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Worcester Magazine October 17, 2013
Citation preview
newsMexican restaurant’s lease with city fi lls vacant spacePage 4
kraveDraught House, a welcome addition to West BoylstonPage 24
FREEFREE
inside stories
OCTOBER 17 - 23, 2013 WORCESTERMAGAZINE.COM NEWS • ARTS • DINING • NIGHTLIFE
Page 20
From darkness to light
Dance lifts young woman from depression
2 W O R C E S T E R M A G A Z I N E . C O M • O C T O B E R 1 7 , 2 0 1 3
2013 Holiday Hand BookComing November 14 - just in time for your Holiday Shopping
Including gift ideas and product advertorialsReach more than 80,000 Shoppers
For more information, or to book your space, callHelen Linnehan, Ad Director at
508-749-3166 x333or email [email protected]
O C T O B E R 1 7 , 2 0 1 3 • W O R C E S T E R M A G A Z I N E . C O M 3
Kirk A. Davis PresidentKathleen Real Publisher x331
Brittany Durgin Editor x321Steven King Photographer x323Walter Bird Jr. Senior Writer x322Brian Goslow, Janice Harvey, Lynne Hedvig, Jim Keogh, Laurance Levey, Josh Lyford, Doreen Manning, Taylor Nunez, Cade Overton, Jim Perry, Matt Robert, Jeremy Shulkin, Barbara Taormina, Al Vuona Contributing WritersNora McDonald Editorial Intern
Don Cloutier Production ManagerKimberly Vasseur Art Director/Assistant Production ManagerBess Couture, Becky Gill, Stephanie Mallard, Graphic Artists
Helen Linnehan Ad Director x333 Rick McGrail x334, Theresa S. Carrington x335, Media ConsultantsAmy O’Brien Media Coordinator x332Carrie Arsenault Classifi ed Manager
Worcester Magazine is an independent news weekly covering Central Massachusetts. We accept no responsibility for unsolicited manuscripts. The Publisher has the right to refuse any advertisement.
LEGALS/PUBLIC NOTICES: Please call 978-728-4302, email [email protected], or mail to Central Mass Classifi eds, P.O. Box 545, Holden, MA 01520
DISTRIBUTION: Worcester Magazine is available free of charge at more than 400 locations, limited to one copy per reader. Additional copies may be purchased for $1 each at Worcester Magazine offi ces. Unauthorized bulk removal of Worcester Magazine from any public location, or any other tampering with Worcester Magazine’s distribution including unauthorized inserts, is a criminal offense and may be prosecuted under the law.
SUBSCRIPTIONS: $47 for one year, third class mail. First class mail, $125 for one year. Send orders and subscription correspondence to Worcester Magazine, 72 Shrewsbury St., Worcester, MA 01604.
ADVERTISING: To place an order for display advertising or to inquire, please call 508.749.3166. Worcester Magazine (ISSN 0191-4960) is a weekly publication of The Holden Landmark Corporation. All contents copyright 2013 by The Holden Landmark Corporation. All rights reserved.
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EDITORIAL: 508.749.3166 SALES: 508.749.3166E-MAIL: [email protected] Magazine, 72 Shrewsbury St. Worcester, MA 01604worcestermagazine.com 20
17
insidestoriesstories
4 City Desk
6 Worcesteria
8 Harvey
9 Spiral Bound
10 Cover Story
17 Night & Day
21 Film
22 Film Times
24 Krave
27 Event Listings
30 Classifi eds
39 2 minutes with…A B O U T T H E C O V E R
Photo by Steven KingDesign by Bess Couture
Arianys De Jesus spent much of her childhood mired in depression and riddle with anxiety. Diagnosed at age 7 with chronic anxiety and severe
depression, she took Prozac and saw therapists and counselors. Her mental illness was bad enough that, at times, she heard voices in head telling her to take her own life. While medicine and therapy did what they could, De Jesus credits the world of dance for truly healing her. Now 20, she has since started the Dance to Live Foundation, which holds its second annual fund raiser this month to raise money for other children suffering from mental illness to be able to take part in a performing art. This week, we look at what De Jesus has overcome, as well as at the numbers that show just how hard hit Latinos are by mental illness. For many, as it was for De Jesus, it truly is a long journey out of the darkness into the light.
-Walter Bird Jr., Senior Writer
4 W O R C E S T E R M A G A Z I N E . C O M • O C T O B E R 1 7 , 2 0 1 3
October 17-23, 2013 ■ Volume 39, Number 7
Total for this week: A weekly quality of life check-in of Worcester
WOO-TOWN INDEX
{ city desk }
-3+2
Elder Services of Worcester Area Inc. holds 39th annual meeting at Holy Cross. Ceremony includes presentation of awards to nine Outstanding Homemakers providing exception care. +2
-2Circus comes and goes in Worcester with possibility, however slim, that it could be banned under a proposed new city ordinance. -2
+2The Massachusetts Academy of Math and Science, a magnet school, tops the list of Massachusetts schools for average SAT scores, with a mean score of 2042. +2
+1Pure Juz on Highland Street celebrates grand opening with owners Luz Piedad Gonzalez and Arber Isaak. +1
-2Renovations were barely complete at Elm Park when vandals allegedly tagged benches there. More work is planned at the park and offi cials plan to install surveillance cameras at the park. -2
+1Holy Cross has four students – William Geddes, Matthew McCormick, Michelle McGahan and Megan Norton – honored with Robert Noyce Teacher Scholarships. +1
-2While city offi cials consider a foreclosure mediation ordinance, more time passes with needy families potentially at risk of foreclosure and many with no recourse. -2
-3Emergency vehicles at the Fire Department are in dire need of replacement, a concern raised to city councilors. In the meantime, fi refi ghters make do with vehicles that, in some cases, are as much as 20 years old or more. -3
With $4.4 billion worth of property from which it receives no taxes, few would argue against Worcester’s need
for more taxable income. Offi cials see the leasing of city-owned buildings that might otherwise go unused as one way to add to the bottom line and there are a number of examples where public interest has met private opportunity under City Manager Mike O’Brien, a big fan of public-private partnerships. The city has executed leases with businesses such as Luciano’s, Byblos and Vanasse Hangin Brustlin Inc. at Union Station, the Massachusetts Commission Against Discrimination at City Hall and the Central Massachusetts Regional Planning Commission (CMRPC), to name a few.
One of the more recent leases is with Mezcal Tequila Cantina, the popular Shrewsbury Street eatery that is expected to open the doors on its new spot beneath the Major Taylor Boulevard Parking Garage in a matter of months. It is a deal that has the city putting up more than $500,000 in loans, including up to $150,000 for a commercial kitchen ventilation system that does not have to be paid back because the equipment would stay in the building should Mezcal leave anytime during its 10-year lease (there are two, fi ve-year options). In return, Michael Covino and his family, who own Niche Hospitality Group, parent company to Mezcal and four other restaurants, are investing what he says will likely top $1 million when all is said and done. He says renovations in the
building are more than 50 percent complete and that an opening by the end of the year is a possibility.
“Most people would like to say we’re not paying taxes,” Covino says of some naysayers
– some of whom have voiced their criticism anonymously or through emails to Worcester Magazine. “We’re taking 11,455 square feet that generated zero revenue for years. We’re here and we intend to be here [for a long time]. We like to think we’re not a fl ash-in-the-pan company. We’re building this as a legacy and long-term project.”
Mezcal will open up across the street from Uno Chicago Grill at 30 Major Taylor Boulevard in the basement of a city-owned parking garage. It fi lls the space formerly occupied by the Sh Booms, the once-popular nightclub that enjoyed its heyday on Main Street before moving to the garage to make way for a the new Worcester Courthouse. The city put the space out to bid three times with a Request for Proposals that identifi ed the preferred use for the space as a restaurant. Covino bid all three times; the fi rst two time did not bear fruit, once because of the anticipated high cost of construction and again because the city was offering just a 10-year lease. The third time proved the charm, with Covino winning out over the owners of the former Tailgaters Grille in Clinton. Under the terms of the lease, which was signed June 14, Covino pays $8 per square foot the fi rst year, with the cost increasing by 50 cents each subsequent year. The city agrees to pay up to $150,000 for a kitchen ventilation system, which the company does not have to repay.
“It’s going to be a permanent structure,” Paul Morano, the city’s director of business
assistance, says of the reasoning behind paying for the system.
In addition, the city will loan up to $250,000 to assist in the build-out and up to $140,000 to install grease traps and plumbing in the kitchen. Those loans must be repaid, although Covino admits he did not think the company should be required to pay back the $140,000 because, like the ventilation system, it will be a permanent part of the building.
“We didn’t think we should have to [pay back the loan],” Covino says. “I understand why. We’re a private company. Usually we do private deals where I negotiate with a landlord who doesn’t usually put out an RFP. I can’t negotiate the same way with the public sector.”
Addressing questions by some, including District 3 City Councilor George Russell, about some of the items being paid for up front by the city, including booths, tables,
Mexican restaurant’s lease with city fi lls vacant space, prompts questionsWalter Bird Jr.
Mezcal will move from Shrewsbury St. to the former Sh-booms loca-tion on the fi rst fl oor of the parking garage on Major Taylor Blvd.
STEVEN KING
STEVEN KING
O C T O B E R 1 7 , 2 0 1 3 • W O R C E S T E R M A G A Z I N E . C O M 5
{ city desk }
BUSTEDA TICKED OFF CLERK: A man who allegedly robbed a Mini Mart Sunday, Oct. 13 may have gotten more than he bargained for when the clerk behind the counter chased after him, even though the suspect had handed him a note indicating he was carrying a gun. The incident took place around 9 a.m. at the store at the Edgemere Mini Mart at 734 Grafton St.. Police responding to the call were told by a dispatcher that witnesses had seen the clerk chasing after the suspect, who was later identifi ed as 34-year-old Michael McIntyre, 6 Nancy Drive, Putnam, Conn. Offi cers ultimately captured McIntyre behind 12 End St. The clerk told police McIntyre entered the store, asked a question and left without buying anything. A short while later, McIntyre returned and handed the clerk a note demanding cash. The note also indicated he was armed with a gun. The clerk said McIntyre went behind the counter and took an undisclosed amount of cash. Police say they found evidence on McIntyre linking him to the crime. They also found two hypodermic needles, two orange pills (Buprenorphine Hydrochloride, a Class B substance), three orange capsule pills
(Gabapentin, a Class E substance) and a small, white powdery substance. McIntyre was charged with armed robbery, assault with a dangerous weapon (knife), intimidation of a witness, possession of a Class B substance, possession of a Class E substance, disturbing the peace, disorderly person and resisting arrest. No injuries were reported as a result of the incident.IPHONE, IFLED: Police on Thursday, Oct. 11 arrested Edgar Rivas after he allegedly stole a victim’s iPhone and fl ed the scene. Police who responded to an apartment on Charlton Street around 3:40 a.m. spotted a man in the driveway. The man ran when he saw the police and was found hiding under brush in a wooded area behind the building. Police found a pellet gun and mask near the 25-year-old Rivas. Police learned Rivas allegedly broke into the apartment through a window, held a gun to the female victim’s head and threatened her life. He allegedly stole her iPhone before taking off. Rivas was charged with armed home invasion and larceny over $250. He also had an outstanding warrant for his arrest.
chairs and bar stools, Covino notes equipment is all part of the lease that will be paid back to the city.
Morano says the deal with Covino was made possible because of parking revenues generated through the city’s Off-Street Parking Board. He says the lease alone will generate about $1.2 million for the city over 10 years. The city will realize $59,407 in interest from the build-out loan and $46,347 from loan for the grease traps and plumbing in the kitchen. Adding in the meals tax over that 10-year period as well as an estimated 2,500 patrons per week, Morano says, “The long-term benefi t is much greater than what we’re putting up front.”
“We would like to see more restaurants downtown, more sit-down restaurants,” he adds. “As we add more students and offi ce workers there’s more demand for restaurants.”
While the arrangement with Mezcal is not the fi rst reached by the city with a private business, some offi cials have regularly stood opposed to those deals. Russell, for example, was a voice of opposition when the city was going to buy equipment for a proposed brewery in Union Station. That deal eventually fell through. The councilor says he and his colleagues each received an anonymous email criticizing the city’s lease with Mezcal.
“I don’t think we should be in the restaurant business,” Russell says. “It’s one thing to lease property out, but it’s another to go into the restaurant business. I don’t think we should be in the leasing-out-space business, either. We should be using city space for city uses.”
Russell admitted he was waiting for further details about the deal with Mezcal from the city’s chief fi nancial offi cer, which he expected this week.
At-Large Councilor Rick Rushton, meanwhile, says the city has to fi nd ways to generate tax revenue.
“We’ve got spaces, we’ve got to maximize revenue,” he says. “Every city space equals no taxpayer dollars. We’ve got to maximize use. It’s about revenue.”
Have a story tip or idea? Call Walter Bird Jr. at 508-749-3166, ext. 322, or email him at [email protected]. Be sure to follow him on Twitter @walterbirdjr and friend Walter on Facebook. Catch Walter with Paul Westcott every Thursday morning at 8:35 on radio station WTAG 580AM for all things Worcester!
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{ worcesteria } Walter Bird Jr.
6 W O R C E S T E R M A G A Z I N E . C O M • O C T O B E R 1 7 , 2 0 1 3
O’BRIEN’S “TIME”: The panhandling ordinances Worcester enacted at the beginning of the year garnered attention throughout the state. Boston, the largest city in New England, gladly let Worcester take the lead on panhandling, no doubt willing to let city offi cials here play guinea pig when it came to dealing with a growing problem – begging on, and in some cases in, public streets. By putting in place the ordinances, the city empowered police to arrest panhandlers, if necessary, and they have. In most of the arrests, drugs were involved. Nonetheless, the ordinances riled civil rights activists and the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) has fi led suit. More than just Boston is watching now. City Manager Mike O’Brien and Worcester are the main subjects of an Oct. 10 story in Time U.S. It cannot hearten the city manager and other city offi cials to have so many good things happening in Worcester, but see national attention focused on something it did almost a year ago. Still, the city had to have known someone would challenge the ordinances. Now that someone has, O’Brien acknowledges in the Time article the city could lose the case.
BACK FOR MOORE: If state Sen. Michael Moore isn’t running for his seat next year, it’s news to him. There has been some mention of Moore landing a job in the private sector and not running to retain his seat in 2014. Word was that, were that to happen, newly-elected state Rep. Dan Donahue would run for the Senate, which
would leave the 16th Worcester District state representative’s seat wide open again. And that, of course, would only fuel speculation that ex-state Rep. John Fresolo, who resigned that seat earlier this year, would try to win it back. “I’m running for re-election,” Moore says. “I’m very happy where I am. Look at all the activities I have over the next several months. Someone started this rumor 30 days after I was re-elected last November. I assured everyone I was very happy serving the 2nd Worcester District.” As for talk of a possible challenge by Republican Carol Claros, Moore says, “It’s really irrelevant to me.”
NO TALE OF THE TAPE: If, like us, you’re curious about just what is on that tape that allegedly captured an assistant district attorney and Worcester cop in the throes of passion, you’ll have to keep guessing, for now. Responding to a request for a copy of the tape by Worcester Magazine, Daniel Sullivan, general counsel for the Executive Offi ce of the Trial Court, says the Court is not subject to the state’s Public Records Law. It is also exempt from the Freedom of Information Act, which is a federal statute and does not govern state agencies or state courts. “In addition,” Sullivan writes, “several courts have held that the Freedom of Information Act does not apply to state agencies.” As such, the Trial Court declined to comply with our request. We reminded the Trial Court that while it may not be required to release the tape it could certainly choose to do so, particularly as it allegedly depicts public employees. Alas, the plea was to no avail.
SAY WHAT? Maybe it was a fear of what new owner John Henry has in store for the bargaining chip, er, newspaper he just acquired. Maybe it was a slap at the Worcester daily they consider their ugly stepsister. Whatever the reasoning behind Boston Globe correspondent Lonnie Shekhtman’s recent story, “Worcester’s revival proving elusive,” city offi cials are hopping mad. City Manager Mike O’Brien believes some of the folks contacted for the story were misled about its intent. At-Large Councilor Konnie Lukes thinks it proves not enough is being done to market Worcester. “When we have to read this kind of headline, this is demoralizing and it’s not true, that’s the problem,” Lukes grouses. The story essentially paints the city as stuck in the mud and making little, if any progress in revitalizing its downtown. Lines like, “... when commuters disembark from trains at Union Station and cross a six-lane highway to reach downtown via Front Street, they are still greeted by the leftover portion of a rusting skeleton of a failed urban-renewal-era mall” certainly create a visual, even if it is completely one-sided and dismissive of all that has taken place while so many other cities, like Boston, came to a virtual construction standstill when the economy collapsed.
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{ worcesteria }
O C T O B E R 1 7 , 2 0 1 3 • W O R C E S T E R M A G A Z I N E . C O M 7
GOOD FRIENDS TO HAVE: Former Lt. Gov. Tim Murray and his now ex-boss, Gov. Deval Patrick, put mor than $656,000 into a so-called segregated account from their last inauguration, according to a report by Jack Sullivan on www.commonwealthmagazine.org. The account is allowed under the law, thanks to the Ethics Reform Act of 2009. Money from the account can be used to pay legal fees, recount costs and inaugurations, Sullivan writes, and unlike regular campaign accounts there is no limit to what donors can contribute and no requirement on the part of the recipient to report when and how the cash was spent. Most of the donations to Patrick and Murray, according to Sullivan, came from large corporations whose businesses were regulated by executive department or business with the state.
SCAMMED: Unfortunately, whenever there are noble causes there are also scam artists looking to take advantage of folks’ generosity. Police have been looking into a possible new scam involving people going door to door purporting to raise money for breast cancer research. Worcester Magazine received a complaint from one woman and police spokes gal Katie Daly says detectives have also received several complaints and were trying to determine their veracity. Police remind people to always verify the company or organization before making a donation and should not allow unexpected guests or solicitors into their homes. To report a possible scam or fraudulent activity, call the Worcester Police Detective Bureau at 508-799-8651.
CAUSING A TIF(F): Mark Stebbins, owner of XSS Hotels, laid the blame squarely at the feet of local unions for his failure to secure a City Council subcommittee’s approval for a Tax Increment Finance (TIF) deal to build a new hotel earlier this year. He was visibly angry and said he would “absolutely not” build the hotel in Worcester. He didn’t go as far as he could have. In Belleville, Ill. Dianne Rogge showed her frustration at being denied a TIF, literally. She hung a sign in the front window of her business, the Pour Haus restaurant, that read: “No TIF for us, Tks B’ville.” Maybe it’s best Stebbins didn’t do that. City offi cials have assessed more than $31,000 in fi nes to Rogge for refusing to remove the sign. She has fi led a federal civil rights lawsuit.
GOING GREEN: The Worcester Regional Research Bureau is accepting nominations for its Thomas S. Green Public Service Awards, which recognize public employees for exceptional service and commitment to the public. To qualify, people must be employed in Worcester County; possess exceptional competence and effi cient handling of all assigned responsibilities; show willing performance of tasks above and beyond the call of duty; demonstrate a friendly, helpful and cooperative attitude toward the public and fellow employees; and perform volunteer community service outside the cope of job-related responsibilities. Nominations are due by Nov. 26. Winners will be recognized at a ceremony March 26 at Assumption College.
TAKING OFFENSE WITH THE DEFENSE: Several area residents – some inside Worcester, others from beyond its boundaries – are outraged over the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) and want city offi cials to sign on to efforts backing the restoration of constitutional governance. Some opponents held a rally outside City Hall before Tuesday night’s City Council meeting. Inside, many of them delivered passionate testimony urging councilors to go on record as opposing the NDAA. The matter was ultimately referred to the Committee on Rules and Legislative Affairs, which is chaired by District
3 Councilor George Russell.
COUNCILOR HART? We won’t say who, but one city councilor tells Worcester Magazine he could actually see council meeting regular Jo Hart making a decent councilor. “She loves Worcester,” the councilor says of arguably the city’s harshest critic. Hart routinely mocks councilors in her time at the mic during the public comment portion of council meetings. She has sunk her teeth into the Worcester Regional Transit Authority (WRTA), which now operates out of a bus hub on Foster Street and has been plagued by problems since the new building opened earlier this year.
TALKING HEAD: Assumption College is getting a new communications chief in Mike Guilfoyle, who previously worked in the Diocese as spokesman for Bishop Thomas Tobin. “Michael brings over 15 years of senior leadership experience in the communications fi eld to Assumption marketing and communications efforts,” College President Francesco Cesareo says. “His professionalism, creativity and understanding of social media will serve the college well.” Guilfoyle will start Oct. 28 and replace Renee Buisson as executive director of communications.
IN MEMORY OF: A community rally observing the fi rst anniversary of the shooting death of Nathan Otero is scheduled for Thursday, Oct. 17, from 5:30-6:30 p.m., in Winslow Park (Peace Park) at Pleasant and Winslow streets. Otero was killed last year in the parking lot of Indian Lake Beach, at the end of Clason Road. His killer has not been found. The rally is being held to talk about how to prevent violence and address the needs of non-violent solutions, preventions and interventions.
Can’t get enough Worcesteria. Check out Daily Worcester online at www.worcestermag.com. Have an item for Worcesteria? Call Walter Bird Jr. at 508-749-3166, ext. 322, or email him at [email protected]. Be sure to follow him on Twitter @walterbirdjr and friend Walter on Facebook. Catch him with Paul Westcott every Thursday morning at 8:35 on radio station WTAG 580AM for all things Worcester!
VE R BATI M
I want to be able to do my business that I’ve been doing
the past 19 years.”-Worcester constable Ed Moynihan, who has sued the city over fees
he and other constables are required to pay50 The number of destinations now
available for JetBlue customers out of Logan Airport. JetBlue starts fl ying out of Worcester Regional Airport Nov. 7
DAM N E D L I E S andand STATISTICS
SCAMMED
commentary | opinions
8 W O R C E S T E R M A G A Z I N E . C O M • O C T O B E R 1 7 , 2 0 1 3
Harvey
{slants& rants}
Break out the aprons, June! Home Ec is in the news!
At least, it was dusted off by The Boston Sunday Globe last week. A course that has gone the way of the dinosaur, celibacy and table manners has been bandied about for resurrection, and I for one think it’s about time.
I never took a Home Economics course in high school, nor did my daughter, but I had a stay-at-home mom, so I learned certain basic survival skills from watching her. Back in the days before MCAS, we had something called “electives,” which are a dim memory now, thanks to standardized testing being the Golden Yardstick of Education. To me, Home Ec was for stiffs – why would I take something so mundane when Mr. Hulbert was teaching Current Affairs? Irish History was way more interesting than sewing rickrack on place mat.
Apparently, being a single, working mom, I failed to pass on these basic skills, resulting in a daughter who can’t sew a button back on to a blouse. I discovered this recently, when I was
helping her pack for a trip to Italy. “This dress has a seam open,” I mentioned
as she was about to pack a fl oor-length garment for evening wear. “You’ll have to sew it.”
“I can’t sew,” she replied.“What do you mean? Of course you can.”“Of course I can’t. I’ve never sewn anything
in my life.”This was a real news fl ash. I never showed
her how to thread a needle? “What have you done in the past when a
button falls off?” I asked.“I give the thing to Goodwill. Or it stays in
the back of my closet.”Luckily, a needle and thread came with
some travel kit she purchased on her last vacation, and I was able to repair the dress for her, but not before we had a chat about her inability to sew – and other things.
“You iron way better than I do,” she said. “I don’t crease stuff.”
How could this be? One of my duties as a window dresser for Lerner Shops was to iron every scrap of material that went on a
mannequin. I ironed my dad’s handkerchiefs as soon as I could reach the ironing board.
“You did it for us,” she told me. “You did everything.”
“If we waited long enough, and could stand your nagging, eventually you cleaned our rooms, too.”
I thought about this awhile. I remembered badgering my kids to clean their rooms; did they ever really do it?
“No. You did,” she grinned.I starting thinking about it: who took out
the trash? I did.Who cleaned the litter box? I did. Who did the laundry, folded the clean
clothes, put them away? I did, I did, I did.Who washed the dishes? Who made the
beds? Who vacuumed? Who cooked the meals? You guessed it.
“If we procrastinated long enough, you couldn’t stand it and you’d say ‘Forget it! I’ll do it myself!’ Worked every time.”
Maybe it was Super Single Mom Syndrome, thinking I could do everything for everyone. Maybe it was simply impatience. Or maybe it
was genetics. I distinctly remember my grandmother
letting me sweep the fl oor as a child, only to have her take the broom from me, saying: “That’s nice, Doll, now let Nana show the right way.”
Maybe in my head, the lesson learned was: Why bother?
I thought about it again, when I was babysitting my grandson. I was trying to sweep up crushed Cheerios when he tugged at the broom. My fi rst instinct was to pry his fi ngers from the handle, and then I remembered that his mother can’t sew.
I gave him the broom. He almost poked out my eye, but that’s a small price to pay if someday he can crease his own pants.
character
1,001 words
By Steven King
A stitch in time
CORRECTION: A listing for Hungry Coyote in Worcester Magazine’s “Bites” section Thursday, Oct. 10 featured an incorrect address and time of service. Hungry Coyote is located at 580 Park Ave. It is open Sunday-Thursday, 11 a.m. to 10 p.m., and Friday-Saturday, 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Worcester Magazine apologizes for the errors.
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O C T O B E R 1 7 , 2 0 1 3 • W O R C E S T E R M A G A Z I N E . C O M 9
Spiral BoundSpiral Bound Brittany Durgin
NIGERIAN NATIVE PAINTER EXHIBITS PAINTINGS AT WPIThe artwork of expressionist painter Edward Oluokun is currently on display at Worcester Polytechnic Institute (WPI) in the Class of 1970 Cafe Gallery through Nov. 19. Oluokun, a Nigerian native and now Worcester resident, is said to paint “with vivid strokes and images.” His painting “Horn Man,” depicts how the Yoruba and other Nigerian tribes use animal horns to produce musical notes for spiritual meetings or celebrations. See Oluokun’s work at WPI, Class of 1970 Cafe Gallery, 100 Institute Rd.
WORKS OF NINA FLETCHER AT WSUA new exhibit, “Nina Fletcher: No Limits” opens at the Mary Cosgrove Dolphin Gallery at Worcester State University on Oct. 24 with a reception from 5-7 p.m. that is free and
open to the public. Described as “edgy and inventive,” Fletcher incorporated a mix of materials, including clothes, wire, bones, buttons and tissues, in her artwork. Fletcher has won numerous awards for her prints and sculptures. “Nina Fletcher: No Limits” will be on display
through Nov. 21. Regular gallery hours are Tues-Fri, 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; and Sat, 1-5 p.m. The Gallery at Worcester State, Ghosh Science and Technology Center, 486 Chandler St. worcester.edu.
NEW ART EXHIBITION AT ANNA MARIAView the artwork of Darrell Matsumoto, as he presents his work at Anna Maria College now through Nov. 7 as a guest artist. A self-proclaimed “artist-observer-maker,” Matsumoto was born in Hawaii, earned his MFA in Photography from Rhode Island School of Design and is a member of the faculty at New Hampshire Institute of Art. Matsumoto’s work is distinct and this exhibition should not be missed. Anna Maria College, Payer Art Gallery in Miriam Hall, 50 Sunset Ln., Paxton. annamaria.edu.
FILMMAKER PRESENTS DOCUMENTARIES AT FSUDocumentary fi lmmaker John Antonelli will present two new fi lms exploring environmental issues in Africa at Fitchburg State University on Wednesday, Oct. 23 at 3:30 and 7 p.m. The fi rst fi lm, “Unfair Game: The Politics of Poaching” is set in Swaziland and Zambia and contrasts two approaches to solving the poaching issue. The second fi lm, “The New Environmentalists,” is a series that has been running for 10 years on PBS, the Sundance Channel and fi lm festivals. Fitchburg State University, Ellis White Lecture Hall in Hammond Hall, 160 Pearl St., Fitchburg.
Send notes about Worcester colleges and universities, works of art by students and staff, opinion pieces and other higher-ed related content to [email protected] with contact information to be considered for publication.
10 W O R C E S T E R M A G A Z I N E . C O M • O C T O B E R 1 7 , 2 0 1 3
{ cover story } From darkness to light: Dance lifts young woman from
depressionFOR LATINOS, MENTAL ILLNESS A PRESSING CONCERNWalter Bird Jr.
Arianys De Jesus smiles a lot when you talk to her. An engaging, seemingly
happy 20-year-old who is a double major in Spanish and Health at Worcester State
University, where she is a junior, De Jesus lives with her mother, stepfather and younger
brother in Southbridge. There is very little to suggest she was ever anything but a confi dent,
happy-go-lucky person. Her childhood could have been like just about any young girl’s – hanging out
with friends, maybe doing sleepovers and gossiping and giggling about the cute boy in class. Instead, according to her mother, it was a nightmare brought on by a constant battle with depression that, at its worst, had De Jesus sometimes thinking she might be better off dead. “I kind of noticed she was always on the quiet side, crying a lot more than a normal kid,” Marilyn Rodriguez says of her daughter. “The age of 6 is when I talked to the doctor about her having a chemical imbalance. At 7 it got really severe.”“She was crying all the time, very irritable,” her mother adds, saying De Jesus often had diffi culty sleeping.
STEVEN KING
O C T O B E R 1 7 , 2 0 1 3 • W O R C E S T E R M A G A Z I N E . C O M 11
{ cover story }THE NIGHTMARE
De Jesus was diagnosed with severe depression and chronic anxiety when she was 7. She was prescribed Prozac and was seen regularly by a therapist and psychologist. It helped, but it did not eliminate all the problems De Jesus was dealing with.
“There were times I would hear people talking in my head, saying really bad things to me, like take my life, just bad things,” she says. “I would sit in school and I would hear voices talking to me and I would feel like I was going crazy. They would say things like, ‘You’re ugly, you shouldn’t be living, you should kill yourself. You should take all those pills.’”
De Jesus says her mother tells her she was always the shy one in the family, but it went beyond shyness. “I didn’t talk to anybody, even to my own parents,” De Jesus says. “I’d always keep to myself. I wouldn’t want to leave my room. I would go home and sit in my room and just cry. I didn’t want anybody near me, not my mom, not my dad.”
Suicide, she acknowledges, was something she contemplated more than once. “I did think of it a lot of times,” she admits. “Did I try it? No. The main thing that popped
up to me was overdosing on my medications. I never actually had the balls to do it, I guess, but it was in the back of my head every day growing up.”
That time in her daughter’s life was, Rodriguez says, “a nightmare.” De Jesus has since come “out of the darkness and into the light,” according to her mother,
and she is using one of the passions of her young life, dancing, to help others suffering from mental illness. In a few days, the effort she started, the Dance to Live Foundation, will host its second annual fund raiser. The event aims to raise money to provide opportunities for children ages 13-18 suffering from depression or some other mental illness to take part in a performing art, such as dancing. De Jesus credits dancing for healing her, but she is well aware that there are many others who are struggling with depression and other mental health affl ictions.
A PROBLEM FOR LATINOSAlthough she may have felt it at the time, De Jesus was not alone – not just because thousands of Americans suffer from depression or some other mental illness every year. As a Latina, De Jesus was, according to statistics, already at a high risk of suffering from depression and anxiety. A Latino Community Mental Health Fact Sheet from the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) notes women and Latinos are more likely to go through a depressive episode. Among Latinos, depression is more common for women (46 percent) than men (19.6 percent). In addition, the rate of attempted suicide among high-school age girls has been reported as one-and-a-half times more for Latino girls than that of African-American or non-Hispanic white girls.
“I don’t like the stats that show the disparity between ethnicities,” says Mirza Lugardo, director of Intensive Family Services at Harrington Memorial Hospital in Southbridge.
WHAT: Dance to Live Foundation 2013 Green Carpet Affair & Fundraiser
WHEN: Saturday, Oct. 19
WHERE: Renaissance Function Hall, 1040 Southbridge St., Worcester
TIME: 7 p.m. to midnight
COST: $25 person, $40 couple
PURPOSE: Raise money for scholarships to provide access to performance arts activities for teens suffering from depression and other mental health issues
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{ cover story }
12 W O R C E S T E R M A G A Z I N E . C O M • O C T O B E R 1 7 , 2 0 1 3
that her daughter had a mental illness. “I was in denial in the beginning because I was
working in the mental health fi eld and I didn’t want to admit my child had that,” she says. “It was just devastating to have this little girl … who was born with something wrong.”
Sarai Rivera has worked in the mental health fi eld for several years. As a clinical social worker she interacted with many Latino women and young girls.
“When you look at Latino females, one of the issues is, you know when you’re dealing with diabetes or high blood pressure you have things that can trigger or exacerbate it,” says Rivera. “It’s the same thing with depression. You have things that can trigger or exacerbate it. When you look at the struggles of identity, specifi cally for Latino females, when you’re growing up in a Barbie culture where beauty is defi ned by a certain look and you look in a mirror and your hair is anything but straight. You look on TV and anyone that looks like me, that looks like a maid, is Latino. Those are some issues, on top of when you have depression … begin to exacerbate the problem all the more.”
As for the reluctance among some Latinos to seek help dealing with mental health issues, Rivera points to the history of mental illness.
“It was always seen as some sort of evil spirit or something you did wrong, something wrong with you,” she says. “Historically, the reaction to it has always been negative. So if I’m going to get locked up or ostracized who’s going to admit to that? Latinos are also very spiritual. A lot of time in my practice I would hear that they would seek guidance from a spiritual leader of some kind. I’m a believer in diving healing, don’t get me wrong, but I would always tell people, if you have a toothache most likely you’re going to call your dentist instead of your pastor, but yet we tend not to do that when we’re talking about mental illness.
She cites one study that shows four of 10 Latino girls showed symptoms of depression. “It is incredible how the numbers continue to show that Latinos and African-Americans are worse off than their European counterparts.”
The disparity could be even greater considering that, according to NAMI, fewer than one in 11 Latinos with mental health disorders reach out to a specialist or seek treatment. They are twice as likely to turn to other resources, such as their own personal physician or a member of the clergy.
Part of it has to do with the lack of Spanish-speaking mental health professionals, but there are other reasons.
“It has to do a lot with the stigma and the diffi culty accepting you have a mental illness as well as limited services for Latinos,” Lugardo says. “The majority of times, [Latinos] say the cultural sensitivity is an issue. They don’t feel welcome.”
For Rodriguez, it took a while to accept
• Talking about wanting to die
• Looking for a way to kill oneself
• Talking about feeling hopeless or having no purpose
• Talking about feeling trapped or in unbearable pain
• Talking about being a burden to others
• Increasing the use of alcohol or drugs
• Acting anxious, agitated or recklessly
• Sleeping too little or too much
• Withdrawing or feeling isolated
• Showing rage or talking about seeking revenge
• Displaying extreme mood swings
The more of these signs a person shows, the greater the risk. Warning signs are associated with suicide, but may not be what causes a suicide.
WHAT TO DO • Do not leave the person alone
• Remove any fi rearms, alcohol, drugs or sharp objects that could be used in a suicide attempt
• Call the US National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 800-273-TALK (8255)
• Take the person to an emergency room or seek help from a medical or mental health professionalism
WARNING SIGNS OF SUICIDE
It has to do a lot with the stigma and the diffi culty accepting you have a mental illness as well as limited services
for Latinos
-Mirza Lugardo, director of Intensive Family Services
Mirza Lugardo, M.Ed., CAGS, LADC-I, LMHC, Director of Intensive Family Services at Harrington Hospital.
STEVEN KING
O C T O B E R 1 7 , 2 0 1 3 • W O R C E S T E R M A G A Z I N E . C O M 13
{ cover story }DANCING TO HEALTH
De Jesus knows she will most likely always battle depression, but she is not letting it keep her down. She is turning to something she credits for empowering her to deal with her illness and start smiling again – something that was prescribed to her in addition to medicine.
In addition to being put on Prozac when she was 7, De Jesus was encouraged to fi nd an activity that would help her interact with other girls her age. Her mother decided to enroll her in dance classes. The way Lugardo recalls it, De Jesus did not immediately take to the new endeavor.
“In the beginning she sat in the corner, she resisted the dance,” Lugardo says. “She was not just saying, ‘Oh, great.’ She couldn’t see that she could really do it. Her mother would not give up.”
De Jesus actually started dancing at 4, but her mother had to take her out of the classes because of her struggles. Eventually, De Jesus took to it – big time. By the age of 10, De Jesus was taking part in dance recitals and dance competitions. She had fi nally found something to draw her out of her room.
“My mom said I went from living in a dark hole to living in the light,” says De Jesus, who performs several types of dance, including jazz, tap and ballet.
Her therapists apparently saw the same thing. “They saw a big improvement in my life, within eight to nine months, where I was smiling more and talking more, as opposed to to going home, into my room and closing the door,” De Jesus says.
By the time she turned 15, she was off Prozac. She started teaching dance, something she still does. She is not immune to depression, especially when there are setbacks, such as in August when the dance studio where she was teaching, Salsa Storm on Harriston Street in Worcester, closed. She had been going there for the past four-plus years.
“It really hit me,” De Jesus says, adding she now attends a dance studio in Connecticut. STEVEN KING
Barry N. Feldman, PhD Director, Psychiatry Programs in Public Safety and Asst. Professor of
Psychiatry at the University of Massachusetts Medical School.
{ cover story }
14 W O R C E S T E R M A G A Z I N E . C O M • O C T O B E R 1 7 , 2 0 1 3
2011 HEALTH AND RISK BEHAVIORS OF MASSACHUSETTS YOUTH: SUICIDALITY
High School Students• 13 percent of students reported seriously considering suicide (16 percent of females versus 11 percent
of males)
• 12 percent reported making a suicide plan (14 percent of females, 11 percent of males)
• 7 percent reported attempting suicide (8 percent of females, 5 percent of males)
• 2 percent reported a suicide attempt resulting in injury requiring medical attention (2 percent females, 2 percent males)
• 14 percent of ninth-graders were more likely than 12th-graders, 9 percent, to have seriously considered suicide
Middle School Students• 4 percent of students reported having attempted suicide one or more times in past year, compared to 5
percent in 2009 (females more likely to report having attempted suicide, 6 percent to 3 percent)
• 7 percent of students seriously considered suicide and 1 percent had a suicide attempt resulting in injury (females 5 percent more likely than males to report seriously considering suicide – 10 percent to 5 percent)
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{ cover story }
O C T O B E R 1 7 , 2 0 1 3 • W O R C E S T E R M A G A Z I N E . C O M 15
During the dark time, Rodriguez noticed her daughter’s attitude and outlook changed whenever she danced.
“Dance transformed that little sad girl into a happy girl,” she says. “I guess she was able to express a lot of emotion through dance. I remember her telling me at one point, ‘Mom, I don’t hear voices anymore. I’m not sad.’”
When a depressive episode hits now, Rodriguez says, her daughter knows how to escape it. While dancing and other outlets may not be a cure-all for mental illness, Lugardo believes
they are invaluable. Her practice, in fact, incorporates alternative methods of treating mental health issues. She says the state Department of Mental Health (DMH) has granted her program, which offers alternative forms of therapy, a 10-year, $6-million contract.
“We do talk therapy,” Lugardo says, “but also, like in the summer we will take kids to a horse farm in Rutland, where they learn to groom and care for the horses. All of that really addresses many of their symptoms.”
There is also an after-school program that sometimes takes kids to a local nursing home to deliver Valentines or pumpkins, something they will do this month.
“We know, to some kids, that is even more signifi cant than sit-down therapy, although I’m not saying that is not important,” Lugardo says. “Through art or any type of culture, children can communicate in a way they never thought they could.”
RECOGNIZING THE SYMPTOMSThe characteristics De Jesus displayed when she was younger are typical of children who suffer depression, according to Lugardo.
“In children and teens they become very irritable, they hate everything,” she says. “Also, they become indifferent to others. They lose interest in activities they used to enjoy.”
Like De Jesus, youngsters with depression tend to have diffi culty falling to sleep. It is also not unusual for kids to suffer from both anxiety and depression, two things that tend to walk hand in hand, Lugardo says.
“Some people think if you’re anxious, you can’t be depressed,” she says. “That’s not the case.”
As for why young people might be so susceptible to mental illness, Dr. Barry Feldman says it is important to remember that adolescence technically lasts until age 24. They can suffer from youth congitive skill defi cits, otherwise known as impulsive behavior.
“You have young people trying to deal with stress in their lives, such as confl icts at home, break-ups, problems in schools, that in many cases haven’t learned some of the behavior of how to deal with that,” says Feldman, who serves as director of Psychiatry Programs in Public Safety and is an assistant professor of psychiatry at UMass Medical School. “That’s part of the equation. There are many factors that go into mental illness.”
TEEN DEPRESSION STATISTICS• Roughly 20 percent of all teens will experience depression
before adulthood
• Between 10-15 percent of teens have some symptoms of depression at any one time
• About 5 percent of teens are suffering from major depression at any one time
• As many as 8.3 percent of teens suffer depression for at least one year at a time, much higher than the general population, 5.3 percentage
• Most teens with depression will suffer from more than one episode
• 15 percent of teens with depression eventually develop bipolar disorder
(Source: www.teenhelp.com)
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{ cover story }
16 W O R C E S T E R M A G A Z I N E . C O M • O C T O B E R 1 7 , 2 0 1 3
When dealing with young people dealing with mental health issues, Feldman says, it is important to provide buffers or protective factors and a connection, such as contact with a caring adult.
“Positive self esteem or coping skills are buffers,” Feldman says. De Jesus, he notes, seems to have found her buffer. “The project she’s involved in, channeling energy and efforts is great and works for her. Exercise is very helpful in terms of coping with depression. Maybe she’ll enlist participation for other kids.”
DANCE TO LIVE The Dance to Live Foundation is in its second year of a mission that seeks to facilitate the access for young people to performing arts activities in an attempt to combat depression and teen suicide. Scholarships will be awarded for activities such as dance, art, music, drawing, martial arts, even sports. Its second annual fund raiser, the Green Carpet Affair, will be held Saturday, Oct. 19, from 7 p.m. to midnight, at the Renaissance Function Hall, 1050 Southbridge St., Worcester. The cost is $25 per person, $40 per couple. The night will feature a welcome reception, buffet dinner, a keynote address from Lugardo and, of course, music and dance performances.
De Jesus is hopeful that enough money will be raised to allow the group to start accepting scholarship applicants in January.
“The fi rst event was amazing,” De Jesus says of the inaugural fund raiser
last year. “There were over 200 guest. I gave my speech. It is hard to talk about it, but I feel like if I don’t [speak up], no one’s going to get help. That night was hard. It was my fi rst time every sharing with people what I had gone through.”
Rodriguez is more than impressed with what her daughter has accomplished. “When she fi rst mentioned [Dance to Live] to me, to be honest I was speechless,” Rodriguez
says. “She asked me one day if there were scholarships for people to dance and I said, ‘No, I wish there was.’ She said, ‘I want kids to be able to feel what I feel when I dance. I’m going to start a scholarship.’ I cried. It was just an amazing feeling. I’m just so proud of her.”
Have a story tip or idea? Call Walter Bird Jr. at 508-749-3166, ext. 322, or email him at [email protected]. Be sure to follow him on Twitter @walterbirdjr and friend Walter on Facebook. Catch Walter with Paul Westcott every Thursday morning at 8:35 on radio station WTAG 580AM for all things Worcester!
I want kids to be able to feel what I feel when I dance. I’m going to start a scholarship.
-Arianys De Jesus
STEVEN KING
night&day
O C T O B E R 1 7 , 2 0 1 3 • W O R C E S T E R M A G A Z I N E . C O M 17
art | dining | nightlife| October 17 - 23, 2013
10 years of Rock & ShockJoshua Lyford
Rock and Shock has become a standout event for Worcester and with good reason – the event consistently brings out major players in the world of horror. Couple this with awesome screenings, meet and greets, surprises and great bands, and you have the recipe for a fantastic time for both horror afi cionados and casual fans. On Oct. 18-20, Worcester will open itself up for yet another
wild ride.This year marks the 10th anniversary of
Rock and Shock and the fall institution is pulling out all the stops. If you have an interest in horror, music, or both, there is something here for you. With actors, directors, writers and producers meeting with fans at Worcester’s DCU Center and Palladium, downtown will once again turn into an eerily good time.
Things will kick off at 5 p.m Friday, Oct. 18 and run until 5 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 20. Fans will have a hard time soaking everything
in given the sheer magnitude of the event. Guests include Robert Englund (“Nightmare on Elm Street,” “Wishmaster”), Robert Patrick (“Terminator 2: Judgment Day,” “X-Files,” “True Blood”), Michael Rooker (“The Walking Dead,” “Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer,” “Tombstone,” “Mallrats”), Scott Wilson (“The Walking Dead,” “In Cold Blood,” “The Exorcist 3”), Gunnar Hansen (“The Texas Chainsaw Massacre,” “Chainsaw Sally,” “Mosquito”), Adam Green, Laura Ortiz and Corri English of “Holliston,” Dee Snider
(Twisted Sister, “Strangeland”) Jason Mewes and Brian O’Halloran (“Clerks,” “Mallrats,” “Dogma”), Jordan Ladd (“Cabin Fever,” “Death Proof,” “Hostel 2”), Twiggy Ramirez (NIN, Marilyn Manson), Kane Hodder (“Friday the 13th 7-10”), William Forsythe (“The Devil’s Rejects,” “Halloween”), Dave Sheridan (“The Devil’s Rejects,” “Scary Movie”), Sid Haig (“House of 1000 Corpses,” “The Devil’s Rejects”) and Hanna Hall (“Halloween,” “The Virgin Suicides”).
Rock and Shock will kick off the musical portion of the event with a pre-show Thursday, Oct. 17 at the Palladium
featuring Between the Buried and Me, The Faceless, The Contortionist and The Safety Fire. Friday night there will be a screening of Jay and Silent Bob’s “Super Groovy Cartoon Movie.” Saturday night the legendary Danzig will be celebrating 25 years of music and performing with Doyle from The Misfi ts. Otep, Butcher Babies, Texas Hippie Coalition and A Pale Horse Named Death will be supporting. On Sunday, Oct. 20 Twiztid will kick off their Fright Fest Tour with Blaze, The Roc, Aqualeo, Funny People making Funna People, Fury, Masstapeace and more.
Rock and Shock gets the guests almost as excited as the fans, as the evening marks an opportunity for them to connect one on one. Actor Michael Rooker, who is perhaps best known these days for his role as Merle Dixon from AMC’s “The Walking Dead,” appreciates the time spent with fans and is himself a fan of horror. He says that festivals are an enjoyable experience. “do enjoy them, obviously, as I keep coming back for more,” Rooker says. “It always amazes me the amount of love the fans have to give and the excitement that unfolds at the conventions. I always have a great time. Horror fans are great, they’re very loyal and always enthusiastic in a very cool way. I do count myself as a horror fan. My personal favorite is ‘Night of the Living Dead.’”
Jason Mewes is an actor, producer and all-around hilarious guy to be around. He is often identifi ed as his character, Jay, the more loquacious half of hilarious on-screen duo Jay and Silent Bob, who have starred in classics like “Clerks,” “Mallrats,” “Dogma” and “Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back.” He will be at Rock and Shock promoting his new animated feature, “Jay and Silent Bob’s Super Groovy Cartoon Movie.”
“Rock and shock is defi nitely my favorite,” Mewes says. “I love this. We’ve been touring with this movie and I get to sit and listen and watch people’s reaction to the movie and do the Q&A and then afterward I go out and hang out with everybody and take pictures and say what’s up. You meet some of the most interesting people.”
Mewes is a fan of horror fi lms himself and counts “Blood Beach” and the “Saw” series among his favorites. “I am defi nitely a horror fan, but I am not as hardcore as some of the fans that go to the shows,” he says. “You’ll see some people that drive three or four hours to different shows with different costumes each time.”
So do yourself a favor and check out the Rock and Shock 10th anniversary show for yourself at the DCU Center and Palladium, Friday Oct. 18 through Sunday, Oct. 20. You can pick up tickets in advance at www.rockandshock.com and be sure to heed the wise words of Jason Mewes: “Come out, you will defi nitely enjoy yourselves.”
18 W O R C E S T E R M A G A Z I N E . C O M • O C T O B E R 1 7 , 2 0 1 3
night&day{ arts }
Chasing the Lightingby Matt Robert
The story of area artist Stephen Knapp’s revolutionary lightpaintings (distinct from photographic light painting), is a tale about risk, exploration and the artist’s long journey.
Knapp is known locally for the eight glass doors at the Worcester Public Library, added during the building’s refurbishing in the early 1990s, and worldwide for some of the world’s largest glass-glazed ceramic murals and for his kaleidoscopic “lightpaintings,” that are not paintings at all, but spectral fl ourishes of refracted light illuminated remarkably by a single light source.
Knapp’s work includes permanent exhibits in Cincinnati, Ohio and Japan, and a temporary exhibit currently on display at The Alexandria Museum of Art in Alexandria, La., where it will remain through November, before moving to Lakeland, Fla.
Knapp never set out to be a lightpainter. That discovery occurred unwittingly when he picked up a camera in college.
“At Hamilton [College, in Clinton, NY],” Knapp says, “I picked up a camera and said, ‘Oh, wow!’ I never knew that I could do something creative until I picked up a camera for the fi rst time, and it absolutely blew me away.”
Knapp says that his experiences at the liberal arts college were “way way important” in precipitating his discovery.
“I tell most young people I talk to that want to make a living in the arts to get a good liberal arts degree fi rst, because you learn to think differently, if you take advantage of it. And that ability to look at things differently, to come at it from different perspectives, is why I am where I am today.”
“The people that end up leading giant companies, and most endeavors really, tend to be people who can think laterally and who have a good grasp of a lot of different areas.”
He also credits the zeitgeist of the time
period. “I was drinking the Kool Aid of the ‘60s,
which said you could do anything you wanted,” he says, “and by the time I realized how diffi cult it was to lead a creative life I was just too stubborn to stop.”
And the rest, as they say…took decades of tireless exploration and risk-taking.
The initial gambit to pursue art out of college, though, didn’t cause Knapp a moment of doubt.
“That was easy. I worked for a large corporation for a couple years and it taught me that I never wanted to do that again.”
Though Knapp’s early artistic forays were in photography, his fi rst lark was in writing. “I dragged my young bride screaming off to Nova Scotia shortly after we got married to write the great American novel,” he says. “And we were up there for about 10 months and I’ve got three unpublished novels.”
The manuscripts remain in Knapp’s attic today. Despite his failure to hit pay dirt, he sees the jaunt as meaningful, just the same. “It was really just an incredible break from that tradition of going to high school, going to college, getting a job,” he says. “There’s something about those 10 months, [it] was a magical thing to do and in the ‘60s we just kind of expected we’d do things like that. It was the fall of ’71 when I last worked for somebody else.”
When he returned to the States, Knapp started small, selling photographic prints in increasing sizes and prices. Enjoying “working in scale,” he was drawn to larger pieces and eventually to installations, which led to edged metal walls.
“I did what was probably, in 1984, the largest photo-edged metal wall in the country, in Cincinnati, a 14-foot by 72-foot installation,” he says. “And that same year or
continued on page 20
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O C T O B E R 1 7 , 2 0 1 3 • W O R C E S T E R M A G A Z I N E . C O M 19
night&day{ arts }
‘David is generally unavailable for interviews due to his intensive touring schedule’By Jeremy Shulkin
Essayist, short story author, frequent voice on National Public Radio and all-around humorist David Sedaris is returning to Worcester’s Hanover Theatre for the second time in three years on Tuesday, Oct. 22 at 7:30 p.m. The evening, sponsored by Fallon Community Health Plan, will feature Sedaris reading excerpts from his books, including his most recent, “Let’s Explore Diabetes With Owls,” a collection of new material and previously-published work that came out in the spring.
Sedaris’ publicist said the author would be too busy during his tour to give interviews, but Worcester Magazine has decided to interview him anyway, supplying his answers via his writing.
WM:WM: “Let’s Explore Diabetes with Owls” is a collection of new material sprinkled in with work that’s only previously been published in magazines from earlier in your career. What’s different about your writing then and now?
DS:DS: “As a child I assumed that when I reached adulthood, I would have grown-up thoughts.”
WM:WM: There was some controversy a few years back about some of your stories having exaggerated details, sparking some debate about how much grey area can be afforded personal essay writers when telling a story. Did people just misunderstand how creative non-fi ction works?
DS:DS: “You exhaust me with your foolishness and reward my efforts with nothing but pain, do you understand me?”
WM:WM: You’ve held many odd jobs before your writing career. Imagine your life if
writing hadn’t worked out for you. What do you see as your job?DS:DS: “I am a 33-year-old man applying for a job as an elf.”
WM:WM: Which gets you into more trouble: your writing about family, politics or the differences between American, French and English culture?DS:DS: “My family’s started to see things differently. Their personal lives are the so-called pieces of scrap I so casually pick up, and they’re sick of it. More and more often their stories begin with the line, ‘You have to swear you’ll never repeat this.’ I always promise, but it’s generally understood that my word means nothing.”
WM:WM: At your shows you often read your already-published essays aloud, though three years ago at The Hanover Theatre, you read some unheard material and played an excerpt of actress Elaine Strich reading one of the stories from your book “Squirrel Seeks Chipmonk.” Do you have any other surprises planned for your Worcester audience?
DS:DS: “If you read someone else’s diary, you get what you deserve.”
All answers were compiled from Sedaris’ books “Let’s Explore Diabetes with Owls,” “Me Talk Pretty One Day” and “Holidays on Ice.”
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20 W O R C E S T E R M A G A Z I N E . C O M • O C T O B E R 1 7 , 2 0 1 3
night&day{ arts }
the next year, I did what was, I think, one of the largest glass glazed-ceramic murals in the world, in Japan.”
These works were risky for the young artist, as he had no training in the medium. In fact, no one did, because the medium didn’t exist. “But I’m endlessly curious,” he says. It is said that curiosity killed the cat, and it must have struck fear in Knapp’s heart, too, as untested media, especially on a large scale, meant working in the unknown, for great periods of time, and limited remuneration. Knapp says that these circumstances played to his advantage, however, as he saw himself as “willing to take out huge chunks of time and invest in myself and invest in learning.”
Though professional commissions carry guarantees that minimize some elements of artistic risk associated with the independent artist, Knapp says that a lot of doubt remains. “You’ve just got to be willing to convince them and yourself that you can do the work, he says. “And often the amount of pay you get early on to do something that big is miniscule compared to the time involved.”
The risks, he says, paid off in other ways. “It was the ability to get some incredibly big things done that gave me the chance to move on and build a name,” he says.
Knapp’s arrival at his lightpaintings came about in the early 1990s, after he had completed work on the Worcester Public Library glass doors. He says that someone who saw his edged-metal and glass-metal walls, said, “‘We’d like you to do this large glass project.’” Knapp was surprised, because he hadn’t really worked in glass – at least not in the way they intended. So, he asked, “‘Why me?’” and they said, “’We like the way you
think, the way you solve problems, and how you create things,” hearkening back to his liberal arts training.
“So, I started working in kiln-formed glass,”
he says. And in late 1993 Chicago’s world-renowned Merchandise Mart (the world’s largest commercial building and wholesale design center) asked Knapp to create an exhibit to go along with a talk on architectural art glass. “NeoCon is the biggest show in the world for architectural designers. And I was told that, if you do that, do it properly.”
The Mart offered Knapp a 5,000-square-foot showroom for a “huge exhibit that stayed up for a full year in The Mart.”
“I fi lled it with glass and steel sculpture and architectural walls, like the Worcester Public Library [doors].”
Initially fearing that he couldn’t fi ll the exhibit with just his own work, Knapp started looking at different types of materials and found acrylic glass, which, he says, “is the basis of lightpaintings.”
“We ended up doing the whole exhibit with glass and steel sculpture and furniture and art glass walls and really cool different things,” he says, “and I did a tiny dichroic piece in the corner.”
Since then, Knapp has created lightpaintings for nearly 40 private commissions throughout the United States, including The Allmerica Building on Lincoln Street, in Worcester, and has displayed his works in innumerable group and solo exhibits throughout the world.
“People tell me all the time that it takes a lot of guts to go through life doing this for a living. And I tell people that I was always more afraid of not doing it,” he says.
“Somebody told me years ago that I would be very wealthy if I stuck with something and did it over and over again, but I also think I would’ve been brain dead if I had done that.”
But since writing about art is like dancing about architecture (as they say!), drop this and visit www.stephenknapp.com to see the artist’s work.
continued from page 18
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{ fi lm }night&day
O C T O B E R 1 7 , 2 0 1 3 • W O R C E S T E R M A G A Z I N E . C O M 21
Hannah Arendt was a philosopher and political theorist who covered the 1961 trial of the notorious Nazi Adolph Eichmann and produced a memorable piece in The New Yorker declaring that Eichmann was no monster. Instead, she argued, he was a bureaucrat, a nobody, a middleman mindlessly following his orders that the cattle cars transporting Jews to the ovens be full and on time. His very ordinariness was what made him dangerous and opened the possibility that many others put in his position would commit similarly horrifi c acts.
Guilty? Yes. Deserving of being hanged? Absolutely. Satan on earth? Not so much.
Arendt’s stance regarding the “banality of evil,” as well as her contention that Jewish leaders submitted too readily to the Nazis, angered and alienated US Jewish intellectuals, costing her friendships and threatening her job as a professor. She was accused of being unsympathetic to the victims of the Holocaust and a traitor to Israel, despite her protestations that she agreed with the verdict.
The fi lm “Hannah Arendt” nicely captures the texture and tenor of the controversy stirred up by this German American who herself had done time in a detention camp. As portrayed by Barbara Sukowa, Hannah is baffl ed by the fuss, insisting that the man she saw in the courtroom could, under different circumstances, have been the guy who does your taxes. This is driven home by the real footage of Eichmann on trial in Israel; a slender, balding, bespectacled man in defensive posture who was either a masterful liar or willingly oblivious.
Hannah is faithfully supported by her loving husband, Heinrich (Axel Milberg), and good friend, the ever-buoyant novelist Mary McCarthy (Janet McTeer), but her editors at The New Yorker knew a storm was brewing from the moment they read her fi rst draft.
One of Hannah’s arguments rings particularly true when considered in a contemporary light. Trying to understand evil, she contends, is not the same as forgiving it. In post-9/11 society, the same charge is often levied against anyone wishing to know deeper truths about why terrorists attack by those who believe that motive is inconsequential — as though knowing more about the roots of your enemy’s behavior somehow empowers him.
Sukowa brings a distinct balance of strength and delicacy to Hannah, though I prefer her performance when she’s speaking in her native
German rather than in English because she sounds eerily like Madeline Kahn’s Lili Von Shtupp from “Blazing Saddles.” When the movie moves away from Sukowa and into fl ashbacks, it weakens — her long-ago romance with her college mentor is thinly explored and wastes too much real estate. Hannah is at her best in front of a classroom, railing away, certain about her beliefs but expecting a fi ght from those who are just as certain about theirs.
Hannah Arendt will be shown at 7:30 p.m. Thursday and Saturday, and at 1 and 3:15 p.m. Sunday in the Jefferson Academic Center at Clark University. The fi lm is part of the Cinema 320 series.
Evil by any other nameBy Jim Keogh
A Capsule from Hollywood“Captain Phillips” is director Paul Greengrass’ second fi lm depicting an encounter between
hijackers and their captives (the other is “United 93”), and he again proves masterful at depicting physical and emotional confrontation in a confi ned space. His fi lm expands on the true narrative of the 2009 invasion of the Maersk Alabama by Somali pirates, and their kidnapping of the captain, Richard Phillips, leading to a tense standoff with the US Navy. It’s thrilling and exhausting.
Once you get past his pahk-the-cah accent, Tom Hanks is splendid as Phillips — quietly heroic, utterly decent, in short, so very, very Tom Hanks. He’s matched by Arkhad Abdi, a rookie actor who is a revelation as the glowering leader of the desperate pirates. Expect
multiple Oscar nominations from this one.
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(508) 752-4232
night&day
22 W O R C E S T E R M A G A Z I N E . C O M • O C T O B E R 1 7 , 2 0 1 3
fi lm times
Blackstone Valley 14: Cinema de Lux70 Worcester/Providence Turnpike, Millbury, MA 01527www.showcasecinemas.comShowtimes for 10/18 - 10/24. Subject to change.
Baggage Claim (PG-13); 1 hr 36 min
1:35 pm 7:30 pm
Captain Phillips (PG-13) PRESENTED IN SONY 4K DIGITAL; 2 hr 14 min
12:50 pm 3:50 pm 7:00 pm 10:00 pm 11:40 pm
Captain Phillips (PG-13) DIRECTOR'S HALL; Reserved Seating; 2 hr 14 min
12:20 pm 3:20 pm 6:30 pm 9:30 pm
Carrie (R) CC/DVS; 1 hr 32 min
12:10 pm 2:35 pm 5:10 pm 7:45 pm 10:25 pm
Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs 2 (PG); 1 hr 35 min
11:30 am1:50 pm 4:20 pm 6:45 pm 9:10 pm
Don Jon (R); 1 hr 30 min
4:10 pm 10:10 pm 12:20 am
Escape Plan (R); 1 hr 56 min
1:25 pm 4:15 pm 7:25 pm 10:15 pm 12:05 am
Gravity (PG-13); 1 hr 31 min
12:25 pm 2:40 pm
Gravity 3D (PG-13) REAL D 3D; 1 hr 31 min
11:55 am 2:10 pm 4:30 pm 5:00 pm 6:50 pm 7:20 pm 9:15 pm
9:45 pm 11:30 pm 12:00 am
Insidious: Chapter 2 (PG-13); 1 hr 45 min
1:10 pm 4:00 pm 7:05 pm 9:35 pm 12:25 am
Machete Kills (R); 1 hr 47 min
12:15 pm 2:45 pm 5:15 pm 7:50 pm 10:20 pm
Prisoners (R); 2 hr 26 min
12:45 pm 6:40 pm
Runner Runner (R); 1 hr 31 min
4:45 pm 10:05 pm 12:15 am
The Fifth Estate (R); 2 hr 4 min
12:40 pm 3:45 pm 6:55 pm 9:50 pm
2 GUNSElm Thurs: 7:30
BAGGAGE CLAIM (PG-13)Blackstone Thurs: 12:35, 2:55, 5:15, 7:50, 10:20, Fri-Wed: 1:35, 7:30Solomon Pond Thurs: 12:45, 4:15Westborough Thurs: 1:20, 4:30Worcester North Thurs: 12:35, 3, 5:20, 7:55
BESHARAM (NR)Westborough Thurs: 12:30, 3:35, 6:40 9:45
BLACKFISH (PG-13)Clark Thurs, Sat: 7:30, Sun: 1, 2:45 p.m.
BLUE JASMINE (PG-13)Worcester North Thurs: 12:05, 7:30
BOSS (NR) Westborough Thurs: 12:30, 3:40, 6:40, 9:40 Fri-Wed: 1, 4, 7, 10
CAPTAIN PHILLIPS (PG-13)Blackstone Thurs: 12:45, 3:45, 7, 10:20 Fri-Wed: 12:50, 3:50, 7, 10, 11:40Cinemagic Thurs: 11:50 a.m., 2:45, 6:50, 9:45 Fri-Wed: 11:50, 2:45, 6:50, 9:45Solomon Pond Thurs: 12:30, 1:20, 3:30, 4:50, 7, 8, 10 Fri-Wed: 112:35, 1:05, 3:40, 4:20, 7:05, 7:50, 10:05Westborough Thurs: 12:40, 3:40, 6:40, 9:40 Fri-Wed: 1:05, 4:05, 7:05, 9:15Worcester North Thurs: 1, 4:15, 7:15 Fri-Wed: 12:55, 1:25, 4:15, 4:45, 7:15, 7:45, 10:10, 10:40
CARRIE (R)Blackstone Thurs: 10 Fri-Wed: 12:10, 2:35, 5:10, 7:45, 10:25Solomon Pond Thurs: 10:10 Fri-Wed: 12:40, 1:10, 1:40, 4, 4:40, 7, 7:30, 8, 10, 10:30Westborough Thurs: 10:05 Fri-Wed: 1:15, 1:45, 4:10, 4:45, 7:15, 7:45, 9:30, 10:10Worcester North Fri-Wed: 12:20, 2:45, 5:10, 7:50, 10:15
CLOUDY WITH A CHANCE OF MEATBALLS 2 (PG)Blackstone Thurs: 11:45, 12:30, 2:15, 4:35, 5:05, 6:55, 7:25, 9:35 Fri-Wed: 11:30, 1:50, 4:20, 6:45, 9:10Cinemagic Thurs-Wed: 11:30, 2, 4:15, 7:10, 9:30Solomon Pond Thurs: 12:30, 1:10, 2:45, 4:10, 5, 7:35, 9:50 Fri-Wed: 12:30, 2:45, 5, 7:35, 9:55Westborough Thurs: 12:30, 2:50, 5:10, 7:30, 9:50 Fri-Wed: 1:35, 3:55, 6:50, 10:05Worcester North Thurs: 12:25, 2:50, 5:10, 7:30 Fri-Wed: 12, 2:20, 4:40, 7, 9:20
CLOUDY WITH A CHANCE OF MEATBALLS 2 3D (PG)Blackstone Thurs: 1:45Worcester North Thurs: 12, 2:20, 4:40, 7
DON JON (R)Blackstone Thurs: 11:55, 2:10, 4:55, 7:40, 10:05 Fri-Wed: 4:10, 10:10, 12:20 a.m. Solomon Pond Thurs: 5:05, 7:45, 10:05 Fri-Wed: 4:15, 9:40Westborough Thurs: 4:15, 9:05 Worcester North Thurs: 12:50, 3:10 Fri-Wed: 12:50, 3:10, 6:30, 10:20
ENOUGH SAID (PG-13)Worcester North Thurs: 12:15, 2:30, 5, 7:20 Fri-Wed: 12:15, 2:30, 5, 7:20, 9:45
ESCAPE PLAN ( R )Blackstone Fri-Wed: 1:25, 4:15, 7:25, 10:15, 12:05Solomon Pond Thurs: 10 Fri-Wed: 12:50, 3:50, 7:10, 10:10Westborough Thurs: 10 Fri-Wed: 1:20, 4:20, 7:20, 10:05Worcester North: Fri-Wed:1, 4, 7:25, 10:35
EXHIBITION: VERMEER AND MUSIC: THE ART OF LOVE AND LEISURE (NR)Blackstone Thurs: 7:30Solomon Pond Thurs: 7:30
GRACE UNPLUGGED (PG)Worcester North Thurs: 12:45, 3:05, 5:30, 8 Fri-Wed: 12:15, 7:35
GRAVITY (PG-13)Blackstone Thurs: 2:50, 10:10 Fri-Wed: 12:25, 2:40Cinemagic Thurs: 2:15 Fri-Wed: 2:15Solomon Pond Thurs: 1:30, 7:20 Fri-Wed: 1:35, 7:20Westborough Thurs: 1, 7:10 Fri-Wed: 1Worcester North Thurs: 5:20, 7:40 Fri-Wed: 12:10, 12:40. 2:25, 2:55, 4:50, 7:05, 9:35, 10:05
GRAVITY 3D (PG-13)Blackstone Thurs: 11:30 a.m., 12, 2:20, 4:05, 4:45, 6:50, 8:20, 9:40 Fri-Wed: 11:55 a.m., 2:10, 4:30, 5, 6:50, 7:20, 9:15, 9:45, 11:30, 12 a.m. Cinemagic Thurs: 11:45 a.m., 4:30, 7:15, 9:30 Fri-Wed: 11:45, 4:30, 7:15, 9:30Solomon Pond Thurs: 12:35, 1:05, 2:50, 3:40, 5:10, 6:40, 7:50, 9:30, 10:15 Fri-Wed: 12:45, 1:30, 4:30, 6:50, 7:40, 10:20Westborough Thurs: 12:35, 1:25, 2:55, 5:15, 6:45, 7:35, 9:55 Fri-Wed: 1:40, 4:30, 7:30, 9:50Worcester North Thurs: 12:10, 12:40, 2:25, 2:55, 4:50, 7:10 Fri-Wed: 12:10, 12:40, 2:25, 4:50, 7:05, 9:35, 10:05
HANNAH ARENDT (NR)Cinema 320 at Clark University Tuesday, Oct. 15 Thursday, Oct. 17 Saturday, Oct. 19: 7:30 Sunday, Oct. 20: 1, 3:15
I’M IN LOVE WITH A CHURCH GIRL (PG)Worcester North Fri-Wed: 1:15, 4:20, 7:30, 10:25
INSIDIOUS: CHAPTER 2 (PG-13)Blackstone Thurs: 1, 4, 7:10, 9:45,
night&day
O C T O B E R 1 7 , 2 0 1 3 • W O R C E S T E R M A G A Z I N E . C O M 23
{ fi lmtimes }
Blackstone Valley Cinema de Lux 70 Worcester/Providence Turnpike, Millbury 800-315-4000Cinema 320 at Clark University, Jefferson Academic Center 950 Main St.; Cinemagic, 100 Charlton Rd.,
Sturbridge 508-347-3609 Elm Draught House Cinema, 35 Elm St., Millbury 508-865-2850 Holy Cross Seelos Theater, 1 College St. 508-793-2455
Regal Solomon Pond Stadium 591 Donald Lynch Blvd., Marlborough 508-229-8871Regal Westborough Stadium 231 Turnpike Rd., Westborough 508-366-6257
Showcase Worcester North, 135 Brooks St. 508-852-2944 The Strand Theatre, 58 High St., Clinton 978-365-5500 Worcester Public Library (WPL) Saxe Room, 3 Salem Sq.
THE STREAM (PG)Fri. - Sun.(1230 240) 450 720 950
Mon. - Thu.(120) 410 725 945
CARRIE [CC,DV] (R) Fri. - Sun.(1240110 140) 400 440 700 730 800 1000 1030
Mon. - Thu.(100 130) 400 440 720 750 950 1030
RIFFTRAX LIVE: NIGHT OF THE LIVINGDEAD (NR) Thu.800 PM
ESCAPE PLAN [CC,DV] (R) Fri. - Thu.(1250 350) 710 1010
FIFTH ESTATE [CC,DV] (R) Fri. - Sun.(1255) 405 715 1010
Mon. - Thu.(1235) 405 715 1000
ROMEO AND JULEIT [CC] (PG-13)Fri. - Wed.(100 PM) 645 PM
Thu.(100 PM)
CAPTAIN PHILLIPS [CC,DV] (PG-13)Fri. - Sun.(1235 105 340) 420 705 750 1005Mon. - Thu.(1230 105 340) 420 700 740 955
MACHETE KILLS [CC,DV] (R) Fri. - Sun.(115) 425 725 1025
Mon. - Thu.(115) 425 730 1015
GRAVITY IN REALD 3D [CC,DV] (PG-13) NoPasses Fri. - Sun.(1245 130) 430 650 740 1020
Mon. - Thu.(1245 130) 430 650 735 1020
GRAVITY [CC,DV] (PG-13)Fri. - Thu.(345 PM) 930 PM
RUNNER RUNNER [CC,DV] (R) Fri. - Sun.(120) 410 655 945
Mon. - Wed.(125) 410 655 1005Thu.(125 PM) 410 PM
DON JON [CC] (R) Fri. - Sun.415 PM 940 PMMon. - Wed.415 PM 1015 PM
Thu.415 PM
CLOUDY WITH A CHANCE OF MEATBALLS 2[CC,DV] (PG) Fri. - Sun.(1230 245) 500 735 955
Mon. - Thu.(100 355) 710 940
PRISONERS [CC,DV] (R) Fri. - Sun.(355 PM) 935 PM
Mon. - Thu.(1255 355) 705 935
INSIDIOUS: CHAPTER 2 [CC,DV] (PG-13)Fri. - Sun.(135) 435 745 1015
Mon. - Wed.(1240) 415 745 1025Thu.(1240) 415 705 1025
SHAHID (NR) Fri. - Thu.(130) 400 645 955
FIFTH ESTATE [CC,DV] (R) Fri. - Thu.(110) 415 710 1010
CARRIE [CC,DV] (R) Fri. - Sun.(115 145) 410 445 715 745 930 1010
Mon. - Thu.(145) 445 745 1010
ESCAPE PLAN [CC,DV] (R) Fri. - Thu.(120) 420 720 1005
BOSS (NR) Fri. - Thu.(100) 400 700 1000
MACHETE KILLS [CC,DV] (R) Fri. - Thu.(125) 425 725 1000
CAPTAIN PHILLIPS [CC,DV] (PG-13)Fri. - Thu.(105) 405 705 915
GRAVITY IN REALD 3D [CC,DV] (PG-13) NoPasses Fri. - Thu.(140) 430 730 950
GRAVITY [CC,DV] (PG-13) Fri. - Thu.(100 PM)
RUNNER RUNNER [CC,DV] (R) Fri. - Sun.440 PM 940 PM
Mon. - Thu.(115) 440 715 940
CLOUDY WITH A CHANCE OF MEATBALLS 2[CC,DV] (PG) Fri. - Thu.(135 355) 650 1005
RUSH [CC,DV] (R) Fri. - Sun.(110 PM) 640 PMMon. - Thu.(110 355) 640 925
PRISONERS [CC,DV] (R) Fri. - Thu.(315 PM) 635 PM 910 PM
Fri-Wed: 1:10, 4, 7:05, 9:35, 12:25 a.m.Cinemagic Thurs: 12:10, 4:40, 9:40 Fri-Wed: 2:10, 4:40, 7:20Solomon Pond Thurs: 1:15, 4:15, 7:15, 10:25 Fri-Wed: 1:35, 4:35, 7:45, 10:15Worcester North Thurs:1:05, 3:50, 6:45 Fri-Wed: 1:05, 3:50, 6:45, 9:15
INSTRUCTIONS NOT INCLUDED (NO SE ACEPTAN DEVOLUCIONES) (PG-13)Worcester North Thurs: 12:35, 3:30, 6:30
LEE DANIELS’ THE BUTLER (PG-13)Solomon Pond Thurs: 3:55, 9:55Westborough Thurs: 3:50, 9:30Worcester North Thurs: 1:35, 4:30, 7:25 Fri-Wed: 1:35, 4:30, 7:35, 10:30
MACHETE KILLS (R)Blackstone Thurs: 11:50 a.m., 2:30, 5, 7:45, 10:15 Fri-Wed: 12:15, 2:45, 5:15, 7:50, 10:20Cinemagic Thurs: 11:40 a.m., 2:20, 4:50, 7:20, 9:50 Fri-Wed: 11:40, 9:50Solomon Pond Thurs: 12:50, 4, 7:10, 10:10 Fri-Wed: 1:15, 4:25, 7:25, 10:25Westborough Thurs: 12:45, 4:10, 7, 9:35 Fri-Wed: 1:25, 4:25, 7:25, 10Worcester North: Thurs: 1:15, 4, 7:25 Fri-Wed: 1:20, 3:55, 6:55, 9:40
METALLICA THROUGH THE NEVER 3D (R)Blackstone Thurs: 12:20, 2:40, 5:05, 7:20, 9:40Solomon Pond Thurs: 12:30, 2:45, 5:05, 7:40, 10:10, Fri-Wed: 4:05, 10:30Worcester North Thurs: 12:30, 2:45, 5:05, 7:55, Fri-Wed: 1:15, 4, 7:25, 10:35
NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD (1968) (R)Strand Fri: 10 p.m., doors open at 9:30 p.m.
PEARL JAM 20Elm Mon: 7:30
PERCY JACKSON: SEA OF MONSTERS (PG)Strand Thurs: 7
PLANES (PG)Solomon Pond Fri-Wed: 12:40, 2:55
PRISONERS (R)Blackstone Thurs: 12:05, 3:20, 6:35, 9:50 Fri-Wed: 12:45, 6:40Cinemagic Thurs-Wed: 12, 3:15, 6:30, 9:40
Solomon Pond Thurs: 12:45, 3:35, 7:05, 9:40 Fri-Wed: 3:55, 9:35Westborough Thurs: 12:55, 3:30, 6:55 Fri-Wed: 3:55, 9:35Worcester North Thurs: 1:15, 4, 7:25 Fri-Wed: 12:25, 3:45, 7:05, 10:20
RAJA RANI (NR)Westborough Thurs: 1, 4:30, 7:55
ROMEO & JULIET (PG-13)Solomon Pond Thurs: 12:55, 3:45, 7, 9:50 Fri-Wed: 1, 6:45Worcester North Thurs: 12:50, 4:10, 7:05 Fri-Wed: 12:50, 4:10, 6:50, 9:55
RUNNER RUNNER (R)Blackstone Thurs: 1:40, 4:25, 7:30, 9:55, Fri-Wed: 14:45, 10:05, 12:15 a.m.Cinemagic Thurs: 11:30, 1:45, 4:10, 7, 9:15Solomon Pond Thurs: 1:05, 1:35, 3:50, 4:20, 6:55, 7:40, 9:35,Fri-Wed: 1:20, 4:10, 6:55, 9:45Westborough Thurs: 1:05, 4:25, 7:15, 10:15, Fri-Wed: 4:40, 9:40Worcester North Thurs: 12:20, 2:40, 5:15, 7:35 Fri-Wed: 2:40, 5:15, 10
RUSH (R)Blackstone Thurs: 12:50, 3:40, 6:40, 9:25Cinemagic Thurs: 11:30 a.m., 7 Solomon Pond Thurs: 6:50, 9:55 Fri-Wed: 6:55, 9:45Westborough Thurs: 6:50, 9:55 Fri-Wed: 1:10, 6:40Worcester North Thurs: 1:10, 4:10, 7:15 Fri-Wed: 4:10, 10
THE BEGUILED (R)WPL Sat: 2 Free
THE BIRDS (1963) (PG)Strand Mon: 7 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.
THE IMPOSSIBLEHoly Cross Seelos Theater Wed, Oct. 23: 3, 8
THE FAMILY (R)Cinemagic Thurs: 2, 9:45Solomon Pond Thurs: 3:45Westborough Thurs: 3:20
Worcester North Thurs: 1, 4:05, 7 Fri-Wed: 1:10, 7:15
THE FIFTH ESTATE (R )Blackstone: Fri-Wed: 12:40, 3:45, 6:55, 9:50Worcester North Fri-Wed: 1:30, 4:05, 7:10, 9:50
THE HEAT (R)Worcester North Thurs: 5:25, 7:50,
THE IMPOSSIBLE (PG-13)Holy Cross Wed: 3, 8
THE WORLD’S END (R)Worcester North Thurs: 12:05 p.m.
WE’RE THE MILLERS (R)Cinemagic Thurs: 11:20, 4:30, 7:15 Fri-Wed: 11:20, 2, 4:30, 7:15, 9:50Solomon Pond Thurs: 4:10, 10:15Worcester North Thurs: 2:20, 4:55
night&day{ dining }
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24 W O R C E S T E R M A G A Z I N E . C O M • O C T O B E R 1 7 , 2 0 1 3
A mainstay of the Worcester-area dining scene has been the Manor Restaurant, which has served as a restaurant and function space in West Boylston for decades. Despite always having good food and decent prices, the restaurant was more commonly though of as a place to take the grandparents for an early bird special than it was for a night out for dinner and drinks. Seeking to change this image, the establishment at 42 West Boylston St. in West Boylston has broken off into two entities under one roof, the Manor Banquet Facility, and a newly renovated bar and grill called The Draught House, featuring a refreshed menu and some 30-beers on draught. In just a few short months, The Draught House has redefi ned itself as a great alternative for Worcester-area diners looking to get dinner and drinks on the route less traveled.
Still situated on Route 12, just a mile from the Worcester/West Boylston line, the dining room of The Draught House surprises guests with a huge, horseshoe-shaped bar, with over two dozen taps taking center stage. Tables, booths and high-tops make a semicircle around the bar, with fl at-screens on nearly every wall. Dining on a Friday night at about 8 p.m., co-diner, Markos, and I were stunned
to be quoted a 40-minute wait to sit down, but were lucky to grab two stools at the bar in about 10 minutes. Immediately greeted by our bartender Nikki, we were eager to dive into a couple of 20-ounce beers and the revitalized menu.
We started with an order of buffalo chicken tenders (opting for “medium” on the spice rating), roughly six large and meaty boneless wings, doused in a tangy and hot buffalo sauce, served aside the regular assortment of vegetables and a ramekin of house-made bleu cheese, which was more sweet than expected with hints of dill. Off the bar menu, this order of wings was only $4 and was more than enough for two of us. The wings are one of many items on a paired-down bar menu packed with wallet-friendly dinner and drink specials, that is seemingly offered throughout the entire dining room.
After the surprisingly spicy buffalo wings, we cleansed our palettes with complimentary olive bread, served alongside a dish of oil and feta cheese – a favorite of the Manor Restaurant that they thankfully chose to keep. Though we were tempted by the low prices on the bar menu, Markos and I ordered off the dinner menu, a three-page menu that features everything from seafood and burgers to personal pizzas and traditional Greek meals. Having fi lled up on wings and olive bread, Markos opted for the Caprese Panini ($10), an excellent sandwich doused in olive oil, with warm slices of thick tomatoes and huge chunks of fresh mozzarella cheese, pressed
between two pieces of glazed ciabatta bread.
Though I had my eye on a couple of the Draught House’s burgers and a Mediterranean fl atbread pizza that I had enjoyed before, I opted for the dinner special, Lobster Capelline ($18). The Draught House continues to be a standard bearer for excellent, reasonably-priced seafood in the Worcester area. Large
chunks of grilled lobster tail and claw were the focus of this dish, as diced tomatoes, roasted red peppers and basil were sauteed in
an excellent garlic Parmesan sauce, tossed in linguine. Both Markos and I were impressed by the sheer mass of lobster included in a sub-$20 dish. Washed down with a cold glass of Boulevard’s Tank 7 Farmhouse Ale, an earthy and refreshing saison and the best beer on tap, the meal was perfect.
Despite a terrifi c meal at a total bargain (about $45 for drinks, apps, and entrees), the Draught House is not without growing pains. Would-be diners were perturbed as some names were skipped over or forgotten in the waiting room (a buzzer system would be a welcome addition), and the defl ating singer/songwriter was too downbeat for music on a Saturday night. While it’s nice to see local establishments feature local musicians, “Harry Chapin” and “America” covers might be more fi tting for weekday nights. Nevertheless, the Draught House impressed us with its new menu, great prices, and revitalized bar, offering a great alternative for Worcester diners looking for dinner and drinks.
FOOD ★★★1/2 AMBIENCE ★ ★ ★1/2 SERVICE ★★★★ VALUE ★★★★ 42 West Boylston St., West Boylston • 508-835-4722 • thedraughthouse.com
The Draught House
Draught House, a welcome addition to West Boylston mainstayBy Michael Brazell
basil were sauteed in
A Great Pair of LegsBy: Al Vuona
Cameron Diaz, Katy Perry and Pamela Anderson all have one thing in common: great legs. What does this have to do with wine you ask? Every now and then you will notice a wine lover swirling their glass, raise it towards the light and watch for the wine’s legs to appear. These so called legs, or tear drops as the French refer to them, and are the streaks of wine forming on the side of the wine glass. The legs were once thought to be associated with a wine’s quality (the more legs, the higher the quality). However, as it turns out this phenomenon has more to do with science than with quality. You see, wine is a mixture of alcohol and water, the alcohol has a faster evaporation rate and a lower surface tension than water, effectively forcing the alcohol to evaporate at a faster rate. This dynamic allows the water’s surface tension and concentration to increase, pushing the legs up the glass until the surface tension pushes the water into beads. Finally, gravity wins the battle and forces the liquid to tear down the glass in the form of streaks or, as it’s commonly referred to as, its legs. Sorry to disappoint all you wine lovers who, like myself, thought we had a lock on this one. Unfortunately, science is the clear winner here. But don’t let that stop you from enjoying a great bottle. You can still pour your favorite wine and then patiently watch as the liquid slowly coats the inside of the glass with a viscous consistency. This phenomenon is known as the Gibbs-Marangoni effect. It is named after two physicists, Italian Carlo Marangoni and American Josiah Gibbs. Just because the quality myth has been debunked is no reason to get upset. Look at it this way: In the end you still get to drink all the wine you want while at the same time enjoying some impressive legs. Now that’s what I call a great pair.
SwishSwishRaising a glass to wine everywhere
WINEOF THE WEEKMirassou Riesling,
California $ 12
25On The CommonOn The Common
RestaurantRestaurant
508-839-5931
25 Grafton Common, Graftonwww.thegraftoninn.com
Come Discover...Come Discover...
As seen on...CHRONICLENew England’s Nightly News Magazine Program
Tu-Th 11:30-9 • Fri & Sat 11:30-10 • Sundays noon-8 • Closed on Mondays
FALL INTODELICIOUSNESS!Every Day Special Dinners
From $9.99
Kids Menu only $4.95
“Brit Wits”British Invasion Music
Oct. 25th
night&day krave
O C T O B E R 1 7 , 2 0 1 3 • W O R C E S T E R M A G A Z I N E . C O M 25
FIGHT BREAST CANCER WITH DELICIOUS TREATSFor the whole month of October, Armsby Abbey will offer several drink and dessert items with 100 percent of profi ts benefi tting the fi ght against breast cancer. These special menu items include: Treasure Chest with Old Ipswich White Rum, Old Ipswich Tavern Rum, pineapple juice, lime, hibiscus syrup and Bittermans Tiki Bitters; Pink Ribbon Punch with Bluecoat Dry Gin, Combier Pamplemousse Liqueur, Luxardo Apertivio, lemon, orange fl ower water, fi nished with a spritz of seltzer; La Fuerza with Olmeca Altos Plata Tequila, Elderfl ower Liqueur, lime, agave, pomegranate juice; and for dessert: bread pudding, créme brulee, apple crisp. Armsby Abby, 144 North Main St., Worcester. armsbyabbey.com.
FOOD DAYCelebrate Worcester Food Day! The Regional Environmental Council’s (REC) will celebrate on Saturday, Oct. 19 at the Main South Farmers’ Market at the YMCA Central Branch from 9:30 a.m.-2 p.m. The following week, on Thursday, Oct. 24, a fi lm festival with a series of workshops and a farmers’ market will be held at Worcester State University, and the Canal District Farmers’ Market will celebrate the same day from 3-7 p.m. with fresh local produce and other goods. Also on Oct. 24, a kid-friendly fi lm and free taco bar by Chipotle will be held at the Community Harvest Project in North Grafton at 5:30 p.m. All events are free and open to the public. For more information, visit worcesterfoodday.org.
HALLOWEEN COCKTAIL PARTYDress up for a Halloween cocktail party at the EcoTarium on Thursday, Oct. 24 from 5:30-8:30 p.m. The Dale LePage Trio will perform music from the Mad Men era, live and silent auctions will be held and heavy hors d’oeuvres will be served. Cash bar. The event benefi ts VNA Care Network & Hospice’s home health and hospice services and the use of technology for patient care. Costumes are optional, but awards will be given for the best. Tickets are $50. vnacarenetwork.org/news/halloween2013.
BITES ... nom, nom, nomBrittany Durgin
continued on page 26
In the Worcester Area Call
508-755-8631Call Toll Free 1 800•922•8281
257 Granite Street, WorcesterStandard Auto Wrecking Company Inc.
www.standardautoinc.com
SINCE 1939 FAMILY OWNED
USED AUTO PARTS
Ask Us about Charity Cars for Friendly House
Thanks Worcester for Voting us your
favorite salvage yard!
It means a lot to us!-The Employees of SAWCO
STURBRIDGE SEAFOOD OPENSA new restaurant, Sturbridge Seafood, has just opened in Sturbridge and will celebrate with a ribbon cutting on Thursday, Oct. 24 at 3 p.m. The public is welcome to attend the celebration.
Absolut House Martini $4.99!
Fisherman’s Feast Only
$15.99!
602 Southbridge St., Auburn 508-407-8880 602 Southbridge St., Auburn 508-407-8880 Kitchen Hours: Sun.-Wed. 11:30am-10pm, Thurs.-Sat. 11:30am-11pm
EVERY TUESDAY:Whole Belly Clam Snack with Fries $4.99
EVERY WEDNESDAY:50¢ Chilled Cocktail Shrimp
EVERY THURSDAY:25¢ Jumbo Chicken Wings
Great Craft Beer Selection!
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26 W O R C E S T E R M A G A Z I N E . C O M • O C T O B E R 1 7 , 2 0 1 3
Hors d’oeuvres and light refreshments will be served. The restaurant promises to offer the highest quality, locally-sourced ingredients prepared in creative ways. Visit Sturbridge Seafood at 376 Main St., Sturbridge and visit them online at sturbridgeseafood.com. For reservations, call 508-347-2600.
CAFE CONCERTSThe Worcester Chamber Music Society performs a series of concerts at local establishments
during the month of October. On Thursday, Oct. 17, Nuovo Restaurant on Shrewsbury Street will host a buffet dinner at 6:30 p.m. followed by the sounds of Bruch and Blumhofer, from 8-9 p.m. On Saturday, Oct. 24, Classical meets classic rock when Worcester Chamber Music Society performs at Nick’s Bar, which as usual serves drinks and offers a small menu. Show times at Nick’s are 8 p.m. and 10 p.m. Fore more information, visit worcesterchambermusic.org or call 978-456-2730.
\BEER GARDEN DURING PHISH CONCERT WEEKENDArmsby Abbey will offer an outside beer garden (weather permitting) on Friday, Oct. 25, from 4-8 p.m. and Saturday, Oct. 26, from noon-8 p.m. when legendary band Phish is in town to play the DCU Center both days. The beer garden will be located in the parking lot adjacent Armsby Abbey, 144 North Main St., Worcester during the aforementioned times. For more information, visit armsbyabbey.com
WINE EDUCATION CLASSESJulio’s in Westborough offers wine education classes every Tuesday at 7 p.m. Tim’s upcoming wine education classes include: Southern Italy on Tuesday, Oct. 22 and Germany on Tuesday, Nov. 5. Julio’s Liquors, 140 Turnpike Road, Westborough. juliosliquors.com.
VIN BIN ACADEMYThe Vin Bin in Marlborough offers a series of food and beverage classes in the months of October and November. The following are upcoming classes available for $10 per
person: Monday, Oct. 21: Craft Beer Night; Tuesday, Oct. 22: A Trip to Tuscany; Tuesday, Oct. 29: A Slice of Cheese, part 2; Monday, Nov. 4: Scotch Seminar; Tuesday, Nov. 5: The Rest of Italian Wines; Tuesday, Nov. 12: American Whiskey. All participants will receive a $10 voucher to use in the store once the course is completed. The Vin Bin, 91 Main St., Marlborough. thevinbin.com.
BURGERS AND SHAKESHungry Coyote has recently opened on Park Ave., offering up burgers and milk shakes. OK, they have a few other items on the menu, but these are the focal
BITES ... nom, nom, nomcontinued from page 25
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Wexford House
RestaurantTuesday-Saturday, 11:30am-10:00pm
508-757-8982Located at the corner of Shrewsbury Street
and Route 9 in Worcester
“Where Good Friends Meetfor Food & Drink”
Daily Luncheon Specials!Sandwiches, Burgers & Salads
El Morocco Salad With Shrimp or Chicken, Lobster, Scallop & Clam Rolls
Fresh Seafood — Chicken DishesGreat Steaks — Homemade Italian
Allen’s Specialty: Middle Eastern FoodWe Will Be Open Thanksgiving Day
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O C T O B E R 1 7 , 2 0 1 3 • W O R C E S T E R M A G A Z I N E . C O M 27
music
>Thursday 17 Hidden Gems Busking Blitz! (Street Performance). Various performers will be busking to offer an image of life in Worcester when Busking Culture takes over! Artists of all kinds are encouraged to sign up, and get $ for doing what they love in public! (iamtheprocess.com, facebook.com/IamtheprocessStudios) Free. 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. Worcester City Hall Common, Front St. 774-314-9412.Free Live Acoustic Original Reggae and Jamaican Buffet at One Love Cafe. Call 774-272-3969 for reservations. $10 per person Buffett. 5-10 p.m. OneLove Cafe, 800 Main St. 508-753-8663 or facebook.com/events/164007660454055. An Evening with Michael Caprera. Michael is a talented performer and an emerging composer who lives in our community. Michael will play original piano compositions, interspersed with narrations telling the process of composing different pieces. Free. 6:30-7:30 p.m. Jacob Edwards Library, Reading Room, 236 Main St., Southbridge. 508-764-5426. Worcester Chamber Music Society - Café Concert 1. Experience chamber music in an informal, fun café setting. Relax with a glass of beer or wine and enjoy the music. Enhance your experience with a delicious buffet dinner before the show at the award-winning Nuovo Restaurant. Concert $25, Dinner and Concert $50. 6:30-9 p.m. Nuovo Restaurant, 92 Shrewsbury St. 508-217-4450 or worcesterchambermusic.org. Thursday Open Mic Night/local Musicians Showcase With Bill Mccarthy. Bill McCarthy (originator of the “Half-Hour Sets!”) is Your Host at another great Open Mic Night! To check the schedules and open slots visit: m.facebook.com/groups/209610855806788?ref=bookmark&__user=578549000. Free! 7:30-11 p.m. Leitrim’s Pub, 265 Park Ave. 508-798-2447.BlackLight Rukus - Stop Tito - Magic Island. 21 + doors at 6 p.m. (facebook.com/blacklightruckus) “A morphing 4-piece from Southern NH, these boys like to mix things up, taking infl uences across the entire music spectrum. (facebook.com/pages/Stop-Tito-Collective/71553492192) $5. 8 p.m.-1 a.m. Electric Haze, 26 Millbury St. 508-799-0629 or facebook.com/events/731866433506259. BitterSuite. 4 Piece Cover Band Playing All Your Favorite’s From the 70’s - Today! Visit Us @ facebook.com/BitterSuiteRocks. 8:30-11:30 p.m. Black Sheep Tavern, 261 Leominster Road, Sterling. 978-422-8484. FLOCK OF A-HOLES, the ultimate 80’s tribute band with the TRAUMA QUEENS and Anastasia Markov. 80’s Dance and alternative hits. Anastasia Markov is opening up the night at 9:15 p.m. $5. 8:30 p.m.-2 a.m. Lucky Dog Music Hall, 89 Green St. 508-363-1888 or facebook.com/pages/Flock-of-Aholes/127019150125. College Night Featuring DJ Danny Fly. Come and experience Worcester’s HOTTEST College Dance Party! DJ Danny Fly will be spinning your favorite Top 40, Dance, Hip Hop! 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Industry Bar Room, 109 Water St. 508-756-2100. Metal Thursday! One of the Most Respected Nights for Metal in New England! Visit facebook.com/metal.thursday. 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Ralph’s Chadwick Square Diner, 148 Grove St. 508-753-9543. Open Mic Night! 9-11 p.m. Canal Restaurant & Bar, 65 Water St. 508-926-8353. The Well-Informed! No Cover! 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Nick’s Bar and Restaurant, 124 Millbury St. 508-753-4030. Jim Devlin. 10 p.m.-2 a.m. Michael’s Cigar Bar, 1 Exchange Place. 508-459-9035. Thirsty Thursday with DJ Matty J. DJ Matty J helps you get the weekend started early with old school jams, club remixes, HD videos and Karaoke! No Cover charge. 10 p.m.-1:30 a.m. Center Bar & Grill, 102 Green st. 508-438-0597.
>Friday 18 10th Annual Rock & Shock. Friday, Oct. 18 through Sunday, Oct. 20, 2013. Fans can meet their favorite horror fi lm stars, directors, writers and bands during the day. At night we have well-known national bands performing each night at The Palladium and DCU Center. Tickets
are on sale now at the DCU Center Box Offi ce, Ticketmaster locations, by phone at 800-745-3000 and online at ticketmaster.com. Hours Friday - doors open at 5 p.m. Saturday & Sunday - doors open at 11 a.m. . DCU Center- Arena and Convention Center, 50 Foster St. 508-755-6800 or dcucenter.com.Dana Lewis LIVE! Classic Radio Hits from the 50’s to the 80’s “The Soundtrack of your Youth” Free! 5:30-8:30 p.m. Webster House Restaurant, 1 Webster St. 508-757-7208. Thank Friday it’s Dr. Nat! 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m., then Jennifer Antkowiak with Tom Lamark host “Open Mic” 9 p.m.! No Cover! 5:30 p.m.-2 a.m. Nick’s Bar and Restaurant, 124 Millbury St. 508-753-4030. Open Mic. Open to musicians, poets, comedians or anyone with a talent! Hosted by Patrick McCarthy. 6:30-9 p.m. Nu Cafe, 335 Chandler St. 508-926-8800 or nucafe.com/events. Bobby Brazo. 8-11 p.m. Canal Restaurant & Bar, 65 Water St. 508-926-8353. Live Bands. 8 p.m.-1 a.m. Black Sheep Tavern, 261 Leominster Road, Sterling. 978-422-8484. Music Of The Woodstock Generation by Tom Yates & The Workingman’s Band. Performing Classic Songs from early rock to Woodstock. (myspace.com/workingmansband) 8-11 p.m. Cornerstone’s Restaurant, 616 Central St., Leominster. 978-537-1991. Relative Souls - with Full Spectrum. 21-plus doors at 6 p.m. (facebook.com/relativesouls) “Relative Souls is a high energy band from Bridgeport, CT. Equal parts funk, jam, and rock music. (facebook.com/FullSpectrumMusic) 8 p.m.-1 a.m. Electric Haze, 26 Millbury St. 508-799-0629 or facebook.com/events/724219060938250. 8 FT TALL Band with The Wondermics, Rocky & the Pressers and Alex Cohen. Eight Feet Tall is an 8 piece Hip Hop/Reggae/Funk band based out of Boston, MA. The Wondermics Innovators of Univer-Soul Hip Hop. Rocky & The Pressers are a contemporary reggae band based in The Bronx, New York. Alex Cohen $8. 8:30 p.m.-2 a.m. Lucky Dog Music Hall, 89 Green St. 508-363-
1888 or facebook.com/events/217392445082888. Butterknife Returns to Ralphs! w/Satellites Fall, Lincoln-Douglas Debate, Ariband and La Variations! 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Ralph’s Chadwick Square Diner, 148 Grove St. 508-753-9543. Dave & Randy Show. 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Rivalry’s Sports Bar, 274 Shrewsbury St. 774-243-1100. NEW! “High Voltage Friday’s” High Energy Hardcore with DJ Chananagains! Every Friday Night! 18+ $10, 21+ $5. 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Club Remix, 105 Water St. 508-756-2227. Chris Reddy Acoustic Loops from Hell. 10 p.m.-2 a.m. Michael’s Cigar Bar, 1 Exchange Place. 508-459-9035. DJ One-3. 10 p.m.-2 a.m. Perfect Game Sports Grill and Lounge, 64 Water St. 508-792-4263. Friday Night Dance Party with DJ Blackout. DJ Blackout bringin’ the energy to get the party poppin’ all night long No Cover charge. 10 p.m.-1:30 a.m. Center Bar & Grill, 102 Green St. 508-438-0597. Plush Worcester: Deep Frost w/ Deph & Frost Breaks. Resident dj’s Ryan Benwa, Big Spoon, & Karl Krazen bring you the fi nest tech house, jackin house & deep house. 10 p.m.-2 a.m. Sahara Cafe & Restaurant, 143 Highland St. 508-798-2181 Supernova Friday. The Supernova has arrived Worcester! Come out every Friday to Worcester’s hottest new nightclub, Bar FX. $10 (18+). 10 p.m.-2 a.m. Bar FX, 90 Commercial St. 774-823-3555 or facebook.com/barfx.worcester.3. Top 40 Dance Party. Free. 10 p.m.-2 a.m. Speakers Night Club, 19 Weed St., Marlborough. 508-480-8222 or speakersnightclub.net. Video DJ Jay Senior. No Cover. 10 p.m.-2 a.m. PiNZ Entertainment / Blue Dog Sports Bar & Grille, 110 So Main St., Milford. 508-473-6611 or pinzbowl.com.
point. The fast food joint offers creative takes on the traditional hamburger with the Ono, a beef patty topped with bacon, marinated pineapple, mayonnaise and swiss cheese; the P-Nutty, a beef patty topped with bacon, peanut butter and grilled onions on lightly-buttered toast; and the Slaw Burger, a beef patty topped with coleslaw and pickles. Milkshakes come in traditional fl avors: chocolate, strawberry, banana, mango, raspberry, orange and cream, coffee, caramel and peanut butter. Other cold desserts include ice cream, sundaes, root beer fl oats and ice cream sandwiches. Visit hungrycoyote.com to fi nd the full menu or visit their location at 580 Park Ave., Worcester. Open Sunday-Thursday, from 10:30 a.m.-10 p.m. and Friday-Saturday, from 10:30 a.m.-11 p.m.
WINE AND BEER TASTINGEnjoy an evening of tasting a variety of wines and beers and supporting Girls Inc. of Worcester at the organization’s Fall Wine and Beer Tasting on Wednesday, Nov. 6 from 5-7 p.m. Held at Wormtown Brewing Company, guests will be offered tours of the brewery and a silent auction will be held. Celebrity wine pourers include Cherylann and Leng Gengel of the Be Like Brit Foundation, Worcester Sharks Players, Andy Lacombe of Charter TV3 and several others. Light appetizers will be served and complimentary valet parking will be available. $30 per person. Email [email protected] or call 508-755-6455 x21. Wormtown Brewing Company, 455 Park Ave.
COOKING CLASS AT RED MAPLE INNRed Maple Inn offers the cooking class “Julia Child’s Bistro Favorites” from 6:30-9:30 p.m. on Oct. 19 with Chef Shari Alexander. Available to everyone from those looking for inspiration to experienced cooks. Advanced reservations required: 508-885-9205. $85 per person. Red Maple Inn, 217 Main St., Spencer. theredmapleinn.com/cooking_school.php.
QUICK, GOURMET MEALSLearn how to make a quick and delicious dinner at Tower Hill Botanic Garden on Sunday, Nov. 10 from 1-4 p.m. The class will show participants how to cook minestrone soup, chicken in a lemon wine sauce with capers, mushrooms and artichoke hearts served over rice, a mixed green salad with a homemade herb dressing and a cheesecake stuffed with fresh peaches. Tastings will be provided at the end of the class. Cost is $30 for members and $35 for nonmembers. Tower Hill Botanic Garden, 11 French Dr., Boylston.
V o t e d W o r c e s t e r ’ s
B e s t H e a l t h F o o d M a r k e t
110% OFF Offer exp ires 10/20/2013. Not va l id on prev ious purchases .
Cannot be combined w ith other of fers. (HL)
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An Evening of Burlesque Presented by the Wortown Bombshells A night fi lled with classic burlesque as well as guest MC Dale Lepage, guitarist Joe D’ Angelo, comedian Sarah Blodgett, a raffl e and a PIN UP CONTEST. The show will take place in the Acadia Ballroom at the White Eagle 116 Green St. Worcester, Ma 01604. Doors open at 7:30p.m. and the show runs from 8-10. General tickets-$10.00 and VIP tickets- $20.00. Tickets on sale at door the night of show. For more info visit: https://www.facebook.com/WortownBombshells
>Saturday 19 10th Annual Rock & Shock. Friday, Oct. 18 through Sunday, Oct. 20, 2013. Tickets are on sale now at the DCU Center Box Offi ce, Ticketmaster locations, by phone at 800-745-3000 and online at ticketmaster.com. Hours Friday - doors open at 5 p.m. Saturday & Sunday - doors open at 11 a.m.. DCU Center- Arena and Convention Center, 50 Foster St. 508-755-6800 or dcucenter.com.Rejoice! A Choral Extravaganza. Experience sublime choral and organ music. A special concert in aid of All Saints Church, featuring the combined choirs of All Saints and special solo works. Free. 3:30-5 p.m. All Saints Church, 10 Irving St. 508-752-3766. JAZZED UP Trio LIVE. Mauro DePasquale on vocals and piano , Ed Conley on drums and Phil Madison on bass. If you like the music of Buble’, Sinatra, Bennett, Connick Jr., you will love JAZZED UP Trio. No Cover. 6-8:30 p.m. Coral Seafood, 225 Shrewsbury St. 508-755-8331. As Time Goes By, A Musical Gala. An evening of music featuring Malcolm Halliday and 5 other talented musicians. Dessert and coffee Free after the concert. Silent auction before concert and at intermission. All proceeds benefi t the Capital Campaign Fund at First Congregational Church of Shrewsbury. $25. 7-8:30 p.m. Tuckerman Hall, 10 Tuckerman St. 508-754-1234. Dana Lewis Live! Dana Lewis, Playing the greatest Hits from the 50’S to the 80’s. “The sound track of your youth” 7-10 p.m. Nancy’s Quaker Tavern, 466 Quaker Hgwy (Route146a), Uxbridge. 508-779-0901. Worcester Chamber Music Society.. Program includes Jonathan Blumhofer’s String Quartet no. 1; Semper Dowland, semper dolens, for string quartet; Four Vignettes, for fl ute and strings; and The Maiden Pearl, for fl ute, violin, cello, & piano. Free & open to the public. 7-9 p.m. Clark University: Traina Center for the Arts, Razzo Hall, 92 Downing St. Cafe’ con Dios. Donation. 7:30-10 p.m. Faith Baptist Church, Main Auditorium, 22 Faith Ave, Auburn. 508-579-6722. Carrie Newcomber in Concert. A benefi t concert for the Interfaith Hospitality Network of Greater Worcester, a family shelter program for homeless families. 20. 7:30-10:30 p.m. Congregational Church of Westborough, 8 Church St., Westborough. 508-755-2212 or email [email protected]. Chuck & Mud and The Hole in the Dam Band. Mainstays of the Worcester scene, have a knack for creating an evening of gentle humor, fi ne music and good company. (WCUW.org or facebook.
com/#!/wcuw91.3fm) $10. 7:30-10:30 p.m. First Unitarian Church, John Henry’s Hammer Coffeehouse (Bancroft Room), 90 Main St. 508-753-1012 or brownpapertickets.com/event/445079. Elijah’s Fire. This NY Classic Rock Band is the real deal! Refreshments Available at nominal cost. $4 Suggested Donation. 7:30-10 p.m. Faith Baptist Church, !Cafe con Dios!, 22 Faith Ave, Auburn. 508-579-6722. Blue Honey. 8-11 p.m. Canal Restaurant & Bar, 65 Water St. 508-926-8353.
Chris Reddy Acoustic Loops from Hell. 8-11:30 p.m. The Mill, 185 West Boylston St., West Boylston. Cosmic Dust Bunnies - The Mushroom Cloud - Political Animals. 21+ doors at 6 p.m. music at 9 p.m. (facebook.com/cosmicdustbunnies, facebook.com/themushroomcloud and facebook.com/politicalanimalsct.) 8 p.m.-1 a.m. Electric Haze, 26 Millbury St. 508-799-0629 or facebook.com/events/224379611057844. Live Bands. 8 p.m.-1 a.m. Black Sheep Tavern, 261 Leominster Road, Sterling. 978-422-8484. Tigerlily. Free. 8 p.m.-1 a.m. Speakers Night Club, 19 Weed St., Marlborough. 508-480-8222. Great rock covers with QUADRAPLANE and special guests DEEP SIX! and ALTIC. Quadraplane covers your favorite rock songs from the 70’s to current. $7. 8:30 p.m.-2 a.m. Lucky Dog Music Hall, 89 Green St. 508-363-1888 or facebook.com/quadraplaneband. Beach Party with Tom Revane. 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Rivalry’s Sports Bar, 274 Shrewsbury St. 774-243-1100. Benny Sharoni Quartet. No Cover! 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Nick’s Bar and Restaurant, 124 Millbury St. 508-753-4030. Hey Now Morris Fader, Preacher Roe, The Rationales, and The Easy Reasons! 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Ralph’s Chadwick Square Diner, 148 Grove St. 508-753-9543. No Alibi. The area’s best party band is back at JJ’s! Bring your dancing shoes and get ready to party all night! 9 p.m.-12:30 a.m. JJ’s Sports Bar and Grill, 380 Southwest Cutoff, Northborough. 508-842-8420. Shakedown Street. Come dance and shake your bones to the Blue Plat Lounge’s premier Grateful Dead cover band! $5. 9 p.m.-
midnight Blue Plate Lounge, 661 Main St., Holden. 508-829-4566. Time Machine. $5. 9 p.m.-1 a.m. Greendale’s Pub, 404 W Boylston St. 508-853-1350. “Tantrum Saturdays” Dance Party Every Saturday Night with DJ Tony T. 18+ only $10, 21+ only $5. 10 p.m.-1:45 a.m. Club Remix, 105 Water St. 508-756-2227 or remixworcester.com. Center Bar Saturday Nights. DJ E-Class & Mike DJ Kartier take turns bringing the beats to make you move every Saturday Night! No Cover charge. 10 p.m.-1:30 a.m. Center Bar & Grill, 102 Green St. 508-438-0597. Dj Reckless. 10 p.m.-2 a.m. Perfect Game Sports Grill and Lounge, 64 Water St. 508-792-4263. Hit the Bus. 10 p.m.-2 a.m. Michael’s Cigar Bar, 1 Exchange Place. 508-459-9035.
>Sunday 20 Revolution Sunday’s! Drag Show Extravaganza Hosted by Lady Sabrina and Bootz! Featuring The Remix Girls, Special Guests, and DJ Whiteboi Spinning Beats! 18+ $8 21+ $5. midnight-1:30 a.m. Club Remix, 105 Water St. 508-756-2227. 10th Annual Rock & Shock. Friday, Oct. 18 through Sunday, Oct. 20, 2013. Tickets are on sale now at the DCU Center Box Offi ce, Ticketmaster locations, by phone at 800-745-3000 and online at ticketmaster.com. Hours Friday - doors open at 5 p.m. Saturday & Sunday - doors open at 11 a.m. DCU Center- Arena and Convention Center, 50 Foster St. 508-755-6800 or dcucenter.com.Blue Heron Renaissance Choir. The Blue Heron Renaissance Choir will perform as part of the 2013-2014 HUMANARTS series. Free and open to the public. 2-3 p.m. Assumption College: Chapel of the Holy Spirit, 500 Salisbury St. 508-767-7304. A Far Cry Chamber Orchestra and David Krakauer, clarinet. A Far Cry presents an incredible range of works, from acclaimed College of the Holy Cross Music Professor Osvaldo Golijov’s The Dreams and Prayers of Isaac the Blind, to a work of chant music by Hildegard von Bingen. Adult $42, Student $15, Youth $5. 3-5 p.m. Mechanics Hall, 321 Main St. 508-754-3231 or musicworcester.org.Big Jon Short - solo acoustic country blues. Free. 5-8 p.m. Vincent’s Bar, 49 Suffolk St. 508-752-9439. The Hangover Hour Spoken Word Salon 5 p.m.; Ballard
Street Poetry Journal 2013 Issue Release Party 7-9; Andy Cummings 9 p.m. No Cover! 5 p.m.-2 a.m. Nick’s Bar and Restaurant, 124 Millbury St. 508-753-4030. Blues Jam w/Jim Perry. Blues Jam with special guests weekly Free. 6-10 p.m. Greendale’s Pub, 404 W Boylston St. 508-853-1350. Open Mic Sundays At Perfect Game With Bill Mccarthy. To check the schedules and open slots visit: m.facebook.com/groups/209610855806788?ref=bookmark&__user=578549000. Free! 6:30-10:30 p.m. Perfect Game Sports Grill and Lounge, 64 Water St. 508-792-4263.Sunday Funday Karaoke with DJ Matty J. No Cover charge. 9 p.m.-12:30 a.m. Center Bar & Grill, 102 Green St. 508-438-0597.
>Monday 21 Driftin’ Sam Politz 7pm, then Big Game Karaoke! 9pm! No Cover! 7 p.m.-2 a.m. Nick’s Bar and Restaurant, 124 Millbury St. 508-753-4030. MONSTER MONDAYS. The ALL NEW Open jam every Monday hosted by Mike G. Free to get in, Jam ON! 8:30 p.m.-1 a.m. Lucky Dog Music Hall, 89 Green St. 508-363-1888 or theluckydogmusichall.com. Bop & Pop Jazz Organization. Classic Hammond Organ Quartet grooves every Monday night at the Dive. Free. 9 p.m.-midnight Dive Bar, 34 Green St. facebook.com/BopNPopJazzOrganization.
>Tuesday 22 Open Mic Tuesdays/local Musicians Showcase @ Greendale’s Pub With Bill Mccarthy. To check the schedules and open slots visit: m.facebook.com/groups/209610855806788?ref=bookmark&__user=578549000. Free! 7:30-11:30 p.m. Greendale’s Pub, 404 W Boylston St. 508-853-1350.Solar Eyes. 21+ $3. Solar Eyes is an experimental pop group comprised of members Hannah Cox, Ziyad Habib, Amman Mushtaq & Danial Hyatt. $3. 8 p.m.-1 a.m. Electric Haze, 26 Millbury St. 508-799-0629 or facebook.com/events/243647512451653. “See You Next Tuesday” with DJ Poke Smot! Downstairs! No Cover! Check our Facebook page (facebook.com/ralphs.diner) for guests each week. 8:30 p.m.-2 a.m. Ralph’s Chadwick Square Diner, 148 Grove St. 508-753-9543. “Dam Chick Singer” Denise Cascione, Joe D’Angelo, Pete Premo! No Cover! 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Nick’s Bar and Restaurant, 124 Millbury St. 508-753-4030. ELECTRIC TUESDAYS are back at The Lucky Dog (always 21+). Worcester, MA’s longest running DJ & live electronic night! WOMP. $10 Free before 11pm. 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Lucky Dog Music Hall, 89 Green St. 508-363-1888 or facebook.com/electrictuesdays.
>Wednesday 23 Open Jam w/Sean Ryan. Open Jam Free. 8:30 a.m. to 11 p.m. Greendale’s Pub, 404 W Boylston St. 508-853-1350. Hidden Gems Busking Blitz! (Street Performance). Various performers will be busking to offer an image of life in Worcester when Busking Culture takes over! More info at: iamtheprocess.com facebook.com/IamtheprocessStudios Free. 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. Worcester City Hall Common, Front St. 774-314-9412 or facebook.com.Live Music with Matt Robert. The Worcester-based guitarist plays a blend of rootsy originals and interpretations of ancient folk, blues, and jazz, as well as current roots and rock tunes. (facebook.com/mattrobertmusic) 6:30-8:30 p.m. Nu Cafe, 335 Chandler St. 508-926-8800 or nucafe.com/events. Duotone Instrumental Guitar Duo. Come enjoy great food and great music at the Sahara tonight with the Duotone Instrumental Guitar Duo. Free. 7-9:30 p.m. Sahara Cafe & Restaurant, 143 Highland St. 508-798-2181. Wednesday Night Open Mic/local Musicians’ Showcase W/ Bill Mccarthy @ Guiseppe’s.! To check the schedules and open slots visit: m.facebook.com/groups/209610855806788?ref=bookmark&__user=578549000. Free! 7:30-10:30 p.m. Guiseppe’s Grille, 35 Solomon Pond Road, Northborough. 508-393-4405.“Krazy Wednesday Jam Session” with The “Get On Up Band.” The music is hot motown/funk/swing/blues style. We offer a drum kit, bass rig and a full PA system for all to use, so bring what you
Singer-songwriter Abby Lappen performs at World Gifts & Espresso Cafe in Clinton on Thursday, Oct. 17, from 7-8:30 p.m. World Gifts & Espresso Cafe, 50 High St., Clinton.
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{ listings }play and “get on up” Free. 8 p.m.-1 a.m. The Krazy Horse Bar & Grill, 287 Main St. Worcester. 1-774-823-3131.Wacky Wednesday Night Jam @JJ’s Sport Bar. Open mic jam session...All are welcome. We offer a drum kit, bass rig and a full PA system for all to use. Guitar players please bring your own amp. Free. 8:30-12:30 p.m. JJ’s Sports Bar and Grill, 380 Southwest Cutoff, Northborough. 508-842-8420. . Dan Decristofaro. 9 p.m.-1 a.m. Michael’s Cigar Bar, 1 Exchange Place. 508-459-9035. Music Under the Moose! Every Wednesday Night. 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Ralph’s Chadwick Square Diner, 148 Grove St. 508-753-9543.
artsADC Performance Center (@ The Artist Development Complex), 18 Mill St., Southbridge. 508-764-6900 or adcmusic.com/Index.htm.Anna Maria College, 50 Sunset Lane, Paxton. 508-849-3300 or
annamaria.edu.ARTSWorcester, Hours: closed Sunday - Monday, 1-4 p.m. Tuesday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wednesday - Friday, 1-4 p.m. Saturday. Admission: Free. 660 Main St. 508-755-5142 or artsworcester.org.Asa Waters Mansion, Admission: $3 for guided tour, $7-10 for tea. 123 Elm St., Millbury. 508-865-0855 or asawaters.org.Assumption College: Emmanuel d’Alzon Library, 500 Salisbury St. 508-767-7272 or assumption.edu/dept/Library.Booklovers’ Gourmet Daydreaming with Wings, mixed media paintings & collage by Kim Carmichael, Through Oct. 31. Hours: closed Sunday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday, 10 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Tuesday - Friday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday. 55 East Main St., Webster. 508-949-6232 or er3.com/book.Clark University: University Gallery, Hours: Noon-5 p.m. Sunday, closed Monday - Tuesday, Noon-8 p.m. Wednesday, Noon-5 p.m. Thursday - Saturday. 950 Main St. 508-793-7349 or 508-793-7113 or clarku.edu.Clark’s Cafe and Art On Rotation Gallery, Hours: 6 a.m. to 1 p.m. Sunday - Saturday. Admission: Free for gallery. 310 High St., Clinton. 978-549-5822 or 978-365-7772 or aorgallery.com.College of the Holy Cross: Iris & B. Gerald Cantor Art Gallery, reThink INK: 25 Years at the Mixit Print Studio, Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thursdays, Fridays, Saturdays, Aug. 23 - Oct. 26. Hours: closed Sunday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday - Friday, 2-5 p.m. Saturday. 1 College St. 508-793-3356 or holycross.edu/departments/cantor/website.Danforth Museum of Art, Hours: Noon-5 p.m. Sunday, closed Monday - Tuesday, Noon-5 p.m. Wednesday - Thursday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday - Saturday. 123 Union Ave., Framingham. 508-620-0050 or danforthmuseum.org.Dark World Gallery, Hours: closed Sunday, 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday - Saturday. 179 Grafton St. darkworldgallery.com.DZian Gallery, Hours: 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday, closed Monday - Tuesday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Wednesday - Saturday. 65 Water St. 508-831-1106 or dzian.net.EcoTarium, Science + You, Through April 27, 2014. Hours: noon-5 p.m. Sunday, closed Monday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday - Saturday. Admission: $14.00 adults; $8.00 for children ages 2-18, $10 college students with IDs & senior citizens. Children under 2 & EcoTarium members free. 222 Harrington Way. 508-929-2700 or ecotarium.org.Fisher Museum Harvard Forest, 324 N. Main St., Petersham. 978-724-3302 or harvardforest.fas.harvard.edu/museum.html.
Fitchburg Art Museum, Hours: noon-4 p.m. Sunday, closed Monday, noon-4 p.m. Tuesday - Saturday. 25 Merriam Parkway, Fitchburg. 978-345-4207 or fi tchburgartmuseum.org.Fitchburg Historical Society, Hours: closed Sunday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday - Tuesday, 10 a.m.-Midnight Wednesday, closed Thursday - Saturday. 50 Grove St., Fitchburg. 978-345-1157 or fi tchburghistory.fsc.edu.Fitchburg State University: Hammond Hall, 160 Pearl St., Fitchburg. fi tchburgstate.edu.Framed in Tatnuck, Hours: closed Sunday - Monday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tuesday - Friday, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday. 1099 Pleasant St. 508-770-1270 or framedintatnuck.com.Fruitlands Museum, 102 Prospect Hill Road, Harvard. 978-456-3924 or fruitlands.org.Gallery of African Art, Gallery of African Art Free Tours, Thursdays, through Dec. 19; Weekly Thursday Tours at the Gallery of African Art, Thursdays, through Dec. 26. Hours: closed Sunday, 10 a.m. to 5:30
p.m. Monday - Wednesday, 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Thursday, 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Friday, 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Saturday. 62 High St., Clinton. 978-368-0227 or 978-598-5000x17 or galleryofafricanart.org.Higgins Armory Museum, WOO Card good at Higgins Armory Museum, Through Dec. 31. Hours: noon-4 p.m. Sunday, closed Monday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday - Saturday. Admission: General Admission: $12 for Adults, $10 for Seniors (age 60+), $8 for Children (age 4-16), Children 3 and under are Free. 100 Barber Ave. 508-853-6015 or higgins.org.Highland Artist Group, 113 Highland St. highlandartistgroup.com.Mass Audubon: Broad Meadow Brook Conservation Center and Wildlife Sanctuary, Hours: 12:30-4 p.m. Sunday, closed Monday, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday - Saturday. 414 Massasoit Ave. 508-753-6087 or massaudubon.org.Museum of Russian Icons. Series of One Icon Exhibits, Through June 20, 2014. Hours: closed Sunday - Monday, 11-3 a.m. Tuesday - Wednesday, 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Thursday, 11-3 a.m. Friday, 9-3 a.m. Saturday. Admission: Adults $7, Seniors (59 and over) $5, Students (with ID) & children (3-17) $2, Children under 3 free, Groups (any age) $. 203 Union St., Clinton. 978-598-5000 or 978-598-5000x17 or museumofrussianicons.org.Old Sturbridge Village, Harvest Days, Saturday - Sunday. Admission: $7 - $20 charged by age. Children under 3 fre. 1 Old Sturbridge Village Road, Sturbridge. 800-733-1830 or 508-347-3362 or osv.org.
Park Hill Gallery, Hours: closed Sunday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday - Friday, closed Saturday. 387 Park Ave. 774-696-0909.Post Road Art Center. Animal Show 2013, Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thursdays, Fridays, Saturdays, through Oct. 30. Hours: closed Sunday, 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Monday - Saturday. 1 Boston Post Road, Marlborough. 508-485-2580 or postroadartcenter.com.Preservation Worcester, Hours: closed Sunday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Monday - Friday, closed Saturday. 10 Cedar St. 508-754-8760 or preservationworcester.org.Prints and Potter Gallery, American Contemporary Art & Craft Gallery, Mondays-Saturdays, through Dec. 31; Paint and Switch-Worcester Artist, Mondays-Saturdays, through June 30. Hours: closed Sunday, 10-5:30 a.m. Monday - Tuesday, 10-7 a.m. Wednesday - Thursday, 10-5:30 a.m. Friday, 10-5 a.m. Saturday. 142 Highland St. 508-752-2170 or printsandpotter.com.Quinebaug Valley Council for the Arts & Humanities, the Arts Center. Friday - Sunday. Hours: 2-4 p.m. Sunday, closed Monday - Friday, 2-4 p.m. Saturday. 111 Main St., Southbridge. 508-346-3341 or qvcah.org.Rollstone Studios, Hours: 11-4 p.m. Sunday, closed Monday - Wednesday, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Thursday - Saturday. Admission. 633 Main St., Fitchburg. 978-348-2781 or rollstoneartists.com.Salisbury Mansion, Hours: closed Sunday - Wednesday, 1-8:30 p.m. Thursday, 1-4 p.m. Friday - Saturday. 40 Highland St. 508-753-8278 or worcesterhistory.orgSAORI Worcester style Weaving Studio, 18 Winslow St. 508-757-4646 or 508-757-0116 or saoriworcester.com.Taproot Bookstore, Hours: Noon-5 p.m. Sunday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday - Tuesday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Wednesday - Thursday, 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Friday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday. 1200 West Boylston St. 508-853-5083 or TaprootBookstore.com.Tatnuck Bookseller & Cafe, Hours: 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday, 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday - Thursday, 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. Friday - Saturday. 18 Lyman St., Westborough. 508-366-4959 or tatnuck.com.
The Foster Gallery 51 Union St. 508-397-7139 or thefostergallery.comThe Sprinkler Factory, John Pagano: New & Recent Work, Saturdays, through Oct. 26; John Pagano: New & Recent Work, Sundays, through Oct. 27. Hours: noon-6 p.m. Sunday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday - Friday, closed Saturday. 38 Harlow St. sprinklerfactory.com.Top Fun Aviation Toy Museum, Hours: 1:30-4:30 p.m. Sunday, closed. Monday - Friday, 10:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Saturday. 21 Prichard St., Fitchburg. 978-342-2809 or 978-297-4337 or topfunaviation.com.Tower Hill Botanic Garden, Guided Garden Tour, Sundays, through Dec. 30; Free Admission for Seniors on Tuesdays in September, Tuesdays, through Sept. 24. Hours: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday, closed Monday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday - Saturday. Admission: $12 Adults, $9 Seniors & $7 Youth, Free to Members & Children under . 11 French Drive, Boylston. 508-869-6111 or towerhillbg.org.Westboro Gallery, Hours: 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Sunday, closed Monday - Tuesday, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesday - Saturday. 8 West Main St., Westborough. 508-870-0110 or westborogallery.com.Worcester Art Museuwm, 50% off admission Third Thursdays at WAM, Thursday; WAM Talks, Thursday; Worcester Art Museum Audio Tours, Through Dec. 31; Meditation in the Galleries, Fridays, through Dec. 27; Families @ WAM Tour, Saturdays, through April 13; Families @ WAM: Make Art!, Saturdays, through May 4; Saturday Zip Tours @ Noon, Saturdays, through Oct. 26; Sunday Sermon, Sunday; U-student Wednesdays FREE admission to COWC students, Wednesdays, through Dec. 31. Admission: Free for members, $14 adults, $12 seniors, free for youth 17 and under. Free for all fi rst Saturdays of each month, 10am-noon. 55 Salisbury St. 508-799-4406 or worcesterart.orgWorcester Center for Crafts, Hours: closed Sunday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday - Thursday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday, closed Saturday. 25
Sagamore Road. 508-753-8183 or worcestercraftcenter.orgWorcester Historical Museum, Alden Family Gallery, Through Dec. 31, 2015; Blue Star Museums Military Personnel & Family Discount, Through Sept. 2; In Their Shirtsleeves, Through Dec. 31; Stories They Tell, Through Dec. 31; Worcester 911, Through Aug. 31. Hours: closed Sunday - Monday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday - Saturday. 30 Elm St. 508-753-8278 or worcesterhistory.org.Worcester Public Library, “Lincoln: The Constitution and the Civil War “Traveling Exhibit, Through Nov. 15; Lincoln Exhibit, Through Nov. 15. Hours: 1:30-5:30 p.m. Sunday, 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Monday, 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Tuesday - Wednesday, 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Thursday - Saturday. 3 Salem Square. 508-799-1655 or worcpublib.org.WPI: George C. Gordon Library, 39/29: A Retrospective Show by Lora Brueck, Through Oct. 18; Invented - WPI Patents Past & Present, Through Oct. 31. 100 Institute Road. wpi.edu.
fairs and festivals>Saturday 19 Apple Festival. In addition to apples, dumplings, apple crisp, and refreshments there will be children’s activities including sand art, face
painting, and more. There will also be craft tables with local vendors, raffl e baskets and a 50/50 raffl e, and a pie eating contest. Proceeds will be distributed to the Leicester Public Schools by the Mothers’ Club to support educational programs.10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Leicester High School, 174 Paxton St., Leicester. 508-892-7030. Great Pumpkin Fest. Join us for the EcoTarium’s 10th annual Great Pumpkin Fest, featuring hundreds of carved pumpkins (illuminated after dark), Free hay and train rides, Free planetarium shows, spooktacular science programs, entertainers, and so much more! Event is held rain or shine. Proceeds benefi t the EcoTarium. $15 per person; $12 for EcoTarium members. noon-9 p.m. EcoTarium, 222 Harrington Way. 508-929-2700 or ecotarium.org/pumpkins. Fall Craft Fair. Free Admission. 1-3 p.m. Bay Path Barn, 119 Central St., Boylston. AppleFest. Our most popular fall festival, AppleFest features over 75 Craft Fair & Farmers’ Market Booths, Family Entertainment, Scenic Foliage Skyrides to the Summit, Mountainside Barbecue, Pony Rides, Clowns, Climbing Wall and Euro Bungee, Jugglers & Magicians for the Kids. Adults: $9 Advance, $12 Door / Kids 6-12: $4 Advance, $7 Door; 5 & Under Free. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wachusett Mountain Ski Area, 499 Mountain Road, Princeton. 978-464-2300 or wachusett.com.
>Sunday 1924th Annual Harvest Festival. The 24th Annual Harvest Festival is a family fun tradition! The event includes: Local Crafters & Artisans, Specialty Foods & Farm Fresh Harvests, Horse Drawn Trolley Rides, Live Music & Entertainment, Activities & Games for Kids, The Publick House Scarecrow Contest. Live Music! Free. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sturbridge Town Common, Main St., Sturbridge. 508-347-2761 or cmschamber.ning.com.
Calliope Productions presents “Steel Magnolias” on Thursday-Sunday, Oct. 17-20 and Oct. 25-27 with show times at 7:30 p.m. Thursday through Saturday, and 2 p.m. on Sunday. Tickets $18 for the general public or $15 for students and seniors and can be reserved by calling 508-869-6887 or at calliopeproductions.org.
Old Sturbridge Village welcomes guests to fi nd out fi rsthand where their food really comes from during their Farm Field to Table weekend October 19-20. Oxen will demonstrate plowing and prepping fi elds, while their drivers will discuss the evolution of oxen and their importance to early farming. Guests will also be able to join historians as they harvest apples, potatoes, carrots and beets, grains, shell corn and beans and churn butter. Samples of heirloom apples and fresh apple cider will be offered. Old Sturbridge Village, 1 Old Sturbridge Village Rd., Sturbridge. osv.org.
Dr. Benjamin Alberti, archaeologist and faculty member at Framingham State University, will speak at the Shrewsbury Public Library on Monday, Oct. 21 at 7 p.m. about ceramics from Northwest Argentina, where Alberti has participated in archaeological digs in recent years. Shrewsbury Public Library, 609 Main St., Shrewsbury.
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Interior Painterwith Attention to Detail
-Color Consultation-Wallpaper Removal
Woman owned business.Small jobs welcome.
Refs, reliable,100% Customer Satisfaction.
508-523-1209www.juliefrenchinteriors.com
FENCE & STONE
Commonwealth
Fence & Stone
Your Complete Fence & StoneCompany. All fence types-Cedar, Vinyl, Chain Link, Post& Rail, Ornamental, Pool.Hardscapes- Stone Wall, Walk-ways, Patios.
For a free estimatecontact:
508-835-1644
FLOORING/CARPETING
C & S Carpet Mills
Carpet & Linoleum
30 Sq. Yds. $589 Installedwith Pad. Free Metal Incl’d.
Berber, Plush orCommercial. Call Tom:
800-861-5445or 508-886-2624
PAINTING/REPAIRS
It Costs Less To Do The Job
Right The First Time
E.W. Gemme & Sons Co. Inc."Gemme Painting Since 1907"
CALL NOW forLow Winter Rates.
Interior/Exterior Painting-Carpentry-Roofing-
Power Washing-Decks Restored508-865-4707 or
1-508-314-5290 Cell.ewgemmeandson.com
MA HOMEIMPROVEMENT
CONTRACTOR LIC 125150FULLY INSURED
PAINTING/REPAIRS
Painting Unlimited
Services
Skilled, Reliable,Reasonable. Meticulous prep &
workmanship.Interior/Exterior
Painting/Staining,Powerwashing.Free Estimates.
Fully Insured. HIC #163882Call Tim: 508-340-8707
Stressing about
painting your home? CallBlack Dog
Painting Company!We take the PAINout of PAINTING!Interior? Exterior?Power-washing?
You Name it!Visit BlackDogPainters.com OrCall 978 502 2821 for a FREE
on-site Quote
RUBBISH REMOVAL
TOTAL DISPOSAL DumpsterSpecials
10yd. $250, 15yd $300.Home Clean-outs
Landscape Clean-upsDemo Rubbish,
Appliances.Give us a call
and we’ll talk trash.508-864-7755
SNOW PLOWING/REMOVAL
Snow Plowing-
Sutton, Grafton, Millbury
Call Jeff 774-696-4791
TREE SERVICES
KEEGAN P. McNEELY
Tree RemovalBobcat Work
FirewoodLot ClearingStorm Work
Furnace Wood.508-867-6119/413-324-6977
Sky Hook Tree
Owner on every job. Tree Re-moval & Trimming. Chipping.Pruning. Brush Removal.Stump Grinding. Aerial BucketService. Fully Insured. Free Es-timates. VISA/MC 508-865-4370 www.skyhooktree.com
Need a friend?Call Dial-A-Friend508.852.5242
24 Hours Everyday
Inspirational Messages Inspirational Messages Recorded DailyRecorded Daily
INSPIRATION
REFLEXOLOGY
Give the Gift of Stress Relief Today!
Are you Stressed? Have Anxiety or Depression? Pain from Work & Traveling?
Get a massage today with Helen Nguyen
for only $39 (reg $55)
Massage andPrenatal Therapy
500 West Boylston StreetWorcester, MA 01606508-400-1977
MASSAGE
Call 774-312-6535 for appointment.
Pathways To Wellness Associates, LLC50 Elm Street, Suite 3BWorcester, MA 01609
OCTOBER SPECIAL!THERAPEUTIC FOOT
REFLEXOLOGY SESSION!Take some time to relax and unwind before the start of the holiday season
with a REFLEXOLOGY Session.
For the month of October BOOK one GET one FREE!
Book a session for $55 and receive an additional session FREE.
When you book fi ve sessions you will receive a free session with
rewards card.*Offer expires 10/31/13
Fall
Ha
rves
t
October 19th 10-2October 19th 10-2
Francis GardensFrancis Gardens(off Francis Ave Shrewsbury)(off Francis Ave Shrewsbury)
Jewelry, Crafts,Jewelry, Crafts,Big Raffl e Table,Big Raffl e Table,
Recycled Treasures,Recycled Treasures,Books, Plants, Books, Plants,
Refreshments available..Refreshments available..Join us...Join us...
eaturingFeaturing
Directory
Directory BAZAAR
O C T O B E R 1 7 , 2 0 1 3 • W O R C E S T E R M A G A Z I N E . C O M 31
www.centralmassclass.com
LAWN & GARDEN
LANDSCAPING & LAWN MAINTENANCE
PERRONE
LANDSCAPING
Mulch Sales &Delivery. Mowing.
Parking lot sweeping. Planting& Design.
Walkways/Retaining Walls.Residential & Commercial.
Free Estimates.Fully Insured.
PerroneLandscaping.com 508-735-9814 EMPLOYMENT
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
Artists: Your Own Business
3 day training to learn teachingmethod that’s in demand.Artis4Every1.com/training508-882-3947 November 2-4
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
SUCCESSFUL
ENTREPRENEUR SEEKS
Business Partner to assist inthe continual advancement ofa nationwide distribution sys-tem growing out of control.For an interview respond to954-540-4155.
HELP WANTED LOCAL
Part Time Accounts
Payable/Payroll
Experience Required.Send resume to
k W h
High Electric Bill?Your Heating or A/C
May Not Be Running Efficiently.
Chuck Laverty & Son MechanicalPlumbing & HVAC Contractors
Over 25 Years ExperienceMillbury, MA 01527
www.chucklaverty.com
1-877-54-CHUCK Fax 508-581-8757
Need a Repair?Need a Repair?Need a Replacement?Need a Replacement?Stay comfortable with regular preventative maintenance for your heating system. We specialize in standard & high efficiency heating systems.
• Worry Free Service Plans• Save on Your Heating Bill• Mass Save Rebates• Same Day Service• Residential & Commercial• Sales, Service & Repairs• Boilers & Furnaces• Gas, Oil, Propane
20% Discounton Heating Tune Up
(Expires in 30 days)24 Hour Emergency Service
Licensed & InsuredGet a Full System Check-Up
& Service for Just $149plus parts
Senior Discounts1-877-54-CHUCK
For your FREE Estimate Call:1-508-581-8907
Up to $4000 in Rebates Call for Details
RECEIVE $500 TRADE IN on your old boiler or furnace
PLUMBING & HVAC
Peace and Tranquility in your own Backyard
Full landscaping service & so much more! Full Lawn Planting & Maintenance
Ponds built & maintainedFall Clean-ups • Mum Installation
Pond Closings • Fall Pruning & ShearingWaterfalls • Walls | Patios & Walkways
House Cleanout, Attics, CellarsBobcat Work | Backhoe Work | Gutter Cleaning
508-885-1088
LANDSCAPING
Lawn WorksLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaawwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnn WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWoooooooooooooooooorrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkssssssssssssssssssL A N D S C A P I N G
Construction & Maintenance
Top Quality Work at Affordable Prices.
978-257-3057
10% Off 10% Off Walkways, Patios, Retaining Walkways, Patios, Retaining
Walls and Other Projects Walls and Other Projects if you mention this ad.if you mention this ad.
LANDSCAPING
“Yesterday, my bathtub was ugly. Today, it’s beautiful!”“Yesterday, my bathtub was ugly. Today, it’s beautiful!” ALL WORK GUARANTEED
After!After!
We Also Repair and Refinish:
Call for a FREE Estimate! 508-655-2044Each Miracle Method franchise independently owned and operated. See our work at MiracleMethod.com/
Don’t Replace,Refinish!
BATHTUB REFINISHING
FOSTER PARENTS WANTEDFOSTER PARENTS WANTED
688 Main Street, Holden, MAToll Free (877) 446-3305www.devereuxma.org
Seeking families throughoutCentral Massachusettswho are interested in
improving a child’s life.Call to inquire about our
upcoming foster parent training.
Foster Care Information SessionEvery 3rd Wednesday of the Month • 2pm-4pm
(Please Call for Details)
$500 BONUSCall for Details
(Must mention this ad during inquiry)
FOSTER PARENTS
32 W O R C E S T E R M A G A Z I N E . C O M • O C T O B E R 1 7 , 2 0 1 3
www.centralmassclass.com
MERCHANDISE
ITEMS UNDER $2,013
2 Twin Bed-Free 1 DoubleFrame-Free, 1 twin carriage $45Call 508-865-5083
2 booth units with sinks mintcondition for sale $300.00 508-865-5353
3 Scroll Saws $60.00 Call 508-987-5515
ITEMS UNDER $2,013
4 Michelin snowtires with alu-minum rims used on 2012 Cam-ry bolt pattern 5-114 $600 508-612-8929
5’x8’100% Wool Area Rug Lightcolors. Used 2 yrs. Paid $350Sell for $200 978-537-8270
80" sofa, excellent condition
beige w/mauve flowers &green stripes. $125 or b/o978-798-1332
Air intake for Toyota Corolla
excellent conditions asking $100or best offer 508-579-3621
Armoire, TV Stand Cocktail ta-ble, End table. $150.00 508-335-0031
Complete downhill ski pack-
age. Incl’s shape skies, bind-ings, boots 91/5 poles, etc.$45.00. 508-829-9240.
General Electric Refrigerator &
Freezer 19.7 cu ft. No frost.$250.00 508-331-8262
Golf Clubs Graphite King Co-bra Irons. 3 P.W. Driver & 4wood. Bag and hand cart.$100.00 508-829-7074
Heavy duty SONOTUBE
Concrete Form 18" I.D., 4ft long$35. Call 508-574-3766
Honda Riding Lawn Mower 11HP, 38" cut. New belts, newblades. Starts and runs beauti-fully. $550. 774-364-4752
Loop Loc Pool Cover Fits18x36 in ground pool. Exc.cond. $400.00 508-886-4905
Men’s Raccoon Jacket SizeLarge $150.00 774-289-6982
Non-electrical heater. Great forcampsite or construction area.$75 or best. 508-425-1150
Perception Sea Kayak Lots ofaccessories. $900.00 978-424-6315 [email protected]
Red Tool Box with wheels
Hardly used. 3 drawers. $100.00508-865-6065
VT Castings wood stove. Tana-ka gas powered brush cutter.Thule ski rack. 48" bar w/foot-pads. $750 508-865-7493
Wicker Loveseat (Brn w/grn
cushion) Pd $250 Pier I. $140 orB.R.O. Cash Only. 978-534-8632
ITEMS UNDER $2,013
Year old 84" sofa/chair/ot-
toman. Sage green treated fab-ric. $850 508-865-3852
ZANE GREY books (15) hard
covers Like new $20.00Princeton Call 978-464-2011
FURNITURE
Queen pillowtop
mattress set -NEW- $149
Still in plastic, can deliver. CallLuke 774-823-6692
YARD SALES & FLEA MARKETS
Annual Church Mouse Fair
Saturday - 10/19/13, 9 a.m. -12 noon at St. Francis Episco-pal Church, 70 Highland Street(Corner of Route 31 andPhillips Road), Holden. AtticTreasures, Jewelry, Crafts,Books, Toys, Baked Goods.Proceeds are used to providemonthly dinners at the "Mus-tard Seed" in Worcester and"Dismas Farm" in Oakham.
YARD SALES & FLEA MARKETS
PRINCETON-4 Havenwood
Dr. (Off Rt. 31) Oct. 19th,Saturday, 9am-3pm. Rain orShine. Garage Sale. Featuringtoys, household items, toolsand more!
HEALTHCARE SERVICES
HEALTHCARE SERVICES MISCELLANEOUS
WANTED: 6 SERIOUS people
interested in losing weight-and earning $$$ showing
others how to do the same!Sue lost 16 lbs her 1st month
and earned $320.774-275-0646
PETS & ANIMALS
LOST AND FOUND
LOST CAT-SPENCER, MA
Last seen on Northwest Rd.Five year old Female. Calico,grey white and a little peach.Please call 508-885-1088
LOST DOG-HOLDEN, MA
Maltese, white, small dog.Female. Last seen aroundBancroft Rd. early Mondaymorning, 9/30/2013. No collar,no chip. Very friendly, will an-swer to any name, but hername is Jasmine. Reward. Call508-829-9164
HELP WANTED LOCAL
in the in the CENTRAL MASS CLASSIFIEDSCENTRAL MASS CLASSIFIEDSSUBMIT ITEMS UNDER $2013 FOR FREE! Here’s all you need to do! 3 ways to submit...
1. Mail completed form to Central Mass Classifi eds, P.O. Box 546, Holden, MA 01520 2. OR FAX the completed form to 508-829-0670 3. OR Email the info with name/address/phone number to [email protected]
NO PHONE ORDERS ACCEPTED FOR FREE ADS
PLEASE PRINT CLEARLY... We are not liable for misinformation due to ad being illegible:
TREASURE CHEST - ITEMS UNDER $2013Have you advertised in the Central Mass Classifi eds before? Please check one. ___ Yes ___ No
Name ____________________________________________________________________________
Address __________________________________________________________________________
Town ______________________________ Zip ______________ Phone _______________________
Email Address (optional) ______________________________________________________________Ad Text: (approx 20 characters per line includes letters, spaces, numbers, punctuation)
_________________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________________
PLEASE R EAD THE RULES:Maximum 4 lines (approx. 20 characters per line). We reserve the right to edit if ads come in that are too long.NO phone orders accepted. See ways to submit above.Merchandise Ads Only - NO autos, snowmobiles, RV’s, trailers, boats, ATV’s, etc. We have a special rate for these ads ($20 till it sells).NO business Ads accepted for this section. If we suspect the ads are being sent in by a business, we reserve the right to refuse.Limit 1 ad per name/address/phone number every 2 weeks. Ads will run for 2 weeks.Limit 1 item per ad (group of items OK if one price for all and under $2013)Price must be listed in ad.NO Cemetery Plots
DEADLINE FRIDAY 5 PM to begin following week • HAPPY TREASURE HUNTING!
TreasureTreasure ChestChestof FREE Ads!of FREE Ads!
Items Under
$2013 FREE!
Valet Parking Attendants Needed. Work @ various locations in the Worcester Area. Full-time and Part-time positions available.
Benefi ts included for Full-time including medical and dental. Fun outdoor work
with potential for advancement! Customer Service experience is a plus. Between base+tips valets earn $11+ per hour.
www.valetparkofamerica.com/employment
877-455-5552
where Quality still Matters.
HELP WANTED LOCAL
O C T O B E R 1 7 , 2 0 1 3 • W O R C E S T E R M A G A Z I N E . C O M 33
www.centralmassclass.com
“THE DOCTOR ISIN” By ARTHUR S.VERDESCA
ACROSS1 Obama attorney
general Holder5 Rattle9 Bros
13 Online letters19 Commandment
opener20 One missing roll
call, perhaps21 Per person22 Deadhead’s idol23 Perry Mason
story, e.g.26 Insatiable27 Some deer28 Shorten, as a
skirt29 Bad acting30 Onetime Rus.
state33 Busy buzzer34 Strains35 Restraint usually
seen in pairs39 Montana motto
metal41 Yemen’s capital42 Do clerical work43 Stimpy’s pal44 Zest source45 Symbol of a
bettor’s certainty48 SFO listing49 Everyday
connectors50 Jesus of
baseball51 Durban dough52 Bloom holder53 Fight stopper54 Post-hurricane
assessment58 Disney king59 “Fearful” feature
of Blake’s Tyger61 Tasman and a
Genesisshepherd
62 Sneeze cause63 Took the plunge64 Tapestry behind
which Poloniushid
65 Abstain from66 “The Weaver of
Raveloe”68 Unit or sect
suffix69 Surgical tie72 Oil well
firefighter Red73 Like some
locomotives75 Catch76 Shooting
marbles77 Stub __78 Voyaging, say79 Scorch80 Letters seen
before Fridays
81 Coen or Stone85 Where TV’s
“Charlie’sAngels” was set
86 A, for Mozart87 Riles up88 Gets ready to
shoot89 Dick Tracy
creator Chester90 Access, in a
way92 Cats in Cádiz93 Seek redress95 Rope on the
briny96 Classic auto97 Irish tenor
Tynan98 Brazilian range
__ do Mar100 Minor league
baseball level103 Made-to-order108 House minority
leader109 ’40s film critic
James110 Nihilistic art
movement111 Follow
112 Carl withEmmys
113 Supply in a farmcountry store
114 Certain terrier’sisle
115 Big wind
DOWN1 And so on:
Abbr.2 Letter after pi3 Signed promise4 Restrain5 Wilde’s “The
Importance ofBeing Earnest,”e.g.
6 Stirred7 Madhouses8 Disease-struck
tree9 Legal hurdle
10 Toward thefront
11 Stadiumprotectors
12 Cyberjunk13 Deli sandwich14 Coleridge
storyteller
15 __ football16 Curling surface17 Eye protector18 Utter24 Big wind25 Pipe cleaner30 Jack and the
missus of verse31 Spring toy32 Winners can be
determined byone
34 “The Genius ofKeyboard”jazzman
35 “Toad of ToadHall” playwright
36 Coffee breaktreat
37 Doesn’t disturb38 Make
cherished40 NFL six-pointers41 It may be long42 Loses strength45 Baker’s
preparation46 Prayer opener47 Scary tests52 20, in Toulouse54 Lop off
55 “Beavis andButt-head” spin-off
56 Milhous : Nixon:: __ : Garfield
57 Lennon’s“Everybody’sGot Somethingto Hide Except__ My Monkey”
58 Kitchen wrap60 Revealing garb62 Mark for future
reference64 Thin as __65 McGarrett’s
outfit, familiarly66 Hot Wheels
maker67 Slow work68 Basic building
material69 Leans70 “No kidding”71 Online financial
site73 Pope in Attila’s
time74 Book displays77 Like a dogfight
missile
79 AFL partner81 Tactful handling82 Song title words
before “forMiles”
83 Took turns insuccession
84 Budget, inbrand names
89 Spice GirlHalliwell
91 Small-screenBean
92 Overcharge93 Run-down94 Bears, to Ovid97 North Amer.
WWII fliers98 The Missouri R.
runs through it99 All excited
100 ER procedure101 Dixie general102 Poetic fighter104 Puzzle title
people hiddenin eight longanswers
105 Bird’s org.106 Slippery one107 Salon stock
Los Angeles Times Sunday Crossword PuzzleEdited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis
11/3/13 ©2013 Tribune Content Agency, [email protected]
Fun By The NumbersLike puzzles? Then you’ll love sudoku. This mind-bending puzzle will have you hooked from the moment you square off , so sharpen your pencil and put your sudoku savvy to the test!
Here’s How It Works: Sudoku puzzles are formatted as a 9x9 grid, broken down into nine 3x3 boxes. To solve sudoku, the numbers 1 through 9 must fi ll each row, column and box. Each number can appear only once in each row, column and box. You can fi gure out the order in which the numbers will appear by using the numeric clues already provided in the boxes. The more numbers you name, the easier it gets to solve the puzzle!
Car For Sale? Truck for Sale? RV? SUV?
RUN YOUR AD UNTIL IT SELLS!
Reaching 90,000 readers in PRINT & ONLINE
Contact Carrie at 978-728-4302
ONLY $20 FOR SIX LINES FOR ONLY $20 FOR SIX LINES FOR ALL ALL 44 PAPERS UNTIL IT SELLS! PAPERS UNTIL IT SELLS!
90 000 readers in PRIN
Across1 Gavel-banging shout5 Word repeated before “hey” or
after “Yo”10 “This Is Spinal ___”13 Three with close harmony, e.g.14 Forester automaker15 Aboriginal food source16 Diversion tactic #118 “... a borrower ___ a lender be”19 “Baloney!”20 Heavy unit21 Magazine edition23 Diversion tactic #228 Toy advertised with the slogan
“but they don’t fall down”30 Speak eloquently31 “Buffy” spinoff32 Without a date33 Physical measurement, for short36 Diversion tactic #340 Furtive41 Stub ___ (stumble)42 Backwoods type43 African language family45 Unit named for a French
physicist46 With 56-across, diversion tactic
#450 Hits the ground51 To the ___ degree52 Artist’s concern55 Bank feature56 See 46-across61 Born, in a bridal bio62 Like, yesterday63 Flat-topped formation64 Prime meridian setting: abbr.65 Girl Scout cookie with caramel66 Advanced writing degs.
Down1 American Red Cross founder 1
Recipe instruction2 “___ I’ve been told”3 Upstart business, casually4 Cartoon cringe catchphrase5 Organic fertilizer6 Group formed by Duane and
Gregg, for short
7 “Anna and the King” actress ___ Ling
8 “Cold outside today!”9 German two-door sportscar10 Angst-ridden11 “My Cherie ___” (Stevie
Wonder song)12 Blender button14 Add fuel to the re17 Bikini and others22 “___ Done Him Wrong” (1933
Mae West lm)24 “Remote Control” host Ken25 Oust the incumbent26 Get rid of a voicemail27 Newman’s Own rival28 ___ and means29 Hydroxyl compound32 ___ voce33 Person who pedals stolen
goods?34 Harlem ___ (Central Park lake)35 Doing nothing37 Just chill38 Mythological deities39 “___ the mornin’ to ya!”43 Letters on undies
44 “___ Fables”45 “The Jetsons” dog46 When doubled, essential oil
used in shampoo47 Hall colleague48 Like some goals49 Palindromic 1996 New York
City Marathon winner ___ Catuna
53 Major in astronomy?54 Greek letters57 Shooting org.58 ___ Kippur59 “Bed-in for Peace” participant60 “I’m thinking...”
JONESIN’ “A Little Diversion”--be careful when you hear these.
by Matt Jones
©2013 Jonesin’ Crosswords ([email protected]) For answers to this puzzle, call: 1-900-226-2800, 99 cents per minute.
Must be 18+. Or to bill to your credit card, call: 1-800-655-6548. Reference puzzle #645
Last week's solution
34 W O R C E S T E R M A G A Z I N E . C O M • O C T O B E R 1 7 , 2 0 1 3
www.centralmassclass.com
30 Years in Business
CC&&SS Carpet MillsCarpet MillsCARPET & LINOLEUM
30 Sq. Yds. $585 Installed with PadBerber, Plush or CommercialFree Metal Included Call Tom
800-861-5445 or 508-886-2624
Flooring
FLOOR COVERING
PAINTING
We take the PAIN out of Painting
www.blackdogpainters.comPower Washing Available
Insured | References978-502-2821
PAINTING/COLOR CONSULTATION
Woman owned business Small Jobs Welcome!
References, Reliable 100% Customer Satisfaction10% Senior Citizen Discount
Color Consultation • Wallpaper Removal
508-523-1209www.juliefrenchinteriors.com
Interior Painter with Attention to DetailJJulieulie FFrenchrench IInteriorsnteriors
RUBBISH REMOVAL
10 yd. - $250 • 15 yd. - $300 Home Clean-outs
Landscape Clean-upsDemo Rubbish • Appliances
“Give us a call & we’ll talk trash.”
508-864-7755
DUMPSTER SPECIALS
Quality ChimneyQuality Chimney508-410-4551508-410-4551
$50 Off Caps or Masonry$50 Off Caps or MasonryFree InspectionFree Inspection
All Types of Masonry All Types of Masonry Water LeaksWater Leaks
CHIMNEY CLEANING $99$99
CHIMNEY SERVICES
508-373-8440*References available upon request
Fully Insured
Rose’s Cleaning Services
Residential & CommercialCarpet Cleaning
Car DetailingUpholstery Cleaning
Move In & Out CleaningShampoo 1 room & get 2nd room free!
CLEANING SERVICES
508-835-1644 for free estimate
YOUR COMPLETE FENCE & STONE WORK COMPANY
,
• CONCRETE SPECIALISTS - Walkways, Patios, Sidewalks & Pool Patios...
• FENCE ALL TYPES - Vinyl, Chain link, Ornamental & Wood...
• STONE HARDSCAPES - Patios, Stone Walls, Pavers, Walkways & Pool Patios...
FENCE, STONE & CONCRETE
LANDSCAPING
508-735-9814
RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIALFree Estimates • Fully InsuredPerroneLandscaping.com
AERATING: AERATING: $100 for $100 for
yards that are yards that are 10,000 sq ft 10,000 sq ft
or less.or less.
• Mulch sales & delivery• Weekly/bi weekly mowing• Parking lot sweeping• Planting/design• Walkways/retaining walls
Call us today to schedule your Fall advertising!
978-728-4302
Jason Magnusson
Tree Removal & Trimming - Chipping - PruningBrush Removal - Stump Grinding
Aerial Bucket ServiceFully Insured • Free Estimates
VISA/MC
508-865-4370
Owner on every job
www.skyhooktree.com
Jason MagnusOonevjo
TREE CUTTINGKeegan P. McNeely
• Tree Removal
• Bobcat Work
• Firewood
• Lot Clearing
• Storm Work
• Furnace Wood
Home: 508-867-6119Home: 508-867-6119Cell: 413-324-6977Cell: 413-324-6977
TREE SERVICESTREE SERVICES
BUSINESS REFERRAL PROGRAMRefer a business to join our Service Directory,
and if they advertise with us, you’ll receive a $25 credit on your account for future
advertising. We appreciate your business in the
Central Mass Classifieds!!
ADVERTISING ADVERTISING
It Costs LessTo Do The Job Right The First Time
E.W. GEMME & SONS CO. INC.“Gemme Painting Since 1907”
CALL NOW for Low Winter Rates
Interior/Exterior Painting • Carpentry • Roofi ngPower Washing • Decks Restored
508.865.4707 • 1.508.314.5290 CellVisit Our Website www.ewgemmeandsons.comMA HOME IMPROVEMENT CONTRACTOR LIC 125150 - FULLY INSURED
PAINTING
SERVICECall Carrie at 978-728-4302
to place your ad or e-mail [email protected]
DIRECTORYDIRECTORY
SIZE PER BLOCK 1.75 X 1.758 weeks ........... $31.50/week = $25212 weeks ......... $26.75/week = $32120 weeks ......... $25.20/week = $50436 weeks ......... $23.60/week = $85052 weeks ......... $22/week = $1144
Minimum commitment of 8 weeks.
ASK about double blocks (size 3.75” x 1.75”) and COMBO pricing into our other zone and reach 43,000 households in 24 towns in Central Mass each week. FREE line ad included with each block purchased. Book for 52 weeks and receive a Spotlight Business of the Week! Ask for details!
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PLACE YOUR AD ONLINE
ANYTIME, 24/7.www.centralmassclass.com(Excludes free ads, legals & Service Directory ads)
CentralMass
C L A S S I F I E D S
Real Estate • Jobs • Auto • Services
978-728-4302
ADVERTISING ADVERTISING
O C T O B E R 1 7 , 2 0 1 3 • W O R C E S T E R M A G A Z I N E . C O M 35
www.centralmassclass.com
REAL ESTATE
APARTMENT FOR RENT
BURNCOAT/GREENDALE
1 bd, laundry, appl’s &off st. parking. HT/HW Incl’d.From $775.00. 508-852-6001
RUTLAND CENTER 1st fl,2BD. Modern bath. Freshpaint. Eat in kitchen. Off stprkg. $980/m INCL’S HEAT &HOT WATER. Refs req’d. 2BD,2nd fl, FREE HOT WATER.Tons of space. Modern withview of common. $895/m doesnot incl. heat. 4BD, 3rd fl. Tonsof space. Fresh paint. New tilefloor. FREE HOT WATER! Ten-ants supplies heat. $1050/m.Refs req’d. No pets.978-257-0202
AUTOMOTIVE
AUTO/MOTORCYCLE
2008 Honda Metropolitan
Scooter Black and gray. Mintcond. 469 miles. Asking$1650.00. Includes helmet. 207-289-9362 OR 207-450-1492.
2008 Suzuki GSX 650/K8. Allblack with silver and red trim.Less than 850 miles. Cover,new battery, and lock.$5500.00
508-792-6080
AUTO/TRUCK
2000 Ford F150
Flareside Pickup
Showroom conditioninside and out. 100K miles.
All power, needs nothing.$8500.00
Call 978-466-6043
AUTO/TRUCK
2004 Dodge Ram
SLT 1500 4X4
Blue pick up 4.7 liter under38K. Lots of up dates andwork that has been done tothis truck. $13000.00. Goodstrong truck! 774-633-6478.
AUTOS
1962 Chevrolet Impala sportcoupe. Older restoration. Nicedriver. $8,500 978-422-6646
1976 Cadillac Fleetwood
Brougham Sedan. 79k miles.Grey exterior and interior.
$6500.00 or B/O774-242-2370
1988 Mercedes-Benz 300
SEL 6 cylinder gas. Very goodcond. Runs exc. $3500.00195k miles. Located inSutton, MA 774-287-0777
AUTOS
1997 Oldsmobile LSS Newmuffler, brakes & battery. 130estimated miles. Good cond.$2000.00 firm. Leominster 978-534-1915
2000 Mercury Sable Wagon.131K miles. Exc. cond. inside& out. Asking $2,200.00 CallKathy 978-728-4702
2001 Cadillac Eldorado Tour-ing Coupe, Rare car, loaded,mint condition. $7,995 508-875-7400
2003 Mitsubishi Spyder Con-
vertible Excellent condition,19,900 miles, full of options,never driven in winter, coverfor winter storage. $9,500, call978-390-3467.
To Advertise in this section call Carrie at 978-728-4302
or visit www.centralmassclass.com.
Deadline Monday at Noon. Only $20.00 for all 4 papers &
online if you call in your ad!
DirectoryYARD SALE & FLEA MARKET
GRAFTON FLEAMARKET, INC.OPEN EVERY SUNDAY
OUTDOOR/INDOOR
6am - 4pm• Acres of Bargains
• Hundreds of Vendors• Thousands of Buyers
• 44th Season
Rte. 140, Grafton/Upton town line
Grafton Flea is the Place to be!
Selling Space 508-839-2217www.graftonfl ea.com
Featuring estate items – antiques, collectibles, designer clothing – antique auto & tractor parts, antique furniture,
holiday decorations & gifts, equine accessories, crafts, tools & hardware.Donations are accepted for the saleSpace available in the Nathan’s barn
cellar as well as outside on the lawn – bring your own table & tent -- $15.00
for 10X10 siteFor more information, contact
Norma Bedrosian at 508-865-2082 or Pam Farnham at 508-735-7146 or email [email protected] Farm Preservation, Inc. is a
501(c)3 non profit organization.www.watersfarm.com
1st AnnualPicker’s Paradise
Barn Sale & Flea Market to benefit the Waters Farm Nathan’s Barn Raising FundSaturday, October 19, 2013
10a – 3pRain or shineWaters Farm
53 Waters RoadWest Sutton, MA 01590
Free admission & free parking
Annual Church Mouse Fair
Saturday - 10/19/13, 9 a.m. -12 noon at St. Francis Episco-pal Church, 70 Highland Street(Corner of Route 31 andPhillips Road), Holden. AtticTreasures, Jewelry, Crafts,Books, Toys, Baked Goods.Proceeds are used to providemonthly dinners at the "Mus-tard Seed" in Worcester and"Dismas Farm" in Oakham.
PRINCETON-4 Havenwood
Dr. (Off Rt. 31) Oct. 19th,Saturday, 9am-3pm. Rain orShine. Garage Sale. Featuringtoys, household items, toolsand more!
C E N T R A L M A S S C L A S S I F I E D S
Pet Costume ContestPet Costume Contest
Submit by mail to:Central Mass Classifi eds
PO Box 546Holden, MA 01520
Or by email to [email protected]
Please include your name, pet’s name,address and telephone number
Have some fun with your pets & good luck!!
All photos will be published in the October 31st issue of Central Mass Classifi eds along with announcing the winner.
Only one photo per pet. Please send your entry in by October 25th to be eligible for the drawing. If you send in a photo and would like it returned, please send a stamped
self-addressed envelope.
Dress up your Pet for Halloween, send us
a picture, and enter our contest for a chance to win a gift card to a local
pet store and doggie daycare.
!k!ck!!
selflf--addressed enveelope.
To Place your Real Estate ad To Place your Real Estate ad please call 978-728-4302 orplease call 978-728-4302 or
email [email protected] email [email protected]
36 W O R C E S T E R M A G A Z I N E . C O M • O C T O B E R 1 7 , 2 0 1 3
www.centralmassclass.comAUTOS
2004 Dodge Intrepid
sparkle green. 6 cly., ac,CD, wired for XM remotectl for doors and start ups,
good condition.$2,700.00 or best offer.
508-753-1995
2006 Honda S2000 ext Blackint Brand new top 93oct/synthoil only used Florida car adultowner 59k miles $16,500
508-816-0141
CAMPERS/TRAILERS
1998 Dutchman
Pop-up Camper
Refrigerator, stove, sink.Heater, port o potty, kitchen ta-ble. Sleeps 8. $1700.00. 978-840-0782 Ask for Kenny.
CAMPERS/TRAILERS
24 ft Light Weight 2004 Terry
Dakota Travel Trailer Sleeps7, bunk beds & full bed, 16ftawning, A/C, Central heat, mi-crowave & 3 burner stove. Dualpowered fridge/freezer. Loads ofstorage, outdoor shower. 2 bat-teries, travel septic. Like new.$8,500.00 508-579-6622
CAMPERS/TRAILERS
Truck Camper 1985
Bought new in 1991. Real Lifebrand. Bathroom, shower, selfcontained. 8ft truck bed.$2900.00 B/O 774-287-0777
Utility Trailer Made from a
1970 Chevy short bed pickupbody. $225.00Call Larry 508-886-6082Rutland MA.
Over 40 Acres! Over 3000 Vehicles!
FREE Nationwide
Parts Locator Service
Deposits convenientlytaken over the phone.
• Foreign & Domestic • Early & Late Model• Engines • Transmissions • New Radiators• Gas Tanks • Wheels • Tires • Balancers
• Exhaust Manifolds • Window Motors
Amherst-OakhamAUTO RECYCLING
Toll Free1-800-992-0441Fax 508-882-5202
Off Rte 122 • 358 Coldbrook Rd., Oakham, MA
www.amherstoakhamauto.com
Worcester No. 508-799-9969
Trust usto do it once - and do it right.
USED & NEWAUTO PARTS
91 DAY GUARANTEE
AUTOS
We Buy Unwanted &
Junk VehiclesSCRAP METAL ACCEPTED
B ROOKSROTHERSUSED AUTO PARTS
508-792-6211Worcester, MA
North Zone
South Zone
Your Classified Ads Travel Far ...in Print & Online
In Central Mass Classifi eds
CARRIE ARSENAULT Classifi ed Sales Manager
978-728-4302fax 508-829-0670
“I greatly appreciate our advertisers, as well as all of our dedicated readers. By
advertising with us, you are reaching a fantastic market
of quality consumers.”
Contact: Carrie Arsenault with any of yourquestions or to start booking
your Classifi ed Ads today! ?????
IN NEED OF PARTICIPANTS FOR YOUR NEXT STUDY?
Central Mass Classifi eds can help!
To book your advertisement call Carrie at 978-728-4302 or
email [email protected]?elp!
dvertisement8-4302 or
assclass.com?????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????
O C T O B E R 1 7 , 2 0 1 3 • W O R C E S T E R M A G A Z I N E . C O M 37
www.centralmassclass.comCAMPERS/TRAILERS
Utility Trailer, Heavy Duty
15" wheels, with removablesides. 6’X 8’.
Located in Sutton, MA $650.00774-287-0777
Utility Trailer 5’ X 8’. Floor,sides and gate are 3/4" pt. Re-movable fold down gate inrear. $1400 invested, asking$800 firm. Can be seen inHolden. 508-791-6444
PARTS & ACCESSORIES
Used Auto Parts 91-day
guarantee. Engines, transmis-sions, wheels, mirrors & tires.Excellent service, junk car re-moval. Amherst-Oakham AutoRecycling, 358 Coldbrook Rd,Oakham, MC Visa Disc &Amex. 508-882-5241
Our Adopt-A-Paws feature runs the second Thursday/Friday of each month. With the support of our sponsors, we will feature dogs and cats that are available for adoption at local nonprofi t shelters. TO SEE ALL THE ANIMALS AVAILABLE FOR ADOPTION CHECK OUT THE WEB SITES BELOW:
SECOND CHANCE ANIMAL SHELTER111 Young Road • East Brookfi eld, MA
508-867-5525 • [email protected]
ANIMAL SHELTER INC.17 Laurelwood Road • Sterling, MA 978-422-8585 • SterlingShelter.org
WORCESTER ANIMAL RESCUE LEAGUE139 Holden Street • Worcester, MA 508-853-0030 • Worcester-arl.org
A BETTER TOMORROW202 Central Street • Winchendon, MA 774-641-1271 • ShelterForCats.org
ADOPT-A-PAWSADOPT-A-PAWS
We are seeking sponsors for future issues. You do not need to be a pet related business to sponsor a pet. The more sponsors we get, the more pets we will feature. If your business would like to sponsor a pet, please call Carrie at 978-728-4302 or email [email protected] by November 8th to be in our next ADOPT-A-PAWS on November 14th. Together we can make a difference!
It’s a spook-tacular thing to adopt/rescue an animal! However, nothing scary about it! Some might be frightened by an animal’s past history, but many animals live in the moment and they will appreciate you bringing them into your home. You can fi nd some boo-tiful animals here on the page and also on the shelters’ websites. And don’t forget to enter our Pet Costume contest this month! Do you have a hallow-weenie dog? Or a
boo-chon frise? How about a pumpkin-persian? Share your fun pics with our readers and you might win a prize!
RockyMale/Neutered - 1 yr 6 mos
Terrier, Bull/Terrier, American Staffordshire
Shamrock Dog Collars
9 Crescent St., West Boylston508-835-6677 wexfordhouse.com Jewelry Belleek Sweaters Giftware
EclairMale/Neutered - 2 yrs 1 mo
Chihuahua, Short Coat
136 Main Street, Spencer508-885-3385 • www.cormierspencer.com
Jewelry As Unique As You AreBuy 5 beads at regular
price and get 6th bead or Starter Bracelet for FREE*
* Up to $35 value. Stop in to see our large
selection of animal beads and charms.
Basset Hound / MixedFemale - Medium
Baby
Creative Floors, Inc.Ceramic • Carpet • Vinyl • Marble • Granite
Laminate • Pre-finished Hardwood • Wallpaper
Sales • Design • InstallationResidential & Commercial • Carpet Binding
Financing Available • Free Estimates
Open Tuesday-Saturday | 1653 N. Main St., Holden, MA
508-829-7444www.creativefloorsinc.com
Terrier/Chinese Crested-Powder-Puff/Mixed - Male - Medium
Young
TutuFemale/Spayed - 6 yrs 8 mos
Domestic Shorthair/Mix
Serving Worcester County for 30 years.
Call for a freeon-site Consult for increasing revenue
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1-800-527-9990 or
508-795-0009 x116
BILLING SPECIALISTSCHM/MEDICAL
202 CENTRAL ST.WINCHENDON, MA
774-641-1271SHELTERFORCATS.ORG
Visit our cats and meet your next best friend!
A NEW SHELTER
BentleyAdult, Short Haired Tuxedo
Neutered Male
PLACE YOUR AD ONLINE ANYTIME, 24/7.www.centralmassclass.com(Excludes free ads, legals & Service Directory ads)
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38 W O R C E S T E R M A G A Z I N E . C O M • O C T O B E R 1 7 , 2 0 1 3
www.centralmassclass.comLEGALS/PUBLIC NOTICES
LEGAL NOTICENOTICE OF
PUBLIC SALENotice is hereby given by Pat’s Service Center of 5 Shrewsbury Street, Worcester, MA, pursuant to the provisions of Mass G.L c. 255, Section 39A, that they will sell the following vehicles on or after October 18, 2013 by private sale to satisfy their garage keeper’s lien for towing, storage, and notices of sale:
Signed,Pat Santa Maria, ownerPat’s Service Center10/3, 10/10, 10/17 WM
1. 2005 Ford Taurus VIN# 1FAFP56215A277727
2. 2010 Dodge Grand Caravan VIN# 2D4RN5D18AR119997
3. 1995 Chevrolet Tahoe VIN# 1GNEK13K2SJ406157
4. 2000 Ford Taurus VIN# 1FAFP56S1YA102995
Notice is hereby given pursuant to the provision of M.G.L c.255, sec. 39A that on OCTOBER 18, 2013 the following vehicles will be sold at private sale to satisfy our garage keeper lien thereon for towing and storage charges and expenses of sale and notices. Vehicle 2011 HONDA CIVIC vin 2HGFA1F53BH547764 ; owner : Michael Horne 52 Outlook Dr Worcester, MA 01603To be sold at Central Auto Works 78 Canterbury St Worcester, MA10/3, 10/10, 10/17/2013 WM
NOTICE OF MORTGAGEE’S SALE OF REAL ESTATEBy virtue and in execution of the Power of Sale contained in a certain mortgage given by William Giguere a/k/a William F. Giguere and Darlene Giguere a/k/a Darleen J. Giguere a/k/a Darleen Giguere to Sovereign Bank, dated May 24, 2002 and recorded with the Worcester County (Worcester District) Registry of Deeds at Book 26684, Page 297, of which mort-gage the undersigned is the present holder , for breach of the conditions of said mortgage and for the purpose of foreclos-ing, the same will be sold at Public Auction at 10:00 a.m. on November 6, 2013, on the mortgaged premises located at 13 LESLIE LN, MILLBURY, Worcester County, Massachusetts, all and singular the premises described in said mortgage, TO WIT: The land with the buildings thereon in Millbury, Worcester County, Massachusetts situated on the northerly line of Lealic Lane, being Lot 12 on plan of Holiday Hills, Sec. A, off South Main Street, Millbury, Mass., scale 1’’ = 40’, December 19, 1960 by Cullinan Engineering Company, R.L.S. further bounded and described as follows: BEGINNING at a point on the northerly line of Leslie Lane at the southeasterly corner of Lot 10; THENCE N. 15 degrees 35’40’’ E. along Lot 10, 125 feet to a point; THENCE S. 74 degrees 24’20’’ E. along land nor or formerly of Miles 100 feet to a point; THENCE S. 15 degrees 35’40’’ W. along Lot 14, 125 feet to a point; THENCE N. 74 degrees 24’20’’ W. along the northerly line of Leslie Lane 100 feet to the point of beginning. CONTAINING 12,500 square feet of land, more or less. Being the same premises conveyed to Grantors by deed recorded with the Worcester County Registry of Deeds in Book 19460, Page 127. For mortgagor’s(s’) title see deed recorded with Worcester County (Worcester District) Registry of Deeds in Book 19460, Page 127. These premises will be sold and conveyed subject to and with the benefi t of all rights, rights of way, restrictions, easements, covenants, liens or claims in the nature of liens, improvements, public assessments, any and all unpaid taxes, tax titles, tax liens, water and sewer liens and any other municipal assessments or liens or existing encumbrances of record which are in force and are applicable, having priority over said mortgage, whether or not reference to such restrictions, easements, improvements, liens or encumbrances is made in the deed. TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of Five Thousand ($5,000.00 ) Dollars by certifi ed or bank check will be required to be paid by the purchaser at the time and place of sale. The balance is to be paid by certifi ed or bank check at Harmon Law Offi ces, P.C., 150 California Street, Newton, Massachusetts 02458, or by mail to P.O. Box 610389, Newton Highlands, Massachusetts 02461-0389, within thirty (30) days from the date of sale. Deed will be provided to purchaser for recording upon receipt in full of the purchase price. The description of the premises contained in said mortgage shall control in the event of an error in this publication. Other terms, if any, to be announced at the sale.SOVEREIGN BANK, N.A. F/K/A SOVEREIGN BANKPresent holder of said mortgageBy its Attorneys,HARMON LAW OFFICES, P.C.150 California StreetNewton, MA 02458(617) 558-0500201211-0097 – PRP10/10, 10/17, 10/24/2013 MS
Commonwealthof Massachusetts
The Trial CourtProbate and Family Court
Worcester Probate and Family Court
225 Main StreetWorcester, MA 01608
Docket No. WO13D1275DRDIVORCE SUMMONS BY
PUBLICATION AND MAILINGNana Adwoa Curran vs.Patrick CurranTo the Defendant: The Plaintiff has filed a Complaint for Divorce requesting that the Court grant a divorce for irretrievable breakdown. The Complaint is on file at the Court. An Automatic Restraining Order has been entered in this matter preventing you from taking any action which would negatively impact the current financial status of either party. SEE Supplemental Probate Court Rule 411.You are hereby summoned and required to serve upon:Nana Adwoa Curran124 Water Street, Apt. 237Leominster, MA 01453your answer, if any, on or before 12/10/2013. If you fail to do so, the court will proceed to the hearing and adjudication of this action. You are also required to file a copy of your answer, if any, in the office of the Register of this Court. Witness, Hon. Denise L. Meagher,First Justice of this Court. Date: September 19, 2013Stephen G. AbrahamRegister of Probate10/17/2013 WM
TOWN OF SUTTONPublic Notice
49 Worcester-Providence Tpk. Sutton MA. Class II (Second Hand Vehicles) Legal Notice of Board of Selectmen Meeting on November 5, 2013 at 7:00 p.m. located at the Town Hall in Sutton, 4 Uxbridge Road, Sutton, MA 01590 Notice is hereby given under Massachusetts General Laws, Chapter 140 Section 58 §c Class II license, GMV Inc. doing business as J.D. BYRIDER, Gerard M. Vachon (applicant) has applied for a Class II license at the location of 49 Worcester-Providence Tpk., Sutton, The public is invited to attend 10/17/2013 MS
TOWN OF MILLBURYThe Board of Selectmen in the TOWN OF MILLBURY will hold a Public Hearing on, October 22, 2013, 7:15 p.m. at the Municipal Office Building, 127 Elm Street to act upon the Petition of Verizon and National Grid to relocate poles, wires, cable and fixtures, including the necessary anchors, guys and other such sustaining and protecting fixtures to be owned and used in common by your petitioners, along and across McGrath Road.10/17/2013 MS
Town of SuttonPublic Hearing Notice
In accordance with the provisions of Sections IV.C., and V.D. of the Sutton Zoning Bylaw – Site Plan Review and Route 146 Overlay District, the Planning Board will hold a public hearing on the application of Lance Vachon of 635 Washington Street, South Attleboro, MA for property owned by David Hebert of Sutton, MA. The applicant proposes use of the existing structure and site for an automobile sales, service, and financing facility. (pre-existing non-conforming use) The hearing will be held at the Sutton Town Hall, third floor, on Monday, November 4, 2013 at 7:15 P.M. A copy of the application can be inspected in the office of the Town Clerk during normal office hours.Jon Anderson,Planning Board Chairman10/17, 10/24/2013 MS
REQUEST FOR PROPOSALSFISCAL 2015 REVALUATION
TOWN OF MILLBURYThe Millbury Board of Assessors is undertaking a program for a triennial assessment update with a completion date of August 15, 2014. Sealed proposals for this assessment of real and personal property accounts will be accepted at the Assessor’s Office, Town Hall, 127 Elm Street, Millbury, MA 01527 until November 15, 2013 at 4:00 p.m. as shown on the Assessors Office clock. Proposals shall be opened at the Assessor’s scheduled meeting in their office at the Town Hall on November 19th, 2013 at 6:30 p.m. Specifications regarding the proposal may be obtained at the Millbury Assessor’s Office Millbury Town Hall, 127 Elm Street, Millbury, Massachusetts 01527. All proposals shall be submitted in sealed envelope(s) and plainly marked with the description of the proposal. Any questions regarding this Request for Proposals should be addressed to the Assessor’s Office, Millbury, Massachusetts, 01527, telephone number 1-508-865-4732, or e-mailed to [email protected] The Town reserves the right to accept or reject any and all bids, to waive any informality, to divide the award or to accept any bid or part thereof, which is deemed to be in the best interests of the Town of Millbury. MILLBURY BOARD OF ASSESSORSJude CristoChairman 10/17/2013 MS
Commonwealth of MassachusettsThe Trial Court
Probate and Family CourtWorcester Probate and Family Court
225 Main St.Worcester, MA 01608
508-831-2200CITATION ON PETITION FOR FORMAL ADJUDICATION
Docket No. WO13P3117EA Estate of: Richard George OgilvieDate of Death: 06/29/2013To all interested persons: A Petition has been fi led by: Ross Ogilvie of Crofton MD requesting that the Court enter a formal Decree and Order of testacy and for such other relief as requested in the Petition. And also requesting that: Ross Ogilvie of Crofton MD be appointed as Personal Representative(s) of said estate to serve Without Surety on the bond. 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 fi le a written appearance and objection at this Court before: 10:00 a.m. on 10/29/2013. This is NOT a hearing date, but a deadline by which you must fi le a written appearance and objec-tion if you object to this proceeding. If you fail to fi le a timely written appearance and objection followed by an Affi davit of Objections within thirty (30) days of the return date, action may be taken without further notice to you. The estate is being administered under formal procedure by the Personal Representative under the Massachusetts Uniform Probate Code without supervision by the Court. Inventory and accounts are not required to be fi led with the Court, but recipients are entitled to notice regarding the administration from the Personal Representative and can petition the Court in any matter relating to the estate, includ-ing distribution of assets and expenses of administration. WITNESS, Hon. Denise L. Meagher, First Justice of this Court. Date: October 03, 2013Stephen G. Abraham, Register of Probate10/17/2013 MS
Keep it Legal
Two minutes with...
Tell us about your brother. My brother, Rene, is fi ve years older than I am. We were always together, always playing sports together. We looked very similar and sounded very similar. He’s also one of my brothers that lives close by, so we’ve been able to stay very close. When I was an undergraduate here at Assumption, Rene ended up with testicular cancer. He went through that whole process of radiation and chemotherapy. His treatment caused side effects with his kidneys. We started exploring opportunities back in the early 2000s when his kidneys started to fail. We decided that we needed to look at the option of a kidney transplant in 2007.
You volunteered to participate in a kidney paired donation system. What is that? It’s an outstanding program. I was scheduled to donate to my brother in 2006. I got a call confi rming that I needed to be at the hospital the next morning with nothing to drink after midnight. Fifteen minutes later, I got a call saying the surgery was off. When the serum cross match came back it was found that Rene would have rejected my kidney. Needless to say, that was kind of emotional. When we originally had gone in they had mentioned this program, NEPKE, New England Program Kidney Exchange, and gave us a little pamphlet on it. You go into the system as a pair, a recipient and a donor. I told Rene, we should sign up. At the time when we signed up I agreed to donate to someone and their donor would donate to Rene. In our case we had an altruistic donor. They had been
scheduled to give to someone, but their kidney was not compatible with the recipient. They had already gone through all the testing and decided they still wanted to give their kidney, which was wonderful. NEPKE took all their information and ran it through the process and found a recipient. That recipient’s mother was set to donate her kidney and she matched my brother’s. For me there wasn’t another peer because we started with an altruistic donor, so they matched me with someone who was on the waiting list. We ended up with six people involved, three recipients and three donors. All of the surgeries had to happen at the same time. My brother was at Beth Israel receiving the kidney from his donor and four of us were at Mass General going through surgery. The altruistic donor was actually right across from me. As we were in surgery prep I could hear her talking. It was kind of neat.
What were your risks after donating a kidney? Did you ever have second thoughts? The risks are minimal, but that goes to a person’s health. Anytime you go into surgery, clearly there is a risk, but I will say that I’ve found that the physicians and their staff involved in this are just so committed, so aware of and so appreciative of the donors. They really treat you like gold. From my standpoint I’m a healthy person; this happened six years ago and I haven’t had any repercussions. I’d have been back at work in two weeks if my wife had let me.(I’ve had) no second thoughts. I had shoulder surgery before I donated my kidney. If I could, I’d
give another kidney tomorrow before going through shoulder surgery. To me it was a wonderful experience.
How has this experience changed you, besides being one kidney short? I’m more involved in the New England Organ Bank. Through that I’ve met some really phenomenal people, both living donors and recipients. I have a greater appreciation for the good fortune that I’ve had. It’s given me a much bigger appreciation for life.
You’re training for your fi rst marathon at 50 to raise funds and awareness for the New England Organ bank. How’s that going? Have you always been a runner? It’s going great. I originally thought about running a marathon when I turned 40 and that came and went. Through this experience I feel like I’ve been graced with good health and I wanted to run a marathon. Training has gone better than expected. You get stronger and you start believing that you can do it. The last time I ran regularly was in college and that was when Rene was going through his challenges with testicular cancer; at the time that was my outlet.
You’re running in the Marine Corps Marathon in Washington D.C. Did you choose this race for a reason? My colleague had run it two years ago for the Diabetes Foundation. I had looked into the course, it’s relatively fl at and decided it was a good fi rst marathon. I’m also excited to run around our nation’s capital and I know I’ll be running with a lot of men
and women who are serving our country.
How much money have you raised so far? I haven’t raised as much as I’d like to. I’ve raised over $1,000. My goal is $5,000. I’ve always had a hard time raising money, it’s hard asking. I love giving money, but raising it is a little more diffi cult. I’m hopeful I’ll reach my goal and maybe surpass it.
How is Rene doing? He’s doing pretty well. I think anyone who has gone through a transplant is doing a whole lot better than when their kidneys weren’t functioning. He’s feeling a whole lot better than he was six years ago. The reality is that it is likely that he will need another kidney down the road. The young man that I donated to was on his third kidney.
If people would like to donate to your cause how can they do that? I do have a giving web site that the New England Organ Bank has set up, ww.fi rstgiving.com/fundraiser/bobravenelle. The most important part of this is for people to sign up to become organ donors. There are a lot of people out there waiting for kidneys and other organs. There are over 100,000 pe ople waiting for organ transplants. I want people to contribute, but I also want people to sign up and for those who are interested in becoming a living donor, I highly recommend that as well.
— Steven King, Photographer
As the Dean of Students at Assumption College, the 50-year-old Bob Ravenelle has a big hand in shaping the overall life of students as they transition from teens to young adults. As a brother, he wanted to have an even bigger hand in helping Rene Ravenelle, fi ve years Bob’s senior, when his older sibling needed a new kidney. As it turns out they were not a match, but through what’s called a kidney paired donation system, Bob was able to help out someone else. Rene received the kidney he so desperately needed as well, even if it wasn’t exactly how Bob had planned it. Now, Bob is living with one kidney and preparing to run his fi rst marathon with a new outlook on life.
Bob Ravenelle
O C T O B E R 1 7 , 2 0 1 3 • W O R C E S T E R M A G A Z I N E . C O M 39
STEVEN KING
40 W O R C E S T E R M A G A Z I N E . C O M • O C T O B E R 1 7 , 2 0 1 3
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Assorted sizes & colorsChoose from 16
Comp. $20 - $49
$7-$20
Porcelain EnamelTea Kettles
14991.75 Qt.
19992.25 Qt.
Assorted colors.
Cast Iron TeapotsVarious sizes from 0.8 liter
to 2.5 liter capacity. Fully enameled interior
1499 to2499Ice Equalizers Pool Pillows
4’x5’ ..................................7.994’x8’ Heavy duty ....13.99
Deluxe Water Tubes1’x4’ Single .....................3.491’x8’ Double ...................5.991’x10’ Double ................6.99
Above Ground Pool Covers
includes winch & cable15' Round Pool (18’ cover) 29.9918' Round Pool (21’ cover) 39.9921' Round Pool( 24’ cover) 59.9924' Round Pool (27’ cover) 69.9928' Round Pool (31’ cover) 89.99
12'x24' Pool (17’x29’ cover) 39.9916'x24' Pool (21’x29’ cover) 54.9916'x32' Pool (21’x37’ cover) 64.9916'x36' Pool (21’x41’ cover) 69.9918'x36' Pool (23’x41’ cover) 79.9920'x40' Pool (25’x45’cover) 99.9925'x45' Pool (30’x50’ cover)129.99
Commercial GradeWinter Pool Covers & Water Tubes
In Ground Pool Covers
Heater Stove20”x10.75”x23”Comp. $100
$89 Duraflame®
6 ElementInfraredQuartzHeaterBest-In-Classspecifications,Comp. $249
$1592 remotecontrollersIncluded
LifeSmart®
6 ElementInfraredQuartz HeaterEnd-table with DrawerComp. $299
$169
Duraflame®
LifeSmart®
$149
Infrared QuartzTower HeaterHeats up to 1800 sq. ft.Commercial gradeelements. LED display,programmablethermostat control.Comp. $249
50lb Black Oil SunflowerSeed Reg. $29.99................................
$2625lb Nyjer Thistle Seed ...........
$2525lb Signature Blend ...........
$2320lb Country Blend ....................850
Woodpecker Seed Brick 12.25 oz.........350
Suet Cake ..................................................$1
WILD BIRD FOOD
50% OFFAll Halloween Items*
*Excludes scarecrows, pumpkins & candy
Men’s & LadiesBetter Label Coats
Compare $100-$200
Your Choice
3999
50% OFFAll Halloween Items*
$15Charmin®
Ultra Strong Bath Tissue - 30 Rolls DoubleComp. $17.49
Memory Foam Couch Pet BedComp. $119.994999
1299 499
100%PureMapleSyrup32 Oz.
OrganicExtraVirginOliveOil17 Oz
350
Over60 Spices& Extracts
1 lb.Pistachios
79¢