Document 48901

The Valley’s daily newspaper since 1892
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turn to
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Wednesday, July 23, 2014
City has new alert system
CodeRED system replaces Nixle in Woonsocket
By RUSS OLIVO
WAKE UP
CALL
[email protected]
WOONSOCKET – The city has
launched a new mass emergency
notification system designed to
alert residents of public safety
threats, parking bans, dangerous
weather, missing persons and other
vital information.
The CodeRED system replaces
another technology known as Nixle
which had been in place for about
two years.
“This is the future,” Emergency
Management Director Tim Walsh
told an audience of about 40 residents Tuesday at Kennedy Manor,
urging them to sign up.
Walsh joined Mayor Lisa
Baldelli-Hunt, Police Chief Tom
Carey, Fire Chief Paul Shatraw,
Human Services Director Linda
Plays and Deputy Asst. State Fire
JUDGE OKs
38 STUDIOS
SETTLEMENT
Marshal Michael Morin in
announcing the activation of
CodeRed in the community room
of the high rise. A group of VISTA
volunteers, armed with laptop computers, later assisted residents in
signing up for the free alert service.
“You’re the first to learn about
this,” said the mayor.
An emergency alert system is
See ALERT, Page A2
Fung: No
health
coverage
for GA
PROVIDENCE (AP) — A
judge has approved the first
settlement made in the lawsuit brought by the state's
economic development
agency over the $75 million
state loan guarantee with 38
Studios, the failed video game
company started by former
Boston Red Sox pitcher Curt
Schilling.
Superior Court Judge
Michael Silverstein on
Tuesday approved the $4.4
million settlement between
the agency formerly known as
the Economic Development
Corp. and lawyer Antonio
Afonso and his firm, Moses
Afonso Ryan. Moses Afonso
worked on the sale of the
bonds that financed the deal.
By JIM BARON
[email protected]
PROVIDENCE – Allan
Fung, a Republican candidate for governor, called a
press conference Tuesday to
declare that it is “not acceptable” for part-time General
Assembly members to
receive fully-paid health
insurance.
Fung has been a supporter
of calling a Constitutional
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See FUNG, Page A2
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TODAY’S QUESTION
ALL THAT
GLITTERS
Should voter ID be abolished
in RI?
Yes
No
Above, Zoe Kaplan, 13, Skylar
Kaplan 9, and Hannah Broullard, 10,
of Cumberland choose jewelry
pieces for their steampunk jewelry
they were creating during a craft
event at the Cumberland Library
recently.
Left, Tori Dussault, 12, checks out
the necklace she completed. The
Cumberland Library has both teen
and children’s activities throughout
the summer months. A list of upcoming events can found on the library’s
website: cumberlandlibrary.org.
Go to woonsocketcall.com
to answer
INDEX
Amusements........................A7
Comics................................B5
Obituaries............................A5
Opinion................................A4
Sports..................................B1
Television............................A7
CONTACT US:
Vol. CXXII
No. 204
Please
recycle
this paper
questions to team spokesman Stacey
James, who said the team had no
comment.
The Patriots had agreed to turn
over 317 pages of personnel records
sought by the defense, including
medical and training records. But
the team objected to producing nine
See CASE, Page A2
See BLOCK, Page A2
Hernandez lawyer: Pats’ records dispute resolved
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
FALL RIVER, Mass. — A dispute over team records that lawyers
for Aaron Hernandez had sought
from the New England Patriots has
been resolved, the defense said
Tuesday, though it's unclear whether
the documents were turned over.
Hernandez attorney Michael Fee
t
u
O
e
m
i
T
A new Arts &
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& THE TIMES
EVERY THURSDAY
said during a morning hearing in
Fall River Superior Court that the
matter has been resolved. That
prompted the cancellation of a separate hearing before a different judge
that was scheduled for the afternoon.
Defense attorneys declined to
comment outside court. The Patriots'
attorney, Andrew Phelan, referred
By JIM BARON
[email protected]
CRANSTON – Citing statistics his campaign says
come from the state’s
Transparency Portal,
Republican candidate for
governor Ken Block said
Rhode Islanders spent a
combined total of 2.4 years
waiting in line at the
Division of Motor Vehicles
just last month.
Making a similar promise
to one candidates for governor of both parties – also
including incumbent Lincoln
Chafee in 2010 – have made
for decades, Block told
reporters outside DMV headquarters on Tuesday that his
“highest priority” will be to
cut wait times at the registry
to 30 minutes.
“Wait times at the
Department of Motor
The Call/Ernest A. Brown
Circulation: 401-767-8522
Editorial: 401-767-8550
Advertising: 401-767-8505
Block:
DMV wait
too long
Texas governor sends Guard troops to border
By CHRISTOPHER SHERMAN
and WILL WEISSERT
The Associated Press
AUSTIN, Texas — Gov. Rick
Perry is deploying up to 1,000
National Guard troops to the TexasMexico border over the next month to
combat what he said Monday were
criminals exploiting a surge of children pouring into the U.S. illegally.
Perry, a vocal critic of the White
House's response to the border crisis
who is himself mulling a second presidential run, said the state has a responsibility to act after "lip service and
empty promises" from Washington.
"I will not stand idly by while our
citizens are under assault and little
children from Central America are
detained in squalor," the governor
said.
The deployment of National Guard
See BORDER, Page A2
FROM PAGE ONE
A2 THE CALL
Case
pages of scouting reports
and a 1½ page summary of a
psychological assessment
produced by an outside company.
Hernandez, 24, has pleaded not guilty to murder in
the June 2013 killing of
Odin Lloyd, a semi-professional football player from
Boston who had been dating
the sister of Hernandez's
fiancee. Lloyd's bullet-riddled body was found in an
industrial area not far from
Hernandez's North
Attleborough,
Massachusetts, home.
The team released
Border
troops, which may act in a
law enforcement capacity
under state authority, will
cost Texas an estimated $12
million per month. They will
simply be "referring and
deterring" immigrants and
not detaining people, Texas
Adjutant General John
Nichols said. But he added
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Hernandez on the day of his
arrest.
The defense had called
Hernandez's full team
records necessary to prepare
for trial, and said they may
contain critical information
about the former player's
state of mind.
Phelan, meanwhile, had
accused Hernandez's attorneys of being on a "fishing
expedition." He said the
scouting reports contained
trade secrets and were irrelevant to the case. He also
said the Patriots had offered
the defense the option of
reviewing, but not copying,
the psychological assessment summary.
The team wanted the
defense to get the assessment from the company that
wrote it, which provides
character and mental assessments to professional sports
organizations.
During the morning proceeding, which dealt with
scheduling issues, Judge
Susan Garsh set Jan. 9 as the
first day of jury selection in
the murder case. She said
jurors would be selected
from a pool of 1,000 people
brought in over several days.
Hernandez, who is from
Bristol, Connecticut, has
pleaded not guilty, in a separate case, to the murder of
two men in Boston in 2012.
He's being held without bail.
that the National Guard
could take people into custody if need be.
"We think they'll come to
us and say, 'Please take us to
a Border Patrol station,"
Nichols said.
Messages seeking comment were left with the U.S.
Customs and Border
Protection.
Perry bristled at suggestions from some Democratic
state lawmakers and business groups that his move
means Texas is militarizing
is southern border.
Still, Cameron County
Sheriff Omar Lucio said he
didn't know if troops would
be coming to his part of the
border and questioned what
good they would do if they
did.
"Those people are trained
for warfare, not for law
enforcement," said Lucio,
whose county includes
Brownsville. "I think the
money would be better spent
if they would give it to the
local law enforcement that is
close to the border."
More than 3,000 Border
Patrol agents currently work
in Texas' Rio Grande Valley,
but Perry had repeatedly
asked President Barack
Obama to send the National
Guard to the border amid an
influx of immigrants.
Since October, more than
57,000 unaccompanied children and teenagers have
entered the U.S. illegally —
more than double compared
to the same period a year
earlier. Most have been from
Honduras, Guatemala and El
Salvador, where rampant
gang violence and intense
poverty have driven tens of
thousands of people outside
their borders.
Obama administration
officials have said that the
flood has slowed in recent
weeks, with Border Patrol
agents in the Rio Grande
Valley finding fewer than
500 children last week compared to as many as 2,000 a
week last month.
Perry, though, said that,
for years, the federal government failed to secure the
border and suggested that
criminal gangs could be
exploiting the recent surge
to make things worse. He
said more than 200,000
criminals in the country illegally had been booked into
Texas jails since 2008, many
for drug-related offenses but
also for homicides and sexual assaults.
As governor, Perry can
deploy National Guard
troops, but that means Texas
has to pay for it. An order
by Obama would have
meant Washington paid.
Still, Perry and other top
Texas conservatives said
they expect the federal government to eventually reimburse the state.
"Texans are willing to put
the boots on the ground, but
we expect Washington to
foot the bill," said Attorney
General Greg Abbott, a
Republican who is favored
to replace Perry in
November.
Perry isn't seeking reelection but hasn't ruled out
a 2016 presidential campaign.
LOTTERY
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Lucky Ball 36
Check tomorrow’s
paper for late lotteries.
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Fung
Convention, an item on the
November ballot, and he
said he favors repealing an
existing constitutional provision that says: “Senators and
representatives shall receive
the same health insurance
benefits as full-time state
employees.” Because that is
part of the constitution,
Fung explained, it will take
a constitutional amendment
to remove it.
Some lawmakers voluntarily pay 10 percent or 20
percent of their health insurance premiums, which Fung
characterized as “doing the
right thing,” but the
Cranston mayor added, “the
truth is that each legislator
Block
Vehicles are at a three-year
high,” Block said, calling
that situation “outrageous.
“Rhode Islanders are now
spending an hour and a half
for the average license or
registration transaction,” he
added, “90 minutes for a
transaction that in many
other states can be done in
under 15 minutes. The
chronic problem of our
underperforming DMV is
completely unacceptable.”
Block, a computer software executive, said in
response to a question that
he will succeed at reducing
wait times where others have
failed because “this is what I
do for a living.”
That’s not the only thing
Block finds unacceptable.
He asserts that Rhode
Island had to pay a $1.3 million penalty to Hewlett
Wednesday, July 23, 2014
The Call/Russ Olivo
Lorraine Robin signs up for the CodeRED alert system after city officials launched the program at Kennedy Manor on Tuesday.
Alert
only as good as the number
of people who sign up for
notifications, and the general public never seemed to
embrace Nixle in a big way,
said Walsh. After about two
years, he said, fewer than a
thousand residents signed
up for notifications. Nixle
also proved to be less flexible than officials expected
based on the company’s
sales pitch.
Walsh said CodeRED is
a so digitally nimble that it
can alert thousands of residents all at once or zero-in
on just a few who need a
certain piece of information
in a flash. For example, he
said, if a high-risk crime
suspect were known to be
hiding in one house in a
certain neighborhood,
CodeRED could send an
alert to residents of all the
surrounding homes while
skipping over the house
where the suspect was
located.
A growing number of
communities in Rhode
Island have joined the
CodeRED network, which
costs about $6,000 a year,
according to Walsh. Also,
he said the Rhode Island
Emergency Management
Agency’s official alert system is CodeRED, which
means all city residents
who sign up for it will also
receive any state notifications, making for a more
complete, efficient
approach to public safety
notifications.
Chief Shatraw told residents the old system was
terrific at spreading the
word about public safety
emergencies, “but this one
is so much more sophisticated.”
Residents can receive
alerts on a mobile phone,
landline and by e-mail.
The city activated the
system moments before the
ceremonious launch at
Kennedy Manor. Plays said
additional signup events
will be held at the other
high rises in the weeks
ahead as part of an effort to
promote the new system.
“I signed up on my cell
phone, my home phone and
my e-mail,” the mayor told
residents. “It’s a very good
tool to have the information
you need so you can be prepared.”
Storm notifications,
missing persons, emergency
evacuations, temporary
parking bans, flushing of
fire hydrants, street sweeping and trash collection
schedules were among the
few reasons the city might
resort to sending out a
CodeRed alert, the mayor
said, adding, “It’s not
always bad news that would
travel to you.”
Walsh said CodeRed is
compatible with the state’s
Reverse 911 system, which
has a database of all citybased phone numbers. In
the event of a pressing
emergency that every city
resident needed to know
about, CodeRED could
convey the information
even to residents who aren’t
signed up with it. For those
who do sign up, providing
their personal phone numbers and other private information, the system is completely secure.
“No one gets to know
this information,’ he said.
“This is a computer bank
that only the emergency
management notification
system gets to know
about.”
For computer users
savvy enough to download
them, mobile apps are
available to enable
CodeRED subscribers to
receive alerts even when
they’re on vacation or otherwise out of town.
Residents can sign up by
logging onto the city’s web
site,
www.ci.woonsocket.ri.us,
or by contacting City Hall
at a special telephone number established to handle
information about
CodeRED: 401-597-6615.
Additional links can be
found at the web sites for
the Woonsocket police, fire
and emergency management web sites.
With help from the
state’s Reverse 911 system,
Walsh said the city intends
to conduct a “test” of the
CodeRed system next
Tuesday. The event, which
will send out a message
from the mayor to every
phone in the city, is part of
a campaign to spread the
word about CodeRed and
sign up as many people as
possible.
Walsh projects it will
take four to six months to
have the system fully activated. He said there were
be a strong, sustained push
to sign up CodeRED subscribers and he seemed confident that the results will
far outstrip participation in
the now-terminated Nixle
system.
“We WILL do better,” he
said.
Follow Russ Olivo on
Twitter @russolivo.
has the option to accept nocost health care coverage
paid for by the taxpayers.
Even more outrageous, is
that a legislator who
declines that perk is entitled
to a refund from taxpayers
in addition to his or her
annual salary and travel
expenses.”
“Let me be clear,” Fung
told reporters in the
Statehouse Rotunda, “public
service is not self-service.”
He noted that many lawmakers hold full-time
employment and they
shouldn’t make taxpayers
foot the bill for what he
called “these exorbitant
perks.”
“In the early 1990’s,
Rhode Island voters wisely
approved a constitutional
amendment to eliminate
pensions for state legislators
in response to a growing
scandal involving special
pension deals for the politically connected,” the mayor
noted. “With health care
costs lurking as the next
great threat to our state’s
budget, this costly perk may
be implicated in an entirely
new fiscal crisis for our
state. I urge the voters of
Rhode Island to once again
speak up and demand
reform to end this affront to
hard-working, middle-class
families.”
With a pension reform
law for state employees currently being challenged in
court, Fung said health care
costs are “another ticking
time bomb” poised to blow
apart the state budget.
“While the state Budget
Office estimates the cost of
providing subsidized health
insurance for the General
Assembly to be $1.2 million
per year,” Fung said, “the
real price is much higher,”
Fung continued. “Special
deals and taxpayer-funded
perks for political insiders
chip away at the credibility
of our state and the morale
of our citizens. The cost of
this perk will appear much
greater to hard-working
Rhode Islanders who struggle to pay mortgages and fill
their gas tanks, or others
who have been out of work
for weeks, or even months,
when asked to pay for health
insurance for part-time state
legislators.”
Packard, the company that is
working on DMV’s inadequate computer system, a
problem that has plagued the
agency for years.
The state was assessed
that penalty, Block says,
because the state “wasted
23,000 hours of HP’s time.”
He said Rhode Island has
“paid more than $15 million
over the course of a decade
for a computer system project that still does not work.”
“In my software business,” Block said, “we contract with various state governments and private businesses. If my company failed
to deliver as miserably as HP
has failed the state taxpayers, my company would
have had its contract terminated and my company
would have been on the
hook to pay fines. Instead,
the state is paying fines to
our vendor for a system that
functionally doesn’t exist.
This defies all common
sense and is a classic example of waste and fraud.
“How many other vendors are taking advantage of
Rhode Island taxpayers?” he
asked, speculating about
whether the state’s health
insurance exchange operation is similarly troubled.
Chafee spokeswoman
Faye Zuckerman issued a
statement later in the day
that said: “Governor Chafee
inherited both the Hewlett
Packard contract and more
than five-hour wait times at
the DMV from businessman
Governor Carcieri.
Businessman Ken Block is
directing criticism toward his
own Republican Party. Wait
times have dropped considerably since Governor
Chafee took office. He continues to work with the
DMV to get the right
staffing levels to ensure that
the times continue to
improve.
But the DMV page on the
Transparency Portal contains
a chart showing that wait
times have increased, even
during months where the
volume of transactions has
dipped.
Attempts to reach DMV
Director Anthony Silva for
more details on the computer
project were unsuccessful on
Tuesday.
According to information
provided by the Block campaign:
• The current overall average wait time at the DMV is
one hour and six minutes.
• The wait time has not
been that bad since August
2011.
• The overall average wait
time has tripled in the last 10
months.
• During that period, the
average wait time for licenses has increased 262 percent;
155 percent for registrations.
LOCAL
Wednesday, July 23, 2014
CHRISTMAS ARRIVES EARLY
THE CALL A3
EP officials issue advisory
for TTHM in water supply
By JOSEPH FITZGERALD
[email protected]
EAST PROVIDENCE –
Water Department officials
are reporting elevated levels
of trihalomethanes (TTHM)
in drinking water supplied
by the city, but say the levels
detected do not pose an
immediate risk to a person’s
health.
Trihalomethanes
(TTHMs) are a byproduct of
the water treatment process.
They are formed when natural organic material, such as
the decaying vegetation
commonly found in lakes
and reservoirs, reacts with
chlorine used to treat the
water. This reaction produces “disinfection by-products,” the most common of
which are TTHMs.
The city purchases its
water solely from
Providence Water, and is
required by the R.I.
Department of Health to add
chlorine to the water in order
to maintain a chlorine residual of 0.2 milligram per liter.
While TTHMs are normally found in water, levels
in the city’s drinking water
supply rose above the
Environmental Protection
Agency’s maximum levels
over the last four quarters of
testing, prompting Public
Works Director Stephen
Coutu and Water
Superintendent James
Marvel to issue an advisory
on Monday.
EPA has set standards for
TTHMs in water because
there is a slight possibility of
an increased risk of bladder
or colorectal cancer over a
lifetime of drinking water
with TTHMs above 80 parts
per billion.
The city’s average level
of TTHMs between July 1,
2013, and March 31, 2014,
was 85 parts per billion.
“Although this is not an
emergency, as our customers, you have a right to
know what happened, what
you should do, and what we
are doing to correct the situation,” the water department
said in a statement on the
city’s Web site.”
This is the first TTHM
violation in the East
Providence water system,
but it isn’t likely to be the
last until the city completes
its proposed water system
improvements.
“We are working to minimize the formation of
TTHMs while ensuring an
adequate level of disinfection to protect customers
from exposure to bacteria,”
the advisory said. “The City
Council has approved a bond
to begin system upgrades to
distribution mains, a new
storage tank, treatment system, and transmission main.”
In the meantime, water
officials say residents are not
being asked to take any corrective action at this time,
including boiling water.
The EPA estimates that
drinking 2 liters of water
containing 100 parts per billion TTHMs every day for
70 years could result in three
extra cases of cancer for
every 10,000 people. The
slight risk of increased cancer occurs only after decades
of drinking water with elevated TTHMs. Therefore,
there is no immediate risk
from the water with TTHMs
above 80 parts per billion.
However, residents who
have specific health concerns should consult their
doctor, the city advisory
says.
(Follow Joseph Fitzgerald
on Twitter @jofitz7)
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D.J. Bruno, 9, of Lincoln, spends a moment with Santa Claus at the Woonsocket Train Depot
on Monday after the merry old elf made a visit to the city to complete a photo session benefitting the Gloria Gemma Foundation. Bruno's mother, Lisa M. Bruno of 64 Degree
Photography, was the photographer for the shoot. "He's very nice and I hope he comes back
in December," D.J. said of Santa. Santa himself said he didn't quite mind the 82 degrees in
Woonsocket on Monday and noted he had just visited much warmer locations down the East
Coast. "I have to keep my eyes on the children and that means the big kids too," Santa said.
Santa will be back in the city for the Polar Express excursions put on by the Blackstone
Valley Tourism Council during the holiday season.
Cumberland police log arrest,
investigate three accidents
CUMBERLAND – A
33-year-old local man was
picked up on a District
Court warrant after being
located on Harrison Street
early Friday, according to
police.
Brian Stanley was taken
into custody at 12:34 a.m.
on the Sixth District Court
warrant, police said.
In other matters:
• Police investigated a
hit-and-run accident at
1700 Mendon Road at 8:15
a.m. Friday.
• A two-vehicle accident at Hines Road and
High Street was investigated at 9:59 a.m. Friday,
police said. Police identified the operators as
Sharon M. McMaugh of
Mendon Road,
Cumberland, and Theresa
M. Martin of Terrace
Avenue, Cumberland.
No injuries were report-
ed at the scene, according
to police.
• Two vehicles were
reported involved in an
accident at 1200 Mendon
Road and Route 295 at
5:19 p.m. Friday. Police
identified the operators as
Deborah Dogul of Heroux
Boulevard ad Brenda
Matrese of Mendon Road.
No injuries were reported
at the scene, according to
police.
NORTH ATTLEBORO
— Runners and walkers are
invited to join the
“Runaways Runaround” to
be held on Sunday, Aug. 3,
at 9 a.m.
New this year, the traditional 5-mile race will now
be a 5K race. This is a
USATF-NE sanctioned and
certified 5K course which
loops through North
Attleboro. Sponsored by the
Runaways Running Club,
proceeds from the race and
raffle go to benefit
Community VNA Hospice
and Palliative Care serving
eleven area communities.
Registration is $25 after
July 26.
The race begins at North
Attleboro Town Hall, 43
South Washington St.
Cash prizes include $100
for the first overall male and
female runners. Medals
awarded for all divisions: 19
& under, 20-29, 30-39, 4049, 50-59, 60-69, and 70plus. Individuals and families are encouraged participate to show support for
runners and walkers or to
enter a raffle for great
prizes.
To register online:
https://www.signmeup.com/
98440.
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
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FRI. JULY 25TH - LOUISIANA RED HOTS
SAT. JULY 26TH - DIVING DUCKS BLUES
200 Main Street, Blackstone, MA
(508) 928-2164
Mon. - Sat. 11am-1am • Sun. Noon-1am • Kitchen Open till 10p
www.FirehouseTavernMa.com
CUMBERLAND FIRE DISTRICT
1530 Mendon Road, Cumberland, RI 02864
Cumberland Fire District will hold its annual meeting July 30, 2014.
It will be held at the St. Joseph’s Parish Center, 1303 Mendon Road,
Cumberland at 7:00 p.m.. This meeting will be held to elect officials,
approve the budget, and set the tax rate and any other business
that may be legally conducted. The Board of Commissioners has
reported that there were no requests for the open positions in the
district. The following positions are open: Moderator for a 1-year
term, Assistant Moderator for a 1-year term, 1-3yr Commissioners
replacement and 2-4 year Commissioner positions. Nominations will
be taken from the floor on the night of the meeting. Those requesting
interpreter services for the hearing impaired may call (401)333-4311
at least 72 hours before the meeting. Submitted by: Nancy L. Nixon,
Secretary
Annual Meeting Agenda
July 30, 2014 7:00 p.m.
Held at the St. Joseph Parish Center
1303 Mendon Road, Cumberland, RI 02864
a. Calling of the roll and certification of a quorum
b. Pledge of Allegiance
c. District Secretary’s due proof of notices of meeting
d. Appointment of Parliamentarian
e. Reading and disposal of minutes
f. Election of Officers
g. Reports of Officers and Chief of Department, annual or other
h. Communications
i. Old Business and Committee Reports
j. Review of Accountants report
k. New Business
l. Proposed Budget
m. Setting of tax rates
n. Swearing in of new Officers
o. Adjournment
Note: This agenda is subject to change up until 7:00 p.m. the Monday before
the meeting convenes. Those requesting interpreter services for the hearing
impaired must call (401) 333-4311 at least 72 hours before the meeting.
READER’S REWARDS
Breakfast
served all d
ay
GET YOUR NAME IN THE HAT
Enter to win 4 tickets to:
Pawtucket Red Sox
2014 General Admission
Ticket Vouchers
Ten 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
Thursday, July 31, 2014 at noon.
Winners will be posted in The
Call & The Times on Friday,
August 1, 2014.
Miss Mendon Diner
• 50’s style All-American Diner • Catering service
Serving homemade classics
• Funcon hall available
Pares for up to 125 people.
Full liquor license
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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
16 Uxbridge Rd., Mendon, MA • 508-634-3000
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OPINION
Page A4
Interim Publisher/Controller: Kathleen Needham
Executive Editor: Bianca Pavoncello
Managing Editor: David Pepin
Assistant Editor/News/The Call: Russ Olivo
THE CALL — Wednesday July 23, 2014
Rotary involved in
many outreach programs
With the start of a new “Rotary Year” I
thought it would be a great time to give
you an idea of Rotary International looks
like around the world, so you have a better
idea of what the
Woonsocket Rotary is
an important part of.
There are 1.2 million Rotarians in
34,000 Rotary Clubs
worldwide. Along
with the Rotary
Clubs, there are thousands of people
involved in these
other Rotary programs:
•Interact (for youth
ages 12 – 18) and
Rotaract (for young adults age 18 – 30) are
basically a Rotary Club’s “farm team.”
With more than 12,300 Interact Clubs in
133 countries — including clubs at
Woonsocket High and Woonsocket Middle
School — and 8,000 Rotaract clubs in 167
countries — including Bryant University—
we are building some remarkable, servicefocused leaders!
•Rotary Youth Exchange program,
allows more than 8,000 youth to spend
their summers or their entire school year in
another country annually.
•Rotary Youth Leadership Awards are
scholarships Rotary Clubs provide to area
youth to participate in Rotary-led leadership development programs.
•There are also 6,800 Rotary
Community Corps in 78 countries. These
are groups of non-Rotarians organized by
local Rotary Clubs to work on community
improvement projects together.
•There are 70 Global Networking
Groups that are open to Rotarians, their
spouses, and Rotaractors. These networking groups include Rotary Fellowships that
are focused on vocational and recreational
interests and Rotarian Action Groups that
are focused on service projects.
I’ve written here about the local projects
that the Woonsocket Rotary has taken on
this past year. What I haven’t mentioned
much about is the work that all Rotarians
in every Rotary Club supports along with
other leading educational institutions and
organizations.
We are a key partner in the Global Polio
Eradication Initiative with the US Centers
From
The Rotary
for Disease Control and Prevention, the
World Health Organization, UNICEF, and
the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
Aside from polio eradication efforts, we
work with the United Nations on a number
of international causes, including hunger
relief, literacy, and child & maternal health
initiatives.
Rotarians are committed to supporting
the efforts of Mercy Ships (the floating
hospitals), Oikocredit International (international microlending for economic development), Aga Khan University (polio
eradication research institution), and
Unesco-IHE (clean water).
We also work with ShelterBox to provide emergency response teams and equipment to sites of natural disasters.
We are collaborating partners with
Dolly Parton’s Imagination Library, the
Global FoobBanking Network, Goodwill
Industries International, the International
Reading Association, and Youth Service
America.
We facilitate water and sanitation projects around the world through the Rotary
International/US Agency for International
Development International H20
Collaboration.
We provide fellowships for students at
the Rotary Peace Centers in the following
universities around the world to students
taking degrees in conflict prevention and
resolution:
•Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok,
Thailand (professional development center)
•Duke University and University of
North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA
•International Christian University,
Tokyo, Japan
•Universidad del Salvador, Buenos
Aires, Argentina
•University of Bradford, West
Yorkshire, England
•University of Queensland, Brisbane,
Australia
•Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden
We might be only be a small club in the
Blackstone Valley. We are part of an enormous movement that makes a tremendous
difference in every corner of the world,
though.
To learn more about getting involved in
this extraordinary work, come to an ordinary lunch! For more details, contact me at
[email protected]
Notable Quotables
“I will not stand idly by
while our citizens are under
assault and little children
from Central America are
detained in squalor.”
— Texas Gov. Rick Perry
speaking about the thousands
of children streaming over the
border into the U.S.
to where we are today.”
— U.S. Secretary of State
John Kerry on the Israeli,
Palestinian conflict.
“It is remarkable that we
have young men and women
serving in our military who,
day in and day out, perform
Kerry
with so much integrity, so
“Just reaching a cease-fire is
much humility and so much
clearly not enough. It is imperative
courage. Ryan represents the very
that there be a serious engagement,
best of that tradition.”
discussion, negotiation, regarding
— President Obama on awarding
the underlying issues and addressing former Army Staff Sgt. Ryan Pitts the
all the concerns that have brought us Medal of Honor.
As others see it: Smoking
The following editorial appeared in
Monday's Washington Post:
To buy cigarettes in Australia, you have
to pick up a dull green package plastered
with photos of a shriveled infant, a blackened lung or an old man with a tracheotomy hole in his throat. You also need to
look closely because the only difference
among brands is the name in a small, prescribed font on the bottom quarter of the
pack. This arrangement, implemented in
2012, made Australia the first nation both
to require graphic images and ban enticing
logos on cigarette packs.
On Thursday, Australian officials
announced that the nation's smoking rate
fell 15 percent in the past three years —
from 15.1 percent of people older than 14
in 2010 to 12.8 percent in 2013. "This
means the daily smoking rate has halved
since 1991," said Geoff Neideck, a health
spokesperson. By comparison, the United
States took nearly a half-century to do the
same.
Australia's path toward the plain-packaging law wasn't smooth. A long public
debate preceded passage of the measure.
Philip Morris and other tobacco companies
then challenged it in court and before a
United Nations tribunal, and they covered
some legal fees for several countries to dispute it at the World Trade Organization.
The government won the domestic lawsuit,
but the other two cases are still pending.
Tobacco researchers say that the drop in
the smoking rate shows that plain-packaging laws — as well as the 25 percent tax
increase Australia instituted in 2010 —
work. These packs help "de-normalize"
smoking, disassociating it from hipness
and associating it with smoking's health
consequences. Perhaps the fact that cigarette manufacturers are filing lawsuits is
evidence enough of the laws' impact —
and a sign that the United States should be
following in Australia's footsteps.
At least 65 countries have finalized their
graphic warnings, but the United States
still uses its 1984 "Surgeon General's
Warning," small text posted on the side of
cigarette packs. In 2009, Congress ordered
the Food and Drug Administration to move
to graphic warnings. But a federal appeals
court threw out the FDA's resulting rule on
the grounds that it violated companies'
commercial speech rights. The FDA is currently undertaking research in the process
of proposing new graphic images.
The United States has lowered its smoking rate to below 20 percent, thanks to
measures including higher cigarette taxes,
non-smoking environments and bans on
cigarette advertising. Some states are doing
more — New Jersey, for example, is considering raising the smoking age to 21. But
42 million Americans still smoke, and
stronger labels are an essential component
of a more comprehensive response.
The downside of giving weapons
to rebels in Ukraine or Syria
The bodies and debris that rained from the
Ukrainian sky offer a cautionary lesson about
the danger of giving heavy weapons to nonstate actors. I hope the hawks who wanted
President Obama to ship anti-aircraft missiles
to the Syrian rebels are paying attention.
By now there is little doubt that Malaysia
Airlines Flight 17, with 298
people on board, was blasted out of the sky Thursday
by a Russian-made SA-11
missile fired from eastern
Ukraine. U.S. officials say
they have solid evidence
that Russia supplied such
arms to the separatist rebels
who control that part of the
Eugene Robinson
country.
It is unclear whether the
missile was fired by rebels who had been
trained to operate the complex SA-11 system
or by Russian military advisers. This seems
to me a distinction without a difference.
Whoever pulled the trigger, Russia must bear
responsibility and be held accountable.
It was deeply irresponsible for Russian
President Vladimir Putin to put a missile system capable of downing a civilian airliner at
the disposal of trigger-happy separatists who
may have had no idea what they were shooting at. If Putin believed the presence of
Russian advisers would foreclose the possibility of a tragic mistake, obviously he was
wrong.
The tragedy comes amid Putin’s broader
campaign to fragment Ukraine and reabsorb
parts of it into Russia. This whole effort
should be condemned and resisted; Russia
has already been hit with international sanctions, which now are likely to be toughened.
“The costs for Russia’s behavior will only
continue to increase,” President Obama said
Monday.
Members of the Ukrainian Emergencies
Ministry gather before leaving the crash site
of the Malaysia Airlines Flight MH17 near
the village of Hrabove (Grabovo), Donetsk
region. (Maxim Zmeyev/Reuters)
The most important lesson U.S. policymakers should learn from this terrible event, I
believe, is that sophisticated weapons, once
given to combatants in a civil war, are virtually impossible to keep under control.
This is true whether those given the arms
are Russian-backed rebels or “moderate”
Syrian freedom fighters.
Of particular concern are anti-aircraft
weapons. In any civil war, the government
side is likely to have superiority or supremacy in the air. Governments have professional
air forces and fleets of aircraft; rebel armies
generally do not.
In Ukraine, the separatists sought to neutralize the government’s advantage in air
power by deploying anti-aircraft systems —
and successfully using them. On July 14, just
days before the Malaysia Airlines tragedy, a
Ukrainian troop transport plane was hit by a
missile near the Russian border. This aircraft
— like the civilian airliner — was flying
above 20,000 feet, high enough that it could
have been downed only by a powerful and
sophisticated anti-aircraft system such as the
SA-11.
But of the dozen government aircraft
reportedly shot down by rebels in recent
months, most were flying at lower altitudes.
In late May, for example, a helicopter with 12
soldiers aboard was downed. In June,
49?Ukrainian troops died when a transport
plane was blown out of the sky.
These other aircraft were within the range
of small, portable, shoulder-fired missiles,
which Russia is believed to have supplied to
the separatists in large numbers — and which
hawkish critics of Obama’s foreign policy
have demanded he give to pro-Western rebel
groups in Syria.
The government of Bashar al-Assad has
survived largely through the brutal use of air
power against defenseless civilians. Partly
neutralizing this advantage — by credibly
threatening to shoot Assad’s planes down —
might have changed the course of the war,
though now it might be too late.
From the beginning, Obama has been
extremely reluctant to send anti-aircraft
weapons of any kind into Syria. Now his critics should understand why.
When weapons are given to non-state
actors, there is no guarantee they will be used
competently — and no guarantee that they
won’t fall into the wrong hands. In Syria, the
“good” rebels have been outmaneuvered and
outfought by the “bad” rebels: the jihadist
militia that calls itself the Islamic State and
now controls a huge territory encompassing
parts of Syria and Iraq. The Islamic State is
so fanatical and bloodthirsty that it was disowned by al-Qaeda.
Imagine that the Pentagon had given U.S.supported rebels enough shoulder-fired missiles to seriously threaten the Syrian army’s
low-flying aircraft, including its helicopters.
Imagine that these weapons were captured by
the Islamic State.
Imagine the grave threat this would pose,
not just to allied forces struggling against the
Islamic State but potentially to commercial
aviation as well.
Flooding a war zone with weapons is like
dumping gasoline on a fire. Vladimir Putin
should pay a heavy price for doing so. And
Obama’s critics owe him an apology.
Eugene Robinson is a syndicated columnist.
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.
WE WANT TO HEAR FROM YOU:
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OBITUARIES/LOCAL
Wednesday, July 23, 2014
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college football star
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Dr. Robert May, 87;
college hockey coach
GRAND FORKS, N.D.
(AP) — Dr. Robert May,
who coached the University
of North Dakota to its first
NCAA hockey championship and later became a
dentist, has died. He was 87.
May coached the program in the 1957-58 and
1958-59 seasons and led
UND into the NCAA title
game both years. UND
defeated Michigan State 4-3
in the 1959 championship.
May’s record with UND
was 45-17-2.
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THE CALL A5
Three area men sentenced
in major drugs, guns bust
By RUSS OLIVO
[email protected]
PAWTUCKET – The
U.S. Attorney’s Office on
Tuesday announced the sentences of three local men
and another from Cranston
in connection with charges
stemming from a 15-month
investigation that resulted
in the seizure of a substantial quantity of heroin,
crack, powder cocaine,
Ecstasy, the club drug
“Molly,” and a cache of
firearms that included a
machine gun.
Salee Yang, 30, of
Pawtucket, the primary target of the investigation, was
sentenced to 120 months in
federal prison; Eric Negron,
49, of Pawtucket, who
admitted to being a primary
supplier of heroin, cocaine
and crack cocaine to Yang,
was sentenced to 184
months; Stanz Hun, 26, of
Cranston, a member of the
“Four-Fifths Mafia” and the
PSB street gangs who
admitted to being a customer of Yang and to operating his own drug business, was sentenced to 84
months in federal prison;
and Peter Lietar, 37, of
Pawtucket, who admitted to
supplying Ecstasy and
“Molly” to Yang, was sentenced to 24 months in federal prison and ordered to
pay a fine of $30,000.
The sentences were
handed down during hearings that began in March,
said Jim Martin, a
spokesman for U.S.
Attorney Peter Neronha.
The last of the hearings,
during which Hun was sentenced, took place on
Tuesday.
The men were arrested in
June 2013 on drug trafficking, conspiracy and
firearms charges.
“Drug trafficking, illegal
guns and gang activity are a
one-two-three recipe for
urban violence, often with
disastrous results,” said
Neronha. “The long sentences received by these
men are well-deserved, and
will contribute to making
our urban neighborhoods
safer.”
This case was brought as
part of the Rhode Island
Urban Violent Crime
Initiative, a local, state and
federal law enforcement
collaboration designed to
prevent crime in cities.
The investigation,
launched in March 2012,
resulted in the seizure of
more than 137 grams of
heroin, 392 grams of crack
cocaine, 235 grams of
cocaine powder, 47 grams
and 100 pills of the synthetic drug “Molly,” 100
Ecstasy pills and six
firearms, including a
machine gun, officials said.
Follow Russ Olivo on
Twitter @russolivo
Sandy debris still discovered
in marshland of Northeast
HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) — Nearly
two years after Superstorm Sandy pounded the Northeast, communities in
Connecticut, New York and Rhode Island
are preparing to track down and remove
debris from marshland.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration said it will spend $4.7 million for debris removal in marshland in the
states. New York City is among the areas
designated.
Cleanup from Superstorm Sandy began
soon after the storm in public areas such
as beaches and parks.
Dianna Parker, a spokeswoman at
NOAA’s marine debris program, said
much of what was tossed into marshes and
coastline areas by the October 2012 storm
included construction debris, docks, decks,
furniture, lumber and boat remains.
Some debris is partly submerged, presenting additional challenges to companies
that will be selected to haul away the
garbage.
The work is specialized and done by
only a few companies in the United States,
said Reid Loper, senior project manager at
CrowderGulf LLC, a Theodore, Ala., company that removes debris and restores
coastal areas.
A project in sensitive marshland will
typically use equipment that uses a smaller
footprint measured in pounds per square
foot, he said.
“Sometimes, it takes a lot of personnel,
a lot of manual hand labor,” Loper said.
“Sometimes that’s all you can use.”
Marine debris is a potential hazard to
navigation, fishing grounds and ecosystems, Connecticut environmental officials
said.
Marshes are important as buffers to
storm surges and are “nursery grounds”
for crustaceans, mollusks and fish, said
Kate Hughes Brown, grant coordinator at
the state Department of Energy and
Environmental Protection.
Work will begin in Connecticut when
permits are issued and could wrap up in a
year.
CAMPAIGN 2014
Statewide police union endorses Taveras
WARWICK — The
Rhode Island Office of the
National Association of
Government
Employees/International
Brotherhood of Police
Officers (NAGE/IBPO)
announced its endorsement
of Providence Mayor
Angel Taveras in the race
to become Rhode Island’s
next governor.
NAGE/IBPO represents
approximately 1,200 police
officers in 28 communities
across Rhode Island as
well as 300 civilian
employees.
“The Committee was
impressed with Mayor
Taveras’ plans to help
improve Rhode Island’s
economy, while putting
people first. Angel is committed to supporting public
safety professionals and
knows that a safe society
means one where we are
respected,” said Anthony
Capezza Jr., NAGE/IBPO
state director.
“As mayor, he saved the
City of Providence from a
near certain bankruptcy.
His leadership moved the
city forward and put it on a
strong financial path “
even in the midst of a difficult recession. This experience and his willingness
to work with the labor
community is what our
state needs to allow us to
achieve our common goal
of fairness and prosperity
for all Rhode Islanders,”
Capezza added.
“I have an immense
amount of respect for our
police officers and our
civil servants. These men
and women get up every
day to protect and serve
our communities. We owe
it to them to respect that
service,” said Taveras. “I
am honored to have the
support of NAGE/IBPO
and believe that together
we can build a stronger
economy and a Rhode
Island where all of our citizens have the opportunity
to succeed.”
Taveras has previously
been endorsed by: the
Rhode Island State
Association of Firefighters,
Providence Fire Fighters
IAFF Local 799, the
American Association of
University Professors URI
Chapter, the United Food
and Commercial Workers
Union Local 328, the
Brotherhood of Utility
Workers Council/UWUA
Local 310, AFSCME
Rhode Island Council 94,
United Service and Allied
Workers of Rhode Island,
International Federation of
Professional and Technical
Engineers (IFTPE Local
400), and Service
Employees International
Union (SEIU Local 580).
THANK YOU NOVENAS
For Favors Or Prayers Answered
10.00
$
15.00
$
20.00
$
A PRAYER TO THE
ST. JUDE NOVENA BLESSED VIRGIN
May the Sacred Heart of Jesus be
(never known to fail)
Thank You Sacred Heartadored, glorified, loved andOh most beautiful flower of Mt.
throughout the world,
Carmel, Fruitful Vine, Splendour of
& St. Jude For Favorspreserved
now and forever. Sacred HeartHeaven,
of
Blessed Mother of the Son of
Jesus, pray for us. St. Jude, worker
God, Immaculate Virgin, assist me in
Granted.
this, my necessity. Oh Star of the Sea,
C.G.of miracles, pray for us. St. Jude,
help me and show me here you are my
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helper of the hopeless, pray for us.
O Holy Mary, Mother of God,
Say this prayer 9 times a day, by mother.
the
Queen of Heaven and Earth, I humbly
9th day your prayer will beseech
be
you from the bottom of my
answered. It has never been known
heart to secure me in my necessity
to fail. Publication promised. (make
My request). There are none that
prayers have been answered. can withstand your power. O Mary
conceived without sin, pray for us who
C.D.
Call 401-766-3400
To Place Your Ad
In This Publication
have recourse to thee (3 times). Holy
Mary, I place this cause in your hands
(3 times). Say this prayer for 3
consecutive days and then you must
publish it and it will be granted to you.
Thank you Holy Mother.
E.F.
A6 THE CALL
Wednesday, July 23, 2014
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PRESENTS YOUR COMMUNITY CALENDAR
Sunday
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
20
21
22
23
24
Cumberland
Central Falls
Pawtucket
Woonsocket
Woonsocket
Pawtucket
• Widow support group meets
every Sunday — the first two
Sundays of the month are at the
Community Chapel on Diamond
Hill Rd. The second two are at
Emerald Bay Manor, Diamond
Hill Road. All meetings 2 p.m.
Call 401-333-5815.
• Forand Manor holds Bingo
every Monday and Wednesday,
starting at 5:15 p.m.
• 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 St.,
Pawtucket. 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.
• A Creative Writing Group will
be held at 7:30 p.m.at
Woonsocket Harris Public
Library, 393 Clinton St. 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.
• An Adult Knitting Circle will be
held from 7 to 8:30 p.m. at the
Woonsocket Harris Public
Library, 393 Clinton St. 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!
• Spend a day on the links
and support the American
Cancer Society and The
Junior League of Rhode
Island, Inc. (JLRI) at the 22nd
annual Pizzuti Open Golf
Tournament at the Pawtucket
Country Club. For more information and to register, please
visit www.jlri.org.
Sponsorships are also available, beginning at $100.
Pawtucket
• Fogarty Manor Tenant
Association BINGO is open
Monday and Wednesday Nights,
doors open at 4p.m. and the
game starts at 6:30 p.m. until 8
p.m. Our address is 214
Roosevelt Ave.
• The city of Pawtucket will host
a blood drive from noon to 2
p.m. in the Mobile Donor
Coach, which will be located in
the municipal parking lot across
from City Hall, 137 Roosevelt
Ave.
Lincoln
•Book Buddies days at the
Lincoln Public Library.at 11a.m.
for one hour. Each day teen
Readers ages 11-18 meet with
L'il Book Buddies aged 3-8 for
one-on-one reading, coloring
and floor puzzles. No more than
2 L'il BBs per teen Reader. This
is a teen program supervised by
the teen librarian. Both groups
should register at reference or
call 333-2422 x17.
East Providence
• Weaver Library hosts a night
of food and music beginning at
6:30 p.m. The Northeast Navy
showband will be playing big
band and patriotic favorites.
There will be a food truck on
site serving mexican food.
Lincoln
•The Anime Group at Lincoln
Public Library will sample
Flame Painter, a very colorful
program that is mindful f fireworks, from 1 to 4 p.m. Please
register at the reference desk or
call 33-2422 x.17.or check
events at www.lincolnlibrary.com
Foxboro
East Providence
• As part of the outdoor summer movie at Patriot Place,
Cloudy With a Chance of
Meatballs 2 will be playing at
sundown with a DJ and lawn
games from 6 p.m. until the
movie starts.
• Farmers Market at the Weaver
Library from 4 to 7 p.m. The
market features fresh produce,
entertainment and workshops.
25
Pawtucket
• Spend a day on the links and
support the American Cancer
Society and The Junior League
of Rhode Island, Inc. (JLRI) at
the 22nd Annual Pizzuti Open
Golf Tournament at the
Pawtucket Country Club.
For more information and to register, please visit www.jlri.org.
Sponsorships are also available,
beginning at $100.
Saturday
26
Woonsocket
• The Stadium Theatre is hosting its production of “13 the
Musical.” The show is at 2 and
8 p.m. Tickets are $16 and aree
available at te box office or by
calling 401-762-4545. They
can also be purchased at
www.stadiumtheatre.com
• The St. John The Baptist
Romanian Orthodox Church Annual Festival will be held on
the church grounds, 501 East
School St., rain or shine, 3 to10
p.m. Both admission and parking are free.
Pawtucket
• Grand opening of The
Blackstone Shop. The shop will
be open at noon and will sell all
kinds of interesting Rhode
Island things made by local
artists.
Uxbridge
• Remove water chestnuts from
Rice Pond. Shifts will be from 9
a.m. to noon and 1 p.m. to 3
p.m. Email [email protected]
for more information.
27
28
29
30
31
Cumberland
Central Falls
Pawtucket
Central Falls
East Providence
Burrillville
Woonsocket
• Widow support group meets
every Sunday — the first two
Sundays of the month are at the
Community Chapel on Diamond
Hill Rd. The second two are at
Emerald Bay Manor, Diamond
Hill Road. All meetings 2 p.m.
Call 401-333-5815.
• Forand Manor holds Bingo
every Monday and Wednesday,
starting at 5:15 p.m.
• 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 St.,
Pawtucket. 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.
• Forand Manor holds Bingo
every Monday and Wednesday,
starting at 5:15 p.m.
• Farmers Market at the Weaver
Library from 4 to 7 p.m. The
market features fresh produce,
entertainment and workshops.
• Pascoag Council, 383,
Knights of Columbus proudly
continues its Friday Night Bingo
at the Columbus Club function
hall located at 98 Roosevelt
Ave., Pascoag, Fully approved
and licensed by the RI State
Police and Town of Burrillville,
• Our Lady Queen of Martyrs
Annual Festival in Park Square
from 1-11 p.m.
Family Matinee from 1-5 p.m.
Activities include games, rides,
food, raffle, bingo, music. Free
parking and free admission.
500-Lottery-Ticket-Raffle. Grand
Prize Drawing $10,000.
Woonsocket
The St. John The Baptist
Romanian Orthodox Church Annual Festival will be held on
the church grounds, 501 East
School St., rain or shine, noon
to 7 p.m. Both admission and
parking are free. The festival
features traditional foods and
pastries. along with ethnic
music and dancing.
Pawtucket
• Fogarty Manor Tenant
Association BINGO is open
Monday and Wednesday Nights,
doors open at 4p.m. and the
game starts at 6:30 p.m. until 8
p.m. Our address is 214
Roosevelt Ave.
Cumberland
Pawtucket
• Fogarty Manor Tenant
Association BINGO is open
Monday and Wednesday Nights,
doors open at 4p.m. and the
game starts at 6:30 p.m. until 8
p.m. Our address is 214
Roosevelt Ave.
Lincoln
Our Lady Queen of Martyrs
Annual Festival in Park Square
from 6-11 p.m. Activities include
games, rides, food, raffle,
bingo, music, and more. Free
admission and free parking.
Fireworks at 9:30 p.m. Rain
date is Friday
August
Woonsocket
• Rhode Island’s annual
Governor’s Bay Day celebration
is scheduled for Sunday, July
27. During the day, entrance
fees will be waived at all State of
Rhode Island beaches.
3
4
5
6
7
Cumberland
Central Falls
Pawtucket
Central Falls
East Providence
Burrillville
• Widow support group meets
every Sunday — the first two
Sundays of the month are at the
Community Chapel on Diamond
Hill Rd. The second two are at
Emerald Bay Manor, Diamond
Hill Road. All meetings 2 p.m.
Call 401-333-5815.
• Forand Manor holds Bingo
every Monday and Wednesday,
starting at 5:15 p.m.
• 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 St.,
Pawtucket. 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.
• Forand Manor holds Bingo
every Monday and Wednesday,
starting at 5:15 p.m.
• Farmers Market at the Weaver
Library from 4 to 7 p.m. The
market features fresh produce,
entertainment and workshops.
• Pascoag Council, 383,
Knights of Columbus proudly
continues its Friday Night Bingo
at the Columbus Club function
hall located at 98 Roosevelt
Ave., Pascoag, Fully approved
and licensed by the RI State
Police and Town of Burrillville,
the games begin promptly at
6:20 p.m.; doors open at 4:30
p.m. and the kitchen at 5:00
p.m. The bingo program includes
a full complement of regular
games and several higher-paying
special games including a splitthe-pot. An assortment of door
prizes will also be awarded each
week. All net proceeds from the
Bingo will be used to bolster the
organization’s coffers and continuing efforts to support various
youth and charitable causes within the local community.
A full menu of freshly made food
items, including sandwiches,
burgers, French fries, etc. will be
available, as well as an assortment of packaged snacks and
drinks. For more information,
please call 401-568-1865.
Statewide
Warwick
• Auditions for adults who wish
to perform in plays this winter
and next spring with the Ocean
State Theatre Company. Visit
oceanstatetheatre.org for more
information about available roles
and audition times. Auditions will
also be held on the 4th.
Pawtucket
• Fogarty Manor Tenant
Association BINGO, doors open
at 4p.m., game starts at 6:30
p.m. until 8 p.m. Our address is
214 Roosevelt Ave.
East Providence
• Providence Children’s
Museum’s 31st annual Allen
H. Chatterton Jr. Memorial
Golf Tournament at
Wannamoisett Country
Club,Rumford, For registration
and information about sponsorship and tee signs, visit
www.childrenmuseum.org/Golf.
asp or contact Sara Clarke at
(401) 273-5437 ext. 121 or
[email protected].
• The Lincoln Library hosts
“Hunger Games Basic Training”
during which kids aged 12 to 18
learn how to build a fire, make
shelter and learn about medicinal wild plants. Registration is
required and can be completed
by calling 333-2422 x. 17. Visit
www.lincoln library.com for
more details.
Providence
• Public hearing on the closing
of Route 49. Meetings are at 10
a.m. and 6 p.m.
Woonsocket
• Our Lady Queen of Martyrs
Annual Festival in Park Square
from 6-11 p.m. Activities include
games, rides, food, raffle,
bingo, music, amd more.
Free admission and free parking
Pawtucket
• The Major Walter Getchell
VFW Post 306 will hold an allyou-can-eat spaghetti and meatball dinner from 4 to 7 p.m.at
the post hall, 171 Fountain St.
Cost is $8 and includes coffee,
salad and pastries. For more
information call 722-7146.
Pawtucket
• Fogarty Manor Tenant
Association BINGO is open
Monday and Wednesday Nights,
doors open at 4p.m. and the
game starts at 6:30 p.m. until 8
p.m. Our address is 214
Roosevelt Ave.
• August 6 at 6 p.m., the
Pawtucket Library is hosting
“The Lego Movie.” The event is
free to all and the film will be
shown in the library's Campbell
Auditorium (in the basement).
Smithfield
• Swinging Squares of RI workshop, 7-9 p.m., East Smithfield
Neighborhood Center, 7
Esmond St.; $6 per person.
Cumberland
• St. Aidan’s meeting of seniors
at the parish center of the
church on Deiamond Hill Road.
Doors open at 8:30 and the
meeting begins at 10 a.m.
8
10
11
12
13
14
Cumberland
Central Falls
Pawtucket
Central Falls
East Providence
Burrillville
• Widow support group meets
every Sunday — the first two
Sundays of the month are at the
Community Chapel on Diamond
Hill Rd. The second two are at
Emerald Bay Manor, Diamond
Hill Road. All meetings 2 p.m.
Call 401-333-5815.
• Forand Manor holds Bingo
every Monday and Wednesday,
starting at 5:15 p.m.
• 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 St.,
Pawtucket. 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.
• Forand Manor holds Bingo
every Monday and Wednesday,
starting at 5:15 p.m.
• Farmers Market at the Weaver
Library from 4 to 7 p.m. The
market features fresh produce,
entertainment and workshops.
• Pascoag Council, 383,
Knights of Columbus proudly
continues its Friday Night Bingo
at the Columbus Club function
hall located at 98 Roosevelt
Ave., Pascoag, Fully approved
and licensed by the RI State
Police and Town of Burrillville, the
games begin promptly at 6:20
p.m.; doors open at 4:30 p.m.
and the kitchen at 5:00 p.m. The
bingo program includes a full
complement of regular games
and several higher-paying special
games including a split-the-pot.
An assortment of door prizes will
also be awarded each week. All
net proceeds from the Bingo will
be used to bolster the organization’s coffers and continuing
efforts to support various youth
and charitable causes within the
local community.
A full menu of freshly made food
items, including sandwiches,
burgers, French fries, etc. will be
available, as well as an assortment of packaged snacks and
drinks. For more information,
please call 401-568-1865.
Pawtucket
• Fogarty Manor Tenant
Association BINGO is open
Monday and Wednesday Nights,
doors open at 4p.m. and the
game starts at 6:30 p.m. until 8
p.m. Our address is 214
Pawtucket
• Fogarty Manor Tenant
Association BINGO is open
Monday and Wednesday Nights,
doors open at 4p.m. and the
game starts at 6:30 p.m. until 8
p.m. Our address is 214
2
• Our Lady Queen of Martyrs
Annual Festival in Park Square
from 6-11 p.m. Activities include
games, rides, food, raffle,
bingo, music, and more. Free
admission and free parking.
• Cash Mob gathering will meet
at Dave’s Marketplace in
Cumberland at 6 p.m. Two local
businesses will be announced at
the gathering and each person
attending agrees to spend
money, have fun and meet three
new people; sponsored by Buy
Local and the Northern R.I.
Chamber of Commerce.
• Library Board of Trustees
meeting at 5:30 p.m. in the
conference room.
Lincoln
• The Lincoln Public Library is
offering a Safe Sitter Program
on Wednesday July 30 at 9:15
a.m. to 4 p.m..
This one-day program is
designed for 11-14-year-olds.
Woonsocket
1
15
9
16
Send your community events to [email protected] or woonsocketcall.com
AMUSEMENTS
Wednesday, July 23, 2014
THE CALL A7
Girl and cousin both need
counseling after assault
DEAR ABBY:
My granddaughter
“Cindy,” age 2, was being
watched by her mommy’s exsister-in-law and her sons.
Cindy went to her mommy
and said, “Bubby hurt me.”
Bubby is what she calls her
10-year-old cousin. Her
mother called the police. A
policeman spoke to her and
said there wasn’t enough evidence. Now my granddaughter is scared of men.
The police went and
talked to the cousin who
said he “accidentally
touched her down there with
her pull-up on.” DCFS was
called in, and again it was a
man. We took Cindy to a
female doctor and Cindy
told the doctor everything
that happened to her. Now
she wakes up having nightmares and yells, “No, Bubby.
Stop!”
What’s a grandmother to
do to help her? We need justice for Cindy.
— DISTRAUGHT GRANDMOTHER
DEAR DISTRAUGHT:
You may need justice for
Cindy, but what Cindy needs
right now is professional
help to get past the trauma
of what was done to her.
Contact the nearest rape
treatment center, tell them
everything you have told me
and ask for their assistance
DEAR ABBY
Jeanne Phillips
in finding therapy for your
grandchild. They hear stories
like this all too often.
The boy who assaulted
Cindy also needs counseling
so that he won’t/can’t repeat
what he did to her with
another little girl. From my
perspective, both of these
children need professional
help.
DEAR ABBY:
For years I dated guys
who I knew wanted a committed relationship, while I
just wanted to have fun. I
enjoyed being single and
never saw myself getting
married. My mom was married three times to men who
abused her. It made the idea
of marriage terrifying to me.
Through counseling, I
Horoscope
By HOLIDAY MATHIS
ARIES (March 21-April 19).
It is said that a person cannot be
deceived who does not on some
level want to believe the deception. Whether or not that is true,
keep your eyes wide open, and
you’ll be impervious to such
things.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20).
It’s better to go through bad
times with good people than to
get on board with good times
with bad people. Take your company into careful consideration.
GEMINI (May 21-June 21).
Are you already the person you
want to be? Well, he or she is
somewhere inside you, that’s for
sure! Your potential will be realized — you can count on that.
Keep on with the mission.
CANCER (June 22-July 22).
Living well and fully is the
answer, not living long without
the passion of your conviction. If
you think it will take a lot out of
you, it’s probably a mission
worth your effort.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). You
are not worried about what people think of you, because you
assume that they don’t — mostly.
You should be warned, though,
that you’re more memorable and
entertaining than you think.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22).
Your personal qualities will
endure. So, do you know what
they are, and are you in touch
with them? It might be something to home in on now, as
you’ll be growing them for a lifetime.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23).
There will be an inconvenience,
a major inconvenience, in fact.
But if you think of this as a challenge in problem solving or, better yet, an adventure, you will
turn it into an opportunity
instead.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21).
Paper exchanged between you
and another will make a difference in your perception of that
person or business. It is one of
the most tangible forms of communication and is to be strongly
considered.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22Dec. 21). You’ll be putting a
price tag on your work. Don’t
think in terms of what you’re
worth. Think in terms of the
value you create in the lives of
others, and price accordingly.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19). People you grew up with
have influenced the definition of
your boundaries, but you don’t
have to leave those boundaries
where they are. You can change
and move them. You feel ready
for a redesign.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18). You can’t exactly yell out
“cut” like a movie director and
end the scene so everyone can
try the whole thing over from the
top. But you will be able to do
some version of that. You really
are the director, you know.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20).
At one time, you rather unconsciously selected people and circumstances to keep you in a
comfortable and familiar place.
Now you’re thinking differently,
and your eyes are wide open as
you guide yourself toward new
horizons.
have found healing from my
past. I regret the damage I
caused by leading guys on.
Now that I want to be married, my life feels empty.
While I used to enjoy my
independence, I now want to
share my experiences with
someone.
Because of the counseling
I have had, I know what I
shouldn’t settle for, but the
only guys asking me out are
sleazy. I feel like in some
ways life was easier when I
wanted to stay single. How
do I find a healthy balance
so I won’t go back to my old
ways or end up settling out
of desperation?
— HEALED
BUT CONFUSED
DEAR HEALED BUT
CONFUSED: One way
would be to continue the
counseling. While you may
want to be married now, desperation and neediness are
not traits that attract worthwhile men.
You need to be prepared
to take some time and find a
balance in your life while
you’re looking for Mr. Right.
Explore your own interests,
make friends with members
of both sexes, do some volunteering if you have the
time. If you do, the chances
of your meeting the right
kind of man will improve
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6 PM
6:30
PBS NewsHour (N) Å
WBZ News
CBS Evening
(N) Å
News/Pelley
NewsCenter 5 ABC World
at 6:00 (N)
News
ABC6 News at 6 ABC World
(N) Å
News
7 News at 6PM NBC Nightly
(N)
News (N)
NBC 10 News at NBC Nightly
6pm (N)
News (N)
12 News at 6 CBS Evening
News/Pelley
Fox 25 News at Fox 25 News at
6 (N) Å
6:30 (N)
Modern Fam- Modern Family Å
ily Å
World News
Nightly BusiAmerica
ness Report
Two and a Half Two and a Half
Men
Men
Well Read Å Nightly Business Report
The Middle Å The Middle Å
Entertainment Eyewitness
11
Tonight (N)
News
Cold Case The team searches for
20 15 15 a serial bomber.
Cold Case The team searches for
7
a serial bomber.
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
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
67
ESPN
30 34 49 49
ESPN2
29 35 50 50
ESPNC
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
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Sudoku solution
WEDNESDAY EVENING JULY 23, 2014
7:30
Greater BosRick Steves’
ton Å
Europe Å
Wheel of For- Jeopardy!
tune Å
(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 Å
(N) Å
Dish Nation
TMZ (N) Å
(N) Å
The Big Bang The Big Bang
Theory Å
Theory Å
America’s Test Are You Being
Kitchen
Served?
The Big Bang The Big Bang
Theory Å
Theory Å
Sara’s Week- America’s Test
night Meals
Kitchen
Modern Fam- Modern Family Å
ily Å
Access HolTMZ (N) Å
lywood (N)
Cold Case “Spiders” A murdered
teen’s abusive father.
Cold Case “Spiders” A murdered
teen’s abusive father.
7 PM
because you will have more
to offer.
7:30
8 PM
8:30
9 PM
9:30
My Wild Affair Chantek the
NOVA Fossils offer clues about
orangutan raised as a human.
early life. Å
Big Brother House guests vie for Extant John confronts Molly
the power of veto. (N)
about her behavior. (N)
The Middle Å The Goldbergs Modern Family (:31) The
Å
“iSpy”
Middle
(DVS)
The Middle Å The Goldbergs Modern Family (:31) The
Å
“iSpy”
Middle
(DVS)
America’s Got Talent “Boot Camp” The top 48 acts are announced.
(N) Å
America’s Got Talent “Boot Camp” The top 48 acts are announced.
(N) Å
Big Brother House guests vie for Extant John confronts Molly
the power of veto. (N)
about her behavior. (N)
So You Think You Can Dance “Top 16 Perform, 2 Eliminated” The
finalists perform; Misty Copeland. (N) Å
Arrow “Heir to the Demon” Dinah The 100 Clarke and Finn’s
is kidnapped. Å
romance is threatened. Å
John Sebastian Presents: Folk Rewind (My Music) Artists of the
1950s and ’60s. Å
Law & Order: Criminal Intent
Law & Order: Criminal Intent
Couple bludgeoned to death.
“To the Bone” Å
The Return of Sherlock HolDeath in Paradise Commerce
mes Å
Minister is found dead. Å
Arrow “Heir to the Demon” Dinah The 100 Clarke and Finn’s
is kidnapped. Å
romance is threatened. Å
So You Think You Can Dance “Top 16 Perform, 2 Eliminated” The
finalists perform; Misty Copeland. (N) Å
Cold Case New evidence conCold Case Lilly and Valens go to
firms teen’s murder. Å
West Virginia. Å
Cold Case New evidence conCold Case Lilly and Valens go to
firms teen’s murder. Å
West Virginia. Å
8 PM
8:30
9 PM
9:30
10 PM
10:30
Sex in the Wild “Orangutans”
Orangutans in Borneo. (N)
Criminal Minds The team tracks
a killer to Arizona.
Motive An investigation of a
kitchen explosion. (N)
Motive An investigation of a
kitchen explosion. (N)
(:01) Taxi Brooklyn “Ambush” A
female inmate escapes. (N)
(:01) Taxi Brooklyn “Ambush” A
female inmate escapes. (N)
Criminal Minds The team tracks
a killer to Arizona.
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 (N) Å
11 (N)
Two and a Half Two and a Half The Office Å The Office Å
Men
Men
Grand Canyon Serenade Visual BBC World
(Off Air)
tour of the Grand Canyon.
News Å
WBZ News
Seinfeld “The Seinfeld “The The Office Å
(N) Å
Dog” Å
Friars Club”
House of Cards A new king
PBS NewsHour (N) Å
alarms a prime minister.
7 News at 10PM on CW56 (N) Å Everybody-Ray- Everybody-Raymond
mond
Eyewitness
(:45) Sports
Seinfeld “The Family Guy Å
News at 10
Wrap
Dog” Å
Cold Case Evidence in a drug
Cold Case “Slipping” Suicide is
dealer’s freezer. Å
reclassified as a murder.
Cold Case Evidence in a drug
Cold Case “Slipping” Suicide is
dealer’s freezer. Å
reclassified as a murder.
10 PM
10:30
11 PM
11:30
Duck Dynasty Big Smo “Smit- Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty
Å
Å
Å
ney”
Finding Bigfoot: Further EviTo Be Announced
dence Å
(5:00) } Angels & Demons (2009, Suspense) Tom Hanks.
Robert Langdon confronts an ancient brotherhood. Å
106 & Park “Top 10 Countdown” Apollo Live Special performance
(N) Å
by Kierra Sheard. Å
The Real Housewives of Orange The Real Housewives of New
County “Fully Loaded”
Jersey “Oh, Christmas Tre”
Mad Money (N)
Restaurant Startup A mother and
daughter duo from N.Y.
(5:00) The Situ- Crossfire (N)
Erin Burnett OutFront (N)
ation Room
(5:56) South
(:27) Tosh.0 Å The Colbert
Daily Show/Jon
Park Å
Report Å
Stewart
SportsNet Cen- Early Edition
SportsNet
Early Edition
tral (N)
(N)
Central
Street Outlaws Doc wants to
American Muscle Richard Shermake a comeback. Å
man. Å
Austin & Ally Å Austin & Ally Å Austin & Ally Å Liv & Maddie Å
Untold With Maria Menounos
E! News (N)
Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Big Smo “Wor- (:31) Big Smo (:02) Big Smo (:32) Big Smo
Å
Å
Å
Å
“G.I. SI”
“Quack Draft” kin”’ (N)
(N) Å
Treehouse Masters: Out on a
Treehouse Masters International The Pool Master Anthony visits Treehouse Masters: Out on a
Limb “Treetop Taphouse”
“Japan”
some astonishing pools.
Limb “Treetop Taphouse”
} Jurassic Park III (2001, Adventure) Sam Neill. A search
} Jurassic Park III (2001, Adventure) Sam Neill. A search
party encounters new breeds of prehistoric terror. Å
party encounters new breeds of prehistoric terror. Å
Apollo Live Special performance } Middle of Nowhere (2012) Emayatzy Corinealdi. A
The Game Å The Game Å
by Musiq Soulchild.
woman considers leaving her imprisoned spouse for another.
The Real Housewives of New
Million Dollar Listing Miami
The Real Housewives of New
Watch What
Million Dollar
York City “The Last Leg”
“Relationship Negotiation” (N)
Jersey “Oh, Christmas Tre”
Happens: Live Listing Miami
American Greed Trevor Cook
American Greed Nevin Shapiro American Greed “The Car
American Greed Business partruns an investment fund.
creates a Ponzi scheme.
Con” (N)
ners steal millions.
Anderson Cooper 360 (N) Å
Anthony Bourdain Parts
CNN Tonight (N)
Anderson Cooper 360 Å
Unknown “Spain”
Key & Peele Å Key & Peele Å South Park Å South Park Å South Park Å South Park
Daily Show/Jon (:31) The Col“Insheeption” Stewart
bert Report
CES MMA XXII
CES MMA XX
Sports Tonight SportsNet Cen- Sports Tonight SportsNet Cen(N)
tral (N)
tral (N)
American Muscle: Ripped “Suh’s American Muscle MMA star
Naked and Afraid Survivalists
American Muscle MMA star
Anger Management”
Rashad Evans. (N) Å
face the Cambodian jungle.
Rashad Evans. Å
} Phineas and Ferb: The Movie: Across Dog With a
Dog With a
Jessie Å
Austin & Ally Å Liv & Madthe 2nd Dimension (2011) ‘NR’ Å
Blog Å
Blog Å
die Å
Keeping Up With the Kardashi- Keeping Up With the KarThe Soup (N) The Soup
Chelsea Lately E! News
ans “Move It or Lose It”
dashians
(N)
SportsCenter (N) Å
MLB Baseball San Francisco Giants at Philadelphia Phillies. From Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia. Baseball Tonight (N) Å
SportsCenter (N) Å
(N Subject to Blackout) Å
Around the
Pardon the
Soccer Tottenham Hotspur at Toronto FC. From BMO Field in
Soccer Manchester City at Sporting Kansas City. From Sporting
Olbermann (N) Å
Horn (N)
Interruption (N) Toronto. (N)
Park in Kansas City, Kan. (N)
(5:00) NASCAR Racing From
Who’s Number 1? Å
Who’s Number 1? Å
Who’s Number 1? Å
Who’s Number 1? Å
Who’s Number 1? Å
July 29, 2012. Å
EWTN News
Church Orders Daily Mass Å
EWTN Live (N)
EWTN News
The Holy
EWTN ReliVaticano
The Catholic
Women of
Nightly (N)
Nightly
Rosary
gious
View
Grace
Melissa &
Melissa &
Mystery Girls Young & Hun- Young & Hun- Mystery Girls } Liar Liar (1997, Comedy) Jim Carrey, Maura Tierney, Jen- The 700 Club Å
Joey Å
Joey Å
“Pilot” Å
gry Å
gry (N) Å
(N) Å
nifer Tilly. A fast-talking lawyer cannot tell a lie.
Diners, Drive- Diners, Drive- Restaurant: Impossible Mom & Restaurant Stakeout “Whine
Restaurant Stakeout Owners
Restaurant: Impossible “Fork in Restaurant: Impossible Saving a
Ins and Dives Ins and Dives Dad’s Italian Restaurant.
Bar”
seek to save their reputation.
the Road”
family run business.
}
}
(5:30)
Taken (2008) Liam Neeson. SlaAct of Valor (2012, Action) Roselyn Sanchez, Jason Cottle, Alex Veadov.
The Bridge Sonya and Marco
The Bridge Sonya and Marco
vers kidnap the daughter of a former spy.
Navy SEALs uncover a terrorist plot against America.
make a discovery. (N)
make a discovery.
Property Brothers A move to a Property Brothers “Joey and
Cousins Undercover A specialist Property Brothers (N) Å
House Hunters H Hunt. Int’l
Property Brothers “Maria &
serene and stylish home.
Mark” Å
who helps sick children.
(N) Å
Dave” Å
American Pickers The guys
American Pickers An Italian
American Pickers Bill’s south
American Pickers The guys meet American Pickers Strange road (:03) American Pickers A house
travel to Italy. Å
mega-pick in Bologna. Å
Florida stockpile. Å
an octogenarian artist.
trip through Florida.
that’s full of rare toys.
Bring It! The Dancing Dolls
Bring It! Dianna calls for an all- Bring It! The dancers feel pres- Bring It! Miss D begins building BAPs The ladies host a welcome (:01) BAPs The ladies host a
defend their title. Å
night rehearsal. Å
sure to perform. Å
a new team. (N) Å
home party. Å
welcome home party. Å
True Life Over-dependent
Finding Carter Carter deals with Virgin Territory Lisa wants to
Teen Mom 2 Jenelle learns the Teen Mom 2 Nathan’s approach- Virgin Territory A Christian virgin
mothers.
a betrayal from Bird.
wait for her wedding.
gender of her baby.
ing jail time. (N)
is tempted. (N)
Red Sox First Red Sox Game- MLB Baseball Boston Red Sox at Toronto Blue Jays. From Rogers Centre in Toronto. (N Subject to
Extra Innings Red Sox Final Sports Today
Sports Today
Pitch (N)
Day
Blackout)
Live (N)
(N)
LIVE (N)
LIVE
iCarly Å
The Thunder- Sam & Cat
Every Witch
Full House Å Full House Å Full House Å Full House Å Full House Å Full House Å Friends Å
(:36) Friends Å
mans Å
“NewGoat”
Way (N)
}
}
}
(4:30)
Swamp
The 6th Day (2000, Science Fiction) Arnold Schwarzenegger, Tony Goldwyn.
Hellboy (2004, Fantasy) Ron Perlman, John Hurt, Selma Blair. The son of Aliens on Moon
Volcano Å
A helicopter pilot is cloned without his consent. Å
the devil fights paranormal creatures. Å
Cops “Family
Jail Å
Cops “Jackson- Cops Traffic
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops “Coast to Cops A burglar- Cops “Coast to Cops Officers Cops “New
Jail Å
Feuds” Å
ville”
stop. Å
Coast”
ized home.
Coast”
find heroin.
Jersey” Å
Who Do You Think You Are?
Who Do You Think You Are?
Who Do You Think You Are?
Who Do You Think You Are?
Who Do You Think You Are?
Who Do You Think You Are?
“Christina Applegate” Å
“Chelsea Handler” Å
“Sarah Jessica Parker”
“Cynthia Nixon” Å
“Matthew Broderick” Å
“Cynthia Nixon” Å
(:01) Castle Evidence links Castle (:02) Castle A murder occurs
(:03) The Last Ship A team
Castle Investigating a weather- Castle A storage unit connected Castle A man collapses in
to a murder.
during a convention.
searches for monkeys. Å
caster’s death.
to a murder.
Castle’s pool. Å (DVS)
Teen Titans Go! World of Gum- Adventure Time Regular Show King of the
King of the
The Cleveland The Cleveland American
American
Family Guy Å Family Guy Å
ball
Hill Å
Hill Å
Show
Show
Dad Å
Dad Å
The Andy
The Andy
The Andy
The Andy
The Andy
The Andy
The King of
The King of
Hot in Cleve- Jennifer Falls Hot in Cleve- Jennifer Falls
Å
Griffith Show Griffith Show Griffith Show Griffith Show Griffith Show Griffith Show Queens Å
Queens Å
land (N)
(N) Å
land Å
Law & Order: Special Victims
Law & Order: Special Victims
Law & Order: Special Victims
Suits “Litt the Hell Up” Logan
(:01) Graceland Paige is deep
(:02) Modern (:32) Modern
Unit “Dominance” Å
Unit “Desperate” Å
Unit “Strange Beauty”
Sanders is brought in. (N)
undercover. (N)
Family
Family
Seinfeld “The Seinfeld “The Seinfeld Å
Seinfeld “The Family Guy Å Family Guy Å The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Conan (N) Å
(DVS)
(DVS)
Theory
Theory
Theory
Theory
Finale” Å
Finale” Å
Maestro”
6 PM
6:30
7 PM
7:30
} Gone in Sixty Seconds (2000) Nicolas Cage. A retired thief
must steal 50 cars to save his brother. ‘PG-13’ Å
(5:45) } The Wolverine (2013) Hugh Jackman. Wolverine
confronts the prospect of real mortality. ‘PG-13’ Å
(:15) } Riddick (2013, Science Fiction) Vin Diesel. Wanted
criminal Riddick confronts two teams of mercenaries. ‘R’ Å
(:15) } Man on a Ledge (2012) Sam Worthington. A disgraced ex-cop steps onto the ledge of a high-rise. ‘PG-13’
(4:40) } (:20) } Frozen (2013, Musical Comedy)
Austenland
Voices of Kristen Bell. ‘PG’ Å
} Stakeout (1987, Suspense) Richard Dreyfuss. A detective falls for a woman he is assigned to observe. ‘R’ Å
8 PM
8:30
9 PM
9:30
10 PM
10:30
11 PM
DISH DTV P-VF BrVF BuVF
11:30
} Picture Perfect (1997, Romance-Comedy) (:45) } Selena (1997, Biography) Jennifer Lopez, Edward James Olmos,
Jennifer Aniston, Jay Mohr. ‘PG-13’ Å
Jon Seda. Mexican-American singer skyrockets to fame. ‘PG’ Å
True Blood Sookie hosts a party } The Internship (2013, Comedy) Vince Vaughn. Old-school Real Time With Bill Maher Å
in Bon Temps. Å
salesmen finagle internships at Google. ‘PG-13’ Å
(:15) } Mama (2013) Jessica Chastain. A ghostly entity fol- } The Hills Have Eyes (2006, Horror) Aaron Stanford,
lows two feral girls to their new home. ‘PG-13’ Å
Vinessa Shaw. Bloodthirsty mutants hunt fresh meat. ‘R’ Å
} Beauty Shop (2005) Queen Latifah. A determined hairstyl- Masters of Sex Masters begins } The Canyons (2013) Lindist competes with her former boss. ‘PG-13’ Å
his new job. Å
say Lohan. ‘R’ Å
(:05) } Brown Sugar (2002) Taye Diggs, Mos Def. Childhood Power (iTV) Tommy and Ruiz
(:05) } Derailed (2005)
friends won’t admit they love each other. ‘PG-13’ Å
settle their differences. Å
Clive Owen. ‘R’ Å
} In the Name of the Father (1993) Daniel Day-Lewis. An (:15) } Veronica Guerin (2003, Biography) Cate Blanchett.
Irishman and his son are wrongly imprisoned in Britain.
An Irish journalist probes mobsters’ ties to drugs. ‘R’ Å
6
6
6
2
2
4
4
5
5
6
7
10
10
10
10
12
12
12
12
7
8
28
28
9
9
36
36
8
8
18
3
3
44
26
64
64
11
11
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
76
299 170 252 252 252
244 122 180 180 180
262 168
54
54
54
280 183 139 139 139
245 138
51
51
51
296 176 257 257 257
301 106 244 244 244
242 105
50
50
50
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
WEATHER/LOCAL
A8 THE CALL
Wednesday, July 23, 2014
Today’s Forecast
Narragansett
Buzzards
Merrimack to
Chatham to
Bay
Bay
Chatham
Watch Hill
Weather
.............. Hazy, Humid......
Wind (knots)
SW 10-20
Seas (feet)
WED THU
FRI
SAT
SUN
Visibility (miles)
SW 12-25
SW 10-20
SW 12-25
2
2-4
2-4
4-6
3-5
3-5
3-5
3-5
Mark Searles’s Southern New England Area Forecast
80-88 74-78
68-72 68-72
Shwrs/Storm
77-82
60-65
Less Humid
80-84
60-65
82-86
65-70
P. Sunny
P. Sunny
P. Sunny
The southwest wind continues today, keeping humidity levels high across the
area. Temperatures will surge into the upper 80s away from the coast today, upper
70s likely at the extreme south coast. A cold front pressing in from the northwest
this afternoon will trigger scattered thundersatorms...some could be quite strong.
These storms will mainly be off to our northwest. Although as they weaken some
showers COULD passthrough overnight into the morning.
Five Day Forecast data supplied by Storm Team 10
Gannon recognized as Pawtucket Soup Kitchen hero
Ex-Patriots star
presents group
with $10K check
By JOSEPH B. NADEAU
[email protected].
PAWTUCKET – Ray
Gannon knows all too well
that it takes plenty of volunteers to keep an organization
working to help people in
need. He has seen that
proven again and again as he
helped run the Pawtucket
Soup Kitchen at 195 Walcott
St. since its founding in
1992, and witnessed the ups
and downs in support over
the years.
Now thanks to the Kraft
Family and New England
Patriots Charitable
Foundation, Gannon’s good
work is helping the kitchen
in an even bigger way, to the
tune of $10,000.
Gannon is among the 26
winners of the 2014 Myra
Kraft Community MVP
Awards.
One grand prize of
$25,000 was awarded to a
member of the group, and
Gannon was among the ten
earning $10,000 secondplace awards.
All of the cash awards
were made to the organization where the honorees volunteer.
To help Gannon celebrate
the Pawtucket Soup
Kitchen’s receipt of $10,000
from the Kraft and Patriots
foundation, Steve Nelson, a
former Patriots linebacker
and a member of the Patriots
Hall of Fame, joined
Gannon in serving an
evening meal and also to
hand over a copy of the
donation check. The kitchen
is located in the basement
community room of Holy
Family Parish on Walcott
Street and serves many families in the neighborhood in
addition to members of the
homeless community.
Nelson said he believes
players have a responsibility
to “give back to the community,” and that was why he
went to meet Gannon on
Tuesday. “He has been volunteering in the Soup
Kitchen for over 20 years
and helps to serve 27,000
meals to people in need each
year,” Nelson said. “There
were over 350 nominees for
the awards, and Ray was
selected to receive one,” he
said while describing
Gannon as very deserving of
the team and foundation’s
recognition.
Gannon had not met
Nelson prior to Tuesday, but
said he found him to be “a
tremendous guy.”
The fact that the Krafts
and Patriots were donating
funding to the Soup Kitchen
was an even more important
tribute, Gannon said.
“It is awesome to think
they gave $10,000 to the
Soup Kitchen,” he said.
“That will go an enormously
long way to helping those in
need,” he said. “It is a great
day.”
Gannon was also honored
by visits from close friends
like longtime kitchen volunteer Irving Basiliere, 90, and
his family, and Rhode Island
notables such as Attorney
General Peter Kilmartin,
retired Superior Court Judge
Joseph Keough, a member
of the kitchen’s board of
directors, and former R.I.
State Police Col. Brendan
Doherty.
Keough said Gannon was
“an outstanding” person and
his tribute “long overdue.”
Gannon’s granddaughter
said she also believed he
was deserving of such an
honor.
“It’s wonderful because
he has been doing such
amazing work for so many
years and he is just as humble as ever,” she said. “It is
so nice that he has finally
gotten the recognition. His
family is thrilled.”
Follow Joseph Nadeau on
Twitter @JNad75
Above, from left, former New
England Patriots linebacker
Steve Nelson, Pawtucket
Soup Kitchen manager Ray
Gannon and R.I. Attorney
General and Pawtucket resident Peter Kilmartin display a
$10,000 check the kitchen
received Tuesday from the
New England Patriots
Charitable Foundation after
Gannon was honored as a
Myra Kraft Community MVP
for his years of service to the
kitchen. In left photo, from
left, Elijah Goncalves, 9;
Ismael Luben, 10; and Jamari
Goncalves, 7, all of
Pawtucket, enjoy dinner after
receiving autographed photos
of Nelson and some Patriots
memorabilia.
Call Photos/Joseph B. Nadeau
Friday vigil to serve as memorial for two homeless men’s deaths
By JOSEPH B. NADEAU
[email protected]
PAWTUCKET – The deaths of
two homeless men in Providence
will draw members of the organizations working to help those in
need to a candlelight vigil at
Cathedral Square Friday evening.
Karen Jeffreys, of the R.I.
Coalition for the Homeless, at
1070 Main St., said the evening’s
observances will be the third such
vigil the organizations and volunteers have held since committing
to remember any homeless person
who dies while living on the
streets in Rhode Island.
The groups participating the
Statewide Outreach Committee
will be gathering to remember
Luis Belmont, 45, beaten on
March 13 this year and who died
at Rhode Island Hospital of blunt
head trauma and complications on
March 31; and Milton Lyles, who
was attacked and beaten on May
19 this year and died of his
injuries at Rhode Island Hospital
on June 13.
The vigil for the two victims of
crimes against the homeless will
follow two other vigils held to
remember two men dying while
living on the streets, according to
Jim Ryczek, executive director of
Apple pie contest
at ‘Dogapalooza’ Aug. 2
PAWTUCKET — The Pawtucket
Dog Park Committee’s “Dogapalooza”
Summer Festival 2014 will present “The
Best Apple Pie Contest” Saturday, Aug.
2, at 2 p.m.
Deadline for entries to be received is
July 30, and the contest is limited to the
first 12 entrants. There is a $5 entry fee.
Pies will be judged in three categories:
• Overall Appearance — texture, consistency, inside texture
• Taste — flavor strength, balance of
ingredients, taste of crust
• Overall Impression — creativity,
impressiveness, memorable
the R.I. Coalition for the
Homeless.
The prior observances were for
a homeless man who died in fire
in a truck where he was staying to
keep warm, and another with medical problems.
“We all promised as a group
that if someone died on the street
we would hold a vigil to remember them,” Ryczek said. “So on
Friday we will have a speaking
program and we are inviting all of
the Providence politicians and candidates for governor and lieutenant
governor and members of the
General Assembly to join us,” he
said.
The Rev. Donna Williams will
serve as master of ceremonies, and
Teny Gross of the Center for the
Study and Practice of NonViolence will speak about
Belmont’s and Lyles’ deaths.
Ryczek said he plans to address
the gathering about the problem of
finding shelter for the homeless in
Rhode Island and the lack of
affordable housing in the state in
general.
The work by groups such as
the R.I. Coalition for the Homeless
and volunteers and by health care
providers is bringing more people
off the streets and into the care
system, but once in, there is not
enough movement of those gaining assistance into permanent
housing, he noted.
And for those remaining on the
street, the risks are great, according to the Coalition. The mortality
rate for individuals experiencing
homelessness is 3 to 4 times that
of the general population.
The vigil will begin to assemble
at the Square in front of Saints
Peter and Paul Cathedral off 30
Fenner St. in Providence at 6 p.m.,
and the speaking program at 7
p.m. For more information on the
Coalition’s efforts to help the
homeless, call 401-721-5685 or
email [email protected].
CF’s contracted school custodians vote to join union
CENTRAL FALLS – Local school custodians working for the school’s department contracted provider GCA Service Group, Inc.,
have voted to join the Rhode Island Council
94 labor union, Council 94 reported Tuesday.
“Central Falls school custodians made an
important decision today; a decision to stand
for dignity, for their future and the future of
their families,” Gladys Gould, a Council 94
organizer, said.
“They worked hard to secure a strong
voice in their workplace and now, R.I.
Council 94 will work hard to negotiate a good
contract for those custodians who day in and
day out make sure the students, parents, and
staff have clean and safe schools in Central
Falls,” she said.
RI Council, which represents many school
custodians in different cities and towns across
Rhode Island, had represented custodians in
Central Falls before they were privatized.
Gould said that status changed for the Central
Falls employees on Thursday.
J. Michael Downey, RI Council 94 president, said the union is proud of its new members. “R.I. Council 94 has vast experience
negotiating good contracts and setting the
standards for this industry in the public sector
and now is the time to extend those benefits to
the private sector,” he said.
Gatehouse Media parent company agrees to buy Providence Journal
PROVIDENCE (AP) — The
parent company of Gatehouse
Media LLC on Tuesday
announced an agreement to buy
The Providence Journal and relat-
ed print and digital assets from
A.H. Belo Corp. for $46 million
cash.
New York-based New Media
Investment Group Inc. said it
expects to complete the deal for
the newspaper in the third quarter.
“The Providence Journal is one
of the most established and
prominent newspapers in the
United States and is the pre-eminent provider of local content to
the greater Providence marketplace,” New Media President
Michael Reed said.
SPORTS
Blackstone Valley
THE CALL, Wednesday, July 23, 2014 — B1
CHANGING
American Legion
FACES IN
VALLEY
Photo by Ernest A. Brown
Navigant Post 85’s E.J. Torres dives into a base during a
recent game. On Tuesday, Torres drove in a run to help
Navigant finish its regular season strong in a 6-2 win.
Navigant/85
nabs 6-2 win
over Post 22
By JON BAKER
[email protected]
ATHLETICS
With retirement of longtime AD Frank Geiselman, Cumberland
joins Tolman, Shea and Woonsocket in seeing turnover at post
WOONSOCKET –
Navigant/Fairmount Post 85
co-skippers Buster Perreault
and Jim Gauthier maintained
a particular plan for its pitching during their season-ending R.I. American Legion
Senior Division twinbill
against Team Stores USA
Post 22 late Tuesday afternoon.
The pre-game philosophy
included starting John
Almeida for three frames,
moving to fellow righthander
Miguel Raymond for another
trio before opting for closer
Scott Tucker in the seventh.
Having already secured a
playoff spot, it seemed a
stellar idea. It turned out to
be one as well.
Almeida allowed just
three hits (without a run) and
a walk with three whiffs in
his initial shutout innings,
and Raymond delivered virtually the same, yielding two
hits and a pair of walks with
one “K.” With that, not to
mention Kevin Valentine’s
masterful 3-for-4 performance at the plate, Navigant
cruised to a 6-2 triumph over
North Kingstown’s Team
Stores in the opener at
Renaud Field.
See NAVIGANT, page B2
By BRENDAN McGAIR | [email protected]
CUMBERLAND
A
lthough Frank Geiselman has officially retired
from Cumberland High School as the Clippers’
athletic director, he hasn’t fully abandoned ship
just yet.
Geiselman is still overseeing the town’s varsity, junior
varsity and middle school sports programs while a
search for his successor takes place. Once a candidate is
found, he will remain on board for a while longer to help
make the transition a smooth one.
“Even though I’ve resigned, there are still some
things that need to get done before someone is put in
place,” Geiselman said.
When you’ve been involved in Clipper athletics for as
long as Geiselman has – the Pawtucket native and
Tolman High graduate has been a part of the sports
scene on the Mendon Road campus since 1971 – making
a clean break is easier said than done. But Geiselman,
67, says that he’s at peace with his decision to step aside.
Reached earlier this week at his office at the Sher-LeMon Swim Club, Geiselman said that retirement from
See ATHLETICS, page B3
Clockwise from top left: Frank Geiselman, Frank Laliberte, Kate Corry and Carnell Henderson.
Former Red Sox
pitcher Ken
Ryan, pictured
instructing a
group of players
at a baseball
camp, says he
plans to move
the KR Baseball
Academy from
Pawtucket to a
new building in
Lincoln.
File photo
International League
Betts, Barnes lead PawSox past Chiefs
SYRACUSE – The Pawtucket
Red Sox rallied for six runs in the
first two frames and held on for a
satisfying 8-3 victory over the
Syracuse Chiefs before 3,822 fans at
NBT Bank Stadium on Tuesday
night.
Matt Barnes (5-7) earned the win,
yielding just three hits, two runs
(both earned) and a trio of walks
with a pair of strikouts in 6 1/3
innings. Blake Treinan (6-1) took his
first loss for the Chiefs (60-44) after
lasting just five, yielding eight hits,
seven runs (all earned) and two passes with three strikeouts.
Mookie Betts led the Sox, going
2-for-5 with three RBI and two runs
scored, while Jonathan Herrera went
2-for-4 with two RBI and two runs
scored (raising his batting average to
.395) and Carlos Rivero 2-for-4 with
a double and a pair of RBI.
Pawtucket (now 57-48) started
with bats blazing, plating a pair in
the opening frame. Betts opened the
surge with a leadoff hit to center,
then scored on Herrera’s soft triple
to right. With one down, Travis
Shaw grounded to second to score
Herrera.
See PAWSOX, page B2
Little League baseball
Ryan’s baseball
academy looks
to new facilities
Ex-pitcher planning
move to Lincoln
By BRENDAN McGAIR
State title
match-up set:
Cumberland
vs. Cranston
In the loser’s bracket final
played Tuesday at the Rhode
Island State Little League
Tournament, Cranston
Western topped Coventry, pictured at left, 8-5. Cranston will
face Cumberland on Thursday
for the major division state
championship.
Jerry Silberman• risportsphoto.com
[email protected]
KR Baseball Academy is
on the move after a successful 10-year run in Pawtucket.
Though nothing is official, the owner hopes everything regarding the academy’s new Lincoln location
will be signed, sealed and
delivered by the middle of
next week. More specifically, Ken Ryan plans to inhabit
space on 100 Higginson
Ave., which is situated in the
Lonsdale section of town.
“It’s going to be a very
nice facility and similar to
what we had,” said Ryan, the
Pawtucket native who
pitched for both the PawSox
and Red Sox.
If everything checks out
accordingly, Ryan plans to
be up and running in
October with a grand unveiling scheduled either on a
Sunday in the same month or
in November.
It appears that the new
home for KR Baseball
Academy is going to be part
of an emerging sports and
entertainment complex.
Based on what Ryan has
been told, a Formula One
race track is going right next
to his baseball school. It’s
also possible that mini golf
could be part of a setup that
already features an indoor
rock-climbing venue.
“I was very fortunate to
find this place,” Ryan noted.
“You’re going to be in an
See RYAN, page B3
SPORTS
B2 THE CALL
Wednesday, July 23, 2014
PawSox
MLB
Continued from page B1
The PawSox tacked on four more in
the second, with Garin Cecchini earning a leadoff pass. Ryan Roberts flew
to center for the first out, but Alex
Hassan’s single to left pushed
Cecchini to third, and Dan Butler
walked to fill the bags.
Just as quickly, Betts’ ground
triple down the right-field stripe plated all three, and he trotted home on
Herrera’s sacrifice fly in the same
direction, giving them a 6-0 cushion.
The hometowners added a run in
the fifth after Will Middlebrooks
poked an initial bloop hit to left. He
took second when Travis Shaw did
the same, then raced in once Carlos
Rivero knocked another soft single to
left and Jeff Kobermus bobbled the
ball.
Photo by Louriann Mardo-Zayat
Syracuse answered with a run in
Mookie
Betts,
back
with
Pawtucket
after
a
stint
in
the
majors,
is once again terrorthe back half of the sixth, doing so
izing International League pitching. His triple with the bases loaded on Tuesday
courtesy after Emmanuel Burriss
night broke the game open in a 9-3 PawSox win.
drive an initial two-bagger to right,
took third on Kobermus’ groundout
and skipper Kevin Boles immediately reliever Chris Hernandez gleaned the
to second and scored on Steven
replaced Barnes with Dalier
next two outs to avoid further damSouza’s sacrifice fly to center.
Hinojosa.
age.
The PawSox, however, mustered
He
yielded
Solano
a
single
to
left,
another in the seventh. Herrera and
Pawtucket
240 010 101-- 9 – 11 – 0
moving Perez to third, and – after
Middlebrooks started the flurry with
Syracuse
000 001 110-- 3 – 7 – 1
Solano
stole
second
–
Perez
raced
in
Matt Barnes, Dalier Hinojosa (7) and Dan
singles before Shaw walked to fill
on Will Rhymes’ sacrifice fly to
Butler. Blake Trainen, Neil Holland (6), Daniel
the bags. Rivero plated Herrera on a
right. It also manufactured another in Strange (8) and Jhonatan Solano. WP – Barnes
sacrifice fly for the 8-1 cushion, but
LP – Trainen (6-1). 2B – Perez (4),
the eighth. Hinojosa allowed Souza a (5-7).
Cecchini and Roberts both flew out
Burriss (14), Moore (14). 3B – Herrera (1),
lead single and Tyler Moore doubled
Betts (2). E – SF – Herrera, Rivero, Souza,
to center.
Rhymes, Laird. SB – Solano (1). E – Kobermus
him to third before he scored on
The hosts manufactured one more
(2). LOB – Pawtucket 6, Syracuse 10.
Brandon
Laird’s
sacrifice
fly.
Destin
in the seventh following Perez’ abiliHood walked to load the bases, but
T - 3:22. A – 3,822.
ty to reach on a one-out, infield hit,
Navarro, Reyes homer as
Blue Jays beat Red Sox 7-3
NBA
CEO: Rivers to quit Clippers if Sterling stays
LOS ANGELES (AP) — The
interim CEO of the Los Angeles
Clippers testified Tuesday that coach
Doc Rivers told him he will quit if
Donald Sterling remains the owner of
the team.
CEO Richard Parsons made the
statement at a trial to determine
whether Sterling’s wife Shelly
Sterling can sell the team for $2 billion to former Microsoft CEO Steve
Ballmer.
The NBA has tried to force out
Donald Sterling since soon after racist
statements emerged on recordings in
April.
“Doc is troubled by this maybe
moreso than anybody else,” Parsons
said on the witness stand about
Rivers, who is black. “If Mr. Sterling
continues as owner, he does not want
to continue as coach.”
Parsons said he fears there would
also be an exodus of key players,
including team captain Chris Paul,
who also is black and heads the NBA
players union.
Parsons was about to give an
account of his conversations with
Paul but was stopped by an objection
by an NBA lawyer who said it would
be an invasion of privacy. The judge
upheld the objection.
Rivers has said he had heard from
other Clippers business employees
that they didn’t think they would be
able to work for Sterling under the
circumstances.
Parsons is a former chief executive
at Time Warner and Citigroup who
took over leadership of the Clippers
in May during the media blitz surrounding the banishment of Sterling.
Under questioning by Ballmer’s
lawyer, Parsons said the departure of
Rivers would begin “a death spiral”
for the Clippers.
“If Doc were to leave, that would
be a disaster,” Parsons said. “Doc is
the father figure, the one who leads.
He’s the coach. He’s the grown-up.
He is able to connect with people and
earn their trust. The team believes in
him and loves him.
“If he were to leave, that is only
going to accelerate the death spiral,”
Parson said.
The discussion of Clippers players
and coaches is new territory for the
trial that has mostly explored the dealings between the Sterlings.
It wasn’t immediately clear what
effect the new information might have
on the narrow question under consideration of whether Shelly Sterling can
sell the team under the family trust.
Messages left for team officials
seeking comment from Rivers weren’t
immediately returned.
Parsons, who is considered an
expert in the management of major
corporations, said he was certain that
sponsors would pull out and season
ticket holders would demand their
money back if Donald Sterling
remains as owner.
“If your coach leaves, if your players don’t want to play with you, what
do you have?” Parsons asked. “If
your sponsors leave and the fans
leave, it’s going to spiral down and
down.”
He said key sponsors such as
Mandalay Bay Resorts in Las Vegas
are cold about whether they will continue, as are other companies including Kia Motors Corp.
“We have a bunch of sponsors sitting at the edge of the pool and they
don’t want to go in if the Sterlings are
there,” Parsons said.
Parsons also said he doesn’t
believe that anyone will offer as
much money for the team as Ballmer.
The high-stakes financial fight
centers on whether Shelly Sterling
was authorized to make a deal with
Ballmer on behalf of the Sterling
Family Trust.
While she was negotiating, Donald
Sterling revoked the trust, a move
designed to rescind his signed agreement for the sale of the Clippers,
which he bought for just $12 million.
He announced from the witness
stand earlier in the trial that he would
never sell the team and would be
suing the NBA for the rest of his life.
AP source: Cavs to sign Andrew Wiggins to contract
CLEVELAND (AP) — Andrew
Wiggins will sign his rookie contract
with the Cavaliers. It’s still not clear
if he’ll play for them.
A person familiar with the negotiations says the Cavs will sign the
No. 1 overall pick to his deal, an
agreement that would prevent any
potential trade involving the small
forward from being completed for 30
days.
The Minnesota Timberwolves and
Cavaliers have been discussing a
potential deal that would send AllStar forward Kevin Love to the
Navigant
Continued from page B1
Almeida, about to enter
his sophomore “fall-ball”
season at Boston’s Lasell
College, had twirled a nohitter back on July 8 during
a 4-0 victory over host Hurd
Chevrolet Post 64 of
Johnston, but didn’t last long
in his last stint.
He nevertheless wowed
his skippers once more
Tuesday.
“For a small kid, he’s
sneaky fast, and he has one
of the best change-ups
we’ve seen in years,”
Cavaliers for Wigging, Anthony
Bennett and other pieces. The person
familiar with the talks says Wiggins
will sign with Cleveland as early as
Wednesday. The person spoke to The
Associated Press on Tuesday on condition of anonymity because the
team is not commenting on its plans.
The Cavs and Timberwolves have
had ongoing discussions about a
trade for Love since before
Cleveland selected Wiggins first in
May. The Timberwolves have always
insisted that Wiggins be involved in
any package, a stipulation the
Gauthier stated after his club
improved to 11-10. “And
Miguel, he’s been a workhorse all summer. What’s
nice about both of them,
they hate to be taken out.
They want to stay in there
and battle.
“Our goal all along was
to get a lot of our pitchers
three innings of work,” he
added. “We didn’t want to
overload them in preparation
of the playoffs (which begin
Saturday at West Warwick’s
McCarthy Field). At the
beginning of the night, we
could’ve finished as high as
fourth and as low as eighth
in the team standings, so we
On The Banner
PHOTO FEATURED IN PIC OF THE DAY LAST WEEK
May 23, 2014 - Mount junior Matthew Saviano battles
Classical opponent Joe Zurien in the number 3 singles
match during the Div. II boys tennis state championship
at Slater Park Saturday. Ernest A. Brown/RIMG photo
Cavaliers initially resisted.
To help in their pursuit of Love,
the Cavs traded guard Carrick Felix
to Utah on Tuesday for three players
with non-guaranteed contracts.
Cleveland acquired guard John
Lucas III and forwards Malcolm
Thomas and Erik Murphy from the
Jazz in exchange for Felix, a secondround draft pick and cash considerations.
The trade will allow the Cavs to
clear $3.3 million in salary cap
space, room to potentially sign Love
or other players.
still have no idea who we
could face.”
Team Stores fell to 10-101 following the defeat. Tall,
lanky righty Ryan
Worthington took the loss
after allowing two hits, two
runs (both earned) and four
walks while fanning a pair.
For Navigant, Mount St.
Charles junior-to-be
Valentine paced his offense
with a double, three RBI and
a run scored. Almeida
helped himself, going 0-for1 with two walks, an RBI
and a run, while E.J. Torres
went 1-for-3 with an RBI;
Will Andino 1-for-4; Brad
Shatraw 0-for-3 with a walk,
a pair of stolen bases and
two runs; MSC junior Alex
Lataille 0-for-3 with two
robbed bags and a run; and
Raymond 1-for-2 with a
double, walk and run.
Still, Post 22 seemed
poised to break a scoreless
tie in the second after Chad
Mansolillo roped a one-out
double to deep left, but
Chris Lenox popped out to
Almeida, who made a
superb running catch near
the third-base foul line, then
fanned Jay Montenaro.
Worthington needed only
nine deliveries to retire Post
85 in the first, but ran into
trouble in the second. After
issuing a pass to Lataille to
start the frame, the hurler
caused Brandon Rainville
and Torres to fly to left, but
Raymond walked, and he
and Lataille pulled off a
double-steal before catcher
Alex Denoyelle drew a
“freebie” to juice the bags.
Almeida plated Lataille
with his pass for the 1-0
lead, though Andino flew to
deep right to end the threat.
Brian Cox whacked a
double to right with two
down in the third, and
Almeida walked Adam
Noble before Matt Ricard
reached on an infield single
to load the bases. Ty
Lamane, however, grounded
to second as Navigant
trimmed that possible rally.
It wouldn’t be the last
time.
In the back half of the
fourth, Raymond hustled out
a leadoff double on an oppo-
IAN HARRISON
Associated Press
TORONTO — J.A. Happ
pitched six shutout innings
for his first victory in three
starts, Dioner Navarro and
Jose Reyes homered and the
Toronto Blue Jays beat the
Boston Red Sox 7-3 on
Tuesday night.
Reyes and Navarro both
connected in the sixth inning
as the Blue Jays rebounded
from Monday's 14-1 defeat
to snap Boston's winning
streak at five games.
Reyes and Melky Cabrera
both had three hits and two
RBIs. Cabrera has 14 multihit games in his past 30.
David Ortiz hit a solo
homer in the eighth, his third
homer in two games and the
36th of his career at Rogers
Centre, matching Alex
Rodriguez for the most by a
visiting player.
Happ (8-5) allowed seven
hits in six innings, walked
one and struck out four to
win for the first time since
beating the Chicago White
Sox on June 26.
Dustin McGowan allowed
Ortiz's homer in 1 2-3
innings and Aaron Loup
needed just one pitch to
retire pinch-hitter Daniel
Nava for the final out of the
eighth.
Casey Janssen got two
outs in the ninth but gave up
a two-run homer to Stephen
Drew. Brett Cecil got the
final out for his fourth save
in five chances.
The Red Sox have hit at
least one home run in seven
straight games.
Toronto opened the scoring in the third on a two-out
single by Cabrera that struck
Red Sox right-hander Jake
Peavy in the leg and rolled
into foul territory as Anthony
Gose scored.
Reyes led off the sixth
with his eighth home run and
Cabrera followed with a
double. One out later,
Navarro made it 4-0 with a
drive into the bullpen in
right.
Peavy (1-9) left in the
seventh after infield hits by
Gose and Reyes. Cabrera
greeted Burke Badenhop
with another RBI single that
struck the pitcher.
Peavy lost for the ninth
time in 15 starts and has not
won since beating Toronto
on April 25. He allowed five
runs and eight hits in 6 1-3
innings, walked three and
struck out seven.
Toronto made it 7-1 in the
eighth, scoring twice against
Felix Doubront. Ryan Goins
hit an RBI single and scored
on a double by Reyes.
Boston scored a seasonhigh 14 runs in Monday's
rout but couldn't duplicate
that output against Happ.
The Red Sox loaded the
bases with two outs in the
fourth but Drew flied out.
Boston got consecutive
singles from Mike Napoli
and Jonny Gomes to begin
the sixth, but Shane
Victorino grounded into a
double play and Drew struck
out.
Red Sox second baseman
Dustin Pedroia went 0 for 4
with a walk and is hitless in
17 at-bats.
NOTES: Toronto selected
top prospect RHP Aaron
Sanchez from Triple-A
Buffalo. The Blue Jays
recalled Goins and selected
RHP Esmil Rogers from
Triple-A. To make room,
Toronto optioned C Erik
Kratz and OF Darin
Mastroianni to Triple-A and
designated LHP Brad Mills
for assignment. ... Canadian
tennis star Milos Raonic
served the first pitch with a
racket, skipping it past Blue
Jays pitcher Mark Buehrle to
the backstop. ... Boston RHP
Clay Buchholz faces Blue
Jays RHP R.A. Dickey on
Wednesday.
Yankees acquire 3B Chase
Headley from Padres
MIKE FITZPATRICK
AP Sports Writer
NEW YORK — Trying to
boost one of the weakest
lineups in the American
League, the New York
Yankees acquired third baseman Chase Headley from
the San Diego Padres on
Tuesday for rookie infielder
Yangervis Solarte and minor
league pitcher Rafael De
Paula.
Headley arrived at
Yankee Stadium right
around game time Tuesday
night and was in uniform
shaking hands with his new
teammates in the dugout
during the top of the second
inning. Before the game,
New York manager Joe
Girardi said he hoped
Headley would be available
off the bench.
After that, he’ll become
the everyday starter at a spot
that’s been a question mark
site-field, bloop hit to right,
took third on Denoyelle’s
sacrifice bunt and scored on
a wild delivery to make it 20, but Post 22 seemed poised
to slice the deficit in the
fifth.
With one down, Cox
walked and moved to second
on Nabb’s hit to right. Both
moved into scoring position
on a double theft, though
Raymond caught Matt
Ricard looking at a called
third strike. Lamane drew a
pass to fill the bases, but he
was thrown out at second on
Mansolillo’s fielder’s choice.
Navigant tacked on two
more in the bottom half after
Shatraw drew a walk off of
reliever Mansolillo, then
stole second and raced to
third after backstop Lenox
underthrew second.
Valentine scored him with a
two-bagger that one-hopped
the 328-foot fence in right,
and he later came in on
Torres’ opposite-field linedrive single to right.
The Gauthier/Perreault
crew iced it in the sixth with
two more. Almeida (now in
for the Yankees all year following the season-long suspension of Alex Rodriguez.
“I don’t think we’re getting a big thumper,” general
manager Brian Cashman
said. “But I do think we’re
getting an upgrade and a
professional at-bat.”
The 30-year-old Headley,
drafted by the Padres in
2005, can become a free
agent after this season. The
switch-hitter was batting
.229 with seven homers and
32 RBIs but has a .339 average with six extra-base hits
in 13 games since July 4. He
was a Gold Glove and Silver
Slugger winner two years
ago, when he had a huge
second half and hit .286
with 31 homers and an NLleading 115 RBIs.
He moves from a cavernous ballpark in San
Diego to a homer haven in
the Bronx, and the Yankees
think that can help him.
right field) walked, reached
second on Andino’s bloop
hit to right and took third on
Shatraw’s fielder’s choice.
Shatraw stole second, and
both scored on Valentine’s
single to right.
That gave the hosts the 60 cushion.
Righty closer Scott
Tucker yielded a pair in the
seventh on RBI hits by Nabb
and Lamane, but the damage
already had been completed.
“Kevin Valentine just
crushed the ball here,”
Gauthier noted. “We did a
couple of things wrong; we
didn’t hustle everything out,
and that’s a ‘no-no’ for this
team. Whether we’re winning or losing, you have to
go 110 percent, and we didn’t.
“We also missed a few
signs, but we’ll take it.
Overall, we played well.”
Post 22 000 000 2 -- 2 – 7 – 1
Post 85 010 122 x -- 6 – 7 – 2
Ryan Worthington, Chad Monsolillo
(5) and Chris Lenox. John Almeida,
Miguel Raymond (4), Scott Tucker
(7) and Alex Denoyelle. 2B –
Monsolillo, Brian Cox, Kevin
Valentine.
SPORTS
Wednesday, July 23, 2014
Athletics
Continued from page B1
the AD’s chair is something
he had been discussing with
his wife Christine over the
past year. At the end of the
school term, he tendered his
letter of resignation.
“Cumberland has been a
part of the family. It wasn’t
an easy decision, but I
thought it was time,” said
Geiselman, who prior to
becoming athletic director
for the Clippers in 2005,
enjoyed a 26-year coaching
career at the high school
where he piloted football,
girls’ basketball and girls’
volleyball.
Geiselman kidded that the
chances are pretty good that
his wife may kick him out of
the house shortly after the
new school year gets underway. But if not, he is looking
forward to traveling more
and spending more time with
his nine grandchildren.
“When you’re in athletics,
especially coaching all those
years, you just go from one
season to another to another.
Then I step into a summer
job, so I haven’t had a
chance to step back,”
Geiselman said. “Some people have said that you’re not
going to like (retirement)
because you’re one of those
guys who needs to be doing
something. Maybe I do,
maybe I don’t. If there are
things to do at the house, I
can spend more time and not
feel rushed. Before, I would
find a couple of minutes
prior to heading back to the
field, the swim club or the
gym at night.”
Geiselman’s tenure as
athletic director yielded
plenty of positive returns.
You can point to the number
of state championships and
standout athletes that
Cumberland produced, along
with the new track and stateof-the-art synthetic turf at
Tucker Field, and the opening of the multi-purpose
Wellness Center. Geiselman
may also be most remembered as the driving force
behind transforming the AD
position from a part-time
role to a full-time position.
“In my annual report, I
would write about upgrading
the athletic director’s position
to a full-time one, which I
asked for in the past three
years,” Geiselman said. “The
person doing it needs to be
there full time. I was part
time because that’s what the
position entailed, but I don’t
do anything part time. I put
in as many hours as I could,
but you’re limited supposedly by the retirement board.
“In any event, there’s
going to be a lot of things
that the new person will be
able to undertake,”
Geiselman continued. “I think
the athletic department is in
great shape.”
Ryan
Continued from page B1
area where people are going
to go mini golfing or to
Formula One and say, ‘Oh,
let’s go hit balls while we’re
waiting.’”
Why did Ryan leave his
decade-long Pawtucket business address located at 413
Central Ave.? For starters,
the city placed limits on his
hours of operation during the
day and at night – Ryan was
precluded from holding
pitching and hitting sessions
after 8 p.m. There were also
issues with parking spots
due to apartments sprouting
up in the mill building where
Ryan was operating.
Though Pawtucket officials tried their best to keep
KR Baseball Academy within the city’s limits – Ryan
noted that he looked at several possible relocation spots
– the author of eight bigleague seasons with Boston
and Philadelphia came to the
realization that seeking
space elsewhere would serve
as the best alternative. His
soon-to-be Lincoln digs will
be a little bit smaller than his
Pawtucket operation, which
was 11,700 square feet.
“The way the (Lincoln)
facility is laid out is going to
be very easy for me to put in
my cages,” Ryan said.
Officially, Ryan closed the
doors in Pawtucket in early
June. The phone number to
KR Baseball Academy –
(401) 724-7555 – still works
with Ryan now receiving
calls on his cell phone.
THE CALL B3
Shea is Kate Corry, who
coached tennis and oversaw
the school’s physical education department.
“These two people,
they’ve done it all as far as
coaching and overseeing
games in Pawtucket,”
Scanlon said.
***
Last week’s decision by
the Woonsocket School
Committee to table the discussion relating to the vacant
athletic director’s post has
apparently yielded a couple
of alternative solutions. The
plan is so have something
more concrete to present to
the school committee at the
Aug. 13 meeting.
All signs seem to point to
keeping the AD position as a
part-time job, which was the
case when the late George
Nasuti oversaw Villa Novan
athletics. Carnell Henderson
is still wearing the interim
label, though keep in mind
he’s roughly a month away
from resuming his
Woonsocket football coaching duties.
Henderson, who is also a
vice principal at the high
school, is serving as the contact person for the several
coaching vacancies that are
open for fall sports – two
football assistant coaches,
one girls’ head soccer coach
and one cross country coach.
“I’m trying not to,” said
Henderson when asked if he
would continue running the
athletic department in the
event there’s not a definitive
person in place prior to the
start of school. “I’m still trying to make sure that schedules are committed and the
information that needs to be
passed on to coaches is being
done, but it wouldn’t be fair
to the other sports if this
were to continue.”
Follow Brendan McGair
on Twitter @BWMcGair03
Photos by Ernest A. Brown
Longtime Tolman Athletic Director John L. Scanlon Jr., left,
and longtime Shea Athletic Director Ray McGee both retired
this year.
CHS Athletic Director Frank Geiselman, at right, watches the
Cumberland High School hockey team during their championship win at Meehan Auditorium this past winter.
In another example of just
how committed Geiselman is
to Cumberland athletics, he
was part of the search committee to find his replacement. Prospective candidates
have already been interviewed with the hope that
someone will be in place by
the time fall sports officially
begin practicing next month.
The school committee next
meets on Aug. 14.
As far as what the future
with regard to athletics may
or may not hold, Geiselman
admits that he will continue
to spend his summers working at Sher-Le-Mon. When
asked about the prospect of
serving as a game supervisor,
he responded that such
actions will likely hinge on
guidelines put in place by the
new Cumberland athletic
director.
In the same breath
Geiselman stated, “I would be
more than happy to do something like that.”
“It was very stressful,
but I said to myself that
maybe this is for the best,”
Ryan said. “I’m a business
owner, but I’ve never
moved before.”
Ryan hopes that a change
in scenery will also result in
the expansion of his client
base into the heart of the
Blackstone Valley. When he
was in Pawtucket, he could
always count on drawing
youngsters from the city as
well as Southeastern
Massachusetts.
“We’ve had a lot of support through the years
because of the instruction
they’re getting and it’s customer friendly,” Ryan said.
“A lot of people have been
calling the last few months
asking where I was moving
to because they were going
to follow me.”
***
In Pawtucket, the line of
succession as far as who
would take over as athletic
director at Tolman and Shea
high schools was drawn with
the firm idea of putting in
people who are familiar with
the culture.
Taking over for John
Scanlon at Tolman is Frank
Laliberte, the longtime varsity
tennis coach and scoreboard
operator at basketball games.
Replacing Ray McGee at
Follow Brendan McGair
on Twitter @BWMcGair03
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B4
SPORTS
THE CALL
NFL
Wednesday, July 23, 2014
SPORTS ON THE AIR
Seahawks start
atop AP rankings
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
NEW YORK — The
Seattle Seahawks start the
preseason right where they
ended last season, as the No.
1 team in the AP Pro32 NFL
power rankings.
In balloting by 12 media
members who regularly
cover the NFL, the top three
teams in the AP Pro32 were
the Seahawks, San Francisco
49ers and Denver Broncos.
The Super Bowl champion Seahawks grabbed 11
first-place votes on Tuesday
and had 383 points.
“The world champions are
still intact and have the ability to repeat, but that’s a long
way off,” said Pat Kirwan of
SiriusXM NFL
Radio/CBSSports.com.
Their NFC West rival
from the Bay Area earned
the other first-place vote and
had 360 points.
Rick Gosselin of the
Dallas Morning News put
the 49ers in the top spot.
“The 49ers can run the
ball and play defense,”
Gosselin said. “With Vernon
Davis, a healthy Michael
Crabtree and the addition of
Stevie Johnson, the 49ers
should be able to pass it now
as well.”
The Broncos and New
England Patriots, who faced
each other in the AFC championship game, followed at
No. 3 and No. 4, respectively. Both AFC powers were
active in the offseason trying
to get an edge on the other.
After getting blown out in
the Super Bowl, Denver
added wide receiver
Emmanuel Sanders to help
out Peyton Manning, and
DeMarcus Ware, Aqib Talib
and T.J. Ward to bolster the
defense.
“Peyton Manning isn’t
going away just yet and the
Broncos have enough firepower on offense and some
key additions on defense to
get back to the big game,”
Kirwan said.
The Patriots added
Darrelle Revis and Brandon
Browner to help a defense
that lost key starters last season to injury.
“Tom Brady still is plenty
good enough to win a championship,” Newsday’s Bob
Glauber said. “Question is
whether there’s enough
around him to give him a
chance.”
The Green Bay Packers
and New Orleans Saints
were tied for fifth.
ESPN’s Herm Edwards
thinks the Packers are a
strong favorite to repeat as
division champions.
“A healthy Aaron Rodgers
along with the running game
of Eddie Lacy and the additions on defense, Julius
Peppers and Ha Ha ClintonDix, is not good for the NFC
North,” Edwards said.
Alex Marvez of
Foxsports.com agreed.
“This looks like Green
Bay’s best roster since their
Super Bowl-winning team of
2010,” he said.
The Indianapolis Colts,
Philadelphia Eagles,
Cincinnati Bengals and San
Diego Chargers rounded out
the top 10.
The Bengals have made
the playoffs for three consecutive seasons and lost in the
first round each time. They
haven’t won a playoff game
since 1990, which ties for
the sixth-longest streak of
postseason futility in NFL
history.
“The time is now for this
roster, especially QB Andy
Dalton.” ESPN.com’s Jeff
Legwold said.
Rounding out the bottom
of the poll were the
Cleveland Browns,,
Jacksonville Jaguars and, at
No. 32, the Oakland Raiders.
The Raiders, who added
Maurice Jones-Drew, Justin
Tuck and LaMarr Woodley
in the offseason, finished 412 last season.
“The Raiders have been
through seven head coaches
since posting their last winning record in 2002,” noted
Ira Kaufman of the Tampa
Tribune.
Giants’ offensive line a
jumble as camp begins
EAST RUTHERFORD,
N.J. (AP) — Nothing is
more important to the New
York Giants’ championship
chances than protecting Eli
Manning.
Nothing is more jumbled
in the Giants’ lineup as training camp opens than the
offensive line.
Not the best formula for
success. Of course, it’s still
only July.
“The Giants have a proud
tradition on the offensive
line,” second-year right tackle Justin Pugh said Tuesday.
“There will always be questions and the only way to
stop those questions is to go
out and play and win and
change people’s opinions.”
Until they kick it off in
the Hall of Fame game on
Aug. 3 against Buffalo, the
Giants won’t have an opportunity to truly test their
blockers. The next week of
practices aren’t likely to
determine a whole lot.
At some point, though,
coach Tom Coughlin and his
staff must sort out who will
be the starters and backups,
and at which positions?
With veteran guard Chris
Snee, a four-time Pro
Bowler, having retired on
Monday, and versatile David
Diehl and Kevin Boothe also
gone, the line will have a
new look regardless of who
is where. The Giants brought
in six veteran linemen, several others with a little experience, and drafted center
Weston Richburg of
Colorado State in the second
round.
They are considering
Brandon Mosley, a 2012
fourth-round pick, for Snee’s
spot — Mosley left practice
early Tuesday with what
Coughlin referred to as
something heat-related.
Richburg worked at both
center and guard in the first
practice session of camp.
Geoff Schwartz, who was
with Kansas City last season,
has been projected at guard,
probably on the left side.
J.D. Walton, last with
Denver, then Washington —
he didn’t play a game last
season — can play center
and guard.
John Jerry, a starting
guard in Miami the past two
seasons who was discarded
after the bullying scandal, is
slowly recovering from knee
surgery.
TODAY
AUTO RACING
10 a.m.: FS1 — NASCAR, Truck Series, practice for
Mudsummer Classic, at New Weston, Ohio
11:30 a.m.: FS1 — NASCAR, Truck Series, final
practice for Mudsummer Classic, at New Weston,
Ohio
5 p.m.: FS1 — NASCAR, Truck Series, pole qualifying for Mudsummer Classic, at New Weston, Ohio
7 p.m.: FS1 — NASCAR, Truck Series, pole qualifying for Mudsummer Classic, at New Weston, Ohio
CYCLING
8 a.m.: NBCSN — Tour de France, Stage 17, Saint
Guadens to Saint Lary Soulan Pla d’Adet, France
1. Seattle Seahawks (11)
2. San Francisco 49ers (1)
3. Denver Broncos
4. New England Patriots
5. Green Bay Packers
5. New Orleans Saints
7. Indianapolis Colts
8. Philadelphia Eagles
9. Cincinnati Bengals
10. San Diego Chargers
11. Chicago Bears
12. Baltimore Ravens
13. Pittsburgh Steelers
14. Kansas City Chiefs
15. Carolina Panthers
16. Arizona Cardinals
17. St. Louis Rams
18. Detroit Lions
19. Atlanta Falcons
W
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
L
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
T
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Pts
383
360
356
352
329
329
301
290
266
251
248
242
229
214
213
205
188
181
171
20. Tampa Bay Buccaneers 0 0 0 170
21. New York Giants
0 0 0 155
22. New York Jets
0 0 0 152
23. Washington Redskins 0 0 0 125
24. Miami Dolphins
0 0 0 105
25. Dallas Cowboys
0 0 0 103
26. Buffalo Bills
0 0 0
81
27. Tennessee Titans
0 0 0
80
28. Houston Texans
0 0 0
77
29. Minnesota Vikings
0 0 0
61
30. Cleveland Browns
0 0 0
48
31. Jacksonville Jaguars
0 0 0
46
32. Oakland Raiders
0 0 0
25
___
VOTING PANEL
John Czarnecki, Fox Sports
Tony Dungy, NBC Sports
Herm Edwards, ESPN
Bob Glauber, Newsday
Rick Gosselin, Dallas Morning News
Ira Kaufman, Tampa Tribune
Pat Kirwan, SiriusXM NFL
Radio/CBSSports.com
Jeff Legwold, ESPN/ESPN.com
Jenny Vrentas , Monday Morning Quarterback
Alex Marvez, Foxsports.com
Jim Miller, SiriusXM NFL Radio
Charean Williams, Fort Worth Star Telegram
Baltimore
Toronto
New York
Boston
Tampa Bay
W
54
52
50
47
47
L
44
49
48
53
53
Detroit
Cleveland
Kansas City
Chicago
Minnesota
W
55
50
48
48
45
L
41
49
50
52
53
Oakland
Los Angeles
Seattle
Houston
Texas
W
61
59
53
41
40
L
37
39
46
58
59
1 p.m.: MLB — Regional coverage, Cleveland at
Minnesota or Cincinnati at Milwaukee (2 p.m.)
7 p.m.: NESN , 103.7 FM — Boston at Toronto
7 p.m.: ESPN — San Francisco at Philadelphia
Washington
Atlanta
Miami
New York
Philadelphia
W
54
54
47
46
43
L
43
46
52
53
56
Milwaukee
St. Louis
Pittsburgh
Cincinnati
Chicago
W
55
54
52
51
40
L
45
45
47
48
57
San Francisco
Los Angeles
San Diego
Arizona
Colorado
W
55
56
43
43
40
L
44
45
55
57
59
MINOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
7 p.m.: 920 AM — Pawtucket at Lehigh Valley
SOCCER
7 p.m.: ESPN2 — Exhibition, MLS/Premier League,
Tottenham at Toronto
NBCSN — Exhibition, Premier League/Serie A,
Liverpool vs. Roma, at Boston
9 p.m.: ESPN2 — Exhibition, MLS/Premier League,
Manchester City at Kansas City
10 p.m.: NBCSN — MLS, Chicago at San Jose
11 p.m.: FS1 — Exhibition, MLS/Premier League,
Los Angeles vs. Manchester United, at Pasadena,
Calif.
TRANSACTIONS
Tuesday's Sports Transactions
The Associated Press
BASEBALL
American League
CLEVELAND INDIANS — Recalled RHP
Danny Salazar from Columbus (IL). Optioned
RHP C.C. Lee to Columbus.
MINNESOTA TWINS — Optioned LHP Kris
Johnson to Rochester (IL).
NEW YORK YANKEES — Acquired 3B Chase
Headley and cash considerations from San
Diego Padres for INF Yangervis Solarte and
RHP Rafael De Paula.
OAKLAND ATHLETICS — Reinstated OF Josh
Reddick from the 15-day DL.
SEATTLE MARINERS — Recalled RHP
Erasmo Ramirez from Tacoma (PCL).
Optioned 1B Justin Smoak to Tacoma.
TEXAS RANGERS — Activated RHP Nick
Martinez from the 15-day DL. Placed C
Geovany Soto on the 15-day DL.
TORONTO BLUE JAYS — Selected the contracts of RHP Aaron Sanchez and RHP Esmil
Rogers from Buffalo (IL). Recalled SS Ryan
Goins from Buffalo. Optioned OF Darin
Mastroianni and C Erik Kratz to Buffalo,
Designated LHP Brad Mills for assignment.
National League
CHICAGO CUBS — Activated INF-OF Emilio
Bonifacio from the 15-day DL. Recalled RHP
Kyle Hendricks from Iowa (PCL). Designated
INF Darwin Barney for assignment. Optioned
LHP Zac Rosscup to Iowa.
CINCINNATI REDS — Placed RHP Logan
Ondrusek on the 15-day DL, retroactive to
July 13. Recalled RHP Curtis Partch from
Louisville (IL).
LOS ANGELES DODGERS — Reinstated
RHP Josh Beckett from the 15-day DL.
Optioned LHP Paco Rodriguez to
Albuquerque (PCL).
PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES — Placed OF John
Mayberry Jr. on the 15-day DL. Recalled OF
Darin Ruf from Lehigh Valley (IL).
Can-Am League
QUEBEC CAPITALES — Released INF Tim
Smith. Signed C Josue Peley.
BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
CHICAGO BULLS — Signed F Doug
McDermott and G Aaron Brooks.
GOLDEN STATE WARRIORS — Signed G-F
Brandon Rush to a two-year contract.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
BUFFALO BILLS — Signed LB Xavius Boyd.
Waived/injured LB Darrin Kitchens.
CINCINNATI BENGALS — Placed G Mike
Pollak on the active/PUP list.
DENVER BRONCOS — Designated TE Joel
Dreessen as released/failed physical.
HOUSTON TEXANS — Waived FB Brad
Smelley and DL Tim Jackson. Signed TE
Chris Coyle.
NEW YORK GIANTS — Named David Tyree
director of player development.
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS — Released LB
Larry English,
ST. LOUIS RAMS — Released OT Abasi
Salimi, WR Diontae Spencer and LBs Tavarius
Wilson and Caleb McSurdy. Signed OT T.J.
Dill, G D.J. Morrell and LBs Pat Schiller and
Lawrence Wilson.
WASHINGTON REDSKINS — Signed TE Mike
Caussin. Waived LS Kyle Nelson. Promoted
Jeff Scott and Josh Washburn to Pro Scout.
Named Matt Evans player personnel assistant
and Brian Zeches administrative assistant.
Canadian Football League
SASKATCHEWAN ROUGHRIDERS — Signed
RB Will Ford to the practice roster.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
ANAHEIM DUCKS — Signed D Sami Vatanen
to a two-year contract.
DALLAS STARS — Agreed to terms with F
Antoine Roussel on a four-year contract.
TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS — Fired assistant
general manager Claude Loiselle and vice
president of hockey operations Dave Poulin.
Named Kyle Dubas assistant general manager. Signed F David Booth to a one-year contract.
COLLEGE
COLGATE — Named Andy Waeger swimming
and diving coach.
FELICIAN — Named John Chang women's
volleyball coach.
LONG BEACH STATE — Named Paul Reed
women's assistant basketball coach.
MEMPHIS — Named Hayden Perez women's
tennis coach.
NEW MEXICO — Named Jeremy Anderson
strength and conditioning coach for men's
basketball.
SAINT ROSE — Named Stephen Hogan
men's soccer coach.
SC UPSTATE — Promoted assistant men's
basketball coach Kyle Perry to associate head
coach. Named Kenzie Roark softball pitching
coach.
WAYLAND BAPTIST — Named Rick Cooper
director of athletics.
THIS DAY IN SPORTS
Compiled By PAUL MONTELLA
By The Associated Press
July 23
1907 — Australasia beats British Isles 3-2 to
win the Davis Cup held at Wimbledon.
Australasia wins its first David Cup and ends
the four-year reign of the British Isles.
1921 — At the annual Harvard-Yale vs.
Cambridge-Oxford meet at Harvard Stadium,
Harvard's Edward Gourdin becomes the first
to long jump 25 feet. Harvard lists Gourdin's
jump as 25 feet, 3 inches, but the official listing in U.S. Track and Field is 25-2.
1960 — Betsy Rawls becomes the first
woman to win the U.S. Women's Open golf
title four times.
1966 — John Pennel pole vaults 17 feet, 6¼
inches for the world record in a meet at Los
Angeles. It's the eighth of nine world records
he set in the event in his career and his first
since 1963.
1976 — The last NFL All-Star game is held
and is shortened when thunderstorms hit
Chicago. The Pittsburgh Steelers beat the AllStars 24-0.
1978 — Hollis Stacy wins the U.S. Women's
Open golf championship for the second
straight year.
1989 — Mark Calcavecchia wins the British
Open, edging Greg Norman and Wayne
Grady in a three-man playoff. Calcavecchia,
the first American to win the Open in five
years, birdies three of the four holes in the
playoff.
1989 — Greg Lemond wins his second Tour
de France with the closest finish ever, edging
Laurent Fignon by 8 seconds. Lemond starts
the day 50 seconds behind Fignon and wins
the final stage, a 15-mile race against the
clock from Versailles to Paris, in 26:57.
Fignon finishes the stage 58 seconds slower.
1995 — John Daly wins the British Open at
St. Andrews by four strokes in a four-hole
playoff with Italy's Costantino Rocca. Rocca
forces the playoff by sinking a 65-foot putt on
the 18th hole.
1995 — Miguel Indurain of Spain wins his
record fifth consecutive Tour de France.
Indurain joins Jacques Anquetil, Eddy Merckx
and Bernard Hinault as the other five-time winners.
2000 — Tiger Woods, at 24, becomes the
youngest player to win the career Grand Slam
with a record-breaking performance in the
British Open on the Old Course at St.
Andrews.
WNBA
EASTERN CONFERENCE
W L Pct
Atlanta
15 6 .714
Indiana
11 12 .478
Washington
10 13 .435
Connecticut
10 14 .417
New York
8 13 .381
Chicago
8 14 .364
WESTERN CONFERENCE
W L Pct
Phoenix
18 3 .857
Minnesota
17 6 .739
San Antonio
11 12 .478
Los Angeles
10 12 .455
Seattle
9 15 .375
Tulsa
8 15 .348
GB
—
5
6
6½
7
7½
GB
—
2
8
8½
10½
11
Monday's Games
No games scheduled
Tuesday's Games
Indiana at Chicago, 8 p.m.
Atlanta at Minnesota, 8 p.m.
Tulsa at San Antonio, 8 p.m.
Phoenix at Seattle, 10 p.m.
Wednesday's Games
Connecticut at Washington, 11:30 a.m.
New York at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.
Thursday's Games
New York at Seattle, 10 p.m.
Phoenix at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.
MLS
EASTERN CONFERENCE
W L T Pts GF
Kansas City
10 5 5 35 29
D.C.
10 5 4 34 29
Toronto FC
7 5 5 26 26
New York
5 6 9 24 32
New England
7 10 2 23 24
Philadelphia
5 8 8 23 33
Columbus
5 7 8 23 23
Chicago
3 4 11 20 26
Houston
5 11 4 19 22
Montreal
3 10 5 14 18
WESTERN CONFERENCE
W L T Pts GF
Seattle
12 4 2 38 35
FC Dallas
8 7 5 29 32
Real Salt Lake
7 4 8 29 28
Los Angeles
7 4 6 27 26
Colorado
7 6 6 27 28
Vancouver
6 4 9 27 29
Portland
5 6 9 24 32
Chivas USA
6 8 5 23 21
San Jose
4 8 5 17 17
GA
18
20
23
31
31
35
26
28
40
31
GA
24
29
25
16
24
27
33
30
19
NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie.
Friday's Games
Portland 2, Colorado 1
Saturday's Games
Sporting Kansas City 2, Los Angeles 1
New York 1, San Jose 1, tie
Columbus 2, Montreal 1
Chicago 1, Philadelphia 1, tie
FC Dallas 2, New England 0
Houston 2, Toronto FC 2, tie
Real Salt Lake 1, Vancouver 1, tie
Sunday's Games
D.C. United 3, Chivas USA 1
Wednesday, July 23
Chicago at San Jose, 10:30 p.m.
Thursday, July 24
Montreal at Real Salt Lake, 10 p.m.
Friday, July 25
Chivas USA at Colorado, 9:30 p.m.
Saturday, July 26
Sporting Kansas City at Toronto FC, 7 p.m.
Columbus at New England, 7:30 p.m.
Sunday, July 27
FC Dallas at Vancouver, 5 p.m.
Portland at Montreal, 8 p.m.
Monday, July 28
Los Angeles at Seattle FC, 10 p.m.
East Division
GB WCGB L10
—
—
6-4
3½
2
5-5
4
2½
5-5
8
6½
8-2
8
6½
7-3
Central Division
Pct
GB WCGB L10
.573
—
—
6-4
.505 6½
3
6-4
.490
8
4½
2-8
.480
9
5½
5-5
.459
11
7½
6-4
West Division
Pct
GB WCGB L10
.622
—
—
6-4
.602
2
—
7-3
.535 8½
—
4-6
.414 20½
12
5-5
.404 21½
13
2-8
Pct
.551
.515
.510
.470
.470
Str
W-1
W-1
L-1
L-1
W-5
Home
26-23
28-23
21-24
26-26
22-28
Away
28-21
24-26
29-24
21-27
25-25
Str
W-2
L-2
L-4
W-1
W-1
Home
26-25
29-19
22-25
27-22
22-25
Away
29-16
21-30
26-25
21-30
23-28
Str
W-1
L-1
W-1
W-1
W-1
Home
32-16
34-17
25-26
21-28
18-30
Away
29-21
25-22
28-20
20-30
22-29
Str
W-3
L-2
W-3
L-3
L-2
Home
30-20
27-22
28-24
25-23
19-30
Away
24-23
27-24
19-28
21-30
24-26
Str
W-1
L-1
L-1
L-4
L-5
Home
26-24
29-21
32-21
27-21
20-22
Away
29-21
25-24
20-26
24-27
20-35
Str
W-1
W-2
W-2
L-1
L-6
Home
28-25
25-24
26-26
20-32
24-26
Away
27-19
31-21
17-29
23-25
16-33
NATIONAL LEAGUE
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
NFL POWER RANKINGS
AP Pro32-Power Rankings
The Associated Press Pro32 NFL Power
Rankings, as voted by a 12-member panel,
with first-place votes in parentheses, records
through July 22, total points based on 32
points for a first-place vote through one point
for a 32nd-place vote, and previous ranking:
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
GB WCGB L10
—
—
6-4
1½
½
5-5
8
7
4-6
9
8
6-4
12
11
5-5
Central Division
Pct
GB WCGB L10
.550
—
—
3-7
.545
½
—
7-3
.525 2½
2
5-5
.515 3½
3
4-6
.412 13½
13
2-8
West Division
Pct
GB WCGB L10
.556
—
—
6-4
.554
—
—
5-5
.439 11½ 10½ 4-6
.430 12½ 11½ 6-4
.404
15
14
3-7
Pct
.557
.540
.475
.465
.434
MLB SCHEDULE
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Monday's Games
Texas 4, N.Y. Yankees 2
Boston 14, Toronto 1
Minnesota 4, Cleveland 3
Chicago White Sox 3, Kansas City 1
Detroit 4, Arizona 3
Baltimore 4, L.A. Angels 2
Seattle 5, N.Y. Mets 2
Tuesday's Games
Texas at N.Y. Yankees, 7:05 p.m.
Toronto 7, Boston 3
Cleveland at Minnesota, 8:10 p.m.
Kansas City at Chicago White Sox, 8:10 p.m.
Tampa Bay at St. Louis, 8:15 p.m.
Detroit at Arizona, 9:40 p.m.
Baltimore at L.A. Angels, 10:05 p.m.
Houston at Oakland, 10:05 p.m.
N.Y. Mets at Seattle, 10:10 p.m.
Wednesday's Games
Cleveland (Bauer 4-4) at Minnesota (Gibson
8-8), 1:10 p.m.
Kansas City (Shields 9-5) at Chicago White
Sox (Quintana 5-7), 2:10 p.m.
Detroit (A.Sanchez 6-4) at Arizona (Cahill 1-6),
3:40 p.m.
N.Y. Mets (B.Colon 8-8) at Seattle (T.Walker
1-1), 3:40 p.m.
Texas (Darvish 9-5) at N.Y. Yankees (Phelps
4-4), 7:05 p.m.
Boston (Buchholz 5-5) at Toronto (Dickey 710), 7:07 p.m.
Tampa Bay (Cobb 5-6) at St. Louis (Lynn 116), 7:15 p.m.
Baltimore (Tillman 7-5) at L.A. Angels (Weaver
10-6), 10:05 p.m.
Houston (Peacock 3-6) at Oakland (J.Chavez
7-6), 10:05 p.m.
Thursday's Games
Boston at Toronto, 12:37 p.m.
Texas at N.Y. Yankees, 1:05 p.m.
Houston at Oakland, 3:35 p.m.
Chicago White Sox at Minnesota, 8:10 p.m.
Cleveland at Kansas City, 8:10 p.m.
Detroit at L.A. Angels, 10:05 p.m.
Baltimore at Seattle, 10:10 p.m.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Monday's Games
L.A. Dodgers 5, Pittsburgh 2
San Francisco 7, Philadelphia 4
Miami 3, Atlanta 1, 10 innings
Milwaukee 5, Cincinnati 2
Washington 7, Colorado 2
Detroit 4, Arizona 3
Seattle 5, N.Y. Mets 2
Tuesday's Games
L.A. Dodgers at Pittsburgh, 7:05 p.m.
San Francisco at Philadelphia, 7:05 p.m.
Miami 6, Atlanta 5
San Diego at Chicago Cubs, 8:05 p.m.
Cincinnati at Milwaukee, 8:10 p.m.
Tampa Bay at St. Louis, 8:15 p.m.
Washington at Colorado, 8:40 p.m.
Detroit at Arizona, 9:40 p.m.
N.Y. Mets at Seattle, 10:10 p.m.
Wednesday's Games
Cincinnati (Leake 7-8) at Milwaukee (Lohse
10-4), 2:10 p.m.
Washington (Strasburg 7-7) at Colorado (J.De
La Rosa 10-6), 3:10 p.m.
Detroit (A.Sanchez 6-4) at Arizona (Cahill 1-6),
3:40 p.m.
N.Y. Mets (B.Colon 8-8) at Seattle (T.Walker
1-1), 3:40 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers (Haren 8-7) at Pittsburgh
(Liriano 1-7), 7:05 p.m.
San Francisco (Bumgarner 11-7) at
Philadelphia (A.Burnett 6-9), 7:05 p.m.
Miami (Eovaldi 5-5) at Atlanta (E.Santana 8-6),
7:10 p.m.
Tampa Bay (Cobb 5-6) at St. Louis (Lynn 116), 7:15 p.m.
San Diego (Kennedy 7-9) at Chicago Cubs
(Wada 0-0), 8:05 p.m.
Thursday's Games
San Francisco at Philadelphia, 1:05 p.m.
Miami at Atlanta, 7:10 p.m.
San Diego at Chicago Cubs, 8:05 p.m.
N.Y. Mets at Milwaukee, 8:10 p.m.
INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE
North Division
W L Pct.
GB
Syracuse (Nationals) 60 43 .583 —
Pawtucket (Red Sox) 56 48 .538 4½
Rochester (Twins)
56 48 .538 4½
Buffalo (Blue Jays)
50 52 .490 9½
Wilkes-Barre (Yankees) 49 54 .476 11
Lehigh Valley (Phillies) 49 55 .471 11½
South Division
W
L
Pct.
GB
Durham (Rays)
56 47 .544 —
Gwinnett (Braves)
46 58 .442 10½
Norfolk (Orioles)
45 58 .437 11
Charlotte (White Sox) 45 59 .433 11½
West Division
W
L
Pct.
GB
Columbus (Indians)
56 49 .533 —
Indianapolis (Pirates) 56 49 .533 —
Toledo (Tigers)
52 52 .500 3½
Louisville (Reds)
50 54 .481 5½
Tuesday's Games
Scranton/Wilkes-Barre 7, Gwinnett 0
Pawtucket at Syracuse, 7 p.m.
Rochester 4, Durham 0
Charlotte 9, Indianapolis 3
Buffalo 7, Lehigh Valley 6
Columbus 8, Louisville 5
Toledo at Norfolk, 7:05 p.m.
Wednesday's Games
Charlotte at Indianapolis, 1:35 p.m.
Scranton/Wilkes-Barre at Gwinnett, 6:35 p.m.
Rochester at Durham, 7:05 p.m.
Pawtucket at Lehigh Valley, 7:05 p.m.
Columbus at Louisville, 7:05 p.m.
Toledo at Norfolk, 7:05 p.m.
Syracuse at Buffalo, 7:05 p.m.
Thursday's Games
Toledo at Norfolk, 12:05 p.m.
Syracuse at Buffalo, 1:05 p.m.
Scranton/Wilkes-Barre at Gwinnett, 6:35 p.m.
Charlotte at Indianapolis, 7:05 p.m.
Pawtucket at Lehigh Valley, 7:05 p.m.
Columbus at Louisville, 7:05 p.m.
Rochester at Durham, 7:05 p.m.
AL LEADERS
By The Associated Press
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Through July 21
BATTING_Altuve, Houston, .336; Cano,
Seattle, .334; Beltre, Texas, .328; Brantley,
Cleveland, .328; Chisenhall, Cleveland, .325;
VMartinez, Detroit, .322; KSuzuki, Minnesota,
.311; MiCabrera, Detroit, .311.
RUNS_Dozier, Minnesota, 71; Trout, Los
Angeles, 69; Brantley, Cleveland, 67;
Donaldson, Oakland, 65; Kinsler, Detroit, 65;
Bautista, Toronto, 60; MeCabrera, Toronto,
59; Pujols, Los Angeles, 59.
RBI_MiCabrera, Detroit, 76; JAbreu,
Chicago, 74; NCruz, Baltimore, 74; Trout, Los
Angeles, 74; Donaldson, Oakland, 70;
Encarnacion, Toronto, 70; Ortiz, Boston, 68.
HITS_Altuve, Houston, 135; MeCabrera,
Toronto, 124; Cano, Seattle, 123; Brantley,
Cleveland, 121; AJones, Baltimore, 120;
Markakis, Baltimore, 120; Kinsler, Detroit,
117.
DOUBLES_MiCabrera, Detroit, 36; Altuve,
Houston, 30; Plouffe, Minnesota, 29; Trout,
Los Angeles, 29; Hosmer, Kansas City, 27;
AEscobar, Kansas City, 26; Kinsler, Detroit,
26; Pedroia, Boston, 26.
TRIPLES_Rios, Texas, 8; Bourn, Cleveland,
7; Eaton, Chicago, 7; Gardner, New York, 6;
De Aza, Chicago, 5; AJackson, Detroit, 5;
Odor, Texas, 5; Trout, Los Angeles, 5.
HOME RUNS_JAbreu, Chicago, 29; NCruz,
Baltimore, 28; Encarnacion, Toronto, 26;
Trout, Los Angeles, 23; Moss, Oakland, 22;
Ortiz, Boston, 22; Donaldson, Oakland, 21;
VMartinez, Detroit, 21.
STOLEN BASES_Altuve, Houston, 41;
Ellsbury, New York, 27; RDavis, Detroit, 24;
AEscobar, Kansas City, 22; Andrus, Texas,
20; JDyson, Kansas City, 18; JJones,
Seattle, 18; LMartin, Texas, 18; Reyes,
Toronto, 18.
PITCHING_Tanaka, New York, 12-4; Porcello,
Detroit, 12-5; FHernandez, Seattle, 11-2;
Richards, Los Angeles, 11-2; Scherzer,
Detroit, 11-3; Gray, Oakland, 11-3; Kazmir,
Oakland, 11-3; Lackey, Boston, 11-6.
ERA_FHernandez, Seattle, 2.02; Sale,
Chicago, 2.03; Kazmir, Oakland, 2.38;
Richards, Los Angeles, 2.47; Lester, Boston,
2.50; Tanaka, New York, 2.51; Gray,
Oakland, 2.72.
STRIKEOUTS_Price, Tampa Bay, 173;
FHernandez, Seattle, 163; Darvish, Texas,
154; Kluber, Cleveland, 152; Scherzer,
Detroit, 150; Lester, Boston, 142; Tanaka,
New York, 135.
SAVES_Rodney, Seattle, 27; Holland, Kansas
City, 25; DavRobertson, New York, 24;
Perkins, Minnesota, 23; Uehara, Boston, 20;
Nathan, Detroit, 20; Britton, Baltimore, 17;
Soria, Texas, 17.
NL LEADERS
By The Associated Press
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Through July 21
BATTING_Tulowitzki, Colorado, .340;
MaAdams, St. Louis, .323; McGehee,
Miami, .322; AMcCutchen, Pittsburgh,
.322; Morneau, Colorado, .312;
Goldschmidt, Arizona, .310; Puig, Los
Angeles, .308; Lucroy, Milwaukee, .308.
RUNS_Goldschmidt, Arizona, 71; Pence,
San Francisco, 71; Tulowitzki, Colorado,
71; Rendon, Washington, 69; FFreeman,
Atlanta, 65; Rizzo, Chicago, 65; Stanton,
Miami, 65.
RBI_Goldschmidt, Arizona, 65; Stanton,
Miami, 65; Desmond, Washington, 62;
AdGonzalez, Los Angeles, 62;
AMcCutchen, Pittsburgh, 62; Howard,
Philadelphia, 60; Morneau, Colorado, 60.
HITS_McGehee, Miami, 121; Pence, San
Francisco, 121; AMcCutchen, Pittsburgh,
119; DanMurphy, New York, 116;
Goldschmidt, Arizona, 115; DGordon, Los
Angeles, 112; CGomez, Milwaukee, 111.
DOUBLES_Goldschmidt, Arizona, 38;
Lucroy, Milwaukee, 33; Span, Washington,
29; FFreeman, Atlanta, 28; AMcCutchen,
Pittsburgh, 28; Puig, Los Angeles, 27;
SCastro, Chicago, 26; Morse, San
Francisco, 26; JhPeralta, St. Louis, 26.
TRIPLES_DGordon, Los Angeles, 9;
BCrawford, San Francisco, 8; Braun,
Milwaukee, 6; BHamilton, Cincinnati, 6;
Yelich, Miami, 6; 11 tied at 5.
HOME RUNS_Rizzo, Chicago, 23; Stanton,
Miami, 23; Tulowitzki, Colorado, 21; Frazier,
Cincinnati, 20; Byrd, Philadelphia, 19;
Goldschmidt, Arizona, 18; Desmond,
Washington, 17; AMcCutchen, Pittsburgh,
17; JUpton, Atlanta, 17.
STOLEN BASES_DGordon, Los Angeles,
45; BHamilton, Cincinnati, 38; Revere,
Philadelphia, 26; EYoung, New York, 25;
SMarte, Pittsburgh, 21; Rollins,
Philadelphia, 19; Blackmon, Colorado, 18;
CGomez, Milwaukee, 18.
PITCHING_Wainwright, St. Louis, 12-4;
Simon, Cincinnati, 12-4; Kershaw, Los
Angeles, 11-2; Ryu, Los Angeles, 11-5;
Lynn, St. Louis, 11-6; WPeralta, Milwaukee,
11-6; Greinke, Los Angeles, 11-6;
Bumgarner, San Francisco, 11-7.
ERA_Wainwright, St. Louis, 1.83; Kershaw,
Los Angeles, 1.92; Cueto, Cincinnati, 2.18;
Beckett, Los Angeles, 2.26; HAlvarez,
Miami, 2.64; Teheran, Atlanta, 2.64;
TRoss, San Diego, 2.70.
STRIKEOUTS_Strasburg, Washington, 158;
Cueto, Cincinnati, 148; Kennedy, San
Diego, 137; Bumgarner, San Francisco,
135; Kershaw, Los Angeles, 134; TRoss,
San Diego, 132; Greinke, Los Angeles,
130.
SAVES_Kimbrel, Atlanta, 30; Rosenthal, St.
Louis, 30; FrRodriguez, Milwaukee, 29;
Jansen, Los Angeles, 29; Street, San
Diego, 24; Papelbon, Philadelphia, 23;
AReed, Arizona, 23.
COMICS
Wednesday, July 23, 2014
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
THE CALL B5
Lio
By Mark Tatulli
Crankshaft
By Tom Batiuk
Garfield
Gasoline Alley
Zits
By Jim Davis
By Jim Scancarelli
By Jerry Scott & Jim Borgman
Marvin
By Tom Armstrong
Pearls Before Swine
By Stephan Pastis
Get Fuzzy
By Darby Conley
Su Do Ku Tips and computer program at www.sudoku.com.
For solutions, check “JRC Publications” on the
solutions page of www.sudoku.com.
© Puzzles by Pappocom
B6 THE CALL
THE
Blackstone
CALL Valley alues
V
Wednesday, July 23, 2014
Legals
100 Legals
MORTGAGEE'S SALE
116 Mill Street,
Unit 102, River Haven
Condominium
Woonscoket, RI
The premises described
in the mortgage will be
sold subject to all encumbrances and prior
liens on August 14,
2014 at 12:00 p.m. on
the premises, by virtue
of the power of sale
contained in a mortgage by Jeanne C. Rioux and Eugene A. Rioux dated September
23, 2005 and recorded
in the Woonsocket
Land Evidence Records
in Book 1468, Page
295, the conditions of
said mortgage having
been broken.
100 Legals
p
liens on August 11,
2014 at 10:00 a.m. on
the premises, by virtue
of the power of sale
contained in a mortgage by Deborah A.
Grenon dated September 22, 2004 and
recorded
in
the
WOONSOCKET
Land
Evidence Records in
Book 1385, Page 221,
as affected by a corrective mortgage recorded
in said Records in Book
2057, Page 75, the conditions of said mortgage having been broken.
MORTGAGEE'S SALE
60 Saint Cecile Avenue
Woonsocket, RI
$5,000.00 in cash, certified or bank check is
required to bid. Other
terms will be announced at the sale.
HARMON LAW
OFFICES, P.C.
Attorney for the Holder
of the Mortgage
150 California Street
Newton, MA 02458
(617) 558-0500
$5,000.00 in cash, certified or bank check is 201208-0199 - PRP
required to bid. Other
terms will be announced at the sale.
HARMON LAW
OFFICES, P.C.
Attorney for the Holder
of the Mortgage
150 California Street
Newton, MA 02458
(617) 558-0500
201405-0259 - YEL
MORTGAGEE'S SALE
ASSESSOR'S PLAT#
17-E AND LOT#
234 & 235
126 Carnation Street
Woonsocket,
Rhode Island
The premises described in the mortgage
will be sold subject to
all encumbrances and
prior liens on August 6,
2014 at 12:00 pm on
the premises by virtue
of the Power of Sale
in said mortgage made
by Christopher M.
Bijesse and Janice M.
Bijesse dated February
27, 2007, and recorded
in Book 1637 at Page
51, et seq. of the
Woonsocket Land Evidence Records, the
conditions of said mortgage having been broken:
$5,000.00 in cash,
bank check or certified
check at time of sale is
required to bid; other
terms will be announced at time of sale.
The premises described
in the mortgage will be
sold subject to all encumbrances and prior
liens on August 15,
2014 at 1:00 p.m. on
the premises, by virtue
of the power of sale
contained in a mortgage by Richard D.
Doucette and Marie
Pierel-Doucette
a/k/a
Marie Pierel Doucette
dated April 7, 2008 and
recorded
in
the
Woonsocket Land Evidence Records in Book
1735, Page 72, the conditions of said mortgage having been broken.
The undersigned, Tax Collector of the OaklandMapleville Fire District located in the Town of
Burrillville, hereby gives notice that he will sell at
public auction to the Highest Bidder in the
Oakland-Mapleville Fire District Office located at
46 Oakland School Street, Oakland, Rhode Island
02858, on the 31st day of July 2014 at 10:00
a.m., local time, the various parcels of real estate
or so much thereof as may be necessary to pay
the Oakland-Mapleville Fire District fire district
taxes of the Oakland-Mapleville Fire District
located in the Town of Burrillville which constitute a lien thereon as set forth in the original advertisement of the 9th day of July 2014 in the
Woonsocket Call, a daily newspaper to which
reference is hereby made.
Any property, upon which fire district taxes have
been paid since the advertisement first appeared,
will not, of course, be included in the sale.
Be advised that if your property in which you
have a substantial interest is sold at tax sale,
then you have one year to redeem it through the
Collector s Office or through the tax sale purchaser by tendering the fire district taxes paid,
plus a ten percent penalty on the tax sale
amount, plus one percent interest on the tax sale
amount per month from the seventh month onward.
After the passage of one year, you may exercise
your right to redeem through the tax sale purchaser or his attorney, or, if a petition to foreclose your right of redemption has been filed in
Superior Court, you may redeem through the
Court until a final decree is entered forever foreclosing your right of redemption.
The premises described
in the mortgage will be
sold subject to all encumbrances and prior
liens on July 31, 2014
at 10:00 a.m. on the
premises, by virtue of
the power of sale
contained in a mortgage by Michael Lombardi
and
Marc
Williams dated January
5, 2004 and recorded
in the WOONSOCKET
Land Evidence Records
in Book 1333, Page 61,
the conditions of said
mortgage having been
broken.
$5,000.00 in cash, certified or bank check is
required to bid. Other
terms will be announced at the sale.
204 General Help
Wanted
304 Apartments
Unfurnished
Financial
Notice To Our
Readers
131 Boats - Marine
Woonsocket - 4 Bedroom,
230 Business
1st Floor, Newly renovated, laundry. Lead Certi61 PEARSON Triton –
Opportunities
fied. $980 per month.
Sloop, 28ft, with sails. In
Companies that do busi- use thru 2012. Needs
Call 401-659-6511
ness by phone can't ask TLC. Make offer. 401- Entrepreneurs
wanted!
you to pay for credit be- 423-1588
Property and Casualty Insurance Agency for Sale.
fore you get it. For more
305 Apartments
Affiliated with major nainformation, call toll free
Furnished
tional
carrier.
Great
busi1-877-FTC-HELP. A pubness opportunity! Please
lic service message from
Call Rick (484) 432-9990 $120/WK. rooming house
The Call and the Federal
shared bath, all utilities
Trade Commission.
free cable 154 Pond St.
or 233 High St. 871-1813
Business Services
Merchandise
Vehicles
$95/week & up. 1-2 room
single occupancy. Safe,
secure & clean. Laundry.
Sober community. Utilities
incl.
Main
St.
149 Cleaning Maintenance
HARMON LAW
123 Autos For Sale
OFFICES, P.C.
Attorney for the Holder 01 DODGE- Grand Caravan. 107K miles, needs
of the Mortgage
work. $1,000. Call
150 California Street some
401-207-1815/363-1677.
Newton, MA 02458
1993
Toyota
Corolla,
(617) 558-0500
Brown. Runs good but
needs tlc 4 door. Inspect201312-0590 - PRP
Oakland-Mapleville Fire District
COLLECTOR S SALE OF
ESTATES FOR TAXES AND/OR ASSESSMENTS
DUE AND UNPAID
125 AntiqueClassic Cars
NEW TODAY
67 Ford – Galaxy 500 con1 BED, good location, 1st,
vertible. All original, low Experienced pizza/grinder hardwoods, storage, coin
mileage, $13,900 or best. person. P/F time. Apply ops, parking, no dogs,
Chas 401-294-3123
within. Pawtucket House $650mo. 401-744-3136
of Pizza, 398 Smithfield st
1 floor, large 3 bed, comAve., Pawtucket.
pletely renovated, new
126 Trucks
kitchen & bathroom, new
107 Personals
appliances, nice land1998 Ranger, 5 speed,
scaped yard, hardwoods,
4x4, extended cab, runs
All utilities, off st. parking
HAVING trouble with alco- great. $2,495. Call 401& laundry facilities inc.
hol?
Call
1-800-439- 447-4451
$1350 mo. Woonsocket.
8860
401-269-9191
2001 FORD F150
www.rhodeisland~aa.org
without problems, 121K
Central Falls 3 Bedrooms.
miles. $4000 You can call
Kitchen,
Parlor
and
111 Special Notices me at 240-224-3050
Pantry. Spacious, Nice
Apt. Call 401-359-9439
$5,000.00 in cash, certified or bank check is
required to bid. Other
terms will be announced at the sale.
Bendett & McHugh,
P.C.
270 Farmington
TERMS: CASH OR BANK CHECK ONLY
Avenue, Ste. 151
Farmington, CT 06032
Richard Nolan, Tax Collector
Attorney for the
Oakland-Mapleville Fire District
present
Holder of the Mortgage
MORTGAGEE'S SALE
302 BLACKSTONE ST
WOONSOCKET, RI
Annoucements
100 Legals
Woonsocket 401-766-4931
House cleaner with experi251 Appliances
ence
and
references.
Please call for free estimates. 401-359-4379
Dirt devil small canister
vacuum cleaner. $10.
Brass table lamp $10.
151 Construction
Call 766-9535
NEW TODAY
EXPERIENCED
CARPENTERS WANTED
Experienced
carpenters
wanted for commercial
ed. Very economic. 4 cyl.
remodeling and renova$800. Call 401-497-5616
tion work. Must have own
transportation and hand
1996 Toyota Carolla. Runs tools. Please call 401great. Green. 174K miles. 769-4285.
Asking $1500 or best offer. 401-728-0162
1997 OLDS Achieva, 4 cyl.,
auto, runs great, $1095
or best.
769-0095 or
401-447-4451
2004 Cady DeVille Limited 4
dr. black chrome wheels,
moonroof low miles Must
see $ 3950. 401-301-0056
2004 DODGE STRATUS
4DR 97K ONE OWNER
LOOKS NEW RUN GREAT
509 WINTHROP (RTE 44)
REHOBOTH MA $3500
2004 Hyundai Sonata GLE
Ed. Ltd. 4dr., loaded,
moonroof, auto, V6, new
insp., 81K miles, mint,
$2250. 401-426-0975
2005 Pontiac Sunfire SE 2
dr Coupe. Loaded, 4 cyl.,
33MPG, auto, silver, roof,
like new, $1850. Call 401241-0413
HONDA Accord, 2001,
133K, garaged, remote
starter, cover, new battery, 1 owner. $2889.
Call 401-489-0533.
257 Camping –
Sports - Outdoors
Cooler. 15x13 with zippers. Good condition. Call
401-728-6299
NEW TODAY
261 Coins & Stamps
NEW TODAY
306 House/Duplexes
For Rent
Dirt Devil vacuum for the
car. $8. Basil vacuum
NEW TODAY
cleaner $8. Call 401-728No. Smithfield; 4 bed, 2.5
6299
baths, log house, has
WHIRLPOOL Washer, $50. large 2 car garage, appl's,
Call 401-603-7519
storage, private/country
setting.
Lease/security.
$1900mo. 401-766-7533
204 General Help
Wanted
1998 Mustang 5.0 Limited Advisor, Application DevelConv. V8, 5 speed, black, oper. Woonsocket, RI.
saddle leather, wheels, Guide, lead & facilitate
among
mint, low miles, very fast, collaboration
team members. Con$2950. 401-301-0056
tribute to the creation of
work products. Develop
1999 Nissan Maxima SE & maintain software ap4dr., auto, V6, low miles plications. Develop & im(new inspection) Roof, plement technical soluwheels, like new, 2nd own- tions, including but not
er, $1950. 401-241-0413
limited to: analysis & design documents, pro2000 Ford Escort ZX2. gram specifications, test
$2300. Low miles. Good plans & results, design,
condition. 508-883-9417
code, testing, debugging,
&
documentation
of
2000
Mitsubishi
Very those programs while
Good Condition, white 4 delivering
assignments
cyl. fully load w/moon within
specified
time
roof $1750. or B.O. Call frames. Min BS or foreign
508-622-1732
equiv in Comp. Science,
Info Sys, Engineering or
2001 TOYOTA RAV4 4WD
related field & 5 yrs exp
4cyl, automatic, silver, 70k in application developmi. $3700 Phone #786- ment. Exp must include
520-5649
working with NSQL, SQL,
PL/SQL, GEL scripting,
2002 Jeep Grand Cherokee Java, Crystal Reports,
Limited. 4 dr., 2 or 4 XOG, Toad, relational
wheel dr., loaded, roof, databases and SQL Servleather, mint, one owner, er. Apply at http://
$2500. 401-241-0354
jobs.cvscaremark.com/,
Requisition # 178817BR
DOWNTOWN area 1 room
with kitchen & bath, all
utilities furnished, private
entrance.
Reasonable
rent. 401-524-1361
Buying US coins dated before 1965: dimes $1.30,
quarters $3.25, halves
$6.50. Woonsocket 401597-6426
Walking
Liberty
silver
halves. Extremely fine:
1941-S, 1943-S, 1944-D,
1945-S, 1946-P. All for
$65. 401-597-6426
265 Furniture Household
Blonde oak mission dining
table. 41” diameter. Excellent condition. $50.
Call 401-762-5728
273 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
AIR CONDITIONER, 5,000
BTU, $30. Call 401-6037519.
274 Musical
Merchandise
Cash for old musical inCARPENTERS
Frame, finish, remodel struments of any kind
work ~IMMEDIATE open- broken or not. Call anyings~ Will train, trans- time 401-365-3636
portation to Blackstone,
MA ~ Pd. holidays/vacation. 508-400-5715
Real Estate-Rent
Deliver the Verizon
phone books.
18 years & older with insured vehicles to deliver
Woonsocket, North Smithfield areas. Also looking for
office clerks and loaders.
Delivery starts July 29th.
Work a minimum of 6 daylight hours per day and get
paid within 72 hours, upon
successful completion of
route. Call 1-800-979-7978
Refer to Job # 30110-A.
EOE.
WAITRESS/Breakfast
Apply within daily 1039
Cass Ave., Woonsocket
301 Room – No
Board
PAWTUCKET: Near center,
laundry facilities, wall to
wall carpets. $100 & up
401-726-0995.
SERVICE DIRECTORY
FOR $2.00 A DAY ADVERTISE YOUR BUSINESS HERE
CALL FOR DETAILS 401-767-8503
Martel (401)724-4129
Over 20 Years Experience with “Red Star Matt. Uph. Co.”
Maria’s
Family Owned Since 1926
Plumbing & Heating
EMERGENCY SERVICE
From New Toilets, Faucets to New Gas Boilers installed.
Hot Water Tanks Replaced (same-day replacement)
Full Drain Cleaning
From small to large jobs, we want you to be our customer!
Red Star Mattress & Upholstry Co., Inc.
Upholstering, Carpeting, Binding and Custom-Made Mattresses
Available for RVs and Households, Antique Restoration Specialist
4012 Mendon Road, Cumberland, RI
401-658-3200 phone/fax 401-658-1058
www.redstarmat.com
Fantastic Painters, Inc.
& Specialized Home Improvement
Music
“We don’t just say it... WE DO IT!”
25th Anniversary Special
HARMON LAW
Mention this ad and get 15% Discount!
OFFICES, P.C.
Attorney for the Holder
of the Mortgage
ALPHONSO NEALY
150 California Street
(401) 766-1473 • CELL (401) 639-8157
Newton, MA 02458
(617) 558-0500
201404-1216 - TEA
MORTGAGEE'S SALE
376 CUMBERLAND
Servicing All Makes and Models
HILL RD
WOONSOCKET, RI
Residential & Commercial
Making
Music for
49 Years
Guitars, Drums, Band Instruments, Accessories
Lessons On All Instruments Available
Gift Certificates Available
526 Front Street, Woonsocket, RI 02895 • (401) 769-3552
www.facebook.com/aldrewsmusiccenter • [email protected]
Mon-Thurs 12-8
Friday 12-7
Saturday 10-4
Moe’s
M
oe Mower Repair T.R. Omar General Contracting
The premises described
in the mortgage will be
sold subject to all encumbrances and prior
continued next column
20 yr Craftsman Specialist
I Buy and Sell Used Equipment
401-651-9053
21 Rocky Hill Rd. • Smithfield, RI 02917
Established 1979
Remodeling
Home Improvement
• Kitchens & Baths
• Roofing • Doors
• Additions
• Siding
• Decks/Patios
• Flooring
• Windows • All Exterior Work
• All Interior Finish
• Painting
Fully Insured
(401) 744-5209
Lic. 704
THE CALL B7
Wednesday, July 23, 2014
SERVICE Poll touts McCoy as vegan friendly
DIRECTORY PETA salutes PawSox’
FOR $2.00 A DAY ADVERTISE YOUR BUSINESS HERE
CALL FOR DETAILS 401-767-8503
“NO Job Too Small”
All Your Property Needs!
Tel. 401-282-9900 [email protected]
General Contractor JOSÉ DaSILVA
Financing Available ~ 0% Interest
www.RIPROPERTYMGT.com
diverse menu offerings
PAWTUCKET — The Pawtucket
Red Sox have hit a home run with
People for the Ethical Treatment of
Animals, according to PETA’'s ranking of the Top Five VegetarianFriendly AAA Minor League
Ballparks.
McCoy Stadium has taken the
number three spot on PETA’s list.
“McCoy Stadium has really
stepped up to the plate and made all
Pawtucket Red Sox fans feel welcome,” says PETA Director Ryan
Huling. “And by offering so many
different vegetarian and vegan foods,
the park is providing everyone with
healthy options when they go out to
the old ballgame.”
Healthy fare at the stadium cited by
PETA includes hummus and pita
chips, fresh fruit salad, fried greenbean straws, veggie burgers, and veggie dogs.
The number one spot in the minors
goes to the Omaha Storm Chasers’
Werner Park, where fans can chow
down on black-bean burgers (vegans,
hold the cheese), a hearty veggie dog,
and the Philly Cheese Phake (again,
vegans can just hold the cheese).
Coca-Cola Field (Buffalo Bisons) in
New York took second place, and
rounding out the winners are Cheney
Stadium (Tacoma Rainiers) in
Washington and Herschel Greer
Stadium (Nashville Sounds) in
Tennessee. Honorable mentions go to
AutoZone Park (Memphis Redbirds)
in Tennessee and Raley Field
(Sacramento River Cats) in California.
In the major leagues, AT&T Park,
home of the San Francisco Giants,
took top honors, thanks in part to its
tasty Field Roast frankfurter and portobello mushroom sandwich.
The Pawtucket Red Sox will
receive a framed certificate from
PETA.
To view the complete rankings,
please see PETA’s minor league
(http://www.peta.org/blog/peta-making-big-deal-minor-league-stadiums/)
and major league
(http://www.peta.org/blog/winnerspetas-2014-vegetarian-friendly-mlbstadium-rankings/) blog posts.
Moore praises Mass. child poverty report
Wolf Construction
“we’re ahead of the pack”
All phases of construction
Full Licensed & Insured
Ray
401-787-0731
DECKS
ADDITIONS
ROOFING & SIDING
Free Estimates
F I N I S H & PA I N T I N G
LEMAY’S SHARPENING
Saws, Chains, Carbide
Scissors, Home & Garden
and Other Tools
Summer Hours: April 1st - August 31st
Mon 12pm-7pm, Tue thru Fri 10am-7pm, Sat 8am-1pm
SUNDAY CLOSED
STARTING APRIL - SEPT
206 St. Barnabe St., Woonsocket, RI
(401) 769-1095
(401) 725-6854
(401) 434-0095
(401) 334-1357
Licensed & insured in RI & MA
In Business Over 40 Years
FREE
Estimates
100’ Crane • Bucket Truck • Back Hoe & Bobcat Work
Storm Damage • Tree Climbing • Stump Grounding
Tree Trimming/Pruning • Firewood/Log Loads
www.timbertreeserviceri.com
D&S Painting
RESIDENTIAL
Interior/ Exterior • Free Estimates
Over 30 Years • Insured • RI Lic#7271
Ron Nichols 401-766-5175 • Cell 401-339-4625
48 Norman Street, Woonsocket, RI 02895
$25 GIFT CERTIFICATE UPON COMPLETION
BE-SAFE
DRIVING SCHOOL
CALL or TEXT
401-533-0185
[email protected]
Visit our website for more
information & to register
Our goal is to teach safe
driving techniques & provide
affordable, quality driving
lessons in Rhode Island
• Door To Door Service
• Save On Insurance (Insurance Certificate)
• Specialized In Car Instruction
• Instructor Available Every Day Of The Week
BeSafeRI.com
Licensed & Insured
Free Estimates
~
Serving
RI & MA
Since 2001
~
401-572-8311 • LYNCHFENCECO.COM
Liberty’s
SEAL COATING
401-390-4976
Crack Filling/Patching/Striping
Residential ~ Commercial
Free Estimates • Owner Operated
P.O. Box 253, Manville, RI 02838
NEW ENGLAND WINDOW SIDING & REMODELING
General Contracting
Kitchen & Bath Remodeling • Replacement Windows
Vinyl & Wood Siding • Decks • Additions & More
Licensed & Insured in RI and MA
FREE ESTIMATES
CALL 1-800-696-7160 OR 508-478-7160
www.newsremodeling.com
CLEAN UP
&
CLEAR OUT
Sell those unwanted items
$$$ CHEAP! $$$
This Special Available
to Subscribers Only!
Items Under $100 ..... FREE
Items Under $250 ......$5.00
Items Under $500 ....$10.00
5 Lines / 7 Days • 2 items per household per week
OVER 166,000 READERS
Call one of our Classified Customer Service Reps
The Call - 767-8503 or The Times - 365-1438
PRIVATE PARTY ONLY. NO VEHICLES OR PETS.
BOSTON —
Massachusetts children
lead the nation in educational achievement and
health insurance coverage
and the Bay State has one
of the lowest child poverty
rates in the nation, according to a report by the Annie
E. Casey Foundation, a
Baltimore-based philanthropic organization. The
report, based on 2012, the
most recent data available,
declared Massachusetts
first in the nation for overall in child well-being.
“While there’s still more
we need to do to help our
children achieve their full
potential," stated Sen.
Richard T. Moore, DUxbridge, Senate President
Pro Tempore, who has been
a staunch advocate of funding for early childhood
education and children’s
health programs.
Moore was commenting
on a just-released Annie E.
Casey Foundation’s Kids
Count report which studied
economic, health, community and educational metrics.
Massachusetts children
improved in most areas,
although their condition
worsened over recent years
in regards to childhood
poverty, parental employment, single-parent households and children living in
high-poverty areas.
Economic factors well
known to policy makers
and aggravated by the
Great Recession caused
Massachusetts to slip in a
few categories over recent
years. The 15 percent of
Bay State children in
poverty in 2012 is a tick up
from 2005, though well
below the 23 percent of
children living in poverty
nationwide. In
Massachusetts, 414,000
children, or 30 percent, had
parents who lacked secure
employment in 2012 compared to 26 percent in
2008.
Independent rankings
serve as sources of pride or
embarrassment for the state
officials. “The good news
in the Kids Count Data
Book is that, in the aggregate, Massachusetts does
well by children because
we have invested in education and health care,”
Citizens for Public Schools
President Ann O’Halloran
said in a statement issued
through the Massachusetts
Budget and Policy Center.
“The bad news is that an
opportunity gap exists for
poor children and children
of color — they need early
education, small class sizes
through the third grade, and
learning experiences that
support the needs of the
whole child.”
“The findings of this
report validate many of the
budget priorities that my
Senate colleagues and I
have advocated in recent
years,” Moore noted.
Among Moore’s budget
and policy priorities are
funding for early childhood
education, childhood disease immunization, teen
pregnancy prevention —
especially for Southbridge,
which has historically higher rates, and at-risk youth
through programs such as
the Boys and Girls Clubs in
Blackstone and Dudley and
the Milford Youth Center.
As one of the architects
of the landmark
Massachusetts Health
Reform Law, Moore has
long been a recognized
leader in efforts to gain
access to health care for
virtually every child in the
state. The 1 percent, or
20,000 Massachusetts children, without health insurance in 2012, is compared
to 7 percent nationwide.
The Massachusetts
Chapter of the American
Academy of Pediatrics
recently recognized Moore
for his advocacy and lead-
ership in the passage of
“An Act establishing the
Massachusetts Childhood
Vaccine Program.” The bill
establishes a Childhood
Vaccine Trust Fund to provide kids who may not
have otherwise received
certain vaccines through
the state immunization program with access to vaccinations for a list of preventable diseases. The law
also enables the
Commonwealth purchase
the vaccines at a lower
price in an effort to promote health care cost containment.
Moore also established
the Massachusetts Pediatric
Palliative and Hospice Care
Program for seriously ill
children, which has helped
hundreds of Bay State children and their families face
the crises of potentially
fatal illness.
In the new budget, Sen.
Moore championed the
establishment of a
Massachusetts Down
Syndrome Clinic in conjunction with the UMASS
Memorial Children’s
Medical Center that will
provide comprehensive
care services to Down
Syndrome children in
Central and Western
Massachusetts.
The majority of measurements showed cause for
encouragement, however.
High school students not
graduating on time fell by a
third from 2005 and 2006,
when it was at 21 percent,
to 14 percent in 2011 and
2012.
Massachusetts had the
lowest percentage of fourth
graders not proficient in
reading, 45 percent in
2013, and at 45 percent the
lowest number of eighth
graders not proficient in
math that same year.
Teens who abuse alcohol
or drugs have fallen locally
and nationally, as have teen
births, which dropped pre-
cipitously in Massachusetts
and the country as a whole
between 2005 and 2012. In
Massachusetts in 2012
there were 14 teen births
per 1,000 compared to 29
teen births per 1,000
nationwide. Massachusetts
and New Hampshire had
the lowest teen birth rates
in 2012.
“The continued decline
in the teen birth rate in
Massachusetts is a testament to the potential of
youth, the strength of communities, and the positive
investments in teen pregnancy prevention by policymakers,” said Elizabeth
Peck, of the Massachusetts
Alliance on Teen
Pregnancy, in a statement,
“However, the state wide
average ignores the
inequities in health outcomes for underprivileged
groups in our state. We
have a responsibility as a
state to structure resources
so that they more equitably
serve communities and
racial/ethnic minorities
with teen birth rates well
above the state average.”
Other New England
states followed close
behind Massachusetts in
the Kids Count rankings.
Vermont was second, New
Hampshire was fourth and
Connecticut was seventh.
Massachusetts scored
below New Hampshire and
11 other states in the economic categories, topped
the chart in education,
ranked only below Iowa in
health, and ranked eighth in
family and community — a
category where New
Hampshire ranked first.
Overall, Mississippi
ranked lowest.
For more information
about Sen. Moore, visit
www.senatormoore.com, or
follow him on Facebook
(www.facebook.com/senatormoore) or Twitter
(www.twitter.com/SenDick
Moore).
DEM seeks proposals for $3.2M in water quality grants
PROVIDENCE — The
Department of Environmental
Management announces that up to
$3.2 million in grants are available
for local water quality protection and
restoration projects that abate nonpoint sources of pollution and
improve storm water management.
Funding for the grants includes $2.8
million from the Narragansett Bay
and Watershed Protection Bond Fund,
along with $400,000 from the federal
Clean Water Act Section 319 program. Local, state and regional governmental agencies, as well as public
schools, universities, and nonprofit
watershed, environmental or conservation organizations, are eligible to
apply for the grants.
Nonpoint source pollution arises
from many diverse sources, such as
uncontrolled storm water runoff,
cesspools and failing septic systems,
and erosion due to land disturbances.
DEM has identified surface water
bodies in the state that are impaired
because they do not meet applicable
water quality standards and criteria.
Many of these impairments are due to
nonpoint sources of pollution.
Reducing or preventing nonpoint
source pollution often requires local
implementation of site-specific projects and activities in accordance with
water quality restoration plans. The
newly available grant funds are aimed
at supporting these efforts.
Grant funding through the
Narragansett Bay and Watershed
Restoration Fund, which was
approved by Rhode Island voters in
2012, will be provided for projects
that seek to control the effects of
nonpoint source pollution and
improve storm water management.
Water quality restoration projects
should be based on prior characterization of the pollution sources adversely affecting water quality. Highest
priority will be given to projects that
implement regional actions that result
in watershed-based solutions to abate
nonpoint source impairments that
have been characterized by a water
quality restoration plan, and those
that result in the development of sustainable funding mechanisms for
storm water management.
DEM encourages collaborative
projects that address nonpoint source
pollution abatement on a watershed
or regional basis as appropriate. For
example, municipalities and partners
might work together to implement
riparian buffer restoration actions
such as pavement removal and planting projects or storm water retrofitting projects at several locations in
a prioritized manner within a shared
watershed. DEM is also seeking capital projects that strengthen local
storm water management programs,
including projects that enhance local
capacity for storm water management
through acquisition of vehicles and
equipment; implement a best management practice identified through a
DEM-approved storm water management plan; projects focusing on the
mitigation, control or elimination of
illicit connections to storm sewers;
and the evaluation and/or development of a sustainable funding mechanism for storm water management.
Habitat restoration projects are not
eligible for funding under this grant
round.
In addition to the state grant funds,
a limited amount of funding from
federal Clean Water Act
Implementation Grants is available
for projects that implement eligible
actions in three designated watersheds. They include the BristolKickemuit River Watershed Plan,
which covers most of Bristol and the
eastern portion of Warren; the
Barrington-Palmer-Warren Rivers
Watershed Plan, which covers a small
portion of Bristol, eastern Warren,
eastern Barrington and southeast East
Providence; and the Aquidneck Island
Watersheds Plan, which covers
Newport, Middletown and
Portsmouth.
DEM’s Office of Water Resources
will hold a public workshop on
Wednesday, Aug. 6, to review the
grant application process. All potential applicants are strongly encouraged to attend. The workshop will be
held from 1 to 3: p.m. in Room 300
at DEM Headquarters, 235
Promenade St., Providence.
Proposals must be submitted to
DEM no later than 4 p.m. on Friday,
Sept. 12.
Proposals for state Narragansett
Bay and Watershed Restoration Fund
grants must be submitted to Jay
Manning, P.E., principal sanitary
engineer in DEM’s Office of Water
Resources, 235 Promenade Street,
Providence, RI 02908. He may be
reached at 222-4700 ext. 7254 or via
email at [email protected].
For further information contact Sue
Kiernan at 222-4700, ext. 7600, or
via email at [email protected].
Proposals for federal Clean Water
Act 319 Program grants must be submitted to Betsy Dake, senior environmental planner in DEM’s Office of
Water Resources, 235 Promenade
Street, Providence, RI 02908. She
may be reached at 222-4700, ext.
7230, or via email at
[email protected] . For further
information contact Ernie Panciera at
222-4700, ext. 7603, or via email at
[email protected].
The request for proposals is available on DEM’s website at
http://www.dem.ri.gov/programs/benviron/water/finance/index.htm. The
request for proposals is also posted
on the state Office of Purchases website at
www.purchasing.ri.gov/RIVIP/GrantS
earch.asp
B8 THE CALL
Wednesday, July 23, 2014