
4 0 0 0 0 2
Ozuna cf
4 1 2 0 0 0
Bour 1b
3 1 2 2 0 0
Rojas 3b
1 0 0 0 0 0
Dietrich 2b
3 1 2 0 0 1
CJhnson 3b-1b 3 0 1 0 0 1
Mathis c
3 0 1 1 0 1
Conley p
3 0 0 0 0 1
Totals
32 3 9 3 0 8
Avg.
.350
.245
.311
.323
.267
.227
.298
.236
.179
.000
Atlanta.................000 000 000 — 0 6 0
Miami...................030 000 00x — 3 9 0
LOB—Atlanta 7, Miami 5. 2B—Aybar (9).
3B—Ozuna (5). HR—Bour (12), off Gant.
S—Gant. DP—Miami 1.
Atlanta
IP H R ER BB SO ERA
Gant L 1-2
5„ 7 3 3 0 5 4.45
Krol
1‚ 1 0 0 0 3 2.65
Jenkins
1 1 0 0 0 0 0.00
Miami
Conley W 4-4
Ramos S 23
IP H R ER BB SO ERA
8 4 0 0 1 4 3.56
1 2 0 0 0 1 1.78
Inherited runners-scored—Krol 1-0.
HBP—by Conley (Inciarte). WP—Conley.
NP—Gant 81, Krol 23, Jenkins 16, Conley
114, Ramos 16. Umpires—Home, Phil
Cuzzi; First, Dan Bellino; Second, Toby
Basner; Third, Tom Hallion. T—2:27.
A—22,642 (37,442).
BLUE JAYS 5, DIAMONDBACKS 2
ARIZONA
AB R H BI BB SO
Segura 2b-ss
4 1 1 0 1 0
Gosselin 3b-2b 5 0 1 0 0 0
Gldschmidt 1b 2 0 2 0 2 0
Weeks Jr. dh
3 0 1 0 1 2
Castillo c
4 0 0 0 0 4
O'Brien lf
4 0 1 0 0 3
Tomás rf
4 1 1 0 0 1
Ahmed ss
3 0 0 0 0 0
Lamb ph-3b
1 0 0 0 0 1
Bourn cf
4 0 1 1 0 1
Totals
34 2 8 1 4 12
Avg.
.304
.250
.290
.239
.264
.162
.257
.208
.277
.238
TORONTO
AB R H BI BB SO
Travis 2b
4 0 0 0 0 2
Donaldson 3b
3 1 1 0 0 2
Barney 3b
0 0 0 0 0 0
Encrnación dh 2 2 1 1 2 0
Saunders lf
3 0 0 0 1 2
Martin c
3 1 1 3 0 1
Tulowitzki ss
3 1 1 1 0 1
Smoak 1b
3 0 0 0 0 1
Pillar cf
3 0 1 0 0 0
Ceciliani rf
3 0 0 0 0 2
Totals
27 5 5 5 3 11
Avg.
.244
.279
.295
.255
.304
.218
.215
.243
.259
.000
Arizona................001 100 000 — 2 8 0
Toronto................300 002 00x — 5 5 1
E—Ceciliani (1). LOB—Arizona 9, Toronto 2. 2B—Goldschmidt (13), Tomás (14),
Donaldson (18). HR—Encarnación (19),
off Ray, Martin (6), off Ray, Tulowitzki
(10), off Godley. DP—Arizona 2; Toronto 1.
Arizona
IP H R ER BB SO ERA
Ray L 4-6
5‚ 4 4 4 2 8 4.59
Godley
1„ 1 1 1 0 2 2.89
Delgado
1 0 0 0 1 1 3.79
Toronto
Happ W 9-3
Floyd
Storen
Grilli
Osuna S 14
IP H R ER BB SO
5 6 2 2 4 8
1 0 0 0 0 1
1 1 0 0 0 2
1 1 0 0 0 1
1 0 0 0 0 0
ERA
3.42
4.11
5.13
2.35
1.95
HBP—by Ray (Donaldson). WP—Ray.
NP—Ray 101, Godley 21, Delgado 11,
Happ 99, Floyd 12, Storen 15, Grilli 10, Osuna 15. Umpires—Home, Mike Everitt;
First, Jordan Baker; Second, Tim Timmons; Third, Ryan Blakney. T—2:54.
A—46,967 (49,282).
AB R H BI BB SO
4 0 1 0 0 3
3 1 0 0 1 0
4 0 0 0 0 0
3 0 1 0 0 0
3 0 0 0 0 1
3 0 1 1 0 2
3 0 0 0 0 0
3 0 0 0 0 3
3 0 0 0 0 1
29 1 3 1 1 10
Avg.
.292
.235
.273
.224
.193
.202
.177
.000
.164
CLEVELAND
AB R H BI BB SO
Santana dh
3 2 2 2 1 0
Kipnis 2b
4 1 1 2 0 0
Lindor ss
2 1 0 1 1 0
Napoli 1b
4 0 0 0 0 1
JoRmírez lf-3b 4 0 2 1 0 0
Uribe 3b
4 0 0 0 0 3
Martínez lf
0 0 0 0 0 0
Chisenhall rf
4 1 2 0 0 1
Giménez c
4 0 1 0 0 0
Naquin cf
3 1 1 0 0 1
Totals
32 6 9 6 2 6
Avg.
.231
.265
.307
.233
.296
.230
.314
.280
.179
.318
Tampa Bay......... 000 000 100 — 1 3 0
Cleveland............300 100 20x — 6 9 1
E—Napoli (7). LOB—Tampa Bay 2,
Cleveland 5. 2B—Morrison (7), Santana
(12), JoRamírez (17), Chisenhall (9),
Naquin (4). HR—Kipnis (9), off Archer.
SB—Santana (4), JoRamírez (8). SF—Lindor. DP—Cleveland 1.
Tampa Bay
IP H R ER BB SO ERA
Archer L 4-10
6 6 4 4 2 5 4.70
Andriese
1„ 3 2 2 0 1 2.88
Garton
‚ 0 0 0 0 0 3.38
Cleveland
Bauer W 5-2
TWINS 6, PHILLIES 5
CINCINNATI
AB R H BI BB SO
Cozart ss
5 0 1 0 0 1
BiHamilton cf
5 0 1 0 0 2
Phillips 2b
4 0 0 0 1 1
Bruce rf
4 2 2 0 0 0
Duvall lf
2 1 1 1 2 1
Suárez 3b
4 1 2 3 0 1
De Jesús Jr. 1b 4 0 0 0 0 3
Barnhart c
3 0 0 0 1 2
Peraza dh
4 0 1 0 0 0
Totals
35 4 8 4 4 11
Avg.
.283
.256
.258
.285
.258
.229
.211
.238
.229
TEXAS
Choo rf
Odor 2b
Mazara lf
Béltre 3b
Fielder dh
Rua cf
Desmond cf
Moreland 1b
Andrus ss
Chirinos c
Totals
Avg.
.220
.271
.288
.275
.205
.287
.316
.231
.284
.205
AB R H BI BB SO
3 2 1 1 1 0
3 1 1 0 0 1
3 1 0 0 1 0
4 1 1 1 0 0
3 0 1 2 0 0
2 0 0 0 0 1
1 1 1 1 0 0
3 0 0 1 0 1
3 0 0 0 0 0
3 0 0 0 0 2
28 6 5 6 2 5
Cincinnati............000 001 030 — 4 8 1
Texas...................000 400 11x — 6 5 0
E—De Jesús Jr. (2). LOB—Cincinnati 8,
Texas 1. 2B—Bruce 2 (17). HR—Suárez
(14), off Diekman, Choo (2), off Cingrani,
Desmond (12), off Hoover. SB—Suárez
(5), Peraza (4). CS—Odor (2).
Cincinnati
IP H R ER BB SO ERA
Straily L 4-4
6 3 4 4 2 3 3.83
Hoover
1 1 1 1 0 2 9.72
Cingrani
1 1 1 1 0 0 3.86
Texas
Hamels W 8-1
Bush
Diekman
Dyson S 15
IP H R ER BB SO
6 5 1 1 2 8
1 0 0 0 1 1
1 2 3 3 1 2
1 1 0 0 0 0
ERA
2.79
1.02
2.28
1.93
HBP—by Straily (Odor).
NP—Straily
92, Hoover 20, Cingrani 13, Hamels 95,
Bush 19, Diekman 25, Dyson 13. Umpires—Home, David Rackley; First, Chris
Guccione; Second, Alfonso Marquez;
Third, Larry Vanover. T—2:38. A—32,407
(48,114).
GIANTS 7, PIRATES 6
SAN FRAN.
AB R H BI BB SO
Span cf
5 1 2 0 0 0
Panik 2b
4 1 1 2 1 0
Belt 1b
5 0 1 0 0 2
Posey c
4 1 1 1 1 0
Pagán lf
4 1 1 1 0 1
Williamson rf
2 0 1 0 3 1
Crawford ss
5 1 2 1 0 1
Peña 3b
5 1 2 2 0 1
Samardzija p
1 0 0 0 0 1
Blanco ph
1 0 0 0 0 1
Parker ph
1 1 1 0 0 0
Gillaspie ph
1 0 0 0 0 0
Totals
38 7 12 7 5 8
Avg.
.256
.259
.303
.277
.270
.182
.263
.462
.152
.267
.270
.220
PITTSBURGH AB R H BI BB SO
Jaso 1b
5 1 1 1 0 2
Polanco lf
5 2 3 3 0 2
McCutchen cf 4 0 1 0 0 0
Kang 3b
4 1 1 1 0 1
Joyce rf
3 0 1 1 1 2
Harrison 2b
4 0 0 0 0 1
Rodríguez ss
4 0 1 0 0 1
Stewart c
2 1 0 0 1 0
Marte ph
1 0 0 0 0 0
Kratz c
0 0 0 0 0 0
Liriano p
2 1 1 0 0 1
Freese ph
1 0 0 0 0 1
Mercer ph
1 0 1 0 0 0
Totals
36 6 10 6 2 11
Avg.
.277
.301
.238
.276
.293
.288
.250
.205
.329
.050
.310
.294
.273
San Francisco.....010 123 000 — 7 12 1
Pittsburgh...........231 000 000 — 6 10 0
E—Peña (1). LOB—San Francisco 10,
Pittsburgh 5. 2B—Panik (10), Posey (16),
Peña (1). HR—Jaso (4), off Samardzija,
Polanco (10), off Samardzija, Kang (10),
off Samardzija. SB—Kang (2), Rodríguez
(2). CS—Jaso (2). SF—Pagán. DP—San
Francisco 2.
San Francisco IP H R ER BB SO ERA
Samardzija
3 6 6 6 2 2 3.59
Law W 3-1
2 2 0 0 0 3 2.49
Strickland
„ 1 0 0 0 1 3.08
Osich
1‚ 0 0 0 0 3 3.74
Gearrin
1 0 0 0 0 1 2.30
Casilla S 15
1 1 0 0 0 1 2.57
Pittsburgh
IP H R ER BB SO
Liriano
5 6 4 4 3 6
Hghs BS2;L0-1 1 4 3 3 0 0
Feliz
1 0 0 0 1 2
Watson
1 2 0 0 0 0
Lobstein
1 0 0 0 1 0
ERA
5.17
4.12
3.42
3.60
3.96
Inherited runners-scored—Osich 1-0.
NP—Samardzija 64, Law 27, Strickland 15,
Osich 22, Gearrin 15, Casilla 16, Liriano 89,
Hughes 25, Feliz 18, Watson 11, Lobstein
15. Umpires—Home, Jim Reynolds; First,
Manny Gonzalez; Second, CB Bucknor;
Third, Fieldin Culbreth. T—3:28. A—33,747
(38,362).
TIGERS 5, MARINERS 1
SEATTLE
AB R H BI BB SO
Martín cf
3 0 0 1 0 1
Smith rf
2 0 1 0 0 1
Gutiérrez ph-rf 2 0 0 0 0 2
Canó 2b
4 0 0 0 0 0
DLee 1b
4 0 1 0 0 1
Seager 3b
4 0 0 0 0 1
Lind dh
3 0 0 0 1 1
Marte ss
3 1 0 0 0 1
Clevenger c
3 0 1 0 0 1
Aoki lf
2 0 0 0 0 0
Totals
30 1 3 1 1 9
Avg.
.254
.267
.256
.297
.291
.265
.234
.280
.234
.245
DETROIT
AB R H BI BB SO
Kinsler 2b
5 0 1 0 0 2
Maybin cf
5 0 0 0 0 1
Cabrera 1b
2 1 1 1 2 0
ViMartínez dh 4 0 1 0 0 3
Castellanos 3b 4 0 2 0 0 1
Upton lf
4 0 0 0 0 0
Moyà rf
4 3 3 2 0 1
Avilés rf
0 0 0 0 0 0
Sltlamacchia c 3 1 1 0 1 1
Iglesias ss
4 0 3 2 0 0
Totals
35 5 12 5 3 9
Avg.
.299
.339
.307
.324
.305
.235
.321
.226
.188
.258
Seattle.................000 010 000 — 1 3 0
Detroit................. 120 110 00x — 5 12 0
LOB—Seattle 5, Detroit 9. 2B—Iglesias
(11). HR—Cabrera (16), off Iwakuma,
Moyà 2 (3), off Iwakuma, off Iwakuma.
DP—Seattle 1.
Seattle
IP H R ER BB SO ERA
Iwakuma L 6-6 4„ 11 5 5 3 5 4.45
Montgomery 3‚ 1 0 0 0 4 2.51
Detroit
Fulmer
Ryan W 2-2
Greene
JusWilson
Rodríguez
IP H R ER BB SO
4‚ 3 1 1 1 3
1„ 0 0 0 0 3
1 0 0 0 0 1
1 0 0 0 0 1
1 0 0 0 0 1
ERA
2.40
2.96
5.18
3.49
3.38
Inherited runners-scored—Montgomery 2-0, Ryan 3-0. IBB—off Iwakuma (Cabrera). HBP—by Fulmer (Aoki, Martín).
NP—Iwakuma 100, Montgomery 39, Fulmer 74, Ryan 19, Greene 8, JusWilson 10,
Rodríguez 10. Umpires—Home, Kerwin
Danley; First, Andy Fletcher; Second, Ben
May; Third, Mark Ripperger. T—2:39.
A—31,497 (41,297).
ORIOLES 7, PADRES 2
INDIANS 6, RAYS 1
TAMPA BAY
Forsythe dh
Miller ss
Longoria 3b
Morrison 1b
Jennings cf
Dickerson lf
Motter rf
Franklin 2b
Casali c
Totals
Sports
RANGERS 6, REDS 4
KANSAS CITY AB R H BI BB SO
Merrifield 2b
4 0 1 1 0 0
4 0 2 0 0 0
Escobar ss
Hosmer 1b
4 0 1 0 0 1
Cain cf
4 0 0 0 0 1
Pérez c
4 1 1 0 0 2
Orlando rf
4 0 1 1 0 2
Cuthbert 3b
4 1 1 1 0 0
Dyson lf
4 1 2 0 0 0
Duffy p
1 0 0 0 0 0
Eibner ph
1 0 0 0 0 0
Totals
34 3 9 3 0 6
NY Mets
IP H R ER BB SO
Sydrgrd W 8-2 6 8 3 3 0 4
Blevins
1 0 0 0 0 0
Reed
1 1 0 0 0 1
Familia S 24
1 0 0 0 0 1
G l o b e
IP H R ER BB SO ERA
9 3 1 1 1 10 3.20
Inherited runners-scored—Garton 1-0.
WP—Archer. NP—Archer 97, Andriese
36, Garton 11, Bauer 113. Umpires—
Home, Ted Barrett; First, Gabe Morales;
Second, Angel Hernandez; Third, Lance
Barksdale. T—2:30. A—21,216 (35,225).
SAN DIEGO
AB R H BI BB SO
Jankowski cf
4 2 2 0 1 0
Myers 1b
4 0 0 0 0 1
Kemp rf
4 0 2 2 0 1
Solarte 3b
3 0 0 0 1 0
Upton Jr. lf
4 0 0 0 0 2
Wallace dh
2 0 0 0 2 2
Bethancourt c 3 0 1 0 1 2
Schimpf 2b
3 0 0 0 0 1
Rosales ph
1 0 0 0 0 1
Ramírez ss
4 0 0 0 0 1
Totals
32 2 5 2 5 11
Avg.
.250
.286
.268
.255
.253
.210
.267
.143
.191
.250
BALTIMORE
Jones cf
Kim lf
Schoop 2b
Davis 1b
Trumbo rf
Rickard rf
Wieters c
Álvarez dh
Hardy ss
Flaherty 3b
Totals
Avg.
.247
.339
.285
.230
.283
.263
.274
.234
.245
.233
AB R H BI BB SO
4 2 2 0 0 0
4 0 2 1 0 0
3 1 2 1 1 0
3 0 0 1 0 2
4 2 3 1 0 0
0 0 0 0 0 0
3 0 1 2 0 0
4 0 0 0 0 2
4 0 0 0 0 0
4 2 1 1 0 0
33 7 11 7 1 4
San Diego............100 010 000 — 2 5 1
Baltimore............011 131 00x — 7 11 0
E—Solarte (5). LOB—San Diego 8, Baltimore 5. 2B—Schoop (16), Trumbo (13).
HR—Trumbo (21), off Johnson, Flaherty
(3), off Johnson. SB—Jankowski 2 (8).
SF—Wieters. DP—San Diego 2.
San Diego
IP H R ER BB SO ERA
Johnson L 0-3
4 9 6 6 1 3 9.82
Villanueva
2 1 1 0 0 0 3.27
Thornton
1 1 0 0 0 0 4.91
Maurer
1 0 0 0 0 1 6.23
Baltimore
IP H R ER BB SO
Jiménez W 4-7 6 4 2 2 4 7
Brach
2 0 0 0 0 2
Britton
1 1 0 0 1 2
ERA
6.97
1.11
1.17
Inherited runners-scored—Villanueva
3-2. HBP—by Villanueva (Davis).
NP—
Johnson 78, Villanueva 20, Thornton 9,
Maurer 13, Jiménez 104, Brach 34, Britton
18. Umpires—Home, Jerry Meals; First,
Sean Barber; Second, Ron Kulpa; Third,
Chris Conroy. T—2:43. A—23,785 (45,971).
PHILADELPHIA AB R H BI BB SO
Herrera cf
5 1 1 0 0 0
Blanco 2b
4 2 3 2 0 0
Franco 3b
2 0 0 0 2 0
Howard dh
4 0 1 1 0 1
Joseph 1b
4 0 0 0 0 2
Rupp c
4 1 1 1 0 1
Asche lf
3 0 1 0 0 0
Goeddel ph-lf
1 0 0 0 0 0
Galvis ss
4 0 1 0 0 1
Bourjos rf
4 1 1 0 0 0
Totals
35 5 9 4 2 5
Avg.
.303
.268
.237
.143
.229
.262
.262
.241
.211
.230
MINNESOTA
Núñez 3b
Mauer 1b
Grossman lf
Dozier 2b
Plouffe dh
Escobar ss
Kepler rf
Suzuki c
Buxton cf
Totals
Avg.
.313
.277
.295
.244
.254
.282
.247
.266
.193
AB R H BI BB SO
5 0 1 1 0 0
5 1 1 0 0 0
5 1 2 0 0 2
4 0 1 0 0 1
4 2 3 1 0 0
4 1 2 2 0 1
3 0 1 2 0 1
3 0 1 0 1 1
3 1 1 0 1 1
36 6 13 6 2 7
Philadelphia........011 030 000 — 5 9 1
Minnesota...........110 030 10x — 6 13 1
E—Morgan (1), Kepler (2). LOB—Philadelphia 5, Minnesota 9. 2B—Asche (6),
Dozier (13), Plouffe (9). 3B—Escobar (2).
HR—Blanco (3), off Gibson, Rupp (6), off
Gibson. SB—Galvis (4), Núñez (17), Kepler
(2). SF—Kepler. DP—Minnesota 1.
Philadelphia
IP H R ER BB SO ERA
Morgan
5 11 5 4 1 3 6.55
Bailey
1 0 0 0 0 1 4.39
DHrnndz L 1-2 1 2 1 1 1 2 4.41
Neris
1 0 0 0 0 1 2.82
Minnesota
IP H R ER BB SO
Gibson
6 8 5 4 2 5
Rogers W 3-0
1 1 0 0 0 0
Pressly
„ 0 0 0 0 0
1‚ 0 0 0 0 0
Abad S 1
ERA
6.05
4.12
3.99
2.16
IBB—off Gibson (Franco). NP—Morgan
96, Bailey 8, DHernández 26, Neris 11, Gibson 98, Rogers 15, Pressly 3, Abad 13. Umpires—Home, Carlos Torres; First, Rob
Drake; Second, Sam Holbrook; Third, Gerry Davis. T—2:48. A—25,032 (38,871).
TWINS 6, PHILLIES 5
PHILADELPHIA AB R H BI BB SO
Herrera cf
5 1 1 0 0 0
Blanco 2b
4 2 3 2 0 0
Franco 3b
2 0 0 0 2 0
Howard dh
4 0 1 1 0 1
Joseph 1b
4 0 0 0 0 2
Rupp c
4 1 1 1 0 1
Asche lf
3 0 1 0 0 0
Goeddel ph-lf
1 0 0 0 0 0
Galvis ss
4 0 1 0 0 1
Bourjos rf
4 1 1 0 0 0
Totals
35 5 9 4 2 5
Avg.
.303
.268
.237
.143
.229
.262
.262
.241
.211
.230
MINNESOTA
Núñez 3b
Mauer 1b
Grossman lf
Dozier 2b
Plouffe dh
Escobar ss
Kepler rf
Suzuki c
Buxton cf
Totals
Avg.
.313
.277
.295
.244
.254
.282
.247
.266
.193
AB R H BI BB SO
5 0 1 1 0 0
5 1 1 0 0 0
5 1 2 0 0 2
4 0 1 0 0 1
4 2 3 1 0 0
4 1 2 2 0 1
3 0 1 2 0 1
3 0 1 0 1 1
3 1 1 0 1 1
36 6 13 6 2 7
Philadelphia........011 030 000 — 5 9 1
Minnesota...........110 030 10x — 6 13 1
E—Morgan (1), Kepler (2). LOB—Philadelphia 5, Minnesota 9. 2B—Asche (6),
Dozier (13), Plouffe (9). 3B—Escobar (2).
HR—Blanco (3), off Gibson, Rupp (6), off
Gibson. SB—Galvis (4), Núñez (17), Kepler
(2). SF—Kepler. DP—Minnesota 1.
Philadelphia
IP H R ER BB SO ERA
Morgan
5 11 5 4 1 3 6.55
Bailey
1 0 0 0 0 1 4.39
DHrnndz L 1-2 1 2 1 1 1 2 4.41
Neris
1 0 0 0 0 1 2.82
Minnesota
IP H R ER BB SO
Gibson
6 8 5 4 2 5
Rogers W 3-0
1 1 0 0 0 0
Pressly
„ 0 0 0 0 0
Abad S 1
1‚ 0 0 0 0 0
ERA
6.05
4.12
3.99
2.16
IBB—off Gibson (Franco). NP—Morgan
96, Bailey 8, DHernández 26, Neris 11, Gibson 98, Rogers 15, Pressly 3, Abad 13. Umpires—Home, Carlos Torres; First, Rob
Drake; Second, Sam Holbrook; Third, Gerry Davis. T—2:48. A—25,032 (38,871).
ATHLETICS 5, BREWERS 3
Tuesday night game
MILWAUKEE
Villar ss
Gennett 2b
Braun lf
Lucroy dh
Carter 1b
AHill 3b
Nwenhuis cf
Maldonado c
Flores rf
Totals
AB R H BI BB SO
4 0 0 0 0 1
4 1 1 0 0 1
4 1 2 1 0 1
3 1 1 0 1 0
4 0 1 1 0 3
4 0 2 0 0 0
4 0 1 1 0 1
4 0 1 0 0 2
3 0 1 0 0 0
34 3 10 3 1 9
Avg.
.292
.266
.319
.311
.225
.269
.222
.102
.240
OAKLAND
Crisp cf
Lowrie 2b
Vogt c
Valencia 3b
Davis lf
Butler dh
Alonso 1b
Semien ss
Muncy rf
Smolinski rf
Totals
AB R H BI BB SO
3 0 0 0 2 0
5 0 3 0 0 0
5 0 2 1 0 0
4 1 2 0 0 0
5 2 1 0 0 2
4 0 0 0 0 2
4 1 1 1 0 0
4 0 3 3 0 0
2 1 1 0 2 0
0 0 0 0 0 0
36 5 13 5 4 4
Avg.
.221
.294
.267
.330
.243
.259
.245
.238
.238
.308
Milwaukee..........000 101 010 — 3 10 1
Oakland...............000 011 30x — 5 13 1
E—Villar (9), Gray (1). LOB—Milwaukee
6, Oakland 12. 2B—Gennett (11), Braun
(14), Nieuwenhuis (12), Lowrie (7), Valencia (8). 3B—Vogt (1), Semien (1). HR—.
S—Flores. DP—Milwaukee 2; Oakland 2.
Milwaukee
IP H R ER BB SO ERA
Nelson
5 6 1 1 1 2 3.80
Boyer BS 2
„ 2 1 1 1 0 3.67
Smith L 1-2
‚ 1 1 0 1 0 1.69
Blazek
„ 2 2 0 0 1 4.01
Barnes
1‚ 2 0 0 1 1 2.35
Oakland
Gray
Dlittle W 2-2
Axford
Dull
Madson S 13
IP H R ER BB SO
6 7 2 1 1 7
1 1 0 0 0 0
0 2 1 1 0 0
1 0 0 0 0 1
1 0 0 0 0 1
ERA
5.20
2.51
3.90
2.41
2.48
Inherited runners-scored—Smith 2-0,
Blazek 1-1, Barnes 1-0, Dull 1-0. HBP—by
Nelson (Valencia). PB—Maldonado.
NP—Nelson 105, Boyer 24, Smith 19,
Blazek 21, Barnes 21, Gray 100, Doolittle 6,
Axford 2, Dull 13, Madson 9. Umpires—
Home, Alan Porter; First, Jeff Kellogg;
Second, John Tumpane; Third, Paul Nauert. T—3:32. A—14,810 (35,067).
DODGERS 3, NATIONALS 2
Tuesday night game
WASHINGTON AB R H BI BB SO
Revere cf
5 0 0 0 0 0
Werth lf
5 0 2 0 0 1
Harper rf
5 1 2 1 0 0
Murphy 2b
3 0 0 0 1 0
Zmmerman 1b 4 0 1 0 0 1
Ramos c
4 0 1 0 0 0
Rendón 3b
4 0 1 0 0 1
Espinosa ss
3 1 2 1 1 0
Roark p
4 0 2 0 0 2
Solís p
0 0 0 0 0 0
Totals
37 2 11 2 2 5
Avg.
.206
.253
.258
.352
.226
.332
.250
.220
.069
.000
LA DODGERS AB R H BI BB SO
Utley 2b
4 0 1 0 0 1
Seager ss
4 0 1 0 0 1
JusTurner 3b
4 0 0 0 0 0
AGonzález 1b
3 0 1 0 0 1
Kendrick lf
3 0 0 0 0 1
Pederson cf
2 1 2 0 1 0
Puig rf
3 1 1 0 0 0
Grandal c
3 1 1 3 0 0
Kazmir p
1 0 0 0 0 0
Venable ph
1 0 0 0 0 1
Thompson ph
1 0 0 0 0 1
Totals
29 3 7 3 1 6
Avg.
.261
.283
.248
.272
.238
.242
.238
.183
.125
.111
.251
Washington........100 010 000 — 2 11 0
LA Dodgers.........000 000 03x — 3 7 0
LOB—Washington 10, LA Dodgers 3.
2B—Werth (12), Zimmerman (12), Ramos
(12), Rendón (16), Roark (1), AGonzález
(11), Pederson (16). HR—Harper (15), off
Kazmir, Espinosa (13), off Kazmir, Grandal (6), off Roark. SB—Harper (8). CS—
Seager (3). DP—Washington 2.
Washington
IP H R ER BB SO ERA
Roark L 6-5
7‚ 6 3 3 1 5 3.18
Solís
„ 1 0 0 0 1 1.52
LA Dodgers
Kazmir
Liberatore
Cleman W 1-1
Jansen S 21
IP H R ER BB SO
6 8 2 2 1 4
1 1 0 0 0 0
1 2 0 0 1 1
1 0 0 0 0 0
ERA
4.52
0.77
3.25
1.48
IBB—off Kazmir (Murphy), off Coleman
(Espinosa). NP—Roark 102, Solís 13, Kazmir 97, Liberatore 18, Coleman 20, Jansen 12. Umpires—Home, Doug Eddings;
First, Jeff Nelson; Second, Nic Lentz;
Third, Cory Blaser. T—2:44. A—42,307
(56,000).
D3
Cardinals
sweep up
on Cubs
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Michael Wacha pitched into the
seventh inning for his first win in
nearly two months and the visiting
St. Louis Cardinals
BASEBALL waited out Jake ArriROUNDUP eta before roughing
up Chicago’s bullpen
in a 7-2 victory over the Cubs on
Wednesday.
Aledmys Diaz hit a two-run home
run, and Matt Carpenter had a tworun double in a five-run sixth after
Arrieta (11-2) departed. The Cardinals won their eighth straight road
game — their longest streak since
1982 — and completed their first
three-game sweep at Wrigley Field
since 1988.
Wacha (3-7) gave up two hits until rookie Willson Contreras’s oneout, two-run homer in the seventh
ended his day as he snapped a sevengame skid.
Yankees 9, Rockies 8 — Starlin Castro hit a game-winning home run to
lead off the bottom of the ninth as
host New York rallied to beat Colorado.
The Yankees trailed, 8-4, going into the seventh, but Carlos Beltran’s
three-run homer helped bail out CC
Sabathia after his worst outing of the
season.
Mets 4, Royals 3 — Noah Syndergaard left his start after six innings
with a sore elbow and Yoenis Cespedes came out because of an aching
wrist, yet New York held off visiting
Kansas City for a two-game sweep in
their World Series rematch.
Both star players were sent to the
d o c t o r a s t h e b a n g e d - u p Me t s
packed for a seven-game road trip.
Matt Reynolds snapped a sixthinning tie with his first major league
home run for the Mets.
Giants 7, Pirates 6 — Buster Posey
threw out John Jaso attempting to
steal second base to end the game,
Joe Panik’s two-run double capped a
three-run sixth inning, and San
Francisco rallied from an early fiverun deficit to beat host Pittsburgh.
T h e G i a n t s ’ Je ff S a m a r d z ij a
matched the shortest start of his
nine-year career with just three innings and was tagged for six runs
and six hits. However, five relievers
followed with a combined six scoreless innings.
Blue Jays 5, Diamondbacks 2 — Russell Martin hit a three-run homer
and Edwin Encarnacion and Troy
Tulowitzki added solo shots as host
Toronto snapped Arizona’s five-game
winning streak.
Astros 3, Angeles 2 — Jose Altuve
homered and Marwin Gonzalez’s tiebreaking RBI triple in the eighth
helped host Houston to its fifth
straight win.
Orioles 7, Padres 2 — Ubaldo Jimenez interrupted his exile to the bullpen with a sharp performance in a
starting role, and Baltimore got its
1,000th win at Camden Yards.
Mark Trumbo and Ryan Flaherty
homered for the first-place Orioles,
who also got two RBIs from Matt Wieters.
Tigers 5, Mariners 1 — Steven Moya
homered twice, and host Detroit
withstood a shaky fifth from Michael
Fulmer to beat Seattle.
Indians 6, Rays 1 — Trevor Bauer
threw a three-hitter for his second
career complete game, Jason Kipnis
hit a two-run homer, and host Cleveland got its sixth straight win.
Rangers 6, Reds 4 — Cole Hamels
won his third consecutive start with
eight strikeouts in six solid innings,
the Rangers took full advantage
when Cincinnati starter Dan Straily
lost control for a short stretch.
Brewers 4, Athletics 2 — Scooter
Gennett and Kirk Nieuwenhuis
homered to back Junior Guerra’s
first victory in more than a month as
Milwaukee earned a split of its twogame interleague series at Oakland.
Twins 6, Phillies 5 — Max Kepler
made up for a costly error with a tying single in the fifth inning and the
go-ahead sacrifice fly in the seventh
as Minnesota handed Philadelphia
its eighth straight loss.
Marlins 3, Braves 0 — Adam Conley
pitched a career-high eight innings
as host Miami snapped Atlanta’s sixgame winning streak.
D4
T h e
Sports
B o s t o n
G l o b e
T H U R S D A Y, J U N E 2 3 , 2 0 1 6
NBA Draft player profiles: The raw athletes
JAYLEN
BROWN
MARQUESE
CHRISS
FRESHMAN FORWARD | CALIFORNIA
FRESHMAN FORWARD | WASHINGTON
NG
GTON
SCOUTING REPORT
THE
T DATA
Need to know: Averaged 14.6
points in helping Cal to the NCAA
Tournament . . . Named Pac-12
Freshman of the Year . . . Heavily
recruited by several top programs
but stunned many by signing
with Cal . . . Fiercely attacks the
basket, but defenses adjusted,
and he picked up numerous
charging calls during second half
of the season . . . Wowed teams
with his intelligence during
combine interviews; has not hired
an agent, only advisers . . . His
game may be better suited for
the NBA than college because of
his physicality . . . Shot just 29.4
percent from the 3-point line.
Brown needed a
good Combine
showing after
struggling with
his shot over
his final five
games, including
the Pac-12
tournament
and NCAA
Tournament; he
shot just 20.8
percent from
the field, 2 of 12
from long range.
14.6
PPG
COMPILED BY GARY WASHBURN
THE SKINNY
LEAPING ABILITY
7-FOOT WINGSPAN
5.4
RPG
HEIGHT
EIG
GHT
6-7
6-7
WEIGHT
EIG
GHT
2.0
APG
225
22
25
5
SCOUTING REPORT
THE
T DATA
Need to know: Enjoyed a
stellar freshman season,
playing mostly power
forward . . . One of the
better athletes in the draft
but doesn’t yet have a true
position . . . Could have been
a better rebounder, but his
athletic skills make him
an intriguing prospect . . .
Fouled out of 15 games as
a freshman and averaged
more than four fouls per
game . . . Solid 3-point
shooter despite spending
most of his time in the paint.
Chriss led
Division 1 in
personal fouls
last season
with 138 —
an average of
just over four
per game. He
fouled out of 15
of 34 games
(44 percent),
including six in
a row in January
and seven
games in which
he played no
more than 20
minutes.
COMPILED BY GARY WASHBURN
THE SKINNY
QUICKNESS
13.8
SHOOTING TOUCH
PPG
HEIGHT
SOFT HANDS
6-10
PROTOTYPICAL BODY
5.4
RPG
WEIGHT
UNREFINED POST GAME
E
3-POINT SHOOTING
UNDISCIPLINED DEFENSE
SE
E
OVERAGGRESIVENESS
LATE BLOOMER
230
0.8
APG
Celtics are still mulling third pick in draft
CELTICS
Continued from Page D1
acquire a talented veteran such as Bulls All-Star
Jimmy Butler, Jazz forward Gordon Hayward, or
Bucks forward Jabari Parker.
But one league source said it remained too
early to classify any of Boston’s overtures as a
swing-and-a-miss, saying most discussions in the
lead-up to the draft are simply “posturing.”
Still, there is a real chance that the Celtics will
ultimately make a selection with the third overall
pick rather than trade it, and if that is the case, it
is all but certain that the yet-to-be-identified
player was somewhere in a ballroom at the
Grand Hyatt in Manhattan on Wednesday.
That is where all of the draft’s top prospects —
many of whom had been shielded from interviews in recent weeks — gathered for media sessions.
Although the Celtics’ preference at No. 3 remains unclear — and it is entirely possible that
president of basketball operations Danny Ainge
has not even made up his mind — it seems the
field of prospective picks seems to have narrowed
to six.
The group includes Providence’s Kris Dunn,
Oklahoma’s Buddy Hield, California’s Jaylen
Brown, Washington’s Marquese Chriss, Kentucky’s Jamal Murray, and the 18-year-old Croatian, Dragan Bender.
Brown, a 6-foot-7-inch forward, was called
back to Boston for his second workout with the
Celtics on Monday.
“I think they’re definitely heavily considering
taking me with the third pick in the draft, but I’m
sure they brought some other guys in as well,”
Brown said. “I don’t keep up with everything, but
I’m glad they did bring me in.”
Brown, who made just 29.4 percent of his 3pointers as a freshman last season, said he is
working to show that he is capable of more, even
from the deeper NBA 3-point line.
The Celtics run a drill in which players shoot a
total of 100 3-pointers from five spots on the
court, and Brown said that he made 76 of them
— one of the higher numbers of this draft season
YOUNG KWAK/ASSOCIATED PRESS
Cal freshman Jaylen Brown believes his defense is NBA-ready, but his shooting is not.
— at his workout.
“I’ve been shooting it really well with a hand
in my face, with competition etc.,” Brown said.
“So it’s been going really well. I think a lot of people have low expectations of me shooting the
ball, and I think it’s given me a little edge, because I’ve blown people away a little bit.”
Brown believes his defense is NBA-ready, and
that his ability to guard four positions would
make him an asset as a rookie.
Hield said the Celtics attended two of his
workouts in Los Angeles, the first at a pro day
open to all teams and the second an individual
session that Boston controlled. The sharpshooting guard said he tried to quell the Celtics’ questions about his defense.
“I didn’t show many defensive abilities [last
season], but I said my freshman year I played defense when I needed to get on the court,” Hield
said. “In the NBA, guards are two-way players. If
you want something so bad, you’ve got to go get
it. I have the heart to do that.”
Hield was asked if he believes he should be
the No. 3 pick of the draft.
“Why not? Why not me?” he said. “They need
a shooter. You never know what the team’s GM
and the organization wants, but I think I’m a perfect fit.”
Hield and Murray are similar players. Murray
is just 19 years old and might have the higher
ceiling, but Hield might be more ready to play
right away. Much like Hield, though, Murray has
worked to erase doubts about his defense.
“It’s something I want to improve on,” he said.
“It’s not fake that I want to play defense. It’s
something I take pride in, and when I get it done
I want to be a two-way player like Klay Thompson.”
Dunn, meanwhile, has been something of an
enigma over the past two months, declining to
work out for any teams. There had been reports
that his camp did not want him to be drafted by
the Celtics because the team already has a deep
and young backcourt that includes players with
similar skill sets.
But Dunn, who is from New London, Conn.,
said he would love to play for Boston, and that he
was not worried about a roster’s makeup.
“Situations like that, having a lot of guards,
actually kind of helps you because you can get to
see different types of players,” Dunn said. “You
take some things from them and put it in your
game and improve. And it’s gonna be a battle every day. I think that’s the exciting part, that I’m a
competitor.”
Bender completed a workout with the Celtics
in Boston on Tuesday, one of just three he took
part in after arriving in the United States from Israel two weeks ago.
“It was a really good, really great workout, really great people around the club and everything
was really cool,” Bender said. “It was great meeting those guys and just a chance to talk with
them and work with them.”
The 7-1 forward has a unique skill set as a
shooter and a passer and might be the most intriguing prospect in this draft class, but there are
also questions, as he played just 14.5 minutes per
game for Maccabi Tel Aviv last season.
Chriss worked out for the Celtics, too, and
said he was impressed by the team’s coaching
staff. He added that he would love to play with
point guard Isaiah Thomas, a fellow Washington
Huskie.
“They were interested,” Chriss said of the Celtics. “They liked the way I shot the ball. They
didn’t really go in-depth about picking me or
anything like that . . . I hope that they saw
enough in me.”
No matter what the Celtics ultimately do with
the third pick, it figures to be a long and eventful
night; the team currently holds eight total selections, including the 16th and 23d choices in the
first round.
Adam Himmelsbach can be reached at
[email protected]. Follow him on
Twitter @adamhimmelsbach.
Knicks acquire oft-injured Rose from Bulls in stunner
ASSOCIATED PRESS
The New York Knicks acquired Derrick Rose from the
Chicago Bulls on Wednesday,
hoping the forNBA
mer NBA MVP
NOTEBOOK can be their
answer at
point guard.
The Knicks sent center Robin Lopez and guards Jose Calderon and Jerian Grant to the
Bulls in the deal. New York also
received guard Justin Holiday
and a 2017 second-round pick,
and waived point guard Tony
Wroten.
New coach Jeff Hornacek
said recently the Knicks needed
a point guard and Rose was
one of the NBA’s best before
multiple knee injuries slowed
the former No. 1 pick’s career.
He played in 66 games last season, his most in five years, and
averaged 16.4 points.
‘‘This is an exciting day for
New York and our fans,’’ Hornacek said in a statement.
‘‘Derrick is one of the top point
guards in the NBA who is playoff battle-tested. He adds a
whole new dynamic to our roster and immediately elevates
our backcourt.’’
After missing the playoffs in
a disappointing first season under Fred Hoiberg, the Bulls decided to move on without the
hometown kid they selected
with the top pick in the 2008
draft.
It seemed a perfect fit when
Rose led the Bulls to the top of
the Eastern Conference in the
2010-11 regular season, earning MVP honors and leading
the franchise to success it
hadn’t enjoyed since Michael
Jordan.
But he wrecked his knee for
the first time in the playoffs the
following year and no longer
has the speed that once made
him one of the league’s most
dazzling young stars and a
seemingly perennial All-Star.
‘‘Knowing Derrick as I do
makes this trade a hard one,’’
Bulls chairman Jerry Reinsdorf
said. ‘‘Everyone knows him as
the local kid who became MVP
for his hometown team, but
not everyone got to know him
like I did. While he is a terrific
basketball player, he is an even
better person with a tremendous heart.’’
Rose hasn’t been back to the
All-Star Game since 2012 and
has often had trouble just playing in the real games. He sat
out all of the 2012-13 season,
made it back for 10 games in
2013-14 and appeared in a little more than half the Bulls’
games in 2014-15.
Still, he could be worth the
risk for a Knicks team that has
struggled to generate offense.
The veteran Calderon and
Grant, a first-round pick last
year, were on the roster of a
team that started well but faltered badly in the second half
on the way to a 32-50 season.
Rose is expected to be an upgrade as the team transitions
from the triangle offense to a
quicker attack under Hornacek.
Pacers, Jazz deal
The Indiana Pacers traded
one Indianapolis native for another — sending George Hill to
Utah and acquiring Jeff Teague
in a three-team swap that also
included Atlanta.
While the deal cannot be announced officially, Hill’s agent,
Bill Neff, confirmed the details.
Atlanta received the No. 12
overall pick in Thursday night’s
draft.
In Teague, Indiana gets the
true point guard it has long
wanted. Hill adds defense and
depth to a spot that could be in
flux for the Jazz if point guard
Dante Exum comes back slower
than from a torn ACL that cost
him the entire 2015-16 season.
Hill and Teague both have
one year left on their current
deals and each is scheduled to
make $8 million in 2016-17.
LeBron is staying put
During the team’s championship parade, LeBron James,
the unanimous NBA Finals
MVP, gave his fans more reason
to celebrate, telling reporters
he intends to stay in Cleveland
and go for another title next
season. James is expected to
opt out of his contract and become a free agent soon to take
advantage of a new TV deal
that will push maximum NBA
salaries higher.
‘‘I’m nothing without this
city. I’m nothing with you all,’’
he told the crowd during a 20-
minute speech. ‘‘Let’s get ready
for next year.’’
Police said the only injury
reported was to a female who
sustained non life-threatening
leg wounds after she was shot
twice by a teen suspect near
downtown Cleveland.
Simmons: ‘I’m ready’
Considered the draft’s top
pick, Ben Simmons arrived
New York after an up-anddown season at LSU, where he
averaged 19.2 points, 11.8 rebounds and 4.8 assists on a 1914 squad that failed to make
the NCAA Tournament, with
more scrutiny for a player expected to be called first by NBA
commissioner Adam Silver. ‘‘It
was a roller coaster but I think
everything that I went through
has helped mold me into the
player that I am now,’’ Simmons said. ‘‘But I think I’m
ready.’’
T h e
T H U R S D A Y, J U N E 2 3 , 2 0 1 6
B o s t o n
Draft hinges on what
they do with third pick
ON BASKETBALL
Continued from Page D1
scoring guard Jimmy Butler,
meaning the Celtics’ options for
a trade are even more limited.
Boston’s move at three will
determine the rest of the draft.
With no clear-cut option, expect Ainge and the Celtics brass
to keep their choice close to the
vest until the absolute moment
no deal is available.
“Look, the Celtics control
the draft right now,” said ESPN
draft expert Chad Ford. “The
problem is, in this draft, I’m
not sure that the No. 3 pick,
along with the assets that the
Celtics have, are going to be
enough to get that sort of player.
“And that’s frustrating for
Celtics fans, but it is what it is
because you’re talking at the Jamal Murray level or the Kris
Dunn level or the Marquese
Chriss level, as a guy that
doesn’t project as a sure-fire
All-Star down the road. They
don’t project that way. And so
teams being willing to give up a
superstar for that become a lot
harder, and the Celtics have a
lot of nice pieces, a lot of interesting pieces, but again, none
of them are necessarily guys
that other teams really covet.”
This draft is so unpredictable that the Celtics could get
just as productive of a player
with the 16th pick as with the
third. With the number of oneand-dones in the draft, the
number of questionable draftentry decisions, and with so
many teams in the lottery looking to trade out, it’s uncertain
how this draft eventually will
pan out.
Experts say it’s a deep draft,
meaning senior players such as
Michigan State’s Denzel Valentine, Virginia’s Malcolm Brogdon, and North Carolina’s Brice
Johnson could prove to be better values than the younger
players who will be drafted before them.
The Draymond Green Effect
will help Valentine because
there will be at least one team
that does not want to pass on a
senior player ready to contribute with all-star-caliber skills.
Age has been completely overrated in the NBA Draft, which
is a primary reason why Hield
isn’t a top three pick.
But the patience of organizations with younger players
has become increasingly shorter. One-and-dones carry great
value, but also have a higher
risk of becoming complacent
after signing their first NBA
contract and going bust.
Then again, there will be
players throughout this draft
whom teams will pass on.
Three players — Kentucky’s
Skal Labissiere, Australia’s
Thon Maker, and Kansas’ Cheick Diallo — enter the draft essentially unproven, with little
or no experience, but tremendous upside. All three are considered projects and all three
could be taken in the firs t
round.
Look for Denver, the Celtics,
and 76ers to perhaps take more
chances in the first round because each has three firstround picks. And this also
could be a strong year for international prospects such as
Bender, swingman Timothe Luwawu who plays in Serbia, his
teammate Ivica Zubac, Spanish
swingman Juan Hernangomez,
Turkish prospect Furkan Korkmaz, and Croatian center Ante
Zizic all could be taken in the
first round.
Call this the Kristaps Porzingis Effect. NBA teams do not
want to pass on the next great
European prospect because of
failures in the past. And if there
had been a redraft from last
season, Porzingis may have
gone second — instead of
fourth — after Karl-Anthony
Towns.
“I think you’re starting to
see that trend reverse now,”
Ford said. “I think you’re starting to see that teams are being
more patient with the international prospects now. I think
they’ve understood the mistakes that they’ve made in the
past. I think that they’re looking for players like a Porzingis,
for example, who is playing at a
very high level in Spain. He
wasn’t just playing in some international tournament and
they took him based off of that.
There was a lot of great video
evidence and scouting evidence
that this kid was going to be a
good player.
“If you can compete in the
ACB [Spanish League], you can
compete in the NBA, and I
think that’s what they saw.”
Gary Washburn can be reached
at [email protected].
Follow him on Twitter
@GwashburnGlobe.
Any shades of Red from Ainge?
SHAUGHNESSY
Continued from Page D1
children, and 14 grandchildren.
What could these men possibly have in common?
Bloodlines. Basketball DNA.
Celtic green genes. Both are
maniacal competitors who are
skilled at evaluating basketball
players.
For all practical purposes,
Auerbach and Ainge have been
the only guys calling the shots
for the Celtics in the last 65
years. OK, we had Rick Pitino
bumping Red from the masthead and messing things up
from 1997-2001. Nice guys like
Jan Volk, Dave Gavitt, and
Chris Wallace held the title of
general manager. But Red never went away. He served the
Celtics from 1950 until he died
in 2006.
Ainge was drafted by Auerbach in 1981, played eight seasons with the Celtics, and came
home to run the operation in
2003 while Red was still blowing smoke at team practices.
This is Ainge’s memory of
his introduction to Red:
“We didn’t know each other
very well, but he was showing
me around and we were driving
around and I had to pick up my
wife, Michelle, at the airport.
And he said very delicately —
because he didn’t know how to
put it — he said, ‘Now, are you
like all the other Mormons or
do you have just one wife?’
“I laughed my head off. Later, he would always kid me. He
used to accuse me of being a
closet smoker. He used to tease
me all the time. When I’d play
cards with the guys, he’d come
in and say, ‘Hey, I know for a
fact that Mormons are not supposed to gamble.’
“And I’d come back with,
‘Red, be quiet. When I play
these guys, it’s not gambling.
There’s no risk involved.’ ’’
Auerbach loved his feisty,
combative young guard. He rallied to Ainge’s defense when
former Bucks coach Don Nelson (a champion as a Celtic)
called Ainge a dirty player during the 1983 playoffs.
“I liked the fact that Red always pointed out the little
things that are hard to get players and coaches to do,’’ Ainge
said. “After a game, he didn’t
come and talk about the box
score or how many points anybody got. He’d come in and talk
about who set a screen or boxed
out or got a rebound to win a
game. I always appreciated
that.’’
Still, Red was bloodless, a
forefather of the Bill Belichick
method. When he thought it
would help his Celtics, he traded Ainge to the Sacramento
Kings in 1989.
When Ainge returned to the
Garden for his first game in
Boston as a King, he said, “I
didn’t really feel much until I
was out shooting in warm-ups
and saw Red walk in and sit in
his seat. Red’s a guy I’ve always
idolized. To me, he’s what the
Celtics are.’’
According to Celtics owner
Wyc Grousbeck, it was Auerbach who urged ownership to
hire Ainge in 2003. Auerbach
died three years later, and was
high above courtside when
Ainge’s Celtics hoisted championship banner No. 17 to the
Garden rafters in 2008.
Now Ainge is on the spot,
hoping to deliver the goods,
just as Auerbach did in 1956
(Bill Russell, Tom Heinsohn,
K.C. Jones, all Hall of Famers),
1978 (Larry Bird, junior eligible), and 1980 (Robert Parish
and Kevin McHale for Joe Barry
Carroll in a swap with the Warriors).
“I know the history,’’ Ainge
said. “Red was a risk taker.
“But the world of managing
NBA teams is completely different now. It’s a whole new world.
There are no secrets. There’s no
finding someone that the rest of
the world doesn’t know about.
Now everybody knows everything, even if it’s in Brazil, Croatia, or Lithuania. That’s the difference.
“But Red was very confident. What I learned from him
is that if you make a mistake,
you don’t let it rattle your confidence.’’
Ainge knows he’s not likely
to find an unknown Sam Jones
from tiny North Carolina Central or a John Havlicek with the
last pick of the first round.
Those kinds of things don’t
happen anymore. But he’ll have
the Power of Red with him
when the Celtics go to work
Thursday night.
Dan Shaughnessy can be
reached at dshaughnessy
@globe.com
D5
B Y G A R Y WA S H B U R N | G L O B E S TA F F
1
Philadelphia
2
LA Lakers
3
Boston
4
Phoenix
F Brandon Ingram
Duke
F Jaylen Brown
California
The Celtics would love to include this pick in a package for a veteran, but Brown has impressed
in workouts, perhaps has the biggest upside of the remaining picks, and has an NBA body.
F Marquese Chriss
Washington
Chriss will be 19 July 2 and freakishly athletic, but he fouled out of 15 games last season
and will need some work. Phoenix needs building blocks and major talent.
6
New Orleans
7
Denver
8
Sacramento
9
Toronto
10
Milwaukee
11
Orlando
12
Atlanta
G Kris Dunn
Providence
Dunn will eventually take over for the erratic Ricky Rubio if a team doesn’t trade up to nab
him. He has leadership skills, great basketball IQ, and a hunger to be great.
G Jamal Murray
Kentucky
The Pelicans have to move on from the Tyreke Evans-Eric Gordon experiment and Murray
will blend well with fellow Kentucky standout Anthony Davis to provide some hope.
F-C Dragan Bender
Croatia
It will take a few years for Bender to become a productive player but his skills are too much
to deny. The Nuggets likely will allow him to stay overseas for a few years.
G Buddy Hield
Oklahoma
The Kings don’t need another 19-year-old who will take years to develop. Hield is NBAready, is the best shooter in the draft, and will add some spark to the Kings.
C Domantas Sabonis
Gonzaga
The Raptors need interior players with Bismack Biyombo a free agent and Luis Scola 36 years
old. Sabonis has perimeter scoring ability and will fit well with coach Dwane Casey’s system.
F Henry Ellenson
Marquette
The Bucks could go many ways here, but they do need a skilled big man who can stretch the
floor. Ellenson is underrated.
F-C Skal Labissiere
Kentucky
The Magic are hoping to strike gold with this one. Labissiere averaged 6.6 points per game
last season but has skills and upside. That wasn’t displayed much at Kentucky.
C Jakob Poeltl
Utah
The Hawks are looking for size in case Al Horford departs. Poeltl (7 feet 1 inch) improved
greatly from his freshman to sophomore seasons and should be a nice addition.
Phoenix
G Dejounte Murray
Washington
Somewhat of a mystery because he hasn’t worked out for many teams after signing with
LeBron James’s agent. Murray could be a top-five player in this draft in time.
14
Chicago
15
Denver
G Wade Baldwin
Vanderbilt
Well, since the Bulls traded Derrick Rose to the Knicks, they need a point guard and floor
leader. Baldwin has drawn comparisons with Russell Westbrook. It’s a solid pick.
C Cheick Diallo
Kansas
The Nuggets don’t need more young bigs, but with three first-round picks, have the
flexibility to take a chance on the raw Diallo, who probably should have stayed in school.
16
Boston
17
Memphis
18
Detroit
19
Denver
20
Indiana
21
Atlanta
22
Charlotte
23
Boston
24
LSU
The slender swingman is a potential franchise cornerstone who can shoot from the perimeter
and be a Kevin Durant-type. That’s good enough for a Lakers franchise in rebuild mode.
Minnesota
13
F Ben Simmons
The most gifted player in the draft, Simmons has all the skills to be an All-Star. Don’t pay
attention to his troubled season at LSU; with the right coaching, he will be a great one.
5
ANDY LYONS/GETTY IMAGES (LEFT); GREGORY PAYAN/AP
. . . or they could roll the dice on projects like Kentucky’s
Skal Labissiere (left) or Australia’s Thon Maker (right).
Sports
2016 NBA MOCK DRAFT
WINSLOW TOWNSON/AP (LEFT);GRANT HALVERSON/GETTY IMAGES
The Celtics might pick an experienced collegian like Denzel
Valentine (45) or Malcolm Brogdon of Virginia . . .
G l o b e
F Deyonta Davis
Michigan State
The Celtics don’t need to get any younger but they do need defenders. They are going to
have to make decisions on some of their young guys, and Davis could push somebody out.
G Timothe Luwawu
France
The Grizzlies need to get younger and Luwawu may be the second-best player overseas. He
could contribute right away.
G Denzel Valentine
Michigan State
He would be a popular pick in Detroit and the Pistons could use a versatile player. Reggie
Jackson is more of a scoring point guard; Valentine could move Jackson to SG.
C Ante Zizic
Croatia
The Nuggets likely will keep Zizic overseas for a few years. With three first-rounders and a
full frontcourt, they can afford to wait.
G Malachi Richardson
Syracuse
The freshman sensation eventually could fit in well with the Pacers. They already have an
established SG in Monta Ellis, so Richardson can take his time to develop.
F DeAndre’ Bembry
Saint Joseph’s
Bembry is very skilled and ready to help a team right away. Kent Bazemore is a free agent
and the Hawks need more offense. Bembry will be a surprise.
G Malik Beasley
Florida State
The Hornets need to get more athletic and Beasley will help that cause. He may take a
couple of years to contribute but could become a keeper.
C Ivica Zubac
Croatia
He’s a legit center and the Celtics can’t afford to keep all of their first-round picks. They will
stash him overseas and hope he comes over in a few years and contributes.
Philadelphia
F Taurean Prince
Baylor
A polished player and strong defender, Prince could blend into Philadelphia’s rebuilding
project. He’s a senior and plays with a strong passion.
25
LA Clippers
26
Philadelphia
27
Toronto
28
Phoenix
29
San Antonio
30
Golden State
F Juan Hernangomez
Spain
Given their cap constraints, the Clippers need to score with this pick and they also need SF
help. Hernangomez will take some time but will be a nice addition.
G Tyler Ulis
Kentucky
Philadelphia needs a legit PG and despite his size, Ulis has NBA skills and could have a long
career. Seems like a natural fit here.
C Brice Johnson
North Carolina
The Raptors’ search to supplement their backcourt continues with Johnson, who flourished
late in his UNC career and is a rim protector.
F Furkan Korkmaz
Turkey
The Suns desire outside shooting and Korkmaz has potential but likely would stay in Turkey
for another year or two.
G Isaiah Cousins
Oklahoma
The Spurs need a point guard and Cousins had a strong season, although overshadowed by
teammate Buddy Hield. Cousins needs to learn the Spurs’ system but he could pay dividends.
C Diamond Stone
Maryland
The Warriors need a big man and Stone has the potential to be a standout. Won’t need to
contribute right away, but eventually will be a starter.
D6
T h e
Sports
SportsLog
Russia weightlifting banned?
Russia, Kazakhstan and Belarus face one-year
suspensions from international weightlifting
competition following the retesting of samples
from the 2008 and 2012 Olympics, which may
prevent lifters from those countries competing at
the Summer Games in Rio de Janeiro in August.
FOOTBALL
SOCCER
Ronaldo testy with reporters
Christiano Ronaldo threw a reporter’s microphone into a pond after she asked him if he was
ready for Portugal’s match against Hungary. Ronaldo went on to score twice in the game, his first
two goals of the tournament. Both teams advanced in a 3-3 draw . . . Ireland beat Italy, 1-0, to
earn a spot in the knockout stages of the European Championship for the first time in team history . . . Austria exited the tournament with a 2-1
loss to Iceland, which will face England Monday
in Nice . . . Sweden was also knocked out, spelling
the end of Zlatan Ibrahimovic’s international
soccer career. The Swedes were eliminated in a
1-0 loss to Belgium, which will play Hungary on
Sunday . . . In the MLS, Roland Alberg had the
second three-goal game in Philadelphia history
and the Union beat the Chicago Fire, 4-3, at Chester, Pa.
BASEBALL
Colon won’t miss next start
Mets manager Terry Collins said he expects
righthander Bartolo Colon to make his next
scheduled start Sunday in Atlanta. Colon was only four pitches into his start against Kansas City
Tuesday when he was hit with a sharp line drive
off the bat of Whit Merrifield . . . The Rangers
placed lefthander Derek Holland on the 15-day
disabled list with left shoulder inflammation and
recalled righthander Luke Jackson from Triple A
Round Rock. Martin Perez (6-4) is scheduled to
pitch in Holland’s spot Sunday against the Red
Sox . . . The Reds reinstated right-hander Michael
Lorenzen from the 60-day disabled list and
placed righthander Alfredo Simon on the 15-day
disabled list with a muscle strain . . . The Mariners signed righthanded reliever Tom Wilhelmsen and acquired lefthander Wade LeBlanc from
Toronto in an effort to bolster their pitching.
TENNIS
Wimbledons seeds revealed
Novak Djokovic and Andy Murray were seeded first and second, respectively, at Wimbledon
this year. They cannot meet until the finals. Serena Williams and Garbine Muguruza were seeded
first and second among women . . . Marcos Baghdatis beat American Sam Querrey to advance to
the quarterfinals of the Nottingham Open . . .
Top-seeded Agnieszka Radwanska topped Eugenie Bouchard to advance to the quarterfinals of
the Eastbourne International. Caroline Wozniacki was upset by qualifier Monica Puig.
MISCELLANY
Athletes visit Orlando victims
Orlando-area athletes Shaquille O’Neal, Johnny Damon, Tim Tebow and Kaka visited victims
of last week’s attack at Pulse nightclub in Orlando
in the hospital . . . In the WNBA, Tina Charles
had 23 points, 9 rebounds and 10 assists for the
New York Liberty, who beat the host Atlanta
Dream, 90-79, in double overtime for their fifth
straight victory; and at Washington, Tayler Hill
had 11 of her 16 points in the second half and the
Mystics beat the Indiana Fever, 76-62 . . . The Big
12 released a statement asking Baylor for a full
accounting of the investigation into how sexual
assault allegations were handled at the school, including information that has not been released
publicly . . . The 111th annual Midnight Sun
Baseball Game in Alaska, played on the solstice
with no artificial lighting, was called in the seventh inning because of darkness.
Y
Y
THU
FRI
SAT
SUN
MON
TUE
WED
CWS
1:35
NESN
TEX
8:05
NESN
TEX
9:20
NESN
TEX
3:05
NESN
TB
7:10
NESN
TB
7:10
NESN
TB
12:10
NESN
6/23
6/24
6/25
6/26
6/27
6/28
Y
6/29
DC
7:00
CSN
For updated scores: bostonglobe.com/sports
On the radio, unless noted: Red Sox, WEEI-FM 93.7; Revolution, WBZ-FM 98.5
ON THE AIR
Latest line
COLLEGE BASEBALL
8 p.m.
World Series: Coastal Carolina vs. Texas
ESPN2
PRO BASEBALL
12:30 p.m. San Francisco at Pittsburgh
1:35 p.m.
Chicago White Sox at Boston
3:30 p.m.
Seattle at Detroit (in progress)
7 p.m.
Chicago Cubs at Miami
MLB
NESN
MLB
MLB
PRO BASKETBALL
7 p.m.
NBA Draft
ESPN
DIVING
7 p.m.
US Olympic trials
NBCSN
GOLF
9:30 a.m.
3:30 p.m.
European Tour: BMW International Open
PGA Tour: Quicken Loans National
Golf
Golf
GYMNASTICS
8:30 p.m.
US Olympic trials (men)
Soccer
Semifinals
Wednesday, June 22
At Chicago
Chile 2.....................................Colombia 0
Third Place
Saturday, June 25
At Glendale, Ariz.
United States vs. Colombia..................8
Championship
Sunday, June 26
Argentina vs. Chile.................................8
EURO 2016
Wednesday, June 22
At Nice, France
Belguim 1..................................Sweden 0
At Lille, France
Ireland 1..........................................Italy 0
At Lyon, France
Hungary 3................................Portugal 3
At Saint-Denis, France
Iceland 2.....................................Austria 1
North Division
W
L
Rochester ................43 29
Scranton/W-B.........43 30
Lehigh Valley..........41 31
Buffalo .....................38 33
Pawtucket ...............37 34
Syracuse..................32 37
Pct. GB
.597 —
.589 —
.569
2
.535 4½
.521 5½
.464 9½
South Division
W
L
Charlotte .................35 38
Gwinnett..................32 39
Durham....................32 41
Norfolk .....................26 46
Pct. GB
.479 —
.451
2
.438
3
.361 8½
West Division
W
L
Indianapolis ............38 32
Columbus ................38 34
Louisville .................35 35
Toledo ......................30 41
Pct. GB
.543 —
.528
1
.500
3
.423 8½
WEDNESDAY'S RESULTS
Durham 6................................Charlotte 4
Gwinnett 4........Indianapolis 3 (10 inn.)
Lehigh Valley 2.........................Norfolk 1
Buffalo 8.................................Louisville 1
Columbus 7...........................Rochester 2
Syracuse 6...........................Pawtucket 4
Scranton/W-B 1.........................Toledo 0
Syracuse 6, Pawtucket 4
MLS
EASTERN CONFERENCE
W L T Pts.
Philadelphia .......... 7 4 5 26
New York............... 7 8 1 22
NYC FC ................... 5 5 6 21
Montreal ................ 5 4 5 20
Toronto FC............. 5 5 4 19
NEW ENGLAND ..... 4 4 7 19
D.C. United ............ 4 6 5 17
Orlando City.......... 3 3 8 17
Columbus............... 3 5 6 15
Chicago.................. 2 7 5 11
GF
27
27
25
22
15
21
14
25
18
14
GA
22
22
31
20
15
26
16
23
21
20
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Colorado ................ 9 2 4 31
FC Dallas................ 8 5 4 28
Real Salt Lake.... 8 4 3 27
Kansas City ........... 6 8 3 21
Vancouver ............. 6 7 3 21
Los Angeles........... 5 3 6 21
San Jose................. 5 4 6 21
Portland ................. 5 6 5 20
Seattle.................... 5 8 1 16
Houston.................. 3 7 5 14
19
24
27
16
24
27
18
25
13
20
11
24
24
18
27
17
18
27
17
22
NOTE: Three points for victory, one
point for tie.
WEDNESDAY’S RESULTS
Philadelphia 4..........................Chicago 3
Real Salt Lake 2................... New York 1
Colorado...............................Los Angeles
SATURDAY’S GAMES
New York City FC at Seattle.................5
NEW ENGLAND at D.C. United..............7
Vancouver at Philadelphia....................7
New York at Columbus....................7:30
Sporting Kansas City at Montreal..7:30
Toronto FC at Orlando City.............7:30
Real Salt Lake at FC Dallas...................8
Los Angeles at San Jose......................10
Colleges
BASEBALL
College World Series
At Omaha, Neb.
Wednesday, June 22
Arizona 3..Cal.-Santa Barbara 0 (elim.)
Thursday, June 23
Coastal Carolina vs. Texas Tech......... 8
WNBA
WEDNESDAY'S RESULTS
New York 90.................Atlanta 79 (2OT)
Washington 76........................Indiana 62
THURSDAY'S GAMES
San Antonio at Dallas.......................8:30
FRIDAY'S GAMES
Phoenix at Washington.........................7
Chicago at New York........................7:30
Los Angeles at Minnesota.................... 8
Connecticut at Seattle.........................10
NY-Penn League
WEDNESDAY'S RESULTS
Vermont 7..................................Tri-City 2
West Virginia 7.............. Staten Island 4
Aberdeen 7................................Auburn 0
Connecticut 7.........................Brooklyn 5
Lowell 3.........Hudson Valley 2 (12 inn.)
Williamsport 1...Mah. Val. 0 (...13 inn.)
State College 11.......................Batavia 1
Lowell 3, Hudson Valley 2
at Dutchess Stadium, Wappingers
Falls, N.Y.
LOWELL
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
McLean rf
5 1 1 0 1 0 .231
Madera lf
4 0 0 0 2 1 .071
Hill dh
5 0 1 1 1 1 .364
Baldwin 3b
6 0 1 0 0 0 .273
Tubbs 1b
4 0 1 0 1 0 .250
YAybar cf
5 0 0 0 0 0 .316
APerez 2b
5 1 2 0 0 1 .214
Sciortino c
4 1 1 0 1 1 .222
C.Tovar ss
5 0 2 2 0 2 .316
Totals
43 3 9 3 6 6
HV
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Astacio ss
4 0 0 0 0 2 .364
APerez rf
5 0 1 1 0 1 .393
Mstrbuoni 2b 4 0 0 0 1 1 .000
Boldt dh
5 1 1 0 0 1 .200
Popadics 3b
3 0 1 0 1 0 .278
Meyer 1b
2 0 0 1 2 0 .188
ORojas cf
5 0 0 0 0 3 .211
JRojas c
5 0 1 0 0 0 .231
MHrnandez lf 4 1 0 0 1 4 .143
Totals
37 2 4 2 5 12
Lowell 000 011 000 001 — 3 9 1
HV
010 000 010 000 — 2 4 1
E—Sciortino (1), MHernandez (1).
LOB—Lowell 10, Hudson Valley 7. 2B—
Sciortino (1), C.Tovar (3), JRojas (1).
SB—McLean (1), Popadics (1), APerez
(1), Boldt (1). S—Astacio. SF—Meyer.
GIDP—YAybar, Hill, Madera. DP—Hudson Valley 3.
LOWELL
IP H R ER BB SO ERA
DGonzalez
5„ 4 1 1 0 7 2.70
McEachern 1‚ 0 0 0 1 1 0.00
AMartinez
3 0 1 1 1 2 2.08
Stone W 1-0
2 0 0 0 3 2 3.00
HV
IP H R ER BB SO
Fulenchek
4„ 5 1 1 5 2
NRodriguez 2‚ 3 1 1 1 0
Ingram
3 0 0 0 0 4
Lawson L 0-1 2 1 1 0 0 0
ERA
3.38
1.59
3.60
0.00
HBP—by McEachern (Popadics).
WP—AMartinez. T—3:23. A—3,856.
at McCoy Stadium, Pawtucket, R.I.
SYRACUSE
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
TTurner ss
4 1 2 3 2 2 .292
Lmbrdozzi 2b 5 1 1 0 1 0 .182
Goodwin cf
5 0 1 1 0 2 .294
Skole 1b
4 0 0 0 1 1 .246
Severino c
5 1 3 0 0 0 .280
den Dekker lf 4 1 1 0 0 1 .219
Martinson 3b 3 0 0 0 0 2 .213
CRamsey rf
4 2 2 0 1 1 .288
Sizemore dh
4 0 1 0 1 3 .206
Totals
38 6 11 4 6 12
PAWTUCKET AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
RCastillo cf
5 1 1 0 0 1 .239
Witte 3b
4 1 2 2 0 1 .253
CMarrero 1b
4 0 1 0 0 1 .286
Brentz lf
4 0 0 0 0 1 .278
HRamos rf
4 1 1 2 0 1 .280
Maxwell dh
4 0 0 0 0 2 .225
Court 2b
4 1 2 0 0 0 .462
MMiller ss
4 0 1 0 0 0 .243
DButler c
3 0 0 0 1 1 .279
Totals
36 4 8 4 1 8
Syracuse
010 210 002 — 6 11 1
Pawtucket 000 110 020 — 4 8 2
E—den Dekker (1), CMarrero (3),
Brentz (2). LOB—Syracuse 14, Pawtucket 6. 2B—Lombardozzi (4), TTurner
(15), RCastillo (9), Witte (14). 3B—
TTurner (7). HR—HRamos (1). SB—
CRamsey (5), Severino (2). S—Martinson. GIDP—Lombardozzi. DP—Pawtucket 1.
SYRACUSE
IP H R ER BB SO ERA
THill
7 5 2 2 0 6 4.76
JGutierrez
‚ 3 2 2 0 1 5.21
Harper W 1-0 „ 0 0 0 0 0 0.00
RaMrtin S 14 1 0 0 0 1 1 4.40
PAWTUCKET IP
Wilkerson
3
WWright
3‚
Mendez L 3-2 2„
H
4
6
1
R
1
3
2
ER BB SO
1 2 4
3 2 5
0 2 3
ERA
2.12
2.84
4.55
HBP—by Wilkerson (Martinson), by
Wilkerson (den Dekker). T—3:08.
A—4,150.
THURSDAY'S GAMES
Lehigh Valley at Norfolk................ 12:05
Louisville at Buffalo..........................1:05
Charlotte at Durham.........................7:05
Indianapolis at Gwinnett..................7:05
Rochester at Columbus....................7:05
Syracuse at Pawtucket....................7:05
Toledo at Scranton/W-B .................7:05
Eastern League
Eastern Division
W
L
Reading....................50 22
Trenton ....................43 27
Hartford...................38 31
New Hampshire .....30 40
Binghamton ............28 41
Portland...................26 43
Pct.
.694
.614
.551
.429
.406
.377
GB
—
6
10½
19
20½
22½
Western Division
W
L Pct. GB
Akron........................42 30 .583 —
Altoona ....................39 31 .557
2
Harrisburg...............37 32 .536 3½
Erie ...........................32 41 .438 10½
Bowie .......................30 40 .429 11
Richmond ................27 44 .380 14½
WEDNESDAY'S RESULTS
Erie 2...........................New Hampshire 1
Hartford 7.............................Richmond 6
Trenton 3......................................Bowie 0
Altoona 6...........................Binghamton 3
Harrisburg 9............................Portland 6
Reading 4..................................... Akron 1
Bowie 4......................................Trenton 3
Harrisburg 9, Portland 6
at Hadlock Field, Portland, Maine
HARRISBURG AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
RBautista cf
4 1 1 0 0 0 .258
Difo ss
5 1 0 1 0 2 .223
Ballou lf
4 1 2 7 0 1 .238
Keyes dh
4 0 0 0 1 1 .233
Bostick 2b
3 0 1 0 2 0 .295
Collier rf
5 0 2 0 0 1 .291
Kieboom c
4 0 1 0 1 0 .255
Pleffner 1b
4 3 2 0 1 1 .239
SPerez 3b
4 3 3 0 0 0 .282
Totals
37 9 12 8 5 6
PORTLAND
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Moncada 2b
5 2 3 2 0 0 .400
Coyle 3b
3 1 0 0 2 1 .208
Benintendi cf 4 0 0 0 1 0 .252
CDecker 1b
5 0 0 1 0 1 .250
Freiman dh
4 0 2 2 0 0 .268
ATavarez rf
3 0 1 1 1 1 .305
Romanski c
4 0 0 0 0 1 .293
Sturgeon lf
3 1 1 0 1 0 .269
TLin ss
3 2 1 0 1 0 .233
Totals
34 6 8 6 6 4
Harrisburg 003 400 020 — 9 12 2
Portland
000 231 000 — 6 8 1
E—Difo (16), RBautista (5), Romanski
(5). LOB—Harrisburg 8, Portland 7.
2B—Bostick (11), Kieboom (9), Ballou
(5), Moncada (1). 3B—Collier (6). HR—
Ballou (1). SB—TLin (6). S—RBautista.
SF—Ballou. GIDP—TLin. DP—Harrisburg 1, Portland 1.
HARRISBURG IP H R ER BB SO ERA
Giolito
4„ 7 5 5 4 3 3.17
Simms W 4-3 2‚ 1 1 1 1 0 2.93
NLee
1 0 0 0 0 1 3.18
DLs Sntos S 2 1 0 0 0 1 0 1.29
PORTLAND
IP H R ER BB SO
Couch L 4-3 3„ 8 7 7 2 0
McCarthy
1‚ 1 0 0 0 0
Taylor
2 1 0 0 1 2
Ysla
1 2 2 0 0 2
Buttrey
1 0 0 0 2 2
Thursday
Major League Baseball
National League
Favorite...........Line Underdog........Line
At Pittsburgh. -110 San Fran........+100
At Cincinnati..-106 San Diego.......-104
Chicago...........-174 At Miami........+162
New York........-163 At Atlanta......+153
Arizona............-150 At Colorado...+140
Thursday
American League
At Detroit........-126 Seattle............+116
At BOSTON.....-220 Chicago..........+200
At LA Angels..-145 Oakland.........+135
Interleague
At Minnesota.-148 Phila...............+138
Transactions
NBCSN
International League
COPA AMERICA
T H U R S D A Y, J U N E 2 3 , 2 0 1 6
Bergeron loses
bid for Selke
Eriksson denied;
Kane is MVP
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Home games shaded
Sanchez adviser suspended
The NFL Players Association suspended the
registration of Ash Narayan, a financial adviser
accused of funneling millions of dollars from accounts he managed for professional athletes, including Denver Broncos quarterback Mark Sanchez, into a struggling online sports and entertainment ticket business on whose board he
served . . . A spokeswoman for Johnny Manziel
said the former Cleveland Browns quarterback
wasn’t injured in a hit-and-run accident he reported to Dallas police earlier this week . . . Former Dallas Cowboys running back Joseph Randle
added threatening a deputy to the list of charges
he faces in Kansas, where he is in jail. Sheriff ’s
spokesman Lt. Lin Dehning said in an e-mail that
Randle is accused of threatening a deputy who
was ‘‘enforcing the rules’’ last month at the jail.
G l o b e
Scoreboard
WADA sides
with IAAF on
Russia’s ban
World Anti-Doping Agency president Craig
Reedie stated support for track and field’s decision to bar Russian athletes from competing under their own flag at the Rio Olympics Wednesday. The statement from Reedie, who is also an
IOC member, countered the IOC’s claim that Russian athletes who were cleared to play could not
compete under an independent flag, further jumbling the mix of positions the governing bodies
have take. The IAAF, track’s federation, had originally said it had the support of the IOC in allowing Russian athletes who could show they had
been subject to doping controls outside their
home country to compete under an independent
flag.
B o s t o n
ERA
4.81
6.55
0.00
4.26
5.05
WP—Giolito. T—2:55. A—3,823.
THURSDAY'S GAMES
Akron at Reading.............................12:05
Richmond at Hartford.......................1:35
Harrisburg at Portland.....................6:00
Altoona at Binghamton....................6:35
Trenton at Bowie...............................6:35
BASEBALL
Baltimore (AL): Recalled P Ashur Tolliver from Norfolk (IL). Placed P Brian
Duensing on 15-day DL, retroactive to
June 20.
Chicago (AL): Claimed P Juan Minaya
off waivers from Houston and assigned him to Charlotte (IL).
Cincinnati (NL): Reinstated P Michael
Lorenzen from 60-day DL. Placed P Alfredo Simon on 15-day DL, retroactive
to June 16. Reinstated INF Jordan
Pacheco from 15-day DL and sent him
outright to Louisville (IL). Pacheco refused the outright assignment and
elected to become a free agent.
Houston (AL): Signed P Forrest Whitley
to a minor league contract.
Los Angeles (NL): Claimed P Layne
Somsen from the New York Yankees.
Transferred P Chin-hui Tsao to 60-day
DL.
New York (NL): Recalled P Logan Verrett from Las Vegas (PCL). Optioned
INF Ty Kelly to Las Vegas.
Philadelphia (NL): Signed P Kevin
Gowdy, SS Cole Stobbe, P JoJo Romero
and OF Josh Stephen on minor league
contracts.
Pittsburgh (NL): Recalled P Kyle Lobstein from Indianapolis (IL). Optioned
P Alfredo Boscan to Indianapolis.
San Francisco (NL): Signed OF Bryan
Reynolds.
Seattle (AL): Signed P Tom Wilhelmsen
to a one-year contract. Acquired P
Wade LeBlanc from Toronto for cash
or a player to be named. Transferred P
Charlie Furbush to 60-day DL. Optioned
P Jonathan Aro to Tacoma (PCL).
Texas (AL): Placed P Derek Holland on
15-day DL, retroactive to June 21. Recalled P Luke Jackson from Round
Rock (PCL).
BASKETBALL
New York (NBA): Acquired G Derrick
Rose, G Justin Holiday and a 2017 second-round draft pick from Chicago for
C Robin Lopez and Gs Jose Calderon
and Jerian Grant.
HOCKEY
NHL: Announced the league will expand to Las Vegas for the 2017-18 season after awarding its 31st franchise to
Bill Foley.
Arizona (NHL): Signed D Alex Goligoski
to a five-year contract.
Chicago (NHL): Signed F Dennis Rasmussen on a one-year contract.
Tennis
WIMBLEDON QUALIFYING
At Bank of England Sports Ground
Singles
Men
Second Round
Mohamed Safwat, Egypt def. Nikoloz
Basilashvili (3), 7-5, 3-6, 7-5.; Ruben Bemelmans def. Adrian Menendez-Maceiras, 4-6, 6-3, 11-9.; Luke Saville def.
Aldin Setkic, 6-4, 3-6, 8-6.; Daniil Medvedev def. Vincent Millot (31), 6-4, 6-2.;
Matthias Bachinger def. Pere Riba, 6-4,
7-5.; Marius Copil def. Kenny de Schepper (25), 7-5, 6-4.; Tristan Lamasine
def. Grega Zemlja, 7-6 (5), 6-3.; Thomas
Fabbiano (8) def. Ruben Ramirez Hidalgo, 6-4, 6-2.; Franko Skugor def. Daniel
Munoz-de la Nava (17) , 7-6 (4), 6-2.;
Daniel Brands (21) def. Ramkumar Ramanathan, 7-6 (5), 7-6 (3).; Matthew
Barton def. Marcelo Arevalo, 6-3, 6-4.;
Lukas Lacko (11) def. Alexandre Sidorenko, 6-2, 6-3.; Albano Olivetti def.
Gregoire Barrere, 6-7 (6), 7-5, 8-6.; Tobias Kamke (23) def. Mathias Bourgue,
6-4, 6-4.; Igor Sijsling (9) def. Calvin
Hemery, 6-1, 6-3.; Hiroki Moriya def.
Tim Smyczek (14), 6-1, 3-6, 6-4.; Quentin Halys (29) def. Li Zhe, 7-6 (5), 6-4.;
Dennis Novikov (28) def. Uladzimir Ignatik, 2-6, 7-6 (3), 10-8.; Yannick
Mertens def. Jan Satral, 6-4, 7-6 (0) .;
Radu Albot (15), Moldova def. David
Guez, 6-4, 7-6 (2) .; Yoshihito Nishioka
(12) def. Frederico Ferreira Silva, 7-5,
6-4.; Jozef Kovalik (19) def. Alejandro
Falla, 6-3, 6-7 (5), 13-11.; Bjorn Fratangelo (6) def. Axel Michon, 6-7 (9), 6-1,
6-2.; Alexander Kudryavtsev def. Daniel Nguyen, 6-4, 6-3.; Adam Pavlasek
(2) def. Darian King, Barbado, 6-3, 6-4.;
Austin Krajicek (22) def. Joe Salisbury,
6-4, 3-6, 6-3.; Marcus Willis def. Andrey
Rublev, 7-5, 6-4.; Gerald Melzer (13)
def. Go Soeda, 2-6, 6-2, 6-3.; Edouard
Roger-Vasselin def. Julian Reister, 6-1,
7-6 (3).; Edward Crrie def. Michael Berrer (10), 6-0, 6-3.; Dennis Novak def.
Daniel Cox, 6-3, 7-5.; Karen Khachanov
(1) def. Enrique Lopez-Perez, 6-7 (4),
6-4, 9-7.
Women
First Round
Risa Ozaki (10) def. Freya Christie,
6-7 (7), 7-6 (4), 7-5.
Second Round
Chang Kai-chen def. Alexandra
Panova, 6-4, 6-4.; Zhang Kai-Lin (3) def.
Tereza Smitkova, 6-7 (4), 6-1, 6-2.; Jana
Cepelova (14) def. Sherazad Reix, 6-4,
6-4.; Amra Sadikovic def. Viktorija Golubic (2), 6-4, 6-4.; Barbora Stefkova
def. Kristina Kucova (9), 6-3, 7-5.; Tatjana Maria (1) def. An-Sophie Mestach,
6-3, 6-3.; Duan Ying-Ying (16) def. Taylor Townsend, 6-2, 5-7, 6-2.; Marina Erakovic (19) def. Urszula Radwanska,
6-4, 6-2.; Andrea Hlavackova def. Wang
Yafan, 7-5, 6-1.; Ekaterina Alexandrova
def. Stephanie Vogt, Liechtenstein, 6-4,
4-6, 14-12.; Barbara Haas def. Lauren
Davis (6), 6-3, 6-3.; Harriet Dart def.
Risa Ozaki (10), 6-4, 6-3.; Mandy Minella (17) def. Misa Eguchi, 6-2, 6-7 (0),
7-5.; Rebecca Peterson (13) def. Katie
Boulter, 4-6, 7-6 (3), 6-3.; Irina Khromacheva (11) def. Andreea Mitu, 6-2,
6-4.; Zhu Lin def. Robin Anderson, 7-5,
3-6, 6-2.; Julia Boserup def. Jessica
Pegula, 6-2, 6-1.; Maria Sakkari (5) def.
Jovana Jaksic, 7-6 (2), 6-2.; Maryna Zanevska (22) def. Michelle Larcher de
Brito, 3-6, 6-3, 6-4.; Tamira Paszek (7)
def. Lisa Whybourn, 6-3, 7-6 (3).; Luksika Kumkhum def. Ashleigh Barty, 3-6,
6-4, 6-2.; Aleksandra Krunic (4) def.
Elise Mertens, 3-6, 7-5, 6-3.; Paula Kania def. Virginie Razzano, 6-4, 6-4.;
Vania King def. Gabriella Taylor, 5-7,
6-4, 6-4.
WTA EASTBOURNE
At Devonshire Park—Eastbourne, England
Singles
Third Round
Monica Puig def. Caroline Wozniacki, 4-6, 6-3, 6-4.; Dominika Cibulkova
(12) def. Kateryna Bondarenko, 7-6 (3),
6-3.; Agnieszka Radwanska (1) def.
Eugenie Bouchard, 6-3, 6-3.; Kristina
Mladenovic def. Anna-Lena Friedsam,
6-4, 7-6 (4).; Elena Vesnina def. Madison Brengle, 7-6 (2), 6-4.; Johanna Konta (11) def. Petra Kvitova (5), 5-7, 6-4,
6-0.
ATP NOTTINGHAM
At Nottingham TC—Nottingham, England
Singles
Third Round
Andreas Seppi (7) def. Adrian Mannarino, 6-2, 6-3.; Marcos Baghdatis (9)
def. Sam Querrey (5), 1-6, 7-6 (8), 6-4.;
Dudi Sela def. Benjamin Becker, 6-3,
2-6, 6-4.; Pablo Cuevas (2) def. Daniel
Evans, 6-7 (4), 7-6 (5), 6-4.; Alexandr
Dolgopolov (4) def. Frank Dancevic,
6-3, 7-5.; Steve Johnson (6) def. Vasek
Pospisil (11), 7-6 (4), 7-6 (1).; Gilles
Muller (8) def. Mikhail Youzhny, 6-7
(4), 7-6 (4), 6-3.; Kevin Anderson (1)
def. Fernando Verdasco (14), 6-3, 7-6
(6).
Bruins center Patrice
Bergeron was among the finalists on Wednesday night in Las
Vegas for the Frank J. Selke Trophy as the
NHL
NHL’s best deNOTEBOOK fensive forward,
but he did not
win.
Anze Kopitar of the Kings
won for the first time. Ryan Kesler of the Ducks was the other finalist.
Kopitar also won Lady Byng
Trophy for his gentlemanly play,
beating out Loui Eriksson of the
Bruins and Aleksander Barkov
of the Panthers.
The Blackhawks’ Patrick
Kane won the Hart Trophy, becoming the first player born and
trained in the United States to be
named the NHL’s most valuable
player.
The NHL scoring champion
also won the Ted Lindsay Award
after his fellow players recognized him as the game’s most
outstanding player, and he also
accepted the Art Ross Trophy in
recognition of his 106-point season.
Kane was the runaway winner of the Hart, getting 121 of
the 150 first-place votes. Sidney
Crosby of the Penguins finished
second with 11 first-place votes,
while Dallas’s Jamie Benn was
third.
Braden Holtby of the Capitals
won the Vezina Trophy as the
NHL’s top goalie. His coach, Barry Trotz, won the Jack Adams
Award for the first time in 17
seasons behind an NHL bench,
recognizing the impressive Presidents’ Trophy season.
Drew Doughty won his first
Norris Trophy as the NHL’s top
defenseman, beating out Ottawa’s Erik Karlsson and San Jose’s
Brent Burns.
And Chicago forward Artemi
Panarin won the Calder Trophy
as the NHL’s top rookie.
Vegas gets team
The NHL league will expand
to Las Vegas for the 2017-18 season after awarding its 31st franchise to billionaire businessman
Bill Foley. Commissioner Gary
Bettman announced the decision after the league’s board of
governors met in Las Vegas
Wednesday on a 109-degree day
and unanimously voted to put
an ice hockey team in the Mojave Desert’s gambling mecca.
‘‘We think this is a tremendously exciting opportunity, not
just for Las Vegas, but for the
league as well,’’ Bettman said,
calling Las Vegas ‘‘a vibrant,
growing, global destination city.’’
Foley will pay $500 million to
ETHAN MILLER/GETTY IMAGES
Patrick Kane became the
first player born and trained
in the US to win the Hart.
the NHL’s other owners as an expansion fee. The new team will
play in T-Mobile Arena, the $375
million building that opened just
off the Las Vegas Strip in April.
The NHL is expanding for the
first time since 2000, when Minnesota and Columbus each paid
$80 million to join the league.
With nearly 2.2 million people in the last census, Las Vegas
is the largest population center
in the US without a team in the
major professional sports. Vegas
was an economic boomtown in
the previous decade, and the
NHL is betting that its slowed
growth hasn’t curbed the city’s
appetite for sports and spectacles.
Foley’s bid had the advantage
of an NHL-ready arena built
with private funding and eager
for a flagship tenant. Foley has
accepted more than 14,000 season-ticket deposits and sold out
all 44 suites in the 17,500-seat
rink built by MGM Resorts International and Anschutz Entertainment Group, which owns
the Los Angeles Kings.
‘‘We won’t sell out every game
with season ticket-holders, but I
believe it’s going to be 85 percent, 90 percent [filled by season
ticket-holders],’’ Foley said.
The new franchise will be
stocked by an expansion draft
that will be more favorable than
previous drafts, theoretically allowing the Vegas franchise to become competitive more quickly.
They'll play in the Pacific Division, the home of the league’s
three California teams and the
Arizona Coyotes.
Goligoski a Coyote
The Coyotes addressed one of
their biggest offseason needs,
signing defenseman Alex Goligoski to a five-year, $27.375 million deal.
Arizona acquired Goligoski’s
negotiating rights in a trade with
Dallas last week and brought
him out for a visit. Goligoski
liked what he saw and so did the
Coyotes, taking one of the top
free agent defensemen off the
market.
Citing Zika, McIlroy
rules out Olympics
By Steve Douglas
ASSOCIATED PRESS
DUBLIN — Rory McIlroy became one of the most high-profile sports stars to opt out of the
Rio de Janeiro Olympics because
of concerns about the Zika virus,
saying Wednesday it is ‘‘a risk I
am unwilling to take.’’
‘‘After speaking with those
closest to me, I've come to realize
that my health and my family’s
health comes before anything
else,’’ the four-time major golf
champion said in a statement released by his management company.
The fourth-ranked McIlroy
was scheduled to play for Ireland
as golf makes its return to the
Olympics for the first time since
1904.
The Olympic Committee of
Ireland said it was ‘‘extremely
disappointed’’ not to have McIlroy on its team.
‘‘However, as we have always
said, it is down to the individual
and of course we respect his decision, which he has taken for personal reasons,’’ the OCI said in a
statement.
The 27-year-old McIlroy said
this month that he and his fiancée, Erica Stoll, may consider
starting a family ‘‘in the next couple of years.’’
‘‘Even though the risk of in-
fection from the Zika virus is
considered low,’’ McIlroy said, ‘‘it
is a risk nonetheless and a risk I
am unwilling to take.’’
Australian golfer Marc Leishman had already pulled out of
the Olympic tournament, citing
concerns over the health of his
family because of the mosquitoborne virus, which is linked to
severe birth defects and possible
neurological problems in adults.
Leishman’s wife, Audrey, nearly
died last year from toxic shock
syndrome.
Adam Scott, Louis Oosthuizen, Charl Schwartzel, and Vijay
Singh have also said they won’t
compete at Rio, mostly because
of scheduling commitments.
Last month, 150 health experts issued an open letter to the
UN health agency calling for the
games to be delayed or relocated
‘‘in the name of public health.’’
The World Health Organization
responded that such steps would
‘‘not significantly alter the international spread of Zika virus.’’
The OCI said it has been taking its lead on the Zika situation
from the International Olympic
Committee.
‘‘They have provided us with
every assurance and we have total confidence that the Games
will be safe for all athletes,’’ the
Dublin-based organization said.
T h e
T H U R S D A Y, J U N E 2 3 , 2 0 1 6
B o s t o n
G l o b e
Sports
D7
Bruins need to be in preservation mode
Fluto Shinzawa
ON HOCKEY
That Patrice Bergeron is at
the peak of his powers is not in
question.
On Wednesday in Las Vegas,
Bergeron finished second to
Los Angeles’s Anze Kopitar for
the Selke Trophy as the NHL’s
best defensive forward. Aside
from Kopitar, Bergeron does
not have many rivals in the category of do-it-all center.
The critical issue is how
long Bergeron can sustain his
excellence. The answer is both
murky and terrifying enough to
keep Bruins general manager
Don Sweeney up at night.
On July 24, Bergeron will
turn 31. He has played 820 regular-season games, plus 95 in
the playoffs. That 915-game cumulative workload is thirdhighest among NHL forwards
drafted in 2003, behind Eric
Staal (977) and Dustin Brown
(965).
The Hurricanes traded Staal
at last season’s deadline to the
Rangers for Aleksi Saarela, a
2016 second-round pick, and a
2017 second-rounder. Staal
flamed out on Broadway, collecting 6 points in 20 regularseason games and going scoreless in five playoff appearances.
The market for the unrestricted free agent-to-be is lukewarm.
The Kings pulled the captaincy from Brown (11-17—28
in 82 games last year). He is
under contract at $5.875 million annually through 2022,
when he will be 37. It is the
definition of an unmovable
contract.
The Bruins cannot afford
any kind of similar slippage in
Bergeron — not next season or
in years to come. The alternate
captain is their most important
player.
During five-on-five play in
2015-16, Bergeron had a
league-leading 9.1 Corsi For
relative percentage, indicating
how the Bruins controlled the
puck when he was on the ice
and how they had to chase it
when he was on the bench.
Bergeron averaged 2:11 of
shorthanded ice time per
game, the most he’s logged
since 2012-13 (2:12). He took
713 defensive-zone faceoffs,
most of any player in the
league save for Ryan Kesler
(760). He won 57.1 percent of
his league-high 1,978 total
draws.
Bergeron’s soundtrack of defensive white noise has its
equally potent counterpoint. In
2015-16, he whistled a career-
high 32 pucks past opposing
goalies. In all situations,
Bergeron averaged a careerhigh 2.59 points per 60 minutes of play. He led the Bruins
in power-play scoring with 25
points despite being the focus
of penalty-killing attention as
the bumper in the middle of
the team’s man-up formation.
It was no surprise that
Hockey Canada added
Bergeron’s linemate, Brad
Marchand, to its World Cup
roster. Marchand and Bergeron
have become one of the NHL’s
elite 200-foot duos.
In 2015-16, Bergeron (68
points/2:59 average power-play
ice time per game/2:11 shorthanded) was one of only three
forwards to score 60 points and
average at least two minutes of
special-teams time per game.
The others were Kopitar (74
points/2:34/2:09) and Ryan
O’Reilly (60 points/3:16/2:05).
The World Cup of Hockey,
however, will be the latest extracurricular activity to pound
on Bergeron’s legs. Training
camp will begin in Ottawa
Sept. 4. The Canadians will
play the Americans in a pretournament game in Columbus
Sept. 9, then have a rematch
the next day in Ottawa. Canada
will play Russia in Pittsburgh
on Sept. 14.
The games will begin to
count on Sept. 17 in Toronto.
The championship game will
take place on Oct. 1. Bergeron
and the Canadians do not expect to be finished playing before then.
That’s a lot of matches
Bergeron will burn before he
even steps onto the sheet at
Warrior Ice Arena for his first
twirls on the Bruins’ new practice rink.
So as good as Bergeron is on
the draw, there is one opponent
he’ll never beat in a faceoff:
time. At some point of his career, the high-mileage center
will start to slow. The Bruins’
priority is to defer this dropoff
long enough until his successor
is ready.
Ryan Spooner is 24 years
old. His defensive game is suspect, to be generous. Austin
Czarnik, Providence’s top center last year, has never played
an NHL game. The Bruins
think highly of Jacob Forsbacka Karlsson, one of their
2015 second-round picks. Forsbacka Karlsson will be a Boston
University sophomore in 201617.
A center who could reinforce or replace Bergeron has
yet to be identified. It’s why the
Bruins are not in position to
miss at the draft this weekend.
They need replacements for
their stars: Bergeron, David
Krejci, and Zdeno Chara.
Bergeron could become an
outlier, like Pavel Datsyuk,
Daniel Alfredsson, Marian
Hossa, and Patrik Elias — productive two-way forwards who
continued to touch the game in
all areas after blowing out 35
candles. He is always in excellent shape. His exquisite hockey sense helps put him into positions that lesser thinkers
MATTHEWS
Had Matthews arrived two
days earlier, he would currently
be recovering from his rookie
season in the NHL. He would
not have dislodged Connor McDavid from being the first overall pick in 2015, but the leftshot center would have prompted some deep thinking by the
Sabres as to whether he or Jack
Eichel, his right-shot counterpart and former USA Hockey
teammate, would be the No. 2
selection.
“Auston Matthews is pretty
much the complete package,”
said NHL Central Scouting director Dan Marr. “He can play
in any situation. He’s got all the
intangibles, all the skills and assets.”
Yet in 2015-16, while McDavid and Eichel were adjusting
to the NHL, Matthews played in
Switzerland, an unlikely location for an American draft-eligible player. Matthews’s birthday
was one of the primary criteria
in determining his destination.
To be eligible for NHL selection, a player must be at least
17 years old on Sept. 15 prior to
his draft year. Matthews missed
this standard by 48 hours.
One NHL general manager
wondered whether Matthews
and his representatives could
have applied for an exception to
be drafted early. In the Canadian Hockey League, for example,
five players have filed for and
been granted exceptional status
to play major junior hockey as
15-year-olds: McDavid, John
Tavares, Aaron Ekblad, Sean
Day, and Joseph Veleno.
But Matthews and agent Pat
Brisson accepted the NHL’s
rule. By doing so, Matthews experienced a year of predraft development that no other highend American had gone
through before.
Progression of a prodigy
S w i t z e r l a n d ’s Nat i o n a l
League A is not for kids. Former
NHL coaches who have worked
in Switzerland include Marc
Crawford and Guy Boucher. ExNHLers who have made the
Swiss league their new home
range from Pierre-Marc
Bouchard to Cory Conacher to
former UMass-Amherst player
and Holliston native Greg
Mauldin. The league emphasizes pace, skill, and professionalism.
Matthews, however, is no
typical teen. As a 15-year-old,
the Scottsdale native had no
trouble acclimating to the National Team Development Program’s Under-17 club, the premier program for up-and-coming Americans. In 24 games
with the U-17s, Matthews had
12 goals and 21 assists, earning
a promotion to the Under-18
club. Matthews continued to
produce alongside older teammates such as Eichel, totaling
12 goals and 5 assists in 20
games.
In 2014-15, with teammates
BRUCE BENNETT/GETTY IMAGES
‘Auston Matthews
(above) is pretty
much the
complete package.’
DAN MARR,
NHL Central Scouting director
such as Eichel, Noah Hanifin,
and Dylan Larkin having aged
out of the NTDP and advancing
to standard pre-NHL proving
grounds (Boston University,
Boston College, and Michigan,
respectively), Matthews became the U-18 team’s centerpiece. He made his tor y by
amassing 116 points (55 goals,
61 assists) in 60 games, crushing Kane’s previous record of
102.
Matthews played in the
World Junior Championships, a
tournament usually dominated
by 19-year-olds. He skated
alongside Eichel, Hanifin, and
Larkin, who returned from
their college teams to play, scoring one goal and adding two assists in five games.
Thus the 17-year-old faced a
decision for 2015-16. Matthews
could report to Everett, the
Western Hockey League team
that drafted him in 2012. But
he determined that playing
against pimply pests would not
serve his game well. He also
considered Boston College, Boston University, Denver, Michigan, and North Dakota as oneand-done NCAA destinations.
But his camp deemed one year
of schoolwork not rich enough
as an NHL prep course.
So Matthews was, for once
in his hockey life, in an uncomfortable position: too old for the
NTDP, too good for junior hockey, too noncommittal toward
campus life, and too young for
the draft.
Upon reflection, Switzerland presented opportunities
that his other options did not.
By committing to Zurich, Matthews could learn under Crawford. Teammates with NHL experience included former NHL
first-rounder Robert Nilsson
and Ryan Shannon, BC’s cap-
tain in 2004-05. The prodigy
who always played against older players could do the same
against professionals responsible for mortgages and tuitions.
Matthews was too young to
start Zurich’s season. But once
he turned 18, he became eligible to play. And he did not disappoint.
He took a midseason reprieve to play with and against
his peers again in the World Juniors. In seven games, while
centering the Americans’ top
line between Matthew Tkachuk
a n d Ha n o v e r n at i v e Co l i n
White, Matthews collected seven goals and four assists.
By the time Matthews concluded his first professional
season in Switzerland, he had
racked up 24 goals and 22 assists in 36 games. His 1.28
points-per-game pace led Zurich. There was little doubt he
had made the right decision.
“He lived up to expectations,” Marr said. “Going over
there was an option for him
which he exercised.
“No one was going to say
he’d be one of the best players
in the league, one of the top
scorers in the league. That certainly wasn’t expected of any
18-year-old.
“But the fact that he went
over there and had success, I
don’t think that surprised anybody who watched him last
year.”
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A piece of the puzzle
Even before he landed in Zurich, Matthews was considered
2016’s first overall pick. So he
did not improve his draft standing with his Swiss season. But
he confirmed to the Maple
Leafs, owners of the No. 1 selection, that their miserable 201516 was worth submitting the
league’s worst record.
“Everybody here, they look
at it as they want to be the best
player they can be,” Matthews
said while attending last
month’s NHL Combine. “They
want to be drafted as high as
they can be. I look at it no differently.”
Matthews’s selection will not
complete Toronto’s reconstruction. The Leafs are still short of
pieces up front and on defense.
“They’re obviously going
through a rebuild,” Matthews
said. “But with the key pieces
they have, with the coach, GM,
and the prospects they have,
they’re definitely going to be a
very exciting team.”
While Matthews ripens under the guidance of coach Mike
Babcock, he will do so at the
same time as Mitch Marner,
William Nylander, and Kasperi
Kapanen, three of the organization’s brightest prospects. By
then, Nazem Kadri and Morgan
Rielly will be battle-tested veterans.
It’s also possible that Steven
Stamkos, this summer’s biggest
free agent catch, will be into his
re vival in Toronto. Jimmy
Vesey, whose father Jim is a To-
September 18, 2016
Spectacle Island
#IslandRun16
ronto scout and brother Nolan
is a 2014 draftee, could be on
Matthews’s left flank.
Since 2013, when they
flamed out against the Bruins
in the playoffs, the only sure
thing about the Leafs has been
their role as a p unch line.
Things are changing. In Matthews, Toronto has the Swiss
Can’t-Miss.
Fluto Shinzawa can be reached
at [email protected].
Follow him on Twitter
@GlobeFluto.
Fluto Shinzawa can be reached
at [email protected].
Follow him on Twitter
@GlobeFluto.
A 21+ Event
Matthews a step ahead of the game
Continued from Page D1
don’t reach.
The Bruins could take steps
to extend Bergeron’s window.
There is no need for him to
participate in another morning
skate. Practices should be optional.
Crossing their fingers could
help, too.
I
my job.
Nominate your
workplace now
BostonGlobe.com/nominate
Deadline Now Extended to June 24th
#WorkBoston
T h e
D8
B o s t o n
G l o b e
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Herb Chambers 83 Boston Post Rd., Rt 20, Sudbury
H11
866.258.0054 landroverofsudbury.com
790 Pleasant St. Rte. 60, Belmont
781-641-1900 buycitysidesubaru.com
J11
MetroWestSubaru.com*
LEXUS
Herb Chambers Lexus of Hingham
Rte. 9, Natick 508-651-2000
Best Service, Prices, Location
H13
141 Derby Street, Hingham 866-237-9636
www.herbchamberslexusofhingham.com
N15
Villagesubaru.com
61 Powdermill Rd., Acton
978-897-1128 [email protected]
Herb Chambers Lexus*
25 Providence Highway Rte 1 “The Automile” Sharon
K16
877.338.9671 herbchamberslexus.com
G8
TOYOTA
Lexus of Northborough*
ACURA
CHRYSLER
Acura of Boston*
Acton Chrysler Dodge Jeep Ram*
Bernardi Honda*
1600 Soldiers Field Rd., Brighton
617-254-5400 acuraofboston.com
196 Great Rd., Rt. 2A, Acton
888-871-3051 actonchrysler.com
300 Manley St., Brockton
888-988-2405 www.bernardihonda.com
L12
ALFA ROMEO
G8
Herb Chambers Chrysler - Danvers*
Boch Honda Westford*
107 Andover St, Rte 114, Danvers 877.831.2139
299 Littleton Rd, Westford
978-589-4200 bochhondawest.com
N7
Atlantic Toyota*
Rte. 9, Northborough
HONDA
D11
508-870-3222
M16
Bernardi Toyota*
1200 Worcester Rd., Rt. 9, Framingham
1-800-626-FORD framinghamford.com
1626 Worcester Rd., Framingham
508-879-1520 bernarditoyota.com
herbchamberschryslerofdanvers.com
2 Latti Farm Road, Millbury
877-875-5491 herbchambersfiat.com
Herb Chambers Chrysler-Millbury*
Boch Honda*
Herb Chambers Lincoln*
2 Latti Farm Rd, Rte 20, Millbury 888.293.8449
279 Boston Providence Hwy, RT 1, Norwood
888-364-2550 bochhonda.com
1130 Providence Hwy Rte 1 “The Automile” Norwood
855-278-0016 Herbchamberslincoln.com
N13
herbchamberschryslerofmillbury.com
AUDI
Audi Brookline* Herb Chambers
308 Boylston Street, Rte 9, Brookline
855.889.0843 audibrookline.com
Herb Chambers Honda Burlington*
353 Broadway, Route 1 North, Lynnfield
781-581-6000 kellyjeepchrysler.net
33 Cambridge St, Rt 3A, Burlington 877.842.0555
herbchambershondaofburlington.com
J8
L7
Herb Chambers Honda in Boston*
DODGE
1186 Commonwealth Ave, Boston 877.205.0986
Audi Burlington* Herb Chambers
Herb Chambers Dodge of Danvers*
J8
Audi Natick*
107 Andover St., Rte 114, Danvers 877.831.2139
herbchamberschryslerofdanvers.com
N7
Herb Chambers Dodge of Millbury *
549 Worcester St. (Rte. 9), Natick
508-651-0388 bernardiaudi.com
H13
2 Latti Farm Rd, Rte 20, Millbury 888.293.8449
herbchamberschryslerofmillbury.com
A16
Audi Shrewsbury
FERRARI
780 Boston Turnpike Rd Rt. 9 Shrewsbury
866-890-0081 wagneraudisales.com
B13
BMW
H11
BUICK
herbchambers.com
Herb Chambers Fiat of Worcester*
540 Lynnway, Rt. 1A, Lynn
781-595-5252 shopkellyhonda.com
A16
66 Galen St., Watertown
888-779-1378 buycolonialgm.com
L11
CADILLAC
G13
Herb Chambers Cadillac-Lynnfield*
75 Granite Street, Braintree 855.298.1177
395 Broadway, Rte 1 N, Lynnfield 866.233.8937
herbchambersfordofbraintree.com
L7
herbchamberscadillaclynnfield.com
1165 Mass. Ave., Arlington
Kelly Ford*
781-643-8000 mirakhyundai.com
978-922-0059 shopkellyford.com
N7
K10
N15
1198 Commonwealth Ave, Boston 855.857.4431
Colonial Buick-GMC*
herbchambersinfinitiofboston.com
M1
66 Galen St., Watertown
Herb Chambers Chevrolet*
90 Andover St., Rte 114, Danvers 877.206.9332
herbchamberschevrolet.com
INFINITI
Herb Chambers Infiniti of Boston*
GMC
128 Derby St., Exit 15 off Rte. 3, Hingham
888-779-1378 buycolonialgm.com
N7
Mercedes-Benz of Boston*
Herb Chambers, 259 McGrath Highway, Somerville
800.426.8963 mercedes-benzofboston.com M10
L11
HONDA
80 Cambridge Street (Rte 3A) Burlington, MA 01803
781-229-1600 www.mbob.com
J8
Rt. 9, Wellesley
781-237-2970
J12
Toyota/Scion of Watertown*
149 Arsenal St., Watertown
H13
L12
MINI COOPER
Exit 36 off Rte. 128, Woburn
781-933-1100 woburntoyota.com
VOLKSWAGEN
72 Andover St., Rte 114, Danvers
978-774-8000 kellyvw.net
M11
N7
Minuteman Volkswagen
39 North Road, Bedford
781-275-8000 minutemanvw.com
Colonial Nissan*
104 Mystic Ave., Medford
781-395-5300 buycolonialnissan.com
K9
Kelly Volkswagen*
Herb Chambers MINI of Boston*
I9
Wellesley Volkswagen*
L10
231 Linden St., Wellesley
781-237-3553 buywellesleyvw.com
J12
Kelly Nissan of Beverly*
420 Cabot St., Route 1A, Beverly
978-922-1405 nissanofbeverly.com
Herb Chambers Infiniti Westboro*
Kelly Nissan of Lynnfield*
312 Turnpike Rd, Rte 9, Westborough 855.878.9603
herbchambersinfinitiofwestborough.com
D13
275 Broadway - Rte. 1 North, Lynnfield
781-598-1234 kellynissanoflynnfield.com
Bernardi Honda*
Infiniti of Norwood
Kelly Nissan of Woburn*
960 Worcester Rd., Natick
508-651-3033 bernardihonda.com
Rt. 1, Automile, Norwood/Westwood
781-329-3040 infinitinorwood.com
95 Cedar St. Exit 36 off I93 & I95, Woburn
781-835-3500 kellynissanofwoburn.com
J14
Woburn Toyota
760 Boston Turnpike Rd Rt. 9 Shrewsbury
888-551-7134 mercedesbenzofshrewsbury.com B13
1125 Mass. Ave., Arlington
781-643-8000 mirakchevrolet.com
H13
N13
Toyota of Wellesley*
Mercedes-Benz of Natick*
Mirak Chevrolet*
K9
210 Union St., Exit 17 off Rt. 3, Braintree
781-848-9300 www.toyotaofbraintree.com
Mercedes-Benz of Burlington *
NISSAN
211 Rantoul Street Rte 1 A Beverly, MA 01915
Best Chevrolet
L7
herbchambersmini.com
Mirak Hyundai*
B15
Toyota of Braintree*
75 Otis St @ Rte 9, Westborough 877.564.1925
herbchambershyundaiofwestborough.com
D13
D13
Herb Chambers Toyota Scion*
herbchamberstoyotaofauburn.com
Herb Chambers Ford-Westborough*
herbchambersfordofwestborough.com
CHEVY
MERCEDES-BENZ
1168 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston 888.994.1075
1511 Bald Hill Road, Rte 2, Warwick, RI 877.206.0272
800-649-6781 bestchevyusa.com
B15
M11
809 Washington Street, Rte 20, Auburn 855.872.6999
Herb Chambers Hyundai Westboro*
310 Turnpike Rd., Rt 9, Westborough 877.207.6736
G24
N7
M13
Herb Chambers Cadillac-Warwick*
herbchamberscadillacofwarwick.com
Herb Chambers Hyundai of Auburn*
herbchambershyundaiofauburn.com
Herb Chambers Toyota Scion*
herbchamberstoyotaofboston.com
151 Andover St, Rte 114, Danvers
978-560-0007 www.kellymaserati.com
Mercedes-Benz of Shrewsbury*
M16
M11
32 Brighton Avenue, Boston 877.884.1866
Kelly Maserati*
Herb Chambers 253 North Main St, Natick
866.266.3870 mercedesbenzofnatick.com
735 Southbridge St, Rte 12&20, Auburn 888.318.7927
Herb Chambers Ford of Braintree*
I12
617-926-5200
N9
HYUNDAI
300 Manley St., Brockton
888-988-2402 www.BernardiHyundai.com
Framingham Ford/Lincoln*
1200 Worcester Rd., Rt. 9, Framingham
1-800-626-FORD framinghamford.com
J12
Bernardi Hyundai*
FORD
Colonial Buick-GMC*
531 Boston Post Rd, Rte 20, Wayland
866.622.0180 herbchambersmaserati.com
Herb Chambers, 385 Broadway Rt 1 N, Lynnfield
877.337.2442 flagshipmotorcars.com
Kelly Honda*
2 Latti Farm Road, Rte 20, Millbury
877.875.5491 fiatusaofworcesterma.com
herbchamberstoyotaofboston.com
Herb Chambers Maserati*
Flagship Motorcars of Lynnfield*
371 Washington Street, Newton Corner
888-511-5869 www.hondavillage.com
K14
32 Brighton Avenue, Boston 877.884.1866
D13
M10
277 Boston Providence Hwy, Norwood
866-500-2624 bochtoyota.com
Herb Chambers Toyota Scion*
MASERATI
350 Turnpike Rd., Rte 9 Westborough 877.207.0329
Honda Village*
Herb Chambers Fiat of Danvers*
Boch Toyota/Scion*
I22
Herb Chambers Honda Westboro*
100 Broadway Rt. 99, Everett
617-600-6045 hondacarsofboston.com
107 Andover Street, Rt 114, Danvers 877-831-2139
128 Boston Post Road, Rte 20, Sudbury
866.483.1828 bmwofsudbury.com
herbchambershondaofseekonk.com
441 Boston Providence Hwy, Rt1, Norwood
781-769-8800 autosportne.com
1168 Commonwealth Ave, Boston 866.803.9622
Herb Chambers BMW of Sudbury*
185 Taunton Av, Rte 44, Seekonk 877.851.3362
Honda Cars of Boston*
K14
M11
Herb Chambers Honda of Seekonk*
herbchambershondaofwestborough.com
FIAT
M11
herbchambershondainboston.com
Ferrari/Maserati/Autosports of NE*
Herb Chambers BMW of Boston*
herbchambersbmwofboston.com
K14
Kelly Chrysler*
L12
62 Cambridge Street, Rte 3A, Burlington
855.845.0576 audiburlington.com
A16
G12
G13
Herb Chambers Alfa Romeo*
A16
N9
LINCOLN
Framingham Ford/Lincoln*
F6
One the Lynnway, Lynn
781-599-4922 www.atlantictoyota.com
*For more information on this dealer, please visit boston.com/cars
Please call (617) 929-1314 to include your dealership in this directory.
VOLVO
P7
Herb Chambers Volvo of Norwood*
1120 Providence Hwy Rte 1 “The Automile” Norwood
L7
888.920.2902
volvoofnorwood.com
K14
Volvo of Wellesley*
L10
962 Worcester Rd., Rte. 9, Wellesley 781-235-8841
volvoofwellesley.com
J12
ThursdayScene
NIGHTLIFE
G
SOCIETY
STYLE
T H E B O S T O N G L O B E T H U R S DAY, J U N E 2 3 , 2 01 6 | B O S T O N G L O B E .C O M / L I F E S T Y L E
Prince
of pop
(culture)
Former rocker finds a home for his
whimsical collection of ’50s and ’60s curios
B Y J OA N A N D E R M A N | G L O B E C O R R E S P O N D E N T
P
PHOTOS BY CRAIG F. WALKER/GLOBE STAFF
Darren Hill, a former bass player and current band manager, in his space at POP in Providence that houses his
vintage collections, including a drum set featuring Gary Lewis and the Playboys.
ROVIDENCE — While the other kids were out shopping for new sneakers, young Darren Hill was dragging random stuff home from the side of the road in
New Orleans. He doesn’t know why, only that he
caught the collecting bug early. Later, when he was a
touring musician, Hill spent his down time on the
road scouring junk shops and flea markets for art,
furnishings, ephemera, curiosities, conversation pieces, he says, from
the archival to the absurd. It kept him out of trouble, but it also got him
into trouble. Over the years Hill had to rent one storage unit after another to house his swelling collection of pop culture artifacts.
He’s obsessed, clearly. But with what, exactly?
“I’ve always been fascinated with history and
preservation but there’s
also an element of P.T.
Barnum and Robert
Ripley,” says Hill. “The
offbeat and the eccentric. Later I became interested in good design.
There was so much of it
in the ’50s and ’60s,
Eames furniture and
automobiles and even
HILL, Page G7
ThursdayArts
Inside
Anderson connects
with his inner mom
By Nick A. Zaino III
GLOBE CORRESPONDENT
Family humor is Louie Anderson’s
specialty. For nearly four decades, he
has taken inspiration from his family
to make people laugh. In
COMEDY his first special, “Mom!
Louie’s Looking at Me
Again!” from 1989, he joked about his
mother trying to get everyone to eat
the “seven or eight hundred pounds of
s w e e t p o t a t o e s ” s h e’d m a d e f o r
Thanksgiving dinner. In his animated
show “Life With Louie” from the
mid-’90s, he found laughs in an unusually deep portrait of his hard-working but angry father.
“I re-create my family onstage in
the hopes that you’ll be able to re-create your family in the audience,” says
the 63-year-old comedian, speaking
from his home in Las Vegas. On Saturday, Anderson comes to Boston for a
ANDERSON, Page G3
PLATED
JAMAICAN FLAVORS
FRANK OCKENFELS/FX
When Nicola Williams founded
Boston JerkFest, she combined
her love of food with her
Caribbean roots
G2
Louie Anderson as Christine Baskets in FX’s “Baskets.”
ENROLL
TODAY!
BOSTON
NEWTON
NORTH SHORE
Programs for toddlers to adults
617.456.6333
A year of fun. A lifetime of memories.
www.bostonballet.org/school
Photo by Igor Burlak Photography
T h e
G2
B o s t o n
G l o b e
T H U R S D A Y, J U N E 2 3 , 2 0 1 6
Insider
FROM THE BAR
Going the
distance for
Italian red,
great with
saltimbocca
JUSTIN SAGLIO FOR THE BOSTON GLOBE
PLATED
NICOLA WILLIAMS OF BOSTON JERKFEST
A celebration
of Jamaican culture,
FUELED BY SCOTCH BONNETS
J
amaica native Nicola Williams founded Boston JerkFest — which takes place Friday and
Saturday at the South End’s Benjamin Franklin Institute of Technology — to combine her
love of food with her Caribbean roots. “I was
born in Jamaica, I’ve been in the Boston area for about
30 years so this my home, and it’s a way for me to celebrate my culture, where I am from, my music, and share
the experience of Jamaica and the Caribbean,” says the
event producer.
“I did some more research, and I found out that the
original home of jerk is in a place called Boston Beach,
in Jamaica. So that was like, ‘OK, that’s it.’ Our festival is
giving homage to the Boston JerkFest that happens in
Jamaica,” says Williams.
Now in its fourth year, the event has been expanded
to two days (with an added festival in Brattleboro, Vt., in
August) to bring even more Jamaican flavor to New
England. The event includes chef demonstrations, Caribbean cocktail competitions, live music, local vendors,
and a kids’ cultural area.
At the center of the extravaganza, is of course, Jamaican jerk. Williams explains that all jerk must have three
base ingredients — Scotch bonnet peppers, fresh thyme,
and allspice — but the blend can contain 20 or more
components. “You can add all kinds of things. Some
people add cinnamon, sugar, scallions . . . and you can
have a dry rub or jerk that is wet.”
But Williams insists there are no substitutes for the
Scotch bonnet. “ A lot of people say you can use habanero, but Scotch bonnet is really a unique pepper. Jamaicans know it, but the average person might not. It’s got
to look like a bonnet, so that’s how we distinguish it. It’s
DATA POINTS
a very flavorful pepper,” she says.
And according to Williams, you can jerk anything.
“Last year we had a cheesecake vendor who had a jerk
ganache sauce on cheesecake. You can jerk ice cream.
We are trying to push the envelope with jerk, even the
drinks as well.”
When it comes to jerking meat, she says the method
is as important as the ingredients. “We can’t do it like we
do in Jamaica, where we dig a pit, put a metal galvanized steel pan over it and grill it in the ground — can’t
do that. So [the vendors] come up with their own
drums, very innovative kind of replacements. They are
smoky, but once you taste [the jerk], it’s tender, it’s juicy,
it’s hot. It’s just right.”
This year the featured meat in the jerk cook-off is
Vermont Chevon goat; the local fish for a seafood throwdown will remain a mystery until the morning of the
event. “We partner with an organization called Northwest Atlantic Marine Alliance, and they are advocates
for local fisherfolk and their livelihood,” Williams says.
Keeping things local is very important to Williams,
who produces about five events a year, including the Hyper-Local Craft Brewfest and the Boston Local Food Festival, and is a board member of the Sustainable Business
Network.
Williams says she has repeat attendees from as far
away as Montreal, and even Japan, for the JerkFest.
“They were like, ‘Can you save a ticket for me?’ And I
said, ‘Sure we can save a ticket. You are coming all the
way from Tokyo!’”
Boston JerkFest, June 24-25, Benjamin Franklin Institute of Technology, 41 Berkeley St., Boston, www.bostonjerkfest.com
CATHERINE SMART
‘I think the
style is
starting to
gain some
acceptance.’
‘I
The number of Tuber species — otherwise known as truffles — found at the
Arnold Arboretum by a team of researchers, according to a study published this month. One of the truffles
is a new discovery. The team, fittingly,
named it Tuber arnoldianum.
Source: Mycorrhiza
effrey Cantella goes the extra mile to
source terrific pours. The wine and beverage director at Novara in East Milton
traversed Italy’s boot “from toe to top” to
meet vintners and select bottles for the
restaurant, located in a revamped space that once
housed Milton Cinema. One of those discoveries is
a 2013 Valpolicella Ripasso ($9 a glass, $32 a
bottle) from Veneto producer Remo Farina.
Cantella describes the corvina-rondinella blend as
“soft, velvety, and round” with added complexity
from a second fermentation on grape skins used to
make Amarone. Chicken saltimbocca is terrific
with this red. Executive chef Tony DeRienzo rolls
prosciutto, boneless breast meat, and Fontina
cheese into a bundle that goes into the oven. Slices
are plated on creamy risotto with mushrooms
sauced in veal demi-glace, and adorned with
crispy fried onions. The wine pro admires how the
pour’s robust fruit provides a counterpoint to the
salty cured meat in the dish. We’re impressed that
he logged some serious miles to pick this wine.
556 Adams St., East Milton, 617-696-8400,
www.novararestaurant.com
ELLEN BHANG
BOTTLES
It’s bubbly.
It’s pink.
And it’s
a beer.
SHUTTERSTOCK
J
ANNA IVANOVA FOR THE BOSTON GLOBE
t’s an odd style,” Long
Trail Brewing Company brewmaster Dave
Hartmann says of the
gose, a classic German
beer brewed with salt and coriander.
Hartmann got his first prolonged exposure to gose (pronounced “go-suh”) during a trip to
Germany in 2008. He’s wanted
Long Trail to make one ever since,
with an eye on the market and
drinkers’ evolving tastes.
“If you’re a brewery of a decent
size and you’re too far ahead of
the curve, people are wondering
what you’re thinking,” says Hartmann. “A few of the smaller guys
have been doing these for a couple
years. I think the style is starting
to gain some acceptance.”
Hartmann describes the gose
as having similar characteristics
to a wheat beer (some Belgian
wheat beers list coriander as an
ingredient). Unlike wheat beers,
goses are salty and tart, the latter
trait due to a fermentation with
lactobacillus. On the surface, the
combination doesn’t seem to
make sense.
“It’s a really interesting thing
that I don’t think you see in any
other beer style, but it really
works,” says Hartmann.
Long Trail recently announced
the release of a beer called Cran-
DAVE
HARTMANN,
Long Trail
Brewing Company
brewmaster
REGAN COMMUNICATIONS
DINING DECOR
WHERE Tonno in Gloucester. It’s the
latest restaurant from Anthony Caturano, chef at the North End’s Prezza.
berry Gose into its year-round
lineup. To put a New England
twist on the brew, the Bridgewater
Corner, Vt., brewery sources cranberries from Wareham’s Blue Water Farms, adding freshly pressed
juice into each batch.
On brew days, Hartmann says,
“the juice guy’s usually here sleeping at 6 in the morning in the cab
of his truck when we arrive.”
From there it gets tricky. Cranberry Gose is brewed through a
process called kettle souring;
Hartmann’s crew starts the brewing process, then lets the wort sit
in the tanks overnight, souring
the liquid with the natural microflora that come with the barley
and wheat malt. The next day the
batches are boiled with salt, hops,
and coriander. Cranberry juice
(“by itself it’s pretty acrid,” says
Hartmann) is added before the
beer hits the fermenter.
The resulting beer is showstoppingly pink, with vigorous bubbles shooting to the top of the
glass, as in a sparkling rosé. Part
sour and part briny, the beer
doesn’t reveal itself all at once,
though the coriander is immediately recognizable. As for the
cranberries, think Ocean Spray
without the sugar. It comes together, like Hartmann said it
would, to form a sophisticated,
much-less-sweet take on an alcopop.
Long Trail recommends you
drink the Cranberry Gose fresh,
though without a ton of hop character, the shelf life is a little longer
(120 days) than most beers. At
any rate, you’ll want to drink it
while the weather’s nice, preferably on a porch, with a view of tiny
pink bubbles fizzing away in your
glass.
GARY DZEN
WHAT A mermaid statue on the host
stand, holding business cards.
WHOSE IDEA Caturano’s restaurant
opened a few weeks ago, as did a
nearby antique shop, Brass Monkey,
which “specializes in all sorts of funky
garden sculptures and knick-knacks,”
Caturano says. So it was only right to
visit his new neighbor to perfect Tonno’s “clean but not intimidating” aesthetic. The seafood restaurant has a
nautical theme, including shots of old
fishermen and a large tuna mounted
on the wall. The waterfront suits Caturano just fine: His parents bought a
cottage here in the 1980s, and he
crashes there after 18-hour days instead of commuting home to Saugus.
“We have the new Brass Monkey, and
there’s a beautiful hotel across the
street, the Beauport. There’s a lot going on in Gloucester now,” he says.
2 Main St., Gloucester, 978-8794795, www.tonnorestaurant.com
KARA BASKIN
T h e
T H U R S D A Y, J U N E 2 3 , 2 0 1 6
B o s t o n
G l o b e
Anderson brings family with him onstage
ANDERSON
Sat., June 25
8pm & 10pm Fri., July 29
8pm & 10pm
NICHOLAS PAYTON DJANGO FESTIVAL ALLSTARS
Fri., August 5
8pm & 10pm
Thurs., June 30
8pm
BIG
BAD
MICHELLE WILLSON
VOODOO DADDY
& THE EVIL GAL
LOUIE ANDERSON
At the Wilbur Theatre,
Saturday at 7 p.m. Tickets:
$29, 617-248-9700,
www.thewilbur.com
Continued from Page G1
show at the Wilbur Theatre.
In January, he was introduced as part of a new TV family as Christine Baskets on the
FX show “Baskets,” which was
co-created by Zach Galifianakis,
Louis C.K., and director/writer
Jonathan Krisel. Galifianakis
plays Chip Baskets, who flunks
out of clown school in Paris and
can only find work as a rodeo
clown in his hometown of Bakersfield.
A n d e r s o n d o e s n’ t p l a y
Christine as a campy drag character. He doesn’t raise the pitch
of his voice or change it in any
way. Christine is a real person
to Anderson, partly because she
is an homage to his own mother.
“I’m Chip Baskets’s mother,”
he says matter-of-factly. “I’m
very concerned with my family
and my sons, and I take it very
seriously. This character’s had a
life. T his charac ter ’s been
through a lot. This character is
just beginning her journey on
TV.”
Anderson is already looking
forward to shooting season two
in September (“Next year is going to be unbelievable.”) He
says when he was offered the
role, he was thrilled that he’d
get to work with such relevant
comics as C.K. and Galifiankis.
He was even more thrilled
when they told him what the
role would be and he accepted
immediately, even though he
knew nothing about the producers’ intentions. “I knew exactly what I would do with it.
What they were thinking of doing with it was insignificant to
me.”
When he is on set, he comes
in early and gets into his wardrobe and makeup and stays in
character until he leaves. “My
main goal in the role is to make
Louie Anderson disappear in
the part,” he says. “As soon as
someone puts lipstick on your
lips, your first thing is to make
sure it looks good. And so you
purse your lips and you look at
yourself. And when you’re in
the full garb, you look at your-
sCullers jazz Club
G3
Call for Tickets & Info at: 617-562-4111
Dinner/Show Packages available. Also In-Club menu.
Order on-line at www.scullersjazz.com
BLUES FESTIVAL
Fri., August 12
DIANE SCHUUR
Fri., July 1
Sat., August 13
8pm
ELAN TROTMAN
RACHELLE FERRELL
I re-create my
family onstage in
the hopes that
you’ll be able to recreate your family
in the audience.’
LOUIE ANDERSON
self and say, ‘I make a pretty
good woman.’”
As much as he throws himself into the character, he has a
detached feeling when he
watches the show later. “When
I look at that charac ter, it
doesn’t feel like me at all,” he
says. “And so I think I accomplished what I was supposed to.
I don’ t know how I accomplished it. I’m just brilliant,” he
says with a hearty laugh.
He’s been laughing more
these days. He says nothing was
more fun than being a comic in
the 1980s and breaking
through with the likes of Roseanne Barr and Bob Saget. But
he finds he can relax and be
himself a bit more these days. “I
think people realize that, to be
who you are and to be true to
yourself is really fun,” he says. “I
think I’m laughing a lot more
and smiling a lot more at life
than I used to. I used to take it
all too serious.”
He’s now working on mate-
rial for his sixth special, which
he may tape at his New Year’s
Eve show at the Ames Center in
Burnsville, Minn., not far from
his hometown of St. Paul. He’s
done the show every year as a
tribute to his mother since her
death in 1990.
It may be Anderson’s last
stand-up special, although he
doesn’t know for sure. The process of creating an hour of new
material is stressful. “You have
to do an hour that’s really five
hours,” he says, “sifting through
five hours of stuff you discarded
and threw away because it
wasn’t good enough to present
on a piece of tape that would be
there forever.”
A lot of his older material
has resonated with fans. He’s
flattered when someone comes
up and says their family quotes
the sweet potato line every year
at holiday gatherings. “I didn’t
know I was invited to so many
Thanksgiving dinners,” he says.
His family struggles are
well-documented. He wrote
about his father’s abuse and alcoholism in his 1989 memoir,
“Dear Dad: Letters From an
Adult Child.” But he chose to
turn the pain into something
positive in his comedy. “I’m optimistic, I’m hopeful, I think
that’s who I am,” he says. He’s
thankful for his experiences,
good and bad.
“Look what it gave me,” he
says. “I was able to use my skill
that was given to me to refine
this really harsh, rotgut moonshine into something I find
quite beautiful.”
Nick A. Zaino III can be
reached at nick@nickzaino
.com.
Access your Globe account online
at bostonglobe.com/subscriber
LowellSummerMusic.org
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T H U R S D A Y, J U N E 2 3 , 2 0 1 6
TheWeek Ahead
MUSIC
Pop & Rock
DEERHOOF
Hot on the heels of “Balter/Saunier,” an arrestingly gorgeous collaboration with Chicago new-music ensemble Dal Niente, this inimitable quartet comes to town
heralding “The Magic,” its newest
collection of tunefully itchy artpop gems, which arrives the same
day. June 24, 8 p.m. $16. Brighton Music Hall. 617-653-8000,
www.ticketmaster.com
FLAG
Whatever one makes of the turmoil continually afflicting the
iconic hardcore-punk band Black
Flag, there’s no denying the abrasive catharsis songs like “Gimmie
Gimmie Gimmie,” “TV Party,” and
“My War” provide — and no better way to hear them played right
than by ex-members Keith Morris, Dez Cadena, Chuck Dukowski, and Bill Stevenson, joined by
Descendents guitarist Stephen
Egerton. June 26, 7 p.m. $28,
advance $25. The Sinclair,
Cambridge. 617-547-5200,
www.sinclaircambridge.com
STEVE SMITH
Folk & World
USTAD NASEERUDDIN SAAMI
AND THE SAAMI BROTHERS
The family of Pakistan’s legendary classical vocalist traces its
musical lineage some 800 years
back. Sammi is joined by his four
sons and by tabla player Nitin
Mitta for an afternoon of qawwali, the devotional music that
draws on the mystical poetry of
Sufism. June 26, 3 p.m. Free with
museum admission. Peabody Essex Museum, Salem. 978-5421511, www.pem.org
DENNIS STROUGHMATT AND
HIS HONKY TONK CIRCUS
A nice Sunday afternoon drive
with some western swing at the
end of it, courtesy of a man who’s
doing his part to keep the style
alive. Stroughmatt’s show celebrates the release of his latest record, a tribute to the legendary
Ray Price and his band, the Cherokee Cowboys. June 26, 4 p.m.
$20. German Club, Pawtucket,
R.I. 401-965-0849. www.sals
productions.com
PROMISED LAND SOUND
+ STEVE GUNN
“For Use and Delight,” the latest
record from Promised Land
Sound, shows the Nashville band
expanding its country-rock template to include ’70s-redolent
psychedelica and American Primitive-style acoustic fingerpicking,
among other things. Also playing:
prolific, collaborative singersongwriter and guitar wizard
Steve Gunn, with a band he’s
Jazz & Blues
DANE VANNATTER
The cabaret singer with the
swinging touch celebrates his latest critically acclaimed disc, “Give
Me Something Real,” featuring
engaging interpretations of tunes
by writers ranging from Billy
Strayhorn to Leonard Cohen.
June 24, 7:30 p.m. $20. Regattabar, Cambridge. 617-395-7757,
www.regattabarjazz.com
Classical
ROCKPORT CHAMBER MUSIC
FESTIVAL
Next up at the charming seaside
festival: a solo recital by pianist
George Li (Thursday); an evening
of piano trios with David Deveau,
violinist Andres Cardenes, and
cellist Anne Martindale Williams
(Friday); and a recital by the New
York Philharmonic’s new concertmaster, Frank Huang, with pianist Gilles Vonsattel (Saturday).
Shalin Liu Performance Center,
Rockport. 978-546-7391,
www.rockportmusic.org
SICK PUPPY
This annual new-music seminar
at New England Conservatory
draws its memorable nickname
from its acronym, SICPP, or the
Summer Institute for Contemporary Performance Practice. Vinko
Globokar is this year’s composerin-residence, and his works are
featured in free performances at
NEC’s Jordan Hall on Thursday
Win Four
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for July 16 & 17 to
OUTSIDE THE BOX
BOSTON’S PREMIER
PERFORMING ARTS FESTIVAL
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JULY 13-17
EXPLODE EVERY DAY:
AN INQUIRY INTO THE
PHENOMENA OF WONDER
More than 20 contemporary artists from the United States, as
well as Canada and France, feature in an ambitious show designed to explore — and activate!
— the condition of wonder. Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art, 1040 Mass MoCA Way,
North Adams. 413-662-2111,
www.massmoca.org
Dance
ASPEN SANTA FE BALLET
Jacob’s Pillow Dance Festival
opens its season with the return
of a festival favorite. Known for
presenting works that fluidly
shift between contemporary and
classical aesthetics, the company
offers a program featuring Alejandro Cerrudo’s “Silent Ghost,”
Fernando Melo’s “Re:play,” and
Cayetano Soto’s “Huma Rojo.”
June 22-26, $45-$75. Jacob’s Pillow Dance Festival, Becket. 413243-0745, www.jacobspillow.org
CHARLIE KOHLHASE
& THE TRIOS X2
Adventurous multi-saxophonist
Kohlhase performs with two simpatico groups: one with drummer
Devin Drobka, the other, Pocket
Aces, including guitarist Eric
Hofbauer and drummer Curt
Newton, and both featuring bassist Aaron Darrell. June 24, 8 p.m.
$15. Third Life Studio, Somerville. www.thirdlifestudio.com
DOR HERSKOVITS TRIO:
A TRIBUTE TO CONLON
NANCARROW
Israeli drummer Herskovits and
Americans Isaac Wilson (piano)
and Max Ridley (bass) bonded as
students in Boston, and play together to this day in the tradition
of such piano-trio trailblazers as
Ahmad Jamal, Keith Jarrett, and
the Bad Plus. This gig debuts
their arrangements of Conlon
Nancarrow’s Studies for Player
Piano, which combine blues, jazz,
and Latin American melodies
with mind-blowingly complex
rhythms. June 26, 10 p.m. $10.
Lily Pad, Cambridge. 617-3951393, www.lilypadinman.com
KEVIN LOWENTHAL
Museums
special effects to speak of in Spiro
Veloudos’s high-spirited, lowtech, hard-to-resist production,
unless you consider charm to be a
special effect. Added bonus: The
return to a Boston stage of the
gifted Erica Spyres. Through June
26. Lyric Stage Company of Boston. 617-585-5678, www.lyric
stage.com
DON AUCOIN
dubbed the Outliners. June 29,
9 p.m. $12. Great Scott. 800-7453000. www.ticketmaster.com
STUART MUNRO
DANIEL DORSA
Quilt + Widowspeak
Wistful, dreamy songs from wandering minstrels is tonight’s
theme, brought to you by Quilt (pictured), a Boston band that
scattered to assorted points in New York, and Widowspeak, a
Brooklyn duo that relocated to Tacoma. Show up in time to see
opener Doug Tuttle, whose sweetly harmonized psych-rock
style prompts bliss. June 24, 8 p.m. $15. The Sinclair,
Cambridge. 617-547-5200, www.sinclaircambridge.com
STEVE SMITH
and Friday. Saturday in Brown
Hall, the festival culminates in a
six-hour-plus marathon concert
aptly dubbed the “Iditarod.” 617585-1122, www.sicpp.org
ASTON MAGNA
The festival premieres a new
work for period instruments by
Alex Burtzos on a program that
also includes works by Handel,
Corelli, Purcell, and Leclair. June
23, 7 p.m., Slosberg Music Center.
888-492-1283, www.aston
magna.org JEREMY EICHLER
ARTS
Theater
MATILDA THE MUSICAL
While it’s not as consistently
transporting as the Broadway
production, the distinctive
strengths of this rich, dark, and
satisfyingly strange musical adaptation of Roald Dahl’s children’s novel still come through,
including a superbly varied score
by composer-lyricist Tim
Minchin. There are strong performances by 9-year-old Sarah
McKinley Austin as Matilda (the
role rotates among several young
performers) and Dan Chameroy
as the bonkers Miss Trunchbull.
Through June 26. Production by
Royal Shakespeare Company and
the Dodgers presented by Broadway In Boston at Boston Opera
House. 800-982-2787,
www.broadwayinboston.com
I WAS MOST ALIVE WITH YOU
The world premiere of Craig Lucas’s intricate, frequently absorbing, occasionally sluggish new
drama, enacted in spoken word
and American Sign Language,
about the struggles of a Southern
California family to cope and to
communicate when adversity
hits, and hits, and hits again.
Through June 26. Huntington
Theatre Company at Wimberly
Theatre, Calderwood Pavilion,
Boston Center for the Arts. 617266-0800, www.huntington
theatre.org
PETER AND
THE STARCATCHER
Turns out there is a cure for Peter
Pan fatigue, and it can be found
in Rick Elice’s whimsical, familyfriendly prequel, which explores
how an unnamed orphan was
transformed into The Boy Who
Wouldn’t Grow Up. There are no
French Table Linens
Warehouse Sale Event
Wednesday, June 22nd through
Saturday, June 25th
10-5 daily
VIP passes include:
SPLENDOR, MYTH, AND
VISION: NUDES FROM THE
PRADO
Twenty-eight Old Master paintings, all representing the nude,
on loan from Spain’s great museum. Includes work by Titian, Tintoretto, Rubens, Velazquez, Ribera, and Poussin. All but four
have never previously been seen
in the United States. The Clark is
the show’s only venue. Through
Oct. 10. Clark Art Institute, 225
South St., Williamstown. 413458-2303. www.clarkart.edu
2ND FESTIVAL OF US & YOU
& WE & THEM
For this three-day fest, the Dance
Complex aims to open its doors
wide to bring the greater community in for a variety of free classes,
rehearsals, installations, and
pop-up performances. The more
formal ticketed concerts happen
each evening with a rotating cast
of performers, including Kairos
Dance Theater and EgoArt Inc.
June 24-26, $12-$17. Dance Complex, Cambridge. 617-547-9363,
www.dancecomplex.org
GRANDMA MOSES:
AMERICAN MODERN
More than 60 paintings and
works on paper by the legendary
self-taught artist, who is presented here in a context of developments in Modernism, alongside
work by other 19th- and 20thcentury folk and modern artists.
Through Oct. 30. Shelburne Museum, 6000 Shelburne Road,
Shelburne, Vt. 802-985-3346,
www.shelburnemuseum.org
SEBASTIAN SMEE
JUAN SIDDI FLAMENCO
SANTA FE
Flamenco fans will want to head
to the Berkshires next week as
this New Mexico-based troupe of
14 dancers and musicians presents six works showcasing flamenco that fuses the traditional
with the contemporary, drawing
on the dance form’s deep multicultural roots. June 22-26,
$25-$45. Jacob’s Pillow Dance
Festival, Becket. 413-243-0745,
www.jacobspillow.org
KAREN CAMPBELL
EVENTS
Comedy
J.B. SMOOVE
There are few comics more ballistic than Smoove, who played Leon on “Curb Your Enthusiasm”
and hosted the eighth season of
“Last Comic Standing.” Show rescheduled from April. June 24,
7:30 p.m. $37. Wilbur Theatre,
246 Tremont St., Boston. 617248-9700, www.thewilbur.com
Galleries
ARTIE JANUARIO
There is probably no funnier
pharmacist in stand-up than Januario, who sometimes wears the
lab coat from his day job onstage.
With Steve Bjork and Steve Halligan. June 24-25, 8:30 p.m. $20.
Giggles Comedy Club, 517 Broadway (Route 1), Saugus. 781-2339950, www.gigglescomedy.com
ROBIN RHODE
This South African artist makes
chalk drawings on the streets of
Johannesburg. Performers play
with the drawings — a basketball
hoop, a bicycle — as if they’re
real. Rhode records the interactions for his charming stop-motion animations. Three are on
view. Through July 9. Rosebud,
683 Main St., Waltham. 781-7363434, www.brandeis.edu/rose/
bud.html
THE LADIES ROOM
A showcase of female comedians
from the New England region,
starring Sue Schmidt, Julee Antonellis, Jennifer Myszkowski, Erin
Spencer, Mariel Cabral, and
Kathe Farris. Presented by the
Boston Comedy Project. June 25,
7 p.m. $12. ImprovBoston, 40
Prospect St., Cambridge. 617-5761253, www.improvboston.com
NICK A. ZAINO III
RESPONDING TO PLACE
For this exhibition rooted in plein
air painting, seven notable artists
— including John Walker, Lois
Dodd, and Wolf Kahn — tapped
some of their favorite painters to
join the show. Through Aug. 13.
Concord Center for the Visual
Arts, 37 Lexington Road, Concord. 978-369-2578,
www.concordart.org
Family
¯\_( )_/¯ (THE SHRUG SHOW)
Nine artists examine the ramifications and meanings of the
emoticon that signifies a shrug:
digital communication across
languages, a copy-and-paste reflex with repercussions for making original art, and the ubiquity
of this symbol of ambivalence.
Through July 9. Dorchester Art
Project, 1486 Dorchester Ave.,
www.dorchesterartproject.org
CATE McQUAID
PHANTOM GOURMET BBQ AND
COUNTRY FEST
Masters of meat from Texas to
Australia descend on Rochester
Fairgrounds for this three-day
slew of ‘que. If that’s not your
scene, there’s also pig racing, a
packed bill of country music, and
a ride called “Swamp Gator.” If
that’s not your scene, stay home
and be boring. June 24-26, 11
a.m.-8 p.m. $5. Rochester FairContinued on next page
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T h e
T H U R S D A Y, J U N E 2 3 , 2 0 1 6
B o s t o n
G l o b e
G5
Dining Guide
Continued from preceding page
grounds, 72 Lafayette St., Rochester, N.H. 603-332-6585.
phantomgourmetbbq.com
MONSTER FUN DAY
This first-ever Sox fan shindig
promises the Yawkey Way experience without the mob of the Fenway, including food, live music,
and an “autograph alley” featuring Red Sox royalty. June 25,
11 a.m.-3 p.m. Free. Hunnewell
Field, 438 Washington St.,
Wellesley. 617-779-3500.
www.monsterfunday.com
DINING OUT
CHEAP EATS
These reviews have appeared in the
Globe’s Food section recently.
SILLARI’S PIZZA
Come to this sparkling new takeout spot in
Malden for brick-oven pies, chicken tenders, and
fries. What the menu lacks in options it more
than makes up for in execution, with exceptional
pizza at affordable prices. 97 Medford St.,
Malden, 781-605-1445, www.sillarispizza.com
(6/22/16)
CATHERINE SMART
SIXTH GEAR CASK & KITCHEN
The newest contender for South
Boston’s most startling symbol of
gentrification. This steampunkthemed restaurant serves water in lab
flasks, its menu careens from honeydew gazpacho to mango tandoori
soup, and dessert is topped with basil
whipped cream. Not your grandfather’s Southie. Sixth Gear does best
when it focuses on the basics. But in
trying to be all things to all people, its
aspirations are exceeding its abilities
and its identity is becoming blurred.
81 L St., South Boston, 617-765-8836,
www.sixthgearboston.com (6/15/16)
SACHA PFEIFFER
MONSTER JAM
A note to kids: any parent who
says they’re not interested in the
calamitous carnage and dizzying
decibels of the major league of
monster trucks is lying to you. Do
them a favor and insist you go
early, since from 1:30-4:30 p.m.
the “Party in the Pits” will give
you up-close access to Grave Digger, Carolina Crusher, and more.
June 25, 1:30-9 p.m. $10-25.
Gillette Stadium, 1 Patriot Place,
Foxborough. 800-543-1776.
www.monsterjam.com/events/
foxboro-ma JOE INCOLLINGO
FLANK
High concept and high testosterone,
Flank is fixing to modernize the traditional “beefsteak” banquet -- an allmale, no-utensils meat feast. Flank
allows women and forks, and adds a
top-notch beverage operation, with a
truly impressive wine list and a creative cocktail program. But the exorbitantly expensive beefsteak dinners
sometimes suffer from shaky execution. 74 Tower Road, Waltham, 781893-5265, www.flankwaltham.com
(6/8/16)
NESTOR RAMOS
MARK YOUR
CALENDAR
JULY 5-17 If/Then at Boston Opera House boston.broadway.com
JULY 9 The Beach Boys at Wilbur
Theatre www.ticketmaster.com
JULY 14 Bob Dylan and Mavis
Staples at Blue Hills Bank Pavilion
concerts.livenation.com
JULY 15 Modest Mouse and
Brand New at Xfinity Center concerts.livenation.com
JULY 17 Paul McCartney at Fenway Park mlb.com
JULY 18 Amanda Palmer at Lexington First Parish Church
www.eventbrite.com
JULY 21 M83 at Blue Hills Bank
Pavilion concerts.livenation.com
JOE INCOLLINGO
SRV
Styled after a bacaro, one of Venice’s
hideaway wine bars, SRV — shorthand for Most Serene Republic of Venice — offers up more than just wellpriced cocktails and seriously tasty
bar snacks called cicchetti. The two
dining areas thrum with mellow ’90s
hip-hop and reinvigorated Venetian
classics as orchestrated by an inspired
front of the house. And seasonality is
deployed through much of the menu,
an awareness that makes the nostalgic
project of Boston-in-Venice feel more
like a lively reconfiguring of Bostonin-June. 569 Columbus Ave., South
End, Boston, 617-536-9500, www.srv
boston.com (6/1/16) TED WEESNER
LA CASCIA’S
This traditional Italian bakery tempts you with
cookies, cakes, and pastry, and thick, satisfying
slices of Sicilian-style pizza. Italian subs on freshbaked bread have their own following.
418 Main St., Medford, 781-396-5041,
www.lacasciasbakery.com (6/22/16)
CATHERINE SMART
CRAIG F. WALKER/GLOBE STAFF
The Townshend
There’s a revolution afoot in the City of Presidents, with a swiftly
developing restaurant scene. The Townshend is at the fore, with its
well-crafted menu that specializes in sustainable fish dishes and
handmade pastas, plus a hospitality team with serious pedigree
(Island Creek Oyster Bar, Sportello). Pictured: pan-seared trout.
1250 Hancock St, Quincy, 617-481-9694,
www.thetownshend.com (6/22/16) JANELLE NANOS
TRUE BISTRO
At this small, plant-based, white linen
tablecloth restaurant in Teele Square,
Somerville, chef Stuart Reiter uses a
cornucopia of vegetables, fruits, herbs,
beans, nuts, and proteins like tempeh,
seitan, and tofu to create dishes designed to please veg and non-veg palates alike. It’s an oasis of sophisticated
and delicious dining that just so happens to be vegan. 1153 Broadway,
Teele Square, Somerville, 617-6279000, www.truebistroboston.com
(5/25/16)
MAT SCHAFFER
OISHII BOSTON
Oishii offers up radically different
routes to Japanese-style dining pleasure. You can go the way of razzle-dazzle, which includes (literally) smoke,
fire, and ice, or take the quieter, if
more spectacular, path via chef’s
choice sushi and sashimi. The backdrop: low-lit, invigoratingly severe,
including a soundtrack of eclectic
lounge that turns into thumpy dance
as the night goes on. 1166 Washington St., South End, Boston, 617-4828868, www.oishiiboston.com
(5/18/16)
TED WEESNER
TRUE WEST BREWERY
At True West, a new brewery and farm-to-table
restaurant in West Acton, choose from a dozen
made-on-premises beers like a Belgian wheat
ale, a red IPA, or a smoked porter while noshing
on hand-crafted fare. Dig into a chorizo flatbread
(great for sharing), potato “tots” with housemade ketchup, and a burger called The Spicy
Pig, a beef patty with pork chili.
525 Massachusetts Ave., West Acton, 978-2061600, www.brewtruewest.com (6/15/16)
ELLEN BHANG
STOKED WOOD FIRED PIZZA CO.
Stoked pizza truck is now a brick-and-mortar in
Washington Square, Brookline, where they’re
making pies based on a chewy, full-flavored,
long-rise dough that is charred on the bottom
(and cooked through!), along with a few
appetizers that include delicious meatballs in a
light tomato sauce. The place is already crowded,
but you can get a drink at the bar while you wait
and watch the action at the wood-fired oven.
1632 Beacon St., Washington Square, Brookline,
617-879-0707, www.stokedpizzaco.com (6/8/16)
SHERYL JULIAN
WUBURGER
Come for the boozy milkshakes; stay for the
fresh, juicy burgers. This friendly, casual local
chain serves homemade versions of fast-food
favorites like double cheeseburgers, chili dogs,
and waffle fries, along with a menu of fun frozen
cocktails.1128 Cambridge St., Inman Square,
Cambridge, 617-945-1703, www.wuburger.com
(6/1/16)
CATHERINE SMART
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Capeside Interiors
1245 Main Street
Chatham, MA 02633
508-945-3144
Dreamscapes Of Boston
Shop At Home
Hull, MA 02045
617-957-6733
Interior Design Services
Shiretown Glass & Home
The Curtain Company
55 Washington Street
Pembroke, MA 02358
781-826-3144
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186 Standish Avenue
Plymouth, MA 02360
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shiretownglass.com
108 North Street
Hingham, MA 02043
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Irving’s Home Center
Shutter Up
10 N. Main Street
Brockton, MA 02301
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irvinghomecenter.com
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Hanover, MA 02339
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Hull, MA 02045
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Nancy Kelly Interiors
433 Main Street
Chatham, MA 02633
508-945-4040
simplerpleasures.com
Simpler Pleasures
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Sarah Blackwell Window Treatments
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Eastham, MA 02642
508-255-6221
The Window Shop
Village Interiors
764 Country Way
Scituate, MA 02066
781-545-0589
W.T.I.N.E
Shop At Home
East Taunton, MA 02718
508-884-5000
*Manufacturer’s mail-in rebate offer valid for qualifying purchases made 7/2/16–9/12/16 from participating dealers in the U.S. only. For certain rebate-eligible
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T h e
G6
INFO VALID 6/23/16 ONLY
()
G
5
8
6
I
DOL
DIG
DSS
K
Bargain show thimes are shown in
parentheses
Restrictions apply/No Passes
Handicapped accessible
Stadium Seating
Hearing Impaired
Rear Window Captioning
Dolby Stereo
Digital Sound
Dolby Surround Sound
NEW ENGLAND AQUARIUM
SIMONS IMAX THEATRE
Central Wharf 617-973-5200
5 8 DIG
NEAQ.org
SECRET OCEAN 3D (NR) 10:00, 1:00
GALAPAGOS 3D: NATURE'S WONDERLAND (NR)
11:00, 2:00, 4:00
HUMPBACK WHALES 3D (NR) 12:00, 3:00, 5:00
Descriptive Video Service
The Boston Globe Movie Directory is a paid
advertisement. Listing appear at the sole discretion
of each cinema. Towns may appear out of alphabetical order so that listings will remain unbroken from
column to column
ARLINGTON
CAPITOL THEATRE
204 Massachusetts Avenue 781-648-4340
6
CapitolTheatreOnline.com
A LEAGUE OF THEIR OWN (PG) 7:30
THE ANGRY BIRDS MOVIE (PG) 5:00
FINDING DORY (PG) 2:30, 5:00, 7:15
FINDING DORY 3D (PG) 3:30, 6:30
FRIED GREEN TOMATOES (PG-13) 9:55
LOVE & FRIENDSHIP (PG) 2:30
THE NICE GUYS (R) 4:40, 7:20
WARCRAFT (PG-13) 4:00
BELLINGHAM
REGAL CINEMAS BELLINGHAM 14
Exit 18 Off Of 495 508-966-5096
5 6 8 DIG
REGAL CINEMAS FENWAY 13 & RPX
201 Brookline Avenue 617-424-6266
5 6 8 I K DIG
INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE (PG-13) Advance
Tickets Available 8:00, 9:30
INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE 3D (PG-13)
Advance Tickets Available 8:10, 10:00
FREE STATE OF JONES (R) Advance Tickets Available
7:00, 10:15
INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE (PG-13) Advance
Tickets Available RPX8:20
INDEPENDENCE DAY DOUBLE FEATURE (NR) Advance Tickets Available 5:00
THE SHALLOWS (PG-13) Advance Tickets Available
7:00, 9:40
CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE (PG-13) (10:45, 1:35) 4:25,
10:30
FINDING DORY (PG) (10:30, 1:15) 4:00, 6:45, 10:50
FINDING DORY 3D (PG) (11:00, 1:45) 4:30, 7:15,
10:10
BRAINTREE
AMC BRAINTREE
121 Grandview Road
5 6 DIG
FREE STATE OF JONES (R) Advance Tickets Available
7:15, 10:35
INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE (PG-13) Advance
Tickets Available 8:00
DCI 2016 TOUR PREMIERE (NR) Advance Tickets
Available 8:30
INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE 3D (PG-13)
Advance Tickets Available 10:30
INDEPENDENCE DAY DOUBLE FEATURE (NR) Advance Tickets Available 5:00
THE SHALLOWS (PG-13) Advance Tickets Available
7:45, 10:35
CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE (PG-13) (1:00, 3:45) 7:00,
10:05
FINDING DORY (PG) (1:15, 1:35, 4:20) 7:15, 7:35,
10:15
FINDING DORY 3D (PG) (12:55, 3:40, 4:00) 6:55,
9:35, 9:55
NOW YOU SEE ME 2 (PG-13) (12:45, 4:10) 7:25,
10:40
THE CONJURING 2 (R) (12:35, 4:05) 7:20, 10:35
WARCRAFT (PG-13) (4:15) 7:30
WARCRAFT 3D (PG-13) (12:50) 10:30
ME BEFORE YOU (PG-13) (1:05, 4:25)
TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE
SHADOWS (PG-13) (1:10)
X-MEN: APOCALYPSE (PG-13) (12:40, 3:55) 7:10
ALICE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS (PG) (1:20,
4:35)
THE ANGRY BIRDS MOVIE (PG) (1:30, 4:45)
CAPTAIN AMERICA: CIVIL WAR (PG-13) (12:30,
3:50) 7:05, 10:20
THE JUNGLE BOOK (PG) (1:25, 4:40)
amctheatres.com
BELMONT STUDIO
376 Trapelo Road (Bus 73) 617-484-1706
StudioCinema.com
FINDING DORY (PG) 1:30, 3:30, 5:30, 7:30
BERLIN
REGAL CINEMAS SOLOMON POND MALL 15
Exit 25-B Off Route 290 508-229-8871
5 6 8 DIG
RegalShowtimes.com
DCI 2016 TOUR PREMIERE (NR) Advance Tickets
Available 8:30
FREE STATE OF JONES (R) Advance Tickets Available
7:00, 10:10
INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE (PG-13) Advance
Tickets Available 8:30
INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE 3D (PG-13)
Advance Tickets Available 8:00
THE SHALLOWS (PG-13) Advance Tickets Available
7:30, 9:55
INDEPENDENCE DAY DOUBLE FEATURE (NR) Advance Tickets Available 5:00
CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE (PG-13) (1:05) 4:10, 7:20,
10:10
FINDING DORY (PG) (11:30, 1:20, 3:30) 4:50, 6:45,
7:45, 9:30
FINDING DORY 3D (PG) (12:30, 2:05) 4:30, 7:15,
10:00, 10:30
NOW YOU SEE ME 2 (PG-13) (11:50, 3:40) 7:05,
10:05
THE CONJURING 2 (R) (11:55, 3:45) 7:25, 9:55
WARCRAFT (PG-13) (12:35) 4:15, 7:25, 10:15
WARCRAFT 3D (PG-13) (3:20) 6:50, 9:45
ME BEFORE YOU (PG-13) (12:50, 3:50) 7:10, 10:25
TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE
SHADOWS (PG-13) (1:25)
TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE
SHADOWS 3D (PG-13) 4:20
ALICE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS (PG) (12:00)
4:00
MAGGIE'S PLAN (R) (12:15)
X-MEN: APOCALYPSE (PG-13) (11:40, 3:10)
THE ANGRY BIRDS MOVIE (PG) (1:00, 3:55)
CAPTAIN AMERICA: CIVIL WAR (PG-13) (12:20,
3:00)
THE JUNGLE BOOK (PG) (12:45)
BOSTON
PARAMOUNT CENTER
ARTSEMERSON: THE WORLD ON STAGE
559 Washington Street 617-824-8000
INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE (PG-13) 8:30,
11:00
INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE 3D (PG-13)
RealD 3D 8:00, 10:30
INDEPENDENCE DAY DOUBLE FEATURE (NR) 5:00
BROOKLINE
COOLIDGE CORNER THEATRE
290 Harvard Street 617-734-2500
5 6
coolidge.org
THE LOBSTER (R) 1:30, 4:15, 7:00, 9:30
LOVE & FRIENDSHIP (PG) 2:15, 4:30, 9:15
WEINER (R) 2:30, 4:45, 7:30, 9:45
MAGGIE'S PLAN (R) 1:45, 4:00, 6:45
NATIONAL THEATRE LIVE: ONE MAN, TWO GUVNORS (NR) 7:00
BURLINGTON
AMC BURLINGTON
20 South Avenue
5 6 DIG
amctheatres.com
DCI 2016 TOUR PREMIERE (NR) 8:30
CAMBRIDGE
amctheatres.com
INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE (PG-13) 8:00,
10:45
INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE -- AN IMAX 3D
EXPERIENCE (PG-13) 8:00, 10:45
INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE 3D (PG-13)
RealD 3D 8:00, 10:45
INDEPENDENCE DAY DOUBLE FEATURE (NR) 5:00
MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS, BOSTON
465 Huntington Avenue 617-369-3907
5 8 DOL DIG
MFA.org/film
LA ISLA MÍNIMA (NR) 4:00
BEFORE I DO (NR) 6:00
RESERVATION FOR THREE (NR)
SOUL ON ICE (NR) 8:00
5 6 8 DOL DIG DSS
hhdt.com
ME BEFORE YOU (PG-13) 12:15, 1:45, 3:00, 4:30,
5:45, 7:15, 8:30
TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE
SHADOWS (PG-13) 12:00, 2:45, 5:30, 8:15
NOW YOU SEE ME 2 (PG-13) 12:30, 3:30, 6:45, 9:30
MONEY MONSTER (R) 12:45, 3:45, 6:30, 9:00
X-MEN: APOCALYPSE (PG-13) 1:30, 4:20, 7:30
PUERTO RICANS IN PARIS (R) 1:00, 7:00
GLOUCESTER SEA SERPENT LEGEND (NR) 11:35
HOWARD BLACKBURN STORY (NR)
TOWNS LOST UNDER QUABBIN (NR) 12:10
DEDHAM
SHOWCASE CINEMA DE LUX
AT LEGACY PLACE
Route 1 & 128 (EXIT 15A) 1-800-315-4000
5 6 8 DSS I K DIG
NationalAmusements.com
THE ANGRY BIRDS MOVIE (PG) 11:55, 2:15
CAPTAIN AMERICA: CIVIL WAR (PG-13) 6:10, 9:25
X-MEN: APOCALYPSE (PG-13) 11:40, 3:10, 6:30
ALICE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS (PG) 12:35,
3:30
FINDING DORY (PG) 11:20, 11:50, 2:05, 2:35, 4:50,
5:20, 7:10, 10:10
FINDING DORY (PG) 1:05, 3:50, 6:35, 9:20
FINDING DORY 3D (PG) 10:50, 1:35, 4:20, 7:10,
10:40
WARCRAFT (PG-13) 12:55, 3:55, 9:40
ME BEFORE YOU (PG-13) 11:15, 1:50, 6:50
TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE
SHADOWS (PG-13) 11:05, 1:45, 4:40, 7:15, 9:55
NOW YOU SEE ME 2 (PG-13) 11:45, 2:50, 6:05, 8:50
THE CONJURING 2 (R) 12:40, 12:55, 3:40, 6:30,
10:00
INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE (PG-13) 8:15,
10:30
INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE 3D (PG-13) 8:00,
10:15
NEIGHBORS 2: SORORITY RISING (R) 4:45
CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE (PG-13) 10:55, 11:25, 1:40,
2:10, 4:25, 4:55, 7:05, 7:35, 9:50, 10:20
DCI 2016 TOUR PREMIERE (NR) 8:30
INDEPENDENCE DAY DOUBLE FEATURE (NR) 5:00
FOXBORO
24 Patriot Place, Route 1 1-800-315-4000
5 6 DOL DIG DSS
5 6 8 DSS I K DIG
applecinemas.com
NationalAmusements.com
CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE (PG-13) 11:00, 1:20, 3:45,
6:10, 8:35, 11:00
WARCRAFT (PG-13) 12:50, 3:25, 6:00, 8:30
THE CONJURING 2 (R) 11:45, 2:30, 5:15, 8:00,
10:45
NOW YOU SEE ME 2 (PG-13) 11:50, 2:30, 5:10,
10:40
TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE
SHADOWS (PG-13) 11:00, 4:40
ME BEFORE YOU (PG-13) 1:20
GENTLEMAN (NR) 6:30
FINDING DORY (PG) 11:00, 12:30, 1:20, 2:20, 3:40,
4:40, 5:50, 7:00, 8:40, 10:00, 11:00
UDTA PUNJAB (NR) 3:30, 11:00
THE SHALLOWS (PG-13) 7:10
OKA MANASU (NR) 9:30
AMMA KANAKKU (NR) 7:50
FINDING DORY 3D (PG) 12:00
CAPTAIN AMERICA: CIVIL WAR (PG-13) 1:30
THE JUNGLE BOOK (PG) 11:00, 3:45, 6:10
X-MEN: APOCALYPSE (PG-13) 11:00, 2:00, 5:00
INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE (PG-13) 8:00,
9:30, 11:00
FREE STATE OF JONES (R) 8:00, 10:50
THE ANGRY BIRDS MOVIE (PG) 11:25, 1:45
CAPTAIN AMERICA: CIVIL WAR (PG-13) 4:05
X-MEN: APOCALYPSE (PG-13) 12:30, 3:40
THE NICE GUYS (R) 1:20
FINDING DORY (PG) 11:10, 12:40, 1:40, 3:30, 4:10,
6:35
FINDING DORY (PG) 11:40, 2:10, 4:40, 7:10, 9:40
FINDING DORY 3D (PG) 12:10, 2:40, 5:10, 6:05,
7:40, 8:45, 10:10
WARCRAFT (PG-13) 1:35, 4:30, 7:20, 10:10
ME BEFORE YOU (PG-13) 1:15, 4:00
TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE
SHADOWS (PG-13) 1:10, 3:45
NOW YOU SEE ME 2 (PG-13) 1:30, 4:25, 7:45, 10:35
THE CONJURING 2 (R) 12:55, 3:50, 7:00
THE CONJURING 2 (R) 12:15, 3:10, 6:10, 9:05
INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE (PG-13) 8:15,
10:30
INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE 3D (PG-13) 8:00,
10:15
CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE (PG-13) 1:05, 3:55, 6:40,
9:20
DCI 2016 TOUR PREMIERE (NR) 8:30
THE SHALLOWS (PG-13) 7:25, 9:40
FREE STATE OF JONES (R) 7:05, 10:10
LANDMARK THEATRES KENDALL SQUARE
FRAMINGHAM
1 Kendall Square Cambridge 617-621-1202
5 6 DOL DIG DSS
LandmarkTheatres.com
WEINER (R) 5 (1:45, 4:20) 7:05, 9:25
MAGGIE'S PLAN (R) 5 (1:50, 4:40) 7:20, 9:40
THE LOBSTER (R) 5 (1:30, 4:10) 7:00, 7:45, 9:40
LOVE & FRIENDSHIP (PG) 5 (2:10, 5:15)
THE MAN WHO KNEW INFINITY (PG-13) 5 (1:35,
4:25) 7:15, 9:45
LOVE & FRIENDSHIP (PG) 5 (1:40, 4:15) 7:05, 9:20
DHEEPAN (R) 5 (1:55, 4:35) 7:10, 9:45
GENIUS (PG-13) 5 (1:35, 4:10) 7:00, 9:35
DE PALMA (R) 5 (1:40, 4:15) 7:05, 9:35
CHESTNUT HILL
SHOWCASE SUPERLUX THE STREET
55 Boylston Street
ShowcaseSuperLux.com
CALL THEATER OR VISIT WEBSITE FOR SHOWTIMES.
DANVERS
AMC LOEWS LIBERTY TREE MALL
Exit 24 (Endicott St.) Route 128
5 6 8 DIG DOL DSS
FINDING DORY (PG) 10:30, 11:45, 12:15, 1:15, 2:30,
3:00, 3:45, 5:15, 6:00, 6:30, 8:00, 8:40, 9:15
FINDING DORY: AN IMAX 3D EXPERIENCE (PG)
10:50, 1:30, 4:15
FINDING DORY 3D (PG) RealD 3D 11:15, 2:00, 4:45,
7:30, 10:15
THE ANGRY BIRDS MOVIE (PG) 11:30, 4:30
THE ANGRY BIRDS MOVIE 3D (PG) RealD 3D 2:00,
7:00
CAPTAIN AMERICA: CIVIL WAR (PG-13) 11:20, 3:00,
6:20
INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE (PG-13) 8:00,
10:00
INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE -- AN IMAX 3D
EXPERIENCE (PG-13) 8:00
INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE 3D (PG-13)
RealD 3D 8:00, 9:00
WARCRAFT (PG-13) 10:30, 11:30, 12:10, 2:30, 3:00,
4:40, 8:30
WARCRAFT (PG-13) 5:30
WARCRAFT 3D (PG-13) RealD 3D 1:45, 7:40
ALICE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS (PG) 11:50
THE JUNGLE BOOK (PG) 3:30, 6:05
X-MEN: APOCALYPSE (PG-13) 2:45
THE CONJURING 2 (R) 11:30, 12:30, 2:40, 3:40,
6:00, 7:00, 9:10
5 6 8 DOL DIG DSS
Exit 24 (Endicott St.) Route 128 978-777-4000
168 Alewife Brook Pkwy. 617-229-6555
artsemerson.com
175 Tremont Street
HOLLYWOOD HITS
SHOWCASE CINEMA DE LUX
AT PATRIOT PLACE
amctheatres.com
AMC LOEWS BOSTON COMMON
NEIGHBORS 2: SORORITY RISING (R) 2:20
TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE
SHADOWS (PG-13) 10:40, 4:10
TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE
SHADOWS 3D (PG-13) RealD 3D 1:20
NOW YOU SEE ME 2 (PG-13) 11:30, 3:10, 6:10, 9:15
FREE STATE OF JONES (R) 7:00, 9:50
CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE (PG-13) 11:00, 12:10, 2:00,
3:00, 4:45, 6:00, 7:30, 8:50, 9:55
THE SHALLOWS (PG-13) 7:00, 9:25
MAGGIE'S PLAN (R) AMC Independent 11:50, 4:40
GENIUS (PG-13) AMC Independent 10:50, 1:30, 4:05
NO STRANGER THAN LOVE (R) AMC Independent
10:30, 1:00
THE NEON DEMON (R) AMC Independent 7:00
APPLE CINEMAS
5 8 DOL
NO FILMS SHOWING TODAY (NR)
G l o b e
RegalShowtimes.com
RegalShowtimes.com
BELMONT
B o s t o n
AMC FRAMINGHAM
22 Flutie Pass
5 6 8 I K DIG
amctheatres.com
INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE (PG-13) 8:00,
9:00
INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE 3D (PG-13)
RealD 3D 8:30, 9:30
INDEPENDENCE DAY DOUBLE FEATURE (NR) 5:00
LEXINGTON
LEXINGTON VENUE
1794 Massachusetts Avenue 781-861-6161
5 DOL DSS
MAGGIE'S PLAN (R) (4:15) 6:45
LOVE & FRIENDSHIP (PG) 7:00
SING STREET (PG-13) (4:00)
MUST SEE FILM OF THE YEAR
LOWELL
SHOWCASE CINEMAS LOWELL
32 Reiss Avenue 1-800-315-4000
5 6 8 DIG
MILLBURY
SHOWCASE CINEMA DE LUX
BLACKSTONE VALLEY
Route 146 & 122A 1-800-315-4000
5 6 8 DSS
NationalAmusements.com
THE ANGRY BIRDS MOVIE (PG) 11:00, 1:30
X-MEN: APOCALYPSE (PG-13) 12:30, 3:35
FINDING DORY (PG) 11:10, 12:10, 1:40, 2:40, 4:10,
5:10, 6:40, 7:40, 9:15
WARCRAFT (PG-13) 12:15, 12:45, 3:15, 3:45, 6:55,
10:05
ME BEFORE YOU (PG-13) 1:00, 4:00, 7:20, 9:55
TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE
SHADOWS (PG-13) 1:25, 4:05
NOW YOU SEE ME 2 (PG-13) 1:30, 4:30, 7:25, 10:20
THE CONJURING 2 (R) 11:30, 2:50, 3:55, 6:25, 7:00,
9:25, 10:10
INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE (PG-13) 8:15,
10:15
INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE 3D (PG-13) 8:00,
10:45
CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE (PG-13) 11:15, 1:20, 1:50,
4:20, 4:50, 7:15, 7:45, 9:50, 10:20
DCI 2016 TOUR PREMIERE (NR) 8:30
FINDING DORY 3D (PG) 11:40, 2:10, 4:40
INDEPENDENCE DAY DOUBLE FEATURE (NR) 5:00
FREE STATE OF JONES (R) 7:00, 10:00
NATICK
IMAX 3D THEATRE AT JORDAN'S FURNITURE
WARCRAFT 3D (PG-13) 4:25, 7:10, 10:05
ME BEFORE YOU (PG-13) 10:50, 1:20, 3:50, 6:25,
9:05
TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE
SHADOWS (PG-13) 10:10, 12:50, 3:30, 9:15
NOW YOU SEE ME 2 (PG-13) 12:25, 3:35, 6:35, 9:25
NOW YOU SEE ME 2 (PG-13) 10:05, 12:55, 4:05,
7:05, 9:55
THE CONJURING 2 (R) 12:45, 3:45
THE CONJURING 2 (R) 10:15, 10:45, 1:15, 1:45,
2:15, 4:15, 5:20, 7:15, 8:20, 10:15
INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE (PG-13) 8:15,
10:15
INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE 3D (PG-13) 8:00,
10:45
NEIGHBORS 2: SORORITY RISING (R) 4:30, 10:10
CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE (PG-13) 11:15, 11:45, 1:50,
2:20, 4:35, 5:05, 7:25, 10:00
DCI 2016 TOUR PREMIERE (NR) 8:30
THE SHALLOWS (PG-13) 7:40
FINDING DORY 3D (PG) 12:05, 2:35, 5:10
INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE 3D (PG-13) 8:30
INDEPENDENCE DAY DOUBLE FEATURE (NR) 5:00
WARCRAFT (PG-13) 10:30, 1:10, 3:55
FREE STATE OF JONES (R) 7:05
INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE (PG-13) 8:05,
10:40
SOMERVILLE
THE SOMERVILLE THEATRE
55 Davis Square (T) Redline 617-625-5700
5 6
Route 9 in Natick 508-424-0088
SomervilleTheatreOnline.com
5 8
ME BEFORE YOU (PG-13) 4:15, 7:15, 9:45
NOW YOU SEE ME 2 (PG-13) 4:10, 7:00, 9:45
SIN ALAS (NR) 8:00
THE LOBSTER (R) 4:45, 7:30, 10:00
X-MEN: APOCALYPSE (PG-13) 4:00, 7:00, 10:00
Jordans.com
WARCRAFT: AN IMAX 3D EXPERIENCE (PG-13)
12:40, 3:20
INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE -- AN IMAX 3D
EXPERIENCE (PG-13) 7:00
NEWTON
WEST NEWTON CINEMA
1296 Washington St. Route 16 617-964-6060
WestNewtonCinema.com
FINDING DORY (PG) 12:30, 2:45, 5:10, 7:30
DARK HORSE (PG) 1:30, 8:10
GENIUS (PG-13) 5 1:00, 3:30, 5:55, 8:15
ME BEFORE YOU (PG-13) 1:15, 8:10
WEINER (R) 1:10, 3:40, 5:55, 8:05
THE MAN WHO KNEW INFINITY (PG-13) 3:40, 6:00
EYE IN THE SKY (R) 3:50
DOUGH (NR) 6:10
LOVE & FRIENDSHIP (PG) 1:20, 3:45, 6:00, 8:05
NORTH ATTLEBOROUGH
SHOWCASE CINEMAS
NORTH ATTLEBOROUGH
640 S Washington St. Route 1 1-800-315-4000
5 6 DIG
NationalAmusements.com
THE ANGRY BIRDS MOVIE (PG) 12:10, 2:25
CAPTAIN AMERICA: CIVIL WAR (PG-13) 12:05, 3:30
X-MEN: APOCALYPSE (PG-13) 12:15, 3:25, 6:30,
9:35
ALICE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS (PG) 12:55,
3:50
FINDING DORY (PG) 12:00, 2:30, 5:00, 7:30, 10:15
FINDING DORY 3D (PG) 12:30, 3:00, 5:30, 8:00
WARCRAFT (PG-13) 12:45, 3:45
ME BEFORE YOU (PG-13) 1:10, 4:10
TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE
SHADOWS (PG-13) 1:35, 4:25, 7:20, 9:55
NOW YOU SEE ME 2 (PG-13) 1:15, 4:15, 7:15
THE CONJURING 2 (R) 12:20, 3:20, 7:00, 10:05
INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE (PG-13) 8:15,
10:30
INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE 3D (PG-13) 8:00,
10:15
CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE (PG-13) 1:20, 4:20, 7:10,
9:50
THE SHALLOWS (PG-13) 7:25, 9:40
LOVE & FRIENDSHIP (PG) 4:45, 7:05, 9:30
FREE STATE OF JONES (R) 7:00, 10:05
RANDOLPH
SHOWCASE CINEMA DE LUX RANDOLPH
Route 139, Exit 20A off Route 24 1-800-315-4000
5 6 8 DIG
NationalAmusements.com
THE ANGRY BIRDS MOVIE (PG) 11:00, 1:20
CAPTAIN AMERICA: CIVIL WAR (PG-13) 3:10
X-MEN: APOCALYPSE (PG-13) 11:45, 3:05, 6:25,
9:40
ALICE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS (PG) 12:05
FINDING DORY (PG) 11:10, 12:10, 1:45, 2:45, 4:20,
5:20, 7:00, 8:00, 9:30, 10:30
FINDING DORY 3D (PG) 11:40, 2:15, 4:50, 7:30,
10:00
WARCRAFT (PG-13) 12:20, 3:35, 6:35, 9:35
ME BEFORE YOU (PG-13) 11:15, 1:50, 4:30, 7:20,
9:55
TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE
SHADOWS (PG-13) 11:05, 1:40, 4:15
NOW YOU SEE ME 2 (PG-13) 10:30, 1:35, 4:35
THE CONJURING 2 (R) 12:15, 12:45, 3:15, 3:45,
6:50, 9:45
INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE (PG-13) 8:15,
10:15
INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE -- AN IMAX 3D
EXPERIENCE (PG-13) 8:00, 10:45
NEIGHBORS 2: SORORITY RISING (R) 3:40
CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE (PG-13) 10:15, 12:00, 1:00,
3:00, 4:00, 6:15, 7:15, 9:10, 10:10
CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE (PG-13) 12:00, 1:00, 3:00,
4:00, 6:15, 7:15, 9:10, 10:10
DCI 2016 TOUR PREMIERE (NR) 8:30
THE SHALLOWS (PG-13) 7:05, 9:15
INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE 3D (PG-13) 8:30
WARCRAFT (PG-13) 10:00, 12:50, 4:05
FINDING DORY: AN IMAX 3D EXPERIENCE (PG)
10:20, 1:15, 3:50
FREE STATE OF JONES (R) 7:05, 10:10
NationalAmusements.com
THE ANGRY BIRDS MOVIE (PG) 10:20, 12:45
CAPTAIN AMERICA: CIVIL WAR (PG-13) 8:50
X-MEN: APOCALYPSE (PG-13) 3:20
THE NICE GUYS (R) 10:20, 1:10
FINDING DORY (PG) 10:45, 11:45, 1:15, 2:15, 3:45,
4:45, 6:15, 7:15, 9:40
FINDING DORY 3D (PG) 11:15, 1:45, 4:15, 6:45, 9:10
WARCRAFT (PG-13) 10:40, 1:25, 4:10, 6:55, 9:50
ME BEFORE YOU (PG-13) 10:15, 12:50, 3:40, 6:30,
9:15
TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE
SHADOWS (PG-13) 11:10, 1:55, 4:25
NOW YOU SEE ME 2 (PG-13) 10:05, 1:00, 3:55, 7:10,
10:15
THE CONJURING 2 (R) 10:00, 1:05, 3:50, 4:20, 6:50,
7:25, 9:55
INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE (PG-13) 8:15,
10:15
INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE 3D (PG-13) 8:00,
10:45
NEIGHBORS 2: SORORITY RISING (R) 12:10, 2:25,
4:40
CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE (PG-13) 10:30, 11:00, 1:20,
1:50, 4:20, 4:50, 7:20, 10:05
DCI 2016 TOUR PREMIERE (NR) 8:30
THE SHALLOWS (PG-13) 7:15, 9:30
FINDING DORY 3D (PG) 12:15, 2:45, 5:15
FREE STATE OF JONES (R) 6:40, 10:00
T H U R S D A Y, J U N E 2 3 , 2 0 1 6
TAUNTON
REGAL CINEMAS SILVER CITY 10
2 Galleria Mall Drive 508-821-4561
5 6 DOL DIG DSS
RegalShowtimes.com
INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE (PG-13) Advance
Tickets Available 8:30
FREE STATE OF JONES (R) Advance Tickets Available
7:00, 9:30
INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE 3D (PG-13)
Advance Tickets Available 9:30
THE SHALLOWS (PG-13) Advance Tickets Available
7:15, 10:15
INDEPENDENCE DAY DOUBLE FEATURE (NR) Advance Tickets Available 5:00
CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE (PG-13) (11:05, 2:45) 6:40
FINDING DORY (PG) (11:00, 1:35) 5:15, 6:45, 9:20
FINDING DORY 3D (PG) (11:30, 2:05) 4:40, 7:15,
9:50
NOW YOU SEE ME 2 (PG-13) (11:45, 3:15)
THE CONJURING 2 (R) (11:55, 3:20) 6:50, 9:25
WARCRAFT 3D (PG-13) (11:05) 6:30
ME BEFORE YOU (PG-13) (11:15, 1:55)
WARCRAFT (PG-13) (2:00) 9:55
TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE
SHADOWS (PG-13) (11:20, 2:00) 7:20, 10:10
ALICE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS (PG) (12:00)
THE ANGRY BIRDS MOVIE (PG) (11:10, 2:55) 4:35
X-MEN: APOCALYPSE (PG-13) (3:00)
WESTBOROUGH
REGAL CINEMAS WESTBOROUGH 12
Route 9 Near Route 135 508-366-3877
5 6 8 DIG
RegalShowtimes.com
FREE STATE OF JONES (R) Advance Tickets Available
7:10, 10:20
INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE (PG-13) Advance
Tickets Available 8:30
INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE 3D (PG-13)
Advance Tickets Available 8:00
INDEPENDENCE DAY DOUBLE FEATURE (NR) Advance Tickets Available 5:00
CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE (PG-13) (11:10, 2:00) 4:50,
7:50, 10:30
FINDING DORY (PG) (10:30, 11:30, 1:15) 4:10, 5:10,
7:00, 8:00, 9:45
FINDING DORY 3D (PG) (11:00, 1:45, 2:15) 4:40,
7:30, 10:15, 10:40
UDTA PUNJAB (NR) (11:40, 3:00) 6:30, 10:00
NOW YOU SEE ME 2 (PG-13) (12:40) 4:20, 7:20,
10:30
THE SHALLOWS (PG-13) Advance Tickets Available
7:40, 10:15
TE3N (NR) (12:30)
THE CONJURING 2 (R) (12:10, 3:20) 7:10, 10:15
WARCRAFT (PG-13) 4:30
WARCRAFT 3D (PG-13) (1:00)
ME BEFORE YOU (PG-13) (11:20, 2:10) 5:00
THE ANGRY BIRDS MOVIE (PG) (10:40, 1:30) 4:00
CAPTAIN AMERICA: CIVIL WAR (PG-13) (11:15,
2:40)
WALTHAM
LANDMARK THEATRES EMBASSY CINEMA
16 Pine Street, Near Moody St. 781-736-7852
5 6 DOL DIG DSS
LandmarkTheatres.com
CAPTAIN AMERICA: CIVIL WAR (PG-13) 5 (12:45)
7:00
CAPTAIN AMERICA: CIVIL WAR 3D (PG-13) 5 (3:50)
NOW YOU SEE ME 2 (PG-13) 5 (12:55, 4:00) 7:00
INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE (PG-13) 5 8:00
THE LOBSTER (R) 5 (1:00, 4:05)
THE CONJURING 2 (R) 5 (12:50, 3:55) 6:50
CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE (PG-13) 5 (1:05, 4:10)
7:20
MAGGIE'S PLAN (R) 5 (1:10, 4:15) 7:30
WOBURN
SHOWCASE CINEMAS WOBURN
Route 128 Exit 35/Route 38 1-800-315-4000
5 6 DOL DIG
NationalAmusements.com
READING
IMAX 3D THEATRE AT JORDAN'S FURNITURE
Exit 39 off Route 128 in Reading 781-944-9090
5 8
Jordans.com
WARCRAFT: AN IMAX 3D EXPERIENCE (PG-13)
12:30, 3:15
INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE -- AN IMAX 3D
EXPERIENCE (PG-13) 7:00
REVERE
SHOWCASE CINEMAS REVERE
Route 1 & Squire Road 1-800-315-4000
5 6 8 I K DIG
NationalAmusements.com
THE ANGRY BIRDS MOVIE (PG) 11:40, 2:00
CAPTAIN AMERICA: CIVIL WAR (PG-13) 1:00
X-MEN: APOCALYPSE (PG-13) 11:10
THE NICE GUYS (R) 9:50
ALICE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS (PG) 11:00,
1:40, 4:20, 7:00, 9:40
FINDING DORY (PG) 10:35, 6:20
FINDING DORY (PG) 10:00, 10:05, 11:35, 12:35,
1:05, 2:05, 3:05, 3:40, 4:40, 5:40, 7:20
FINDING DORY 3D (PG) 11:05, 1:35, 4:10, 6:50, 9:20
WARCRAFT (PG-13) 11:25, 2:10, 4:55, 7:40, 10:35
THE ANGRY BIRDS MOVIE (PG) 10:10, 12:30
X-MEN: APOCALYPSE (PG-13) 12:10, 3:25, 6:45,
9:55
ALICE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS (PG) 10:15
FINDING DORY (PG) 10:25, 10:55, 11:55, 12:50,
1:20, 2:25, 3:20, 3:50, 4:50, 6:20, 7:50, 8:45
FINDING DORY 3D (PG) 11:25, 1:55, 4:20, 6:50,
7:20, 9:15, 9:50
WARCRAFT (PG-13) 10:30, 1:25, 4:15
ME BEFORE YOU (PG-13) 1:50, 4:25
TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE
SHADOWS (PG-13) 11:30
TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE
SHADOWS (PG-13) 2:05, 4:55
NOW YOU SEE ME 2 (PG-13) 10:40, 1:40, 4:35, 7:35,
10:30
THE CONJURING 2 (R) 12:00, 3:00
THE CONJURING 2 (R) 12:30, 3:45, 7:05
INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE (PG-13) 8:15,
10:30
INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE 3D (PG-13) 8:00,
10:15
NEIGHBORS 2: SORORITY RISING (R) 2:50, 5:10,
7:25
CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE (PG-13) 10:45, 11:15, 1:30,
2:00, 4:10, 4:40, 7:00, 7:30, 9:40, 10:10
THE SHALLOWS (PG-13) 7:00, 9:30
FREE STATE OF JONES (R) 7:10, 10:15
T h e
T H U R S D A Y, J U N E 2 3 , 2 0 1 6
B o s t o n
G l o b e
An E.T. lamp and other oddities
are part of Darren Hill’s
collection at POP.
PHOTOS BY CRAIG F. WALKER/GLOBE STAFF
His whimsical collection
finds a permanent home
HILL
down the hill from his house.
The store developed a loyal following,
becoming a clubhouse of sorts for the local
design community, and Hill started supplying pieces to film companies shooting
movies in the area. But when the Replacements’ 2014 reunion tour took off, Hill no
longer had time to run the shop and he
closed POP’s doors.
This week it’ll open again, in a seriously cool new location: a 10,000-square-foot
industrial building in Providence. From
the street it looks like any other brick
warehouse — previous tenants include
Wal-kar Engraving and the Black Key sex
club — and it remains unmarked except
for a sign over the back entrance. Hill
bought the building from a friend two
years ago and renovated the place top to
bottom, sandblasting the soaring ceilings,
refinishing original factory floors, and dividing the place in half. The store is on one
side; on the other is a performance and
gallery space. POP’s opening party is on
Thursday, from 6 to 9 p.m., featuring music from singer-songwriters Man & Wife
and art by Rhode Island painter Susan
Dwyer.
“I’ve been painting Pyrex and Jell-O
molds since high school and when I met
Darren at his store I knew he was a kindred spirit,” says Dwyer, who’s very excited
about the prospect of POP filling a niche in
Continued from Page G1
simple domestic items like telephones and
lamps. I always had a dream of opening a
shop but I figured it would be well into my
retirement.”
Hardly. Hill is 56 and works as an artist
manager, a job he took up after years playing the bass — first in Red Rockers, a New
Orleans punk band that cracked the mainstream with its 1983 hit “China,” and later,
after moving to Boston, in roots rock outfit
the Raindogs, touring the country with
Dylan, Warren Zevon, and Don Henley.
Paul Westerberg, the frontman for alt-rock
heroes the Replacements, recruited Hill
for his first post-Replacements band, but
when Hill’s son was born he made the
transition from musician to manager so
that he could spend more time at home.
Today Hill manages Westerberg, psychrocker Roky Erickson, and the Mighty
Mighty Bosstones from his longtime base
of East Greenwich, R.I., where he works
and lives with his family.
Of course he never stopped shopping.
Despite his best effort to rotate new acquisitions in and out of their home in a timely
fashion, Hill’s finds — which concentrate
on items from the ’50s through the ’80s —
started overtaking the place, so in 2012 he
opened POP, the Emporium of Popular
Culture, in a quaint storefront half a mile
the local art scene. “Providence desperately needs gallery spaces that aren’t geared
toward vacationers or corporations, that
show local artists who don’t have an established following.”
Hill does see himself as something of a
curator, and at POP he brings to bear an
uncommon suite of skills: a great ear, an
impeccable eye, flair for business, and one
of the most undersung qualities in this or
any profession: a huge heart.
“Look at his roster,” says Dicky Barrett,
frontman for the Mighty Mighty Bosstones and announcer for “Jimmy Kimmel
Live!” “It’s not about ‘will it make me a lot
of money?’ or ‘will I be a player?’ These
bands are things he cares about, things
that have been a part of his life. The Replacements, the Bosstones, the New York
Dolls [Hill facilitated the group’s 2004 reunion], a lot of people wouldn’t bother,
but they’re precious things to him. It’s a
matter of respect, and you can parallel
that with his store. He lights up looking at
the things in his store the same way he
lights up at the [the Bosstones’ annual]
Hometown Throwdown. That energy is a
real joy.”
I asked Hill about the through-line,
whether there’s something that connects
his work as a musician, a manager, and a
collector. “I want to feed creativity,” he
says. “That’s the through-line. POP is a
store, of course, and I want to sell things.
But I’d like it to be a playground.”
That’s what it feels like. Walk in the
door and turn to your left – there’s the
gunmetal desk used in “Black Mass” and
just beyond that a mid-century bar nestled
next to a Twister rug. White tulip tables
and a riot of colorful chairs dot the room,
and the seats facing the stage are tucked
behind vintage bowling alley scoring tables. A massive coin-operated Love Meter
(Clammy to Uncontrollable) beckons. Art
covers the walls.
Turn to your right and you’re in the
Emporium. WWOZ out of New Orleans is
streaming, some old R&B, and it’s hard to
focus on any one thing because everything
is enchanting. If you wander for a while,
patterns emerge: a tiny sports section, a
cluster of fine ceramics, items pertaining
to Steve McQueen, nuclear fallout, radios,
venereal disease, Barbie, books, pink
things, the list goes on. Whimsy and stewardship, high style and kitsch, history and
humor, they all seem to have equal value
here.
“Everything,” Hill says, “has a story.
That’s my benchmark.”
For now POP is open Friday-Sunday
from noon to 5 and during special events
in the gallery/performance space. Next
month Hill is bringing in the Amazing
Hancock Brothers, Texas siblings who are
print-makers and spoken-word artists. He
swears he doesn’t want to go into “the
nightclub business” but offers for shows
are rolling in, and it’s easy to imagine POP
becoming a very happening scene. Hill,
who keeps a bass in his office, says he’s
even been thinking about having a little
fun with music again. And why not? This
is his playground.
Joan Anderman can be reached at
[email protected].
G7
PARTY LINES
PHOTOS BY BILL BRETT
The Brain Aneurysm Foundation celebrated its fifth annual
Boston Pops Night with Keith Lockhart at Symphony Hall.
From left: Tracy McCormack and Valerie Desmond, both of
Braintree, and Lynn and Casey Nuttall of Hingham.
From left: BAF Executive Director Christine Buckley, the
Pops’ Keith Lockhart, and BAF cofounder Dede Buckley.
From left: Rebecca Sklepowicz of Boston, Raymond Hwang
of Boston, and Joy Mullin of Winthrop.
From left: Gale and Ken Michaud of Scituate and Ginny
Tocci of Plymouth.
THEATER
THEATER
THEATER
THEATER
THEATER
MUSIC
3 WEEKS ONLY!
JULY 12 - JULY 31
$10 OFF REGULAR
PRICE TICKETS
FINAL WEEKEND MUST CLOSE SUNDAY!
OPENS IN 2 WEEKS!
JULY 5-17
AUGUST 4 - 14
781-891-5600
6/23 - INDIGO GIRLS
6/25 - GARY HOEY BAND
She’s practically perfect in every way!
Mary Poppins’ story has enchanted generations
and MARY POPPINS is now an award-winning
family musical featuring unforgettable songs
and breathtaking production numbers that will
dazzle and delight theatergoers.
Anything can happen if you let it!
Stoneham Theatre presents the World Premiere
of LOBSTER GIRL, June 9-26, written and
directed by Weylin Symes with music and lyrics
by Steven Barkhimer. This endearing and lighthearted new musical comedy set off the shores
of Cape Ann is the best lobstering musical you’ve
ever seen. It’s a keepa, we guarantee it.
Tickets: 781-279-2200
395 Main Street, Stoneham, MA 02180.
www.stonehamtheatre.org.
Discount Code: LG10
Don’t miss this extraordinary new play from
Craig Lucas performed both in English and ASL.
“You MUST SEE this ONE-OF-A-KIND
production.” - JOYCE KULHAWIK
“A GREAT DRAMA told from
an incredible place of love.” - WBUR
“THRILLING TO BEHOLD!” - WBUR
“UNFORGETTABLE!” - SOUTH SHORE CRITIC
“POWERFUL! A MUST-SEE!” - WICKED LOCAL
A Huntington Theatre Company production
South End / Calderwood Pavilion at the BCA
617 266 0800 huntingtontheatre.org
Boston Opera House
800.982.2787 BroadwayInBoston.com
Box Office Hours: Mon-Fri 10am-5pm
Groups 10+ Call 617.482.8616
Lexus Broadway In Boston Season
Tony Award-Winning Gershwin Musical Comedy
Starring Beverly and Kirby Ward
Helen Hayes and Olivier Award Nominees
Robinson Theatre
617 Lexington Street, Waltham
ReagleMusicTheatre.com - FREE PARKING
7/14 - Los Lobos
7/15 - Brett Dennen
7/16 - Colin Hay
7/22 - Eric Burdon & The Animals / Edgar Winter
7/23 - Neko Case / kd lang / Laura Veirs
7/29-31 Lowell Folk Festival
8/12 - The Lone Bellow
8/13 - Dr. Dog
8/19 - WGBH “A Celtic Sojourn”
8/20 - Peter Wolf & The Midnight Travelers
9/1 - “Weird Al” Yankovic
9/3 - The B-52’s
NORTH SHORE MUSIC THEATRE
62 DUNHAM ROAD | BEVERLY | MA
TIX: 978.232.7200
NSMT.ORG
THREE WEEKS ONLY!
AUGUST 16 - SEPTEMBER 4
THE LONG ISLAND MEDIUM.
BEST SEATS AVAILABLE NOW.
WHAT A GLORIOUS FEELING!
Of course, you remember Gene Kelly splashing
his way through the classic MGM film, but have
you seen it live? Join us as we make a big
splash with this spectacular and romantic
musical comedy. There will be wonderful singin’
and dancin’ and, yes, it really will rain onstage!
“You can’t make this stuff up”. Theresa Caputo,
from TLC’s hit show, Long Island Medium
says, “The experience isn’t about believing in
mediums. It’s about witnessing something lifechanging”. Tickets go on-sale Friday, June 24
@10am. Visit thehanovertheatre.org,
877-571-SHOW(7469) or the box office
Tickets start at $39.75.
The Hanover Theatre for the Performing Arts
2 Southbridge St., Worcester, MA.
Broadway, Music & More.
One of Pollstar’s top theatres in the world!
NORTH SHORE MUSIC THEATRE
62 DUNHAM ROAD | BEVERLY | MA
TIX: 978.232.7200
NSMT.ORG
Boston Globe
Ticket to the Arts
Order Online through our Self Serve Order Entry
System. 24/7 from anywhere.
boston.com/tickettothearts
DARE TO LIVE IN FULL COLOR.
Don’t miss the show that has captivated
35 million people worldwide.
Charles Playhouse, 74 Warrenton St.
Groups of 8+ Call 617.542.6700
1.800.BLUEMAN
BLUEMAN.COM
U.S. PREMIERE!
LIMITED ENGAGEMENT
Like A CHORUS LINE of the circus, renowned
circus troupe The 7 Fingers returns
combining acrobatic feats with memories
from family’s kitchens past & present
Emerson/Cutler Majestic Theatre 7/12-8/7
ArtsEmerson 617.824.8400/artsemerson.org
ROCKPORT CHAMBER MUSIC
FESTIVAL
BOSTON’S HILARIOUS
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Tues-Fri at 8, Sat at 6 & 9, Sun at 3 & 7
Added Shows: 6/13 at 8pm & 6/17 at 10am
To order 617-426-5225 or shearmadness.com
Student rush & specially priced senior tix
Great group rates! 617-451-0195
Charles Playhouse, 74 Warrenton Street
JUNE 22-JULY 3
CITI SHUBERT THEATRE
FIDDLEHEAD THEATRE COMPANY
Based on Edna Ferber’s bestselling novel, this
grand American musical follows the lives of the
performers, stagehands and dock workers on the
Cotton Blossom, a Mississippi River show boat.
TICKETS START AT $53 www.citicenter.org
FINAL WEEK!
MUST END SUNDAY
JULY 7 - 17
781-891-5600
TIME Magazine’s #1 Show of the Year!
Boston Opera House
800.982.2787 BroadwayInBoston.com
Box Office Hours: Mon-Fri 10am-5pm
Groups 10+ Call 617.482.8616
Lexus Broadway In Boston Season
Tony Award-Winning ‘Best Musical’
Lavish Dance Numbers with Fabulous Flappers
The Spectacle of the Roaring Twenties in N.Y.C.
Robinson Theatre
617 Lexington Street, Waltham
ReagleMusicTheatre.com - FREE PARKING
SUBLIME MUSICAL TICKETS NOW ON SALE!
Stephen Sondheim’s Pulitzer Prize-winning
masterpiece is the must-see event of the season!
Starts Sept 9. Buy now for the best prices!
A Huntington Theatre Company production
Avenue of the Arts / BU Theatre
617 266 0800 huntingtontheatre.org
June-July 10
Experience world renowned artists in the
beautiful setting of the Shalin Liu Performance
Center! The Festival features such artists as
pianist David Deveau with violinist Andres
Cardenes & Anne Martindale Williams, the
Harlem Quartet, Calder Quartet, world-renowned
viola da gambist Jordi Savall, as well as a Tango
program by violinist Cho-Liang Lin &
clarinetist David Shifrin.
rockportmusic.org | 978.546.7391
Boston Globe Ticket to the Arts
Order Online through our Self Serve Order Entry System.
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T h e
G8
B o s t o n
TV CRITIC’S CORNER
G l o b e
T H U R S D A Y, J U N E 2 3 , 2 0 1 6
LOCAL TV
AND RADIO
ASK AMY
BY MATTHEW GILBERT
Young man greets adulthood
from the couch
MICHAEL DESMOND/SHOWTIME
Tavis Smiley 12:30 a.m., WGBH 2
On Thursday night, Liev Schreiber shows up, presumably to
promote the upcoming season of Showtime’s “Ray Donovan,”
which premieres on June 26.
Schreiber is a favorite, and not only because he killed it in
“Spotlight” as former Globe editor Marty Baron, capturing part of
Baron’s essence without trying to impersonate him. Early in his career, Schreiber was almost a male Parker Posey, a kind of poster
boy for the many small, charming indie movies that came out in
the 1990s.
One of my favorites is “The Daytrippers” from 1996, in which a
family piles into a station wagon and goes to New York in search of
one daughter’s husband. The winning cast includes Anne Meara,
Hope Davis, Stanley Tucci, Posey, and Campbell Scott.
Another favorite is “Denise Calls Up,” about an ensemble of
people in New York — including Tim Daly and Aida Turturro —
whose only contact is by telephone and (this is 1995) fax. The concept is a little dated at this point; we’re all extremely aware of how
alienating phones and social media can be. But still, it’s a cool film
that manages to entertain even while its characters never meet
face to face.
Also on the Liev list: “Big Night,” the lovely 1996 Tucci film
about brothers who run a failing Italian restaurant; “Walking and
Talking,” the 1996 first feature from director Nicole Holofcener
about a longtime friendship, starring Catherine Keener and Anne
Heche; and “A Walk on the Moon” from 1999, in which Schreiber
is part of a love triangle with Diane Lane and Viggo Mortensen in
1969 near Woodstock.
Q. Our son graduated with honors from a private high school several years ago. He wanted
to take a year off to find a part-time job, volunteer, or travel before starting college.
We agreed to the year off. That has now
turned into several years, and he has not
looked for any sort of job. He spends his days
at home on the Internet, reading, and watching TV.
When my wife and I try to talk about his
immediate plans or future goals, he becomes
very upset and defensive.
As parents, we have provided him with a
very good upbringing and wide range of experiences and travels. We have gone out of our
way to ensure that he has a better life than we
have.
He obviously lacks any sort of motivation
and suffers from low self-esteem. He has started to get tattoos, but fortunately does not do
drugs.
We now realize that we have perhaps catered too much to him, and fear that he is losing out on basic life skills and experiences.
MILLENNIAL PARENTS
A. While you pat yourselves on the back for all
of the experiences you have exposed your son
to, he possesses few life skills, has no work history, and is deeply insecure and defensive.
I can think of at least one experience you
neglected to provide during his privileged
childhood: the experience of working and of
feeling useful and competent.
This feeling can come from doing volunteer work during a gap year, or from working
at the drive-thru window of a fast-food joint.
Not only has your son not had either of
these experiences, but he doesn’t seem to have
had any others along the work spectrum.
At this point, he may be anxious and depressed, partly because your expectations are
very low, and yet (I assume) you judge him for
being so useless.
He needs to get a job. Immediately. I suggest something physical, like washing dishes
in the kitchen of a busy restaurant. He must
move toward supporting himself.
Tell him you will pay the tuition for community college or be supportive of him entering the military. He will have to arrive at his
own future the way the rest of us do it —
through trial and error. Because you don’t
seem capable of conveying positive messages
and reasonable expectations, you could also
Thursday June 23, 2016
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try to find a professional who might provide
you all with parenting and job coaching.
Q. Over Memorial Day weekend, my son-inlaw’s grandfather died.
Many of his relatives were coming in from
out of town, and I volunteered to pick up two
people coming in on different airlines at the
airport.
They didn’t know each other, and I didn’t
know them.
I was picking them up at an extremely busy
airport on a very busy holiday weekend.
I would have to navigate traffic, airport
traffic security, and look for them at the same
time.
My son-in-law texted my car’s make, color,
and license number to them.
I asked him to also ask them not to receive
or respond to text messages from others (after
initially texting me) until I picked them up.
People who are texting are not paying attention! My son-in-law refused to do this, saying
that he was uncomfortable asking a person of
his generation not to text. Was this an unreasonable request?
B IN CHICAGO
A. Yes, this was unreasonable. Asking someone not to send or receive text messages at the
airport is akin to asking them not to pick up a
newspaper and glance at it while you are
cruising around and looking for them.
Additionally, texting is also a very efficient
way for them to find you. You could have been
in touch with both of them directly (not
through your son-in-law), saying, “I’m parked
outside the C exit in a blue car now. . .” You
should not have had to find them in a crowd —
the burden should have been on them to find
you, and texting is a great assist.
Q. A letter from “Upset Father” revealed that
his daughter completely disregards him when
she is in the midst of a migraine attack.
Your answer was OK, as far as it went. This
father should ask his daughter what sort of
contact she wants/needs when she is suffering
from a migraine. Sounds to me like he needs
to back off completely.
FELLOW SUFFERER
A. I can imagine that any sound at all could be
agony during a severe attack. Thank you.
Amy Dickinson can be reached at
[email protected].
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