Firm seeks giveback from city

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Tuesday, May 5, 2015
Firm seeks giveback from city
Tunstall looking for $1 million in tax breaks
By RUSS OLIVO
cil will take up a resolution
Wednesday to reduce Tunstall’s
tangible tax bill from $132,432 to
$32,433 per year for a period of 10
years. That includes a two-year
reach-back to 2013, during which
the incentive would be structured
in the form of an abatement.
The company has more than
lived up to its promises on job creation, which is one of the reasons
Mayor Donald Grebien is strongly
[email protected]
PAWTUCKET – The City
Council is poised to consider
granting $1 million worth of tax
breaks to Tunstall Americas, the
digital healthcare giant that’s created more than 300 jobs since moving into a vacant building here two
years ago.
After a public hearing, the coun-
supporting the proposal, according
to his spokesman, Dylan Zelazo.
“We’ve been very happy,” said
Zelazo. “The recruitment of this
company is a major victory by the
administration and the council.”
After a groundbreaking in April
2013, the company projected it
might create around 250 jobs.
In a memo written to the council early last month, Tax Assessor
Robert W. Burns said Tunstall is
now providing “over 300 new jobs,
with plans to add another 40 within
the next several months.”
Tunstall is a division of the
British “telehealthcare” company
Tunstall Health Group, which manufactures and monitors a class of
devices known as personal emergency response systems, or PERS.
For the elderly and others with
medical challenges who want to
live independently, PERS are capable of doing everything from
See FIRM, Page A2
WASHINGTON (AP) —
The Supreme Court has
rejected an appeal from a convicted murderer in
Massachusetts who has been
seeking taxpayer-funded sexreassignment surgery in
prison.
The justices did not comment Monday in letting stand
a lower-court ruling against
Michelle Kosilek. The prison
inmate was born Robert
Kosilek and is serving a life
sentence for killing spouse
Cheryl Kosilek in 1990.
The inmate has waged a
lengthy fight for the surgery
she says is necessary to
relieve the mental anguish
caused by gender-identity disorder.
Last year, a divided federal
appeals court in Boston overturned a first-in-the-nation
court order for the state to
provide the sex-reassignment
surgery.
Bomber
cries as
his aunt
testifies
By DENISE LAVOIE
AP Legal Affairs Writer
The Associated Press on the condition of anonymity, said investigators
were searching Simpson's property
in connection with the case.
Court documents show a man by
the name of Elton Simpson was convicted in 2011 in federal court in
Phoenix of making a false statement
by lying to an FBI agent in January
2010 about whether he had discussed traveling to Somalia.
According to the documents,
Simpson had discussed with an FBI
informant a desire to travel to
Somalia, but denied to an FBI agent
that he'd had any such discussions.
According to trial testimony,
Simpson is an American Muslim
who became the subject of a criminal investigation in 2006 because of
his association "with an individual
whom the FBI believed was attempt-
BOSTON — For the
first time,
Dzhokhar
Tsarnaev
dropped his
blank, impassive
demeanor
and cried as
his sobbing Tsarnaev
aunt briefly
took the stand Monday in
his federal death penalty
trial before she was asked
to step down to compose
herself.
Tsarnaev, 21, wiped
tears from his eyes quickly
and fidgeted in his chair as
his aunt sobbed uncontrollably. He had maintained a
disinterested expression
since his trial began in
January.
His aunt, Patimat
Suleimanova, cried as she
sat down about 10 feet
from Tsarnaev. The tears
began falling before she
began to testify, and she
was only able to answer
questions about her name,
her year of birth and where
she was born.
After a few minutes,
Judge George O'Toole Jr.
suggested that the defense
call a different witness so
she could compose herself.
As she left the stand,
Tsarnaev used a tissue to
wipe his eyes and nose.
Tsarnaev was convicted
last month of 30 federal
charges in the bombings,
including 17 that carry the
possibility of the death
penalty. He moved to the
U.S. with his family in
2002 and committed the
bombings when he was 19.
Prosecutors say
Tsarnaev was an equal
See ATTACK, Page A2
See BOMBER, Page A2
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Amusements........................A7
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Obituaries............................A5
Opinion................................A4
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AP Photo
FBI crime scene investigators document the area around two deceased gunmen and their vehicle outside the Curtis
Culwell Center in Garland, Texas on Monday. Police shot and killed the men after they opened fire on a security officer
outside the suburban Dallas venue, which was hosting provocative contest for Prophet Muhammad cartoons Sunday
night, authorities said.
Police confirm no explosives
found in car used in Texas attack
Two shot dead at Prophet Muhammad cartoon contest
By JAMIE STENGLE
The Associated Press
GARLAND, Texas — Federal
agents searched an apartment in
Phoenix as part of an investigation
into a shooting outside a suburban
Dallas venue hosting a provocative
contest for Prophet Muhammad cartoons, the FBI confirmed Monday.
A police officer shot and killed
two gunmen who opened fire outside the Curtis Culwell Center in
Garland on Sunday night. A security
officer was wounded in the shooting.
Garland officer Joe Harn says the
men had used assault rifles, and that
one officer had fatally shot both
gunmen. Harn also said investigators
searched the men's car and detonated
several suspicious items, but no
bombs were found in the vehicle.
"We were able to stop those men
before they were able to penetrate
the area and shoot anyone else,"
Harn said. The FBI said the Phoenix
residence was being searched for
indications of what prompted the
attack, and FBI spokeswoman
Katherine Chaumont said no other
locations in Phoenix are being investigated.
Agents could be seen also searching a white Chevy minivan at the
Autumn Ridge Apartments complex.
They took what appeared to be plastic bottles out of the vehicle. The
apartment is on the first floor of a
two-story building. The area around
the building is sealed off but residents walked about and stood on
their balconies watching.
A federal law enforcement official has identified one of the suspects in the shooting as Elton
Simpson. The official, who was not
authorized to discuss an ongoing
investigation by name and spoke to
es
om
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Lawyer asks judge to unseal
filings in 38 Studios lawsuit
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
PROVIDENCE — A lawyer for Rhode Island's
economic development agency is asking a judge to
unseal filings in its lawsuit over the
failed 38 Studios deal, saying the public has a right to know.
Max Wistow, who represents the
former Economic Development Corp.,
said in a motion filed last week that
there's a public interest in unsealing
the documents because those involved
have asked a judge to rule immediately
on whether many claims in the multimillion-dollar lawsuit can go forward.
Wistow said motions for summary judgment were
filed under seal because they refer to depositions and
documents designated as confidential.
He also wants to keep future related filings public.
"The case has reached a point where discovery is
complete, and the court is being asked to make subSee UNSEAL, Page A2
FROM PAGE ONE/NATION
A2 THE TIMES
ing to set up a terrorist cell
in Arizona," U.S. District
Judge Mary H. Murgia said
in her order convicting
Simpson.
Prosecutors alleged that
the false statement involved
terrorism, but Murgia's order
said prosecutors hadn't
proved that part of the allegation. Another federal
judge later sentenced
Simpson to three years of
probation.
A resident of the Phoenix
apartment complex, Douglas
Hayes, said he saw police
cars flood the complex
Sunday night and saw
SWAT team members walk-
Bomber
Unseal
partner in the bombings
with his radicalized older
brother, Tamerlan, and
have urged the jury to sentence him to death.
Tsarnaev's lawyers say
Tamerlan, 26, was the mastermind of the attack and
lured his brother into his
plan. Tamerlan died days
after the bombings following a shootout with police.
A cousin testified
Monday that Dzhokhar
was a kind and warm child,
so gentle that he once cried
while watching "The Lion
King."
"I think that his kindness made everybody
around him kind," Raisat
Suleimanova said through
a Russian translator.
Assistant U.S. Attorney
William Weinreb pounced,
asking her if she believes a
deadly attack on innocent
civilians can be considered
kind. Tsarnaev's lawyer
objected, and Suleimanova
was not allowed to answer
the question.
In all, five of Tsarnaev's
family members are
expected to take the witness stand in federal court.
Prosecutors urged Judge
George O'Toole Jr. last
week to press Tsarnaev's
lawyers to make sure his
relatives testify soon
because 16 FBI agents
have been assigned to
guard and protect them
while they are in the
United States. The family
members arrived in Boston
on April 23.
"It's an enormous
expense and distraction for
the agency, and that's just
part of the expense that the
government has endured,"
Weinreb said during a sidebar discussion in court
with Tsarnaev's lawyers
and the judge.
stantive decisions on the
case," Wistow said Monday.
"The public has a right to
know the basis for these
decisions."
A Superior Court judge
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THE TIMES
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Firm
remotely monitoring a user’s
vital signs to screening
unwanted telemarketing
calls.
A Tunstall PERS device
can automatically alert operators on duty ‘round the
clock if a patient has fallen
down and is unresponsive.
Unlike the lady on those TV
commercials who screams,
“I’ve fallen and I can’t get
up!” the Tunstall user doesn’t even have to push a button to summon help.
The company says more
than 3 million people around
the world, many in nursing
homes and assisted living
centers, are being monitored
by its devices.
In 2013, the company
announced that it was relocating a data and operations
center to a vacant building
located at 100 Freight St. in
Pawtucket, the culmination
of a joint economic development mission by the former
Rhode Island Economic
Development Corporation
(now Commerce RI) and
paid $10,000 for off-duty
police officers and other private security.
The wounded security
officer was shot in the lower
leg, Harn said. He was treated and released from a hospital.
Geller told the AP before
Sunday's event that she
planned the contest to make
a stand for free speech in
response to outcries and violence over drawings of
Muhammad. She said in a
statement after the shooting
that it showed how "needed
our event really was."
In January, 12 people
were killed by gunmen in an
attack against the Paris
office of the satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo, which
had lampooned Islam and
other religions and used
depictions of Muhammad.
Another deadly shooting
occurred the following
month at a free speech event
in Copenhagen featuring an
artist who had caricatured
the prophet.
Tens of thousands of people rallied around the world
to honor the victims and
defend the freedom of
expression following those
shootings.
Geller's group is known
for mounting a campaign
against the building of an
Islamic center blocks from
the World Trade Center site
and for buying advertising
space in cities across the
U.S. criticizing Islam.
plans to hear arguments
Friday.
Lawyers for the defendants didn't immediately
respond to messages seeking comment.
Ex-Red Sox pitcher Curt
Schilling's failed video
game company got a $75
million state-backed loan.
The EDC, which has since
been renamed the Rhode
Island Commerce
Corporation, sued Schilling
and 13 others over the collapse, alleging fraud, negligence and breach of fiduciary duty, among other
things.
The lawsuit does not ask
for a specific dollar amount
but for the defendants to
repay the bonds. The suit
seeks triple damages.
In July, a judge approved
a $4.4 million settlement
between the agency and
lawyer Antonio Afonso Jr.
and his firm, Moses Afonso
Ryan, which worked on the
sale of the bonds that
financed that deal.
It is the only settlement
in the case so far.
A trial date has not been
set.
city officials.
The 85,000-square-foot
building, previously the
home of the BNY Mellon
had been vacant since the
financial services company
relocated to Pittsburgh several years earlier.
Burns told members of
the council that the request
for tax stabilization is being
put forward at this time by
Tunstall, but city and state
officials had always held out
the promise of a tax break in
the range of $1 million for
10 years as a carrot that was
offered to entice the company to Pawtucket.
The tax assessor said that,
even if the proposed tax
breaks are approved, the
company will continue to
pay $129,455 a year in real
estate taxes.
The rollbacks will apply
only the company’s tangible
taxes, which cover business
equipment, including computers and office furniture.
“The mechanics of the
proposed stabilization plan,
if approved by the City
Council, essentially reduces
Tunstall’s tangible assess-
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Folk singer Joni
Mitchell may be released from the hospital
soon but still cannot confer with doctors
about her medical care or long-term treatment, an attorney told a judge on Monday.
The assessment by attorney Alan
Watenmaker compelled a judge to place the
singer-songwriter's longtime friend in charge
of health care decisions for Mitchell.
ment from a yearly average
of $2,542,388 to $622,663,”
he said. “This reduction
would mean instead of
receiving $132,432 annually,
the city would receive
$32,433 per year for a period
of 10 years.”
Such plans have been
approved by the council in
the past, most recently for
Collette Tours. Burns said
the incentive “not only
helped keep Collette Tours
in Pawtucket, but has resulted in their further growth
with anticipated further
expansion in the near
future.”
Zelazo said that despite
the rollback, the deal is still
a net financial win for the
city.
“The tangible taxes this is
continuing to produce is
more than the city was getting when this site was
vacant,” he said.
The meeting begins at 7
p.m. tomorrow at 137
Roosevelt Ave.
Follow Russ Olivo on
Twitter @russolivo.
Superior Court Judge David S.
Cunningham III appointed Leslie Morris,
Mitchell's friend for more than 40 years, as
the singer's conservator during a brief hearing Monday.
Morris will now be able to confer with
doctors and make decisions about Mitchell's
treatment and lifestyle when she leaves a
Los Angeles hospital.
Ferguson to pay lawyer
$1,335 an hour to litigate
Justice Department reforms
FERGUSON, Mo. (AP) — Ferguson is paying an
attorney $1,335 an hour to help the St. Louis suburb
negotiate and possibly litigate reforms pressed by the
Justice Department since Michael Brown's shooting
death by a police officer there last summer, according to
a newspaper report.
The Ferguson City Council unanimously decided
behind closed doors in March to hire Dan K. Webb of
suburban Chicago at an hourly rate that Missouri
Lawyers Weekly, a legal publication, said is nearly double Missouri's highest attorney billing rate last year, the
St. Louis Post-Dispatch (http://bit.ly/1I843k3 ) reported.
That tab doesn't include the expenses and fees of any
lawyers or paralegals in Webb's firm who may work on
the case.
Webb, 69, is a former federal prosecutor whose
clients in private practice have included Philip Morris,
Microsoft and the New York Stock Exchange. Webb
prosecuted former National Security Adviser John
Poindexter during the Iran-Contra scandal, leading to
Poindexter's conviction of conspiring to mislead
Congress, obstructing congressional inquiries and making false statements. That conviction was overturned on
appeal. Webb will work with the Justice Department,
which spent seven months probing Ferguson's police
department and municipal court after white Ferguson
officer Darren Wilson fatally shot Brown, an unarmed,
black 18-year-old, in August.
A St. Louis County grand jury and the U.S. Justice
Department declined to prosecute Wilson, who resigned
in November. But the Justice Department released a
scathing report citing racial bias and racial profiling in
the Ferguson Police Department and a profit-driven
municipal court system that frequently targeted black
residents.
After the report, Ferguson's city manager, police chief
and municipal judge resigned. The municipal court clerk
was fired for racist emails. Now it's up to the Justice
Department and the city to negotiate an agreement to
reform the police department and municipal court.
McDonald's to simplify structure, focus on customers
NEW YORK (AP) —
McDonald's CEO Steve
Easterbrook says he's stripping away layers of bureaucracy and increasing
accountability so the company can move more nimbly to keep up with changing tastes.
During a 23-minute
video message posted
online Monday, Easterbrook
said the company's structure
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president Pamela Geller and
Geert Wilders, a Dutch lawmaker known for his outspoken criticism of Islam.
Wilders received several
standing ovations from the
crowd and left immediately
after his speech.
Wilders, who has advocated closing Dutch doors to
migrants from the Islamic
world for a decade, has lived
under round-the-clock police
protection since 2004.
Harn said the city had not
received any credible threats
before the shooting and a
security plan for the event
had been worked out over
several months. He said
additional security was hired
for Sunday's event. The
sponsoring group has said it
Singer expected to be released from hospital
THE TIMES
ADVERTISING
depicting the Prophet
Muhammad.
According to mainstream
Islamic tradition, any physical depiction of the Prophet
Muhammad — even a
respectful one — is considered blasphemous. Drawings
similar to those featured at
the Texas event have
sparked violence around the
world.
White House spokesman
Josh Earnest said President
Barack Obama was
informed about the shooting.
He said the president
believes there is no form of
expression that would justify
an act of violence.
The event Sunday featured speeches by American
Freedom Defense Initiative
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Visit Our New
four years. That's up from
81 percent, and will mean
the company will rely more
heavily on franchising fees
and move away from the
daily work of running
restaurants.
The organizational
changes will contribute to
$300 million in cost-cutting
targeted by McDonald's,
most of which will be realized by 2017. The company
said it's too early to say
how slashed costs will
affect jobs.
Larry Light, who served
as chief marketing officer
of McDonald's between
2002 and 2005 and now
runs a brand consulting
firm, said Easterbrook
offered little in the way of
what matters to customers.
"Being more efficient,
having less bureaucracy
will buy you time, but will
not buy you enduring success," he said.
When McDonald's was
trying to turn around its
business in 2002, Light said
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is "cumbersome" and said it
can no longer afford its
"legacy attitudes."
"The reality is our recent
performance has been poor.
The numbers don't lie," said
Easterbrook, who took
charge of the world's
biggest hamburger chain on
March 1.
To foster quicker movement, McDonald's is
restructuring its units into
four groups based on the
maturity of its presence in
the market: the flagship
U.S. market, established
international markets such
as Australia and the United
Kingdom, high-growth markets such as China and
Russia, and the rest of the
world.
Previously, the business
was segmented by geography.
McDonald's, based in
Oak Brook, Illinois, also
said 90 percent of its more
than 36,200 restaurants
around the world will be
franchised over the next
201
4
Attack
ing throughout the complex.
Hayes said early Monday
morning he heard a loud
noise that turned out to be
law enforcement personnel
breaking into a parked white
minivan. Hayes says all the
windows were broken, leaving glass scattered about the
vehicle.
The bodies of the men
could still be seen on the
ground near the car Monday
before they were later covered with a tarp.
Investigators are still processing the crime scene,
Harn said.
The contest Sunday, hosted by the New York-based
American Freedom Defense
Initiative, would award
$10,000 for the best cartoon
Tuesday, May 5, 2015
Best
Countertop
Store
840 Cumberland Hill Rd.,
Woonsocket, RI 02895
it focused on addressing the
quality of the food, which
had degraded over time. For
instance, he said the company had stopped toasting Big
Mac buns to speed up service. That helped the company reconnect with its existing fans.
"Now McDonald's is
more concerned about the
customers that go to
Chipotle," Light said.
Mark Kalinowski, a
Janney Capital Markets
analyst, said the video contained "quite a bit of broad
commentary, and some
specifics," but not as much
of the latter he had hoped
for.
He noted that "much of
these developments appear
previously anticipated."
McDonald's stock fell 1
percent to $96.65.
Easterbrook also said
during the video that the
company will focus on listening to customers and that
there will be "less sweeping
talk of millennials" as
though they're a homogenous group. The company is
also working on improving
perceptions about the quality of its food with items
like a trio of new sirloin
burgers. In New York City,
Easterbrook said
McDonald's is partnering
with Postmates to offer
delivery starting Monday.
The "turnaround blueprint" comes as McDonald's
fights intensifying competition from a variety of players and shifting tastes. Sales
in Asia took a big hit after a
controversy over a major
supplier this past summer,
and business in Europe has
been weak. Its profit
dropped 15 percent last
year.
In its flagship U.S. market, executives said the
menu got too complicated
and gummed up operations.
Customer visits at established locations declined for
two straight years.
Already, McDonald's has
tried a number of moves to
inject some life back into its
brand.
Back in December, it
said it would start trimming
its menu to simplify operations and make room for
new offerings. More recently, it began testing an allday breakfast menu in San
Diego, revamped its grilled
chicken recipe and said it
would curb the use of
antibiotics. The company
also said last month that it
would double its planned
restaurant closures this year
to roughly 700. It hasn't yet
revealed its updated plans
on overall restaurant count
growth. At the end of last
year, McDonald's Corp. had
more than 36,200 locations
around the world.
LOCAL
Tuesday, May 5, 2015
In brief
Pawtucket Foundation
Prize Exhibit, May 7
This year's Pawtucket
Foundation Prize exhibit
at the Pawtucket Arts
Collaborative is one of the
strongest yet: colorful,
provocative, mysterious,
and diverse.
"There is an element of
abstraction in everything
we chose for the exhibit,
even if the piece was realistic. Each artwork is
strong in color, composition and design and taken
to another level of sophistication,"
said
Ida
Schmulowitz, one of this
year's
jurors.
Ms.
Schmulowitz and fellow
juror John Reidel are both
painters and RISD Alumni.
They have exhibited widely in and out of Rhode
Island, have collected art
for over 40 years, and are
represented in public collections. Ms. Schmulowitz
is also the Coordinator of
Gallery Night, Providence.
The event will be this
Thursday, from 5-7 p.m. at
the PAC Gallery, 560
Mineral Spring Ave.,
Pawtucket. Music, refreshments and prize awards.
Woonsocket Library’s
Li’l Book Buddies seeks
teen/pre-teen readers
WOONSOCKET – The
Woonsocket Harris Public
Library is looking for
teen/pre-teen (ages 12-18)
readers for its Li’l Book
Buddies program.
Participants, ages 5-8,
will get one-on-one reading time, coloring, puzzles
and other fun activities.
Parents do not attend but
are asked to remain in the
building for the full 45
minutes
The afternoon program
(4-4:45) starts
Wednesdays, from May 13
through June 3.
Registration is required
at the children's desk or
call 769-9044, ext. 2.
Letter Carriers Food
Drive is this Saturday
WOONSOCKET – This
Saturday Rhode Islanders
can help collect food for
neighbors in need by leaving a bag of non-perishable food at their mailbox.
Letter carriers across the
state will be picking up
donations and delivering
them to the Rhode Island
Community Food Bank as
part of this annual event.
Coordinated across the
country by the National
Association of Letter
Carriers, last year's drive
resulted in 90,000 pounds
of food for Rhode
Islanders. Annually, the
Food Bank distributes
nearly 10 million pounds
of food.
"We rely on our caring,
generous postal patrons to
support our food drive
each year," says Rhode
Island food drive coordi-
nator and veteran letter
carrier Steve Lepre. "Just
leave out a bag of food on
the morning of Saturday,
May 9, and your letter carrier will do the rest."
"One bag does make a
difference. This food drive
is critical to our ability to
serve our neighbors in
need, especially during the
summer months when
food donations traditionally decrease," said Andrew
Schiff, Chief Executive
Officer of the Rhode
Island Community Food
Bank. "Everyone can help
in the fight against hunger,
simply by leaving a bag of
food at their mailbox on
Saturday, May 9."
Most-needed items
include canned soup and
vegetables, peanut butter,
pasta, rice, canned beans,
tuna, and healthy cereals.
As always, the food collected will be sorted by
volunteers who check for
use-by dates and damaged
packaging.
This year marks the
23rd anniversary of the
event, a national effort to
fight hunger. Across the
country, partners supporting Stamp Out Hunger
include the National
Association of Letter
Carriers (NALC), United
States Postal Service
(USPS), AFL-CIO,
Feeding America, National
Rural Letter Carriers'
Association (NRLCA),
United Way, Valassis, and
Valpak.
LOTTERY
RI Daily
mid-day
3-9-5-1
evening
6-3-9-4
Mass. Daily
mid-day
0-2-2-3
evening
8-0-1-2
Mass Cash 5/3
3-9-12-25-31
Check tomorrow’s
paper for late lotteries.
A3
Pawtucket helps douse Attleboro fire
BY JOSEPH B. NADEAU
[email protected]
PAWTUCKET – Local firefighters
assisted Attleboro with a fire at an
automotive business after responding
to Dickens Avenue for a fire initially
believed to be in Pawtucket.
Battalion Chief Steve Tanguay said
local units responding to the fire report
found it was located just over the line
in Attleboro and took the 12:30 p.m.
call while Attleboro firefighters were
handling a brush fire in their community.
Workers at Greco’s Automobile at
83 Dickens Street, Attleboro, had been
burning trash in a 55-gallon drum as is
allowed at times in that community but
the fire spread to some nearby tires
and automotive parts, Tanguay said.
“It was pretty impressive when we
pulled up,” Tanguay said of the fire
and column of heavy black smoke
found coming from the burning materials.
“We were able to bring it under
control within about an hour and check
for any extension into the building,” he
said. The damage appeared to have
been limited to the pile of debris and
automotive parts and did not spread
into the structure, Tanguay said.
Although outside burning is
allowed in Attleboro, Tanguay said
Monday’s dry and windy weather conditions made it bad idea to be burning
anything outdoors until the conditions
change.
GOOD DAY TO BE OUTSIDE
Blessing of the Pets at
Park Place Church
PAWTUCKET – Park
Place Congregational
Church in Pawtucket will
be hosting its Blessing of
the Pets this upcoming
Saturday at 10 a.m.
The event is free for
animals, large and small,
as well as their humans.
Dogs are asked to be on a
leash.
Park Place
Congregational Church is
located at 71 Park Place in
Pawtucket. For more
information call 401-7262800 or visit parkplaceucc.com.
Photos by Joseph B. Nadeau/The Times
Above, Payton Gallagher and her sister Zoe walk home from school after meeting on Roosevelt Ave., Monday. Payton is a senior
at Davies and Zoe attends Bishop Keough High School. Below, Wayne Maddox of Pawtucket takes advantage of the good
weather to walk his old English Bulldog Chow along the Blackstone River near the Slater Mill Monday.
Watercolors w/Jerry at
Lincoln Public Library
LINCOLN – Lincoln
Public Library will host a
four-week watercolor class
taught by local artist Jerry
Aissis, Mondays June 1, 8,
15, and 22 from 6-7:45
p.m.
Fee is $100 plus supplies. Fee may be paid in
cash or in check to Jerry
Aissis. Payment is expected at time of registration.
Supplies list is available
for pickup.
Class size is limited to
ten (10) students. No waiting lists; no phone registrations. If interested,
please register at the reference desk in the library.
Check Events at lincolnlibrary.com.
Village at Waterman Lake to celebrate veterans
GREENVILLE – On
Sunday, May 17, The
Village of Waterman Lake
welcomes Senior Veterans to
attend their Veterans
Appreciation Celebration to
show thanks for their service.
Veterans and their guests
will enjoy a complimentary
prime rib luncheon beginning at 1:15 p.m., and entertainment by local singer
THE TIMES
Chris Jason.
Please note that seating
will be limited for the luncheon, so call 949-1333 for
reservations.
At 2:30, an outdoor concert open to all, guests and
the public, will feature a performance by the Reggie
Centracchio Quintet, specializing in the sounds of big
band classics.
Coffee and desserts will
be offered during the concert.
For more information on
the event, please visit
Village’s website at villageretirement.com or call
949-1333.
The Village at Waterman
Lake is located at 715
Putnam Pike in Greenville,
Rhode Island.
Family owned and operated since 1990, The Village
at Waterman Lake offers
catered retirement living,
catered assisted living,
assisted living for people
with Alzheimer’s, and
skilled nursing.
K & R Auto
Salvage, Inc.
Wholesale for
Used Auto Parts
JUNK CARS
WANTED!!
Parts for All Makes and Models Foreign & Domestic!
90-Day Standard Warranty Extended Available
950 Smithfield Road, North Providence, RI 02904
(401) 353-9200 or 1-800-638-8089
Open Monday - Friday 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Lic. #241
View our inventory at www.kandrparts.com
READER’S REWARDS
GET YOUR NAME IN THE HAT
Enter to win 4 tickets to:
Pawtucket Red Sox
2015 General Admission
Ticket Vouchers
Twenty 4-packs of vouchers will be awarded.
ENTRY FORM: Pawsox
Name:________________________________________________
Street Address:__________________________________________
City:_______________________________________State:______
Phone Number:_________________________________________
Must be 18 years old to enter.
Entries must be received by
Monday, May 11, 2015 at noon.
Winners will be posted in The
Call & The Times on Tuesday,
May 12, 2015.
No Purchase Necessary. Employees of The
Call & The Times and their families are
not eligible.
Please mail or drop off entry form or 3x5 index card to:
The Call - Reader’s Rewards
75 Main St., Woon., RI 02895
OR
The Times - Reader’s Rewards
23 Exchange St., Pawt., RI 02860
Visit www.pawsox.com for more information
OPINION
Page A4
Regional Publisher: Jody Boucher
General Manager/Advertising Director: Paul Palange
Regional Controller: Kathleen Needham
Executive Editor: Bianca Pavoncello
Managing Editor: David Pepin
Sports Editor: Seth Bromley
Assistant Editor News: Russ Olivo
Distribution Manager: Jorge Londono
THE TIMES — Tuesday, May 5, 2015
A senator’s faith
and humility
There are few moments of grace in our
politics these days, especially where conflicts over religion are concerned. Last
week, I witnessed one. Perhaps it was a
mere drop in an ocean of suspicion and
mistrust, but it was instructive and even
encouraging.
The venue, in a small
meeting room at a
Holiday Inn not far from
the U.S. Capitol, was a
gathering of members of
the Secular Coalition for
America whose mission
is “to amplify the
diverse and growing
voice of the nontheistic
community in the
E.J. Dionne
United States.” One
cause of the contentiousness of our politics is that both secular and very religious Americans feel misunderstood and under assault.
The secular coalition invited Coons to
speak because, as he said of himself last
Thursday night, he is “dedicated to the separation of church and state and to the equal
protection under the Constitution, which I
swore to uphold, whether you are religious
or secular.”
More than that, Coons told the crowd
that he is uneasy with “rigid certainty” on
religious questions. He understands that
many are skeptical of faith, both because
“religion [has] come to be so closely associated with right-wing politics” and
because the Bible “has been used as a document, as a foundation, to justify discrimination.” The revered text is, to some, “the
basis of intolerance, based on outdated
teachings and moral codes and has been a
source of pain and distance and discomfort
for many.”
If Coons had left it at that, this would
have been another in a long series of
Washington speeches in which a politician
tells his allies how much he agrees with
them. But as “a practicing Christian and a
devout Presbyterian,” Coons had a second
message.
Early on, he quoted the very Bible others find offensive, noting that Jesus’s command in Matthew: 25 to feed the hungry,
clothe the naked and visit the imprisoned
had “driven” him throughout his life. As a
young man, he spent time in Kenya and
South Africa working with the poor and
with leaders of the South African Council
of Churches, including Archbishop
Desmond Tutu.
And then he told a story. As a Yale Law
School student, he decided to pursue a sep-
arate degree from the university’s divinity
school, and what he encountered was a
long way from tolerance and open-mindedness.
“I was very active in the progressive
community in my law school, and most of
my friends were politically active progressives,” he said. “But I was unprepared for
their response when word started filtering
out that I had enrolled in divinity school.
Some of them literally disowned me; my
own roommates moved out. Several folks
literally stopped speaking to me and acted
as if I had lost my mind.”
His own background was thrown in his
face, with friends saying: “Chris, you’re a
scientist, you’re a chemist, you trained as a
chemist as an undergraduate, how could
you possibly believe this insane stuff?”
What he experienced, Coons said, was
“real bigotry.”
“Frankly, we were a group of progressives who were really proud of how welcoming and open we were and how virtually any possible lifestyle or worldview or
attitude was something we would embrace
— right up until the moment when I said I
believed in God.” For many progressives,
“accepting someone of expressed faith was
one of the hardest moments of tolerance
and inclusion for them.”
Believers among you are probably
cheering Coons at this point. But ever the
peacemaker, he didn’t stop here. The other
lesson he learned was that many nonbelievers “had personal experiences of deep pain
and of alienation .?.?. that had driven a big
wedge between them and religion.”
And he offered this: “When I think
about this country’s founding, the central
tenet of secular governance, I also think
about the importance of doubt and of
humility.
As a person of faith, I think it’s foundational to our country that if we allow people to choose their path of faith, they must
of course be also free, welcomed, celebrated, to choose not to have faith in a supreme
being.”
It’s to the credit of the Secular Coalition
for America crowd that they cheered a
speech that was as challenging as it was
affirming. Coons’s message was deceptively simple: that we must find ways of “getting past some of our misunderstandings of
each other.” The problem: Respecting each
other on matters of faith and politics seems
beyond our current capacities.
Read more from E.J. Dionne’s archive,
follow him on Twitter or subscribe to his
updates on Facebook.
Letters to the Editor
PawSox belong at McCoy
I am an avid Pawtucket Red Sox fan.
The thought of them moving to Providence
is extremely heartbreaking. McCoy
Stadium has been the home to the
Pawtucket Red Sox for many, many
years...so why change now? The Pawtucket
Red Sox at McCoy Stadium offers a fan
friendly, family oriented, affordable place
to watch great baseball.
The Providence Stadium will not be that
way at all. Mr. Skeffington is not thinking
about the average person and family. We'd
have to pay for parking and the tickets and
concession prices will go up, too.
What will happen to those great mascots, Paws and Sox? They are a big fan
favorite, especially to children. So many
people go to McCoy Stadium every year to
enjoy great baseball because it is a fun and
affordable place to go.
I say emphatically YES to the
Pawtucket Red Sox staying in Pawtucket
and a offer a great big NO to moving the
team to Providence.
Susan Tucker
Barrington, RI
One-party rule breeds corruption
The chickens have come home to roost!
When Rhode Island voters fail to examine
the credentials of candidates for public
office, vote nearly exclusively by party
(Democrat in our case), vote according to
the dictates of their special interest group,
or are egregiously apathetic, then we get —
Rhode Island style government.
That is one-party rule. That is government more easily corrupted. That is when
nearly 50 percent of the candidates for
state office run unopposed. That is government heavily influenced by special interest
individuals or groups.
Currently, there is highly charged
debate on the relocation of the PawSox to
Providence from its home in Pawtucket
with an outrageous $120 million hit to the
taxpayers of the state.
Rhode Islanders are more than concerned that "insiders" and special interest
groups and individuals who make big
donations to election or re-election campaigns will have their way on this issue. If
that happens, trust in our elected leaders,
already low, will sink into the abyss.
Benjamin Franklin on the matter of trust
made it clear when he said, "The success of
any government rests on the general opinion of the goodness of that government as
well as the wisdom and integrity of its governors."
Unless there are definitive changes in
our current practices, Rhode Islanders have
slim chance of ever getting needed reforms
such as voter initiative/referendum, term
limits, or any other measure that rightfully
returns power to them even though candidates, and pointedly this governor, claim to
be "of and for the people".
Sam Parente
Cranston, RI
Letters to the editor policy
The newspaper welcomes letters to the
editor and guest commentaries.
Letters should be no longer than 500
words and should be typed.
Letters must include the writer’s name,
hometown and a phone number. The
newspaper will verify all letters before
publication.
Eight reasons racism
is real in America
Not everyone in America can appreciate
how much racism is still very much an
issue in this country, one that pervades
many aspects of life. As many studies
show, white Americans are often cut off
from the realities of racism, living within
homogeneous social networks and communities.
But if you have any doubts about
whether racism still exists in America, a
three-minute video from Brave New Films,
a California-based company that makes
films to spur political activism, might clear
them up. The video counts down eight reasons that racism is still very real in
America, using research from Yale
University, the American Civil Liberties
Union and the New England Journal of
Medicine, among others.
Those reasons are listed below.
1. Black-sounding names are 50 percent
less likely to be called back by those
reviewing job applications. In a 2002 study,
Marianne Bertrand and Sendhil
Mullainathan of the University of Chicago
mailed thousands of job applications to
reviewers that were identical except for the
names. They found that applications with
white-sounding names like Emily and
Brendan were much more likely to be
answered than identical resumes from
black-sounding names like Lakisha and
Jamal.
2. Black people are charged roughly
$700 more when buying cars. A study by
Ian Ayres and Peter Siegelman of Yale Law
School found that dealers quoted lower
prices to white men than blacks and
women, even though all buyers used an
identical script for negotiating.
3. Black drivers are twice as likely to
get pulled over. Numerous studies —
including a 1999 study by the ACLU and
an analysis of FBI records by USA Today
last year — show a significant racial gap in
police stops and arrests.
4. Black clients are shown 17.7 percent
fewer houses for sale. A 2012 study of
housing discrimination by the Federal
Department of Housing and Urban
Development found that black homebuyers
who contacted agents about recently advertised homes for sale learned about 17 percent fewer available homes than equally
qualified whites and were shown 17.7 percent fewer homes. Asian homebuyers
learned about 15.5 percent fewer available
homes and were shown 18.8 percent fewer
homes.
GUEST COMMENTARY
By Ana Swanson
5. Black people are much more likely to
be arrested for marijuana use. A 2013 study
by the ACLU showed that, while marijuana
use rates are equal among blacks and
whites, black people are 3.7 times more
likely to be arrested for it.
6. Black people are incarcerated at nearly six times the rate of white people. A
2007 study by Marc Mauer and Ryan King
of the Sentencing Project document the
incredible incarceration rates of young
black men. "If current trends continue, one
in three black males born today can expect
to spent time in prison during his lifetime,"
they wrote.
7. Doctors did not inform black patients
as often as white ones about an important
heart procedure. In a 1999 study for The
New England Journal of Medicine,
researchers investigated a long-standing
difference in the use of cardiovascular procedures according to the race and sex of
the patient.
They found that women and blacks
were less likely to be referred for cardiac
catheterization than men and whites,
respectively, and that black women were
much less likely to be referred than white
men.
8. White legislators did not respond as
frequently to constituents with blacksounding names. In a 2011 study, Daniel
Butler and David Broockman of Yale
University found that state legislators were
less likely to respond to requests for help
with registering to vote when the sender
had a putatively black name than a white
one. Legislators of both parties exhibited
similar levels of discrimination against
constituents with "black names." However,
the study also found that minority legislators did the opposite, responding more frequently to those with black names.
Ana Swanson writes for The Washington
Post.
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OBITUARIES/REGION
Tuesday, May 5, 2015
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Corruption investigation proved unfounded
BOSTON (AP) — The FBI has
released documents related to a corruption investigation into late Mayor
Thomas Menino that ultimately
proved unfounded.
Twenty-nine pages of documents
into the 2002-03 probe were posted
Monday on the FBI's website after a
public information request.
The investigation was prompted by
comments Menino made on "Boston
24/7," a 2002 ABC News documentary.
Menino appears to threaten a
lawyer for Sprint that he'll award a
lucrative city contract to rival AT&T
unless the telecommunications company donates $25,000 to the mayor's
youth initiatives.
"You got a problem," Menino said,
according to news reports at the time
the documentary aired. "AT&T is
sponsoring a whole summer program
with me, and you want Sprint to come
in and you did diddly-dink."
The FBI launched the corruption
probe in June 2002 after a story in the
Boston Herald questioned the appropriateness of the conversation.
The documents state that federal
prosecutors initially believed the case
had "prosecutive merit" and that the
FBI conducted interviews and
reviewed the city's contracts with
Sprint and AT&T.
At the time, Menino and the Sprint
lawyer said the conversation was just
bluster for the cameras. The state
inspector general's office also subsequently determined no actual city contract was at stake.
No charges were filed and the FBI
closed the case in September 2003.
The documents released Monday do
not specify why the investigation did
not lead to charges.
Menino died in 2014 after declining
not to seek re-election as he battled
cancer. He spent two decades in office
and was Boston's longest-serving
mayor.
NYPD officer, 25, succumbs
to gunshot injuries to head
First-degree murder
charges await suspect
NEW YORK (AP) — A 25-year-old
police officer shot in the head over the
weekend while attempting to stop a man
suspected of carrying a handgun died
Monday from his injuries, the third New
York City officer slain on duty in five
months.
Brian Moore, who was in a coma after
undergoing brain surgery following the
Saturday evening shooting, was pronounced dead at a Queens hospital with
his family at his bedside, including his
police officer father, uncle and cousin.
Hundreds of uniformed officers stood at
attention outside the medical center and
lined up down the block to salute the
ambulance carrying his body out.
Afterward many could be seen crying and
consoling one another.
"He proved himself to be an exceptional young officer," Police Commissioner
William Bratton said, noting Moore had
made more than 150 arrests in less than
five years on the job and earned meritorious service medals.
Moore and his partner were in plainclothes and in an unmarked police car
when they approached Demetrius
Blackwell in a quiet Queens neighborhood
after they saw him adjusting his waistband, a move that made them suspicious
he had a handgun, authorities said.
The officers pulled up next to
Blackwell, 35, and exchanged words
before the man suddenly turned, pulled out
a weapon and fired at least twice at them,
striking Moore in the head and face,
according to court documents.
Blackwell has been charged with
attempted murder and other crimes. He's
being held without bail and hasn't entered
a plea. His attorney has denied the
charges. He'll be charged with first-degree
murder, prosecutors said.
Mayor Bill de Blasio mourned Moore's
death.
Source says exec.
Goldberg died after
collapsing at gym
LOS ANGELES (AP) —
David Goldberg, the
SurveyMonkey CEO who
also was Facebook executive
Sheryl Sandberg's husband,
was exercising at a gym in a
Mexican resort when he collapsed before he died Friday,
a person close to the family
says. Efforts to revive
Goldberg, who was vacationing with family and friends,
were unsuccessful. The
source says family is planning a service in California
but no other details are available. The popular Silicon
Valley executive died Friday
night at age 47, his company
and family members said on
Saturday, without giving a
cause of death at the time.
In an interview last month,
Goldberg told the news site
Business Insider of maxing
out his credit cards in the
early 1990s to fund one of
his first Internet ventures, a
music site, before going on
to work at other tech companies, including Yahoo.
In 2004, Goldberg married
Sandberg, another longtime
tech executive who now
serves as Facebook's chief
operating officer.
Washington Post
NYPD officers embrace after fellow policeman Brian Moore was loaded into an ambulance. On Monday, Moore died from
injuries sustained in a Saturday shooting.
"For five years, Brian served with distinction and he put his life on the line each
day to keep us all safe," he said in a statement. "On Saturday, he made the ultimate
sacrifice in service to the people of New
York City."
Patrick Lynch, who heads the rank-andfile police officers' union, joined Moore's
family at the hospital and said afterward
that the city's police force would pay their
respects, and then return to their posts
patrolling streets, stairwells and subways.
"They may have sadness in their eyes,
but they have bravery in the hearts," he
said.
Moore had been on the job since July
2010, officials said. Flags at police headquarters were flying at half-staff Monday.
He is the first city officer to be killed
on duty since two uniformed police officers were slain in December in Brooklyn.
Officers Wenjian Liu, 32, and Rafael
Ramos, 40, were shot at close range as
they were sitting in their patrol car Dec.
20. The gunman, 28-year-old Ismaaiyl
Brinsley, then ran into a nearby subway
station and fatally shot himself.
Before the ambush, Brinsley posted on
an Instagram account that he was planning
to shoot two "pigs" in retaliation for Eric
Garner's death in a police chokehold.
In brief
Pedestrian struck, killed
by train in Newton
NEWTON, Mass. (AP) —
Transit police are investigating the death of a man struck
by a commuter rail train in
Newton.
An MBTA spokesman
says the victim was trespassing on the tracks and was
struck by an inbound train
just outside Auburndale
Station at about 9:15 a.m.
Monday.
The man was in his 50s
but his name was not made
public. The death is not considered suspicious. The T
bused passengers on the
Framingham/Worcester commuter rail line between
Wellesley Farms and Boston
during the investigation.
Crash sends car through
Newport shop’s window
NEWPORT (AP) —
Newport police are looking
for the driver of a sport utility vehicle who witnesses say
was responsible for an accident that sent a car through
the front window of a bridal
shop. Police say the SUV
sideswiped another early
Sunday morning and that
Mercedes SUV crashing into
the Andria Bird Bride bridal
shop. No one was in the shop
and nobody in the SUV was
injured.
Shop owner Andi Sperl
said none of the wedding
dresses was destroyed, but
some may need to be sent out
for dry cleaning. She says
that despite the damage to
her shop, she will remain
open for business and honor
every commitment she's
made to brides preparing for
their wedding day.
New England states launch regional crackdown on speeding
WINDSOR, Conn. (AP)
— State police across New
England on Monday
launched the region's first
coordinated crackdown on
speeding and failing to wear
seat belts.
Connecticut Gov. Dannel
P. Malloy announced the
"New England Drive to
Save Lives" campaign with
troopers and highway safety
officials from all six states
at a commuter lot off
Interstate 91 in Windsor,
Connecticut.
State police in
Connecticut, Massachusetts,
Rhode Island, Vermont,
New Hampshire and Maine
will be targeting speeding
and the use of seat belts and
child restraints on interstates 91 and 95 this week.
Local police across New
England will join state
police for a second week of
increased enforcement in
August on highways and
secondary roads across the
region.
Authorities are calling
the effort a highly visible
mobilization and public
education campaign
designed to reduce car crash
deaths and injuries. The six
states also are using the slogan "Stop Speeding Before
It Stops You" employed by
the national "Drive to Save
Lives" program, which was
started three years ago by
the International
Association of Chiefs of
Police.
Speeding is a factor in
30 percent of fatal accidents
nationwide, according to
the National Highway
Thank You Novenas
For Favors or Prayers Answered
(Sample ads.
Many others to
choose from)
A5
FBI releases files from probe of late Boston mayor
‘Star Trek’ actress
Grace Lee Whitney, 85
LOS ANGELES (AP) —
Grace Lee Whitney, who
played Captain Kirk’s assistant, Yeoman Janice Rand, on
the original "Star Trek"
series, died on Friday at her
home in Coarsegold, Calif.
She was 85.
Ms. Whitney played
Yeoman Rand in the first
eight episodes before being
written out of the series. In
her 1998 autobiography, "The
Longest Trek: My Tour of the
Galaxy," she wrote that her
acting career largely ended
after that.
She also wrote of becoming an alcoholic. She
described struggling with her
addiction for many years
before seeking treatment and
resuming her career with the
help of Leonard Nimoy, who
starred as Spock in the series.
THE TIMES
PRAYER
0 TO THE
0
.
BLESSED
VIRGIN
20
Oh$Most Beautiful Flower of Mt.
ST. JUDE’S
0 NOVENACarmel,
fruitful vine, splendor of
0 Sacred Heart ofHeaven, Blessed Mother of the Son
May5.the
God, Immaculate Virgin, assist
$1 be adored, glorified,of
Jesus
me in this, my necessity. Oh Star of
loved
and
preservedthe Sea, help me and show me here
throughout the world nowyou are my Mother, Oh Holy Mary,
and forever. Sacred Heart ofMother of God, Queen of Heaven
and Earth, I humbly beseech you
0
Jesus, pray for us.
0
.
the bottom of my heart to
0
St. Jude, help of thefrom
1
secure me in my necessity (make
$
hopeless pray for us. St. Juderequest). There are none that can
worker of miracles pray forwithstand your power. Oh Mary,
us.
conceived without sin, pray for us
N.M. & R.B. Thank You St. Jude.
who have recourse to thee (3 times).
Thank You Blessed
Virgin Mary for
favor granted.
Mary, I place this prayer in
B.Z.Holy
your hands (3 times). Say this prayer
Call 401-365-1438
To place your ad in this publication
for three consecutive days and then
you must publish it and it will be
granted to you.
L.L.
Traffic Safety
Administration.
"The message will be
clear," said Connecticut
State Police Col. Brian
Meraviglia. "Going over the
speed limit? Be prepared to
be stopped by a trooper. Not
wearing your seat belt?
Again, be prepared to be
stopped by a trooper."
In 2013, there were 276
car crash deaths in
Connecticut, 145 in Maine,
326 in Massachusetts, 135
in New Hampshire, 65 in
Rhode Island and 69 in
Vermont, according to the
latest data compiled by
National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration.
More than 30,000 people
are killed on the nation's
road each year.
Funeral Home Directory
Charles Coelho Funeral Home
151 Cross Street,
Central Falls, RI 02863
401-724-9440
Cook-Hathaway Funeral Home
160 Park St., Attleboro, MA 02703
508-222-7700
Foley-Hathaway Funeral Home
126 South Main St.,
Attleboro, MA 02703
508-222-0498
Duffy-Poule Funeral Home
20 Peck Street,
Attleboro, MA 02703
508-222-0193
Diamond Funeral Home
180 N. Washington Street,
North Attleboro, MA 02760
508-695-5931
Dyer-Lake Funeral Home
161 Commonwealth Avenue,
North Attleboro, MA 02763
508-695-0200
Sperry & McHoul Funeral Home
15 Grove Street,
N. Attleboro, MA 02760
508-695-5651
Darlington Mortuary of
L. Heroux & Sons, Inc.
1042 Newport Avenue,
Pawtucket, RI 02861
401-722-4376
Keefe Funeral Home
5 Higginson Avenue,
Lincoln, RI 02865
401-725-4253
Lincoln Funeral Home
1501 Lonsdale Ave.,
Lincoln, RI 02865
401-726-4117
Karol A. Romenski Funeral Home
342 High Street,
Central Falls, RI 02863
401-722-7250
R.W. Chatigny Funeral Home
151 Cross Street,
Central Falls, RI 02863
401-725-7756
J.J. Duffy Funeral Home
757 Mendon Road,
Cumberland, RI 02864
401-334-2300
Perry-McStay Funeral Home
2555 Pawtucket Avenue,
E. Providence, RI 02914
401-434-3885
Rebello Funeral Home
901 Broadway,
E. Providence, RI 02914
401-434-7744
Raymond Watson Funeral Home
350 Willett Avenue,
E. Providence, RI 02915
401-433-4400
J.H. Williams Funeral Home
210 Taunton Avenue,
E. Providence, RI 02915
401-434-2600
Bellows Funeral Chapel
160 River Road,
Lincoln, RI 02865
401-723-9792
Cheetham Funeral Home
1012 Newport Avenue,
Pawtucket, RI 02861
401-725-4525
Costigan-O’Neill Funeral Home
220 Cottage Street,
Pawtucket, RI 02860
401-723-4035
Lachapelle Funeral Home
1012 Newport Avenue,
Pawtucket, RI 02860
401-724-2226
Manning-Heffern Funeral Home
68 Broadway,
Pawtucket, RI 02860
401-723-1312
Merrick Williams Funeral Home
530 Smithfield Avenue,
Pawtucket, RI 02860
401-723-2042
Prata Funeral Home
220 Cottage Street,
Pawtucket, RI 02860
401-722-8324
William Tripp Funeral Home
1008 Newport Avenue,
Pawtucket, RI 02861
401-722-2140
Russell Boyle Funeral Home
331 Smith Street,
Providence, RI 02908
401-272-3100
Mariani & Son Funeral Home
200 Hawkins Street,
Providence, RI 02904
401-861-5432
O’Neill Funeral Home
3102 Mendon Road,
Cumberland, RI 02864
401-658-1155
Tuesday, May 5, 2015
THE TIMES
A6
ALLIANCE
BLACKSTONE VALLEY FEDERAL CREDIT UNION
594 Central Avenue, Pawtucket, RI • 401-722-8236 • www.ABVFCU.com
Mon. 9-5pm, Tues. & Wed. 9-4:30pm, Thur. & Fri. 9-6pm, Sat. 9-12pm
PRESENTS YOUR COMMUNITY CALENDAR
Sunday
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
4
5
6
7
8
9
Woonsocket
Lincoln
Cumberland
Cumberland
Cumberland
North Smithfield
• The YWCA is hosting its
Women Holding Office celebration at Kirkbrae Country Club
from 6 to 8 p.m. There will be
speakers at the event recognizing women holding office with a
reception to follow. Tickets are
$25 and include hors d’oeuvres
and there is a cash bar. Seating
is limited. Visit ywcari.org for
ticket information.
• The Cumberland Public
Library is having its Tales for
Threes on Tuesdays at 10 a.m.
This is a chance to interact with
your three-year old through fun
stories and singing. No registration is needed.
Pawtucket
• There is a meat raffle at the Club
Lafayette, 289 Aylsworth Ave. from
2 to 4 p.m. Contech Michele at
401-636-2085 or
[email protected] with questions.
• Shakespeare’s Much Ado
About Nothing being held by at
the Beacon Theatre Workshop,
3rd Floor; Beacon Charter High
School for the Arts in
Woonsocket; 7 p.m. Tickets: $10
and $5 for seniors and students;
brownpapertickets.com.
• The Cumberland Public
Library is having its Tales for
Fours and Fives on Wednesdays
at 10 a.m. This is a chance for
parents and preschoolers to
interact through stories, movement activities and songs. No
registration is needed.
• The Cumberland Public
Library will have its Tales for
Twos on Thursdays at 10 a.m.
This is a time for parents to
encourage their two-year-old’s
emerging language skills with
stories and songs. No registration is needed.
3
May
Glocester
• Chepachet Grange will host a
Special Whist Party at 28
Chopmist Hill Road (Rt. 102) in
Glocester starting at noon; Buffet,
beverages, and whist entry fee is
$10; There will be door prizes,
basket, raffle, and other prizes;
RSVP by April 30th. Call Marge
(401) 568-2011 or Dianne (401)
934-1167.
Smithfield
•Swinging Squares of Rhode
Island Square Dance Workshop:
7-9:30 p.m. at East Smithfield
Neighborhood Center, 7
Esmond Street, Smithfield; Fee:
$6 per person; For more information contact Lynne at 508852-7164.
Pawtucket
• The Leon Mathieu Senior
Center and Shri Studio have
partnered to offer a “Yoga for
Seniors” on Tuesday mornings
from 9:30am-10:30am at Shri
Studio, 21 Broad Street in
Pawtucket.This class is
designed to introduce seniors to
gentle yoga postures and meditation techniques from their
chairs, helping them reduce
stress, improve focus, build
strength, and increase flexibility.
The fee for Leon Mathieu Senior
Center members is $5 per person per month. Transportation is
available from the Senior Center
to the Studio for those who
need it. For more information
and/or to register for the class
please contact the Senior
Center at 728-7582.
Woonsocket
• CrAfternoons are back at the
North Smithfield Public Library,
Fridays from 2 to 4 p.m. (or until
materials run out), drop-in when
you can, no registration necessary. Each Friday there will be
set out in the children’s room a
simple craft that can be completed by kids of all ages.
Providence
• Woonsocket Harris Public
Library: Creative Writing Group
Wednesdays, 7:30-9 p.m. Local
writers meet weekly to share
support, suggestions and criticism. An informal gathering of
both published and unpublished
writers who find a group useful
for incentive and inspiration.
There is no charge to join.
Contact - 401-769-9044 or
www.woonsocketlibrary.org.
• Award-winning author
Jeannette de Beauvoir will be
appearing on May 8 at 7 p.m. at
Books on the Square, 471
Angell Street, Providence, RI,
02906.
• The Goff Junior High PTO will
be holding a Spring Bazaar at
Goff Junior High from 9 a.m. to
3 p.m. Any interested
crafters/vendors should send
an email to ([email protected])
or call (729-6500) Kelly Colson
for an application. Application
deadline is Friday, May 1.
Woonsocket
• WRD Classic Rock Music
Festival, 1-10 p.m. at Bouley
Field, Social Street,
Woonsocket. A full day of music
from some of the best local
bands in New England. Tickets
are $15, available at the gate.
Woonsocket
•The Cumberland-Lincoln
Community Chorus stages
“Timeless Broadway,” 7:30
p.m., St. Ann’s Cultural Center,
84 Cumberland St. Tickets are
$15 and are also available
online at clccmusic.org. For
more, call Melissa or Sheila at
609-800-CLCC (2522) or email
[email protected]. The show
will also be held Sunday, May
10 at 3 p.m. at St. Ann’s.
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
North Kingstown
Cumberland
Cumberland
Pawtucket
Cumberland
North Smithfield
Lincoln
• Mother’s Day Road Raise to
raise awareness and money for
migraine research featuring a
ten-mile race and a 5k race
starting at 9 p.m. Event takes
place rain or shine at the North
Kingstown Golf Club in Quonset
Business Park. Those interested
should register at mothersdayrace.com or register at 7
a.m. on race day.
• The Cumberland Public
Library will have its Babies and
Books storytime, for birth to 23
months, on Mondays at 10 a.m.
Connect with your baby through
stories, rhymes and songs. A
play time will follow. No registration needed.
• The Cumberland Public
Library will have its starlight story
time for children of all ages and
their families Monday evenings
at 6:30 p.m. This is a chance to
put on pajamas and participate
in reading, singing and fun.
• Hypnosis for Health at
Cumberland Public Library, featuring Patrick Bowe, 6 p.m.
• The Cumberland Public
Library is having its Tales for
Threes on Tuesdays at 10 a.m.
This is a chance to interact with
your three-year old through fun
stories and singing. No registration is needed.
• The Industrial Revolution Quilt
Guild will hold a live auction of
quality quilting and sewing related items and giftware at the
Smithfield Congregational
Church, 514 Smithfield Avenue,
Pawtucket, RI (Fairlawn Section
near the Lincoln line). Auction at
7p.m./auction preview 6:15
p.m. Everyone welcome.
• The Cumberland Public
Library will have its Tales for
Twos on Thursdays at 10 a.m.
This is a time for parents to
encourage their two-year-old’s
emerging language skills with
stories and songs. No registration is needed.
Woonsocket
• Hearts With Hope is holding a
Mother's Day brunch at St.
Joseph's Veteran's association
on from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.;
Proceeds will go to the Rachel
Autiello 5K, hosted by the RI
Athletic Club, which is also
being held simultaneously that
morning in her honor in
Woonsocket. Menu includes
eggs, sausage, bacon, pancakes, hash browns, juice, coffee, cinnamon rolls, beans and
toast. Cost is $12 per adult, $7
per child under 10 and kids 3
and under eat free. For more,
call 401-742-9278.
17
• The Attleboro Parkinson’s
Disease Support Group meets
from 10 a.m. to noon at
Community VNA, 10 Emory St. It
is designed for caregivers and
their loved ones. Free, open to
the public. Call Gretchen at 508226-2910 for more information.
North Smithfield
• The Garden Club of North
Smithfield will be meeting at
6:30pm at the Little Red
Schoolhouse in Forestdale to
make teacup flower arrangements. Participants will need to
bring their own supplies. New
members welcome. Call Jo-Ann
767-6889 for a detailed list of
supplies if you plan to attend.
Burrillville
• The Commissioners of the
Burrillville Housing Authority will
meet in regular session at the
Burrillville Housing Authority community room, Ashton Court,
Harrisville, Rhode Island at 6:30
p.m.
• Thursday Night Live, 6-11p.m.
Whether you like to experience
our local Stadium Theater, enjoy
a concert and dinning, you'll find
this event a Thursday nightlife a
great night out. If nightlife means
enjoying your favorite beverage
and food, with an energetic and
friendly crowd of locals with the
love for music, you will not want
to miss Thursday Night Live!
Located: Parking Lots of the
Legendary Chan’s Jazz Club &
The Historic Ciro’s Tavern.
• The Lincoln Garden Club will
hold its annual plant sale from 9
a.m. to 1p.m. at the Chapel St.
Congregational Church, 185
Chapel Street. (The rain date is
May 23.) The sale will feature
perennials, herbs and vegetables. For further information, call
333-2199.
Woonsocket
Woonsocket
• "Dancing into Summer" 4:308:30p.m.; located at River
Island Park. A celebration featuring many forms of dancing
such as: breakdancing, salsa,
belly dancing and ballroom.Plus
exhibits and refreshments.
•”Salute to Veterans” 10 a.m.-5
p.m.; located at the Armed
Forces Park on Davidson Street.
We honor those that have served
our country. This event will feature live entertainment and there
will also be a display of military
vehicles and a military museum
exhibit.
Smithfield
•Swinging Squares of Rhode
Island Monthly Square Dance: 810:30 p.m. at East Smithfield
Neighborhood Center, 7
Esmond Street, Smithfield; $7
per person; Contact Lynne at
508-852-7164 for additional
information.
22
23
18
19
20
21
Cumberland
Cumberland
Pawtucket
Woonsocket
North Smithfield
• The Cumberland Public
Library will have its Babies and
Books storytime, for birth to 23
months, on Mondays at 10 a.m.
Connect with your baby through
stories, rhymes and songs. A
play time will follow. No registration needed.
• The Cumberland Public
Library will have its starlight story
time for children of all ages and
their families Monday evenings
at 6:30 p.m. This is a chance to
put on pajamas and participate
in reading, singing and fun.
• The Cumberland Public
Library is having its Tales for
Threes on Tuesdays at 10 a.m.
This is a chance to interact with
your three-year old through fun
stories and singing.
•Fogarty Manor Tenant
Association BINGO is open
Monday and Wednesday Nights,
doors open at
4 p.m. and the game starts at
6:30 p.m. until 8 p.m. Aaddress
is 214 Roosevelt Ave.
• Adult Knitting Circle, hursdays, 7-8:30 p.m., knitters and
crocheters of all levels of experience are invited to attend this
crafting circle. Led by experienced knitter and crocheter, Jen
Grover. Donations of yarn are
appreciated. Woonsocket Harris
Public Library, 303 Clinton St.,
401-769-9044.
www.woonsocketlibrary.org
• The North Smithfield Library
presents storybook yoga at 11
a.m. This is for children ages 3 to
9. Direction will be given by
Debbie Quinn of Color Me Yoga.
This will include simple yoga and
a storybook read aloud.
Registration requested by dropins welcome. Call 767-2780.
Pawtucket
• The Leon Mathieu Senior
Center and Shri Studio have
partnered to offer a “Yoga for
Seniors” on Tuesday mornings
from 9:30 a.m.-10:30 a.m. at
Shri Studio, 21 Broad St. This
class is designed to introduce
seniors to gentle yoga postures
and meditation techniques from
their chairs, helping them
reduce stress, improve focus,
build strength, and increase flexibility. The fee for Leon Mathieu
Senior Center members is $5
per person per month.
Transportation is available from
the Senior Center to the Studio
for those who need it. For more
information and/or to register for
the class please contact the
Senior Center at 728-7582.
Woonsocket
25
26
27
28
Cumberland
Cumberland
Cumberland
Cumberland
West Warwick
• The Cumberland Public
Library will have its Babies and
Books storytime, for birth to 23
months, on Mondays at 10 a.m.
Connect with your baby through
stories, rhymes and songs. A
play time will follow. No registration needed.
• The Cumberland Public
Library will have its starlight story
time for children of all ages and
their families Monday evenings
at 6:30 p.m. This is a chance to
put on pajamas and participate
in reading, singing and fun.
• The Cumberland Public
Library is having its Tales for
Threes on Tuesdays at 10 a.m.
This is a chance to interact with
your three-year old through fun
stories and singing.
• The Cumberland Public Library
is having its Tales for Fours and
Fives on Wednesdays at 10 a.m.
This is a chance for parents and
preschoolers to interact through
stories, movement activities and
songs.
• The Cumberland Public
Library will have its Tales for
Twos on Thursdays at 10 a.m.
This is a time for parents to
encourage their two-year-old’s
emerging language skills with
stories and songs. No registration is needed.
• The Pawtuxet Valley
Community Chorus
proudly presents ‘Lifting Our
Voices in Song’ on Saturday,
May 30, 7 p.m. and Sunday,
May 31, 2 p.m.; West Warwick
High School auditorium.
Tickets: Adults: $12 in advance,
$15 at the door; children 10
and under, $5; For tickets contact any chorus member or call
401-862-3105; also visit
www.pvchorus.com.
Pawtucket
•Fogarty Manor Tenant
Association BINGO is open
Monday and Wednesday Nights,
doors open at
4 p.m. and the game starts at
6:30 p.m. until 8 p.m. Our
address is 214 Roosevelt Ave.
24
Attleboro
Woonsocket
• CrAfternoons are back at the
North Smithfield Public Library,
Fridays from 2 to 4 p.m. (or until
materials run out), drop-in when
you can, no registration necessary. Each Friday there will be
set out in the children’s room a
simple craft that can be completed by kids of all ages.
Pawtucket
•Fogarty Manor Tenant
Association BINGO is open
Monday and Wednesday Nights,
doors open at
4 p.m. and the game starts at
6:30 p.m. until 8 p.m. Our
address is 214 Roosevelt Ave.
Pawtucket
• The Leon Mathieu Senior
Center and Shri Studio have
partnered to offer a “Yoga for
Seniors” on Tuesday mornings
from 9:30 a.m.-10:30 a.m. at
Shri Studio, 21 Broad St. This
class is designed to introduce
seniors to gentle yoga postures
and meditation techniques from
their chairs, helping them
reduce stress, improve focus,
build strength, and increase flexibility. The fee for Leon Mathieu
Senior Center members is $5
per person per month.
Transportation is available from
the Senior Center to the Studio
for those who need it. For more
information and/or to register for
the class please contact the
Senior Center at 728-7582.
• Creative Writing Group,
Wednesdays, 7:30 p.m.;Local
writers meet weekly to share
support, suggestions and criticism. An informal gathering of
both published and unpublished
writers who find a group useful
for incentive and inspiration.
There is no charge to join.
Meetings are held Wednesday
evenings 7:30-9 p.m.;
Woonsocket
• The 118th and 1118th
Engineer Companies formerly
stationed at the South Main
Street Armory in Woonsocket will
hold their sixth annual reunion at
St. Joseph Veterans Association,
99 Louise St. Social hour from 6
p.m., pictures at 6:30 and dinner at 7. For more, contact Tom
Dunayeski at 508-883-4567 or
Sonny Vadeboncoeur at 401766-7953.
Woonsocket
• Adult Knitting Circle, hursdays, 7-8:30 p.m., knitters and
crocheters of all levels of experience are invited to attend this
crafting circle. Led by experienced knitter and crocheter, Jen
Grover. Donations of yarn are
appreciated. Woonsocket Harris
Public Library, 303 Clinton St.,
401-769-9044.
www.woonsocketlibrary.org
29
30
Pawtucket
•Fogarty Manor Tenant
Association BINGO is open
Monday and Wednesday Nights,
doors open at
4 p.m. and the game starts at
6:30 p.m. until 8 p.m. Our
address is 214 Roosevelt Ave.
Send your community events to [email protected] or woonsocketcall.com
AMUSEMENTS
Tuesday, May 5, 2015
THE TIMES A7
Parents with strong beliefs
won’t visit cohabitating couple
DEAR ABBY:
Our amazing daughters are
in their late 20s. Both of
them are independent, intelligent and loving. The four of
us have a special bond. My
wife and I have always been
supportive in all aspects of
our daughters’ lives, and that
will never change.
They have been dating
great guys over the past five
years whom we believe they
will ultimately marry. The
problem? My wife and I were
raised with certain values,
and our daughters have
recently moved in with their
boyfriends. We do not
approve, but respect their
decisions as adults.
One daughter plans to
have an open-house party celebrating their new place.
She’s upset that my wife and I
have indicated we won’t be
attending, because doing so
would be difficult and against
our beliefs. We have understood her decision, but she
does not appear to respect
ours. Are we wrong to take
this stance?
— AGAINST THE TIDE
IN NEW JERSEY
DEAR AGAINST: I think
so. Your daughter is an adult.
Do you plan to continue
“punishing” her and the man
you say you approve of until
they tie the knot? She and her
boyfriend have been a couple
for five years now, and their
relationship appears to be
DEAR ABBY
Jeanne Phillips
progressing nicely. It’s not
unusual for couples today to
live together. I see nothing to
be gained by skipping their
open house — but I do see
something to lose.
DEAR ABBY:
I like a girl but don’t know
if she likes me. I went to a
school dance with her, but
that’s about it. I’m a choosy
person, but everything seems
right about her.
I never had a girlfriend
before. Am I doing something
wrong? I really want to be in
a relationship with her, but I
don’t want to get rejected. I
hate that feeling. Can you
give me advice on what to
do?
— IN LIKE IN WISCONSIN
DEAR IN LIKE: There is
a saying, “Nothing ventured,
nothing gained.” It means
that in order to succeed, you
have to TRY. In dating relationships, there is always
DEAR ABBY:
My husband’s grandmother keeps purchasing season
tickets to the theater for me. I
have told my mother-in-law
(who is in charge of buying
the tickets) as politely as possible that summer is a very
busy time for me. My kids,
husband and I are all involved
in activities, and the theater
conflicts with these activities.
As well, I don’t particularly enjoy the group of people
that we go there with. (I
haven’t shared this with my
mother-in-law.) While I like
my mother-in-law and hus-
Horoscope
A - Cox B - Uxbridge, Millville Comcast
C - Blackstone, Franklin Comcast D - Bellingham Comcast
By HOLIDAY MATHIS
ARIES (March 21-April 19).
Mysterious bounty befalls you!
You’ll be thankful and grateful
and not sure whom to thank —
good problem to have. Paying it
forward is always a sound
option.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20). You can’t control what
other people say, but you can
live a life that’s so good that the
chatter doesn’t matter to you.
That’s what you’ll be up to
today. Bonus: A big check will
help you tune them out.
GEMINI (May 21-June 21).
There are some things (like love
and hate) that are obvious to
everyone except the person in
the thick of the spell. This is
why you need friends who are
honest and frank.
CANCER (June 22-July 22).
The music is influencing you,
whether you want it to or not.
Where your taste intersects
with another person’s taste is
more than a confluence of aesthetics. It’s a soul connection.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). If
you trust too much, you may be
led astray, but if you don’t trust
enough, you’ll be isolated.
Navigating this territory will be
your main responsibility of the
day.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22).
There’s some funny business
afoot, so keep your eyes peeled.
Before you reward the savior of
the day, make sure this person
didn’t actually cause the problem to begin with.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23).
First World problems are a joke
because we often react as if
they were as dire, frustrating
and real as Third World problems. You’ll be the voice of perspective, putting the entitled in
their place.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
21). Books can be like people
you know, except sometimes
they seem more real. You think
about them throughout your
day. You visit them like friends.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22Dec. 21). When your loved
ones want your help, your
response is automatic.
However, should it be?
Consider that sometimes the
very best way to help is by not
helping.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19). Every face has a default
position, a resting pose while
out in the world. You can’t go
wrong if you steer toward those
whose default happens to be
rather pleasant.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18). You prefer to do what fits
your skills and talents. But
when you can’t do that, you fit
your skills and talents to the
activity at hand, thus multiplying them.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March
20). As much as you try to live
in the present moment, you
keep getting pulled back. How
can you help it? There’s a lot of
life in the past, and some of it is
begging for a visit.
band’s grandmother, the others are rude. They exclude me
from conversations and hardly acknowledge my existence.
I try to make conversation
but unsuccessfully. It makes
for a dreadfully awkward
evening.
How do I get out of going
to the theater without hurting
anyone’s feelings?
— NO THANKS
IN CANADA
DEAR NO THANKS: The
most effective way to accomplish that would be to stop
beating around the bush and
tell your husband’s mother
and grandmother you would
prefer not to be included, and
the reason why.
^ WGBH
A
B
C
D
2
2
2
2
$ WBZ
4
% WCVB
& WLNE
5
6
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7
* WJAR
10 10
, WPRI
12
9 WFXT
< WLWC
D WSBE
F WSBK
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6
¥ WBPX
μ WPXQ
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Modern Family Å
Nightly Business Report
Two and a Half
Men
Curious George
The Middle Å The Middle Å
Entertainment Eyewitness
11
Tonight (N)
News
Criminal Minds A suspect fasci20 15 15 nated by Greek mythology.
Criminal Minds A suspect fasci7
nated by Greek mythology.
CABLE
6 PM
A&E
37 64 37 37
A-P
42 56 63 63
AMC
25 71 59 59
BET
79
BRAV
70 63 57 57
CNBC
48 44 46 46
CNN
49 41 42 42
67
COM
58 67 61 61
CSNE
55 36 52 52
DISC
24 59 39 39
DISN
34 53 24 24
E!
63 72 34 34
ESPN
30 34 49 49
ESPN2
29 35 50 50
ESPNC
6:30
WBZ News
CBS Evening
4 4 (N) Å
News/Pelley
NewsCenter 5 ABC World
5 5 at 6:00 (N)
News
ABC6 News at ABC World
6pm (N)
News
7 News at 6PM NBC Nightly
7 7 (N)
News (N)
NBC 10 News at NBC Nightly
10
6pm (N)
News (N)
12 News at 6 CBS Evening
News/Pelley
Fox 25 News at 6 (N) Å
13 13
Modern Fam9
ily Å
World News
8 15 9 9 America
Two and a Half
8 14 14 Men
Curious George
21 21 16 16
X WLVI
∞ WNAC
6 PM
PBS NewsHour (N) Å
132 309 258 258
EWTN
22 96 56 56
FAM
38 50 26 26
FOOD
28 62 53 53
FX
53 30 30 30
HGTV
44 61 32 32
HIST
41 69 58 58
LIFE
40 28 36 36
MTV
60 76 28 28
NESN
56 37 51 51
NICK
35 52 25 25
SYFY
69 73 62 62
SPIKE
26 74 55 55
TLC
39 55 38 38
TNT
27 32 33 33
TOON
36 51 60 60
TVL
43 48 64 64
USA
52 31 35 35
WTBS
45 33 31 31
PREMIUM
ENC
292 630 326 326
HBO
200 400 301 301
MAX
220 450 341 341
SHOW
240 500 361 361
STARZ
280 600 321 321
TMC
260 550 381 381
6:30
7 PM
Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Buren, also known
as Jeanne Phillips, and was
founded by her mother, Pauline
Phillips. Contact Dear Abby at
www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box
69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.
Good advice for everyone
— teens to seniors — is in
“The Anger in All of Us and
How to Deal With It.” To
order, send your name and
mailing address, plus check or
money order for $7 (U.S.
funds) to: Dear Abby, Anger
Booklet, P.O. Box 447, Mount
Morris, IL 61054-0447.
(Shipping and handling are
included in the price.)
Sudoku solution
TUESDAY EVENING MAY 5, 2015
7:30
Greater BosRick Steves’
ton Å
Europe Å
Wheel of For- Jeopardy!
tune (N)
(N) Å
Inside Edition Chronicle Å
(N) Å
The Insider
Inside Edition
(N) Å
(N) Å
Access HolExtra (N) Å
lywood (N)
NBC 10 News at Extra (N) Å
7pm (N)
Wheel of For- Jeopardy!
tune (N)
(N) Å
Dish Nation
TMZ (N) Å
(N) Å
The Big Bang The Big Bang
Theory Å
Theory Å
Last of the
Are You Being
Summer Wine Served?
The Big Bang The Big Bang
Theory Å
Theory Å
America’s Test Antiques RoadKitchen
show
Modern Fam- Modern Family Å
ily Å
Access HolTMZ (N) Å
lywood (N)
Criminal Minds Prostitutes are
murdered in Texas.
Criminal Minds Prostitutes are
murdered in Texas.
7 PM
some risk of rejection, and it
applies to girls as well as
boys. If you want a relationship with her, stop being
afraid and start acting like it.
Because she went to a dance
with you, she probably
already likes you, too.
7:30
8 PM
8:30
9 PM
9:30
The Roosevelts: An Intimate History “Get Action (1858-1901)”
Cousins Theodore and Franklin Roosevelt.
NCIS “The Lost Boys” A terrorist NCIS: New Orleans “How Much
group buys bombs. (N)
Pain Can You Take” (N)
Dancing With the Stars “Results Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.
Show” (N) Å
“Scars” (N)
Dancing With the Stars “Results Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.
Show” (N) Å
“Scars” (N)
The Voice Five artists advance to Undateable “A Live Show Walks
the next step. (N)
Into a Bar” (N) Å
The Voice Five artists advance to Undateable “A Live Show Walks
the next step. (N)
Into a Bar” (N) Å
NCIS “The Lost Boys” A terrorist NCIS: New Orleans “How Much
group buys bombs. (N)
Pain Can You Take” (N)
Hell’s Kitchen Mardi GrasNew Girl “Clean Weird Loners
Å (DVS)
themed dishes. (N)
Break”
The Flash “Grodd Lives” Iris and iZombie Investigating a talk
Barry have a serious talk.
show host’s death. (N) Å
Last of the
As Time Goes The Café
Moone Boy Å
Summer Wine By Å
Law & Order: Criminal Intent
Law & Order: Criminal Intent
Self-help guru implicated.
“Monster” Å
Call the Midwife A diabetic girl (:05) Masterpiece Classic (N) Å
becomes pregnant. Å
The Flash “Grodd Lives” Iris and iZombie Investigating a talk
Barry have a serious talk.
show host’s death. (N) Å
Hell’s Kitchen Mardi GrasNew Girl “Clean Weird Loners
Å (DVS)
themed dishes. (N)
Break”
Criminal Minds The investigation Criminal Minds “Mayhem” Terin Texas continues.
rorist bombing. Å
Criminal Minds The investigation Criminal Minds “Mayhem” Terin Texas continues.
rorist bombing. Å
8 PM
8:30
9 PM
9:30
Married at First Sight Preparing Married at First Sight “Moving Married at First Sight “Happy
Married at First Sight “Adjusting
for the holidays. Å
In” Å
New Year” Å
to Married Life” (N)
To Be Announced
North Woods Law Two drunk
North Woods Law People celNorth Woods Law ATV driver
sledders run over warden.
ebrate the Fourth of July.
records his own crash. Å
(4:30) } I, Robot (2004) } Jurassic Park (1993, Adventure) Sam Neill, Laura Dern, Jeff Goldblum. Cloned dinosaurs
Will Smith. Å
run amok at an island-jungle theme park. Å
Fresh Prince of } Drumline: A New Beat (2014, Comedy-Drama) Alexandra Shipp, Leonard Rob- Nellyville The family goes on a
Bel-Air
erts. A young woman joins her school’s marching band. Å
skiing getaway. (N) Å
The Real Housewives of New
The Real Housewives of New
The Real Housewives of New
The Real Housewives of New
York City Å
York City Å
York City Å
York City (N) Å
Mad Money (N)
The Profit A family-run ice cream Shark Tank Salad dressing mix; Shark Tank A motorized vehicle
company is torn.
golf ball cleaner. Å
suit. Å
(5:00) The Situation Room (N) Erin Burnett OutFront (N)
Anderson Cooper 360 (N) Å
CNN Special Report Inside
popular online videos.
The Nightly
Daily Show/Jon (6:58) Gabriel Iglesias: I’m Not Gabriel Iglesias: Hot and Fluffy Tosh.0 Å
Tosh.0 Å
Show
Stewart
Fat... I’m Fluffy Å
The comic performs.
SportsNet Cen- Early Edition
SportsNet
Early Edition
Quick Slants
Best of Felger The Men in
Quick Slants
tral (N)
(N)
Central
(N)
& Mazz
Blazers Show
Deadliest Catch The fleet goes Deadliest Catch Huge waves test Deadliest Catch: The Bait “More Deadliest Catch The captains
into a fishing frenzy.
Josh’s mettle. Å
Pain, Less Gain” (N)
make hard choices. (N) Å
Austin & Ally Å Austin & Ally Å Liv & MadK.C. UnderAustin & Ally Å Dog With a
Liv & Maddie Jessie Å (DVS)
Å (DVS)
die Å
cover Å
(DVS)
Blog
Botched A woman with large
E! News (N)
Botched A woman with large
Botched Dwight Eubanks says
nostril anxiety.
nostril anxiety.
goodbye to his nose. (N)
SportsCenter (N) Å
2015 Draft Academy (N)
E:60 (N)
2015 Draft Academy
Around the
Pardon the
SportsCenter (N) Å
Horn (N)
Interruption (N)
(5:00) College Football From
Who’s Number 1? Å
Nov. 3, 2007. Å
EWTN News
Papacy History Daily Mass - Olam Daily Mass
Nightly (N)
} Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer (2007, Science
Fiction) Ioan Gruffudd, Jessica Alba, Chris Evans.
Chopped Falooda noodles; steak Chopped Protein and coffee; a
& cinnamon rolls.
grain and a green.
Mike & Molly Mike & Molly Mike & Molly Mike & Molly
Å
Å
Å
Å
Two Chicks and a Hammer Å
Flip or Flop Å Flip or Flop A
short sale.
American Pickers Jim’s specAmerican Pickers A woman’s
tacular man cave. Å
upstate New York barns.
Dance Moms Å
Dance Moms Å
10 PM
10:30
Frontline “Outbreak” How the
Ebola outbreak began. (N)
(:01) Person of Interest “YHWH”
(Season Finale) (N)
(:01) Forever Henry and Adam
head toward a clash. Å
(:01) Forever Henry and Adam
head toward a clash. Å
Chicago Fire “Category 5” Lt.
Casey goes under cover.
Chicago Fire “Category 5” Lt.
Casey goes under cover.
(:01) Person of Interest “YHWH”
(Season Finale) (N)
Fox 25 News at 10 (N) Å
11 PM
Charlie Rose (N) Å
11:30
2
WBZ News
Late Show W/
(N) Å
Letterman
NewsCenter 5 (:35) Jimmy
at 11:00 (N)
Kimmel Live
ABC6 News at (:35) Jimmy
11pm (N)
Kimmel Live
7 News at
Tonight Show
11PM (N)
NBC 10 News at Tonight Show
11pm (N)
News at 11
Late Show W/
Letterman
Fox 25 News at TMZ Å
11 (N)
Two and a Half Two and a Half Cougar Town Å Cougar Town
Men
Men
“My Life”
BBC World
(Off Air)
Rev. Å
Miranda Å
News Å
Seinfeld “The Seinfeld Å
WBZ News (N) Å
Smelly Car”
Wolf Hall on Masterpiece Å
(:06) PBS NewsHour (N) Å
7 News at 10PM on CW56 (N) Å Deco Drive
Eyewitness
(:45) Sports
News at 10
Wrap
Criminal Minds A dead killer is
linked to new murders.
Criminal Minds A dead killer is
linked to new murders.
10 PM
10:30
6:30
7 PM
7:30
Seinfeld “The Family Guy Å
Smelly Car”
The Listener “Missing” Missing
persons case. Å
The Listener “Missing” Missing
persons case. Å
11 PM
11:30
(:01) Married at First Sight
(:02) Married at First Sight
“Adjusting to Married Life”
“Moving In” Å
River Monsters: Killer Sharks
North Woods Law People celand Rays
ebrate the Fourth of July.
} Jurassic Park (1993, Adventure) Sam Neill. Cloned dinosaurs run amok at an island-jungle theme park. Å
Single Ladies “Remix” The dis- Nellyville The family goes on a
trict attorney visits Keisha.
skiing getaway. Å
Newlyweds: The First Year Toi Watch What
Housewives/
throws a soirée. (N)
Happens: Live NYC
The Profit “Courage.b” Tempers Shark Tank A capsule that keeps
boil at Courage.b.
beverages hot. Å
CNN Tonight (N)
Anderson Cooper 360 Å
Tosh.0 (N) Å
Inside Amy
Daily Show/Jon The Nightly
Schumer (N)
Stewart
Show
Sports Tonight SportsNet Cen- Sports Tonight SportsNet Cen(N)
tral (N)
tral (N)
Sons of Winter Dale and Shane Deadliest Catch The captains
must make a decision.
make hard choices. Å
Jessie Å
Austin & Ally Å I Didn’t Do It
Liv & Mad“Pilot” Å
die Å
Good Work (N)
E! News (N)
2015 Draft Academy
SportsCenter (N) Å
2015 Draft Academy
2015 Draft Academy
Baseball Tonight (N) Å
2015 Draft Academy
Who’s Number 1? Å
Who’s Number 1? Å
Who’s Number 1? Å
Who’s Number 1? Å
8 PM
8:30
9 PM
9:30
10 PM
10:30
11 PM
6
6
6
11:30
(4:30) } (:20) } Next (2007) Nicolas Cage. A clair- } Revenge (1990, Suspense) Kevin Costner. A former Navy (:05) } The Amazing Spider-Man 2 (2014, Action) Andrew
The Vanishing voyant sees two minutes into the future. Å
pilot romances a killer’s seductive wife. ‘R’ Å
Garfield, Emma Stone, Jamie Foxx. ‘PG-13’ Å
Real Time, Bill (:45) } Godzilla (2014, Science Fiction) Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Ken Watanabe. Game of Thrones The Faith Mili- 24/7 Canelo/
Fight Game
Silicon Valley Veep “Tehran”
Å
Godzilla and malevolent foes battle for supremacy. ‘PG-13’ Å
tant grow aggressive.
Kirkland (N)
“The Lady”
} 16 Blocks (2006, Action) Bruce Willis, (:45) } Invis(4:55) } The (:25) } Getaway (2013, Action) Ethan Hawke, } Blended (2014) Adam Sandler, Joel McHale. Two singleUnborn (2009) Selena Gomez. ‘PG-13’ Å
parent families are stuck together at a resort. ‘PG-13’ Å
Mos Def, David Morse. ‘PG-13’ Å
ible Centerfolds
(5:55) } Mission: Impossible III (2006) Tom Cruise. Agent Penny Dreadful “Fresh Hell” Å Nurse Jackie
Happyish
Penny Dreadful “Fresh Hell” Å Inside ComHappyish
Ethan Hunt faces the toughest villain of his career.
“Nice Ladies”
edy Å
}
}
}
(4:40)
(:35)
Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World (2003, Adven- Outlander (iTV) Jamie brings
Outlander “The Watch” (iTV)
(:05)
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Panic Room
ture) Russell Crowe. A British captain chases a French ship in 1805. Å
Claire to his family home.
Jamie and Ian join The Watch.
(2013) Owen Wilson. ‘R’ Å
}
}
}
}
(5:30)
Kill Bill: Vol. 2 (2004, Action) Uma Thurman. An
Finding Vivian Maier (2013, DocumenAn Inconvenient Truth (2006, Docu(:10)
Cradle Will
assassin confronts her former boss and his gang. ‘R’ Å
tary) ‘NR’ Å
mentary) Al Gore. ‘PG’ Å
Rock (1999) Hank Azaria. ‘R’ Å
2
2
4
4
5
5
6
7
10
10
10
10
12
12
12
12
7
8
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28
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} Coach Carter (2005, Drama) Samuel L. Jackson, Robert Ri’chard, Rob Brown. A highThe 700 Club Å
school basketball coach pushes his team to excel.
Chopped Coffee can of bacon
Chopped Chicken noodle soup
Chopped Cheesy party food and Chopped Ingredients that are
grease; meatloaf.
and salsa.
expensive offal. (N)
usually thrown out.
} Just Go With It (2011, Romance-Comedy) Adam Sandler, Jennifer Aniston, } Parental Guidance (2012, Comedy) Billy
Nicole Kidman. A man’s careless lie spins out of control.
Crystal, Bette Midler, Marisa Tomei.
Flip or Flop Å Flip or Flop Å Flip or Flop
Flip or Flop Å House Hunters Hunters Int’l
Mark & Derek’s Mark & Derek’s
(N) Å
(N) Å
Flip
Flip
American Pickers The guys find American Pickers Six generaAmerican Pickers Mike and
(:03) American Pickers A vintage
a sculpture of Elvis.
tions of secrets. Å
Frank find a rare vintage auto.
theater marquee. Å
Dance Moms The team returns Dance Moms The team risks
Terra’s Little
Terra’s Little
Terra’s Little
Terra’s Little
to Pittsburgh. (N) Å
being disqualified. Å
Family
Family
Family
Family
True Life Young women who suf- True Life Young women feel
Teen Mom “The F Bomb” Cate
Teen Mom Maci agrees to return Finding Carter Carter attempts to Faking It
Faking It
fer from epilepsy.
shunned.
has gestational diabetes.
to the series. Å
save Crash. (N)
Red Sox First Red Sox Game- MLB Baseball Tampa Bay Rays at Boston Red Sox. From Fenway Park in Boston. (N Subject to
Extra Innings Red Sox Final Sports Today
Sports Today
Pitch (N)
Day
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Live (N)
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SpongeBob
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Fresh Prince of Friends Å
(:36) Friends Å
Å
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(4:30) } Shutter Island (2010, Suspense) } Beautiful Creatures (2013, Fantasy) Alden Ehrenreich, Alice Englert, Jeremy Haunting Dark energy and
Ghost Hunters A mansion with a
Leonardo DiCaprio, Mark Ruffalo.
Irons. Star-crossed teens uncover dark secrets in their town.
demonic possession. (N)
dark history. Å
} Casino (1995, Crime Drama) Robert De Niro, Sharon Stone, Joe Pesci. A mob employee makes a play for power in 1970s
(5:00) } Ocean’s Thirteen (2007) George Clooney, Brad
Pitt. Danny Ocean and his gang seek to right a wrong.
Las Vegas.
19 Kids and Counting “European 19 Kids and
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Counting
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cations arise. (N) Å
(Series Premiere) (N)
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Castle “Law & Murder” Juror
Castle A man is found dead
NBA Basketball Conference Semifinal: Teams TBA. (N) Å
NBA Basketball Conference Semifinal: Teams
dies during a high-profile trial.
inside a pizza oven.
TBA. (N) Å
Teen Titans Go! Teen Titans Go! World of Gum- Adventure Time King of the
King of the
The Cleveland Bob’s BurgAmerican
American
Family Guy Å Family Guy Å
ball
Hill Å
Hill Å
Show
ers Å
Dad Å
Dad Å
Gilligan’s
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Reba Å
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Everybody Ray- Everybody Ray- Everybody Ray- Everybody Ray- Younger (N) Å (:32) The King The King of
The King of
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Island Å
mond
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of Queens
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Law & Order: Special Victims
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NHL Hockey Conference Semifinal: Teams TBA. (N)
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Unit “Savior” Å
Unit “Confidential” Å
Unit A child is poisoned.
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DISH DTV P-VF BrVF BuVF
26
64
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15
15
12
15
CABLE
265 118 181 181 181
282 184 130 130 130
254 130 231 231 231
329 124 270 270 270
273 129 185 185 185
355 208 102 102 102
202 200 100 100 100
249 107 190 190 190
77
77
77
278 182 120 120 120
290 172 250 250 250
236 114 196 196 196
206 140
70
70
70
209 144
74
74
74
208 143
71
71
71
422 261 285 285 285
311 180 199 199 199
231 110 164 164 164
248 137
53
53
53
229 112 165 165 165
269 120 128 128 128
252 108 140 140 140
331 160 210 210 210
623 434
76
76
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299 170 252 252 252
244 122 180 180 180
262 168
54
54
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280 183 139 139 139
245 138
51
51
51
296 176 257 257 257
301 106 244 244 244
242 105
50
50
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247 139
52
52
52
PREMIUM
526 340 350 350 350
501 300 400 400 400
512 310 420 420 420
537 318 365 365 365
520 350 340 340 340
544 327 385 385 385
A8
WEATHER/HEALTH
THE TIMES
Tuesday, May 5, 2015
he average date of the first 80degree day of the season locally is
May 4 ... so Monday's warm temperatures were right on schedule. It will
be a warm week in fact, just the chance
of a few showers today as a cool front
sags across the area. Any showers,
howeevr, will not do much to put a dent
in the rain deficit for the year to date
(which stands at just under four inches).
T
TODAY: Partly sunny, a few showers
late morning through mid-afternoon.
HIGH: 75
WEDNESDAY: Mostly sunny. HIGH:
73
THURSDAY: Mostly sunny. HIGH: 76
FRIDAY: Mostly sunny. HIGH: 77
SATURDAY: Partly sunny. HIGH: 78
SUNDAY: Partly sunny. HIGH: 77
MONDAY: Chance of rain. HIGH: 69
— StormTeam10
In brief
Sturdy Hospital to
hold June blood drive
ATTLEBORO – Sturdy
Memorial Hospital will be
holding a Blood Drive in
partnership with the Rhode
Island Blood Center on
Thursday, June 11, from 7:30
a.m. – 4 p.m. in the Hospital
Auditorium.
Each donation made can
treat up to three people and
will help alleviate the
region’s seasonal blood
shortage. While emergencies
and disasters capture the
attention of our community
and prompt people to
respond by donating, the
need for blood donations is
ongoing. Donating regularly
is something we can do to
ensure blood is always available the instant it is needed,
and for people who have
cancer, blood disorders, sickle cell anemia, and other illnesses, as well as those who
need regular blood transfusions to live.
A “Be The Match” bone
marrow registry will also be
held at the drive. To register
to become a bone marrow
donor and have your information in the “Be The
Match” registry, you must
provide a cheek swab sample, and fill out a consent
form, which consists of basic
contact information, alternate
contact information, and
some medical evaluation
questions.
All donors will receive
refreshments and be entered
in a raffle. To schedule an
appointment for the Sturdy
Memorial Blood Drive, call
508-236-8555 or visit sturdymemorial.org/events_bloo
ddrives.html. Sturdy
Memorial is committed to
bringing in at least 58 donors
for the Blood Drive. Donors
need to be at least 17 years
of age and at least 110
pounds, and the process
takes approximately one
hour.
‘Miracle Balloon’
fundraiser to benefit
Children’s Hospital
PROVIDENCE – More
than three dozen local
Walmart and Sam’s Club
associates joined Hasbro
Children’s Hospital on
Thursday, April 30 to kick
off this year’s ‘Miracle
Balloon’ fundraising campaign. The announcement,
which occurred during an
event in the hospital’s lower
lobby, also served to highlight the impact the company’s support for Children’s
Miracle Network Hospitals,
of which Hasbro Children’s
Hospital is a member.
Starting Monday and continuing through June 14, all
Rhode Island and select
southeastern Massachusetts
Walmart and Sam’s Club
locations will offer members
of the community a convenient way to support the
area’s leading pediatric hospital. Upon checkout, customers may add a “Miracle
Balloon” donation of $1 or
more to their shopping total,
with 100 percent of the
funds directly going to
Hasbro Children’s Hospital.
Donations made during
the six-week campaign will
support the hospital’s areas
of greatest need, impacting
the thousands of children
and families treated by
Hasbro Children’s Hospital
each year. Learn more at
CMNHospitals.org.
Memorial Hospital
offers free hearing
screenings
PAWTUCKET— Free
hearing screenings will be
offered at Memorial Hospital
of Rhode Island on May 18,
19, 20 and 21, 2015 in the
Physical Medicine
Department. Audiologists at
Memorial Hospital encourage local residents to have
regular hearing screenings to
identify hearing loss.
Audiologists from the
Physical Medicine
Department will conduct the
screenings and analyze
results. Hearing screenings
are open to everyone and
take about 15 minutes. For
more information or to
schedule an appointment,
call 401-729-2022.
Health Fair planned at
Mathieu Senior Center
PAWTUCKET—The City
of Pawtucket, Division of
Senior Services, Leon
Mathieu Senior Center is
sponsoring its annual Senior
Health Fair on Wednesday,
May 13 from 9 a.m. unti
11:30 a.m. The Health Fair is
planned in celebration of the
month of May being Older
Americans Month.
A variety of free screenings and workshops will be
available including: cholesterol & blood glucose
screenings, oral cancer
screenings, vision screenings, nutrition awareness and
education, blood pressure
checks, reflexology, chair
massage therapy, meditation
classes, Reiki treatments,
plus much more. The Gloria
Gemma Breast Cancer
Resource Foundation’s Hope
Bus will also be on hand for
attendees to visit. An audiologist from Memorial
Hospital of Rhode Island, a
Care New England hospital,
will be conducting free hearing screenings. To make an
appointment for a free hearing screening, please call the
Senior Center at 728-7582.
All adults 55 and older
are invited to attend the
Health Fair free of charge.
For more call 728-7582.
Learn the power of natural healing using
our new line of bulk herbs and teas
GONG BATH Join us on Friday,
May 15 for a relaxing 11/2 hour of
sound healing. Call to reserve space.
• Spiritual Book Study Mondays & Tuesdays
• Yoga Wednesdays and Saturdays
• P-Knot Class Thur & Sun - Learn how to
loosen knots in your neck, back, legs, etc.
SEE COMPLETE CLASS SCHEDULE ONLINE
1099 Mendon Rd. (corner of Mendon Rd. & Martin St.)
401-305-3585 www.its-my-health.com
Almost half of states’ health care
exchanges face financial struggles
By LENA H. SUN
and NIRAJ CHOKSHI
The Washington Post
WASHINGTON — Nearly half of
the 17 insurance marketplaces set up
by the states and the District under
President Barack Obama's health law
are struggling financially, presenting
state officials with an unexpected and
serious challenge five years after the
passage of the landmark Affordable
Care Act.
Many of the online exchanges are
wrestling with surging costs, especially for balky technology and expensive
customer-call centers — and tepid
enrollment numbers. To ease the fiscal
distress, officials are considering raising fees on insurers, sharing costs with
other states and pressing state lawmakers for cash infusions. Some are
weighing turning over part or all of
their troubled marketplaces to the federal exchange, HealthCare.gov, which
is now working smoothly.
The latest challenges come at a critical time. With two enrollment periods
completed, the law has sharply
reduced the number of uninsured and
is starting to force change in the
nation's sprawling health-care system.
But the law remains highly controversial and faces another threat: The
Supreme Court will decide by the end
of June whether consumers in the 34
states using the federal exchange will
be barred from receiving subsidies to
buy insurance.
If the court strikes down subsidies
in the federal exchange, the states that
are struggling financially probably
would abandon efforts to join the federal marketplace because their residents would no longer be able to get
subsidies to help them buy insurance.
If the court upholds subsidies for the
federal exchange, some states may
step up efforts to transfer operations to
HealthCare.gov.
"Everyone is looking at all the
options," said Jim Wadleigh, executive
director of Connecticut's exchange,
considered one of the most successful
of the state marketplaces. While states
are "trying to find ways to become
self-sustaining," he added, it is an
open question whether they will succeed.
States have received nearly $5 billion in federal grants to establish the
online marketplaces used by consumers to enroll in health plans under
the health care act. The federal funding ended at the beginning of the
year, and exchanges now are required
to cover their operating costs.
Most exchanges are independent or
quasi-independent entities. For most
of them, the main source of income is
fees imposed on insurers, which typically are passed on to consumers.
Because those fees are based on how
many people have signed up, strong
enrollment is critical to an exchange's
fiscal success.
But for the recently completed
open enrollment period, signups for
the state marketplaces rose a disappointing 12 percent, to 2.8 million
people.
That compared with a 61 percent
increase for the federal exchange, to
8.8 million people, according to
Avalere Health, a consulting firm.
States with the smallest enrollment
growth are among those facing the
most daunting financial problems.
Most exchanges have operating
budgets of $28 million to $32 million.
One of the biggest cost drivers is call
centers, where operators answer questions and can sign people up.
Enrollment can be a lengthy process
— and in several states, contractors
are paid by the minute. An even bigger cost involves IT work to correct
defective software that might, for
example, make mistakes in calculating
subsidies.
"A lot of people are going to want
to know: What happened to all those
taxpayer dollars that went to these IT
vendors?" said Sabrina Corlette, project director of Georgetown
University's Center for Health
Insurance Reforms.
To shore up their finances, state
exchanges are looking at an array of
options, although they probably will
hold off making major decisions until
after the Supreme Court rules.
"They are literally looking at huge
gaps and they are not sure how they
are going to get through the year,"
said Caroline Pearson, senior vice
president of Avalere Health.
In Minnesota and Vermont, officials
are so fed up with costly technical
problems in their exchanges that they
are considering handing over some or
all of their functions to the state or
federal governments. Lawmakers in
Oregon abolished the state exchange
in March, long after it was essentially
turned into a gateway to
HealthCare.gov.
In Rhode Island, the legislature is
considering a fee on health plans that
would go up or down based on the
exchange's operating costs.
In Hawaii, which has one of the
most problem-plagued marketplaces,
the exchange needs $28 million to
fund operations until 2022, when it is
projected to become self-sustaining,
officials say. Without the money, "it's
going to be very difficult to keep the
doors open," said Jeff Kissel, executive director of Hawaii Health
Connector.
As a backup plan, officials are talking to the Obama administration about
a possible federal takeover of the marketplace, said an administration official who declined to be named
because of ongoing talks.
Some states are exploring novel
ways to raise funds. The Connecticut
exchange is offering to help other
marketplaces — for a price. It plans,
for example, to renegotiate its callcenter contract and share its strategy
with other states that use the same
contractor, Wadleigh said.
Some state lawmakers express frustration that exchange officials either
don't know whether their marketplaces
will eventually be self-sufficient or are
reluctant to say.
"Basically, the exchange is teetering and the question is, 'Can this be
shored up?" said Republican Sen.
Ellen Roberts, who chairs the committee with oversight of Colorado's
exchange board. The cost of running
the exchange's call center is expected
to reach $21.3 million for this year,
well above a previous estimate of
$13.6 million.
When the ACA was enacted,
Democratic governors pressed to create their own exchanges to signal their
support for the law and to assert their
own authority. Republican governors
refused to set up exchanges as "a sort
of badge of honor in opposing
Obamacare," said Larry Levitt, a senior vice president at the Kaiser Family
Foundation. But now, decisions probably will be made on more pragmatic
grounds. "It will come down to more
of a dollar-and-cents decision," he
said.
Some critics say the states' problems show that supporters of the law
underestimated the practical difficulties of setting up the exchanges. The
states are facing "execution problems
more than political resistance problems," said Thomas Miller, a healthcare policy expert at the American
Enterprise Institute.
SPORTS
Blackstone Valley
THE TIMES, Tuesday, May 5, 2015 — B1
Softball
Sylvestre, St. Raphael rip Davies, 14-3
Viera, LaBree lead attack,
Saints improve to 8-1
By BRENDAN McGAIR
[email protected]
LINCOLN – Regardless of what the
scoreboard says, Davies Tech head
coach Scott Cooper is all about playing
until the final out.
Cooper wasn’t necessarily disappointed with the final outcome Monday
– a 14-3 loss to Division II contender
St. Raphael. What bothered him was the
number of long faces he saw, both in
the field and in the dugout, as the game
progressed.
Things appeared to hit rock bottom
for the Patriots, who came into Monday
as the top team in Division II-North, in
the top of the seventh when injuries and
double substitutions left Cooper with no
choice but to finish the inning with just
eight fielders.
“I’m just disappointed that some of
our kids threw the towel in,” said
Cooper. “We don’t coach like that and
we don’t play like that.”
Davies’s cause was hurt when one of
the team’s top hitters, junior Laura
Sylvestre, missed the game due to illness. Sylvestre’s absence forced Cooper
to rearrange the top four spots in his
batting order. On a typical day, the
Patriots have Madison Goodhart leading off followed in order by Sylvestre,
Madison Cooper and Samantha Lisi.
“It was like a domino effect,” said
Cooper.
Davies Tech head
softball coach
Scott Cooper,
wearing hat at
right, talks to his
team following
their 14-3 loss to
St. Raphael
Academy on
Monday.
Photo by
Brendan McGair
See SAINTS, page B3
Track and Field
Scullin’s four
wins power
Clippers to
North crown
Jared Briere, pictured here during
an earlier meet,
set an impressive
personal best in
the hammer throw
on Monday, with a
205’5”-toss that
was only the 10th
200-foot throw
among U.S. highschoolers this
year.
File photo
by Ernest A. Brown
By JON BAKER
[email protected]
BRIERE
NAILS IT
Woonsocket’s Jared Briere sets new
PR with 205-foot hammer throw
By JON BAKER
[email protected]
CUMBERLAND – Jared Briere
rapidly swung the hammer around
his body and grunted as he propelled
it high into the air, eventually landing
it a few feet right of the sector’s
invisible mid-line.
Both he and Woonsocket High
weight coach Marc Piette knew it
was a pure and solid heave; that’s
why the athlete immediately went
back to catch a glimpse of the distance.
When Piette announced it as 205
feet, five inches, Briere leaped, then
grinned widely.
With the toss, he became only the
10th schoolboy across the United
States to eclipse the 200-feet milestone.
“I’ve been thinking about this all
day,” Briere said afterward, not long
after the start of the Villa Novans’ trimeet clash with unbeaten
Cumberland and Mount St. Charles,
not to mention Burrillville. “I’ve
wanted this so badly. On my first
throw, I fouled to the left, and my
second was 184 feet, so I knew I had
to let it all out on the third.
“This has been a huge mental barrier for me, (one) I had to get over,”
he added. “On my previous two
throws, I was too lazy; I was coming
into (the final turn) too late. I knew,
at the end, I really had to explode.
I’m elated; I finally did it.”
Thanks to fellow sophomores Jake
Greenless and Dilyn Cote,
Woonsocket swept the event, but
Cumberland still manufactured more
top-six placements in the resulting
events to collect elementary Northern
Division beatings of the Novans
(120-34), Mounties (127.5-26.5) and
Broncos (145-9).
Still, Woonsocket did edge MSC,
75-70, though the Mount salvaged a
win over Burrillville, 86-52.
With the three triumphs, the
Clippers (11-0) captured yet another
divisional regular-season crown during their quad-meet finale.
“It’s unbelievable what Jared just
did,” Piette said. “He’s been gearing
up for this since last year. His best
throw as a freshman was 179-5, but
he threw 197-even in this same circle
(during) the Cumberland Frosh-Soph
Invitational a couple of weeks ago.
Photos by Joseph B. Nadeau
Above, Cumberland’s Amy Laverty and Julia Dempsey finish the
3,000 meters on Monday, with Laverty placing first. Below, Mount
St. Charles’s Trevor Roberge finished first in the triple jump.
CUMBERLAND – Senior
quad-captain Nichole Barger had
been told by Cumberland High
coach Vanessa Malloy prior to her
1,500-meter run on Monday afternoon to begin in a slow tempo and
build on it.
Just 200 meters into the race,
and Barger still a long distance
from her coach, Malloy could be
heard saying, seemingly to herself,
“Seventy-five seconds. Nichole,
take it easy!”
Barger eventually did, sealing
the race with a time of 5:08.5.
That finish later helped the
Clippers earn a Northern Division
double-dual meet sweep of
Woonsocket (109-44), Mount St.
Charles (125-29) and Burrillville
(112-33) at Tucker Field on
Monday afternoon.
“My best time ever is 4:47, but I
felt great,” Barger said after her
lone triumph. “Coach told me to
go out slower because I ran a fast
800 (2:18.16) at the Rick Schomp
Invitational (at Coventry High) on
Saturday.
“This was last dual meet, and
we’ve been using (the regular season), at least for the upper-echelon
girls, to double and triple up in
events, but she had told me I’d
only be doing one event here,” she
added. “We’ve been doing that to
build our strength and conditioning
for the class and state meets.
“I know Coach has a big workout in store for me on Wednesday,
and I don’t know what it is yet. I
will say that the 5:08 is a good
time for me in practice, but –
based on Coach Malloy’s reaction
– I think I started a little stronger
than expected.”
On the other side of the spectrum, classmate Meaghan Scullin
competed in four, and – naturally –
reigned in them all. After snaring
See CLIPPERS, page B3
See BRIERE, page B3
NBA
Baseball
Shea tops Davies 4-3,
feeding playoff hopes
Warriors’ Curry
voted MVP over
Harden, James
By BRENDAN McGAIR
[email protected]
LINCOLN – A perfectly executed suicide
squeeze helped Shea edge Davies Tech, 4-3,
Monday in a Division III contest with postseason
implications.
The Raiders and Patriots
began Monday with matching 27 records, tied for last in the 11team division. With playoff
spots awarded to the top-six finishers and half the season done,
there’s no time like to present to
string some victories together.
“We still have half a year to
Campopiano
go, but both teams still need to
get in,” said Shea coach Dino Campopiano. “You
See SHEA, page B2
ANTONIO GONZALEZ
AP Basketball Writer
Photo by Keith Allison | Flickr
Stephen Curry was named the NBA’s MVP for 2014-15 after leading Golden
State to a league-best 67 wins.
OAKLAND, Calif. — His voice cracked first.
Then, his eyes got red. Finally, Stephen Curry
cried.
He had felt this way in the past — when he
barely received any scholarship offers out of high
school, when some questioned whether his game
could translate from tiny Davidson College to the
NBA, when he sat in a doctor's office searching for
answers on how to fix his troublesome right ankle.
See CURRY, page B2
SPORTS
B2 THE TIMES
HIGH SCHOOL SPORTS SCHEDULE
TUESDAY
BOYS
Baseball
3:30 p.m. Shea at Rogers
3:45 p.m. Scituate at Mount St. Charles
Tiverton at Tolman, (at McCoy
Stadium)
4 p.m. Davies at Juanita Sanchez
Central Falls at Wheeler
Burrillville at Paul Cuffee
Tennis
3:30 p.m. Shea at Cranston East
4 p.m. Scituate at Burrillville
4:15 p.m. Cumberland at S. Kingstown
Lacrosse
6:30 p.m. Smithfield at Cumberland
Track
3:30 p.m. Lincoln, North Providence at
Johnston
Volleyball
6:30 p.m. North Kingstown at Mount
St. Charles
South Kingstown at Tolman
GIRLS
Softball
3:30 p.m. Cumberland at Toll Gate
4:15 p.m. Tolman at East Providence
4:30 p.m. Lincoln at Chariho
Lacrosse
4:30 p.m. Warwick Vets at Mount St.
Charles
6 p.m. Burrillville/North Smithfield at
Westerly
Track
3:30 p.m. Lincoln, North Providence at
Johnston
Tolman, Shea, East Providence
at Barrington
4 p.m. Central Falls, Juanita Sanchez,
Toll Gate at Mount Pleasant
CO-ED
Golf
3 p.m. Ponaganset vs. Lincoln, (at
Kirkbrae CC)
WEDNESDAY
BOYS
Baseball
3:30 p.m. Woonsocket at St. Raphael
3:45 p.m. Lincoln at Coventry
Tennis
3 p.m. Shea at Pilgrim
3:30 p.m. Woonsocket at Cranston West
N. Smithfield at Ponaganset
Cranston East at St. Raphael
3:45 p.m. Prout at Lincoln
Wheeler at Mount St. Charles
4 p.m. Chariho at Tolman
Lacrosse
4 p.m. Pilgrim at PCD/St. Raphael
4:30 p.m. Middletown at Lincoln
6:30 p.m. Burrillville/North Smithfield at
North Providnce
Volleyball
5:30 p.m. North Smithfield at Shea
6:30 p.m. Lincoln at Mount Hope
Mount Pleasant at St. Raphael
GIRLS
Softball
3:45 p.m. Davies at Woonsocket
Lacrosse
3:30 p.m. Pilgrim at Mount St. Charles
CO-ED
Golf
1:30 p.m. Tolman, Classical vs. North
Providence, (at Triggs GC)
3 p.m. Shea, Scituate vs. La Salle, (at
Triggs GC)
Mount St. Charles, Burrillville vs.
North Smithfield
Cumberland, Smithfield vs.
Woonsocket (at Glocester CC)
THURSDAY
BOYS
Baseball
3:30 p.m. Rogers at Davies
3:45 p.m. North Smithfield at Scituate
Westerly at Tolman
4 p.m. Mount St. Charles at Smithfield
Cumberland at North Kingstown
Juanita Sanchez at Central Falls
6 p.m. Ponaganset at Lincoln
Tennis
3 p.m. Exeter/West Greenwich at Shea
3:30 p.m. North Kingstown at
Cumberland
3:45 p.m. Burrillville at St. Raphael
4 p.m. Tolman at Wheeler
Lacrosse
4 p.m. Cumberland at Mount St. Charles
Volleyball
6:30 p.m. Mount St. Charles at La Salle
GIRLS
Softball
3:30 p.m. Toll Gate at Mount St. Charles
3:45 p.m. Ponaganset at North
Smithfield
4 p.m. La Salle at Cumberland
Coventry at Lincoln
Wheeler at Shea
Burrillville at Davies
Lacrosse
3:30 p.m. Lincoln at Cranston West
CO-ED
Golf
3 p.m. La Salle, Classical vs. St.
Raphael, (at Pawtucket CC)
North Providence, Johnston vs.
Shea, (at Pawtucket CC)
FRIDAY
BOYS
Baseball
4 p.m. Burrillville at North Smithfield
St. Raphael at Middletown
6 p.m. Shea at Tolman
Tennis
3 p.m. Lincoln at Woonsocket
3:45 p.m. Toll Gate at Mount St. Charles
4 p.m. Tolman at North Smithfield
Lacrosse
3:45 p.m. Lincoln at Narragansett
5:15 p.m. Burrillville/North Smithfield
Volleyball
5:30 p.m. North Smithfield at Classical
Lincoln at Shea
6:30 p.m. Hendricken at Tolman
SATURDAY
BOYS
Volleyball
9 a.m. Little Rhody Tournament, (at
East Greenwich HS)
GIRLS
Softball
11 a.m. Tiverton at St. Raphael
1 p.m. Cumberland at East Providence
3:30 p.m. Lincoln at East Greenwich
Lacrosse
3 p.m. Barrington at Cumberland
AREA ROAD RACE SCHEDULE
Saturday, May 9
CUMBERLAND — The Cumberland
Town Wide Learning 5K will be held
at 10 a.m. at Cumberland High
School on Farm Drive and benefits
art and music programs at
Cumberland High. There will also be
a health fair with food and refreshments before and after the race for
the public. Pre- entry is $18 and
entries the day of the race are $20.
Cumberland students will be $15 and
teams of 10 or more will be $12.
Email Tom Kenwood at
[email protected] for entry forms.
Enter online at https://tlc5k.com/
Monday, May 25
WOONSOCKET — George Nasuti
Novans Pride 5K, 8:30 a.m. The
Gym, LLC, 2168 Diamond Hill Road.
Third annual event begins with a kids
fun run. Contact Michael Debroisse
at (401) 475-6000 or
[email protected] for more
information.
Shea
Continued from page B1
don’t know what’s going to happen as
you head towards the end of the year,
but we battled and I’m just very proud
of them as a club.”
Shea pushed across the go-ahead run
without the benefit of a base hit. Alex
Rodriguez led off the seventh with a
single and then stole second base. David
Mejia also reached and stole second. Up
came Jason Daigle, who dropped down
the bunt that enabled Rodriguez to
score.
“We had one out thought it was a
good opportunity to call the squeeze and
they executed it. It all worked out,” said
Campopiano.
Curry
Continued from page B1
Curry could let it all out and laugh
now. This was a time for celebration.
The Golden State Warriors point
guard won the NBA’s Most Valuable
Player award Monday, the biggest
moment yet of a young career already
full of overcoming obstacles.
Curry received the Maurice Podoloff
Trophy in a packed hotel ballroom
below Golden State’s downtown
Oakland practice facility. He shook his
head in disbelief as he was announced
as the winner of the league’s top individual honor.
“There were obviously good times
and bad times. Times I wanted to shut it
down. Times where you realize that all
the hard work you put into it was worth
it,” Curry said. “It just made me realize
how blessed and thankful I really am to
be in this position.”
Curry received 100 of 130 first-place
votes for a total of 1,198 points from a
panel of 129 writers and broadcasters,
along with the fan vote on the NBA’s
website. Houston’s James Harden had
25 first-place votes and 936 points.
Cleveland’s LeBron James, a four-time
MVP, got five first-place votes and 552
points.
Oklahoma City’s Russell Westbrook
PHOTO FEATURED IN PIC OF THE DAY LAST WEEK
April 15, 2015 - Cumberland freshman Jocelyn
Boddington throws against Westerly at Tucker
Field Wednesday. Ernest A. Brown/RIMG photo
May 9 — May 16
Pineview Big League seeks sign-ups
PAWTUCKET — Pineview LL/RI District 2 Big
League will be chasing its fourth straight state title
and trip to the East Regions in Dover Delaware this
summer.
The team will be holding sign ups for the 2015 season on the following dates and times: Saturdays and
Sundays, May 9, 10, 16 and 17 from noon to 2 p.m.
at Doreen Tomilson field on Daggett Avenue.
Eligible to play are players league age 15 through
18 who reside in the boundaries of Rhode Island
Little League District 2, which includes: Pawtucket,
East Providence, Barrington, Bristol, Warren,
Newport, Portsmouth, Middleton and Tiverton.
Sign up fee is $100 per player, which pays for jersey, hat, and all regular season fees. For more information attend sign-ups or contact manager Joe Clark
by e-mail at [email protected] or coach Norm
Clark at [email protected].
May 7
Woonsocket Senior Bocce League slates
organization and practice session
WOONSOCKET — The Woonsocket Senior Bocce
League will begin its season with an organization and
practice session on Thursday, May 7 at 8:30 a.m. at
Bouley Field.
The league is open to anyone over age 50 from
any community. League play is scheduled to begin on
What also played a part in
Campopiano’s decision to have Daigle
drop down a bunt had to do with who
was on the mound for the Raiders.
Mejia was coming off a sixth inning
where he came in after the starter
(Daigle) allowed the first two Davies
batters to reach.
After getting out of the jam
unscathed, Mejia set down the Patriots
in order in the seventh.
Shea jumped out to a 2-0 lead in the
first inning before solo runs in the first
and second brought Davies back to
even. The Patriots’ second run came on
a sacrifice fly by junior Kyle Frade.
Shea took a 3-2 lead in the third
before Davies tied things up in the
fourth behind a RBI single from sophomore catcher Ryan Carrion.
Besides playing the role of stopper,
Mejia also came through with two hits
and one RBI. Jan Cruz also had two hits
for the Raiders.
Daigle ended up going five-plus
innings for Shea, allowing three runs
(one earned) with four strikeouts. Mejia
struck out two. The two Shea pitchers
combined on a two-hitter.
Davies starter John Hemond was just
as tough on Shea. The sophomore collected 11 strikeouts as part of a complete-game effort.
Shea
201 000 1 – 4-7-2
Davies Tech
110 100 0 – 3-2-3
Jason Daigle, David Mejia (6) and Jan Cruz.
John Hemond and Ryan Carrion.
(352 points) finished fourth and New
Orleans Pelicans big man Anthony
Davis (203 points) was fifth.
Curry’s family informed him of the
news at his house after Golden State’s
win over Memphis in Game 1 of the
Western Conference semifinals Sunday.
Curry, pulled into a room by his basketball-playing brother, Seth, opened the
door to see everyone wearing personalized MVP T-shirts, holding cameras and
sporting “the cheesiest smiles you could
ever imagine.”
“It was a great moment that I’ll
remember for the rest of my life,”
Curry said.
Afterward, he sat in a chair for
about 10 minutes and reflected on his
journey.
Curry kept his cool in private
Sunday. He had trouble staying composed at times in public Monday.
Curry was joined on stage by
Warriors coach Steve Kerr, general
manager Bob Myers and his teammates — praising each of them individually. He got choked up talking
about his pregnant wife, Ayesha, and
their 2-year-old daughter, Riley, who
sat in the front row with the rest of his
family.
And he shed a few tears talking
about his father, Dell, pounding the
dais while he gathered his thoughts.
“A lot of people thought I had it
easy with pops playing in the NBA,”
he said, shaking his head.
Curry thanked just about every
team employee, too, including former
general manager Larry Riley and
retired coach Don Nelson for “taking a
chance on a scrawny, little kid from a
mid-major school.”
Across the country, James called
Curry the “catalyst” for Golden State’s
rise from perennial loser to championship contender.
“I think it’s great that another kid
born in Akron, Ohio, can win an MVP,
so I liked it,” James said at the
Cavaliers’ shootaround.
Curry, now 27, was born in Akron
but grew up in Charlotte, North
Carolina, where he started in the shadows of his father.
Despite his famous name, most
major colleges didn’t offer Curry a
scholarship because they thought he
was too small. Curry proved them all
wrong, going from a shooting guard
who dazzled at Davidson during the
NCAA Tournament to a polished pro
point guard who can shoot, dribble and
distribute with the best of them.
Curry carried the top-seeded
Warriors to a franchise-record 67 wins,
surpassed his own NBA record for
most 3-pointers in a season and added
to his growing reputation as one of the
most entertaining spectacles in sports.
Follow Brendan McGair on Twitter
@BWMcGair03
GATOR’S PUB VOLLEYBALL STANDINGS
Gator’s Pub Summer 2015
Volleyball League
[# of Wins]
Sunday Co-Ed B
DIVISON 1
Korel Construction – 3
No Risk Crossfit – 3
Fat Unicorns – 3
How I Set Your Mother – 3
That’s What She Said – 3
Dirt Bags – 2
Nestor Physical Therapy – 1
Thirsty Dogs – 0
Beach Bums – 0
Can You Dig It? – 0
Notorious D.I.G. - 0
Where’s Wade? – 0
DIVISION 2
All For Fun – 3
Best Sets Ever – 3
The “A” Team – 3
Giggity Gators – 2
Gladu Wreckers – 2
Mission Unblockable – 2
I’d Hit That – 1
Road House Farm – 1
Back Row Attack – 1
Sandy Feet – 0
Sets On The Beach – 0
Team Geritol - 0
Monday – Any 4’s
99 Problems – 3
Foreplay – 3
How I Set Your Mother - 3
Beach Bums – 2
Honey Badgers - 1
Out Of Bounds – 0
Killa B’s – 0
Best Sets Ever - 0
Monday – Ladies 4’s
Forty Five - 3
We Dig This Game – 2
Volley Babes – 2
The E! True VB Story - 2
Simply Smashing – 1
Super Heroes – 1
Ashley’s Beaches - 1
Tequila Shots - 0
Tuesday – Co-Ed A
Gator’s Pub – 3
Cunning Stunts - 2
Spritzer’s – 2
Disgruntled - 2
Village Haven – 1
Killer Figs – 1
Safe Sets – 1
Here For Beer - 1
Tuesday – Any 4’s
Figuerido Masonry - 3
Team Gus – 3
Served On Ice – 3
Nestor Physical Therapy - 2
Affordable Dreams – 1
Nepini Construction –
Sandwedges – 0
Peaches - 0
Wednesday – Men’s B
Pound Sand v.4.6 - 3
Sand Dollar – 2
Balls Deep – 2
Digitall – 1
Just Enough – 1
Scared Hitless - 0
Wednesday – CoEd B
Nothin’ Drops – 3
Rough Sets - 3
That’s What She Set – 3
Sets On The Beach – 2
Slamina – 2
Serves You Right – 1
The Plastics Group - 1
Bump It Up – 0
Last Call Champs - 0
Notorious D.I.G. – 0
Thursday – CoEd B
DIVISION 1
Cool Air Creations – 3
Hooligans – 3
Cool Pickle - 2
Paige Plumbing – 2
Metro Fire - 1
Spike Me Later – 1
I’d Hit That - 1
Sand Bar - 0
DIVISION 2
Bumpin’ Uglies - 3
Palmer Springs – 3
Bottoms Up – 3
Road House Farm - 3
7&7–0
Served Hot – 0
Leclerc Bro’s Painting – 0
Down & Dirty – 0
BLACKSTONE VALLEY MEMORIES
May 5
On The Banner
Tuesday, May 5, 2015
Coach Tommy Eccleston’s
Burrillville nine handed
Sacred Heart a 14-3 defeat as the
Broncos pounded the offerings of Ray
Brochu for 11 hits in a Northern
Division tilt. Starting pitcher Fred Inman
held the Beavers to six hits in five
innings, struck out seven and walked but
one man. Tom Brissette and Inman had
two hits each for the winners, while Bob
Duhamel was the bright spot for the
Academy with three hits, including two
doubles.
1955
Thursday, May 14, at 8:30 a.m.
For more information call David Mencarini at 7623145 or Armand Renaud at 766-8438.
Johnny Gomes, a hard-hitting
sophomore, clouted a threerun homer and two singles good for five
RBI to spark Cumberland to a 10-3 conquest of Woonsocket in a Northern
Division tilt. Kevin Kenyon contributed
a double and single and Jim Salinger
drilled two singles, scored three runs and
drove in one for the Clippers, while winning pitcher lefty Jerry Oakley allowed
eight hits, walked three, struck out 10
and was given errorless support. Roger
Pincince clouted a two-run homer and a
single and Bob Robidoux chipped in
with three singles for the Villa Novans.
1965
BURRILLVILLE — The 10th annual Blackstone
Valley Heritage Golf Tournament will take place on
Monday, June 8 at the Crystal Lake Golf Course on
Bronco Highway.
The fee to play is $125 per person and includes
lunch, dinner, the golf tournament (an 18-hole scramble format), and a goodie bag. Registration and lunch
will begin at 11:30 a.m., with a 1 p.m. shotgun start.
The dinner, auction, and awards ceremony is expected to start at 6 p.m. The proceeds will benefit the
tourism-based environmental programs that protect
and promote the Blackstone Valley.
Visit www.golfblackstone.com to sign up, become
a tournament sponsor, or for more information.
sons, held Tuesday through Friday, June 23-26.
Each lesson will focus on a different swing skill.
Children will also learn the basics of golf safety, golf
etiquette, and respect for the game. The cost of each
children’s clinic is $109.
The adult clinics also consist of four one-hour lessons, each spaced one week apart (the same day
and time for four weeks), that will start on Tuesday,
June 30.
Each lesson will focus on a specific part of the
game, and at the end of each clinic, adults will have
knowledge of the basic fundamentals, such as how
to use a full swing with irons and woods, and “short
game” skills (pitching, chipping and putting). The cost
of each adult clinic is $159.
The instructor for the clinics is Barrie Bruce, a PGA
teaching professional from the Barrie Bruce Golf
Schools.
Equipment and practice balls will be provided. All
participants need are a pair of sneakers and a good
attitude.
Call the Parks and Recreation Department at (401)
334-9996 for more details or to reserve your space
in any of the clinics.
June 23-30
Spring/Ongoing
Cumberland Parks & Recreation holds
beginner golf clinics for kids, adults
Woonsocket Senior Softball League
holding pre-season practices
CUMBERLAND — The Cumberland Parks &
Recreation Department will conduct beginner golf
clinics for children ages 6-15 and adults at
Wentworth Hills Country Club in Plainville, Mass.
The children’s clinics consist of four one-hour les-
WOONSOCKET – The Woonsocket Senior Softball
League will be holding practices every Tuesday and
Friday at 9 a.m. at Baldelli Field.
The league is open to Woonsocket residents must
who are at least 58 years old and non-city residents
June 8
10th annual Blackstone Valley Heritage
Golf Tournament slated
The Darlington Braves topped
the Pawtucket Knights of
Columbus 12-10 in Pineview Major
Little League action. Robert Coia
ripped three hits and John St. Jacques,
Dave Tetreault and Tom Chartier belted
two apiece for the Braves. The
Knights’ Bob Crowell stroked four hits,
two of which were for home runs.
1975
– By Bill Mulholland
who are at least 60 years old.
The season begins on Friday, May 15, and finishes
in October. For more information contact Don
Laroche at (401) 766-1462, Nick Haddad at (401)
465-8652 and Bill Sudan at (401) 749-3452.
Post 85 American Legion baseball seeks
manager, business sponsors
The Woonsocket-area American Legion Post 85
baseball team is seeking a manager for their junior
league team during the upcoming season. The program includes players from Woonsocket, North
Smithfield, Burrillville and students of Mount St.
Charles.
The program is also seeking business sponsorships for their players.
Anyone who is interested in either coaching or
sponsoring, contact Steve Girard at [email protected] or call (401) 309-7993.
Adult volleyball league seeks new players
BELLINGHAM — Bellingham Volleyball is looking
for new players for the spring session. Any adult age
18 and up is welcome.
Games take place at South Elementary School,
Harpin Street, every Tuesday night from 7 to 9 p.m.
Players of all levels are welcome in this recreational pick up league, which plays with different teams
every week. For more information e-mail Doug
Robbie at [email protected] or call (508) 9664053.
SPORTS
Tuesday, May 5, 2015
THE TIMES B3
Photos by Joseph B. Nadeau
Above, Woonsocket’s Quinn Harlan, pictured here in the triple jump, captured a
win in the 100M on Monday, and a tie for first in the 200M with Cumberland’s
Jacklyn Xavier. At right, Cumberland’s Abdullah Kaba wins the boys’ 3,000
meters.
Briere
Continued from page B1
“Throwing here is very agreeable
to him, so I’m not stunned,” he said.
“On his second try, his right foot
came in very late – he had a big
overstep – so he couldn’t transition
into his second turn. I just told him
to get his right foot in (the landing
area) quicker on his first spin, and
then he rode that speed and let it fly.
“For him to be now listed among
the top hammer throwers in the
country, and he’s the top sophomore,
I couldn’t be happier for him. He’s
worked very hard.”
Stated Greenless: “He’s been
Clippers
Continued from page B1
the 400 meters, she also took the
long jump, high jump and triple
jump.
Then there was junior Madison
Soullier, who rolled to wins in the
100 high hurdles (16.3) and 300
low hurdles (49.6).
“My time in the 300 wasn’t very
good, but I’m still getting in some
hard workouts,” Soullier laughed.
waiting for this a long, long time.
Every day, he’d say how much he
wanted to break the 200-foot mark.
He told me (Monday) morning,
“When I woke up, I thought this
would be my day.”
Interrupted Briere: “I didn’t say
that, but I do know I felt pretty good
in warm-ups.”
Briere didn’t fare as well in the
shot put, placing second (40-4)
behind CHS senior Andrew Walters
(47-1), but he didn’t seem to mind.
“I was ranked second going into
this meet behind Walters, so I kind
of expected to finish there,” Briere
said. “I’m not particularly disappointed because I threw three feet
better than my previous PR in the
hammer. I’m still too excited about
that.”
Cumberland dominated in most
of the running and field events,
claiming 14 of the 18. Senior Jared
Talbert led the way with victories in
the 110 high hurdles (14.9) and high
jump; classmate Matt Feng in the
100 dash; junior Sean Laverty in the
1,500 (4:06.5); senior Abdullah
Kaba in the 3,000; Collin Simmons
in the 300 intermediate hurdles; and
Matt Delva in the pole vault.
CHS also swept both relays.
“For Sean in the 1,500 and Jared
Talbert in the 110s, those are good
times going into the championship
season,” said head coach Tom
Kenwood.
Greenless and Troy Rivers added
triumphs in the discus (113-1) and
javelin, respectively, while Trevor
Roberge landed the Mounties’ lone
win in the triple jump (40-10 ¼).
For the Broncos, Dustin Laney
snatched the long jump with a leap
of 19-8, just 6 ¾ further than
Roberge.
MSC fell to 6-2, while
Burrillville dropped to 6-5.
“My goal here was just to score
points, not necessarily to do PRs.
We’re all trying to save those for
the qualifiers and, hopefully, the
state meet.”
Junior Jacklyn Xavier, who tied
Woonsocket sophomore Quinn
Harlan in the 200 (27.2), teamed
with sophomores Katie Wandrey,
Jaylynne Thomas and Katherine
Remavich on the victorious 4 x
100 relay (52.8).
Other first-place point-getters
for the Clippers (10-1 overall)
included junior Amy Laverty in the
1,500; and Hannah Ratcliffe in the
pole vault.
For the Novans, Harlan earned
double-victor status after reigning
in the 100 dash, while teammate
Tara Rochefort gleaned the hammer toss and discus; and Ashley
Martinez the shot put (29-11).
Burrillville collected a pair of
wins, thanks to senior captain
Betsy Dumais in the 800 (2:34.8)
and classmate Catherine Keable in
the javelin (84-6).
Cumberland 109, Woonsocket 44
Cumberland 112, Burrillville 33
Cumberland 125, Mount St. Charles 29
Woonsocket 74, Mount St. Charles 71
Mount St. Charles 84, Burrillville 59
NBA
Bulls grab 99-92 win over Cavs in Game 1
TOM WITHERS
AP Sports Writer
CLEVELAND — Derrick Rose scored 25
points and Pau Gasol added 21, leading the
Chicago Bulls to a 99-92 victory over the
short-handed Cleveland Cavaliers in Game 1
of the Eastern Conference semifinals on
Monday night.
Looking like the MVP he was before being
slowed by knee injuries, Rose helped the Bulls
swipe home-court advantage from the Cavs,
who were missing starters Kevin Love and
J.R. Smith.
Saints
Continued from page B1
The other source of concern for Davies on
this afternoon was defense. All told, the
Patriots wound up committing six errors
along with a handful of mental errors that
may have not showed up in the scorebook,
but made the coaching staff take note.
Cooper coached number of the St.
Raphael players when they played for
Darlington Girls Softball. He specifically
mentioned Alexis Viera, Kamryn LaBree,
Mary Beth Mennucci and Brianna
O’Rourke.
“We were the first team in Darlington
Girls Softball to play fast-pitch and we made
it to the state finals,” recalled Cooper. “I
wanted to give St. Raphael a game. A lot of
the girls walk by and smile and say ‘Hey
coach.’”
Unlike its previous two games, St.
Raphael got off to a tremendous start. After
striking for a run in the first, the Saints
struck for five runs in the top of the third.
The frame was highlighted by back-to-back,
two-run singles by O’Rourke and Ashley
Simmons. Both hits came with two outs.
Jimmy Butler added 20 points and banked
in a contested jumper with 30 seconds left as
the Bulls closed it out.
Kyrie Irving scored 30 points and LeBron
James added 19 and 15 rebounds for
Cleveland, playing its first game since Love
— one of the Cavs' Big 3 — was lost for the
remainder of the postseason with a shoulder
injury.
Game 2 is Wednesday night.
The Cavs only trailed by four points in the
final minutes, but they forced several 3-point
attempts and James missed a tough layup with
51 seconds left.
Viera paced the Saints’ 15-hit attack with
a 4-for-5 showing while LaBree added a
double and a triple. Kaylee Sylvestre once
again went the distance on the mound for
SRA, striking out eight.
“Kaylee came out and threw strikes right
away. We jumped on them early and I think
that took the wind out of them,” said SRA
coach Ron LaBree after his squad improved
to 8-1 in Division II-East.
Before the bottom of the third, Cooper
told his players “we’re not getting shut out
in our house.” Davies would have to wait
until the bottom of the fifth as Waleska Kelly
led off with a base hit and came around to
score on a double by freshman Taylor
Moreau.
Madison Cooper doubled home Davies’
second run in the sixth with the third run
coming on a run-scoring groundout by
Victoria Lopes. Kelly finished with two hits.
Follow Brendan McGair on Twitter
@BWMcGair03
St. Raphael
105 113 3 – 14-15-1
Davies Tech
000 013 0 – 3-8-6
Kaylee Sylvestre and Haley Mitsmenn. Madison
Goodhart, Carissa Kent (3), Goodhart (7) and
Madison Cooper.
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Cumberland 120, Woonsocket 34
Cumberland 127.5, Mount St. Charles 26.5
Cumberland 145, Burrillville 9
Woonsocket 75, Mount St. Charles 70
Mount St. Charles 86, Burrillville 52
Area placements
4x100m relay – 1. Cumberland (Jared
Talbert, Matt Feng, Chase Craven, David
Lazenberry 44.9.
Area placements
100m dash – 1. Quinn Harlan (W) 12.7.
200m – 1. (tie) Harlan, Jacklyn Xavier
(CUMB) 27.2.
400m – 1. Meaghan Scullin (CUMB)
1:00.0.
800m – 1. Betsy Dumais (B) 2:34.8.
1,500m – 1. Nichole Barger (CUMB)
5:08.5.
3,000m – 1. Amy Laverty (CUMB) 11:44.2.
100m hurdles – 1. Maddie Soullier (CUMB)
16.3.
300m hurdles – 1. Soullier (CUMB) 49.6.
110m hurdles – 1. Talbert (CUMB) 14.9.
100m dash – 1. Feng (CUMB) 11.5.
1,500m – 1. Sean Laverty (CUMB) 4:06.5.
400m – 1. Feng (CUMB) 53.2.
300m hurdles – 1. Collin Simmons
(CUMB) 42.4.
800m – 1. Will Mardo (CUMB) 2:03.1.
200m – 1. Craven (CUMB) 23.9.
3,000m – 1. Abdullah Kaba (CUMB)
9:30.5.
4x400m relay – 1. Cumberland (David
Agudelo, Kody Sankey, Mardo, Simmons)
3:38.6.
Shot put – 1. Andrew Walters (CUMB) 47-1.
Hammer throw – 1. Jared Briere (W) 2005.
Discus – 1. Jake Greenless (W) 113-1.
Javelin – 1. Troy Rivers (W) 136-10.
Long jump – 1. Dustin Laney (B) 19-8.
Triple jump – 1. Trevor Roberge (MSC) 4010 ¼.
High jump – 1. Talbert (CUMB) 5-8.
Pole vault – 1. Matt Delva (CUMB) 10-6.
4x100m relay – 1. Cumberland (Xavier,
Jaylynne Thomas, Katie Wandrey,
Katherine Remavich) 52.8.
4x400m relay – 1. Mount St. Charles
4:29.5.
Discus – 1. Tara Rochefort (W) 88-11.
Long jump – 1. Scullin (CUMB) 16-8 ½.
Pole vault – 1. Hannah Ratcliffe (CUMB) 76.
Triple jump – 1. Scullin (CUMB) 34-6 ¾.
Javelin – 1. Catherine Keable (B) 84-6.
High jump – 1. Scullin (CUMB) 4-10.
Hammer – 1. Rochefort (W) 137-7.
Shot put – 1. Ashley Martinez (W) 29-11.
B4 THE TIMES
SPORTS
Softball
SPORTS ON THE AIR
Northmen fight
back, top Eagles
TODAY
GOLF
7 p.m.
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
7 p.m.
NORTH SMITHFIELD –
Trailing 4-2 in the bottom of
the sixth, North Smithfield
exploded for three runs to nail
down an eventual come-frombehind 5-4 win over
Barrington on Monday.
Lorenza O'Donnell cracked
a pair of home runs and drove
in four for the Northmen.
Three of her RBI came on
one mighty swing in the sixth
as O’Donnell’s three-run
round tripper put North
Smithfield (4-6, Division IINorth) up for good.
Paige Concannon connected for a two-run shot to highlight the Eagles' four-run fifth
inning. Katie McMullin
earned the victory on the
mound for N.S., tossing a
complete-game four-hitter
with five strikeouts.
Barrington
000 040 0 – 4-4-2
No. Smithfield 011 003 x – 5-6-3
Paige Concannon and Casey
Jensen. Katie McMullin and Kat
Hewitt.
Novans sink Islanders
WOONSOCKET –
Trailing Middletown 7-3
after the top of the third
inning, Woonsocket High
rallied for seven runs over
the next three to eke out a
thrilling 10-9 Division II
crossover triumph at Cold
Spring Park on Monday
afternoon.
The Villa Novans also
faced a 9-8 deficit in the bottom of the fifth, but freshmen Joevanna Barnwell and
Ariel Lopez both punched
singles, and – after a fielder’s choice – senior Tayla
Sevigny and junior Brittany
Girard responded with backto-back RBI hits to give
WHS the decision.
“That was a barnburner,”
head coach Dan Belisle said
later. “We wouldn’t have
been there if (sophomore)
Katyana Colburn hadn’t
tripled in Pawlina in the
third when we were down, or
Pawlina hadn’t hit a basesloaded triple in the fourth.”
The Novans moved to 5-3
on the campaign.
Middletown
205 020 0 – 9-8-2
Woonsocket
302 320 x –10-126
Cassie Krue and Morgan Rice;
Amanda Nunez and Brittany Girard.
Broncos blast Tigers
BURRILLVILLE – Led by
a dazzling effort on the
mound from Gretchen
Carlson, Burrillville rolled to
a 9-0 win over winless
Tiverton on Monday.
Carlson tossed a five-hit
shutout and received plenty of
support from her offense.
Kasey Desrosiers knocked a
three-run double to highlight
a five-run bottom of the second inning for the Broncos,
who received perfect days at
the plate from Desrosiers (3for-3, two doubles) and
Lauren Lamontagne (4-for-4,
double).
Carlson struck out five for
Burrillville, now 3-5 in
Division II-North. The Tigers
are now winless in nine
league tries.
Tiverton
000 000 0 – 0-5-0
Burrillville
152 001 x – 9-103
Amanda Flick and Amber Silva.
Gretchen Carlson and Emily
Bussell.
Mounties fall to Skippers
WOONSOCKET – North
Kingstown struck for six runs
in the top of the first inning
and never looked back in a 90 win over host Mount St.
Charles on Monday.
N.K. pitchers Racehl
Kantor and Kiara Oliver combined to throw their seventh
shutout on the season and
Emma Simmons had three
hits and three RBI.
Taylor Newcomb and
Emily Durand handled the
pitching duties for MSC, who
managed just one hit. The
Mounties fall to 3-6.
North Kingstown
601 020 0 –
9-12-0
Mount St. Charles
000 000 0 –
0-1-3
Rachel Kantor, Kiara Oliver (4) and
Devin Neary; Taylor Newcomb,
Emily Durand (3) and Taylor Dill,
Sky O'Connell (3).
Vikings breeze past Raiders
NEWPORT – Caeli Palmer
pitched a five-inning no-hitter
with 10 strikeouts and also
blasted a two-run homer to
power Rogers to an 11-0 win
over Shea on Monday. Carol
Rodriguez started the game
on the mound for the Raiders,
who fall to 3-4 in Division III.
The Vikings improve to 7-2 in
league play.
Boys’ Lacrosse
Lions roar past Cougars
LINCOLN – Powered by
a four-goal, five-assist day
from Kyle Bettencourt,
Lincoln raced past North
Providence, 17-4, on
Monday. The Lions led 9-3
at halftime before outscoring
the Cougars 8-1 in the second half.
Trent Tougas, Justin
Palumbo and Ethan DaSilva
each netted hat tricks for the
Lions, now 6-3 in Division
III action. Palumbo added
three assists while Ross
Magliocco made four saves.
Middletown brushes aside
PCD/St. Raphael
MIDDLETOWN –
Middletown raced out to a 70 halftime lead and never
looked back in a 15-2 triumph over PCD/St. Raphael
Co-op on Monday.
Mike Mullaney and Mark
Zito each scored one goal for
the area co-op squad, now 26 in Division III.
Boys’ Volleyball
Saints sweep away Huskies
PAWTUCKET – Pat
Bullen had 10 aces, seven
kills and five blocks as St.
Raphael swept Mt. Hope, 30, in a Division II-North
match on Monday. The
Saints won by scores of 2515, 25-18, 25-21.
SRA is now 3-6 in league
play while the Huskies fall
to 2-6.
Tolman tops Shea
PAWTUCKET – Senior
Kenny Vieira accounted for
12 digs and five kills while
junior Cia-ron Hodgkinson
contributed a dozen spikes
and eight digs, propelling
Tolman High to a 3-1 nonleague verdict over archrival
Shea at the James W.
Donaldson Gymnasium on
Monday evening.
Seniors Jason Soares and
Jason Avila accounted for
nine kills and 32 assists,
respectively, though junior
Isaac Cruz added seven
spikes for the Tigers (2-8
overall).
BOXING
The Associated Press
May 6
At Tokyo, Takashi Uchiyama vs. Jomthong
Chuwatana, 12, for Uchiyama’s WBA Super
World junior lightweight title.
At Tokyo, Ryochi Taguchi vs. Kwanthai
Sithmorseng, 12, for Taguchi’s WBA junior flyweight title.
May 7
At the Belasco Theater (FS1), Los Angeles,
Manuel Avila vs. Rolly Lunas, 10, super bantamweights.
May 8
At Philadelphia (ESPN2), Amir Mansour vs.
Joey Dawejko, 10, heavyweights
May 9
At Frankfurt, Germany, Fedor Chudinov vs.
Felix Sturm, 12, for the vacant WBA interim
super middleweight title; Jack Culcay vs.
Maurice Weber, 12, for the interim WBA junior
middleweight title.
At Wembley Arena, London, Chris Eubank, Jr.
vs. Les Sherrington, 12, for Eubank’s WBA
interim middleweight title.
At Minute Maid Park, Houston (HBO), Canelo
Alvarez vs. James Kirkland, 12, super welterweights; Frankie Gomez vs. Humberto Soto,
10, junior welterweights.
FS1 — USGA, U.S. Amateur Four-Ball,
second round and quarterfinals, at San
Francisco
8 p.m.
NESN, WEEI (103.7 FM) — Tampa Bay at
Boston
MLB — Regional coverage, Chicago Cubs
at St. Louis or Oakland at Minnesota
MINOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
6:30 p.m. WHJJ (920 AM) Pawtucket at Toledo
NHL
8 p.m.
NBCSN — Playoffs, conference semifinals, Game 3, Chicago at Minnesota
9:30 p.m. USA — Playoffs, conference semifinals,
Game 3, Anaheim at Calgary
SOCCER
2:30 p.m. FS1 — UEFA Champions League, semifinal, first leg, Juventus vs. Real Madrid, at
Turin, Italy
TRANSACTIONS
Monday's Sports Transactions
The Associated Press
BASEBALL
Major League Baseball
MLB — Suspended Toronto hitting coach
Brook Jacoby 14 games for his postgame
conduct toward the umpire crew assigned to
the April 29 game at Boston.
American League
BOSTON RED SOX — Activated INF Luis
Jimenez. Optioned RHP Dalier Hinojosa to
Pawtucket (IL).
LOS ANGELES ANGELS — Recalled C Carlos
Perez from Salt Lake (PCL). Designated C
Drew Butera for assignment.
MINNESOTA TWINS — Placed OF Oswaldo
Arcia on the 15-day DL. Recalled OF Eddie
Rosario from Rochester (IL).
SEATTLE MARINERS — Recalled INF Chris
Taylor and LHP Joe Beimel selected from
Tacoma (PCL). Placed OF Austin Jackson on
the 15-day DL. Designated LHP Mike Kickham
for assignment.
TEXAS RANGERS — Recalled RHP Spencer
Patton from Round Rock (PCL). Optioned
RHP Roman Mendez to Round Rock.
TORONTO BLUE JAYS — Traded RHP Matt
West to the Los Angeles Dodgers for cash
considerations.
National League
LOS ANGELES DODGERS — Recalled LHP
Daniel Coulombe from Oklahoma City (PCL).
MILWAUKEE BREWERS — Fired manager
Ron Roenicke. Named Craig Counsell manager and signed him through 2017.
NEW YORK METS — Announced RHP Logan
Verrett was returned to the team by Texas and
sent him outright to Las Vegas (PCL).
SAN DIEGO PADRES — Selected the contract
of C Austin Hedges from El Paso (PCL).
Designated C Wil Nieves for assignment.
American Association
GRAND PRAIRIE AIR HOGS — Signed INF
Robi Estrada and C Tim Quinn.
JOPLIN BLASTERS — Traded RHP Luis
Chirinos to Lincoln for cash.
LAREDO LEMURS — Traded OF JP Ramirez
to Bridgeport for a player to be named.
LINCOLN SALTDOGS — Signed RHP Bryan
Duncan and RHP Kaohi Downing.
SIOUX FALLS CANARIES — Traded OF Steve
Tinoco to Joplin for a player to be named.
Can-Am League
NEW JERSEY JACKALS — Signed LHP
Francisco Gracesqui.
Frontier League
FLORENCE FREEDOM — Signed OF Sean
Mahley. Released OF Connor Battaglia, INF
Logan Brumley, 1B Brian Haggett, C Matt Hitt,
RHP Trent Montgomery, RHP Jeff Neptune
and 3B Bryan Soloman.
FRONTIER GREYS — Released 3B Tyler
Kolodny.
GATEWAY GRIZZLIES — Released OF Drew
Levi.
NORMAL CORNBELTERS — Released RHP
Clay Chapman and RHP Arlett Mavare.
TRAVERSE CITY BEACH BUMS — Signed
RHP Greg Blanco.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
ATLANTA FALCONS — Signed FB Collin
Mooney.
BUFFALO BILLS — Signed DL Alex
Carrington. Agreed to terms with WR Andre
Davis, LB Andrew Hudson, TE Clay Burton,
DT Justin Hamilton, OT Jermaine Barton, DE
BJ Larsen, OT Tyson Chandler, DE Cedric
Reed, CB Cam Thomas, DE Erik Williams, CB
Merrill Noel, P Spencer Roth and LB AJ
Tarpley.
GREEN BAY PACKERS — Released C Joe
Madsen.
INDIANAPOLIS COLTS — Signed LB Zachary
Hodges, QB Bryan Bennett, WR Quan Bray,
WR Ezell Ruffin, CB Donald Celiscar, CB
Joshua Mitchell, CB Al-Hajj Shabazz, LB Cody
Galea, LB Terrell Hartsfield, LB Junior
Sylvestre, TE Jean Sifrin, TE Justin Sinz, S
Robert Smith, RB Tyler Varga and C Brandon
Vitabile. Released WR Kadron Boone, DE
Gannon Conway, RB Jeff Demps and OT Matt
Hall.
MINNESOTA VIKINGS — Exercised the fifthyear options on LT Matt Kalil and S Harrison
Smith.
NEW YORK JETS — Fired director of pro personnel Brendan Prophett and college scouts
Rick Courtright, David Hinson, Cole Hufnagel,
Chris Prescott and Seth Turner.
WASHINGTON REDSKINS — Waived NT
Isaako Aaitui, LB Steve Beauharnais, WR
Braylon Bell, OT Edawn Coughman, DL Kenny
Horsley, G Rishaw Johnson, LB Gabe Miller,
OT Ty Nsekhe, CB Kenny Okoro, WR Jerry
Rice, Jr. and CB Trey Wolfe. Terminated the
contracts of LB Ricky Sapp and LB Austin
Spitler.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
NEW JERSEY DEVILS — Announced president of hockey operations Lou Lamoriello will
give up his position as general manager.
Named Ray Shero general manager.
American Hockey League
MANITOBA MOOSE — Announced the team
nickname.
ECHL
ECHL — Suspended Florida's Mitch Wahl
indefinitely and fined him an undisclosed for
his actions during a May 2 playoff game
against South Carolina. Suspended Toledo's
Justin Mercier one game and fined him an
undisclosed amount for his actions during a
May 2 game against Fort Wayne.
LACROSSE
National Lacrosse League
MINNESOTA SWARM — Announced that they
will not renew the contracts of coach and
associate general manager Joe Sullivan, and
assistant coaches Aime Caines and Rory
McDade for the 2016 season.
COLLEGE
FORDHAM — Named Named Tony Chiles
men's assistant basketball coach.
GEORGIA — Named Chelsea Newton
women's assistant basketball coach.
OKLAHOMA CHRISTIAN — Announced the
retirement of men's and women's track and
field coach Randy Heath. Named Wade Miller
as men's and women's track and field coach.
THIS DAY IN SPORTS
The Associated Press
Compiled By PAUL MONTELLA
May 5
1904 — Cy Young of the Red Sox pitches a
perfect game against the Philadelphia
Athletics, beating Rube Waddell 3-0.
1934 — Cavalcade wins the Kentucky Derby
by more than three lengths over Discovery.
It's his third victory in a span of less than two
weeks.
1966 — The Montreal Canadiens beat the
Detroit Red Wings 3-2 to win the Stanley Cup
in six games.
1969 — The Boston Celtics beat the Los
Angeles Lakers 107-102 in the seventh
game to win the NBA championship for the
10th time in 11 years. Player-coach Bill
Russell retires as a player.
1973 — Secretariat, ridden by Ron Turcotte,
wins the Kentucky Derby with a record time
of 1:59.2. Secretariat beats Sham by 2½
lengths and goes on to win the Triple Crown.
1978 — Pete Rose of the Reds becomes the
14th player with 3,000 hits, singling in the
fifth inning against Montreal's Steve Rogers at
Cincinnati's Riverfront Stadium.
1990 — Unbridled, ridden by Craig Perret,
takes the lead from Summer Squall at the top
of the stretch and runs away with the
Kentucky Derby by 3½ lengths.
1993 — Canisius beats Niagara 11-1 in softball to set an NCAA Division I record with 34
straight wins.
1999 — Colorado becomes the first team in
35 years and the third this century to score in
every inning in a 13-6 win over the Chicago
Cubs.
2001 — Monarchos wins the Kentucky Derby
carrying Jorge Chavez across the finish line
in 1:59 4-5, only two-fifths of a second off
the track record set by Secretariat en route to
the Triple Crown in 1973. Monarchos finishes a dominating 4¾ lengths over Invisible
Ink.
2004 — Mike Piazza sets a major league
mark for homers as a catcher, hitting No.
352, in the New York Mets' 8-2 victory over
the San Francisco Giants.
2007 — Street Sense, ridden by Calvin Borel,
roars from next-to-last in a 20-horse field to
win the Kentucky Derby by 2 1-2 lengths
over Hard Spun.
2007 — Floyd Mayweather Jr. beats Oscar
De La Hoya in one of the richest fights ever.
Mayweather, using his superb defensive skills
and superior speed, wins a 12-round split
decision and win the WBC 154-pound title in
his first fight at that weight. The sellout crowd
of 16,200 at the MGM Grand Garden in Las
Vegas sets a record $19 million gate.
2012 — I'll Have Another catches
Bodemeister down the stretch and pulls away
in the final furlong to win the Kentucky Derby.
Jockey Mario Gutierrez, riding in his first
Derby, guides the 3-year-old colt to a 1½length victory in front of a Derby-record
crowd of 165,307.
2012 — Chris Pontius and Hamdi Salihi score
second-half goals and D.C. United beats
Toronto FC, relegating the Reds to the worst
start in MLS history at 0-8-0. Toronto breaks
the record of 0-7-0 set by Kansas City in
1999.
2013 — LeBron James is the overwhelming
choice as the NBA's Most Valuable Player.
The Miami star gets 120 of 121 first-place
votes in this year's balloting, giving him the
award for the fourth time. Oklahoma City's
Kevin Durant finishes second and third-place
finisher New York's Carmelo Anthony
received the other first-place vote. The NBA
has never had a unanimous MVP selection.
Tuesday, May 5, 2015
AMERICAN LEAGUE
New York
Baltimore
Tampa Bay
Boston
Toronto
Central Division
W
Detroit
Kansas City
Minnesota
Cleveland
Chicago
West Division
W
Houston
Los Angeles
Oakland
Seattle
Texas
W
16
12
13
12
12
L
9
11
12
13
14
W
L
17
16
13
9
8
L
Pct
9
9
12
15
14
W
L
18
11
11
10
8
L
Pct
7
14
15
15
16
East Division
GB WCGB
—
—
3
—
3
—
4
1
4½
1½
Central Division
Pct WCGB
GB WCGB
GB
L10
.654
—
—
.640
½
—
.520 3½
—
.375
7
3½
.364
7
3½
West Division
Pct WCGB
GB WCGB
GB
L10
.720
—
—
.440
7
2
.423 7½
2½
.400
8
3
.333 9½
4½
Pct
.640
.522
.520
.480
.462
Pct. GB
.625
—
.609 ½
.600 ½
.480 3½
.417
5
.240 9½
Pct. GB
.609
—
.560
1
.500 2½
.458 3½
Pct. GB
.600
—
.458 3½
.435
4
.417 4½
Saturday's Games
Louisville 5, Buffalo 2
Pawtucket 2, Durham 1
Syracuse 7, Columbus 6
Rochester 4, Norfolk 3
Charlotte 10, Scranton/Wilkes-Barre 4
Gwinnett 5, Toledo 0
Indianapolis 6, Lehigh Valley 5
Sunday's Games
Buffalo 3, Louisville 2
Durham 8, Pawtucket 2
Syracuse 7, Columbus 3
Indianapolis 6, Lehigh Valley 2
Rochester 7, Norfolk 3
Gwinnett 8, Toledo 1
Scranton/Wilkes-Barre 6, Charlotte 5
Monday's Games
Lehigh Valley at Louisville, 6:35 p.m.
Norfolk at Syracuse, 7:05 p.m.
Tuesday's Games
Pawtucket at Toledo, 6:30 p.m.
Charlotte at Columbus, 6:35 p.m.
Gwinnett at Scranton/Wilkes-Barre, 6:35 p.m.
Lehigh Valley at Louisville, 6:35 p.m.
Norfolk at Syracuse, 7:05 p.m.
Rochester at Indianapolis, 7:05 p.m.
Buffalo at Durham, 7:05 p.m.
MLB CALENDAR
May 20-21 — Owners’ meeting, New York.
June 8 — Amateur draft begins.
July 14 — All-Star game, Cincinnati.
July 17 — Last day to sign for amateur draft
picks subject to deadline.
July 26 — Hall of Fame inductions,
Cooperstown, N.Y.
July 31 — Last day to trade a player without
securing waivers.
Sept. 1 — Active rosters expand to 40 players.
November TBA — Deadline for teams to make
qualifying offers to their eligible former players
who became free agents, fifth day after World
Series.
Home
6-6
6-4
7-8
6-7
5-5
Away
10-3
6-7
6-4
6-6
7-9
Str
Home
Home
Away
W-2
8-5
L-2
9-4
W-4
9-4
W-1
4-8
L-5
6-3
Away
9-4
7-5
4-8
5-7
2-11
L10
Str
Home
Str Home
Away
10-0 W-10
8-5
5-5
L-3
4-6
3-7
W-1
4-9
4-6
L-4
5-7
2-8
L-1
3-9
Away
10-2
7-8
7-6
5-8
5-7
L10
Str
6-4
5-5
7-3
4-6
3-7
Str
W-3
W-2
L-2
L-3
L-1
___
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
W
L
W
New York
16
Atlanta
12
Miami
12
Washington
12
Philadelphia
9
Central Division
W
W
L
St. Louis
18
Chicago
13
Cincinnati
12
Pittsburgh
12
Milwaukee
7
West Division
W
W
L
Los Angeles
16
San Diego
14
San Francisco
12
Colorado
11
Arizona
10
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
GB
L10
Str
Pct WCGB
GB WCGB
L10
.615
—
—
3-7
.480 3½
1½
4-6
.480 3½
1½
8-2
.462
4
2
5-5
.346
7
5
4-6
Central Division
Pct WCGB
GB WCGB
L10
GB
L10
Str
.750
—
—
8-2
.565 4½
—
5-5
.480 6½
1½
4-6
.480 6½
1½
5-5
.280 11½ 6½
5-5
West Division
Pct WCGB
GB WCGB
L10
GB
L10
Str
.667
—
—
7-3
.538
3
—
4-6
.480 4½
1½
7-3
.458
5
2
4-6
.417
6
3
3-7
Pct
L
10
13
13
14
17
L
Pct
6
10
13
13
18
L
Pct
8
12
13
13
14
Home
Away
Str
Home
L-2
11-3
W-1
6-7
L-1
8-7
W-2
5-5
W-1
6-6
Away
5-7
6-6
4-6
7-9
3-11
Str
Home
Home
Away
W-6
11-2
L-2
7-7
L-1
6-5
L-3
6-4
W-2
3-10
Away
7-4
6-3
6-8
6-9
4-8
Str
Home
Home
Away
W-4
13-2
W-3
9-7
W-3
7-6
L-5
4-5
L-3
6-8
Away
3-6
5-5
5-7
7-8
4-6
MLB SCHEDULE
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Sunday's Games
Cleveland 10, Toronto 7
Baltimore 4, Tampa Bay 2
Minnesota 13, Chicago White Sox 3
Detroit 6, Kansas City 4
Houston 7, Seattle 6
Oakland 7, Texas 1
San Francisco 5, L.A. Angels 0
N.Y. Yankees 8, Boston 5
Monday's Games
N.Y. Yankees at Toronto, 7:07 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Boston, 7:10 p.m.
Oakland at Minnesota, 8:10 p.m.
Texas at Houston, 8:10 p.m.
Seattle at L.A. Angels, 10:05 p.m.
Tuesday's Games
N.Y. Yankees (Pineda 3-0) at Toronto (Estrada
1-0), 7:07 p.m.
Baltimore (B.Norris 1-2) at N.Y. Mets
(B.Colon 4-1), 7:10 p.m.
Tampa Bay (Smyly 0-0) at Boston (Porcello 22), 7:10 p.m.
Cleveland (Salazar 3-0) at Kansas City
(J.Vargas 2-1), 8:10 p.m.
Detroit (Greene 3-1) at Chicago White Sox
(Samardzija 1-2), 8:10 p.m.
Oakland (Chavez 0-2) at Minnesota (May 21), 8:10 p.m.
Texas (W.Rodriguez 0-1) at Houston (Feldman
2-2), 8:10 p.m.
Seattle (Paxton 0-2) at L.A. Angels (Richards
2-1), 10:05 p.m.
Wednesday's Games
N.Y. Yankees at Toronto, 7:07 p.m.
Baltimore at N.Y. Mets, 7:10 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Boston, 7:10 p.m.
Cleveland at Kansas City, 8:10 p.m.
Detroit at Chicago White Sox, 8:10 p.m.
Oakland at Minnesota, 8:10 p.m.
Texas at Houston, 8:10 p.m.
Seattle at L.A. Angels, 10:05 p.m.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Sunday's Games
Philadelphia 6, Miami 2
Washington 1, N.Y. Mets 0
Atlanta 5, Cincinnati 0
St. Louis 3, Pittsburgh 2, 14 innings
Milwaukee 5, Chicago Cubs 3
San Francisco 5, L.A. Angels 0
L.A. Dodgers 1, Arizona 0, 13 innings
San Diego 8, Colorado 6
Monday's Games
Miami at Washington, 7:05 p.m.
Philadelphia at Atlanta, 7:10 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers at Milwaukee, 7:20 p.m.
Chicago Cubs at St. Louis, 8:15 p.m.
Arizona at Colorado, 8:40 p.m.
San Diego at San Francisco, 10:15 p.m.
Tuesday's Games
Cincinnati (Lorenzen 0-1) at Pittsburgh (Locke
2-1), 7:05 p.m.
Miami (Latos 0-3) at Washington (Strasburg 22), 7:05 p.m.
Baltimore (B.Norris 1-2) at N.Y. Mets
(B.Colon 4-1), 7:10 p.m.
Philadelphia (Billingsley 0-0) at Atlanta
(S.Miller 3-1), 7:10 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers (Greinke 4-0) at Milwaukee
(Garza 2-3), 8:10 p.m.
Chicago Cubs (Hendricks 0-1) at St. Louis
(Lyons 0-0), 8:15 p.m.
Arizona (Ray 0-0) at Colorado (Lyles 2-2),
8:40 p.m.
San Diego (Cashner 1-4) at San Francisco
(Vogelsong 0-2), 10:15 p.m.
Wednesday's Games
Miami at Washington, 1:05 p.m.
Arizona at Colorado, 3:10 p.m.
San Diego at San Francisco, 3:45 p.m.
Cincinnati at Pittsburgh, 7:05 p.m.
Baltimore at N.Y. Mets, 7:10 p.m.
Philadelphia at Atlanta, 7:10 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers at Milwaukee, 8:10 p.m.
Chicago Cubs at St. Louis, 8:15 p.m.
AL LEADERS
By The Associated Press
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Through May 3
BATTING_AJones, Baltimore, .402;
MiCabrera, Detroit, .366; Altuve, Houston,
.361; Fielder, Texas, .358; Vogt, Oakland,
.356; JIglesias, Detroit, .354; Brantley,
Cleveland, .352.
RUNS_Trout, Los Angeles, 22; Donaldson,
Toronto, 21; KMorales, Kansas City, 20;
Travis, Toronto, 20; Ellsbury, New York, 19;
Moustakas, Kansas City, 19; Cain, Kansas
City, 18; Dozier, Minnesota, 18; Kinsler,
Detroit, 18.
RBI_NCruz, Seattle, 25; Travis, Toronto, 23;
HRamirez, Boston, 22; AJones, Baltimore,
21; KMorales, Kansas City, 21; Reddick,
Oakland, 20; Teixeira, New York, 20; Vogt,
Oakland, 20.
HITS_Altuve, Houston, 39; AJones,
Baltimore, 35; MiCabrera, Detroit, 34; NCruz,
Seattle, 34; Ellsbury, New York, 34; Fielder,
Texas, 34; Moustakas, Kansas City, 33.
DOUBLES_Cespedes, Detroit, 10; Cano,
Seattle, 9; Pillar, Toronto, 9; Brantley,
Cleveland, 8; Longoria, Tampa Bay, 8;
KMorales, Kansas City, 8; Semien, Oakland,
8.
TRIPLES_Orlando, Kansas City, 5; Fuld,
Oakland, 3; ACabrera, Tampa Bay, 2;
JIglesias, Detroit, 2; Kiermaier, Tampa Bay, 2;
Marisnick, Houston, 2; BMiller, Seattle, 2;
SSmith, Seattle, 2.
HOME RUNS_NCruz, Seattle, 13; HRamirez,
Boston, 10; Teixeira, New York, 9; Travis,
Toronto, 7; 9 tied at 6.
STOLEN BASES_Altuve, Houston, 9;
Ellsbury, New York, 9; Marisnick, Houston, 9;
Springer, Houston, 9; Gardner, New York, 8;
Cain, Kansas City, 6; RDavis, Detroit, 6;
LMartin, Texas, 6; Trout, Los Angeles, 6.
PITCHING_McHugh, Houston, 4-0;
FHernandez, Seattle, 4-0; Gray, Oakland, 40; Simon, Detroit, 4-1; 10 tied at 3.
ERA_Keuchel, Houston, 0.73; NMartinez,
Texas, 0.84; Kazmir, Oakland, 1.62; Archer,
Tampa Bay, 1.64; Gray, Oakland, 1.67;
FHernandez, Seattle, 1.82; Volquez, Kansas
City, 2.10.
STRIKEOUTS_Archer, Tampa Bay, 42;
Kluber, Cleveland, 39; Kazmir, Oakland, 36;
FHernandez, Seattle, 36; AnSanchez,
Detroit, 35; Gray, Oakland, 35; Buchholz,
Boston, 33.
SAVES_AMiller, New York, 10; Soria, Detroit,
10; Street, Los Angeles, 9; Perkins,
Minnesota, 8; Rodney, Seattle, 7; Gregerson,
Houston, 6; Boxberger, Tampa Bay, 6.
NL LEADERS
By The Associated Press
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Through May 3
BATTING_DGordon, Miami, .440; LeMahieu,
Colorado, .392; MCarpenter, St. Louis, .365;
AGonzalez, Los Angeles, .362; Goldschmidt,
Arizona, .356; Pagan, San Francisco, .343;
Galvis, Philadelphia, .341.
RUNS_Myers, San Diego, 25; MCarpenter,
St. Louis, 22; AGonzalez, Los Angeles, 20;
Goldschmidt, Arizona, 19; Kemp, San Diego,
19; Upton, San Diego, 19; Frazier, Cincinnati,
18; Harper, Washington, 18; Rizzo, Chicago,
18.
RBI_Stanton, Miami, 24; Goldschmidt,
Arizona, 22; Upton, San Diego, 21;
AGonzalez, Los Angeles, 20; 8 tied at 17.
HITS_DGordon, Miami, 44; MCarpenter, St.
Louis, 35; AGonzalez, Los Angeles, 34;
Pagan, San Francisco, 34; Kemp, San
Diego, 33; Lagares, New York, 33;
Goldschmidt, Arizona, 32.
DOUBLES_MCarpenter, St. Louis, 14;
Tulowitzki, Colorado, 12; DeNorris, San
Diego, 11; AGonzalez, Los Angeles, 10;
Desmond, Washington, 9; Freeman, Atlanta,
9; 8 tied at 8.
TRIPLES_Revere, Philadelphia, 3; Trumbo,
Arizona, 3; 10 tied at 2.
HOME RUNS_Frazier, Cincinnati, 8;
AGonzalez, Los Angeles, 8; Upton, San
Diego, 7; Votto, Cincinnati, 7; Arenado,
Colorado, 6; Goldschmidt, Arizona, 6; Marte,
Pittsburgh, 6; Pederson, Los Angeles, 6;
Stanton, Miami, 6.
STOLEN BASES_Hamilton, Cincinnati, 13;
DGordon, Miami, 11; Polanco, Pittsburgh, 8;
Aoki, San Francisco, 7; Fowler, Chicago, 7;
Rizzo, Chicago, 6; 5 tied at 5.
PITCHING_Harvey, New York, 5-0; Greinke,
Los Angeles, 4-0; Wacha, St. Louis, 4-0;
GCole, Pittsburgh, 4-0; BColon, New York, 41; 12 tied at 3.
ERA_Scherzer, Washington, 1.26;
Wainwright, St. Louis, 1.44; Burnett,
Pittsburgh, 1.45; CMartinez, St. Louis, 1.73;
GCole, Pittsburgh, 1.76; Wacha, St. Louis,
1.93; Greinke, Los Angeles, 1.93.
STRIKEOUTS_Shields, San Diego, 48;
Kershaw, Los Angeles, 43; Cueto, Cincinnati,
40; Scherzer, Washington, 39; Hamels,
Philadelphia, 38; TRoss, San Diego, 37;
Cashner, San Diego, 36; Lynn, St. Louis, 36.
SAVES_Familia, New York, 10; Grilli, Atlanta,
8; Rosenthal, St. Louis, 8; Kimbrel, San
Diego, 8; Casilla, San Francisco, 7; Storen,
Washington, 7; Papelbon, Philadelphia, 5;
AChapman, Cincinnati, 5; Melancon,
Pittsburgh, 5; HRondon, Chicago, 5.
MLS
INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE
North Division
W L
Buffalo (Blue Jays)
15 9
Rochester (Twins)
14 9
Pawtucket (Red Sox)
15 10
Scranton/WB (Yankees) 12 13
Syracuse (Nationals)
10 14
Lehigh Valley (Phillies)
6 19
South Division
W L
Charlotte (White Sox)
14 9
Durham (Rays)
14 11
Norfolk (Orioles)
12 12
Gwinnett (Braves)
11 13
West Division
W L
Indianapolis (Pirates)
15 10
Columbus (Indians)
11 13
Toledo (Tigers)
10 13
Louisville (Reds)
10 14
L10
8-2
5-5
6-4
3-7
3-7
EASTERN CONFERENCE
W L T Pts
5 2 2 17
5 1 2 17
3 1 4 13
3 3 2 11
3 4 0 9
3 4 0 9
2 4 2 8
1 5 3 6
1 6 3 6
0 2 2 2
New England
D.C. United
New York
Columbus
Toronto FC
Chicago
Orlando City
New York City FC
Philadelphia
Montreal
GF
12
10
12
12
11
6
6
6
10
2
GA
8
6
8
8
11
8
10
10
18
6
WESTERN CONFERENCE
W L T Pts GF GA
FC Dallas
5 2 2 17 15 12
Vancouver
5 3 2 17 11
9
Seattle
5 2 1 16 13
6
Los Angeles
3 2 4 13 10
9
Kansas City
3 2 4 13 12 12
San Jose
3 4 1 10 8
10
Houston
2 3 4 10 11 12
Portland
2 3 4 10 7
8
Real Salt Lake
2 2 4 10 7
10
Colorado
1 2 6 9
8
8
NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for
tie.
Wednesday's Games
New York 1, Colorado 1, tie
Friday's Games
FC Dallas 4, Houston 1
Real Salt Lake 1, San Jose 1, tie
Saturday's Games
Toronto FC 1, Philadelphia 0
D.C. United 2, Columbus 0
New England 2, New York 1
Portland 0, Vancouver 0, tie
Los Angeles 1, Colorado 1, tie
Sunday's Games
Sporting Kansas City 1, Chicago 0
Seattle 3, New York City FC 1
Tuesday, May 5
San Jose at Houston, 8:30 p.m.
Wednesday, May 6
Los Angeles at Real Salt Lake, 9:30 p.m.
Friday, May 8
New England at Orlando City, 8 p.m.
San Jose at Colorado, 10 p.m.
Saturday, May 9
Real Salt Lake at Chicago, 3 p.m.
Portland at Montreal, 4 p.m.
Philadelphia at Vancouver, 7 p.m.
Sporting Kansas City at D.C. United, 7 p.m.
Seattle at Columbus, 7:30 p.m.
Los Angeles at FC Dallas, 8:30 p.m.
Sunday, May 10
Houston at Toronto FC, 5 p.m.
New York City FC at New York, 7 p.m.
NBA CALENDAR
May 12-17 — NBA draft combine.
May 19 — Draft lottery.
June 4 — NBA Finals begin.
June 15 — Draft early entry withdrawal dead-
COMICS
B5 THE TIMES
Retail
For Better or Worse
Blondie
By Norm Feuti
By Lynn Johnston
By Dean Young & Denis Lebrun
Mother Goose & Grimm
Baby Blues
By Mike Peters
By Rick Kirkman & Jerry Scott
By Pat Brady
Rose Is Rose
Funky Winkerbean
By Tom Batiuk
By Johnny Hart
B.C.
Cryptoquote
Tuesday, May 5, 2015
Lio
By Mark Tatulli
Crankshaft
By Tom Batiuk
Garfield
By Jim Davis
Gasoline Alley
By Jim Scancarelli
By Jerry Scott & Jim Borgman
Zits
Marvin
By Tom Armstrong
Pearls Before Swine
By Stephan Pastis
Get Fuzzy
By Darby Conley
Su Do Ku
For the solution to today’s puzzle,
see Amusements — page A7
A7
© Puzzles by Pappocom
B6 THE TIMES
Tuesday, May 5, 2015
Blackstone Valley
CLASSIFIEDS
Four easy ways to place your classified ad
in print AND online for one low price:
• Online at www.pawtuckettimes.com
24 hours a day, 7 days a week
• E-mail classifi[email protected]
• Call (401) 767-8503 Mon. - Fri. 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
• Fax (401) 767-8509 Mon. - Fri. 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
Discounts available to subscribers!
100 Legals
100 Legals
Legals
Annoucements
Vehicles
MORTGAGEE'S SALE
330 Nate Whipple Highway
Cumberland, RI 02864
The premises described in the mortgage will be
sold subject to all prior encumbrances on May
20, 2015, at 10:00 AM on the premises, by virtue
of the power of sale in the mortgage granted by
105 Announcments
100 Legals
VIRGINIA L. HALL and JAY A. KENEALLY,
recorded April 20, 2005, in the Town of Cumberland, RI Land Records Book 1263 Page 460, the
LEGAL NOTICE
CREDIT
conditions of said mortgage having been broken.
INFORMATION
FOR ERRORS
$10,000.00 in cash, certified or bank check required to bid. Other terms will be announced at Legal Notices may be
Each advertiser is asked
mailed to:
the sale.
to check his/her adverThe Times,
tisement on the first
P.O. Box 307,
ALEXANDER J. RAHEB
day of publication and
Pawtucket, RI 02860
Attorney for the Mortgagee
to report any error to
Faxed to:
650 Washington Hwy.
the Times classified
(401) 767-8509
Lincoln, RI 02865
department (365or Emailed to:
401-333-3377
[email protected]
1438) as soon as possible for correction.
MORTGAGEE'S SALE
Complete instructions
28-30 Elder Street Pawtucket, RI
should include:
No adjustment will be
Publication dates,
given for typographical
The premises described in the mortgage will be Billing information and
errors, which do not
sold subject to all encumbrances and prior liens the Name and Phone
change the meaning or
on May 19, 2015 at 11:00 a.m. on the premises, number of individual to
lessen the value of the
by virtue of the power of sale contained in a contact if necessary.
advertisement.
mortgage by Fernando Pires dated January 20,
2009 and recorded in the Pawtucket Land EviLEGAL NOTICES
Credit will be allowed
dence Records in Book 3098, Page 123, the con- MUST BE RECEIVED
only to that portion of
ditions of said mortgage having been broken.
3 BUSINESS DAYS
the advertisement
PRIOR TO
where
the error oc$5,000.00 in cash, certified or bank check is rePUBLICATION
curred.
quired to bid. Other terms will be announced at For further information
the sale.
Call 365-1438
Monday thru Friday;
HARMON LAW OFFICES, P.C.
8:30 a.m. To 4:30 p.m.
100 Legals
Attorney for the Holder of the Mortgage
150 California Street
STATE OF RHODE ISLAND
Newton, MA 02458
Probate Court of the
(617) 558-0500
CITY OF PAWTUCKET
201101-0673 - YEL
NOTICE
OF MATTERS PENDING AND FOR HEARING
IN SAID COURT
MORTGAGEE'S SALE
CITY OF PAWTUCKET
130 Sayles Hill Road,
The Court will be in session at 2:00PM
North Smithfield, RI 02896
on the dates specified in notices below
for hearing on said matters:
The premises described in the mortgage will be
sold subject to all encumbrances and prior liens
on May 20, 2015 at 3:00PM on the premises, by BOREK, FREDERICK T., estate.
virtue of the power of sale contained in a mort- First and Final Account of Administrator: for
gage from Martha A. Davenport dated May 26, hearing May 6, 2015.
2006 and recorded in Book 345 at Page 199 in
the Records of Land Evidence in the Town of FONSECA MONTEIRO, ALDEVINA MARIA,
North Smithfield, RI, the conditions of said mort- change of name.
Change of name to Aldevina Maria Fonseca: for
gage having been broken.
hearing May 6, 2015.
$5,000.00 in cash, certified or bank check is required to bid. Other terms will be announced at MAHLECKE, JUDY, ward.
the sale.
Appointment of Guardian: for hearing May 6,
2015
By order of the Mortgagee which gives notice of
its intention to bid at such sale or any postpone- PINA, ROSA M. change of name.
ment or adjournment thereof.
Change of Name to Rosa M. Miranda: for hearing
Mary 6, 2015.
KORDE & ASSOCIATES, P.C.
Attorneys for the Holder of the Mortgage
SENNA, TROY, ward.
321 Billerica Road, Suite 210
Appointment of Guardian: for hearing May 6,
Chelmsford, MA 01824-4100
2015
(978) 256-1500
(4/28/2015, 5/5/2015, 5/12/2015)
CONCEICAO, MARIA L., estate.
14-018286
Peter Conceicao of Seekonk, MA has qualified as
Executor and has appointed John T. Gannon,
Esq. of 727 Central Ave., Pawtucket has his
STATE OF RHODE ISLAND
Agent in RI: creditors must file their claims in the
Probate Court of the
office of the probate clerk within the time reCITY OF PAWTUCKET
quired by law beginning April 21, 2015.
NOTICE
OF MATTERS PENDING AND FOR HEARING
DIAKITE, MOUSSA, ward.
IN SAID COURT
Fatoumata Camara of Pawtucket has qualified as
CITY OF PAWTUCKET
Guardian: creditors must file their claims in the
The Court will be in session at 2:00PM
office of the probate clerk within the time reon the dates specified in notices below
quired by law beginning April 21, 2015.
for hearing on said matters:
DRUMMEY JR., JOHN J., ward.
COSTA, DYLAN M., ward.
Appointment of Guardian: for hearing May 20, Denise A. Calderwood of Lincoln has qualified as
Guardian: creditors must file their claims in the
2015.
office of the probate clerk within the time required by law beginning April 21, 2015.
DREZEK, B. ELIZABETH, estate.
Removal of Executrix and appointment of Administrator D.B.N.C.T.A: for hearing May 20, LALIBERTE, LEO R., estate.
Paula Jean Beaulieu of Bristol has qualified as
2015.
Executrix: creditors must file their claims in the
HAMMERLE, NICOLE BOBBIE, change of name. office of the probate clerk within the time reChange of name to Nicole Bobbie Miranda: for quired by law beginning April 21, 2015.
hearing May 20, 2015.
LUTHER, CHARLES A., estate.
Susan L. Luther of Harwich Port, MA has qualiLACOURSE, MAURICE ABEL
fied as Administratrix and has appointed Nancy
(alias Maurice A. Lacourse) estate.
Fisher Chudacoff, Esq., of 24 Spring St., PawProbate of will: for hearing May 20, 2015.
tucket as her Agent in RI: creditors must file
their claims in the office of the probate clerk
VARELA, INOCENCIO MENDES, estate.
Granting of letters of Administration: for hearing within the time required by law beginning April
21, 2015.
May 20, 2015.
D'ANGELO, BERTHA BLANCHE
(alias Bertha B. D'Angelo), estate.
Lucy M. Rossi of Pawtucket has qualified as Executrix: creditors must file their claims in the office of the probate clerk within the time required
by law beginning May 5, 2015.
KARNEEB, EDITH, estate.
Lynn H. Karneeb of Pawtucket has qualified as
Administratrix: creditors must file their claims in
the office of the probate clerk within the time required by law beginning May 5, 2015.
MCVEIGH, MARY JANE, estate.
Michael A. Devane, Esq. of Pawtucket has qualified as Executor: creditors must file their claims
in the office of the probate clerk within the time
required by law beginning May 5, 2015.
VECCHIO, ALEXANDER, minor ward.
Amy Garganese of Pawtucket has qualified as
Guardian: creditors must file their claims in the
office of the probate clerk within the time required by law beginning May 5, 2015.
Richard J. Goldstein,City Clerk
123 Autos For Sale
2001 Ford Explorer Ltd.
4dr SUV, loaded, 3rd rear
seat, auto, low miles, 1
owner. Mint. Priced to
sell $1850 401-649-5775
2001 Oldsmobile Alero.
110K miles, good shape.
Body good, interior excellent. $1500. Call 401359-6102
2002 Chevy 2500 ¾ ton
pickup, auto, V8, loaded,
white, runs & drives new,
1 owner trade, $1950.
Call 401-241-0413
2004 Jeep Cherokee Laredo. 4WD, 6 cyl., auto.,
electric
seats/windows,
very clean, runs excellent,
$5800. 401-769-8739
2009 Chevy Malibu LS Edition, 4 dr., loaded, auto,
4cyl., 32MPG, white, like
new, 1 owner, must see.
$3,000. 401-649-5775
SELL YOUR CAR, VAN OR
TRUCK THE EASY WAY.
Call the classified team at
The Times today. Tell
more than 40,000 adult
readers in the are about
your vehicle. It's easy to
do, just dial 401-3651438 or visit us at www.pawtuckettimes.com
126 Trucks
Employment
Merchandise
2002 Honda Elite motor Project Manager for 300
scooter. Auto., excellent unit apartment job. Good
condition.
Only
600 salary, tremendous inmiles. $1275. Call 401- centive bonuses. Reply
[email protected]
568-1966
100 Legals
STATE OF RHODE ISLAND
Probate Court of the
CITY OF PAWTUCKET
NOTICE
OF MATTERS PENDING AND FOR HEARING
IN SAID COURT
CITY OF PAWTUCKET
The Court will be in session at 2:00PM
on the dates specified in notices below
for hearing on said matters:
MAKEPEACE, MARLENE AMARAL
(alias Marlene Makepeace), estate.
Granting of Letters of Administration: for hearing May 13, 2015.
Heater by Comfort Zone. 23 inch JVC flat screen
Glass top table & lamp. color TV. New $60. Call
Sacrifice. $50. 401-617- 401-769-1899
0483
Rug. 8 x 10 from Lowe's.
Quality
multicolored
squares. $50. 401-6170483
277 Toys –
Children's Items
Richard J. Goldstein,
City Clerk
305 Apartments
Furnished
273 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
NEW TODAY
Greco carriage and basket,
tan and pink. $20. Call
1 BED apt, all clean, ready
5 gallons of new interior 401-585-2584
to move in Woonsocket.
wall paint. Behr, Olympic
401-447-4451 or 769-0095
and
Valspar.
$20.00.
401-617-0483
204 General Help
Wanted
204 General Help
Wanted
Real Estate-Sale
Activities Director
Countryside Health Care of Milford, a
non-profit nursing and rehab facility
with an impeccable reputation, seeks
an Activities Director for its new
Memory Care Unit. Experience with 330 Brokers - Agents
dementia care will be a great plus.
Interested applicants should send FIND A HOME. Sell a
resume to Mitchellp@Countryside- home. Find a tenant. Call
classified team at The
hc.org, or call 508-473-0435 to set the
Times to place your adup an appointment.
vertisement. Call 401365-1438.
RNs, LPN and CNAs
All shifts FT/PT
Countryside Health Care of Milford, a
non-profit nursing and rehab
facility with an impeccable reputation,
seeks staff for its new Memory Care
Unit. Interested applicants should
FINE, ALLAN Z., (alias Allan Zelig Fine) estate.
send resume to Lashombk@counJeffrey E. Fine of St. Louis, MO has qualified as trysidehc.org, or call 508-473-0435 to
Executor and has appointed Nathan W. Chace, set up an appointment.
Esq., of 1 Park Row Suite 300, Providence as his
Agent in Rhode Island: creditors must file their
claims in the office of the probate clerk within
the time required by law beginning April 28,
2015.
FOSTER SR., JAMES H., estate.
James H. Foster Jr., of Port Richey, FL has qualified as Executor and has appointed Frederick G.
Tobin Esq., of 100 Jefferson Blvd. Suite 200
Warwick, as his Agent in Rhode Island: creditors
must file their claims in the office of the probate
clerk within the time required by law beginning
April 28, 2015.
304 Apartments
Unfurnished
MATTRESS SET. Queen
PillowTop mattress set,
st
never used still in plastic. Sylvania 32” flat screen 1 floor, large 3 bed, com$150. Call or text 401- color TV. 2 years old with pletely renovated, new
kitchen & bathroom, new
237-0340
stand & remote. $60. appliances, nice landscaped yard, hardwoods,
Pawtucket. Twin size mat- 769-1899
All utilities, gated, off st.
tress & box spring with
parking included $1275
metal back board &
mo. Woonsocket. 401frame all in good condi269-9191
tion. $25obo. 728-9699
VIEIRA, ALFRED
(alias Alfred Edward Vieira Jr.) estate.
Probate of Will: for hearing May 13, 2015.
LANGLOIS JR., JOSEPH A., estate.
Joseph A. Langlois III of Pawtucket and Rita D.
MORAN, ANNE, ward.
LaChance of Coventry have qualified as Co-ExCarmela Moran of Pawtucket has qualified as ecutors: creditors must file their claims in the ofGuardian of the Person Only and Paul Moran of fice of the probate clerk within the time required
Foster, RI has qualified as Guardian of the Fi- by law beginning April 28, 2015.
nances Only: creditors must file their claims in
the office of the probate clerk within the time re- LAPALME, THERESA I.,
quired by law beginning April 21, 2015.
(alias Theresa Ida LaPalme) estate.
Irene S. LaPalme of Pawtucket has qualified as
NIMMO, DOROTHY, estate.
Executrix: creditors must their claims in the ofJohn Nimmo of Pawtucket and Thomas Nimmo fice of the probate clerk within the time required
of Providence have qualified as Co-Executors: by law beginning April 28, 2015.
creditors must file their claims in the office of the
probate clerk within the time required by law be- LAVIN, IDA H., estate.
ginning April 21, 2015.
John Salhany of Central Falls has qualified as
Administrator: creditors must file their claims in
ROBITAILLE, RAYMOND E., estate.
the office of the probate clerk within the time reRene M. Robitaille of Tallahassee, FL has quali- quired by law beginning April 28, 2015.
fied as Executor and has appointed Rebekah W.
Dragomire, Esq. of 649 George Washington SMITH, GERTRUDE EILEEN, estate.
Highway, Suite 103, Lincoln as his Agent in Sharon Smith Hansen of Tiverton has qualified
Rhode Island: creditors must file their claims in as Executrix: creditors must file their claims in
the office of the probate clerk within the time re- the office of the probate clerk within the time required by law beginning April 21, 2015.
quired by law beginning April 28, 2015.
Richard J. Goldstein,
City Clerk
Real Estate-Rent
Supply New England is Countertop steel frame
looking for an experi- dish rack. Bamboo knife
enced CDL Driver for dai- block. Expandable drip
ly deliveries. Heavy lift- tray, white gutter, cup
ing/loading min 60lbs. holder $30. 632-0138
Excellent driving record.
Pre-employ drug & DOT
physical required. Bene300 Rental Agencies
fits. Apply in person: 582
200 Employment
Quaker
Highway,
S. Digital police scanner. RaServices
Uxbridge.
dio Shack Pro-96, receives digital frequencies, Readers of The Times are
manuals & accessories. advised The Times does
The Times does not knownot knowingly accept ad$200 firm. 401-724-0562
ingly accept advertisevertisements that are in
ments in the Employment
violation of the Federal
classifications that are
Fair Housing Law and the
not bona fide job offers.
Rhode Island Fair HousClassification 200 is provided for Employment InGPS, JVC, 3.5” screen with ing Practices Act. The
formation, Services and
manuals and all acces- Federal Fair Housing Law
Referrals. This newspasories. $30. 401-724- and Rhode Island Fair
Housing Practices Act are
per does not knowingly
0562
designed to prevent disaccept Employment ads
crimination in the purthat indicate a preference
chase and rental of housbases on age from em251
Appliances
ing. Refusal to rent,
ployees covered be Age
Discrimination In EmLOOKING FOR SOME- lease, or sell property to
ployment Act. Nor do we Whirlpool 10,000 BTU air THING HARD TO FIND? anyone due to age, race,
Excellent Be sure to look in the color, religion, sex, sexuin any way condone em- conditioner.
ployment based solely condition. $100. Call 401- classified pages of The al orientation, marital staupon discrimination prac- 585-2584
TImes every day. Surely tus, disability, familial
tices.
you'll find interesting status, or country of anthings that you may want cestral origin is in viola254 Building
or need. The Times is the tion of the Fair Housing
perfect marketplace you Law. If you have a com204 General Help
Materials
can enjoy in the comfort plaint, contact the Rhode
Wanted
of your own home. There Island Commission for
Rubber roofing, self adhe- is something for every- Human Rights. They will
sive, 12 rolls, 100 sq. c one in The Times classi- help any person that has
EXPERIENCED
CARPEN- pet roll. $249.00 Call
been
discriminated
fieds!
TERS wanted for commeragainst in the rental of
774-462-2191
cial work. Must have relihousing, the sale of
able transportation and be
housing, home financing
willing to travel. Please 261 Coins & Stamps
or public accommodacall 401-769-4285.
Metal bar stool with mi- tions. Call the Rhode Island Commission for Hu1883 Morgan Silver Dollar, crofiber seat & electric
Field technician wanted fine-very fine, $30.00. baseboard heater. $30. man Rights, 401-2222661.
for emergency restora- 401-597-6426
401-617-0483
tion
company.
Back- Woonsocket
ground check and drivers
license required. Must be Buying US coins dated be301 Room – No
able to work on call. Call fore 1965: dimes $1.15,
Dave 722-9595
quarters $2.87, halves
Board
$5.75.
401-597-6426
276 TV – Video –
Woonsocket
FRAMERS WANTED
Stereo
New home construction.
PAWTUCKET: Near center,
Accepting all levels of exlaundry facilities, wall to
265
Furniture
perience. Excellent pay.
wall carpets. $100 & up
Call Jerry 508-294-4810
Household
401-726-0995.
2002 Chevy 3500 1 ton,
16ft box truck, loaded,
auto, V8, rear door, dual
wheels, like new. 1 own- Grade Foreman - Provide
const. layout for utility
er. $3000. 401-301-0056
road & building projects.
2002 CHEVY Impala LS 4 Min 5 yrs surveying/
exp.
Resume,
door, loaded, auto, V-6, const.
all power. Inspected runs salary req, references to
[email protected]
new. One owner. $1450.
401-442-3678
Housekeeper for couple. 2
2004 Hyundai Santa Fe days per week. Excellent
SUV 4 door, loaded, auto, salary. Permanent posiV-6, 28mpg. Black, alloy, tion. Ironing and houserear hatch. Nice. 2 owner. keeping. 401-524-7588
$1850. 401-649-3251
Looking for an experiChevy dump truck, 92K, enced warehouse special4x4, 6.5 diesel, green. ist. Heavy lifting 75lbs.
Selling for $7,000. Call Experience with forklift
& RF Gun. Computer
401-636-2269
knowledge a plus! Preemployment drug screen.
Benefits available. Apply
129 Motorcycles - in person: Supply New
England,
582
Quaker
Mopeds - ATVs
Hwy, Uxbridge
100 Legals
273 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
204 General Help
Wanted
340 Commercial
Property For Sale
EAST PROVIDENCE Fabulous updated 2-unit retail
office/store,
hardwood,
high traffic, gas, basement. Must see $189,900
Call 401-245-7022 [email protected]
123 Autos For Sale
“There’s More $$$ In That Old Car, Truck,
Van or Motorcycle That You Thought.”
You’ll fill up when you sell that old set of wheels through
the Classifieds and this offer available only to subscribers.
5 LINES ONLY
$
19.95
ad appears up to 60 days
(No Dealers)
Call one of our Classified
Customer Service Reps
The Call - 767-8503
or The Times - 365-1438
Reaching Over 120,000 Homes
SPORTS
Tuesday, May 5, 2015
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
DUMPSTERS
$250 / 15 C.Y.
Baseball
Broncos split series with Rogers
BONA FIDE HOME INSPECTIONS
BURRILLVILLE – Rogers High
evened up their season series with
Burrillville on Monday at Eccleston
Field, beating the Broncos 6-5, getting
revenge three days after the Broncos
earned a 3-1 win in Newport.
Burrillville outhit Rogers nine to
eight and drew six walks off Vikings
starter Tim Pratt, but couldn’t get the
key hit that would break the game open,
leaving 13 men on base.
Burrillville’s Justin Deschamps had
two hits, including a double, with a run
and an RBI. Sam Hetu tripled, walked
and scored two runs, and Antwan
Dearden also had two hits.
Michael Keable was charged with
the loss, going two innings with one
walk, four strikeouts and one run.
The Broncos tooks a 2-0 lead in the
first when Tyler Loynds singled, stole
second, and came home on a single by
Chad Stone. Josh DiChiaro also scored
on an error in the inning.
But Rogers rallied for three runs in
the second and never trailed after that.
Trailing by three runs in the seventh,
Burrillville almost mounted a comeback
with Deschampss double and a sacrifice
fly by Slade Sylvestre, but Pratt got
Tyler Loynds to fly out to end the
threat.
In Friday’s game, Antwan Dearden
drove in the go-ahead run to give
Burrillville the lead in the eighth inning,
and the Broncos hung on to beat Rogers
3-1.
After Taylor Chamberlin singled,
Dearden came to the plate with and
banged a triple that sent home
Chamberlin.
Dearden went 2-4, drove in one and
scored one run.
Burrillville’s Colin Murphy was masterful on the mound with 11 strikeouts,
no earned runs, three hits and five walks
over 5 2/3 innings, and Mark Stead got
the win in relief, throwing 2 1/3 innings
of shutout ball. He struck out one,
walked none and surrendered two hits.
The lone run of the game for Rogers
crossed the plate in the first inning on
an RBI single by Aaron Johnson.
FREE Termite Inspection Report
Boys’ Tennis
SPRING CLEANUP
HOUSE CLEANOUTS
FIRE DAMAGE
401-438-3000
VINNIE SOUCAR CARPETS
& FLOOR COVERING
Est. 1986
wood vinyl carpet laminate repairs serging
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LINCOLN – North Smithfield
snapped a three-game losing streak
Monday as the Northmen cruised to a
7-0 win over Lincoln.
Both the No. 2 singles match and
the No. 2 doubles match saw the
Northmen competitors rally after dropping the first game. No. 2 singles player Adam Destefano prevailed by 6-3,
6-4 scores after dropping the opener.
At No. 2 doubles, Rob Pela and Nick
Hanoian fired off 6-1, 6-1 scores after
falling 1-6.
The Northmen are now 4-7 in
Division II while the Lions fall to 1-9.
North Smithfield 7, Lincoln 0
Singles: Alex Bourque def. Eric O'Neill 6-1, 6-0;
Adam Destefano def. Michael Crawley 5-7, 6-3,
6-4; Zach Racine def. Nico Ferretti 6-1, 6-2;
Luke Marcotte def. Alex Kwarta, Lincoln 6-2, 60.
Doubles: Pat Guertin-Alex Lachance def. Andy
Pan-Jose Garcia 6-3, 6-2; Rob Pela-Nick
Hanoian def. James Heineman-Jake
Burlingame 1-6, 6-1, 6-1; Andrew LaBelleConnor McMullin def. Hungson Tran-Jacob
Viera 6-2,6-1.
Same-Day Replacement Hot Water Tanks
Novans remain winless
We also do new toilets, faucets to new gas boilers installed.
Full drain cleaning.
From small to large jobs, we want you to be our customer!
MIDDLETOWN – The
Middletown/Rogers Co-op team
breezed its way to a 7-0 victory over
Woonsocket on Monday at Gaudet
Middle School. Four of the seven
matches ended in 6-0, 6-0 scores in the
Islanders’ favor.
The Novans are now winless in 10
Division II chances.
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Middletown/Rogers 7, Woonsocket 0
Singles: Eric Vieira def. Andy Ratsapho 6-1, 61; Matt Violet def. Benjamin Rickson 6-0, 6-0;
Connor Murphy def. Tim Tanakhone 6-0, 6-0;
Josh Ferreira def. Tom Daosaeng 6-0, 6-0.
Doubles: Jameson McQuade-Alfie Campbell
def. Kevin Au-Tommy Phimmasene 6-0, 6-1;
Thomas Corey-Justin Bartenbach def. Joe
Labreche-Bryan Flores 6-0, 6-0; John HebelKobi Massaro def. Antonio VenmahavongAusten Rodriguez 6-4, 10-4.
MSC cruises past Tolman
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2B – Mousseau 2, Elijah Brackett, Evan Masse.
NORWICH, Conn. – Tolman High
improved to 5-2 on Saturday when they
traveled to Dodd Stadium and shut out
Scituate, 3-0.
Tigers starter Peter Microulis helped
his own cause in the first inning reaching base with a single, and later scoring
on a sacrifice fly by his battery-mate
Ricky Bourdeau.
That was all the offense Tolman
would need, but they got two insurance
runs in the third, when Alex Lopez
scored on an error, and Nate Gagnon
came home on a suicide squeeze bunt
by Joel Negron.
Microulis threw a complete game
shutout, facing 26 batters and allowing
just three hits and two walks, while
striking out three.
Clippers lose heartbreaker to SK
THS. 102 000 0 3 6. 1
SHS. 000 000 0 0 3. 2
Peter Microulis and Ricky Bourdeau; Christian
Farruchi, Nick Petrantozzi (7) and Sam Owens
Mousseau powers Novans to win
WOONSOCKET – Senior righty
Josh Mousseau produced quite an outing for himself, and Woonsocket High,
on Monday afternoon.
He scattered seven hits with a walk
and an astonishing 13 strikeouts in a
complete-game outing to lift the Villa
Novans to a superb 8-5 Division I-A triumph over Middletown at Renaud
Field.
But that wasn’t all. At the plate, he
went 3-for-4 with two doubles, five RBI
and two runs scored as WHS improved
to 4-6 in league action.
Actually, junior catcher Kyle
Beaulieu, complemented his batterymate’s success, going 2-for-4 with an
RBI and three runs.
Teammates Elijah Brackett and Evan
Masse also managed two-baggers in the
victory.
SOUTH KINGSTOWN –
Cumberland High jumped out to a phenomenal 7-0 cushion in the top of the
first frame, but couldn’t hold on to it
during an emotionally-exhausting 11-7
loss to South Kingstown at Old
Mountain Field on Monday.
The Clippers actually outhit the
Revels, 11-10, but couldn’t record the
big hit when they needed it in the middle innings of the Division I-B clash.
Senior Kyle Opiekun did close at 2for-3 with an RBI and a run, while
classmate Ryan O’Neill went 1-for-4
with a two-run triple, but those weren’t
enough. Junior Josh Brodeur added a
three-bagger and a walk, and Jax
Domante finished 1-for-4 with a run for
the Clippers (6-3).
Cumberland
700 000 0 -- 7 – 11 – 2
S. Kingstown 150 320 x -- 11 – 10 – 1
Mike Bogolawski, Brandon Croteau (3), Zach
Fogell (3) and Kyle Opiekun. Asa Nyblom,
Taylor Beckman (1) and Chris Collins.
Lincoln rolls past Saints
LINCOLN – Lincoln High manufactured a five-run flurry in the back
half of the sixth frame to post a decisive
7-1 Division I-A victory over St.
Raphael Academy at Chet Nichols
Memorial Field on Monday.
Senior Mason Palmieri started the
surge with a solo blast, while classmate
Ryan Havunen ripped a two-run triple
for the Lions, who improved to 10-1 in
league action. On the mound, Ryan
Brehio scattered four hits and fanned a
quartet in a complete-game outing.
The Saints fell to 1-10 in I-A.
St. Raphael
100 000 0 -- 1 – 4 – 1
Lincoln
010 105 x -- 7 – 10 – 1
Jarrett Knox and Jordan Gillheeney. Ryan
Brehio and Jake Petrin. HR – Mason Palmieri,
Trevor Marques.
Middletown
400 000 1 -- 5 – 7 – 1
Woonsocket
160 001 x -- 8 – 10 – 1
Zach Chamberlin, Chase Sinatra (2) and Liam
O’Regan. Josh Mousseau and Kyle Beaulieu.
PAWTUCKET – The senior trio of
Mike Doody, Matt Saviano and Ethan
Guevremont dropped only seven
games between them at the top three
singles spots as unbeaten Mount St.
Charles rolled to a 7-0 Division II
crossover blowout of Tolman at Slater
Park’s Mike Kenny Courts on
Monday.
The second and third doubles’
tandems of Jake Lawrence-Dan
Bowen and Pat Hardesty-Aiden
Keating also took both of their matches at love to lift the Mounties to 8-0.
MSC moved to 8-0, while the
Tigers remained winless at 0-8.
Mount St. Charles 7, Tolman 0
Singles: Mike Doody def. John Reall, 6-0, 6-1;
Matt Saviano def. Tyler Letendre, 6-2, 6-1;
Ethan Guevremont def. Harrison Moran, 6-2, 61; Mitch McCoy def. Jared Paquin, 6-0, 6-2.
Doubles: Matt Dubois-Dan Bowen def. Gabe
Cumplido-Joe Groves, 6-0, 6-3; Jake LawrencePaul Resende def. Brian Rego-Jeremy Magnon,
6-0, 6-0; Pat Hardesty-Aiden Keating def.
Johnny Villada-Fabian Marmolejo, 6-0, 6-0.
Saints shine vs. Vets
WARWICK – St. Raphael
Academy’s doubles trio of Santiago
Durango-Austin Gillis, Jiaqi YangJustin Jackson and Andy Li-Bryce
Gillis sustained only five lost games
between them during a 7-0 Division
II/Suburban crossover win over
Warwick Vets on Monday.
Mike Wu helped preserve the
shutout with a key, come-from-behind,
4-6, 6-3, 6-4 verdict over Gabe Shaker
at No. 3 singles.
The Saints upped their record to 53, while the Hurricanes fell to 1-8.
St. Raphael 7, Warwick Vets 0
Singles: Myles Lefebvre def. Andrew
Salaguerra, 6-3, 6-4; Kelton Dos Santos def.
Trent Mochel, 6-4, 6-1; Mike Wu def. Gabe
Shaker, 4-6, 6-3, 6-4; Ethan Mendes def. Matt
Fera, 6-1, 6-1.
Doubles: Santiago Durango-Austin Gillis def.
Chris Ferland-Josh Greenwood, 6-1, 6-0; Jiaqi
Yang-Justin Jackson def. Wade Hornbeck-Tim
Kelly, 6-0, 6-4; Andy Li-Bryce Gillis def.
Brenden Peters-Joe Sepulveda, 6-0, 6-0.
Friday: SRA tops E/WG
EXETER – St. Raphael Academy’s
first doubles tandem rallied to win a
hotly-contested three-set match that
clinched a 5-2 team victory over
Exeter/West Greenwich on Friday.
Saints Santiago Durango and Auston
Gillis defeated Trent Walker and Paul
DiPadua, 6-3, 2-6, 7-6 (7-4).
Singles: Myles Lefebvre (SRA) defeated John
Glendenning (EWG) 6-2,6-4; Mike Forcino
(EWG) defeated Kelton Dos Santos (SRA) 75,4-6,7-5; Michael Wu (SRA) defeated Marcus
Simonini (EWG) 6-2,6-1; Ethan Mendes (SRA)
defeated Matt Sipolski (EWG) 6-4,6-3.
Doubles: Santiago Durango/Auston Gillis (SRA)
defeated Trent walker/Paul DiPadua (EWG) 63, 2-6, 7-6 (7-4); Jared Olsen/Adam Kroian
(EWG) defeated Jiaqi Yang/Jason Li (SRA) 3-6,
6-0, 7-5; Justin Jackson/Andy Li (SRA) defeated David Laliberte/Sam Pagliarni (EWG) 7-6 (74) 6-3.
Seekonk beats Case
SEEKONK – The young Seekonk
High team continued their mid-season
surge on Monday with a convincing 4-1
win over Case.
Top singles player Brandon Costa
battled for a difficult 7-6 (9-7) decision
in the first set of his match with Eli
Geldard to set the stage for the
Warriors’ team victory.
Seekonk’s record now stands at 3-5
on the season.
Singles: Brandon Costa (Seek) def. Eli Geldard
7-6 (9-7), 6-3; Matt Alves (Seek) def. Evan
Wadoicor 6-0, 6-4; Ryan Claudino (Seek) def.
Dihran Ollerhadd 6-0, 6-0.
Doubles: Braden Putney and Neil Joyce (Seek)
def Talon Boie and Jake Wilson, 7-5, 6-3; Mike
Azededo and Mac Desdhdwes (Case) def.
Jesse Possi and Joe Wooden 6-4, 7-6 (11-9)
Shea still winless after loss
PAWTUCKET – Shea High fell to
0-8 this season with their 6-1 loss on
Monday to East Providence.
The bright spot for the Raiders
came from their first doubles pairing
of Edward DeBrito and Zidane
Lomba, who won an impressive 6-0,
6-3 victory over Dan Sepe and Slade
Sharma.
East Providence improved to 3-2 in
Division III.
Singles: Alex Dorego (EP) def. Narisu Barrie 62, 6-1; Sean Contente (EP) def. Rob Postle 6-2,
6-4; Mohamad Aldine (EP) def. Thomas
Bessette 6-2, 6-2; Phil DeSouza (EP) def. Sean
Richardson 6-1, 6-2;
Doubles: Edward DeBrito-Zidane Lomba,
(SHEA) def. Daniel Sepe-Slade Sharma 6-0, 63; Andrew Farrar-Thor Silva, (EP) def. Josh
Travis-Orlando Correia 6-2, 7-6 (7-4); Josh
Brennan-Audino-Kyle Desmaris (EP) won by forfeit.
WE PICK UP
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LINCOLN – Led by a round off 44
from Jeremy Bodington, Cumberland
defeated Mount St. Charles, 183-201,
Monday afternoon at Kirkbrae
Country Club. The Clippers are now
7-1 in the North Division.
Alex Merten’s 48 was the top round
for MSC, now 1-5.
At Kirkbrae CC, par 35
Cumberland 183, Mount St. Charles 201
Cumberland scores: Jeremy Bodington 44,
Jake Dobrenz 46, Ben Brakenwagen 46, Matt
Beaulieu 47.
Mount St. Charles: Alex Merten 48, Sam
Maceroni 50, Zack Parretti 51, Danny Allen 52.
Tolman falls to MBrown, Scituate
RUMFORD – Tolman finished a
distant third behind state contender
Moses Brown and Scituate during
Monday’s West Division match at
Agawam Hunt.
Amazingly, all four Tolman golfers
– Patience Waring, Matthew Marshall,
Nhuy Huynh and Derek Laliberte –
each shot a 70. The Tigers are now 012 in league matches.
At Agawam Hunt, par 37
Moses Brown 159, Scituate 247, Tolman 280
Tolman scores: Patience Waring 70, Matthew
Marshall 70, Nhuy Huynh 70, Derek Laliberte
70.
B8 THE TIMES
Tuesday, May 5, 2015