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Теги: news newspaper the boston globe
Год: 2022
Текст
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1872
2022
Serving our community for 150 years
November 6, 2022
Among Democrats, foreboding mounts
As election nears, party faithful are fearing
a red wave — and what that may wash away
By Jess Bidgood
GLOBE STAFF
MADISON, Wis. — Ellen Fisher, a 74year-old Democrat, has voted in her fair
share of elections over the years, but as
Tuesday’s midterms approach she’s feeling more of that gnawing, pre-election
anxiety than ever.
“It’s frightening,” said Fisher, a retired
university and state employee, who is
deeply worried about a Republican takeover of Congress and state government
here and the march of election deniers
through American politics. What’s worse,
she’s unsure that voters such as she can
stop it.
“I’ve never felt this way about an election,” she said, after dropping off a library
book in a pounding rain in this deep-blue
capital of purple Wisconsin. “I don’t know
what I can do, but vote.”
It is an uneasy time to be a Democrat.
Two years ago, Democrats thought
they had banished Donald Trump for
good. And just this summer, they were
hopeful that the popularity of abortion
rights combined with the extremism of
key Republican candidates might help
them fight the typical midterm gravity
VOTERS, Page A16
WIN MCNAMEE/GETTY IMAGES
People lined up to hear Pennsylvania Lieutenant Governor
John Fetterman, who is running for the Senate.
Short of
staff, ERs
swamped,
stressed
No letup from either side;
surge in need comes amid
persistent labor scarcity
By Kay Lazar
GLOBE STAFF
In a reversal of history, Black residents are leaving Massachusetts, some to
states their ancestors fled, drawn by the comfort of a larger community
The emergency department at Massachusetts
General Hospital was so backed up one Friday
night last month that Janet Cook waited for nearly eight hours in a wheelchair in a crowded hallway before an inpatient bed opened up. That was
after the 69-year-old Norfolk resident had
writhed in pain for almost two hours before receiving medication.
“The halls were lined with patients on stretchers and the nurses would say to you, ‘We are sorry, we have no beds,’” said Cook, who was diagnosed with a bowel obstruction. “The lady across
from me had a broken vertebrae in her neck, and
there were people calling out for help. It was like
a war zone.”
Cook’s recent experience at Mass. General is
hardly an isolated one. While hospital emergency
departments across Massachusetts have weathered surges of sick patients throughout the pandemic and in years past, doctors say what they’re
seeing now is unprecedented. Staffing shortages
are at a peak — an estimated 19,000 positions are
unfilled, according to a report released last week
from the Massachusetts Health & Hospital Association — and ERs are continuing to see a flood of
EMERGENCY ROOMS, Page A18
Words to savor:
An ode to two
bards of cuisine
Writers Gael Greene,
Julie Powell captured the
sumptuous side of eating
By Devra First
JOHNNY HANSON FOR THE BOSTON GLOBE
and weekly event lists. The T-shirts were a hit.
Even Ayanna Pressley bought one.
But it weighed on her, the endless scramble to
build a more diverse social scene in Boston, the effort it took to find affordable venues and rally people to show up. She got tired of feeling constant
pressure to advocate for her community — and
tired, too, of her cramped yet pricey one-bedroom
in Chelsea. It wasn’t the life she’d imagined for
herself.
So last year Bien-Aime moved to Houston,
where, she said in an earlier conversation, she feels
LEAVING, Page A20
FOOD WRITERS, Page A17
‘In Boston, we’re so focused on being Black. I want to exist, too.’
GENEVIEVE BIEN-AIME, who says she’s found a more welcoming environment in Houston
H
By Tiana Woodard
OUSTON — Genevieve Bien-Aime
perched on a barstool in a trendy international food hall here, surveying
the lively crowd: Young Black people
mingled with Latino, Asian, and
white friends over after-work cocktails, sampling
Mexican quesabirrias and Viet-Cajun crawfish.
“You’d never see this in Boston,” she said.
For six years, Bien-Aime, 36, ran a networking
group called The Other Boston for young Black
professionals, promoting open mics, bar nights,
VOL . 302, NO. 129
*
Suggested retail price
$6.00
Georgia and Florida
are gaining an
average of
GLOBE STAFF
1,400 and
1,300
Black newcomers
from Massachusetts
each year,
respectively.
A Bavarian village in central Washington state has the Christmas spirit
could have freed a man wrongly convicted of murder. Metro, B1.
all year long. Travel, N13.
A high-profile Suffolk homicide prosecutor has been suspended amid allegations he withheld evidence that
GLOBE STAFF
Food writing just lost two great influences.
Gael Greene, New York magazine’s inaugural restaurant critic, was 88. Julie Powell, whose blog
about cooking her way
APPRECIATION through Julia Child’s “Mastering the Art of French
Cooking” inspired the 2009 movie “Julie & Julia,”
was 49. Separated by decades, and very different
writers, both women challenged and changed
their medium by ignoring its conventions and deploying their own authentic voices.
It was 1968 when Greene grabbed the wheel
and the template from those who had been restaurant critics before: mostly men, all white (not
much has changed there), who assumed authority
with the ease of shrugging on a bespoke sport
coat. It was made for them, after all.
Restaurant reviews had largely been factual
Barre’s Founders Museum returned
more than 130 artifacts to representatives of the Oglala Lakota and
Cheyenne River tribes. Metro, B1.
Let the records go
Sunday: Warm. High: 72-77. Low: 61-66
Monday: Same. High: 72-77. Low: 42-47.
Sunrise: 6:23 Sunset: 4:31
Complete report, A30. Deaths, A21-29.
Turn clocks back
Daylight saving
time started at
2 a.m. today.
Clocks should
be turned back
one hour.
A2
The World
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
G l o b e
GOP midterm gains could slow foreign efforts
Would hinder
Biden’s work on
Ukraine, Iran
By Michael Crowley
NEW YORK TIMES
WASHINGTON — A Republican takeover of the House or
Senate in the midterm elections
next week could complicate the
Biden administration’s efforts
to defend Ukraine, slow the
confirmation of key US ambassadors and lead to public interrogations of officials who were
involved in the US withdrawal
from Afghanistan last year.
Congress has more leverage
over domestic affairs than over
foreign policy, thanks to the
president’s broad powers as
commander in chief. But Democrats are bracing for a far
more complicated — and, they
fear, more politicized — national security environment if Republicans control legislative
calendars, committee chairmanships and spending power.
Mo s t w o r r i s o m e f o r t h e
Biden administration is the
prospec t that Republicans
might slow the torrent of money and weapons to Ukraine that
began before Russia invaded in
February. Representative Kevin
McCarthy, a California Republican and the minority leader,
said last month that a Republican-led House would be unwilling to approve “blank check”
assistance for Ukraine.
Congress has approved $60
billion in aid for Ukraine since
the war began, with no explicit
conditions. But some Republicans, encouraged by prominent
conservatives such as Fox News
host Tucker Carlson, are increasingly questioning the
price tag of US aid to the country.
Many conservatives, however, doubt that McCarthy’s comment and those of some Republican candidates mean that a
Republican-led House would
constrain US support.
Danielle Pletka, a senior fellow at the American Enterprise
Institute and a former Republican Senate foreign policy staff
member, called McCarthy’s remark “a completely empty, pandering statement” and said she
was not worried about the party’s commitment to defending
Ukraine.
“I think that was just a toe in
the water of this growing divide
inside the Republican Party between the traditionalist, internationalist wing and the populist, Orban wing of the party,”
said Pletka, referring to Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor
Orban, a strongman who has
become a hero to many conservative supporters of former
President Donald Trump's.
The Senate Republican leader, Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, implicitly rebuked McCarthy by saying last month that
the United States should do
even more to support Kyiv. But
se veral Republican Senate
champions of Ukraine are retiring at the end of this Congress:
Rob Portman of Ohio, Richard
Burr of North Carolina, and
Ben Sasse of Nebraska.
One possible scenario would
be a new Republican emphasis
on oversight to ensure that US
weapons and aid are not diverted from their intended use, in a
country with a history of deep
c o r r u p t i o n . T h at n o t e w a s
sounded in June by the two Republicans in line to become
chairs of the House Committee
on Foreign Affairs and the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations.
US aid to Ukraine “will neither be effective nor politically
sustainable without strong
oversight and accountability
mechanisms,” wrote Representative Mike McCaul, a Texas Rep u b l i c a n , a n d S e n at o r Jim
Risch, an Idaho Republican.
Both men say they continue to
support assisting Ukraine.
McCaul and Risch have been
sharply critical of the Biden administration’s withdrawal from
Afghanistan. Both would probably summon Biden officials,
including Secretary of State
Antony Blinken, to public hearings.
McCaul wrote to Blinken in
mid-October requesting that
the State Department preserve
all documents and communications that might “be potentially
responsive to a future congressional inquiry, request, investigation, or subpoena.”
In an August statement on
the anniversary of the fall of
Kabul, Risch complained that
“we still don’t have full answers
as to how the Biden administra-
tion failed to see it coming and
did not have an effective plan in
place to evacuate American citizens and Afghan partners.”
“They are going to drag the
Biden administration over the
coals over Afghanistan,” Pletka
said.
Several Republicans called
for Blinken’s resignation after
the Kabul evacuation, and two
House Republicans introduced
a resolution calling for his impeachment. But Republicans
say they do not expect such efforts to gain traction.
McCaul takes a particular
interest in China and has expressed impatience with the
pace of delivery of US arms purchased by Taiwan for its defense against a potential Chinese invasion. He has also said
he would insist on further
tightening export controls to
deprive China of critical American technology it might use for
military purposes.
McCaul led a House Republican task force on China that
issued a report in 2020 calling
for actions including increased
military spending, new sanctions to punish Chinese human
rights violations, and more aggressive measures to counter
Chinese propaganda.
Republicans in both chambers are eager to press the
Biden administration over its
policy toward Iran. Many Republicans have criticized President Biden for not doing more
to support protesters who have
been demonstrating for weeks
against the country’s clerical re-
gime.
“Republicans are going to
put Iran back on the front burner in Washington,” said Mark
Dubowitz, CEO of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, a hawkish think tank that
calls for relentless pressure on
the Iranian government.
“Republicans are going to be
introducing sanctions bill after
bill,” he said.
Republican gains in Congress would also further complicate Biden’s efforts to resurrect the 2015 Iran nuclear deal,
which Trump abandoned.
International talks to restore the deal have been stalled
for weeks, and Biden officials
express doubt that Tehran is
willing to scale back its nuclear
program again for sanctions relief.
A Republican Senate could
also further slow the confirmation of Biden’s nominees to national security positions
throughout the government. In
particular, the administration
is still waiting for the Senate to
confirm more than three dozen
ambassadorial nominees, as
well as other picks for mid- and
high-level State Department
posts. They include ambassadors to Russia, Saudi Arabia,
Brazil, India, Nigeria, and the
United Arab Emirates.
Senate Democrats hope to
confirm many of them before
the end of the year. If they cannot, the nominations expire
and the candidates must be
nominated again at the start of
the next Congress.
The World
Today
NETHERLANDS
Climate protesters
block private jets
EDE — Hundreds of climate
protesters blocked private jets
from leaving Amsterdam’s
Schiphol Airport on Saturday in
a demonstration on the eve of
the COP27 UN climate meeting
in Egypt. Greenpeace and Extinction Rebellion protesters sat
around private jets to prevent
them leaving and others rode bicycles around the planes. Dewi
Zloch of Greenpeace Netherlands said the activists want
“fewer flights, more trains, and
a ban on unnecessary short-haul
flights and private jets.” Military
police said they arrested a number of protesters for being on the
airport’s grounds without authorization. Responding Friday to
an open letter from Greenpeace,
Schiphol’s new CEO, Ruud
Sondag, said the airport is targeting “emissions-free airports
by 2030 and net climate-neutral
aviation by 2050. And we have
an duty to lead the way in that,”
but conceded it needed to happen faster. (AP)
WEST BANK
Palestinian killed
by Israeli forces
RAMALLAH — The Palestinian
Health Ministry said Saturday
that Israeli forces shot and killed
a young man in the occupied
West Bank. The ministry said
Musab Nofal, 18, was hit with a
bullet in the chest and died at a
hospital in the city of Ramallah.
Another Palestinian was also seriously wounded. The Israeli
military said Nofal and the second Palestinian were hurling
stones at Israeli vehicles traveling on a West Bank road near
Silwad, northeast of Ramallah,
damaging several cars. Soldiers
aimed live fire toward the rock
throwers, it added. The violence
was the latest in a wave of Israeli-Palestinian fighting in the
West Bank and East Jerusalem.
(AP)
SOMALIA
US strikes at
extremist group
MOGADISHU — The United
States military said it had carried out an airstrike in support
of the Somali government’s operations against the Al Shabab
extremist group, which has
killed some of the group’s fighters. A statement by the US Africa Command on Saturday described the airstrike as being at
the request of the Somali National Army near the town of
Cadale in the Middle Shabelle
region. The US statement said
Al Shabab fighters had been attacking Somali military forces.
(AP)
RUSSIA
13 killed, 5 injured
in fire at cafe
ANDREW KRAVCHENKO/ASSOCIATED PRESS
A man sat at a cafe in Kyiv Friday during a blackout. Russian forces continue to pound Ukrainian cities and villages with missiles and drones.
Blackouts hit Ukraine amid heavy Russian shelling
Outages affect
Kyiv and seven
other regions
By Andrew Meldrum
ASSOCIATED PRESS
KYIV — Ukraine’s state electricity operator on Saturday announced blackouts in Kyiv and
seven other regions of the country in the aftermath of Russia’s
devastating strikes on energy infrastructure.
The move comes as Russian
forces continue to pound Ukrainian cities and villages with missiles and drones, inflicting damage on power plants, water supplies, and other civilian targets,
in a grinding war that is nearing
its nine-month mark.
Russia has denied that the
drones it has used in Ukraine
came from Iran, but the Islamic
Republic’s foreign minister on
Saturday for the first time acknowledged supplying Moscow
with “a limited number ” of
drones before the invasion. Hos-
sein Amirabdollahian claimed,
however, that Tehran didn’t
know if its drones were used
against Ukraine and stated
Iran’s commitment to stopping
the conflict.
Ukrenergo, the sole operator
of Ukraine’s high-voltage transmission lines, initially said in
an online statement on Saturday that scheduled blackouts
would take place in the capital
and the greater Kyiv region,
as well as in several regions
around it — Chernihiv, Cherkasy,
Zhytomyr, Sumy, Poltava, and
Kharkiv.
Later in the day, however, the
company released an update
saying that scheduled outages
for a specific number of hours
wouldn’t be enough and instead
there would be emergency outages, which could last an indefinite amount of time.
Ukraine has been grappling
with power outages and the disruption of water supplies since
Russia started unleashing massive barrages of missile and
drone strikes on the country’s
energy infrastructure last
month.
Moscow has said that thosehad come in response to what it
alleged were Ukrainian attacks
on Crimea, the region that Russia illegally annexed in 2014.
Ukraine has denied those allegations.
dents, the presidential office
said.
About 40 shells were fired
overnight at the city of Nikopol,
Dnipropetrovsk Governor Valentyn Reznichenko said on Telegram. The Russian forces targeted the city and the areas around
it with heavy artillery, as they
Iran’s foreign minister for the first time
acknowledged supplying Moscow with
drones.
According to Ukraine’s presidential office, at least three civilians were killed and eight others
were wounded over the past 24
hours by Russian shelling of
nine Ukrainian regions, where
drones, missiles, and heavy artillery were used.
In the Russian-occupied
Kherson region, where a Ukrainian counteroffensive has been
underway, the Russian military
continued to abduct local resi-
have done repeatedly since July.
Two fires broke out, and more
than a dozen residential and
utility buildings, as well as a
gas pipeline, were damaged, he
said.
Elsewhere in the region,
Ukrainian forces shot down a
drone and another projectile, according to Reznichenko.
In the southern Mykolaiv region, the overnight shelling of
rural areas damaged several
houses but didn’t cause any casualties, Mykolaiv Governor Vitali Kim said on Telegram.
Russian forces also fired missiles at the southeastern Zaporizhzhia region, which has been illegally annexed by Moscow and
large parts of it remain occupied. According to regional Governor Oleksandr Starukh, the attack took place after midnight
and damaged three businesses
as well as a number of cars.
In the eastern Donetsk region, also annexed and partially
occupied by Russia, eight Ukrainian cities and villages were
shelled, including Bakhmut, Avdiivka, and Porkovsk.
Russian-installed authorities
in Donetsk reported an attempt
on the life of a Moscow-appointed judge of the region’s Supreme
Court. Alexander Nikulin, who
was on a judicial panel that in
June sentenced to death two
Britons and a Moroccan fighting
for Ukraine, has been hospitalized with gunshot wounds and is
in grave condition, Kremlinbacked officials said.
MOSCOW — A fire in a large cafe in the city of Kostroma killed
13 people and injured five others on Saturday, local authorities
said. Kostroma, a riverside city
of 270,000, is 210 miles north of
Moscow. The blaze erupted in
the early hours after someone
apparently used a flare gun, according to the authorities. The
Russian state news agency RIA
Novosti reported that a brawl
erupted in the cafe shortly before the fire, but it wasn’t immediately clear if it had anything to
do with the flare gun. Russia’s
Investigative Committee said
that a suspect had been detained for allegedly firing the
flare gun and that the cafe’s director also was being held. (AP)
INDEX
Address......................................H
Bird Sightings..........................B5
Books.....................................N10
Business...................................B7
Ideas & Opinion........................ K
Letters..................................... K6
Lottery..................................... B2
Magazine........................... Inside
Metro......................................... B
Movies..................................... N9
Obituaries............................. A29
Sports.........................................C
Sunday Arts............................... N
Sunday’s Child.........................B3
This Day in History................. B4
Travel.....................................N13
TV Listings.............................. N6
Weather.................................A30
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
A3
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The World
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
G l o b e
North Korea fires Vibrant Seoul refuge quiet after tragedy
more missiles
By Choe Sang-Hun
NEW YORK TIMES
Comes as US
flies bombers
over South
By Kim Tong-Hyung
ASSOCIATED PRESS
SEOUL — North Korea added to its recent barrage of weapons demonstrations by launching four ballistic missiles into
the sea on Saturday, as the United States sent two supersonic
bombers streaking over South
Korea in a dueling display of
militar y might that underscored rising tensions in the region.
South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of
Staff said that the four shortrange missiles fired from a
western coastal area around
noon flew about 80 miles toward the country’s western sea.
The North has test-fired
more than 30 missiles this
week, including an intercontinental ballistic missile on
Thursday that triggered evacuation alerts in northern Japan,
and flew large numbers of warplanes inside its territory in an
angry reaction to a massive
combined aerial exercise between the United States and
South Korea.
The South Korean military
said two B-1B bombers trained
with four US F-16 fighter jets
and four South Korean F-35s
jets during the last day of the
“Vigilant Storm” joint air force
drills that wraps up Saturday. It
marked the first time since December 2017 that the bombers
were deployed to the Korean
Peninsula. The exercise involved around 240 warplanes,
including advanced F-35 fighter
jets from both countries.
North Korea’s Foreign Ministry late Friday described the
country’s military actions this
week as an appropriate response to the exercise, which it
called a display of US “military
confrontation hysteria.” It said
Nor th Korea will respond
with the “toughest counteraction” to any attempts by “hostile forces” to infringe on its
sovereignty or security interests.
South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of
Staff said the participation of
the B-1Bs in the joint drills
demonstrated the allies’ readiness to “sternly respond” to
North Korean provocations and
the US commitment to defend
its ally with the full range of its
military capabilities, including
nuclear.
B-1B flyovers had been a familiar show of force during past
periods of tensions with North
Korea. The planes last appeared
in the region in 2017, during
another provocative run in
North Korean weapons demonstrations. But the flyovers had
been halted in recent years as
the United States and South Korea stopped their large-scale exercises to support the former
Trump administration’s diplomatic efforts with North Korea
and because of the COVID-19
pandemic.
The allies resumed their
large-scale training this year after North Korea dialed up its
weapons testing to a record
pace, exploiting a divide in the
UN Security Council over Russia’s war on Ukraine as a window to accelerate arms development.
North Korea hates such displays of American militar y
might at close range. The North
has continued to describe the B1B as a “nuclear strategic bomber ” although the plane was
switched to conventional weaponry in the mid-1990s.
Vigilant Storm had been initially scheduled to end Friday,
but the allies decided to extend
the training to Saturday in response to a series of North Korean ballistic launches on
Thursday, including the ICBM
that triggered evacuation alerts
and halted trains in northern
SEOUL — Seo Hyuk-jun, 36,
knelt before the white chrysanthemums as he placed a lit cigarette, incense, and a paper cup
filled with Jack Daniel’s on the
ground. He stood, knelt and
bowed twice, performing a traditional Korean ritual for the dead.
Day after day, such tributes
arrived at the makeshift memorial in Itaewon, one of Seoul’s
most popular districts. Young
South Koreans used to go there
for its diversity and vibrant
nightlife. They called it “Itaewon
freedom.”
Now, the neighborhood has
become a sobering monument of
grief and soul-searching after
more than 150 young people
were killed Oct. 29 during a
crowd crush while celebrating
Halloween. Bars that were
throbbing with K-pop music just
a week ago are now silent, their
doors covered with condolence
messages and a notice from the
local government asking people
to refrain from loud music and
dancing.
Like many South Koreans,
Seo said he felt guilty being alive
when so many young people
were killed that night, their entire lives still ahead of them.
“For them, it was no ordinary
Halloween. They were supposed
to feel freedom after three years
of pandemic hell,” Seo said,
choking back tears. “I hope my
cigarette and liquor will ease
their trip to the next world.”
Nowhere is that sense of
mourning felt more acutely than
near Exit No. 1 of the Itaewon
subway station, once known as a
bustling gateway to nightlife and
fun. The alleyway where the
crowd crush happened, near
that exit, has remained closed all
week, crisscrossed with orange
police tape. Police officers stood
guard on a recent evening, green
light batons in hand. Pedestrians occasionally knelt and
bowed in mourning.
“People are still walking
down the streets, cars are still
driving, but I hear no noise,”
said Kim Hee-soo, 24, a shop
CHANG W. LEE/NEW YORK TIMES
A student grieved for friends killed in the recent stampede in Seoul’s Itaewon neighborhood.
manager in Itaewon. “It’s as if
this place has stopped dead. It’s
not the Itaewon that I have
known.”
Built long before Seoul had
city planning, Itaewon has always been something of an outlier among South Koreans. Decades ago, US service members
‘It’s as if this place
has stopped dead.
It’s not the
Itaewon that I
have known.’
KIM HEE-SOON
Shopkeeper near the site of the
stampede that killed more than
150 people in Seoul
stationed at a nearby military
base would visit the neighborhood to drink and unwind. Locals usually stayed away. After a
time, the area gained a reputation as a place for foreigners. It
also served as a conduit of Western culture — rock ‘n’ roll and
reggae music, exotic foods, and
foreign fashion — at a time when
South Korea was still a postwar,
developing nation.
Itaewon had to reinvent itself
when the US military began relocating to Camp Humphreys, a
gigantic base south of Seoul, a
decade ago. But even before
then, by the late 1990s, young
people were starting to flock to
its trendy bars and restaurants
squeezed into old buildings and
narrow alleyways. The neighborhood earned a new reputation as
a place to escape the pressures of
South Korean society, bound by
Confucian hierarchies and conformist views.
“When I think of Itaewon,
the words that come to my mind
are freedom, openness, and diversity. You see foreigners here,
you can experience foods from
other cultures here,” said Byun
Ji-sun, 25, a photographer having dinner with friends in one of
the few kebab restaurants still
open on a recent evening in Itaewon. “When young people say,
‘Let’s go to Itaewon,’ we mean,
‘Let’s go clubbing and have fun.’”
Last Saturday, the first Halloween celebration since South
Korea ended its pandemic rules,
was to be something of a coming-out party. Throngs of young
people poured out of Exit No. 1.
Clubs and restaurants were
ready to welcome as many customers as they could handle.
The narrow alleyway where the
crowd crush happened was a
popular shortcut to many bars
and clubs.
“I think every special-effects
makeup artist in the country
had set up little stalls along that
street and were applying fake,
bloody wounds that looked so
real,” said Tami Overby, a senior
adviser at a global business
strategy firm who frequently visits Seoul from the United States
and walked the main Itaewon
street last Saturday. “My last
Halloween in Itaewon was 2019,
and the crowd was nowhere
near that large,” she said. “Never
have I seen that many people in
that small of a space.”
Partygoers surged into the alleyway from both directions,
creating a deadly pressure. Few
police officers were there to
manage the crowd, even though
the city had expected a particularly large number of people in
Itaewon for the Halloween
weekend. Desperate calls to the
police went unheeded as victims
were trampled and smothered.
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B o s t o n
S u n d a y
G l o b e
Governor Baker has questions
about Question 2.
And so should you.
Governor Baker told GBH News he’s likely to vote
No on Question 2 because there are too many
unanswered questions1.
He’s right.
The right answer on Question 2?
Vote No.
1
GBH News, Oct. 27, 2022 | Paid for by The Committee to Protect Access to Quality Dental Care. Top contributors: Dental
Service of Massachusetts, Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, Sun Life Financial, Principal Life Insurance Company,
and Delta Dental Plans Association. For more information regarding contributors, go to www.ocpf.us.
A5
A6
The World
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
G l o b e
In UK, conditions at center for migrants draw criticism
Official cites
‘invasion,’ adding
to condemnation
By Sylvia Hui
ASSOCIATED PRESS
LONDON — Behind wire
fences in southeast England,
children wave their arms and
chant “freedom” to grab the attention of people on the other
side. A young girl throws a bottle
with a message inside. “We need
your help. Please help us,” the
note reads.
The children are among
thousands of people being held
in dangerously overcrowded
conditions at a closed airport
serving as a processing center
for migrants who recently arrived on British shores after
crossing the English Channel in
small boats. The situation there
has reignited a heated debate
about the Conservative UK government’s treatment of asylumseekers.
Located at the site of a former British air force base that
had a short life as the civilian
Manston Airport, the center in
Kent was designed as a shortterm processing facility housing
about 1,600 newcomers. Up to
4,000 were staying there at one
point last week, with some reportedly detained unlawfully for
a month or more.
Independent government inspectors said they saw families
sleeping on floors in prison-like
conditions that presented fire
and health hazards. The inspectors warned of the risk of outbreaks after cases of scabies,
diphtheria, and other conditions
were reported.
“Welcome to the UK,” read a
headline in the Metro newspaper, accompanied by a close-up
photo of young children gazing
out from behind metal fences.
Facing pressure over the situation, UK Home Secretary Suella Braverman defended the government’s policies and described
the increasing number of migrants arriving via the English
Channel as “an invasion on our
southern coast.” Her comment
drew widespread condemnation.
The conditions at the center
in the village of Manston have
put a spotlight on wider problems in Britain’s asylum system,
which is struggling to cope with
a record number of small boat
crossings at a time when border
officials are trying to clear a
massive backlog of refugee applications.
“We’ve got this kind of perfect storm of more people coming — which the government
was warned about — and added
to the mix we have this huge
waiting list of around 100,000
individuals who have sought
asylum,” said Jonathan Ellis, the
policy and public affairs lead at
B r i t a i n’s R e f u g e e Co u n c i l .
“There’s a lack of political will, a
lack of political focus, and therefore, (a lack of ) the associated
resources to really tackle this issue.”
Around 40,000 people from
countries that include Iran, Afghanistan, Iraq, and Albania
have crossed one of the world’s
busiest shipping lanes in dinghies and other unseaworthy
boats from northern France so
far this year, hoping to start new
lives in the United Kingdom.
That’s the highest number ever recorded, and it represents an
exponential increase from 2018,
when only 299 migrants were
detected arriving in England in
small boats without authorization, official data showed. Last
year, there were 28,536.
Dozens of people have lost
their lives attempting the passage, including 27 who died
when a packed smuggling boat
capsized in November 2021.
Braverman, who is known for
an uncompromising approach
to immigration, has blamed
criminal gangs for facilitating
the crossings and focused on
what she called spurious claims
by some of those seeking refuge.
She told lawmakers in Parliament last week to “stop pretending that they are all refugees in
distress.” Her harsh language
has drawn criticism, including
from within the governing Conservative Party. Some critics accuse Braverman of fueling antiimmigration hate.
“The government rhetoric
since I arrived has been scapegoating migrants, blaming us for
the problems of this country. But
it’s gotten a lot worse,” said Hassan Akkad, a documentary maker who fled Syria in 2012 to seek
asylum in the UK.
“When you have a home secretary comparing asylum-seekers to an invading enemy, you
are giving a green light to the
public to attack them,” added
Akkad, who works with refugee
charity Choose Love.
The overcrowding at the
Manston center reached a breaking point last week after hundreds of people were moved
there from another migrant processing center nearby that was
hit with gasoline bombs. Police
said the man who carried out
the Oct. 30 attack and killed
himself afterward was likely
driven by a “hate-filled grievance.”
Braverman also faced accusations that she blocked hotel
bookings for asylum-seekers to
ease overcrowding at Manston
and ignored legal advice on the
matter. She denied the claims.
Critics say government incompetence in managing Britain’s asylum system extend beyond Manston and precede
Braverman becoming interior
minister in September. The opposition Labour Party said only
4 percent of asylum claims from
small boat arrivals were processed last year, meaning that
more than 100,000 people are in
limbo waiting for their applications for protection to be considered.
But despite the unprecedented increase in people arriving in
small boats, the UK receives far
fewer asylum-seekers than many
other European countries, including France, Germany, and
Italy. Last year, 48,540 people
applied for British asylum, compared to 148,200 applicants in
Germany and more than
103,000 in France.
SALVATORE CAVALLI/ASSOCIATED PRESS
The SOS Humanity 1 rescue ship was seen off the shores of Sicily on Saturday.
Italy shuts its ports to rescue ships
By Colleen Barry
and Emily Schultheis
ASSOCIATED PRESS
MILAN — Two Germanrun migrant rescue ships carrying nearly 300 rescued people were waiting off the eastern coast of Sicily on
Saturday, one with permission to disembark its most
vulnerable migrants while the
other’s request for a safe port
has gone unanswered despite
“critical” conditions on board.
Chaos and uncertainty
have resulted from the decision late Friday by Italy’s farright-led government to close
its ports to humanitarian rescue ships.
Nearly 1,100 rescued migrants aboard four ships run
by European charity organizations are stuck in the Mediterranean Sea, some with people
rescued as long as two weeks
ago amid deteriorating conditions on board.
Both the Humanity 1 and
the Rise Above ships, run by
separate German humanitarian groups, were in Italian waters, both seeking shelter
from rough seas. The Humanity 1, carrying 179 migrants,
has received permission to
disembark minors and people
needing medical care, but the
Rise Above’s request for port
for its 93 rescued people has
so far gone unanswered.
By the time darkness fell
Saturday, the Humanity 1 still
had not received any direct
communications from Italian
authorities regarding evacuat i o n s , s p o k e s m a n Wa s i l
Schauseil said.
The SOS Humanity charity
challenged Italy’s move to distinguish “vulnerable” migrants, saying all were rescued at sea, which alone qualifies them for a safe por t
under international law.
Italy’s only Black lawmake r i n t h e l o w e r c h a m b e r,
Abourbakar Soumahoro, said
he would join migrants on the
ship if Italian Premier Giorgia
Meloni’s government did not
act soon to aid all those
blocked at sea.
Interior Minister Matteo
Piantedosi said Friday that
the Humanity 1 would be allowed in Italian waters only
long enough to disembark minors and people in need of urgent medical care.
The measure was approved after Germany and
France each called on Italy to
grant a safe port to the migrants, and indicated they
would receive some of the migrants so Italy wouldn’t bear
the burden alone.
No such provisions have
been offered to the other three
ships, and both the Geo Barents, carrying 572 migrants,
and the Rise Above have entered Italian waters without
consent despite repeated requests for a safe port. The
Ocean Viking with 234 migrants remained in international waters, south of the
Strait of Messina.
“We have been waiting for
10 days for a safe place to disembark the 572 survivors,”
said Juan Mattias Gil, the
head of mission for the Geo
Barents.
Italy’s new far-right-led
government is insisting that
countries whose flag the charity-run ships fly must take on
the migrants. Speaking late
Friday, Piantedosi described
such vessels as “islands” that
are under the jurisdiction of
the flag countries.
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
G l o b e
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NOVEMBER 6, 2022
B o s t o n
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Revolutionary Guard launches rocket
Iranian
state TV
reported
the launch
of this
satellite
rocket
Saturday,
part of
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ASSOCIATED PRESS
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G l o b e
Comes amid
widespread,
angry protests
Bank-issued, FDIC-insured
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DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Iran’s powerful paramilitary Revolutionary Guard on
Saturday launched a new satellite-carrying rocket, state TV reported, seeking to demonstrate
the hard-line force’s prowess
even as anti-government protests rage across the country.
Iranian state TV said the
Guard successfully launched
the solid-fueled rocket — what it
called a Ghaem-100 satellite
carrier — and aired dramatic
footage of the rocket blasting off
from a desert launch pad into a
cloudy sky. The report did not
reveal the location, which resembled Iran's northeastern
Shahroud Desert.
The state-run IRNA news
agency reported that the carrier
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IRANIAN STATE TELEVISION VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS
would be able to put a satellite
weighing 176 pounds into orbit
some 310 miles from Earth.
General Amir Ali Hajizadeh,
the commander of the Guard's
aerospace division, said he
hoped the Guard would soon
use the rocket to put a new satellite, named Nahid, into orbit.
Iran says its satellite program, like its nuclear activities,
is aimed at scientific research
and other civilian applications.
The United States and other
Western countries have long
been suspicious of the program
because the same technology
can be used to develop longrange missiles. Previous launches have drawn rebukes from the
United States.
The Guard operates its own
space program and military infrastructure parallel to Iran’s
regular armed forces and answers only to Supreme Leader
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
Over the past decade, Iran
has sent several short-lived satellites into orbit and in 2013
launched a monkey into space.
The program has seen recent
troubles, however. There have
been five failed launches in a
row for the Simorgh program,
another satellite-carrying rocket.
A fire at the Imam Khomeini
Spaceport in February 2019
killed three researchers, author-
ities said at the time. A launchpad rocket explosion later that
year drew the attention of former president Donald Trump.
The Guard's announcement
came in the seventh week of
protests sparked by the death in
custody of 22-year-old Mahsa
Amini, who was detained after
allegedly violating the country's
strict dress code for women.
The protests embroiling the
country first focused on the
state-mandated headscarf, or
hijab, but swiftly morphed into
one of the biggest challenges to
the government since the 1979
Islamic Revolution. Protesters
chant for overthrowing the clerical rule and the death of
Khamenei.
Security forces, including
paramilitary volunteers with
the Revolutionary Guard, have
violently cracked down on the
demonstrations, killing over
300 people, including 41 children, according to the Oslobased Iran Human Rights.
On Saturday, student unions
in Iran reported protests in at
least six major universities
across the country. Universities
have been hubs for unrest, fueling the protest movement despite the crackdown.
Anger over Iran's sickly economy, suffocated by US sanctions
and years of mismanagement,
has also driven people into the
streets. Talks to revive Iran's nuclear deal with world powers,
which granted Tehran sanctions
relief in exchange for strict
curbs on its atomic program, hit
a deadlock months ago.
On Saturday, Iran's currency,
the rial, plunged to its lowest
value ever against the dollar.
Iran’s currency was trading at
360,000 rials to the dollar, compared to 32,000 rials to the dollar at the time of the 2015 nuclear accord.
The southeastern Sistan and
Baluchestan province was
gripped by unrest on Friday,
drawing a lethal response from
security forces. Advocacy group
HalVash claimed security forces
killed at least 16 people.
Iran's prominent Sunni cleric Mowlavi Abdolhamid Esm a i l z e h i o n S at u r d ay c o n demned the violence in Sistan
and Baluchestan as another
“bloody disaster,” saying that security forces opened fire on protesters who were only “chanting
slogans and throwing stones”
outside the governor's office.
The judiciary of Sistan and
Baluchestan announced Saturday that 620 people had been
arrested in the province during
the unrest, with 45 people sentenced so far on charges of damaging public property and encouraging youth on social media to join protests.
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Brandeis Aging Brain Study
What factors protect some individuals from
developing Alzheimer's disease?
Seeking healthy adult research volunteers over
60 years old with no diagnosis of Alzheimer's
disease or mild cognitive impairment.
WHAT IS INVOLVED?
Two one-day sessions, 3 years apart.
Injection, IV, blood draw, PET/MRI brain scans,
and cognitive testing may be required.
Compensation is $900.
INTERESTED?
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survey! All responses are
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an international humanitarian
organization dedicated to ending
extreme poverty, whatever it takes.
From Afghanistan to Haiti, Ukraine
and Pakistan to the Horn of Africa,
we go the furthest to reach the most
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NOVEMBER 6, 2022
G l o b e
College
closing
left them
adrift
Students say
they’d found
home in school
By Alan Jinich
and Max Strickberger
WASHINGTON POST
After a neighboring college in
Lincoln, Ill., announced plans to
downsize, Aundrae Williams
and his friends joked that their
school might be next. Then he
saw his professors crying.
On March 30, after 157 years
of history, its president, David
Gerlach, announced the closure
of Lincoln College forever.
Jaylah Bolden was stunned.
Like many, she saw Lincoln as
more than a school. She spent
her freshman fall at another university but would ride the train
five hours to central Illinois just
to couch surf, sit in on classes,
and sneak into the dining hall at
Lincoln. By the time she officially transferred, it already felt like
home.
“Lincoln was the first place in
my life where I had peace,” said
Bolden, who grew up house-hopping between relatives. “When
the school closed, I didn’t have
anywhere to go.”
Six months after Lincoln
closed its doors in May, many
still wonder if more could have
been done to save the college. In
the aftermath, students have
struggled to adjust, sometimes
returning to places they had
hoped to leave behind. And Lincoln’s story is becoming increasingly common. According to
Higher Ed Dive, nearly 30 nonprofit colleges have merged or
closed permanently since the
pandemic. What has happened
to those left behind?
Lincoln College was a small
private college in a rural town —
the only higher education institution named after the US president during his lifetime. But instead of attracting local students, it drew many from three
hours north: “Lincoln College
was like a district of Chicago,”
said Willie Spratt, a 2022 graduate and former class president.
Even though the town is 95 percent white, the college was registered as a Predominantly Black
Institution. More than 40 percent of its students were the first
in their families to attend college
ALAN JINICH./FOR THE WASHINGTON POST
University Hall on the Lincoln College campus was built in
1865 and is on the National Register of Historic Places.
and 58 percent came from
households with an annual income of less than $30,000. Three
in five students were Pell Grant
eligible.
Students, alumni, and faculty
described the community as
deeply close-knit. And, for many,
a “second chance.” “Lincoln was
the first time in my life where I
felt like I had a chance,” said past
student Julia Figueroa. For
some, it was also a haven from
gun violence.
In February, Lincoln had just
announced its second-highest
spring enrollment in a decade.
New employees were still being
hired. But the school had been
struggling with operating deficits for years. Between 2013 and
2018, its $40 million endowment was depleted by half. The
pandemic crushed recruitment,
retainment, and fund-raising efforts. And last December, a ransomware attack blocked access
to institutional data. By the time
administrators regained access
in March, fall enrollment projections were far below expectations. President Gerlach announced the only way to keep
the school open was through a
miracle donation of $20 million.
Dozens of students confronted Gerlach expressing grief and
frustration. In a video posted on
Fa c e b o o k , s t u d e n t K e w a n
Thomas told Gerlach, “We got
kids in this room who might die
when they go back to their city.”
Three months later, Norvell
Meadows, a frequent visitor to
Lincoln College, was shot and
killed outside his grandmother’s
home in Chicago.
“I couldn’t even fathom it,”
Bolden said. Meadows’s experience at Lincoln mirrored her
own: They had spent significant
time on the campus even without being enrolled. “He was trying to keep himself away from
the violence in Chicago,” she
said.
“Everyone on campus knew
Vell, everyone knew he didn’t go
here, and everyone loved him,”
Bolden said. “He was part of Lincoln.”
After the closure announce-
ment , K laudia Blaszczyk, a
swimming recruit from Warsaw,
was one of 60 international students sent scrambling to maintain their visas. “It was an extreme pressure on me,” she said.
And with the war in Ukraine so
close to her sister and single
mother, she worried about what
would happen if they needed to
evacuate.
Students and employees desperately organized to attract major donations in a bid to save the
college. “But as we started to get
traction, that goal post kept
moving,” said Scott Raper, a faculty member who helped lead
student fund-raising efforts. In
just a few weeks, the president
raised the target to $50 million
and then $100 million.
Gerlach said he had to raise
the target after students and faculty started transferring to other
schools, making the college even
more difficult to sustain.
Gerlach ceased all fund-raising efforts after two weeks: “We
could have operated another
y e a r. B u t t h a t w o u l d h a v e
crashed the plane.”
According to the Illinois
Board of Higher Education and
Gerlach, a closeout team helped
students transfer through the
summer.
Williams was part of Lincoln’s last graduating class. He’s
now getting his master’s and
coaching college basketball.
Blaszczyk transferred to Culver-Stockton College, the only
institution that accepted her
within her visa’s time constraints. “It doesn’t feel like
home here,” she said. “ This
wasn’t a choice that we wanted
to make.” She gave up competitive swimming since the college
doesn’t have a team.
Bolden is now enrolled at National Louis University in Chicago, where she studies criminal
justice. But the pandemic’s effects compounded by the closure
were too much for some of her
friends, a number of whom are
no longer enrolled in school.
“They lost their faith,” Bolden
said. “ We didn’ t give up on
school. School gave up on us.”
Superfund Workshop
Lower Neponset River Superfund Site
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is
hosting a series of workshops in the Boston area to
discuss the Lower Neponset River Superfund site and
opportunities for community involvement. Attend one
of the workshops to:
•
•
•
•
Meet the EPA site team
Learn about the Superfund cleanup process
Share your concerns and expectations with EPA
Learn how to get involved and stay informed
To learn more, attend one of the following workshops:
(the same information will be provided at each workshop)
•
Milton Workshop: Thurs. Nov. 10th, 6:15-8:00 p.m.
Milton Council on Aging Building, 10 Walnut St., Milton, MA 02186
•
Mattapan Workshop: Tues. Nov. 15th, 6:15-8:00 p.m.
Mildred Avenue K-8 School, 5 Mildred Ave., Boston, MA 02126
•
Hyde Park Workshop: Thurs. Nov. 17th, 6:15-8:00 p.m.
BCYF Hyde Park Community Center, 1179 River St., Hyde Park, MA 02136
*Doors open at 5:30 for workshops above, for an informal open house and poster viewing.
Interpretation services for Spanish and Haitian Creole will be available at the Hyde Park and
Mattapan workshops.*
•
Zoom (online) Workshop: Thurs. Nov. 10th, 6:15-8:00 p.m.
Register for a workshop online at https://neponsetworkshopseries.eventbrite.com,
by using the QR code, or by calling 434-260-6361.
For information on the site, contact:
Access your Globe account online:
bostonglobe.com/subscriber
Natalie Burgo
Join
us on
617-918-1331
617-918-1306
617-918-1003
Purnell.Zanetta@epa.govNovember
Burgo.Natalie@epa.gov
Dumville.Kelsey@epa.gov
12 for
www.epa.gov/superfund/lowerneponset
an Open House
Kelsey Dumville
ZaNetta Purnell
Community Involvement Coordinator
Community Involvement Coordinator
Remedial Project Manager
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
US backs calls for external
ethics probe of OAS chief
Allegation tied
to relationship
with subordinate
By Joshua Goodman
ASSOCIATED PRESS
MIAMI — The head of the
Organization of American States
is facing growing calls, including
from the Biden administration,
for an external probe into possible misconduct tied to his intimate relationship with a subordinate.
T h e Wa s h i n g t o n - b a s e d
group’s own inspector general in
a memo this week said it is in the
organization’s “best interest” to
hire an outside firm to investigate allegations that Secretary
General Luis Almagro may have
violated the ethics code.
The inspector general’s recommendation was based on a report by the Associated Press
finding that Almagro carried on
a relationship with a Mexicanborn staffer described online, including on the organization’s
own website, as “head adviser”
to the secretary general.
The inspector general said
the AP report followed a loosely
detailed, anonymous whistleblower complaint forwarded to
his office by Almagro on June 3.
The peace and democracybuilding organization’s ethics
code prohibits managers from
supervising or participating in
decisions that benefit individuals with whom they are romantically involved.
The proposal to hire an outside firm to look into Almagro’s
behavior is scheduled to be discussed Wednesday at the next
meeting of the 34-member organization’s permanent council.
The US — which has contributed about half of the organization’s $100 million in funding
this year — has already e xpressed support for an external
probe ahead of the meeting.
“We take these allegations se-
Secretary General Luis
Almagro may have violated
the Organization of American States’ ethics code.
riously,” a State Department
spokesperson told the AP, adding that any ethics violation
“should be investigated in a fair
. . . manner by an appropriate external investigative entity.”
But at least four members —
Almagro’s native Uruguay, Antigua and Barbuda, Belize, and St.
Lucia — have publicly backed
draft resolutions that raise concerns about the cost of an external investigation at a time when
the 600-employee hemispheric
body is under pressure to cut
spending.
Their benchmark is a recent
investigation into similar misconduct allegations against the
president of the Inter-American
Development Bank, Mauricio
Claver-Carone, who was accused
of having a long-running relationship with his chief of staff.
The months-long probe by
American law firm Davis Polk
determined that Claver-Carone
had violated ethics rules by favoring the aide, paving the way
for the president’s removal.
Repeated requests for Almagro’s comment on the possibility of an external probe sent to
the secretary general’s press office went unanswered.
But unlike Claver-Carone,
who went down denying he ever
had a relationship with his aide,
Almagro has said only that he
never supervised the staffer or
participated in any employment-
related decisions like authorizing a pay increase. He previously
has vowed to cooperate fully
with any investigation by the organization’s top oversight authority.
Almagro faces criticism on
other administrative matters as
well.
Mexico this week slammed
Almagro for allegedly betraying
members’ wishes by renewing a
contract for the OAS’ ombudswoman, Neida Perez, days before a long-discussed plan to implement an open and competitive process for the leadership
post was approved at the organization’s annual meeting.
Almagro in September unilaterally extended Perez’s contract by four years and Mexico
complained it was an attempt to
preempt those new procedures,
“Unfortunately this isn’t an
isolated act,” Mexico’s delegation
said in a written statement at a
Nov. 1 meeting on administrative matters. “It fits into a pattern of conduct in which the will
of the states is disregarded and
the OAS’ institutions are violated.”
Perez — whose contract was
set to expire Oct. 21, two weeks
after the new procedures were
adopted — was recently reprimanded by the OAS’ top review
panel for neglecting her duty to
serve as an impartial arbiter of
workplace disputes.
That rebuke was in response
to Perez’s role facilitating Almagro’s 2020 removal of the
head of the Inter-American
Commission on Human Rights
— an independently run body.
The commission´s executive secretary was himself facing workplace complaints but nonetheless enjoyed the unanimous support of the watchdog’s seven
commissioners.
Almagro, 59, was elected as
head of the OAS in 2015 with
near unanimous support. He
was reelected in 2020 with support of 23 of 34 member states.
The Nation
G l o b e
A13
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A14
The Nation
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
G l o b e
‘We were shocked because we had no idea what it was.’
MARION LITTLE, on the 32-foot-tall 5G antenna tower placed just outside his Brooklyn hardware store
New York eyes towering
achievement, controversy
Residents react
to view-altering
5G antennas
By Dodai Stewart
NEW YORK TIMES
NEW YORK — A curiously futuristic tower recently appeared
on the corner of Putnam and
Bedford avenues in the BedfordStuyvesant neighborhood of
Brooklyn. A gray column topped
by a perforated casing , at a
whopping 32 feet tall, it reaches
higher than the three-story brick
building behind it.
Sixty-year-old Marion Little,
who owns Stripper Stain & Supplies, a hardware store that has
operated on that corner for 17
years, said he and his neighbors
had received no warning. One
day there were workers outside;
then the tower materialized.
“We were shocked because
we had no idea what it was,” Little said. Since it’s right outside
his store, people keep asking
him about it. “They’ve been emailing me, calling me weekends, Facebooking me, like, ‘Yo,
what’s that?’ and I’m sitting
there like, ‘I have no clue.’”
The object in question is a
new 5G antenna tower erected
by LinkNYC, the latest hardware
in New York’s sweeping technological upgrade.
New York City has an agreement with CityBridge, the team
behind LinkNYC, that involves
installing 2,000 5G towers over
the next several years, an effort
to help eliminate the city’s “Internet deserts.” Ninety percent
will be in underserved areas of
the city — neighborhoods in the
Bronx, Brooklyn, Queens, Staten
Island, and above 96th Street in
Manhattan.
Once the towers are activat-
ed, residents will have access to
free digital calling and free highspeed Wi-Fi as well as 5G service. Many of the locations were
previously home to pay phones.
According to officials in the
city’s Office of Technology and
Innovation, 40 percent of New
York City households lack the
combination of home and mobile broadband, including 18
percent of residents — more
than 1.5 million people — who
lack both.
The 5G towers, as well as fiber cables underground, will
make up an infrastructure that
carriers including AT&T and Verizon can use to provide better
service to customers. Most of the
towers, including the one on Little’s corner, have not yet been activated.
But as is often the case when
something new appears on the
New York City streetscape, people seem startled by the large
structures — and some have expressed unfounded fears about
5G. They’re concerned about the
towers’ sheer size and, in some
cases, the wrecked views from
third-floor windows. Little also
questioned the practicality of
placing the tower on his corner
at the B26 bus stop: “The buses
turn here,” he said. “It’s going to
be easy to miscalculate and hit
the thing.”
Another 5G tower popped up
in Fort Greene, on the corner of
Vanderbilt and Myrtle avenues,
by, again, a bus stop — the B69.
It looms alongside a three-story
residential building with a
ground-level liquor store.
Mark Malecki, 26, who
moved to New York City in midOctober from Richmond, Va.,
has an intimate view framed by
his third-floor bedroom window.
“I wasn’t even quite sure what it
was,” he said.
Just down the street lives Renee Collymore, a 50-year-old
Brooklynite who said her family
is “four generations deep in this
neighborhood” and who serves
as the Democratic liaison for the
57th Assembly District in Fort
Greene. She has been wary of the
tower since it appeared this
summer.
As the head of the Vanderbilt
Avenue Block Association, Collymore said, “Never have I heard
one mention of residents asking
for a tower to be placed where
we live.” She plans to hold a
meeting about it.
“Before this tower came, I
had fine service,” Collymore added. “What, a call dropped every
now and then? So what. You
keep going.”
In Manhattan’s Chinatown,
where a tower cropped up on the
corner of Mulberry and Bayard
streets, a resident of a nearby
building declared it a “monstrosity.”
“Who wants to look at something like that?” she said.
The towers are not the only
5G antennas being installed in
New York City. Others are going
up on city property, including
traffic lights and streetlamps.
At the end of September,
jackhammering could be heard
outside of the six-story brick
building on the Upper East Side
where Chelsea Formica, 32, lives
with her husband, Joe, and their
infant son.
Formica was in New Jersey
visiting her mother when her
husband called. “He was like,
‘Hey, you know, they put something up outside of our window.
I’m just laying here on the couch
and it’s pretty big.’” Then Formica got home. “I was like, ‘Oh, my
God,’ freaking out. It’s huge. It’s
so big.”
Workers for telecommunica-
AMIR HAMJA/NEW YORK TIMES
Virginie Glaenzer, a resident of New York’s Upper East Side, has a close-up view of a 5G
antenna outside her window. She wants it removed entirely or moved across the street.
tions company ExteNet had installed a c ylindrical objec t
roughly the size of a human: a
5G antenna that is 63 inches tall
and 21 inches in diameter, according to the company. It is accompanied by a box that is 38
inches high, 16 inches wide and
14 inches deep. The imposing
antenna is mounted on top of a
slender pole, three stories high
— more than 30 feet in the air —
and right in front of Formica’s
living-room window. It’s also
just steps away from where their
5-month-old baby sleeps, which
makes Formica uncomfortable.
“People say that it is safe; the
FCC says it’s safe and everything,” she said. “We’re just worried that it’s so close to my son’s
bedroom.”
Alex Wyglinski, associate
dean of graduate studies and a
professor of electrical and computer engineering at Worcester
Polytechnic Institute, said residents need not worry. He noted
that 5G is nonionizing radiation,
on the opposite end of the spectrum from ionizing rays that
people need protection from,
such as UV rays and X-rays.
In addition, Wyglinski said,
the tower “cannot just blast energy everywhere. It’s going to be
hyperfocused points of energy
going directly to your cellphone.”
And although the towers are
tall, “you’ ll get used to it,” he
said. Just like streetlights and
traffic lights, he added, “this will
get integrated into the cityscape.”
Formica and her next-door
neighbor Virginie Glaenzer,
whose window view is also dominated by the antenna, took a
measuring tape to the sidewalk
and discovered that the new pole
is slightly less than 10 feet away
from the building, a distance
that typically triggers a community notification process, according to the agreement between
New York City and ExteNet.
Glaenzer and Formica contacted their local representatives
and handed out fliers urging
their neighbors to do the same.
They would like to see the antenna removed — or at least moved
across the street, alongside the
Asphalt Green turf field and not
next to a residential building.
Julie Menin, the New York
City Council member who represents Formica, Glaenzer, and the
rest of District 5, said she has, on
behalf of her constituents, asked
the city to hire a third party to
conduct emissions tests on the
antennas to ensure that they
comply with federal regulations,
and the city’s Office of Technology and Innovation has agreed to
do so.
The city also asked ExteNet
to move the antenna, but ExteNet said it had no plans to do so.
Formica said she wouldn’t feel
comfortable living next to it once
it is turned on. She isn’t sure she
would move out, she said, but
she would consider her options.
As for Glaenzer, she laughed
as she pointed to some crystals
she had placed in a bowl on the
windowsill in front of the antenna. “They’re supposed to remove
the radiation,” she said, shrugging. “You’re just holding on to
whatever you have.”
BUYING OLD TOYS
Joel Magee
US Civil War
& World War II
Japan & German
items
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Buying all kinds
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60’s and older
SCOUT
Buying Political
items 1950’s
and older
IF YOU HAVE A DISABILITY OR TOO MANY TOYS TO CARRY,
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NOVEMBER 6, 2022
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
The Nation
G l o b e
A15
Current, former presidents make their case before vote
Pa. is the focus
for Obama,
Biden, Trump
By Marc Levy,
Steve Peoples,
and Aamer Madhani
ASSOCIATED PRESS
PITTSBURGH — The Democratic Party’s most prominent
figures warned that abortion,
Social Security, and democracy
itself are at risk as they labored
to overcome fierce political
headwinds — and an ill-timed
potential misstep from President
Biden — over the final weekend
before the midterm elections.
“Sulking and moping is not
an option,” former president Barack Obama told several hundred voters on a blustery day in
Pittsburgh.
“On Tuesday, let’s make sure
our country doesn’t get set back
50 years,” Obama said. “The only
way to save democracy is if we,
together, fight for it.”
L a t e r i n t h e d a y, B i d e n
shared the stage with Obama in
Philadelphia, the former running mates campaigning together for the first time since Biden
took office. In neighboring New
York, even former president Bill
Clinton, largely absent from national politics in recent years,
was out defending his party.
The trio of Democrats were
the first presidents, but not last,
to speak out on Saturday as voters across America decide control of Congress and key statehouses. Former president Donald Trump finished the day at a
rally in working-class southwestern Pennsylvania, describing the
election in apocalyptic terms.
“If you want to stop the destruction of our country and
save the American dream, then
on Tuesday you must vote Republican in a giant red wave,”
Trump told thousands of cheering supporters, describing the
United States as “a country in
decline.”
Biden, Trump, Obama, and
Clinton — four of the six living
presidents — focused on North-
ANGELA WEISS/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES
PATRICK SEMANSKY/ASSOCIATED PRESS
Barack Obama appeared with President Biden on Saturday in Philadelphia, while Donald Trump spoke to a rally in Latrobe, Pa.
eastern battlegrounds on Saturday, but their words echoed
across the country as the parties
sent out their best to deliver a
critical closing argument. Polls
across America will close on
Tuesday, but more than 36 million people have already voted.
Not everyone, it seemed, was
on message Saturday.
Even before arriving in Pennsylvania, Biden was dealing with
a fresh political mess after upsetting some in his party for promoting plans to shut down fossil
fuel plants in favor of green energy. While he made the comments in California the day before, the fossil fuel industry is a
major employer in Pennsylvania.
Senator Joe Manchin, Democrat of West Virginia and chairman of the Senate Energy and
Natural Resources Committee,
said the president owed coal
workers across the country an
apology.
“Being cavalier about the loss
of coal jobs for men and women
in West Virginia and across the
country who literally put their
lives on the line to help build
and power this country is offensive and disgusting,” Manchin
said.
The White House said that
Biden’s words were “twisted to
suggest a meaning that was not
intended; he regrets it if anyone
hearing these remarks took offense” and that he was “commenting on a fact of economics
and technology.”
Democrats are deeply concerned about their narrow majorities in the House and Senate
as voters sour on Biden’s leadership amid surging inflation,
crime concerns, and widespread
pessimism about the direction of
the country.
Obama was accompanying
Senate nominee John Fetterman, the lieutenant governor
who represents his party’s best
chance to flip a Republican-held
seat.
L ater Saturday, the y appeared in Philadelphia with
Biden and Josh Shapiro, the
nominee for governor.
Trump campaigned in western Pennsylvania on behalf of
Dr. Mehmet Oz, the Senate nominee, and Doug Mastriano, who
is running for governor. Oz, who
has worked to craft a moderate
image throughout the fall after
earning Trump’s endorsement,
briefly joined Trump on stage,
but delivered his formal remarks
more than an hour earlier.
A double rainbow flashed
across the sky shortly before Oz
and struggled to complete sentences in his lone debate against
Oz last month, although medical
experts say he’s recovering well
from the health scare.
Having little trouble speaking
on Saturday, Fetterman railed
against Oz and castigated the
former New Jersey resident as
an ultrawealthy carpetbagger
who will say or do anything to
get elected. Gusty winds
knocked several American flags
off the stage during his remarks.
“I’ll be the 51st vote to eliminate the filibuster, to raise the
minimum wage,” said Fetterman, wearing his trademark
black hoodie. “Please send Dr.
Oz back to New Jersey.”
Fetterman hugged Obama after they spoke in Pittsburgh. Later in Philadelphia, Fetterman
linked hands with Biden,
Obama, and Shapiro.
Obama acknowledged that
voters are anxious after suffering
through “some tough times” in
recent years.
“The Republicans like to talk
about it, but what’s their answer,
what’s their economic policy?”
Obama said. “They want to gut
Social Security. They want to gut
Medicare. They want to give rich
folks and big corporations more
tax cuts.”
spoke.
“Here’s the deal. I’m not a
politician, I’m a surgeon,” Oz
told thousands of Trump loyalists. “And what surgeons do is
tackle big problems and we do it
successfully, in my case fixing
broken hearts, by working with
everybody.”
The attention on Pennsylvania underscores the stakes in
2022 and beyond for the tightly
contested state. The race between Oz and Fetterman race
could decide the Senate majority
— and with it, Biden’s agenda
and judicial appointments for
the next two years.
The governor’s contest will
determine the direction of state
policy and control of the state’s
election infrastructure heading
into the 2024 presidential contest.
Shapiro, the state attorney
general, leads in polls over Mastriano, a state senator and retired Army colonel who some
Republicans believe is too extreme to win a general election
in a state Biden narrowly carried
two years ago.
Polls show a closer contest to
replace retiring Republican Senator Pat Toomey as Fetterman
recovers from a stroke he suffered in May. He jumbled words
Saturday marked Obama’s
first time campaigning in Pennsylvania this year, though he has
been the party’s top surrogate in
the final sprint to Election Day.
He campaigned in recent days in
Georgia, Michigan, Wisconsin,
Nevada, and Arizona, while
Biden has spent more time in
Democratic-leaning states where
he’s more welcome.
As for Trump, his evening rally in Latrobe was part of a late
blitz that will also take him to
Florida and Ohio. He’s hoping a
strong GOP showing will generate momentum for the 2024 run
that he’s expected to launch in
the days or weeks after polls
close.
Trump displayed recent poll
numbers on the big screens at
the rally and referred to Florida
Governor Ron DeSantis, a potential 2024 GOP rival, as “Ron
DeSanctimonious.”
And over and over, he falsely
claimed he lost the 2020 election
only because Democrats cheated, while raising the possibility
of election fraud this coming
week. In part, because of such
rhetoric, federal intelligence
agencies have warned of the possibility of political violence from
far-right extremists in the coming days.
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The Nation
A16
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
G l o b e
Nevada secretary of state won’t lift handcount ban Twitter
Order comes
following state
court ruling
By Gabe Stern
ASSOCIATED PRESS
RENO, Nev. — Nevada’s secretary of state declined Friday to
lift a ban on a rural county’s controversial early handcount of
mail-in ballots, saying a modified procedure the county clerk
proposed still raises “concerns
relating to the integrity of the
election.”
Republican Secretary of State
Barbara Cegavske ordered Nye
County last week to halt its
handcounting of ballots until after polls close on Nov. 8. Her order came after the Nevada Supreme Court issued an opinion
siding with the American Civil
Liberties Union’s objections to
the reading of individual votes
out loud.
In a letter to the county Friday, Cegavske invited county officials to update or better explain
their proposal for a silent
handcount with more details.
But the move makes it increasingly difficult for Nye
County to revise, submit, get
approval and carry out plans
for the handcount of mail-in ballots before polls close on Election Day.
Meanwhile, the ACLU and
the sprawling, heavily GOP
county halfway between Reno
and Las Vegas continued to argue over the circumstances that
led to an election official, who
was openly carrying a gun, removing an ACLU observer from
the handcount that lasted two
days before Cegavske suspended
it last Thursday night.
Lawyers for Nye County said
in a new letter to Cegavske Friday that the chairman of the Nye
County GOP Central Committee,
who was legally armed, was acting as a handcount volunteer
trained by county Interim Clerk
Mark Kampf when she confronted the ACLU observer she believed was tallying the vote count
in violation of the recount rules.
The ACLU quickly responded
and the dispute could last past
Election Day.
But the rejection of the county’s late-hatched proposal to resume the handcount in silence
puts the early count of mail-in
ballots almost out of reach by
the time polls close.
Kampf proposed three talliers and a control team with two
independent verifiers who mostly worked separately, so there
would be no reader who called
out each ballot or verifier, who
looked over the reader’s shoulder.
Cegavske listed a number of
concerns in explaining why she
would need more details before
she allowed the count to resume.
She noted the silent handcount will require the “complete
focused attention” on each ballot
by talliers that will prevent them
from noticing when other talliers make wrongful marks or
mistakes.
“Additionally, there are no
provisions in your plan describing the required use of medical-
style gloves to further mitigate
the risk of cheating or accidental
marking, nor a prescribed and
standardized device for tallying
to ensure any new mark could be
quickly identified,” she said.
Nye County is one of the first
jurisdictions nationwide to act
on election conspiracies related
to mistrust in voting machines,
though other counties across Nevada have considered using
handcounts in the future.
Earlier Friday, lawyers for the
county rejected the ACLU's recent accusations of a “coordinated partisan election administration effort” in a letter to Cegavske’s office asking for an
investigation into the handcount. Hours later the ACLU responded, doubling down on its
concerns.
The ACLU’s complaint about
the removal of its observer by
Nye County GOP Central Committee Vice Chair Laura Larsen
raised concerns about Kampf ’s
delegation of authority to partisan officials to remove observers
from handcount rooms, particu-
larly during a handcount process
dealing with ballot tabulation.
Along with noting Nevada is
an open-carry state, Nye County's lawyers said the county understood Larsen, a trained volunteer, had never threatened to
use the firearm.
Larsen’s position as the vice
chair of Nye County’s GOP central committee “does not limit or
invalidate her ability to participate as a poll worker/volunteer,”
the response added.
But the ACLU said in a letter
to the secretary of state’s office
that the county’s response “further emphasizes that Larsen is,
in fact, not serving in a neutral
capacity” and remains active in
partisan leadership.
In an interview with The Associated Press after the first day
of handcounting, Larsen said
her role was “making sure things
are going the way Mark (Kampf)
has set everything up. So, just
looking out for the election integrity.” She did not respond to
an e-mail requesting comment
on Friday.
Among Democrats, foreboding mounts
uVOTERS
Continued from Page A1
against the party in power in
Washington. But a chilling concern set in as the calendar
flipped to fall. Polls in House,
Senate, and governor’s races increasingly show the possibility of
a Republican rout that could
give the GOP control of Congress, freezing the Biden administration’s agenda for the next
two years as Trump rattles his
sabre about another presidential
run in 2024.
Democrats worry that something new and dark could be
permanently stitched into the
nation’s political fabric, that they
will be powerless to stop election-denying Republicans from
making changes to how Americans vote, or passing strict abortion bans or other laws that
don’t reflect the positions of a
majority of Americans.
“This country is not 100 percent Republican,” said Briana
Gutierrez, 38, an independent
voter who always backs Democrats and works at an insurance
company in downtown Madison. “They can’t make all the
rules the way they want them for
a country that is not them.”
Nowhere are those worries
more pronounced than in Wisconsin, a battleground state that
served as the incubator for populist Democratic ideas such as
Social Security a century ago,
but more recently is a showcase
for the exercise of raw political
power. The narrowly divided
state has backed Democrats for
president in eight of the last nine
presidential elections — the notable exception being 2016. But
its Legislature is so deeply gerrymandered, Republicans are
within striking distance of winning veto-proof majorities in
both chambers next week.
“It’s like a majority of the people, their feelings, their thoughts
… we’re not being represented,”
Laurie Biehl, 61, a Democrat
from Porterfield said at an art
gallery in Marinette one day last
week, while Democratic candidates were trying to squeeze every vote out of somewhat hostile
territory.
While Republican candidates
have been seizing on fears of inflation, crime, and even Fentanyl-laced Halloween candy, the
Democrats’ message has at times
seemed dutiful and muted. They
are, after all, asking voters to do
the equivalent of eating their civic vegetables and to be patient as
prices rise.
In Wisconsin, Governor Tony
Evers, a soft-spoken Democrat
and former teacher seeking a
second term, is traversing the
state in a yellow school bus emblazoned with the words “Doing
the right thing,” although his
warning on the stump is dire.
“It’s clear to me that if we
don’t have the right result, our
democracy will start to slide further and further away,” Evers
said in a packed union hall in
Green Bay on Wednesday night.
He warned the crowd about his
opponent, businessman Tim Michels, who has said that if he
wins the governor’s race, Republicans “will never lose another
election in Wisconsin.”
Evers has cast himself as a
bulwark against Republican
overreach who has vetoed more
launches
blue check
overhaul
New $8 a month
subscription
ASSOCIATED PRESS
NEW YORK — Twitter on
Saturday launched a subscription service for $8 a month that
includes a blue checkmark now
given to verified accounts as new
owner Elon Musk overhauls the
platform’s verification system
just ahead of US midterm elections.
In an update to Apple iOS devices, Twitter said users who
“sign up now” can receive the
blue checkmark next to their
names “just like the celebrities,
companies and politicians you
already follow.”
The change represents the
end of Twitter’s current verification system, which was
launched in 2009 to prevent impersonations of high-profile accounts such as celebrities and
politicians. Before the overhaul,
Twitter had about 423,000 verified accounts, many of them
rank-and-file journalists from
around the globe that the company verified regardless of how
many followers they had.
Experts have raised grave
concerns about upending the
platform’s verification system
that, while not perfect, has
helped Twitter’s 238 million daily users determine whether the
accounts they were getting information from were authentic.
The update Twitter made to the
iOS version of its app does not
mention verification as part of
the new “blue check” system.
It comes a day after the company began laying off workers to
‘I own the
responsibility for
why everyone is in
this situation.’
JACK DORSEY, cofounder and
former CEO of Twitter
HAIYUN JIANG/NEW YORK TIMES
Wisconsin Governor Tony Evers spoke at a Madison rally. Evers has cast himself as a bulwark against Republican overreach
than 100 bills. But even his supporters are worried that, even if
Evers wins, a GOP supermajority
could make him all but toothless. And if Michels wins, said
Mike Maurer, a retired educator
who lives in Marinette County, it
would be even worse.
“Then,” Maurer said sorrowfully, “we’d have to move to Massachusetts.”
These feelings of Democratic
despair are by no means limited
to Wisconsin. Reports of voter
intimidation from armed partisans and political violence, such
as the hammer attack on House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s husband,
Paul Pelosi, make many feel like
something fundamental is
changing.
“It seems like all of that is no
nificant midterm losses. But it
wasn’t so long ago that polling
forecasts gave Democrats a
healthy chance of at least holding the Senate because of the
seats in play this year and the
quality of the GOP field.
Even Republicans such as
Senator Mitch McConnell were
openly worried that erratic and
extreme candidates, including
Don Bolduc in New Hampshire
and Blake Masters in Arizona,
could hurt their chances of regaining control of the chamber.
Some Democrats were confidently predicting they would
even pick up enough seats to
codify abortion rights or even to
overturn the filibuster.
But now, with races tightening around the country, the Cook
‘It’s like a majority of the people,
their feelings, their thoughts . . .
we’re not being represented.’
LAURIE BIEHL, Wisconsin Democrat
longer considered unacceptable
for some politicians to support,”
said Debbie Doyle, 55, as she
cast her early ballot in Arlington,
Va. She said she was worried
about antisemitism, too.
“I’m basically concerned that
there could be fascism rising in
this country,” Doyle said.
Ramona Rosario, an unemployed electrical engineer in her
50s who was also voting in Arlington, said she was deeply worried that a Republican victory in
the House will elevate far-right
political figures such as Georgia
Representative Marjorie Taylor
Greene further into the mainstream.
“They have, in effect, cut the
bond between the elected and
the electorate,” she said.
With President Biden in the
White House and Democrats
holding narrow control of the
House and Senate, history dictates the party should expect sig-
Political Report is predicting
that the Senate will either likely
remain evenly split, which gives
Democrats control by virtue of
Vice President Kamala Harris’s
tie-breaking vote, or that Republicans will win as much as a
three-seat majority. Republicans
are also expected to gain the majority in the House.
As optimistic Republicans
have pressed their advantage,
the slipping polls have left Democrats in a tizzy.
In Pittsburgh recently, Andrew Halpern, 67, worried that
Democratic Senate candidate
John Fetterman might be on the
verge of a loss, which could tip
the Senate into Republican
hands.
“If that happens,” he lamented at a Fetterman rally, “Canada’s looking good.”
In Nevada, at a campaign
event for Senator Catherine Cortez-Masto, a Democrat who is
narrowly trailing challenger Adam Laxalt, Chester Ruiz, 73, said
he and his partner find themselves awake at 2 or 3 in the
morning, talking about the election. They’re kept up by fears
about crucial issues such as reproductive rights if the Senate
changes hands.
And in Arizona, Marilyn Duerbeck was worried that her ability to vote hinges on the outcome
of Tuesday’s election, because
that state has election deniers
running for governor, secretary
of state, and attorney general, all
of whom have promised to reshape the election system.
“They would take steps to
make it harder,” Duerbeck said,
before she went to knock on 55
doors on a sunny Saturday in
late October to urge people to
vote Democratic. “I feel like my
vote won’t count anymore.”
There are already signs that
the election will drag on long
past Tuesday. Election officials
around the country are warning
that it could take days to count
the votes — a standard delay that
Republicans like Senator Ted
Cruz of Texas are depicting as
nefarious — while Republican
candidates Kari Lake in Arizona
and Senator Ron Johnson in
Wisconsin aren’t committing to
accepting the results.
“That’s a hypothetical question,” Johnson said when asked
by the Globe after a campaign
stop in Marinette. “I can’t really
answer that question until we
see results.”
He derided his Democratic
opponent, Lieutenant Governor
Mandela Barnes, as having contempt and disdain for America
during the event, after dark, in a
parking lot by the local GOP
headquarters. And then Johnson’s supporters cast the election
in existential terms, too.
“It’s the country. It’s the last
stand. If we don’t win, OK, we
are lost,” said Denise Oleszak, a
retiree who believes America
will turn to socialism and then
communism if Democrats pre-
vail on Tuesday.
Democrats are hoping they
can still motivate their supporters to avert what they see as an
electoral disaster. Gripping the
podium at Madison’s ornate Orpheum Theatre, Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders described
Tuesday’s election as the most
important midterms in generations, because the “foundations
of American democracy” hang in
the balance.
“Which party controls the US
Senate will mean the future of
this country and the future of
your lives,” Sanders boomed, as a
crowd of mostly young voters
cheered. Among them was Marc
Buensalida, 18, who was planning to cast his first vote, hoping
Democrats might advance his
priorities such as voting rights
and immigration.
But that kind of rhetoric
leaves Brad Bauer, 54, a former
Democrat who says he despises
both the MAGA right and the
progressive left, exhausted.
“The hyperbole, ‘It’s the end
of democracy if you don’t vote
the right way.’ It’s a little hyped
up,” Bauer sighed over a beer at a
nearby bar. He seemed to see
America’s deeply polarized politics as its own unyielding abyss.
He was planning to vote for
Evers, but was considering sitting out the Senate race because
he dislikes Johnson and Barnes.
For Cloey Braatz, a college
student in Madison who wants
to be a teacher, it really feels like
everything is on the line on Tuesday, especially if Republicans
win majorities in Washington
and Wisconsin and cut education funding.
“I can’t even imagine what
would happen,” she said. “It
stresses me out. It gives me anxiety. I don’t know what my job
will look like. I don’t know what
anything will look like.”
Globe correspondent Shannon
Coan contributed to this report.
Jess Bidgood can be reached at
Jess.Bidgood@globe.com.
cut costs and as more companies
are pausing advertising on Twitter as a cautious corporate world
waits to see how it will operate
under its new owner.
About half of the company’s
staff of 7,500 was let go, tweeted
Yoel Roth, Twitter’s head of safety and integrity.
Twitter cofounder Jack Dorsey on Saturday took blame for
such widespread job losses. He
had two runs as CEO of Twitter,
with the most recent stretching
from 2015 into 2021.
“I own the responsibility for
why everyone is in this situation:
I grew the company size too
quickly,” he tweeted. “I apologize
for that.”
Musk tweeted late Friday
that there was no choice but to
cut the jobs “when the company
is losing over $4M/day.” He did
not provide details on the daily
losses at the company and said
employees who lost their jobs
were offered three months’ pay
as a severance.
Meanwhile, Twitter has already seen “a massive drop in
revenue” because of pressure
from activist groups on advertisers to get off the platform, Musk
tweeted Friday. That hits Twitter
hard because of its heavy reliance so far on advertising to
make money. During the first six
months of this year, nearly $92
of every $100 it made in revenue
came from advertising.
United Airlines became the
latest major brand to pause advertising on Twitter. The Chicago-based United confirmed Saturday that it had made the move
but declined to discuss the reasons for it or what it would need
to see to resume advertising on
the platform.
Musk tried to reassure advertisers last week, saying Twitter
would not become a “free-for-all
hellscape” because of what he
calls his commitment to free
speech.
But concerns remain about
whether a lighter touch on content moderation at Twitter will
result in users sending out more
offensive tweets. That could hurt
companies’ brands if their advertisements appear next to
them.
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
The Nation
G l o b e
A17
Ye to midterms, an unsettling stream of antisemitism
Jews concerned
as troubling
rhetoric surfaces
By Michael Paulson
and Ruth Graham
NEW YORK TIMES
Simon Taylor was on his
way to an appointment in Flatbush, Brooklyn, when he pulled
into a local filling station one afternoon last week. It was a lovely fall day in New York City, but
as he began to fuel up, the climate turned sour: Another customer, spotting the skullcap atop
Rabbi Taylor’s head, launched
into an expletive-laden rant
about how much he hated Jews
and then, when the rabbi photographed his license plate, started
chasing him with an upraised
fist.
Taylor, a 38-year-old father of
five who oversees social services
and disaster relief programs for
an umbrella organization of Orthodox Jews, was shaken. A native of England who now lives on
Long Island, he wondered if the
incident was connected to a
mainstreaming of antisemitic
rhetoric in America.
“I’ve never had anything like
this in New York, and it definitely felt to me like this whole
Kanye West thing had something to do with it,” said Taylor,
referring to the ugly utterances
of hip-hop legend Kanye West,
now known as Ye. “All it takes is
a couple influential people to say
things, and suddenly it becomes
very tense.”
For Jews in America, things
are tense indeed. Next week’s
midterm elections feel to some
like a referendum on democracy’s direction.
There is a war in Europe. The
economy seems to be teetering.
It is a perilous time, and perilous
times have never been great for
Jews.
“When systems fail, whether
it’s the government or the markets or anything else, leaders often look for someone to blame,”
said Jonathan Greenblatt, the
CEO and national director of the
Anti-Defamation League, which
seeks to monitor and combat antisemitism. “Jews have historically played that role.”
Antisemitism is one of the
longest-standing forms of prejudice, and those who monitor it
say it is now on the rise in America.
The number of reported incidents has been increasing. On
Thursday, the FBI warned of a
“broad threat” to synagogues in
New Jersey; by Friday, the agency had located a man it said ex-
HILARY SWIFT/NEW YORK TIMES/FILE
A march followed the Pittsburgh synagogue shooting in 2018. For American Jews, this fall has become increasingly worrisome.
pressed “an extreme amount of
hate against the Jewish community.”
Social media has clearly
made it easier to circulate hate
speech, and that means outbursts like Ye’s, in which he posted on Twitter that he would “go
death con 3 On JEWISH PEOPLE,” get more attention. (Many
have noted that Ye has about
twice as many followers on Twitter as the world’s population of
Jews.)
Ye’s persistent outbursts have
been followed by attention-getting signs of support: In Los Angeles, a group of emboldened antisemites hung a “Kanye is right
about the Jews” banner over an
interstate Oct. 22, and Saturday,
similar words were projected at
a college football stadium in
Jacksonville, Fla.
“There’s no doubt that the
normalization of antisemitism
in the highest echelons of our
culture and our political establishment is putting toxins in our
eyes and our ears,” said Rabbi
Rick Jacobs, president of the
Union for Reform Judaism, the
largest Jewish denomination in
the country. “It’s dangerous, and
it’s deadly. It has been unleashed
and accelerated in the last few
years, and actual attacks have
risen.”
For many Je wish people
across the country, the sense
that overtly antisemitic rhetoric
is emanating from so many
spheres simultaneously is unsettling.
Steve Rosenberg, a former executive at the Jewish Federation
of Greater Philadelphia, said he
was put “over the edge” by an incident last weekend in which a
prominent basketball player,
Brooklyn Nets guard Kyrie Irving, defended his support of an
antisemitic documentary (and
garnered praise from Ye in the
process). On Thursday, the Nets
suspended Irving indefinitely,
citing his “failure to disavow antisemitism.” He posted an apology on Instagram late Thursday
night.
Rosenberg said the incident
had particular resonance for
him because of the current politics of his home state.
“In Pennsylvania, we are really at a crossroads,” he said, describing himself as a conservative independent who voted for
Donald Trump for president in
2016 but could not bring himself
to vote for either major-party
candidate in 2020.
Rosenberg said that this year,
he is voting for Josh Shapiro, the
Democratic candidate for governor, because of his concerns
about Republican Doug Mastriano, who has alarmed many Jewish voters over incidents including criticizing Shapiro for sending his children to a Jewish day
school. (Mastriano has said his
criticism was directed at Shapiro’s decision to send his chil-
dren to an “expensive, elite”
school and not based on the
school’s religious affiliation.)
But his concerns cut both
ways. In his state’s race for the
Senate, Rosenberg is voting for
the Republican, Mehmet Oz, citing concern that the Democrat,
John Fetterman, “will vote with
the left-wing woke progressive
anti-Israel” faction in the Senate.
The years since the election
of Trump — a champion of Israel’s right wing and the father of a
convert to Judaism, but also the
beneficiary of societal anger that
has often had ugly undertones —
h av e s e e n a r i s e i n a tt a c k s
against the Jewish community,
which some leaders associate
with Trump’s reluctance to distance himself from groups that
traffic in antisemitism.
At the same time, the left has
been rattled by rising divisions
within the Democratic Party
over Israel’s treatment of Palestinians, pitting those who have
traditionally supported Israel
against a rising class of progressive activists and lawmakers
who ally themselves with the
Palestinian cause.
It is a fracture that has made
the politics of the moment even
more complicated for many
American Jews.
“There’s this constant discussion and debate as to where it is
worse — is it worse on the right
or the left — when it’s present on
both sides, no question,” said
Rabbi Moshe Hauer, executive
vice president of the Orthodox
Union. “There’s been an ascendancy on the right, but there’s also been a very significant uptick
on the left, and the evolution of
antisemitism on the left is a major development.”
A new study by a group of academics including Leonard
Saxe, the director of the Cohen
Center for Modern Jewish Studies at Brandeis University, found
that Jews across the political
spectrum are equally concerned
about what it calls “traditional
antisemitism” but that conservatives are more concerned than
liberals about “Israel-related antisemitism,” meaning anti-Jewish views that can be conflated
with criticism of Israel.
There are fissures: In Pittsburgh this week, a group of
more than 200 Jews signed a letter criticizing a political action
committee related to AIPAC, the
pro-Israel group, for donating to
a Republican congressional candidate, and in the process also
criticized AIPAC for supporting
“lawmakers who have promoted
the antisemitic ‘Great Replacement’ conspiracy theory.”
A spokesperson for AIPAC,
Marshall Wittmann, said the organization had opposed the
Democratic candidate as a “detractor of America’s alliance
with the Jewish state.” Wittmann said AIPAC had supported
148 “pro-Israel Democrats” this
election cycle.
“Antisemitism is a conspiracy
theory,” said Deborah Lipstadt,
the US special envoy for monitoring and combating antisemitism. “The Jew is seen as more
powerful; the Jew is richer and
is smarter, but in a malicious
way.”
Lipstadt said she sees antisemitism as “the canary in the
coal mine” for a broader set of
threats to democracy.
A thread of antisemitism connects many of the nation’s recent
spasms of political violence: the
“Jews will not replace us” chants
during a white nationalist rally
in Charlottesville, Va., in 2017;
the “Camp Auschwitz” sweat
shirt worn to last year’s attack
on the US Capitol; the Holocaust
denial in blog posts that appear
to have been written by the
man accused of breaking into
the residence of House Speaker
Nancy Pelosi last week, hoping
to break her kneecaps and, upon not finding her at home, attacking her husband with a
hammer.
And throughout this year’s
election season, troubling rhetoric has surfaced.
In Texas, the Republican candidate for railroad commissioner, Wayne Christian, agreed last
week to stop using the slogan
“vote for the only Christian” after complaints from his Democratic opponent, Luke Warford,
who is Jewish.
In an e-mail, Christian said
he has been using the slogan
since first running for office, has
traveled to Israel, and has “nothing but love and support for the
Jewish community.”
But Warford isn’t buying it.
“If you take him at his word that
he didn’t know he was running
against a Jewish candidate, it’s
still an antisemitic thing to say,”
he said.
Rabbis across the country are
grappling with how to address
the issue with worshippers. Congregation Beth Elohim in Brooklyn this week sent an e-mail to
its members announcing a sermon this weekend on antisemitism, noting the upcoming election as well as news coverage of
rising antisemitism and saying,
“It is difficult not to feel anxious
about the future.”
Younger Jews sense a shift
in society. “For people of my parents’ generation, there was a certain sense of safety with regard
to antisemitism in America,”
said Meshulam Ungar, a 21year old junior at Brandeis and a
vice president of the Brandeis
Orthodox Organization. “Things
have gotten more dangerous for
us.”
Words to savor: A fond ode to two bards of cuisine
uFOOD WRITERS
Continued from Page A1
and reportorial, steady in syntax
and sometimes self-important in
tone, doling out adjectives with
an even hand. Then came
Greene, literary and gimleteyed. She recognized that appetite was appetite, blurring the
lines between food and sex. To
her, life was a beautiful banquet
groaning with pleasures. It was
all juicy, from rare rack of lamb
to the city’s social scene. It was
all worth tearing into, and
sometimes tearing down.
“Lapsing into sexual metaphor seems sacrilegious. But I
have had more than a dozen
meals at cafe Chauveron that
justified both decadence and
sacrilege,” she wrote in 1969.
“Great sensuous feasts to stagger home from, giggling,
pleased with the sheer brilliance
of having chosen so well. Les
moules au Chablis glacées, mussels buried in a sublime wine
sauce enriched with whipped
cream, then glazed under the
salamander. Tender, pinkfleshed rack of lamb with
primeurs, infant vegetables tasting as if they’d been grown in
butter. And then a great voluptuousness of the chocolate, the
Chauveron mousse — the Sophia Loren of mousses — gutsy,
not the least bit subtle, wrapped
in a thin sponge-cake package,
served with a whipped-creamfluffed sabayon sauce and — holy gluttony! — moist almondscented macaroons. Fresh
strong café filtre. Measure that
climax, Dr. Masters!”
’Scuse me while I fan myself.
That paragraph was a whole
meal.
As critic, Greene worked
anonymously (she was famed
for her floppy-hat disguises in
public), visited each restaurant
multiple times, and paid for her
meals. She also followed her appetites where they led, which
was sometimes into bed with
chefs. She solved the conflict like
a journalist, with full disclosure.
A 1977 review headlined “I Love
Le Cirque But Can I Be Trusted?” chronicled both the evolution of the restaurant and
Greene’s trysts with chef de cuisine Jean-Louis Todeschini.
Racy, but relevant — Greene
used what she learned about
cooking and restaurants
through the relationship to enlighten the reader.
(She also slept with Elvis
Presley, one of many dalliances
described in the memoir “Insatiable: Tales From a Life of Delicious Excess.” She once referred
to herself in an interview as having been “single and lusty in that
wonderful moment between the
pill and the plague,” a turn of
phrase that deftly conjures decades of womanly New York experience.)
Meanwhile, in 2002, Powell
was having a Gen X crisis. (Like
all good Gen X crises, it involved
temping, depression, and nearing 30.) To escape “secretarial
ennui,” she started cooking her
way through Child’s masterwork, writing about the process,
and posting her thoughts online
— “where anybody can see it,”
she told her skeptical mother,
according to the book that resulted (also called “Julie and Julia”). Her writing was honest,
confessional. It wasn’t poetry; it
was more workaday, diaristic.
She made no bones about presenting herself as a flawed hu-
PETER KRAMER/ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILE/2009
ETHAN HILL FOR NEW YORK TIMES
Blogger and writer Julie Powell (left) and restaurant critic Gael Greene ignored the
conventions and used their own authentic voices as they wrote about food.
man. In fact, she seemed to revel
in it. She wrote about her husband, her boring job, being
young in New York. She ranted.
She cursed. She cooked. In other
words, Powell had a food blog.
She was an early entrant to
the oeuvre: Chowhound, often
considered the first food blog,
started in 1997. Cookbook author and pastry chef David Lebovitz followed in 1999, featuring
recipes, musings, tales from his
expat life in Paris, all the distinctly first-person hallmarks of
the deluge that would follow in
the next five or so years. Powell’s
approach — cookbook as framework — was novel. It would
prove to be influential, with
“cooking my way through X” becoming a regular format: There
were blogs by people cooking
their way through the Alinea
cookbook, the entire Ina Garten
repertoire, and so on. Even more
influential, though, was her
voice. She wasn’t so much writing as a writer as she was as a
reader’s friend — frank, funny,
relatable.
After her Day 1 post (bifteck
sauté au beurre and artichauts
au naturel), Powell wrote, “I got
thirty-six hits. I know I got thirty-six hits because I went online
to check twelve times that day at
work. Each hit represented another person reading what I’d
written. Just like that! At the
bottom of the entry there was a
spot where people could make
comments, and someone I’d
never even heard of said they
liked how I wrote!”
Sigh. It was all so heady, so
innocent, back then. (And I
need to digress here, in real sadness: Powell wrote a second,
darker book, “Cleaving,” in
2009, about butchery and the
challenges of marriage. When
she died last week of cardiac arrest, she was trying to make
progress on writing something
new — this according to her
posts on Twitter, a medium perfectly suited to her style. On it,
she also wrote about her ongoing depression and a recent bout
with COVID. Her feed has now
turned into a debate about
whether the virus or the vaccine
somehow caused her death,
with anti-vaxxers joking about
comeuppance because last year
she made a cruel and tasteless
comment about COVID killing
“some of the right people,” those
who refused to get vaccines or
wear masks. One has to search
for the comments offering condolences, remembrances, celebrations of the joy Powell’s writing brought her readers. I would
say for the comments expressing
the normal human emotions,
but this darkness is normal too.
And it’s out and about, on a
spree.)
Sample from a blog entry,
Oct. 1, 2002: “My friends, I confess to backsliding. I have committed the sins of sloth and indolence; at least, I must have, although I can’t remember a time
in the past month when I haven’t been running around like a
chicken with its head cut off. Because I am failing on all fronts.
In the past week I have failed as
a secretary, as a tenant, as a
housekeeper, as a wife, as a
daughter, as a cook, and, dear
readers, as a blogger. I have insufficiently cleaned ovens and
had my deposit taken away from
me. I have disturbed my family
that loves me by moving into a
hellhole of an apartment. I have
produced substandard briefings.
I have quailed before the
thought of cooking and, God forgive me, ordered Domino’s pizza
instead.”
Readers loved it. Critics did
not. In a New York Times review
of the book “Julie and Julia,” David Kamp (author of bestseller
“The United States of Arugula”
and others, including a series:
“The Food Snob’s Dictionary,”
“The Wine Snob’s Dictionary,”
and several other snob’s dictionaries) dismissed it as chick-lit for
cosmo drinkers, as opposed to
the “genuine” lit he thought it
had the potential to be. “‘Julie
and Julia’ still has too much blog
in its DNA: it has a messy, whatever’s-on-my-mind incontinence
to it, taking us places we’d rather not go.”
Who is this “we,” one wonders. The book sold more than a
million copies.
Greene referenced George Eliot and classical music; Powell
called upon John Hughes and
“Buffy the Vampire Slayer.” But
both were irreverent and selfaware. And both ignored the expectations and conventions, the
male gaze and snobbery, to inhabit and express themselves.
Like writers do.
Devra First can be reached at
devra.first@globe.com. Follow
her on Twitter @devrafirst.
A18
The Region
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
G l o b e
Mass. emergency rooms are beyond the brink
uEMERGENCY ROOMS
the nation’s health care system.
“It’s not like we are on the
brink. It’s like we are past the
brink,” he said.
Janke and colleagues studied emergenc y depar tment
boarding — holding admitted
patients in the ER, often in hallways, while awaiting an inpatient bed — nationwide between January 2020 and December 2021.
They found that when a hospital was more than 85 percent
f u l l , bo a r d i n g t i m e s i n t h e
emergency department often
exceeded the national standard
of four hours. (Across Massachusetts, hospital beds are 94
percent occupied, according to
the latest state data.)
Health experts say boarding
longer than four hours creates
concerns for patient safety, such
as a higher risk for medical errors as overwhelmed doctors
and nurses rush among patients
to deliver care.
The researchers also found
that when hospital occupancy
exceeded that 85 percent mark,
the median boarding time was
6.58 hours, compared with 2.42
hours in other times.
While emergency departments have periodically struggled over the years with overcrowding, the crisis now is considerably beyond that, Janke
said. And the situation is continuing to decline.
“It’s unprecedented in my
career,” said Dr. Michael Van-
Continued from Page A1
desperately sick patients who
delayed care during the pandemic. An early start to flu and
respiratory virus season, and a
steady stream of COVID-19 hospitalizations, has further
strained the system.
Not only have wait times for
patients increased, but doctors
are citing an even more alarming statistic: a rising tide of ER
patients who give up and leave
before ever seeing a doctor. A
recent national study found
that the rate at which people
are leaving hospital waiting
rooms before getting care nearly doubled from 1 to about 2
percent between 2017 and the
end of 2021, putting themselves
at risk for even more severe illness.
To better understand the toll
that overcrowded ERs are having on patients, the Globe asked
readers to share their recent experiences. Some spoke of waiting for hours in pain. One recently retired physician suffered a stroke in September and
had to wait 20 hours in the
emergency department before a
bed opened up. She spent much
of the time on a gurney, just feet
from a row of patients with antibiotic-resistant infections.
Several people who sought
treatment at other hospitals described instances of overhearing intimate details of other patients’ medical histories and
symptoms, as frazzled doctors
and nurses tried to treat people
in crowded waiting rooms.
“Most caregivers are saying
this is the worst they have ever
seen it,” said Steve Walsh, presid e n t o f t h e Ma s s a c h u s e tt s
Health & Hospital Association.
“There is enormous concern
about the fragility of the system.”
Dr. Ale xander Janke, an
emergency medicine physician
at the VA Ann Arbor Healthcare
System/University of Michigan,
has studied hospital crowding
across the country and said it’s
as if the levees have broken in
ERIN CLARK/GLOBE STAFF
Janet Cook waited in a wheelchair for eight hours in an emergency department in October.
partments because many of the
places where patients are discharged to, like nursing homes,
are also swamped.
Janke puts it this way: “All of
us are at risk for being in a bad
car accident, and you want the
system to be ready for you. And
it’s not ready for you right now.”
Janke and his colleagues also
‘Most caregivers are saying this is the
worst they have ever seen it. There is . . .
concern about the fragility of the system.’
STEVE WALSH, Massachusetts Health & Hospital Association
president
Rooyen, chief of enterprise
emergency medicine at Mass
G eneral Brigham, who has
worked in emergency medicine
for 30 years.
Hospitals can’ t free up
enough beds in emergency de-
found that among the worst
performing hospitals, roughly
10 percent of ER patients left
before a medical evaluation at
the end of 2021, compared with
4.3 percent at the beginning of
2017.
At Mass General Brigham,
the state’s largest health system,
an average of 6 percent of patients seeking emergency care
from July through October left
without being seen — three
times higher than a level that
used to set off alarms.
“We’ve never seen averages,
to this degree, of 6 percent,”
VanRooyen said, adding that
he’s seen peaks above 10 percent during that same time period.
VanRooyen is concerned because, he said, the people who
walk out before receiving care
aren’t necessarily leaving because they are less sick.
“There’s been pretty good evidence that shows that people
who leave without being seen
are equally as ill as those coming into the hospital.”
Other health care systems in
Massachuse tts declined to
share data about the percentage
of their patients who left before
being seen.
Yolette, a Randolph mother,
said she saw patients repeatedly
leave the emergency department waiting room in mid-September when she rushed her
teenage son to South Shore
Hospital because he was having
trouble breathing. She asked
that her last name not be used
to protect her family’s privacy.
“It was so packed, and people kept coming in, and this
head nurse was making announcements, saying it’s going
to be eight hours until you are
seen,” Yolette said. “And every
time she made that announcement, people got up and left.”
She said they waited about
three hours before her son was
finally treated with oxygen, steroids, and intravenous fluids.
He has since recovered.
Yolette was worried about
the delayed care, but she said
what prompted her to write a
stern letter to the hospital was
patient privacy concerns. During her hours-long wait, she
said she inadvertently heard intimate details about other patients’ symptoms and test results as doctors were forced to
treat many in the waiting room.
In a statement, South Shore
hospital said the “extremely
high” emergency department
volumes they and so many other health systems are facing is
challenging.
“While we are respectful of
privacy at all times, we are also
mindful of the importance of
initiating care as promptly as
possible during a patient’s visit,
and this may include the need
to communicate with a patient
and/or a patient’s family in a
lobby or waiting area,” it said.
The Baker administration on
Tuesday raised the le vel of
alarm it uses to track the number of staffed hospital beds
available, marking an important signal for hospitals that
crowding was worsening. The
action requires weekly, regional
meetings of hospital leaders to
strategize ways to address the
overcrowding and also consider
voluntarily reducing elective,
non-urgent procedures and surgeries.
But with no immediate relief
in sight, VanRooyen said more
patients may spend their entire
time in the emergency department treated in a hospital hallway, or have blood drawn and
intravenous fluids started in a
waiting area chair.
The hope is that these “crazy
accommodations” may ward off
VanRooyen’s worst nightmare:
someone who desperately needs
emergency care leaving and deteriorating.
“There’s a very real risk,” he
said, “of missing a surgical issue, a cardiac issue, a heart attack.”
Jessica Bartlett of the Globe
staff contributed to this story.
Kay Lazar can be reached at
kay.lazar@globe.com.
Follow her on Twitter
@GlobeKayLazar.
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Christine A. Creelman
Kelly Family Foundation
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Youniss
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Bayrd Foundation
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& Peter Wheeler
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B. Andrew Zelermyer
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& Jonathan Delgado
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Foundation
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General Investors
Schrafft Charitable Trust
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Foundation
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& Julian Regan
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NOVEMBER 6, 2022
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
A19
G l o b e
The Boston Ski & Snowboard Expo
returns, renamed as Snowbound Expo
with a huge speaker line up, NEW
features and the latest gear, tech and
apparel for the 2022/2023 season.
Unseen since 2019, the show returns with over 120+ brands, resorts and
inspiration for all of the family including:
– The Seirus Inspiration Stage hosts speakers
including Bode Miller, Chris Davenport, Dan Egan,
Conrad Anker
– A Share Winter Trail for you to find the brands
affiliated with this amazing organisation
– The Snow Skills Cabin presented by Boston.com
which will welcome Dan Egan, Dani Reyes-Acosta,
Ski Talk Phil & Tricia Pugliese and many others
– Jump into the action with a giant street curling
activation, take a shot at winning some fun
giveaways, and learn more about the Games
coming to Lake Placid this winter.
– A purpose-built slope for beginners to try out some
skills
– Chill out in the Ikon Pass Alpine Mountain Bar and
join the Apres Ski!
– Join The Cross-Country Experience and learn where
to go in North America
– Snowbound Expo is the perfect family day out for
the Boston community, whether you’re advanced at
skiing/riding a board or just starting out.
INSPIRATIONAL SPEAKERS
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WWW.SNOWBOUNDEXPO.COM TICKET CHECKOUT
A20
Nation/Region
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
G l o b e
‘There’s always been this stigma that the South is racist, and that’s it.
I thought I wouldn’t be able to handle it.’
EVANDRA GUERRIER-SENAT, who said she’s happy in Houston — and finally able to afford a place with a walk-in closet
JOHNNY HANSON FOR THE BOSTON GLOBE
HEADING BACK DOWN SOUTH
uLEAVING
Continued from Page A1
like “a plant that’s been repotted in better soil.”
“In Boston, we’re so focused on being Black,”
Bien-Aime said. “I want to exist, too.”
The idea that young Black up-and-comers
might leave a liberal Northern city like Boston to
settle in the South might have seemed unimaginable decades ago — outlandish to some even now.
But for Bien-Aime and others, moving south feels
like a step in the right direction, toward something more like home.
In the first half of the 20th century, some 6 million Black Southerners moved to Boston, New
York, Chicago, and other Northern cities in search
of better opportunity. The Great Migration, which
lasted until the 1970s, reshaped American economic and cultural life.
But in a trend scholars call the Reverse Great
Migration, some young Black people are moving
back to the region and sometimes the cities their
grandparents’ and great-grandparents’ generations left behind. It’s been going on for decades,
and may be accelerating now in Boston.
“You had millions of African Americans who
left the South and thought [it] was not a kind place
for Black people,” said Sabrina Pendergrass, an assistant professor of African American and African
Studies at the University of Virginia. “Now, African
Americans are saying, ‘[The South] is the place
where I want to live.’ ”
Though Massachusetts’ Black population increased between 2010 and 2020, the Greater Boston area lost roughly 8,800 Black residents, according to census population estimates. But even
more may have left. Demographer William Frey
said that figure doesn’t include those who checked
“two or more races” or “other” on their census, and
Boston has substantial Caribbean and Afro-Latino
populations.
Some moved to the suburbs outside Boston.
But others left the state. On average, about half of
the roughly 11,700 Black residents leaving Massachusetts each year between 2015 and 2020 were
moving to Southern states, according to Frey’s
analysis of annual American Community Survey
data. The most popular destinations were Georgia
and Florida, each welcoming an average of 1,400
and 1,300 annual newcomers, respectively.
There is no single factor behind the trend. But
in more than a dozen interviews with young Black
Bostonians who’ve moved to Southern cities in the
last couple of years, the cost of housing was a leading driver.
Many Black families in Boston, largely because
of the racist lending and housing policies that prevailed in the 20th century, lack the kind of generational wealth required to enter the Greater Boston
housing market, where the median home price
spiked to nearly $900,000 earlier this year
Southern cities also tend to have more of a visible Black middle class, more Black home ownership, and more Black people generally. Black business ownership and leadership create professional
opportunities that might not come as easily, or at
all, in a city where white people still hold so much
decision-making power.
And perhaps most importantly to many Black
twenty- and thirtysomethings, the social scene in
Southern cities like Miami, Atlanta, and Houston
feels more vibrant, diverse, and fluid.
Amber Williams, 37, a queer artist from Roxbury known as SublimeLuv, moved to Miami last
year. She revels in the energy of her adopted city’s
wealth of BIPOC queer festivals and organizations,
richly influenced by its history as a stopping point
for Caribbean immigrants.
The vibe in Miami “matches the weather,” she
said. “It feels so warm.”
She also traded an $850-a-month one-bedroom
in Mattapan with a view of parked cars and a dismal patch of yard for a $1,000-a-month Miami
houseshare that includes gym membership, pool,
and a palm tree outside her window.
“I’m surrounded by beauty,” she said.
Pendergrass said the younger African American transplants she’s interviewed for her research
“have more optimistic perspectives” about being
Black in the South than their parents or grandparents who had greater “proximity to Jim Crow and
experiences of seeing white flight in Northern cities like Boston and Detroit.”
“The younger generations have their own personal experiences of seeing how racism played out
in Northern and Western cities,” she said.
Other Black transplants are children of AfroCaribbean immigrants who don’t have Southern
roots or relatives, said LaToya Tavernier, a Lynnbased educator who wrote her doctoral dissertation on the Afro-Caribbean migration to Atlanta in
recent decades.
But like African Americans, she said, they’re
drawn to “a place where their Blackness will not
keep them from opportunity.” Visible Black professionals in Southern “Black meccas” hold the promise of success for them, too.
That’s how Dorchester native Emanuel Riggins
felt when he visited friends in Atlanta in 2019 and
saw Black shoppers in designer brands at malls
and hung out at glitzy clubs where roped-off, VIP
sections are the norm.
“If you’ve lived in Boston for 27 years and then
go somewhere and see a thriving Black middle
class, you’re like, ‘Oh, I can thrive here,’ ” said Riggins, 30, who credits his move with helping jumpstart his career as a rap musician.
The South’s scores of historically Black colleges
and universities are also a draw, offering some
Black suburban teens the chance for a sense of belonging they’ve never experienced before.
Laila Christian, 20, toured Tufts University and
the University of Massachusetts Amherst as a junior at Natick High, but the schools’ lack of Black
students “just felt like going to high school,” where
she was one of the few Black kids in her graduating class, she said.
She hadn’t considered an HBCU until her white
cheer coach brought her to an event with recruiters from Howard, North Carolina A&T, and Florida A&M University, and she found herself “surrounded by people that looked like me, talked like
me, and felt like I did.”
Christian now attends Spelman College in Atlanta, where she’s studying biology and feels bonded to “a sisterhood” of young Black women who
look out for one another.
“It’s that sense of community that I didn’t have
in Massachusetts that I have here,” Christian said.
“That just wasn’t something I was going to get
somewhere else.”
Boston Mayor Michelle Wu’s administration
has taken note of the outmigration, and its potential consequences for the city. Segun Idowu, chief
of economic opportunity and inclusion, said the
city has a strategy for containing the loss, which
he feels diminishes Boston’s cultural identity: Targeting residents of color with homeownership
programs; devoting $9 million of federal pandemic relief funding towards BIPOC businesses of all
sizes; and tasking Boston’s director of strategic initiatives with plotting creative ways to revive nightlife.
“We’ve been doing a great job of transforming
the city so that when you list Atlanta, LA, Houston, D.C., Boston will be on the list of a place
where Black people want to go,” he said. “We’re
working to get all those people who are leaving to
want to come back.”
* * *
But Julian C. Tynes, 37, doesn’t see himself
leaving Houston anytime soon.
Tynes, a talent recruiter, also tried to address
Boston’s lack of Black social spaces when he was
living here. As a side gig, he created Profressh, an
events and entertainment brand for the area’s
young professionals.
Like Bien-Aime, though, he ran into structural
challenges: Liquor licenses are scarce and extremely costly in Boston. There are few Black businesses, meaning “you have to go through another
culture” to book a venue, he said. That is, if you
can even convince a manager to host your event.
“Getting a fair deal is like jumping through
hoops,” Tynes said.
He also wasn’t earning enough from his day job
to finance his ultimate goal: owning a home, a financial foundation he felt would offer his two
school-age daughters greater freedom as they
grew older.
“My dad always said, ‘The more options you
have in life, the better quality of life you’ll have,’ ”
Tynes said. “I want them to make decisions not because they have to, but because they want to.”
He visited Miami and Atlanta, and thought
about D.C. as well. But in the end, he chose Houston.
Texas’s largest city, with a population of nearly
2.3 million, isn’t immune to the issues that plague
his hometown. Its neighborhoods remain segregated. Its public school district has battled state
takeovers due to low performance. Many longtime
residents are moving to the suburbs because housing costs are rising. Its jumbled, expansive street
network makes it difficult to live without a car.
Still, housing prices are significantly lower
than Boston’s — the median single family home
price in the Houston metro area peaked at about
$355,000 in June — and both renters and buyers
get more space for their money. New immigrants
from Mexico, India, and Vietnam join the Indigenous, Tejano, African American, Cajun, Creole,
and Czech communities that have lived here longer, creating a welcoming multicultural scene.
Fewer zoning restrictions means more opportunities for Black entrepreneurs.
A good number of Houston’s popular hangout
spots are Black-owned, so anyone seeking Blackcentered social life can find it anytime. An hour after Sunday church services, or at 2 p.m. on a Tuesday, Houston’s brunch spots are in full swing.
Crowds of young Black patrons in sundresses and
luxury brands dine on catfish and grits or chicken
and waffles, beckoning servers to help them capture the perfect Instagram reel.
Tynes, had considered relocating for years, but
it was only last February, in the heat of the pandemic, that he booked a monthlong Airbnb in
Houston. A few days after he arrived, he signed off
from his remote job in Boston and hopped over to
the Galleria location of Prospect Park, a sports bar
with live music whose Black owners have handled
events for the likes of Drake, Jay-Z, and LeBron
James. There, he encountered what locals considered a “slow winter weeknight.” People were popping open bottles, laughing and eating and having
a good time.
“I was like, ‘What is going on?’ ” he recalled
with a laugh. “People are walking in at 12:30 or 1
a.m. . . . It’s a Wednesday!” At that moment, Tynes
“was a thousand percent sure” he’d move there.
“I came down here, and immediately, I felt accepted,” Tynes said. “I didn’t feel like an outsider.”
He has experienced some breakdowns in the
city’s atmosphere of tolerance. Once, when he jaywalked across a street in Uptown Houston, a driver called him a racial slur. But he said he shrugged
it off: “Racism stems from someone else’s insecuri-
ties.”
* * *
The specter of hate, the kind that goes viral on
social media, was one of Evandra Guerrier-Senat’s
main concerns when she first contemplated leaving Weymouth for a more affordable city in the
South.
“There’s always been this stigma that the South
is racist, and that’s it,” said Guerrier-Senat, who
grew up in West Roxbury. “I thought I wouldn’t be
able to handle it.”
But as Guerrier-Senat, 28, explained in an interview on the patio of her new apartment in
Houston on a humid, stormy evening this fall, her
first six months in the city have convinced her the
South is the “total opposite of what she thought.”
She’s taken aback by the offhanded friendliness
she often encounters; strangers will strike up conversations, instead of putting on “tunnel vision” to
get to their final destination.
A pharmacy technician, Guerrier-Senat is settling into her new $1,095-a-month apartment in a
gated complex in Houston’s Texas Medical Center
neighborhood. She’s hung a framed quote near the
front door: “Do something today your future self
will thank you for.”
Houston’s dating scene, Guerrier-Senat said,
has defied all expectations. She’s had plenty of
suitors, who can afford cars and even offer to pick
her up, though she politely declines.
“Southern men are raised differently,” GuerrierSenat said.
Those different upbringings sometimes give
rise to moments of friction with potential matches
over political matters. She’s encountered more socially conservative men who don’t support abortion rights. This has made Guerrier-Senat, who is
pro-abortion rights, miss home sometimes.
“Though people think Boston is a very racist
city, Massachusetts is still a blue state at the end of
the day . . . and they don’t play when it comes to
[abortion rights],” she said.
She also wants to find a church to continue her
Seventh-day Adventist beliefs, but the array of
megachurches she’s looked into seem too political
for her liking. Texas’s gun subculture “is too
much,” she added, though she’s contemplating getting a firearm to protect herself.
Houston has a lot to offer, but it’s lacking the
strong Afro-Caribbean culture that has taken root
in Boston, Guerrier-Senat said. In her new hometown, if she’s seeking dance clubs blasting soca or
Haitian food, “I have to go out of my way to find
it.”
The move has given her newfound confidence,
she explains, as she shows a visitor around her
spacious living room and bedroom. In her walk-in
closet, she grabs a bright orange, form-fitting
dress. Guerrier-Senat bought it when she was 21,
but never found the occasion, or courage, to wear
it until moving to Houston this April.
“You can never be too extra,” she said with a
smile. “Now, I don’t care if I’m doing too much because I know I’m the person in the room.”
* * *
Feeling reinvigorated by her new life in Houston, Bien-Aime has revived The Other Boston under a new name, The Other Vibe The brand offers
online listings of Black social and community
events in both Houston and Boston.
She still loves her hometown, and wants to support Black life in Boston in some way. But she’s not
going back: “Hell has to freeze over.”
Tiana Woodard is a Report for America corps
member covering Black neighborhoods. She can be
reached at tiana.woodard@globe.com. Follow her
on Twitter at @tianarochon.
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
A21
G l o b e
Remembered
SHARE YOUR MEMORIES ON OUR GUEST BOOK AT BOSTON.COM/OBITUARIES
ABRAMO, Carol M. (Russo)
BY CITY AND TOWN
ACTON
CORCORAN, Francis X.
ANDOVER
ABRAMO, Carol M. (Russo)
ARLINGTON
CREEDON, Walter G.
GONYEA, Richard Lloyd
AVON
ANDERSON, Eric Blair
AYER
DeFRANCESCO, Caroline
Yvonne
BEDFORD
NASON, Daniel
PLANSKY, Vincent J.
EVERETT
KERRIGAN, Mary E.
KOWALSKY, William J. Jr.
FALMOUTH
STIMPSON, Edward Sutton III
WASELCHUK, John Jr.
FRAMINGHAM
KERNS, Margaret E.
GEORGETOWN
MACCARONE, June B.
HARWICH
MILLIGAN, John F.
HINGHAM
GREENE, Mary L. (Walsh)
BELMONT
COPPOLA, Ralph
DiPIETRANTONIO, Ann (Tait)
BOSTON
BAKOS, Pauline
BALLARD, Edward G. Jr.
BALOGH, Judith Györgypály,
M.D.
CORCORAN, Francis X.
GARRITY, Francis D.
GONYEA, Richard Lloyd
KERNS, Margaret E.
LEWIS, Alan
McKINNON, Paul
OKYLE, Sharlett R.
PFAU, Kathryn N.
PRATT, Bettina
SCHULTZ, Allen M.
SMITH, Raymond
STIMPSON, Edward Sutton III
WASSER, Steven
WORTMAN, William J.
BOXFORD
MACCARONE, June B.
BRAINTREE
O’REILLY, Rosemary R.
BRIGHTON
LAWSON, John Robert
McCORMACK, Michael F.
BROCKTON
ANDERSON, Eric Blair
BROOKLINE
O’CONNOR, John Edmond
BURLINGTON
DeFRANCESCO, Caroline
Yvonne
FLYNN, Lee M. (Marshall)
PIANTEDOSI, Lillian
CALIFORNIA
OKYLE, Sharlett R.
CAMBRIDGE
ANDERSON, Eric Blair
BALOGH, Judith Györgypály,
M.D.
McKINNON, Paul
NASON, Daniel
CANTON
McKENDALL, Marilyn A.
CATAUMET
O’REILLY, Rosemary R.
CHARLESTOWN
NEITZ, Peter E.
CHELMSFORD
DeSILVA, Eunice A.
FEROLITO, Patricia A.
(Gately)
CONCORD
CORNWALL, Susan
MILLER, Margot Bourgeois
DANVERS
WASELCHUK, John Jr.
WYSOCKI, Peter
DEDHAM
ORDWAY, Kenneth H.
PLANSKY, Vincent J.
SULLIVAN, John Patrick Sr.
DORCHESTER
CONNOLLY, Mary Bernadette
GREENE, Mary L. (Walsh)
ORDWAY, Kenneth H.
SANTA MARIA, Joan M.
(Carey)
SULLIVAN, John Patrick Sr.
HOLBROOK
O’REILLY, Rosemary R.
HULL
GREENE, Mary L. (Walsh)
JAMAICA PLAIN
DIGGES, Diana L.
O’CONNOR, John Edmond
O’DONNELL, John J. PhD
PFAU, Kathryn N.
LEXINGTON
DeFRANCESCO, Caroline
Yvonne
SUNG, Nakho
LINCOLN
BALOGH, Judith Györgypály,
M.D.
LOWELL
DeSILVA, Eunice A.
LYNNFIELD
PERKINS, Ralph T.
MALDEN
ABRAMO, Carol M. (Russo)
CARUSO, Annie (DiSario)
RUGGIERO, Louise
WORTMAN, William J.
RANDOLPH
ROTA, Henry J.
READING
McKINNON, Paul
PERKINS, Beatrice E.
SEIBOLD, Eileen
WINTHROP
SAWYER, Elizabeth A. (Trites)
SAUGUS
KOWALSKY, William J. Jr.
WORTMAN, William J.
WOBURN
BOLAND, Theresa J. (O’Melia)
FLYNN, Lee M. (Marshall)
FREDELLA, Frank G.
TRANIELLO, Cosmo L.
SCITUATE
DiPIETRANTONIO, Ann (Tait)
WRENTHAM
KRUTIL, Anna
SHERBORN
GOGLIA, Charles A. Jr.
GOGLIA, Patricia Ann (Morrissey)
OUT OF STATE
SOUTH BOSTON
CONNOLLY, Mary Bernadette
SOUTH WEYMOUTH
HALPENNY, Daniel
STONEHAM
KERRIGAN, Mary E.
PERKINS, Ralph T.
SEIBOLD, Eileen
STOUGHTON
FLYNN, Lee M. (Marshall)
MARSHFIELD
McCORMACK, Michael F.
SUDBURY
HOLLOCHER, Thomas Clyde
Jr.
MAYNARD
DeSILVA, Eunice A.
MEDFORD
DeLUCA, Michael C. Jr.
FREDELLA, Frank G.
MEDWAY
McCORMACK, Michael F.
MELROSE
BAKOS, Pauline
CARUSO, Annie (DiSario)
CREEDON, Walter G.
GUIDABONI, Carolyn
KERRIGAN, Mary E.
WORTMAN, William J.
METHUEN
SEIBOLD, Eileen
MIDDLETON
WASELCHUK, John Jr.
MILLIS
KERNS, Margaret E.
MILTON
O’CONNOR, John Edmond
SANTA MARIA, Joan M.
(Carey)
NEEDHAM
BALLARD, Edward G. Jr.
MILLIGAN, John F.
O’CONNOR, John Edmond
SARGENT, James Francis
SULLIVAN, John Patrick Sr.
TAYLOR, Kathryn I. (Orr)
TOWER, June B. (Fresen)
NEWTON
COPPOLA, Ralph
DiPIETRANTONIO, Ann (Tait)
STIMPSON, Edward Sutton III
TOWER, June B. (Fresen)
NORFOLK
EILERTSON, Alan W.
NORWELL
GREENE, Mary L. (Walsh)
DOVER
TOWER, June B. (Fresen)
DUXBURY
McCORMACK, Michael F.
OAK BLUFFS
WASS, Herbert F.
EAST BOSTON
FREDELLA, Frank G.
PEABODY
WASELCHUK, John Jr.
EAST BRIDGEWATER
ANDERSON, Eric Blair
PLYMOUTH
DeSILVA, Eunice A.
GUIDABONI, Carolyn
TEWKSBURY
HOLLOCHER, Thomas Clyde
Jr.
TOPSFIELD
MACCARONE, June B.
WASS, Herbert F.
UPTON
ABRAMO, Carol M. (Russo)
W. ROXBURY
O’REILLY, Rosemary R.
WAKEFIELD
CREEDON, Walter G.
PERKINS, Ralph T.
WORTMAN, William J.
WALPOLE
EILERTSON, Alan W.
KRUTIL, Anna
WALTHAM
COPPOLA, Ralph
DiPIETRANTONIO, Ann (Tait)
GUIDABONI, Carolyn
MILLIGAN, John F.
A longtime resident of
Winchester, died peacefully
on November 2nd, at the
age of ninety-five. Beloved wife of the
late Richard M. Boland. Proud mother
of Barbara K. Griesinger, her husband
Andrew of Meredith, NH, and Richard
M. Boland, his wife Cathy of Alma, CO.
Cherished grandmother of Hannah
Phelps, her husband Tate of VA, and
Peter Griesinger of CA. Adored greatgrandmother of Jackson and Hunter.
Dear sister of the late Edward O’Melia,
Dorothy Collins and Ruth Burns.
Also survived by many loving nieces
and nephews. A Funeral Mass will be
celebrated in St. Charles Church, 280
Main Street, Woburn, on Tuesday, Nov.
8th at 10 a.m. Burial will take place in
Calvary Cemetery at the convenience
of the family. Relatives and friends are
respectfully invited to Calling Hours,
Monday, Nov. 7th from 4-7 p.m. in the
Lynch-Cantillon Funeral Home, 263
Main Street, WOBURN, MA 01801. In
lieu of flowers, donations may be made
in Theresa’s memory to the Winchester
Mt. Vernon House, 110 Mt. Vernon St.,
Winchester, MA 01890.
WILMINGTON
THIEL, Mary
ROSLINDALE
CONNOLLY, Mary Bernadette
McKINNON, Paul
PFAU, Kathryn N.
SOMERVILLE
SUNG, Nakho
TRANIELLO, Cosmo L.
Age 92, of Lincoln, MA passed away
on October 30, 2022. Judith had
celebrated 67 years of marriage to
Károly Balogh, M.D.
Dr. Judith Balogh was born in
Budapest, Hungary. As a young child,
Judith excelled in skating and won
prestigious national competitions in
gymnastics. After the early death of
her father, Judith moved with her
mother to the countryside to avoid
the ravages of World War II. In 1954,
Judith graduated from Semmelweis
Medical School in Budapest. While in
medical school, she met Károly Balogh.
They were married in January 1955.
Shortly after the October 1956 Soviet
invasion, Judith and Károly escaped
the communist occupation by fleeing
separately to Austria. Successfully
reuniting in Vienna, the young doctor
couple traveled to the United States
under a Rockefeller Foundation
Fellowship and posting at the Tulane
Medical School in New Orleans, LA.
After a year in New Orleans, Judith and
Károly packed their VW bug and moved
to Boston, MA. They first lived in
Boston, then moved to Cambridge and
started a family. They settled in 1971
in Lincoln, MA where they raised their
children and have lived since.
Dr. Judith Balogh completed her
training as chief resident in psychiatry
at Boston City Hospital in 1962, then
was on the staff of the Massachusetts
Mental Health Center as a child and
adolescent psychiatrist, and maintained
a private practice. For ten years, she
served as chief of Pediatric Psychiatry at
Cambridge City Hospital.
Judith and Károly have three
children, Adam, Peter, and Anna.
Judith made raising her family a
priority. Judith and Károly have three
grandchildren, Charlotte, Eva, and
Alexander. Judith and Károly shared
their athletic passions and love of
the outdoors with their children and
grandchildren, including skiing as
regular season ticket holders for many
years at Pleasant Mountain in Maine.
Judith was passionate about
collecting and reading books and
newspaper articles on a multitude of
subjects and filled stacks of notebooks
with her own thoughts, analysis, and
story ideas. Judith was interviewed as
part of the Hungarian 1956 Memory
Project. www.memoryproject.online/
gyongypaly-balogh-judit/
A Graveside Service for family
and local friends was held on Friday,
November 4th at the Lincoln Cemetery.
A Celebration of Life for the family and
friends will be held at a future date.
The Balogh family wishes to
acknowledge their gratitude to the staff
at the Waltham Crossing Benchmark
facility and Caring Hospice Services
where Judith spent her final days in
their compassionate care.
In lieu of flowers, please consider
honoring the memory of Dr. Judith
G. Balogh with a donation to the
BrightFocus Foundation’s Alzheimer’s
Disease Research fund (www.support.
brightfocus.org, 22512 Gateway Center
Drive, Clarksburg, MD 20871); Special
Olympics (www.specialolympicsma.
org, 512 Forest St., Marlborough, MA
01752); or, Reach Out and Read (www.
reachoutandread.org 89 South St.,
Suite. 201, Boston, MA 02111.
For Judith’s online guestbook, please
visit www.DeeFuneralHome.com
WEYMOUTH
GARRITY, Francis D.
GREENE, Mary L. (Walsh)
WINCHESTER
BOLAND, Theresa J. (O’Melia)
PERKINS, Ralph T.
SOMERSET
GUIDABONI, Carolyn
BOLAND, Theresa J.
(O’Melia)
WESTWOOD
EILERTSON, Alan W.
KRUTIL, Anna
PLANSKY, Vincent J.
REYNOLDS, Elizabeth Clifford
REVERE
KERRIGAN, Mary E.
SAWYER, Elizabeth A. (Trites)
MANSFIELD
EILERTSON, Alan W.
NORWOOD
EILERTSON, Alan W.
KRUTIL, Anna
MACCARONE, June B.
ORDWAY, Kenneth H.
EASTON
O’REILLY, Rosemary R.
QUINCY
HALPENNY, Daniel
NEITZ, Peter E.
PLANSKY, Vincent J.
BALOGH, Judith
Györgypály, M.D.
CALIFORNIA
BALLARD, Edward G. Jr.
BOLAND, Theresa J. (O’Melia)
COLORADO
BOLAND, Theresa J. (O’Melia)
CONNECTICUT
WYSOCKI, Peter
FLORIDA
SCHULTZ, Allen M.
ILLINOIS
GOLDSTEIN, Ada
MAINE
ANDERSON, Eric Blair
GUIDABONI, Carolyn
KERRIGAN, Mary E.
PERKINS, Ralph T.
November 2, lifelong resident of
Malden. Beloved wife of the late Frank
Abramo. Devoted mother of Frank P.
Abramo of Andover and Michael A.
Abramo of Upton; and mother-in-law
of Maria Abramo. Sister of Philip Russo
and wife Patricia of Groveland. Proud
grandmother of Michael, Alexander,
and Melina. Also survived by dear
friends, Frani and Wes; godchild,
Lynne; cousins, Mary Ann, Elizabeth,
Denise, and Larry and many special
cousins. Funeral from the WeirMacCuish Golden Rule Funeral Home,
144 Salem St., MALDEN, on Tuesday,
November 8,, at 9 AM, followed by a
Mass of Christian Burial in S. Josephs
Church, Malden, at 10 AM. Interment
to follow in Woodlawn Cemetery,
Everett. Visitation will be held at the
funeral home on Monday, November 7,
from 4 – 8 PM. For full obituary, www.
weirfuneralhome.com
ANDERSON, Eric Blair
MASSACHUSETTS
LEWIS, Alan
See Enhanced Listing
MINNESOTA
MILLIGAN, John F.
BAKOS, Pauline “Paula”
NEW HAMPSHIRE
BOLAND, Theresa J. (O’Melia)
DeSILVA, Eunice A.
GARRITY, Francis D.
LEWIS, Alan
MACCARONE, June B.
TRANIELLO, Cosmo L.
NEW YORK
BALLARD, Edward G. Jr.
WASSER, Steven
VERMONT
MILLIGAN, John F.
VIRGINIA
GONYEA, Richard Lloyd
Of Melrose, November 2, 2022. Visiting Hours November 6, 2022, Gately
Funeral Home, MELROSE, 2-4PM.
Funeral November 7, 2022. Annunciation of the Virgin Mary Greek Orthodox
Church, 70 Montvale Ave., Woburn at
11AM. Info gatelyfh.com
BALLARD, Edward G. Jr.
“TED”
OUT OF COUNTRY
IRELAND
CONNOLLY, Mary Bernadette
SULLIVAN, John Patrick Sr.
WATERTOWN
COPPOLA, Ralph
DiPIETRANTONIO, Ann (Tait)
WAYLAND
BALLARD, Edward G. Jr.
O’DONNELL, John J. PhD
WELLESLEY
FALVEY, Betsey Dray
SCHULTZ, Allen M.
STIMPSON, Edward Sutton III
TOWER, June B. (Fresen)
WASSER, Steven
WEST NEWTON
TOWER, June B. (Fresen)
WEST ROXBURY
CONNOLLY, Mary Bernadette
GARRITY, Francis D.
McCORMACK, Michael F.
McKINNON, Paul
PFAU, Kathryn N.
PLANSKY, Vincent J.
SULLIVAN, John Patrick Sr.
WESTON
COPPOLA, Ralph
GOGLIA, Charles A. Jr.
GOGLIA, Patricia Ann (Morrissey)
STIMPSON, Edward Sutton III
WESTPORT
O’CONNOR, John Edmond
Share a cherished memory
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Of Needham, MA,
passed away suddenly at
Massachusetts General
Hospital on October 30, 2022,
surrounded by his loving family
and leaving to mourn many other
dear family and friends. He was
affectionately known as “Ted,” “Teddy,”
or “Bones” and is survived by his wife,
Kathie; three sons, Will, Michael, and
Phillip; and sisters, Lynn and Holly.
Ted was born in Nashville, TN, in
1945, spent his childhood in Oil City,
PA, Larchmont, NY, and teenage years
in Old Greenwich, CT. He graduated
from North Yarmouth Academy
in Maine, where he had spent his
summers with family. He served in the
Army Reserve from 1968 to 1974 and
graduated from American University
with a B.S. in 1972.
Ted was accepted into a training
program at Manufacturers Hanover
Trust (succeeded by Chemical Bank
then JPMorgan) in 1974 and sent to
Los Angeles to open the bank’s first
corporate office outside New York.
After the bank sponsored his graduate
studies at Stanford, Ted went on to
open another office in San Francisco
before returning to the east coast to be
closer to relatives. After a few years in
Darien, CT, Ted and Kathie moved their
young family to Needham, MA, where
he began a second career in commercial
real estate, spending nearly a decade
ranked among the highest performers
in the Boston market. Ted ultimately
returned to financial services at State
Street Bank and Trust in 1998.
Ted gave generously of himself
to his loved ones and strangers
alike. Upon retirement, he donated
his leadership and sales skills to
nonprofit endeavors at the Needham
Community Council and Needham 300
(tricentennial) where he led fundraising
activities. Through Needham Cares,
he participated in rebuilding homes
in Louisiana and Mississippi after
Hurricane Katrina.
Ted was a beloved “man-abouttown” in Needham where he coached
youth soccer and lived with his family
for 36 years. He enjoyed tennis,
boating and music (especially jazz),
spending time in Wilmington, NC,
visiting his sons in New York and LA,
and Thursday evenings with his tennis
buddies at Dunn-Gaherin’s, his favorite
watering hole.
A Family Service will be held later
this month and a Celebration of Life
and Memorial Service will be held in
the spring.
In lieu of flowers, donations may be
made to Needham Community Council,
570 Hillside Ave., Needham, MA 02494
(Needhamcouncil.org).
Arrangements entrusted to the care
of the John C. Bryant Funeral Home
of WAYLAND. For condolences, please
visit www.johncbryantfuneralhome.
com
Share a memory
Or add a condolensece
to the guestbook at
boston.com/obituaries
Dee Funeral Home of Concord
978-369-2030
Caring for families since 1868
W.C. CANNIFF & SONS, INC.
531 CUMMINS HIGHWAY
ROSLINDALE, MA 02131
TEL: 617-323-3690
1-800-439-3690
Over 1200 monuments on display
36”
$1190
CANNIFF
EDWARD T.
1908 - 1987
CARUSO, Annie “Mary”
(DiSario)
Passed away on Oct. 21, 2022 at age
90. She was born in Malden & was a
lifelong resident. Devoted wife to the
late Rudy Caruso. Beloved mother of
Donna D’Alessandro of Salem, Corinne
Riley & husband Dan of Nashua, NH,
Rudy Caruso & wife Sheryl of Haverhill,
John Caruso of Plaistow, NH, Julie
George & Lena Ciamarra Caruso. Dear
sister of the late Margaret Della Piana
& two late brothers Phillip & Thomas
DiSario; aunt to cherished niece Diane
Cataldo, as they grew up together like
sisters. Cherished grandmother of
Nicole D’Alessandro, Gina Saccoccio
& husband Ernesto, Danielle Hatch
& husband Matt, Kristen Lavoie
& husband Nick, Michael Caruso,
Anthony Caruso & fiancée Sami
Lattarulo, Kertrina Caruso, Cynthia
Caruso, Kaitlynn Caruso, Kloie Caruso,
Gabriella Caruso & Joseph Caruso.
She is also survived by eight greatgrandchildren: Valentina, Keagan,
Caydence, Braylin, Rilynn, Declan,
Lilianna & Isabella. Funeral Service will
be held at the A.J. Spadafora Funeral
Home, 865 Main St., MALDEN on
Friday, November 11th at 11:00am.
Visitation will be held from 9:00am11:00am prior to the service. Relatives
& friends are respectfully invited
to attend. Entombment will be in
the family mausoleum at Wyoming
Cemetery, Melrose. In lieu of flowers,
memorial donations in Annie’s memory
may be made to the Alzheimer’s
Association at alz.org To sign online
guestbook, visit spadaforafuneral.com
Spadafora Funeral Home
781-324-8680
Funeral Services
Affordable Cremation
$
1310 complete
617 782 1000
Lehman Reen & McNamara
Funeral Home
www.lehmanreen.com
Serving Greater Boston
Cemetery
engraving
& cleaning
Bronze
markers & vases
Select Barre Vermont Granite. Price includes memorial
with family name, one inscription and delivery to
cemetery. Cemetery charges, base number if required,
additional lettering and Massachusetts sales tax extra.
Monday - Friday 9am – 9pm
Saturday – Sunday 12 – 5pm
®
www.lynch-cantillon.com
781-933-0400
500 Canterbury St.
Boston, MA 02131
617-524-1036
www.stmichaelcemetery.com
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MON-FRI 9-9; SAT 9-5, SUNDAY 12-5
Celebrate their lives
Honor your loved ones with a photo
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A22
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
G l o b e
Remembered
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ANDERSON, Eric Blair
CONNOLLY, Mary
Bernadette
U.S. Navy SEAL, LTCMDR (Ret.)
Eric B. Anderson 1943-2022
U
.S. Navy Lt. Cmdr. (ret.)
Eric Blair Anderson,
79, died at his home in
Ubatuba, Brazil, where
he lived with his wife,
Manuela. Eric was born in Blue Hill,
ME, on February 2, 1943. He died on
October 12, 2022, of complications
from a fall.
Except for 1952-61, when he lived in
East Bridgewater, MA, Eric lived on,
in or near the ocean for the rest of his
life. From Blue Hill, his family moved
to Bath, ME, and later spent summer
1954 on Cuttyhunk Island, MA.
Eric’s preparation for a naval career
began at age 8 with swim lessons at
the Brockton, MA, YMCA. As a camper,
then lifeguard and swim teacher,
he spent seven summers at Royal
Ambassador Camp, Ocean Park, ME,
where the outdoor swimming pool
filled with ocean water at high tide and
emptied at low tide.
Eric graduated from East
Bridgewater High School in 1961.
In his senior year, he was Captain of
the EBHS Cross-country team and
Co-captain of the Track team. At one
point, he held the EBHS one-mile
record.
After high school, Eric briefly
attended two colleges, worked in a CA
gypsum mine, hitchhiked to Mexico to
learn Spanish, and drove a Checker cab
in Boston.
Following two years in the Navy
Reserves, Eric went on active duty.
Waiting for a ship assignment, he
was invited to apply for Underwater
Demolition Team training. In 1967, he
was certified as a UDT Diver. As a Navy
“frogman,” he served three years on
active duty with an Amphibious Forces
Underwater Demolition Team.
On March 13, 1969, Boatswains
Mate Second Class Anderson led
one of three frogman teams trained
to recover the returning Apollo 9
astronauts after they splashed down in
the Atlantic. As NASA said at the time,
“The goal of the Apollo 9 10-day earth
orbital spaceflight is to give the moon
lander its initial test with men at the
controls. The key to the trial will be
a complicated rendezvous operation
between the lunar lander and the
command ship.” Apollo 9 prepared for
the successful Apollo 11 landing of a
man on the moon in July 1969.
His enlistment completed, Eric
earned an A.B. degree at Virginia’s Old
Dominion University. At the Navy’s
urging, he rejoined the Navy to attend
Officers Candidate School, graduating
in 1972.
By then, Underwater Demolition
Teams had been renamed the SEALs.
Sea, Air, and Land Teams, known
as Navy SEALs, are the U.S. Navy’s
primary special operations force and
a component of the Naval Special
Warfare Command. As he told his
family early on, “At some point I am
not going to be able to tell you what I
am doing.”
He finished his naval career in
London on the staff of the commander
of U.S. Naval forces in Europe, retiring
in 1989 as a Lieutenant Commander.
It was in London that he met his
wife, Manuela, who survives him.
He is survived as well by his former
wife, Judith Corrin; and by their
two daughters, Britta K. Anderson
of Florida, and Laura C. Anderson
CORNWALL, Susan
See Enhanced Listing
of Maine; as well as two grandsons,
Nico and Kasen. Other survivors
include his sisters, Astrid Dodds of
Cambridge, MA, and Ingrid Whitman
of Clinton, MA; a nephew, and
cousins in Massachusetts, Florida, and
Washington.
Eric was predeceased by his parents,
Rev. Arvid L. and Ruth Anderson of the
Elmwood section of East Bridgewater,
and later, Avon and Wareham, MA.
In 1991, Eric and Manuela bought a
boat in Maine and sailed it to Miami,
FL, where they lived and worked
for 15 years. In 2006, they moved to
Manuela’s native country, Brazil, and
settled in Ubatuba where Eric enjoyed
ocean swimming and worked on
mastering Portuguese.
At Eric’s request, his ashes will be
scattered in the ocean off Brazil. No
memorial service is planned.
Donations in Eric B. Anderson’s
memory may be made to the Old
Colony YMCA, 320 Main Street,
Brockton, MA 02301, or online at
www.oldcolonyymca.org/donate or to
the charity of the donor’s choice.
For a complete obituary and to leave
a message of condolence, please visit
www.keefefuneralhome.com
CORNWALL, Susan
Musician, Friend, Mother
S
Degree from Stanford, and furthered
her musical development at New
England Conservatory. She studied
math because she was pretty good at
it and it was a supposedly practical
major, and the one that would require
the fewest credits, thus allowing her
to take many music classes, as music
was, and remained, her true passion.
Her math degree led her to work in
the computer industry and later as
a management consultant. Sue had
a beautiful light soprano voice and
performed with the Cantata Singers
in the 1970’s, and thereafter in many
small ensembles. She organized and
led a church group that brought music
to people who were ill, the By Your
Side Singers. In recent years, she
embraced Early Music and playing
the harpsichord, which she found
quite preferable to the piano. She was
a beloved chamber music host to the
early music community.
Family was the cornerstone of her
life. She understood the importance of
“making family,” by which she meant
A Loved, Kind,
and Funny Man
November 10, 1929 - October 21, 2022
Formerly of Sudbury, peacefully left
us at 92 years young. Funeral Services
on November 12 are under the care of
Duckett Dignity Memorial, SUDBURY.
Of Dorchester, formerly of West
Roxbury, passed away unexpectedly,
on October 31, 2022. Born June 12,
1942, the beloved daughter of the
late Michael J. and Barbara (Joyce)
Connolly of South Boston, Dorchester
and West Roxbury, and originally from
Connemara, County, Galway, Ireland.
Devoted sister of Lawrence J. Connolly
of West Roxbury and the late Joseph
Francis Connolly. Also survived by
many dear relatives in the U.S. and
Ireland. Mary graduated from St.
Peter Grammar School in Dorchester
and Cardinal Cushing High School
in South Boston. She received her
Bachelor of Science degree, as well as
her Master of Education degree from
Boston State College, now University
of Massachusetts Boston. She taught in
the Boston Public Schools from 1964 to
2001 at the Mather, Lee, Cleveland and
Irving Schools except for a 2 ½ year
stint in the Peace Corps in Sarawak,
Malaysia, on the island of Borneo from
1968 to 1971. Relatives and friends are
kindly invited to attend Visiting Hours
in the William J. Gormley Funeral
Home, 2055 Centre Street, WEST
ROXBURY, on Monday, November
7, 2022, from 4:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m.
Funeral from the funeral home on
Tuesday, November 8, 2022, at 8:30
a.m., followed by a Mass of Christian
Burial at St. Agatha Church in East
Milton, at 10:30 a.m. To livestream
the funeral, please visit https://vimeo.
com/767356781 Interment will
follow in St. Joseph Cemetery in West
Roxbury. In lieu of flowers, donations
in Mary’s memory may be made to
the SMA Fathers, 337 Common Street,
Dedham, MA 02026 or at smafathers.
org For directions or to leave a
condolence message for Mary’s family,
please visit: gormleyfuneral.com
William J. Gormley Funeral Service
617-323-8600
usan Miller Cornwall passed
away on October 31, 2022, at
the age of 79.
She leaves Nick Pappas,
her husband of 42 years;
their daughter, Elizabeth Amy Pappas
Cornwall; her stepsons, Benjamin
Pappas and Matthew Papakipos; her
brother, Richard Cornwall; and her
four grandchildren. Sue resided in
Concord, Massachusetts for over 45
years, the last two years of which she
was delighted to share a home with
Nick, Ben, her daughter-in-law, Esther
Greenburg, and granddaughter Tova.
Sue loved to talk about her early
years in the wintry Upper Peninsula
of Michigan where she learned to ski.
When the family moved to California,
she took up her father’s love of tennis
and played on her college team. In
later life, she became an avid runner,
amassing a large collection of T-shirts
from 10K road races until her health
curtailed her physical activity.
Sue received a Bachelor’s degree
from Pomona College, a Master’s
CORCORAN, Francis X.
COPPOLA, Ralph
that one had to provide the setting, the
support, the activities, and the values
that would constitute an environment
for everyone to connect and develop.
As Sue’s medical problems curtailed
her activity in recent years, her service
dog, Bizzi was always with her. In
addition to his services, (warning
her when she must stop or curtail an
activity), he provided a constant, loving
presence that nurtured her.
There will be a Memorial Service,
followed by a reception, at First Parish
Church of Lincoln, MA, at 11:00 a.m.,
Saturday, November 12, 2022.
Add a memory
or condolence to the guest book at
Boston.com/obituaries
Of Newton, died peacefully on Friday,
November 4, 2022. He was 96. Beloved
husband to his wife of 76 years, Cecilia
(Angelucci) Coppola. Loving father
of Rosalba Salvucci & her husband,
Fred of Weston, and Ralph Coppola,
Jr. & his wife, Mary Jane of Needham.
Cherished “Papa” to Danielle Black
& her husband, Brian, Carla
Salvucci & her husband, Matt Curley,
Christopher Coppola & his husband,
Will Bowling, and Gregory Coppola
& his wife, Ariel. Great-grandfather
to Rebecca, Andrew, Michael, Cecilia,
Emma, and Olivia. He was predeceased
by his brothers, Arduino Coppola
and Mario Tavolieri, and survived by
his sister, Maria Tavolieri, of Atina,
Italy. Born on July 16, 1926 in Atina,
Italy, Ralph and his family immigrated
to Watertown, Massachusetts in 1952,
and eventually settled in Auburndale.
Ralph worked as a plasterer and in his
pastime, was a competitive bowler. He
also enjoyed playing bocce with his
brothers and friends. Weekends were
spent in the company of extended
family over large meals. Ralph had
a passion for gardening and spent
countless hours tending to his yard and
flowers. His green thumb and beautiful
flower beds were recognized by the City
of Newton, which awarded him the
Newton Beautification Award multiple
times. Family and friends are welcome
to celebrate Ralph’s life by gathering for
Visiting Hours at the Nardone Funeral
Home, 373 Main St., WATERTOWN,
on Wednesday from 8-9:30 AM,
followed by a 10 AM Funeral Mass
at St. Patrick’s Church, 212 Main St.,
Watertown. Burial in Newton Cemetery.
In lieu of flowers, donations in Ralph’s
memory may be made to the American
Kidney Fund (kidneyfund.org) or the
Massachusetts Horticultural Society
(masshort.org).
Nardone Funeral Home
(617) 924 - 1113
www.NardoneFuneralHome.com
Share a memory
Or add a condolensece
to the guestbook at
boston.com/obituaries
CREEDON, Walter G.
Of Wakefield, Nov. 3.
Walter is survived by his
wife Ellie; son Gregory
Creedon & partner, Jamie Howarth of
Nantucket; daughter Martha Creedon &
husband Leo Keightley of Waltham;
and son Peter Creedon & partner, Judy
Rondeau of Brockton; and grandchildren, Benjamin and Scott Keightley and
Peter Creedon, Jr. Also survived by his
sister Joan; as well as several nieces
and nephews and their children and by
his dear friends. Preceded in death by
his brother Jack. Burial with military
honors will be 11 a.m. Monday, Nov. 7
at Lakeside Cemetery in Wakefield,
Denis Coleman officiating. Relatives
and friends are invited to attend. In lieu
of flowers, Ellie suggests a contribution
in Walter’s memory to the Friends of
the Beebe Library. Arrangements in the
care of the McDonald Funeral Home,
WAKEFIELD. For full obituary and
guestbook, www.mcdonaldfs.com
DeFRANCESCO, Caroline
Yvonne (Priest)
Of Burlington, formerly of Lexington,
passed away peacefully, with her family
by her side, on November 4, 2022. Beloved wife of the late Charles F. DeFrancesco. Loving mother of Maryann Bates
and her husband Robert of Burlington,
Lisa M. Hanson and her late husband
Neil of Chelmsford, Charles X. DeFrancesco and his wife Debra of Lincoln,
and Gina Gonnella of Ayer. Devoted
sister of Edward J. Priest of Waltham,
and predeceased by 15 siblings. She
is also survived by 11 grandchildren,
Kevin, Courtney, Kayla, Charlie, Colin,
Nicholas, Christopher, Matthew,
Samantha, Jennifer, and Anthony; 6
great-grandchildren, Benjamin, Ryan,
Henry, Ricky, Caroline, and Harper;
and by many nieces and nephews.
Caroline was devoted to her children
and grandchildren, and was especially
known by all for her exceptional cooking.
Funeral from the Douglass Funeral
Home, 51 Worthen Rd., LEXINGTON,
Thursday, November 10th at 9am, followed by a Mass of Christian Burial at
St. Brigid Church, Lexington at 10am.
Visiting Hours at the Douglass Funeral
Home, 51 Worthen Rd., Lexington,
Wednesday from 4pm to 8pm. Relatives
and friends are kindly invited. Donations in her memory may be made to
St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital,
262 Danny Thomas Place, Memphis,
TN 38105. Interment Westview Cemetery, Lexington.
DeLUCA, Michael C. Jr.
Age 82, of Medford, Saturday, October
29. Raised and educated in Boston’s
North End, he was the son of the late
Michael C. and Jennie (DeMarco)
DeLuca. Michael loved people and he
loved to laugh. He enjoyed playing
Bingo, helping to prepare holiday
dinners for the family, and watching
every sporting event. Michael was the
dear brother of Antoinette M. Scoppa
of Medford and her late husband,
Paul, Richard J. DeLuca, and the late
Theresa DeLuca. Also survived by
Debbie Bourgeault and many more
loving cousins and family members.
Funeral Services will be private. In
lieu of flowers, contributions may
be sent in Michael’s name to St.
Jude Children’s Research Hospital,
Memorials Processing, 501 St. Jude
Place, Memphis, TN 38105-9959.
Dello Russo Funeral Homes
Medford - Woburn
Show your respect
View The Boston Globe’s complete list
of death notices and sign the guestbook
at boston.com/obituaries.
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
A23
G l o b e
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DeSILVA, Eunice A.
Of Plymouth, died October 31, 2022.
Visiting Hours Tuesday, Nov. 8 from
3-7PM at Dolan Funeral Home, 106
Middlesex Street, N. CHELMSFORD,
MA. Funeral Wednesday, Nov. 9 at
11AM at Dolan Funeral Home. Burial
in Fairview Cemetery, N. Chelmsford.
In lieu of flowers, contributions in
memory of Eunice DeSilva may be
made to Cranberry Hospice at Beth
Israel Deaconess Hospital-Plymouth
by visiting giving.bilh.org/bidp or by
check made payable to “Beth Israel
Deaconess Hospital-Plymouth” with
“Eunice DeSilva/Cranberry Hospice”
in memo line. Contributions can be
mailed to: Beth Israel Deaconess
Hospital-Plymouth, 275 Sandwich
Street, Plymouth, MA 02360. Memorial
contributions can also be made in
memory of Eunice DeSilva to the Sean
M. Healey & AMG Center for ALS at
Mass General Cure ALS Fund (giving.
massgeneral.org/healeycenter) or by
mail (Attn: Emily Monteiro, Mass
General Development Office, 125
Nashua Street, Suite. 540, Boston, MA
02114-1101).
Dolan Funeral Home 978-251-4041
www.dolanfuneralhome.com
DIGGES, Diana L.
Of Jamaica Plain and Eastham, MA.
July 23,1952 - September 22, 2022. For
obituary and Celebration of Life details,
please see www.alfreddthomas.com
DiPIETRANTONIO, Ann
(Tait)
Age 87 of Watertown, Nov. 3, 2022.
Beloved wife of 68 years to Micheal
DiPietrantonio. Loving mother
of Michael DiPietrantonio, Alan
DiPietrantonio & his wife Lisa, and
Doris Herrick & her husband Doug.
Cherished ‘Nana’ to Nicole, Olivia, Alex,
Kevin, Derek DiPietrantonio, Ryan
and Matthew Herrick. She was the last
of 7 siblings. Family and friends are
welcome to gather for Visiting Hours in
the Nardone Funeral Home, 373 Main
St., WATERTOWN on Tuesday from
11-1, followed by a 1 pm Funeral Home
service. Burial in Ridgelawn Cemetery.
FALVEY, Betsey Dray
Business Leader, Philanthropist,
Family Man
P
Of Wellesley, MA, died on Tuesday,
November 1st, 2022, from
complications related to Alzheimer’s
disease. She was the loving wife of
Arthur Falvey; beloved mother of Ryan
(Brett Robb) of Somerville, MA, Mark
(Jean-Yves Nayl) of Paris, France, and
Justin (Samie Kim) of Los Angeles,
CA; and cherished grandmother to
Jace, Theo, and Bowen Falvey. Betsey
is also survived by many nieces and
nephews that she loved dearly. She
was predeceased by her daughter and
soulmate Michelle; her brothers, Robert
Dray, Richard Dray; beloved sister,
Nancy Burton; and her dear parents,
Gertrude and Michael Dray.
Betsey was born in Boston in 1937,
raised in Hyde Park and Milton,
and spent many joyous summers in
Scituate. She graduated from Newton
College with a teaching degree and
upon graduation she worked as a
special needs teacher in the Boston
Public School System. Betsey loved
teaching and developed enduring
friendships with many students and
their families. She left teaching to raise
her four children and then later worked
for many years in her husband’s dental
practice.
Betsey had an infectious smile and a
warm, engaging presence. She was an
independent spirit who found great joy
in meeting new people, learning about
their lives, and very often finding a way
to make a lasting connection. Betsey
loved opening her heart and home to
others. She could always fit another
chair around the dining room table
to accommodate an additional guest
during a holiday - especially those that
may not have family nearby. Friends
of Betsey often remarked about her
kindness, colorful sense of style, and
marvelous sense of humor.
The family truly appreciates the
caregivers that were by Betsey’s side
during her illness and are grateful to
the wonderful staff at Adelaide Memory
Care Facility in Newton, MA, for
ensuring Betsey’s dignity and comfort
during the later stages of her disease.
The family would also like to extend a
heartfelt thank you to Fatu Sesay for
her compassion, beautiful friendship,
and skilled caregiving throughout
Betsey’s illness.
Interment will be private, and a
celebration of Betsey’s life will be
scheduled to take place in 2023.
Please consider donations to the Cure
Alzheimer’s Fund, www.curealz.org
Of Norwood, passed away on October
28, 2022 at the age of 88. Beloved
husband of Marianne M. (Brauneis)
Eilertson. Devoted father of Ronald
A. Eilertson and his wife Linda of
Mansfield and Karen Eilertson of
Norwood. Brother of Donald H.
Eilertson of Norfolk. Cherished
grandfather of Troy Landers, Elizabeth
Eilertson and Alan Eilertson. Son of
the late Theodore and Emilie (Wilfert)
Eilertson. Also survived by 4 nieces.
Alan was a member of the Walpole
German Club and was also a Board
Member of the Deutsches Altenheim
German Centre in West Roxbury. He
was president of Boston Pattern Works
of Norwood alongside his brother
Donald. A Funeral Service will be held
on Thursday, November 10, 2022,
11am at the Knollwood Memorial Park,
321 High St., Canton, MA followed by
a graveside service. In lieu of flowers,
donations may be made in his name
to a Veteran’s Charity of your choice.
U.S. Army Korean War Veteran.
Arrangements by the Kraw-Kornack
Funeral Home, NORWOOD, MA.
Kraw-Kornack Funeral Home
1248 Washington Street
Norwood, MA 02062
assed away unexpectedly
at his family home in
Kensington, NH. He leaves
behind a close family,
successful businesses, and
a legacy of giving back to help change
people’s lives and save the earth we
share.
Alan was born in Boston, grew up
under the Simco sign in Dorchester,
and would move 14 times by the time
he was 7 years old. Alan credits his
turbulent childhood and tough father
with instilling in him a fighting spirit,
the guts to take risks, and the skills of
an entrepreneur. Starting at the age of
five, his mother would put him on a
Greyhound bus in downtown Boston,
and he would get dropped off in front
of his grandmother Ruth Sawyer’s
house in Kensington. She gave him
love, a welcoming, and a safe space to
stay for the summers.
He dedicated his life to building a
special place in Kensington, known
as Alnoba, and supporting the local
community. What started as a simple
family retreat is now a 600-acre refuge
for people to come, reflect and get
inspired. It was very spiritual for Alan
to walk upon the same ground as his
ancestors, and he would spend hours
day and night walking through the
woods, getting energy and peace from
the forests and fields. It has always
been his North Star.
At Newton South high school, he
met his true love, Harriet Rothblatt.
Last month the couple celebrated their
50th wedding anniversary surrounded
by their family. In Harriet, he found
his soulmate, life partner and travel
companion. Theirs was an uncommon
union based on a shared worldview,
mutual respect, and a readiness for
adventure at the drop of a dime.
Alan was very clear that his family
was his top priority. He was most
proud of his two children, Edward
and Charlotte and the great leaders,
partners, and parents they became.
He always made time to go to their
games, planned special trips with
each of them and throughout his life,
wrote them letters of wisdom. When
COVID hit, he turned over the reins
of Kensington Investment Company
(KIC) to his children, so he could focus
on the travel business. He delighted
in watching them grow into their
leadership and loved coaching them
through one of the most difficult times
in the company’s history.
When his first granddaughter,
Kinsley, arrived, Alan was over the
moon. He always appreciated the cycle
of life and was so proud to welcome his
next generation and know that his life’s
work would go on.
Alan dared to dream and live
big. After selling his interest in
Transnational Travel in 1985, he
purchased the fledgling Grand Circle
Travel, which at the time was losing
$2M a year. He quickly applied his
signature business strategy: stop what
isn’t working and go like hell at what
is. Alan believed if you wanted to go
long in business, you put your people
first and measure your success in
excellence over profit. Today, Grand
Circle and his real estate enterprise,
KIC, are highly respected in their
industries.
Alan loved to travel and never lost
his sense of wanderlust. Whether
trekking in Tibet or driving the
backroads of the American South,
travel deepened his appreciation of
the wisdom of the Indigenous peoples.
He felt they understood community
and connecting to the land at a whole
different level. Alan continually
sought to learn from their teachings,
supported Indigenous rights around
the world, and honored their ways
in how he cared for his land and
community.
In 1981, Alan and Harriet formed
the Alnoba Lewis Family Foundation.
Since then, they have donated more
than $250M to more than 500 projects
in 50 countries. Alan built and gifted
to the town of Kensington, a 35-acre
town park with lit ballfields and plenty
of places for families to play. In 2013,
he opened Eastman’s as a gathering
place for the community, where folks
can get fresh local food and enjoy good
company.
Alan’s passion for travel was equaled
by his passion to develop leaders.
He believed you could lead from
anywhere. As a leader, he was at his
best in times of crisis, believing the
greater the difficulty, the greater the
opportunity. He would face the worst
the world could throw at him head on,
always coming out stronger from the
fight.
He devoted himself to developing
leaders within his company and the
nonprofit organizations the Lewis
family supports. He exemplified
tough love, pushing many out of their
comfort zones, always challenging
them to tackle the tough stuff first and
make decisions.
Alan believed you will always be
rewarded for moral courage, maybe
not in the moment, but at some point
in your life. Alan is now rewarded for a
lifetime of courage.
He leaves behind his wife, Harriet
R. Lewis; son, Edward and his wife,
Caroline Lewis; his daughter, Charlotte
Lewis and her husband, Michael
Aylward; and grandchildren, Kinsley,
Isabelle and Roselee.
He also leaves a legion of daring
leaders whom he taught to go out and
change the world.
In lieu of flowers, donations can be
made to the Alan E. Lewis Fund at
Grand Circle Foundation, 347 Congress
St., Boston, MA 02110 to support
special projects to protect land and
Indigenous Peoples.
Visiting Hours: The family will sit
Shiva from Monday, November 7th
through Friday, November 11th from
4PM - 6PM at Alnoba, 24 Cottage
Road, Kensington, NH.
PRATT, Bettina
FEROLITO, Patricia A.
(Gately)
Nardone Funeral Home
(617) 924 - 1113
www.NardoneFuneralHome.com
EILERTSON, Alan W.
LEWIS, Alan
Passed away on November 1, 2022.
Beloved wife of the late Anthony R.
Ferolito. Loving mother to Michael
and his wife Debbie of Waltham, Paul
and his wife Heidi of Chelmsford and
Erin Maclean and her husband Mike
of Chelmsford. Dear grandmother
to Jillian, Matthew and Anthony
MacLean of Chelmsford, Dominic and
Annabelle Ferolito of Chelmsford and
Emily Ferolito of Waltham. Sister of
Jane Ellen Rossi of Watertown and
the late James, Paul and Thomas
Gately. Also survived by many loving
nieces and nephews. Relatives and
friends are invited to visit at the DeVito
Funeral Home, 761 Mt. Auburn St.,
WATERTOWN, on Friday, November
11 from 4:00pm to 7:00pm. In lieu
of flowers, donations in Patty’s name
may be made to The American Heart
Association at heart.org or to Reading
is Fundamental at secure.rif.org Please
visit devitofuneralhomes.com to leave
an online condolence.
FLYNN, Lee M. (Marshall)
Of Burlington, unexpectedly, Nov. 3.
Beloved wife of John M. Flynn. Loving
mother of Katherine Flynn-McFadden
& her husband William McFadden
of Stoughton and Michael Flynn of
Burlington. Proud grandmother of
Max and Finn McFadden. One of five
children born to the late John and
Mildred Marshall. Funeral Services
will be private. In lieu of flowers,
memorials in Lee’s name may be
made to the Northeast Animal Shelter
at www.northeastanimalshelter.org
Arrangements under the direction
of the Edward V. Sullivan Funeral
Home, BURLINGTON. For full
obituary & online guestbook, see www.
sullivanfuneralhome.net
Loving Parent, fully present
B
ettina Whitney Hawkinson
Pratt of Boston, died
peacefully in her sleep,
in her own home, on
September 20th. She was
born in New York City on April 16,
1928.
Tina was very close to her
mother and father, John and Laura
Hawkinson, and to her brother, John.
Her childhood was filled with music,
art, books and nature. She spent many
happy years at her beloved “Studio”
where her father taught her the names
of flowers and butterflies. She was
always at home in the natural world –
mountains or ocean.
Tina attended Garrison Forest
School and Bennett Junior College. She
learned piano composition from her
beloved teacher, Mr. Whitmer. Playing
the piano was a daily joy well into her
94th year; a facility that remained as
others fell away.
She volunteered when able. In the
1940’s, she designed and taught the
first music course for deaf children
at The American School for the Deaf
in Hartford. She played the piano &
the children felt heretofore unknown
music through their feet and their
hands. During World War II, Tina
was a Red Cross volunteer at Hartford
Hospital. Her memories of the first day
include the Hartford Circus Fire.
In 1951, she married Marsom Pratt
from Plainfield, New Jersey. In the
ensuing years, she had three children“her treasures.”
Marsom went on to become
successful investment banker doing
much financing with MA HEFA
for hospitals and universities in
Massachusetts.
Tina instilled a love of reading in
us all. We grew up with no television
and spent long hours by her side
being read to from the Wizard
of Oz and other books. When we
reported we were bored, she said,
“Bored? Go outside. Snakes, toads,
moss, butterflies, grasses trees, and
thunderstorms. Ain’t Mother Nature
grand?!!”
She filled our home with music.
When she played Rachmaninoff or
Grieg piano concertos, the top up,
the sound went right through you,
particularly if one lay right underneath
the piano.
She balanced family life with her
passions- language, travel, opera,
living through her piano, illustrating
her family life in letters to her
parents. At night, Tina cooked dinner,
singing along to broadcasts from the
Metropolitan Opera.
She continued to volunteer patterning a young girl with cerebral
palsy, teaching English to recent
immigrants in their homes in the
South End of Boston, sitting with the
terminally ill illness in hospital settings
and with shut-ins.
Tina was fervently political. Raised
in a politically conservative family,
she declared herself a Democrat and a
Socialist. She leafletted in Cohasset for
democratic presidential candidates in
the 60’s and 70’s with at least one child
in tow.
She attended the Unitarian Church
in Cohasset where she formed a
lifelong friendship with the Reverend
Roscoe Trueblood, a Quaker Unitarian
minister.
Tina was an early member of the
Vedanta Centre, where she met her
dear teacher, Bapu and Gayatri Devi,
the spiritual leader of the Cohasset
Ashram from 1940 til her death in
1995. The ashrama is a non-sectarian
place of worship, rooted in Hinduism,
dedicated to all the religions of the
world, where people of different faiths
may come together and worship the
One Spirit Who is called by many
names. She was a member of this
community for decades.
Tina spent her last years happily
at home in Boston or in Delray Beach,
Florida, cared for by her beloved
caregivers: Jennifer, Onyi, Patty, Jean,
Medgine, Carla, Dorcas and Rose
Marie and enjoying the company of
friends and family.
She received incredible medical
care at the Beth Israel Hospital from
Drs. Mitch Rabkin, Stephen Come
and Mark Peppercorn, among others,
over the last 50 years. They were her
doctors and her friends.
Tina is survived by her three
children and their partners in life:
Laura Pratt and James Woodberry,
Drusilla and Stephen Pratt-Otto, and
Marsom Pratt and Perry Lickfield; her
four grandchildren and one spouse:
Samuel Pratt-Otto, Langford PrattOtto, Kathleen Whitney Pratt and
Jenny and Curtis Kahn; and her two
great-grandsons: Charles and George
Kahn.
Her effect on her family and
caregivers was profound. Their lives
and our lives were enriched by her joy
of all things beautiful, her curiosity, her
gratitude, her strength, her sense of
humor and her unfailingly positive and
gracious manner.
There will be a Memorial Service
at a later date. In lieu of flowers,
donations can be made to: The
Vedanta Centre, 130 Beachwood Street,
Cohasset, MA 02025.
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A24
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
G l o b e
Remembered
SHARE YOUR MEMORIES ON OUR GUEST BOOK AT BOSTON.COM/OBITUARIES
FREDELLA, Frank G.
GOGLIA, Charles A. Jr.
GREENE, Mary L. (Walsh)
HALPENNY, Daniel
Of Woburn, formerly of Medford and
East Boston, November 2. Beloved husband of Josephine E. (Russo) Fredella.
Devoted father of Larry Fredella and
Gina Tenaglia and her husband, Frank.
Loving grandfather of Stefan Tenaglia,
Gianna Tenaglia and her fiancé, Rob
Capaldo and Zachary Tenaglia and his
wife, Nicolette Moriconi. Loving greatgrandfather of Genevieve and Vienna.
Dear brother of Phyllis Cain and her
husband, George, Josephine Gagnon
and her husband, Donald, the late
Anthony Fredella and Eleanor Alcorn.
Dear brother-in-law of Philip Russo
and his late wife, Joan. Also survived by
many dear nieces and nephews. A Funeral Service will be conducted in the
Dello Russo Funeral Home, 306 Main
St., MEDFORD, Wednesday, November 9, at 11 AM. Relatives and friends
are respectfully invited to attend and
may visit with the family on Tuesday
4 - 8 PM. Burial will be private. Late
U.S. Army veteran, Korean War. Late
proprietor of Sterlingware of Boston.
In lieu of flowers, contributions may be
made in Frank’s name to Honor Flight
New England, PO Box 16287, Hooksett,
NH 03106 or to www.Honorflightnewengland.org To leave a message of
condolence, visit www.dellorusso.net
In loving memory of our father, Charles
A. Goglia, Jr, who passed away on
November 17th, 2021. He was the
devoted husband of Patricia and loving
father of Philip and Catherine. He will
be deeply missed by all who knew him.
Charles was born on August 26th,
1931 to Charles A. and Marie Goglia in
Philadelphia, PA. After graduating from
Boston College Law School he went
on to join the Law Firm, Foley, Hoag
& Eliot where he became a partner
and then eventually, left to open his
own Law Firm. In his long career he
served as Town Counsel for the Town of
Weston and for the Island of Nantucket.
He was the President of the Wellesley
Country Club in 1979 - 1980 and we
enjoyed many summer days as a family
there. A proud moment at the Club
was his “hole in one” while playing the
game of golf that he loved.
Early in life, our father learned
the importance of hard work and he
instilled that same work ethic in his
children. He taught us the importance
of family, hard work and doing what is
right. He faced every challenge in life
with admirable strength and courage.
Charles is predeceased by his parents
and his brother, Robert (Bob). He
is survived by his wife Patricia, two
children, Philip; his wife Lisa, and
Catherine; her husband James; and his
grandson, Gibson.
Of Hull, formerly of Dorchester, died
peacefully on Friday, November 4,
2022, at The Residence at Penniman
Hill in Hingham. She was 73.
Born in Boston on June 14, 1949,
she was the daughter of the late James
and Patricia (Ryan) Walsh. Beloved
wife of Paul J. Greene of Hull. Devoted
mother of James P. Greene and his wife
Donna of Norwell, and Suzanne Darling
and her husband Kevin of Hull. Loving
grandmother of Emma, Abigail, Sophie
and Madelyn Greene, and Emilia
Darling. Dear sister of James Walsh
and his late wife Mary of Weymouth,
Francis Walsh and his wife Gale of Hull,
Kathleen Richmond and her husband
Donald of Hull. Preceded in death by
her siblings, Patricia Travers, Richard
and Stephen Walsh. Also survived by
many loving nieces and nephews.
Relatives and friends are respectfully
invited to greet the family during
the Visiting Hours on Wednesday,
November 9, 2022, 4-8 PM, in the Pyne
Keohane Funeral Home, 21 Emerald St.
(off Central St.), HINGHAM.
A Celebration of Life Service will be
held in the funeral home at 9:30 AM on
Thursday, November 10, 2022, prior to
the Funeral Mass at St. Mary’s Parish
in St. Ann’s Church, Hull, at 10:30 AM.
Interment will follow.
In lieu of flowers, donations in
memory of Mary may be sent to Caring
Hospice Services of Massachusetts,
1208a VFW Pkwy., Suite #204, West
Roxbury, MA 02132.
See www.Keohane.com for directions
and online condolences.
Of South Weymouth (formerly of
Quincy), died October 31, 2022, after
a tenacious and courageous year-long
battle with a rare type of cancer. He was
43 years old.
Dan was the definition of a good
man. He would do anything for his four
beautiful, young children and his loving
wife, Joanie. When asked what came to
mind when thinking about their Dad,
Owen (12) said “amazing and never
complained,” Lily (10) said “I loved
how he would watch Celtics games
with me”, Cora (7) said “the best,” and
Dani (4) said “I love him and he’s the
best Daddy in the whole wide world”.
Dan worked diligently as a proud
and talented Union Painter. When he
wasn’t working, he was outside playing
basketball or swimming with his kids,
snuggling up for family movie night,
lighting the fire pit for s’mores, or
making time to help friends and family.
Dan was someone you could always
count on and was guaranteed to make
you laugh. Dan was the leader of a
tight knit neighborhood and through
his influence, they became more of
a family. He relished in his role as a
father, sharing with friends that he
felt there was “no better feeling in the
world than bringing a baby home from
the hospital”. When Joanie was asked
what came to mind when she thought
of Dan, she said simply, “he changed
my life.” Dan inspired many and
brought light, love, and levity to the
world like no other. A devoted husband
and father, beloved son, thoughtful
brother, and best friend to many – Dan
was known as the ultimate family
man. He will be so very missed, and
though he is gone too soon, the ones
he touched feel lucky to have known
him. Undoubtedly, the impact of Dan’s
unwavering love and generosity will live
on through his children, as he wished.
Loving husband of Joan Halpenny
and devoted father of Dani, Cora, Lily,
and Owen Halpenny of Weymouth.
Cherished son of Ann and Jim Morash,
as well as beloved older brother to
Corey and Ashley Morash of Quincy.
Favorite brother-in-law of Annie
O’Mahony and Michael O’Mahony, and
son-in-law to the late Michael “Toby”
O’Mahony and the late Carol O’Mahony.
Dan is survived by a niece, aunts,
uncles, cousins, extended in-law family,
friends, and his loving “Family-hood”.
Relatives and friends are
respectfully invited to greet the family
during the visiting hours on Monday,
November 7, 2022, from 4-8 PM in
the McDonald Keohane Funeral Home
SOUTH WEYMOUTH at 809 Main
Street (Rte 18 opp. So. Shore Hospital).
A Celebration of Life Service will be
held in the funeral home at 9:15 AM
on Tuesday, November 8, 2022, prior to
the Funeral Mass in St. Francis Xavier
Church in Weymouth at 10 AM. Burial
in Lakeview Cemetery in Weymouth.
Dello Russo Family Funeral Homes
Medford-Woburn
GOLDSTEIN, Ada
GARRITY, Francis D.
Of West Roxbury, November 5, 2022.
Beloved husband of the late Mary E.
(Fitzgerald) Garrity. Loving father
of Mary Ellen Copson and her late
husband Joseph of West Roxbury,
Thomas F. Garrity and his wife Barbara
of Plainfield, NH, and Joseph F. Garrity
and his wife Eileen of Weymouth.
Brother of the late Paul Garrity and his
surviving wife Barbara, his late twin
brother, Robert and his late wife Ruth,
brother-in-law of Dorothy Fitzgerald
and her late husband Henry and the
late David Fitzgerald and his wife the
late Natalie. Also survived by Seven
grandchildren and many nieces and
nephews.
Relatives and friends are invited to
attend. A Mass of Christian Burial will
be celebrated on Wednesday, November
9, at 11:00am, in St. Theresa of Avila
Church, 2078 Centre St., West Roxbury.
Interment St. Joseph Cemetery.
In lieu of flowers, donations may
be made to your favorite charity in
memory of Frank.
www.lawlerfuneralhome
617-323-5600
GOGLIA, Patricia Ann
(Morrissey)
In loving memory of our mother,
Patricia M. Goglia, who passed away
on January 17th, 2022. She was the
devoted wife of Charles A. Goglia,
Jr. and loving mother of Philip and
Catherine. She will be deeply missed by
all who knew her.
Patricia was born on November
27th, 1936 to Lawrence and Dorothy
Morrissey in Long Branch, NJ. She
graduated from Wheelock College in
Boston, where she was a member of
the Dramatic Club and Assistant Editor
of The Spectator. She volunteered at
Ruggles Street, Children’s Hospital,
at Wellesley and Weston elementary
schools. After graduation, she
worked at various schools including
Brookgarden Nursery School, Babson
College and Wellesley College.
Our mother was a kind, caring and
giving person who always put the
needs of her family before her own.
She was a strong woman who faced
every challenge in her life with courage
and dignity. Our mother was a source
of inspiration to us all and she will be
deeply missed by everyone whose lives
she touched.
Patricia is predeceased by her
parents; husband, Charles; her brother,
Lawrence (Skip) Morrissey. She is
survived by her two children, Philip; his
wife Lisa, and Catherine; her husband
James; her grandson, Gibson; her
brother, Robert Morrissey and his wife
Jane.
Beloved wife of the late
Alan Goldstein for over
37 years; loving mother
of Renee Goldstein Fixler (David
Fixler) and Scott (Caroline) Goldstein;
proud Nana of Jared Fixler, Wesley
Fixler, Alanna Goldstein, and Peter
Goldstein; cherished sister of Susan
(the late Barry) Salkovitz; devoted
aunt of Robin Star, Andy Star, Marnie
Salkovitz, and Josh Salkovitz. Ada
helped generations of adults with
developmental disabilities. Private
Graveside Services. In lieu of flowers,
memorial contributions may be made
to Shore Community Services, 8350
Laramie Avenue, Skokie, Illinois 60077,
www.shoreservices.org For Shiva and
funeral information, contact Chicago
Jewish Funerals - Skokie Chapel,
847.229.8822, www.cjfinfo.com
GUIDABONI, Carolyn
GONYEA, Richard Lloyd
“Dique”
Of Alexandria, VA, died at age 77 on
October 17, 2022, peacefully and surrounded by family.
At his request, no service will be
held.
Mr. Gonyea was born April 21,1945,
in Cumberland, MD, to Lloyd Fred Gonyea and Mary Jeanne Gonyea (Toomey).
He was raised in the Boston suburb of
Arlington, MA, and was a graduate of
Northeastern University where he received an electrical engineering degree.
He was fascinated by higher mathematics, such as fuzzy logic and fractal
geometry. He spent much of his career
as a government contractor, working
on telemetry and guidance systems for
satellites.
Mr. Gonyea was President of Telenetics, Inc., a space systems engineering
company and was involved in multiple
programs for the Naval Research Laboratory in Washington, DC.
An aficionado of medieval reenactments, he was a member of the Society
for Creative Anachronism and regularly
attended local renaissance faires. Eastern philosophy and Japanese art and
movies were other interests he was
passionate about.
His wry sense of humor was appreciated by all those who knew and loved
him. He greatly appreciated local artisans and often supported their work by
purchasing gifts for friends and family.
Dique is survived by his two sisters,
Marybeth Shiell and Margaret Brundage; and his four nephews, Zebulon
Brundage, Eben Brundage, Robert
Shiell, and Henry Shiell; and his chosen
family, Zak and Donna McNamara.
He greatly appreciated the programming on public broadcasting, and
donations in his memory may be made
to Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) /
National Public Radio (NPR).
www.moneyandking.com
Celebrate
their lives
Honor your loved ones
with a photo in the
Boston Globe.
Ask your funeral
director for details.
Share a
special memory
Add a cherished memory or condolence to the
online guestbook at boston.com/obituaries.
Of Somerset, November 1, 2022, Carolyn (Newhall) Guidaboni. For complete
obituary and guestbook, please visit
brascofuneralhome.com
“Creating Meaningful Memories”
Brasco & Sons Memorial
HOLLOCHER, Thomas Clyde
Jr.
KERNS, Margaret E.
“Margy”
Age 91, of Sudbury, MA, passed away
peacefully on November 3, 2022. He
was emeritus professor of biochemistry
at Brandeis University, where he taught
for 38 years. Tom’s love and enthusiasm
for science inspired students, family
and friends to treasure the universe in
which we live.
Born in Norristown, PA, to Thomas
Clyde Hollocher and Catharine
Emma (Bernhard) Hollocher, Tom
graduated from Worcester Polytechnic
Institute with a degree in chemistry.
In Worcester, he met his beloved wife
of 69 years, Pamela Ann Moon of
West Springfield, MA, while she was
earning her nursing degree at Memorial
Hospital of Worcester. Tom went on
to graduate from the University of
Rochester with his PhD in biochemistry
and completed a three-year
postdoctoral fellowship in biochemistry
at Washington University in St. Louis,
Missouri.
Tom was passionate about travelling,
mountain climbing, gardening,
paleontology, and supporting his
community. He traveled to many
countries, including Sweden, Slovenia,
Iceland, China, Australia and
Argentina, where he immersed himself
into local cultures and grew to love
the people he met. Tom led groups
of friends and family on mountain
climbing trips, particularly to Mt.
Monadnock, as he gave lessons on the
geological history of the areas. His
knowledge of biochemistry enabled
him to handsomely nourish his
gardens, from which copious harvests
of vegetables, fruits and nuts were
shared. Tom and Pam participated in
dinosaur digs in San Juan, Argentina,
Montana, Utah, and North Dakota.
Tom shared fossils and facts of the
majestic prehistoric animals in
inspiring presentations that included
visits to elementary schools. Tom was
passionate about local organizations,
especially those involved with local
politics, history, education, arts, and
environment.
Thomas is survived by his beloved
wife, Pamela Moon Hollocher; his
loving children, Kurt Thomas Hollocher
and his wife, Janet, of Schenectady,
NY, Susan Hollocher Kirby and her
boyfriend, Peter Tristan, of Tewksbury,
MA, Bruce Coleman Hollocher and
his wife, Cheryl, of Staunton, VA; his
cherished grandchildren, Coleman
Hollocher, Emily Hollocher and her
husband, Andrew Feeley, April Farmer
and her partner, Nicholas Martucci,
Alexandra Farmer, Robert Hollocher,
Alice Hollocher, Jane Kirby, and Julia
Kirby; his many delightful nieces and
nephews; and predeceased by his
brother, William Clifford Hollocher.
A Memorial Service for Tom will
be held at the First Parish Church of
Sudbury, 327 Concord Road, Sudbury,
MA, on Saturday, November 26, 2022,
at 11:00 a.m. Family, friends and
colleagues are invited to attend.
In lieu of flowers, memorial
contributions may be made in Tom’s
memory to The First Parish Church of
Sudbury, The Musicians of the Old Post
Road, The Sudbury Historical Society,
or The American Civil Liberties Union
(ACLU). Duckett-Waterman.com
Age 69 of Millis, passed
away peacefully on Friday,
October 28, 2022. Born
in Framingham, on January 11,
1953, Margaret was the daughter
of the late John F. and Josephine
R. (Szczuka) Kerns. Margaret was
raised and educated in Framingham,
graduating with the class of 1970.
Upon graduation, she went on to
attend Northeastern University and
she later attended Lesley University.
Margaret was a retired Captain in the
United States Air Force. Margaret had
a successful career and passion for
nursing; she specialized in psychiatric
nursing. Margaret was a lifelong animal
lover; she enjoyed hiking at Crane’s
Beach, Rocky Woods, and World’s
End with her dogs. Margaret loved
journaling and writing poetry, reading
and spending time with friends and
family. Margaret leaves her brother
John F. Kerns of Framingham; nieces
Jennifer Kerns of Marlborough, Emma
Kerns of Walpole; nephews Jack Kerns
of Marshfield and Scott Kerns of
Norwood; and several grandnieces and
nephews. Margaret was predeceased
by her sisters Anna J. Kerns, Elinor
H. Kerns, Theresa M. Kerns; and
brother Edward J. Kerns. Services will
be private. Donations can be made in
Margaret’s memory to The Trustees of
the Reservation www.massaudubon.
org/site/Donation and the ASPCA
aspca.org/donate/ps-memory.
Honor a Life
with a death notice announcement in
The Boston Globe and on Boston.com.
Visit Boston.com/DeathNotices or
contact your funeral director.
KERRIGAN, Mary E.
Of Wellesley, formerly of Melrose and
Gray, ME. Peacefully passed on November 1, 2022, at age 85.
Beloved mother of John DeGenova
(Liz), Michael DeGenova, Ellen
DeGenova (Kate), Carolyn DeGenova
and Kathy Donovan (Larry). Gram
extraordinaire to Amanda, Melissa,
Maria, Gina, Julianne and Colleen.
Loving sister to Billy Kerrigan and the
late Phyllis Brothers. Favorite auntie
to many. Dear friend of Bernie Flynn
and Ginny Fitzgerald. A special thanks
to the caregivers at Newton Wellesley
Center for Alzheimer’s Care for loving
and appreciating our mom. Funeral
Mass on Thursday, November 10,
at St Patrick’s Parish, 71 Central St.,
Stoneham, at 10am. Interment to
directly follow at Wildwood Cemetery,
233 Middlesex Ave, Wilmington. In
lieu of flowers, please donate to Riding
to the Top Therapeutic Riding Center.
www.ridingtothetop.org
For more info or to share a memory,
go to
www.andersonbryantfuneralhome.com
KOWALSKY, William J. Jr.
Of Saugus, age 90,
November 2nd. Husband
of the late Claire A.
(Strickland) Kowalsky. Cofounder of
Kowalsky Insurance in Saugus. Loving
father of William C. Kowalsky and his
wife Lisa, Richard Kowalsky and his
wife Ramona, Susan Gagne and her
husband Roy all of Saugus. Cherished
grandfather of David, Sarah, William,
Connor and Caitlin. Dear brother of
James Kowalsky of NH, John Kowalsky
of IN and Katherine Hill of AZ. U.S.
Korean War Army Vet. Relatives &
friends are invited to attend visiting
hours in the Bisbee-Porcella Funeral
Home, 549 Lincoln Ave., SAUGUS,
on Tuesday, 4-8 p.m. A funeral service
will be held on Wednesday at 11 a.m.
at the Cliftondale Congregational
Church, 50 Essex St., Saugus. In lieu of
flowers, donations may be made to the
American Heart Assoc. at heart.org. For
directions & condolences please visit,
www.BisbeePorcella.com
Show respect
View The Boston Globe’s
complete list of death notices
and sign the guestbook at
boston.com/obituaries.
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
A25
G l o b e
Remembered
SHARE YOUR MEMORIES ON OUR GUEST BOOK AT BOSTON.COM/OBITUARIES
KRUTIL, Anna
LEWIS, Alan
McKENDALL, Marilyn A.
See Enhanced Listing
Of Canton, November 4,2022. Beloved
wife of William McKendall. Loving
mother of William, III and his wife
Michelle of Canton, Meredith M.
and her husband Robert Donahue of
Easton, and Shana A. McKendall of
Sturbridge. Sister of Roger Lacasse
of FL, Marylou Fields of VT, and
Barbara St. Pierre of NH. Also survived
by her 6 grandchildren, and nieces
and nephews. Visiting Hours in the
Dockray & Thomas Funeral Home, 455
Washington St., CANTON, on Tuesday,
from 3-6 PM. Relatives and friends
are respectfully invited to attend. A
Funeral Mass will be held in St. Oscar
Romera Parish (formerly St. John’s
Church), on Wednesday, at 10AM.
Interment private. If desired, donations
in Marilyn’s memory can be made to
the Jimmy Fund, 4 Jimmy Fund Way,
Boston, MA 02215.
MACCARONE, June B.
Of Norwood, passed away on October
30, 2022, at the age of 95. Beloved
wife of the late Karel Krutil. Devoted
mother of Helena Magnarelli and her
husband, Robert of Wrentham and Eva
DiFilippo and her husband, Carmine of
Norwood. Cherished grandmother of
Mark DiFilippo, Michael DiFilippo and
his wife, Kelly DiFilippo, and Samantha
Magnarelli. Daughter of the late Jan
and Anna Veškrnov. Anna moved with
her family from Czechoslovakia to the
USA, and was an avid traveler. She
was a retired nurse at the Brigham
& Women’s Hospital and had a heart
of gold, spending a lot of her time
knitting hats for cancer patients. She
was very active at the Norwood Senior
Center and was a longtime volunteer
at Norwood Hospital, as well as a
volunteer at the Boston Symphony
Hall. She loved to cook, shop, listen
to classical music, and spend time
with her grandchildren, family, and
friends. A Funeral Mass will be held
on Saturday, November 12 ,2022, at
10:30 am at St. Timothy Parish, 650
Nichols Street, Norwood, MA 02062.
Arrangements by the Kraw-Kornack
Funeral Home, NORWOOD, MA. In
lieu of flowers, donations may be made
in her name to the Norwood Senior
Center, 275 Prospect St., Norwood, MA
02062.
Kraw-Kornack Funeral Home
1248 Washington St.
Norwood, MA 02062
LAWSON, John Robert
“Bobby”
U.S. Army veteran and
beloved husband for 65
years of Evelyn (Dixon)
Lawson, passed away on Wednesday,
November 2, 2022, at the age of
88. Bob was a master carpenter,
extraordinary gardener, avid shopping
buddy, longtime dog-lover, and most
of all, loving husband, Dad, and
Papa. Nicknames included Abe, Pop,
Oompapa, and when his daughters
were teens, Bank of Dad. From trips
to York Beach, ME, with his wife, to
daily 5:00am fishing trips with his
grandson, and Christmas shopping
marathons with his daughters, he
was always happiest with his family.
He will be sorely missed by all. In
addition to his wife, he is survived by
his daughters, Sheri Lawson,Tammy
Greenwood and her husband, Brian;
grandson, Bobby Greenwood; and
granddaughter, Courtney Greenwood,
all of Brighton; and several cousins,
nieces, and nephews. He was also
predeceased by his best friend, Frank
“Porky” Polcaro of Allston, MA. Services
will be private. Donations can be
made to the Alzheimer’s Foundation
of America, 322 Eighth Avenue, 16th
Floor, New York, NY 10001, alzfdn.
org For guestbook, please visit www.
lehmanreen.com
Lehman Reen McNamara
Brighton 617 782 1000
Honor your
loved one’s
memory
with a photo
Ask your funeral director
for details or visit
boston.com/deathnotices
or call 617.929.1500.
Devoted Wife,
Mother and
Teacher
June B. Maccarone, a selfless educator
and devoted wife and mother of four,
passed away on Oct. 31. She was
82. June began her life of service as
a young woman, volunteering at a
mission in eastern Kentucky. She
taught kindergarten and first grade
and, later in life, worked with special
needs children. In many ways, however,
her life’s work was raising her own
four children. June was nurturing,
caring and constantly cooking. Her
specialty was Italian dishes, including
pizza, lasagna, pizzelles and biscotti.
June prayed regularly for her family
and friends and sought to instill in her
children her own unique empathy for
the suffering of others. “Everyone has
something,” she would often say.
June B. Maccarone was born on
June 22, 1940, in Dorchester, MA,
to William and Beatrice (Molinari)
Grazado. She spent most of her youth
in Norwood, a suburb south of Boston.
After attending Boston State College,
June worked as an elementary school
teacher on Cape Cod and the South
Shore. She married Gaetano “Guy” D.
Maccarone and the couple moved to
upstate New York where he worked
as a patent attorney, and they started
a family. They returned to the Boston
suburbs 10 years later. June was a
regular in the church choir, worked at
the St. Rose of Lima parish rectory in
Topsfield, MA and volunteered at the
St. Mary-St. Catherine food pantry in
Charlestown, MA. In the scant hours,
when she wasn’t doting on others, she
enjoyed bowling, playing cards and
watching British television dramas.
She also took up painting, namely still
life, birds and a portrait of the family’s
beloved German Shepherd, King.
June was preceded in death by her
husband, Guy. She is survived by her
loving children: Maria Maccarone of
Las Terrenas, Dominican Republic,
Elena Maccarone of Exeter, NH,
Dennis Maccarone of Rye, NH, and
Alan Maccarone his wife, Corinne, and
their daughter, Lia June Maccarone,
of Wollongong, Australia; her loving
brother, Robert Grazado, and his wife,
Jean, of Plainville, MA; and her loving
sister, Mary Tagliamonte, and her
husband, Robert, of Newburyport, MA.
Visiting Hours: Family and friends
will honor and celebrate June’s 82
years of life with Calling Hours on
Wednesday, November 9 from 4-7 p.m.
at the ConteGiamberardino Funeral Home, 14
Pleasant Street, GEORGETOWN, MA.
Funeral Mass will be held on Thursday,
November 10 at 11 a.m. at St. Rose of
Lima Catholic Church, 12 Park Street,
Topsfield, MA. Luncheon reception
immediately following in the Church
Hall. The Burial will be private. In lieu
of flowers, memorial donations can be
made to the Rostro de Cristo mission
in Ecuador ( https://rostrodecristo.
org ) and The Cheyenne River Youth
Project (https://lakotayouth.org ). For
condolences and directions, please visit
www.cgfuneralhomegeorgetown.com
Conte-Giamberardino
Funeral Home
cgfuneralhomegeorgetown.com
McCORMACK, Michael F.
Of Brighton, passed away on November
1, 2022. Devoted son of Elizabeth
and the late Thomas McCormack of
Brighton. Loving brother of Theresa
Converse and her husband Roger (BPD)
of West Roxbury, Elizabeth McCormack
of Duxbury, Dennis McCormack of
Medway, Martin McCormack (BFD) and
his wife Christine of Marshfield and
the late Bernadette McMann, Thomas
McCormack, Jr. and John McCormack.
Also survived by many aunts, uncles,
cousins, nieces, nephews and friends.
Funeral from the Lehman Reen &
McNamara Funeral Home, 63 Chestnut
Hill Ave. (nr Brighton Courthouse),
BRIGHTON, on Tuesday, Nov. 8th at
9:30am, followed by a Funeral Mass in
St. Columbkille Church, 321 Market
Street, Brighton, at 10:30am. Relatives
and friends are kindly invited to attend.
Interment Mt. Benedict Cemetery, West
Roxbury. Visiting Hours Monday, Nov.
7th from 4-8pm in the funeral home.
In lieu of flowers, donations in memory
of Michael may be made to the Home
for Little Wanderers, 10 Guest Street,
Brighton, MA 02135. For directions
and guestbook, please visit www.
lehmanreen.com
Lehman Reen McNamara
617 782 1000
Share a memory
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to the guestbook at
boston.com/obituaries
McKINNON, Paul
Of Roslindale, formerly of Reading,
passed away peacefully on October
13, 2022. Beloved husband of 51
years to the late Joan Marie (Bradley)
McKinnon. Loving father to Michael,
Kristen, and Meghan McKinnon, all
of Boston; and cherished Papa of Orla.
Born in Cambridge to the late Herbert
and Dorothy (Hanson) McKinnon.
Dear brother of Leonard McKinnon
and his wife, Kris of Aurora, CO.
Devoted brother-in-law of the late
William Bradley and his wife, Diane
of Arlington, Kevin Bradley and his
wife, Julie of West Yarmouth, and Ann
Savino and her husband, Ken of Milton.
Also survived by his nieces, nephews
and many friends. Visiting Hours will
be held in the Gormley Funeral Home,
2055 Centre St., WEST ROXBURY, on
Saturday, November 12, from 10:00 1:00. In lieu of flowers, donations in
memory of Paul may be made to the
Alzheimer’s Association.
MILLIGAN, John F.
We celebrate the life of John Milligan,
who left us at the age of 93. His
was a life of optimism, wonder, and
wonderment, whose grace, humor, and
kindness left a deep, indelible, beautiful
imprint on everyone he touched.
Here (www.eatonfuneralhomes.com)
is a richer view of this amazing dad,
grandpa, and great-grandpa.
Beloved husband of the late Barbara
Milligan. John is survived by Frances
“dee” Guiney of Minneapolis, MN;
Michelle Milligan of Harwich, MA;
Paul and Nancy Milligan of Needham,
MA; Maureen Roianov of Greensboro,
VT; Victor and Lisa Milligan of
Pomfret, VT; and Billie Milligan of
Waltham, MA. Loving father of the late
Mark Milligan, “Eddie” Milligan and
Kathleen Milligan. Loving grandfather
of 16 grandchildren and 8 greatgrandchildren.
Visiting Hours will be held in the
Eaton Funeral Home, 1351 Highland
Ave., NEEDHAM, on Wednesday,
November 9th, from 4-7 pm. A Mass
of Christian Burial will be held in St.
Joseph Church, 1360 Highland Ave,
Needham, on Thursday, November
10, at 10am. Interment will follow at
Needham Cemetery. In lieu of flowers,
kindly consider contributions to the
Alzheimer’s Foundation or the Neville
Center at Fresh Pond, Cambridge, MA.
Eaton Funeral Home
781-444-0201
NASON, Daniel
William J. Gormley Funeral Service
617-323-8600
MILLER, Margot Bourgeois
Age 89, of Concord, passed away on
Oct. 25, 2022. Predeceased by her
beloved husband, Raymond Miller,
who died in October 2021. Survived
by her loving children, JJ Lanigan
and husband Brian, Julie Clay and
husband Peter, Lisa Moser and
husband Rick, Chris Miller and wife
Kim, Martha Miller, and Jonathan
Miller and wife Rawlings. She was the
adoring grandmother of Megan, Molly
and husband George, PJ and fiancée
Carleen, Emma, Jack, Aly and husband
Mike, Lucy and husband Paul, Will
and fiancé Olivia, Kyle and wife Ally,
Robyn and fiancé Jason, Jake, Luke,
Dylan, Owen and Nate, as well as two
great-grandchildren, Teddy and Oliver,
and several nieces and nephews. Sister
of Michelle Randazza and the late
Suzanne Morton. Family members
gathered privately for her Funeral
Mass on November 3rd at Holy Family
Parish, Concord. Burial followed at St.
Bernard’s Cemetery. In lieu of flowers,
contributions may be made in her
memory to Rivercrest Skilled Nursing
in Concord c/o New England Deaconess
Association, 80 Deaconess Rd, Concord,
MA, 01742. For her full obituary/online
guestbook, visit DeeFuneralHome.com
Dee Funeral Home of Concord
978-369-2030
Caring for families since 1868
Of Bedford, passed
peacefully, on October 30,
2022. Born in Greenfield
to the late Carelton Nason and Irene
(Ward). Beloved father of Luke Nason
and his partner Natalie Brown of
Cambridge, and the late Ethan Nason.
Dear brother of the late Joan Nason
and Judith Ragnow. Late USMC
Vietnam Era Veteran.
A Visitation will be held from the
Keefe Funeral Home, 2175 Mass Ave.,
NORTH CAMBRIDGE, on Monday,
November 14, from 4-7PM. A Prayer
service will be held in the funeral home,
at 6:30PM. Military Honors will follow.
Burial will be private. In lieu of flowers,
donations may be made in Dan’s
memory to Disabled American Veterans
(DAV). http://www.dav.org
Celebrate
their lives
Honor your loved ones
with a photo in the
Boston Globe.
Ask your funeral
director for details.
NEITZ, Peter E.
Age 92, of Quincy, a former
longtime resident of
Charlestown, died
peacefully, Thursday, November 3, 2022
at South Shore Hospital in Weymouth.
Peter was born in Quincy on
September 25, 1930, to the late Walter
J. and Evelyn T. (Horrigan) Neitz.
Raised and educated in Quincy, he was
a graduate of the former Saint John’s
School and Quincy High School. He
attended Northeastern University. He
lived in Quincy for the past twenty-five
years, previously in Charlestown for
many years. Peter was proud to have
served in the United States Army during the Korean War. He was employed
as a city planner for the Boston Redevelopment Authority during the “Big
Dig” and was noted for his expertise on
Boston’s historical city plans. He had
been retired for many years. Peter was
a founding member and officer of the
Adams Heights Men’s Club of Quincy.
He enjoyed sports, played baseball and
football in his youth, played senior
baseball, and enjoyed bowling at
Olindy’s in Quincy with fellow members of the AHMC. He and his late wife,
Peg, spent many summer vacations at
Hampton Beach, NH and County Cork,
Ireland, where both the Horrigan’s and
Harrington’s have family roots. Pete
was a great brother and a very fine
gentleman with a giving heart, friendly
smile, and loving soul. He went out of
his way to be a positive force for those
he met and everyone he knew. He will
be greatly missed.
Beloved husband of the late Margaret T. “Peg” (Harrington) Neitz. Devoted
brother of Anne P. Chamberlin of
Spokane, Wash. and her late husband
John, Stephen J. Neitz and his wife
Mary of Lewes, DE, David B. Neitz and
his wife Magdalena of Reynoldsburg,
OH, Evelyn C. Neitz of Braintree, and
predeceased by Walter R. Neitz and his
late wife Deanna, Mary E. Burns, and
William H. Neitz. Loving uncle of the
late Richard Brian Neitz and his surviving wife Julie, and their children Abbey
and Wyatt, all of Manhattan Beach, CA.
Pete is also survived by the extended
Harrington family of Charlestown.
Visiting Hours will be held at the
Sweeney Brothers Home for Funerals,
1 Independence Avenue, QUINCY, on
Tuesday, November 8, from 4 – 6 p.m.
Relatives and friends are invited to attend. A Funeral Mass will be celebrated
in Saint John the Baptist Church, 44
School Street, Quincy, on Wednesday,
November 9th at 9:30 a.m. Interment,
with military honors, to follow at Blue
Hill Cemetery, Braintree. For those who
wish, donations in Peter’s memory may
be made to the charity of your choice.
“May the road rise up to meet you. May
the wind be always at your back. May
the sun shine warm upon your face, the
rains fall soft upon your fields, and until we meet again, may God hold you in
the palm of his hand.” You are invited
to visit www.thesweeneybrothers.com
or call 617-472-6344.
O’DONNELL, John J. PhD
John “Jack” O’Donnell, PhD, age 88, of
Wayland, MA, died November 4, 2022
after a period of declining health.
He is survived by his wife of 63
years, Joanne; his brother Edward;
his two daughters, Meagan McLean
and Maura O’Donnell; and three
grandchildren, Winston, Courtney and
Maddie McLean. He was predeceased
by his daughter Enid O’Donnell.
Jack was born in Jamaica Plain,
was a proud graduate of Boston Latin
School, class of 1951, received a BSEE
from Northeastern University, class of
1956, and went on to earn a PhD from
Carnegie Mellon University in Electrical
Engineering and Computer Science.
His professional career consisted
of working at leading companies,
including Sylvania, Bell Laboratories,
Texas Instruments and Hewlett
Packard. His work contributed to
the advancement of several key
communication technologies,
particularly Digital Signal Processing.
After retirement, he enjoyed
volunteering with the Town of
Wayland, including the High School
Building Committee, the local food
pantry, Meals on Wheels, tutoring with
the ESOL program and participating in
the Sages and Seekers program.
Visitation will be Wednesday,
November 9th at John C. Bryant
Funeral Home, 56 Pemberton Road
(off Rt 30), WAYLAND from 4:00 to
7:00 pm. Funeral Services will be held
at Good Shepherd Parish at St. Ann
Church, 134 Cochituate Road, Wayland,
on Thursday, November 10, 2022 at
10:30 am. In lieu of flowers, memorial
donations can be made to the Cystic
Fibrosis Foundation, 220 N. Main St.,
Ste. 104, Natick, MA 01760, www.cff.
org/donate
For condolences and
directions, please visit www.
johncbryantfuneralhome.com
O’REILLY, Rosemary R.
(Driscoll)
O’CONNOR, John Edmond
Of Westport, formerly of
Jamaica Plain, Boston,
Brookline, Milton, and
Falmouth, passed away on October 22,
2022. Beloved father of Matthew John
O’Connor of Foot Hill Ranch, CA. Dear
brother of Eileen McMorran and her
husband David of Needham, William
Edward O’Connor, Jr. of Westport and
the late Mary Anne Dwyer and her
husband Jack Dwyer, James Francis
O’Connor and his wife Anne Morgan,
Frances O’Connor and her husband
Nick Goffredo and Thomas Justin
O’Connor and his wife Elizabeth
McCabe. Also survived by 14 nieces
and nephews. John was a graduate
of the Boston Latin School Class of
1955, Boston College Class of 1959,
and Harvard Dental School Class of
1963. Funeral from the Lehman, Reen,
McNamara Funeral Home, 63 Chestnut
Hill Ave. (nr. Brighton Courthouse),
on Wednesday, November 9th at
9:00am. Followed by a Funeral Mass
in St. Ignatius of Loyola Church, 28
Commonwealth Ave., Chestnut Hill
at 10:00am. Relatives and friends are
kindly invited to attend. Interment in
the Massachusetts National Cemetery,
Bourne at 1:30pm. Visiting Hours
Tuesday, November 8th from 4:00pm
to 7:00pm in the Funeral Home. In
lieu of flowers, donations in memory
of John may be made to St. Francis
House, stfrancishouse.org or 39
Boylston St., Boston, MA 02116. For
directions and guestbook, please visit
www.lehmanreen.com
Age 82 of Cataumet, Braintree, W.
Roxbury, Holbrook, & Easton.
Visiting Hours will be held at the
Nickerson-Bourne Funeral Home, 40
MacArthur Blvd (RT 28), BOURNE, MA
02532, on Tuesday, November 8, from
4-7PM. A Funeral Mass will take place
at St. John the Evangelist Church on
Shore Road, Pocasset, on Wednesday,
November 9, at 10AM. Burial will be
held at the Massachusetts National
Cemetery at 12:30PM. Relatives and
friends are kindly invited. In lieu of
flowers, donations may be made in
Rosemary’s memory to Friends Food
Pantry P.O. box 144 Buzzards Bay, MA
02532.
For directions, online condolences, &
to read the full obituary, please visit
www.nickersonbournefuneralhome.
com
To submit a paid death
notice for publication in
The Boston Globe and
on Boston.com,
contact your funeral director,
visit boston.com/deathnotices
or call 617.929.1500.
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further assistance about
a news obituary, please
call 617.929.3400.
To access death notices and
obituaries online, visit
boston.com/obituaries.
Lehman Reen McNamara
Brighton 617 782 1000
Ref lect on a life well lived
To submit a paid death notice for publication in
The Boston Globe and on Boston.com, contact
your funeral director, visit boston.com/deathnotices
or call 617.929.1500. Now offering custom headings
and enhanced listings.
To submit an obituary for editorial consideration,
please send the information and a photo by e-mail
to obits@globe.com, or send information by fax to
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a news obituary, please call 617.929.3400.
Celebrate their lives
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A26
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
G l o b e
Remembered
SHARE YOUR MEMORIES ON OUR GUEST BOOK AT BOSTON.COM/OBITUARIES
OKYLE, Sharlett R.
Passed away suddenly at the age of 88,
on October 31, 2022.
She was a loving mother to Elisa and
Steven Silverman of Boston and Jeffrey
Okyle of California.
She found great joy in the happiness
and success of her six grandchildren.
Sharlett was fortunate to recently spend
time with her great-granddaughter and
grandchildren.
Sharlett was predeceased by her
husband, Paul when she was 50 years
old. She never recovered from the death
of her first and only love. They raised
their two children in Orange County,
CA. Later in life, she moved to Boston
to be near her daughter and son-in-law
and three grandchildren.
For many years, Sharlett was an
active member and volunteer of Hadassah in Los Angeles, Boston, and Boca
Raton. She learned Russian to help support the Jewish immigrants that were
arriving in America.
She will be laid to rest on Tuesday,
November 8, at 12:30 pm at Mount
Sinai Memorial Park, Los Angeles.
Sharlett will be buried next to her
beloved and surrounded by her loving
family.
In lieu of flowers, gifts may be
made to Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
in memory of Sharlett R. Okyle to support the Silverman Women’s Research
Fund for BRCA and Related Genes:
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, P.O. Box
849168, Boston, MA 02284 or via danafarber.org/gift
ORDWAY, Kenneth H.
“Kenny”
PERKINS, Ralph T. Jr.
Of Lynnfield, formerly of
Winchester and Portland,
ME, November 4. Beloved
husband of Nancy M. (Morse) Perkins.
Loving father of Debra Perkins-Smith
and her late husband, Sean of Colorado,
David M. Perkins and wife, Karen of
Andover, John R. Perkins and wife,
Debbie of Lynnfield, and Jeffrey T.
Perkins and wife, Jessica of Maine. Also
survived by nine grandchildren and one
great grandchild. Visitation for relatives
and friends will be held at the
McDonald Funeral Home, 19 Yale Ave.,
WAKEFIELD, on Wednesday from
4-7pm. Interment will be private. For
obit and guestbook, www.mcdonaldfs.
com
PFAU, Kathryn N.
Of West Roxbury, November 3, 2022.
Beloved daughter of the late Agnes
(Lane) and William Pfau. Loving sister
of Mary Caroline Pfau of West Roxbury
and the late William G. Pfau and
Patricia A. Pfau. Also survived by many
nieces, nephews and great-nieces and
nephews.
Kay was an active member of Holy
Name Parish; she was a graduate of
Regis College class of 1953. In her
career, she was employed by Shawmut
Bank and the Boston Herald Traveler.
During retirement Kay volunteered
at the Faulkner Hospital and the VA
Medical Center for which she was
recognized for her many years of
dedicated service.
Relatives and friends are invited to
attend a Mass of Christian Burial in
the Holy Name (Lower) Church 1689
Centre St., West Roxbury, on Monday,
November 7, at 10:00am. Interment
Forest Hills Cemetery.
In lieu of flowers, donations may be
made in Kay’s memory to Holy Name
Parish West Roxbury.
www.lawlerfuneralhome.com
617-323-5600
PIANTEDOSI, Lillian
Of Dedham, passed away peacefully,
on Tuesday, November 1, 2022, at age
56. Born in Jamaica Plain, he was the
beloved son of the late Hammond W.
Ordway, Jr. and Bernice M. (Waller).
He was the loving brother of Linda M.
Spognardi and her husband Ramon of
Dedham. He was the proud uncle of
Julie Cedrone and her husband David
of Walpole, and great-uncle of Marc
and Mitchell Cedrone. Kenny attended
and was a graduate of the St. Coletta’s
Day School in Braintree, and worked
many years for the Charles River
Industries in Needham. Visiting Hours
in the Gillooly Funeral Home, 126
Walpole Street (Rt. 1A), NORWOOD,
on Tuesday, November 8, 2022, from
9-10:30 AM. Funeral Mass in St.
Catherine of Siena Parish, at 11 AM.
Interment is private. In lieu of flowers,
expressions of sympathy may be made
in Kenny’s memory to Till, Inc. 20
Eastbrook Road, Suite 201, Dedham,
MA 02026 or see www.till.org.
Gillooly Funeral Home
Norwood (781)-762-0174
PERKINS, Beatrice E. “Bea”
Formerly of Reading , MA, Bea went
home to be with Jesus on October 28,
2022 in York, PA. She was the daughter
of the late Karl F. Miller and Marguerite
E. Miller Lassell. Bea is survived by
her children, Ann Perkins of York,
PA and Alan Perkins of Reading, MA,
2 grandchildren, Kasey Perkins and
Addison Perkins, as well as brothers,
Jack Miller and his wife Ellie of Tupelo,
MS and Bob Davison and his wife Ellen
of Greer, SC, sisters-in law, Cecilia
Miller of Wilmington, MA and Susan
Miller of North Andover, and several
nieces and nephews. She was preceded
in death by her brothers, Frederick
Miller and Richard Miller.
Visiting Hours: will be held on
Saturday, November 12, 2022, at 10:00
AM, at the First Baptist Church, 45
Woburn St., Reading, MA, followed by
a Memorial Service at 11:00AM. In lieu
of flowers, donations may be made to
the First Baptist Church.
Share a memory
Or add a condolensece
to the guestbook at
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Of Burlington, MA, passed away
peacefully on November 2, 2022, at the
age of 95. Lillian was the beloved wife
of the late Carmine Piantedosi. She
was born in Boston, daughter of the
late Gustave and Nanny Eriksson who
immigrated here from Sweden. Devoted
mother of Aleta Devaney and husband,
Alan of Woburn, Gary Piantedosi and
companion Ann Jonik of Lincoln,
Steven Piantedosi and wife, Susan of
Gardner, Val Piantedosi of Burlington
and Carla Dawe and husband Stephen
of North Andover. Loving grandmother
of Michael Piantedosi, Anthony
Piantedosi, Julie Hogan and husband
David, Nicole Piantedosi and fiance
Marko Yakubovsky, Erik Devaney and
wife Juliette, Michelle Lillian Piantedosi
and partner Stefano Gasbarrino and
Lauren Piantedosi. Adored Greatgrandmother (GiGi) of David, Ryan and
Clare Hogan and Zoe and Max Eriksson
Devaney. Another great-grandson is
arriving in May 2023. Sister of the
late Gladys McGran, Lennart Eriksson
(her twin) and Harry Eriksson. Also
survived by many loving nieces and
nephews.
Lillian was born in Boston on
October 24, 1927, her twin brother,
Lennart arrived first, she was a
surprise! She described a happy
childhood growing up in Roxbury and
Dorchester. Children played marbles,
collected junk for cash, roller skated,
went to the YMCA /YWCA and had
access to many city libraries. Lillian
attributed her longevity to walking all
over Boston as a child and Burlington
as an adult. She attended Roxbury
Memorial High School for Girls but was
excused for her senior year 1944-1945,
only attending the first and last day
as she went to work to aid the war
effort. Lillian worked at Sears Roebuck
and went dancing at the Y (loved to
jitterbug) for fun. While at Sears, Lillian
met her husband Carmine who was
employed by the Post Office affiliated
with Sears. They married in 1950 and
honeymooned at Days Cottages in
North Truro. This started a lifelong
tradition of North Truro vacations and
inspiring a love of the Cape by their five
children. Lillian and Carmine moved
to Burlington in 1956. Fascinated
by archeology and geology, Lillian
inspired many neighborhood kids to
look for rocks and fossils. A “stay-athome-mom” until the mid-60s, Lillian
eventually started a 20-year career at
the Burlington Post Office, retiring in
1990. She walked all over Burlington
until she was 80, loved Building 19 1/2
and going to the library. Lillian was
a voracious reader and read a Kindle
into her 90s. Widowed in 1990, Lillian
played Bingo at the Senior Center
and enjoyed going to Foxwoods. She
loved her family unconditionally and
delighted in the lives of her children,
grandchildren and great-grandchildren.
She was extremely generous to all of
them, her gifts came in a beautiful
card signed by her in perfect Palmer
Penmanship. Lillian’s son, Val, lived
with her, which allowed her to stay in
her home. For that, we are eternally
grateful. Honoring her wishes, there
will be no Calling Hours or Services.
Lillian donated her body to science.
PRATT, Bettina
PLANSKY, Vincent J.
ROTA, Henry J.
See Enhanced Listing
SANTA MARIA, Joan M.
(Carey)
REYNOLDS, Elizabeth
Clifford “Betsy”
Longtime resident of
Dedham, MA, passed away
at the age of 93 on October
31, 2022, surrounded by family. He
was the beloved husband for 58 years
of the late Patricia T. (Toomey) Plansky.
Devoted father of Vincent J. Plansky,
Jr. of Minnetonka, MN, Julie A.
Watterworth of Hampton, NH, Joseph
D. Plansky and his wife Wendy of
Bedford, MA, Pamela J. Vancoppenolle
of Hampton, NH, Patricia P. Paparian
and her husband Dr. Seth of Salem, NH
and Jean M. Plansky of Dedham, MA.
He was cherished as a loving “Grampy”
to eleven grandchildren and “GreatGrampy” to one great-grandchild.
Brother of Joan Plansky of Quincy,
MA and the late Anne Podolski. He
is also survived by several nieces and
nephews.
Vincent grew up in Quincy, MA and
was a graduate of Boston College, class
of 1951. He was a Korean War veteran,
U.S. Army. Vincent had a successful
career as a Sales Executive for Dow
Chemical Company and he retired after
over 35 years with the company. He
had many interests, which included
skiing, golf and woodworking, but his
main love was his family, who looked
up to him as a loving husband, father,
and grandfather, and he will be sorely
missed.
Visiting Hours will be held at the
George F. Doherty & Sons WilsonCannon Funeral Home, 456 High St.,
DEDHAM, on Tuesday, November 8th
from 3-7pm. Funeral from the funeral
home on Wednesday, November 9th
at 9am, followed by a Funeral Mass at
St. Mary’s Church at 10am. Relatives
and friends kindly invited. Interment
Brookdale Cemetery, Dedham. In lieu
of flowers, donations may be made in
Vincent’s memory to St. Mary’s Church,
420 High St., Dedham, MA 02026. For
online guestbook, gfdoherty.com
George F. Doherty & Sons
Dedham 781 326 0500
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Massachusetts Funeral
Directors Association
Funeral and Memorial
Information Council
Westwood, MA
June 26, 1937July 19, 2021
Betsy died at Care Dimensions Hospice
in Lincoln, MA, on July 19, 2021,
from COPD. In her passing, the world
lost a people-loving fireball, who used
her disarming smile, pointed humor,
and penetrating questions to focus on
what matters most. She was idealistic
and resolute in her view of how folks
should treat each another. When she
walked onto a lacrosse field, hooked
a player by the facemask, and scolded
him for rough play, no one ?, not even
the referee ?, dared stop her. When
an ER doctor asked, “any allergies,”
she replied, “the Yankees.” When a
newsletter editor inquired “what is your
favorite hobby,” her eyes flashed as she
quipped, “people.” Three generations
keenly mourn her departure.
Betsy Clifford was born in Boston,
Massachusetts, on June 26, 1937, to
Jeanette Hume and Nathaniel Stone
Clifford. After attending Fox Hollow
School and the Potomac School, she
became a medical transcriptionist in
Boston, fondly remembered for dashing
about the city delivering records with
her trademark sunny wit. One day in
an elevator at the Deaconess Hospital,
she met a thoughtful and handsome
surgeon, Charles Thomas Reynolds.
They married in 1958, had 4 children,
and settled in Westwood, MA, where
they lived for 4 decades. Betsy served
on the Westwood Conservation
Commission and cultivated a
reputation of care for the community.
In the 1970s, as a member of Boston’s
Vincent Club, Betsy helped raise money
for Massachusetts General Hospital for
research on women’s health, and she
regularly performed in the Vincent’s
annual musical show. She was a fond
associate of the Dedham Exchange
in Dedham, MA, and relished its
community of strong women and clever
artisans. She was a spirited tenor in
the choir of Saint Paul’s Episcopal
Church in Dedham and more recently
in Saint Andrew’s Episcopal Church in
Wellesley.
She is preceded in death by her
husband of 53 years; by a son, John
Henry Clifford (1962-1976); and
by a daughter-in-law, Kerry Polk
(1956-2017). She is survived by her
children, Christopher Hume Reynolds
of Wayland, MA, Laura “Yaya” Stone
Reynolds of Cranford, New Jersey, and
Jenny Orme Reynolds of Austin, Texas;
grandsons, Hiram Clifford Reynolds of
Washington, D.C., and Henry Truman
Reynolds of Boston, MA; brother, Shaw
Sprague; and sisters Jeanette (Sprague)
Hagen and Julie Hume Sprague of Cape
Elizabeth, Maine; and many adoring
nieces and nephews who became fellow
pranksters. Her ashes shall be spread
in Maine, where the rugged seacoast
appealed to her sturdy outlook.
Despite being born during the Great
Depression, losing her father to World
War II, and losing a son to an accident,
she fueled her life with resilience, vim,
and optimism. Her greatest gift was
making this recipe contagious.
There are apocryphal stories of
Betsy’s penchant for music and brushes
with the law. These include inviting the
police to attend a backyard chemistry
experiment that turned into an
impromptu firework show (happened),
singing to an officer to get out of a
ticket (happened more than once), and
sparking new friendships by humming
in the grocery store (happened). After
Betsy and her teenage friends were
caught painting a stranger’s house
(happened), some say she explained
to a judge that they just didn’t like the
color of the house (never happened).
She had a knack for puckish humor,
getting folks together, and helping
them feel good.
A memorial service featuring
remarkable music will be held on
Saturday, November 12, at 1 o’clock
(12:40 prelude), at St. Andrew’s
Episcopal Church, 79 Denton Rd.,
Wellesley, MA, with reception to follow
in the Parish Hall. In lieu of flowers,
the family encourages donations to St.
Andrew’s Church.
Lend support
View The Boston Globe’s complete
list of death notices and share
cherished memories in the guestbook at boston.com/obituaries.
Lifelong resident of
Randolph, passed away
peacefully, at home,
surrounded by his loving family, on
November 3, 2022, at the age of 97.
Born and raised in Randolph, Henry
graduated from Stetson High School.
Henry enlisted in the United States
Army and proudly served his country in
the 569th Engineer Company as a
Sergeant, during WWII. Henry had his
own general contracting business for
over 20 years and was the head of the
Randolph Department of Public Works,
serving as the Randolph Highway
Superintendent for 22 years. Henry was
a member of the Lions Club and served
as a former President; recognized by
receiving the Melvin Jones Award. He
was a former Chairman for the
Randolph Board of Health, a Former
Chairman for the Randolph Board of
Selectmen and a Randolph Town
Meeting member for over 50 years,
where he was instrumental in building
the Randolph soccer fields and bringing
Elm trees back to Randolph. He also
resided on the board of the Randolph
Housing Authority, was a Randolph
Savings Bank Trustee and was Grand
Marshall of the 2014 Randolph July 4th
Parade. He belonged to the Randolph
Amvets and was a Charter Member of
the Randolph Elks. He married his
wife, Maude and began a family in
Randolph, where they raised their
family and have been residents for over
71 years. Henry enjoyed spending time
with his family, especially his eight
grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren. Henry and Maude wintered in
Ft. Lauderdale, FL for over 35 years
and they were blessed with many great
friends and enjoyed many wonderful
vacations. A devoted husband, father,
grandfather, great-grandfather, brother
and friend. Henry will be sorely missed
by all who were blessed to have known
him. Henry was the beloved husband
for 71 years to the late Maude E.
(Hannon) Rota. Loving father of Henry
J. “Rick” Rota, Jr., Suzanne Nelson and
her husband Phillip and Marianne
Rizzitano and her husband Sam, all of
Randolph and the late Robert Gibson
and John Rota. Devoted brother of
Marie Callahan of Falmouth and the
late Virginia Brewster. Cherished
grandfather to Michael Nelson,
Matthew Nelson, Jennifer Rizzitano,
Christopher Nelson, Nicolette Rota
Caparella, Leanne Rizzitano, Michelle
Rota and Katelyn Cleary; and
great-grandfather to Dylan, Nicholas,
Mackenzie, Aubrey, Mason, Emily,
Charlotte, Madelyn and Lauren. Also
survived by many nieces, nephews and
friends. Relatives and friends are
respectfully invited to attend Visiting
Hours, on Monday, November 7, from
4:00 – 8:00 PM, in the Cartwright
Funeral Home, 419 No. Main St. (RT.
28), RANDOLPH. A Funeral Mass will
be celebrated on Tuesday, November 8,
at 10:00 AM, in St. Mary Church, 211
No. Main St., Randolph. Burial will
follow in St. Mary Cemetery, Randolph.
In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made in Henry’s name to
the Old Colony Hospice, 321 Manley
St., West Bridgewater, MA 02379 or to
the Randolph Lions Club, P.O. Box 306,
Randolph, MA 02368. For directions or
to leave a sympathy message for the
family, visit www.cartwrightfuneral.
com.
RUGGIERO, Louise
(Boudreau)
Of Malden, November 1st. Devoted wife
of the late Joseph Ruggiero. Beloved
mother of Paul Ruggiero and his wife
Kathy, Joanne Ruggiero and the late
Diane Ruggiero, James Ruggiero and
his surviving wife Denise and Elise
Donovan and her surviving husband
Timothy. Daughter of the late Urie J.
and Mary D. (Pothier) Boudreau. Sister
of the late Catherine Glionna. Cherished grandmother of Paul Ruggiero
and his wife Lisa, Jenna Marinello and
her husband Louis, James Ruggiero
and Leighan Roache, Gia Ruggiero and
companion Jack Pereira, Nicholas Donovan and fiancee Aim Suchitta, Brianna
Dortona and husband Nick and Ryan
Donovan and wife Renee. Also lovingly
survived by 10 great-grandchildren;
her nieces, Carol Rinaldi and Joyce
Ripianzi; and Thomas Glionna. Family
and friends are kindly invited to attend
a Funeral Service in the Carroll Funeral
Home, 721 Salem Street (Maplewood
Square), MALDEN, on Tuesday, November 8th at 10 AM. Visiting Hours in
the Carroll Funeral Home on Monday
from 4-7 PM. Services will conclude
with Interment at Woodlawn Cemetery,
Everett.
Carroll Funeral Home
781-322-6322
www.carrollfh.com
Of Milton, passed away peacefully on
October 31, 2022. Beloved wife of the
late Leo F. Santa Maria. Loving mother
of Donna DeGraan and her husband
Robert of Braintree, Kathleen Santa
Maria and her husband Henry of
Kingston, Regina Santa Maria and her
husband James Connolly of Duxbury,
Mary Pietrowski and her husband
Peter of Quincy, Joan Analetto and her
husband Tony of Milton, Maura Papile
and her husband Ray of Scituate, and
Eileen Cefail and her husband Steven
of Braintree. Cherished grandmother
of 13 loving grandchildren and 2 greatgrandchildren. Dear sister of Mary
Holman, and Joseph Carey and his wife
Nancy. Also survived by many loving
nieces, nephews, cousins, and friends.
Visitation in the John J. O’Connor &
Son Funeral Home, 740 Adams St.
(near Gallivan Blvd.), DORCHESTER,
Wednesday morning, November 9,
2022 from 8:30-10 am, followed by a
Funeral Mass in St. Agatha Church,
MILTON, at 10:30 am. Relatives and
friends are respectfully invited. In lieu
of flowers, donations may be made to
the Lustgarten Foundation located at
415 Crossways Park Drive, Suite D,
Woodbury, NY 11797, in memory of
Joan. Interment in Milton Cemetery.
For directions and expressions
of sympathy, please visit www.
oconnorandson.com
SARGENT, James Francis
“Jim”
Passed away on Wednesday, October
26, 2022. Jim is survived by his loving
wife of 54 years, Elizabeth M “Beth”
Sargent. For complete obit and service
info, visit www.eatonfuneralhomes.com
SAWYER, Elizabeth A.
“Betty” (Trites)
Age 93, November 4, 2022. Beloved
wife of the late Franklin W. Sawyer.
Survived by her daughters, Kathleen
Kligge, Diane Videtto and her husband
John, all of NH, and Nancy Doucette
and her husband Michael of MA; six
grandchildren, Stephanie Kligge of
PA, Kenneth Kligge of VA, Jennifer
(Videtto) Bell and her husband
Christopher of NH, Joseph Videtto and
his wife Jamie Carolyn of MA, Nicole
Doucette her fiancé Michael Resweber
of RI, and Michael (Max) Doucette, Jr.
of NC; one great-grandson, Riley Bell;
sister Muriel Dunn; brother, Thomas
and his wife Gerry; and many nieces
and nephews. Daughter of the late
Agnes (Buchanan) and William Trites,
Sr.. Predeceased by a sister, Thelma
Leonard; and 4 brothers, William, Jr.,
Charles, James, and Francis Trites. A
Funeral Mass will be held on Tuesday,
November 8, at 11:30AM in St. Michael
the Archangel Church, Winthrop.
Burial will will follow in Belle Isle
Section of Winthrop Cemetery.
Visitation prior to the Mass will be
from 9:30 –11 AM at the Maurice W.
Kirby Funeral Home, 210 Winthrop
St., WINTHROP. Donations in Betty’s
Memory are preferred to be made Care
Dimensions, 75 Sylvan St., Suite B-102,
Danvers, MA 01923. For guestbook
and directions, please visit www.
mauricekirbyfh.com
Maurice W. Kirby Funeral Home
Winthrop
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NOVEMBER 6, 2022
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
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SCHULTZ, Allen M.
Of Palm Beach, FL, and Boston,
formerly of Wellesley, on November 5,
2022, at the age of 90.
Devoted husband of Kathryn and the
late Roberta Marget Schultz. Beloved
father of Emily Frank (Joshua), Edward
Schultz (Steven Berlin), James Spindler
(John Vitale), Andrew Spindler-Roesle
(Hiram Butler). Beloved grandfather of
Richard Frank (Manuel Lampon) and
Lily Frank. Dear brother of Stephen
Schultz, the late Lorraine Rudnick and
the late Rita Goldman.
Services are private. Please omit
flowers.
Levine Chapels - Brookline
www.levinechapels.com
(617) 277-8300
SEIBOLD, Eileen (Hilferty)
Of Stoneham, November 4, 2022. Wife
of the late Robert Seibold. Mother of
Carol Linscott of Boston, Robert Seibold and his dear companion Stephanie
Saniek of Methuen, Peter and Beverly
Seibold of Reading, George and Paula
Seibold of Stoneham, Elizabeth Seibold of Stoneham and her steadfast
companion, Joseph Melia of Salem,
NH, and the late Thomas Seibold. She
leaves nine grandchildren, one greatgrandchild; and a myriad of nieces and
nephews. Sister of Robert and Joanne
Belland of Andover, NH, and the late
Frank Hilferty, Marie (Hilferty) Tennihan, John Belland, and Rita Barbri.
Visitation at Anderson-Bryant
Funeral Home, 4 Common St.,
STONEHAM, Saturday, November 12,
8:30-9:45 A.M., followed by a Funeral
Mass at St. Patrick’s Parish, 71 Central
St., Stoneham, at 10 A.M. Private Interment. Memorial gifts may be made to
St. Patrick’s Parish. For obituary, visit
www.andersonbryantfuneralhome.com
SHUMAN, Sidney E.
Of Boynton Beach, FL, passed away
on Wednesday, November 2, 2022.
Sidney was born in Pittsfield, ME, son
of the late Rose (Cohen) and Joseph
Shuman. Loving and devoted husband
of Elaine B. (Epstein) Shuman of 68
years. Beloved father of Jill Novick and
her life partner, Scott Lechter of Canton
and Laurie Adler and her husband,
Seth of Sharon. Cherished grandfather
of Evan Novick and his wife, Amy, Erica
MacDonald and her husband, Joseph,
Brett Novick and his wife, Angelica,
Justin Adler and his wife, Kelly, and
Jessica Leary and her husband, Kevin.
Sid was the adored great-grandfather
of seven. Devoted brother-in-law to
Rhoda and the late Bob Goldstein.
Brother of the late Ruth Heaphy and
the late Natalie Brandon. Devoted uncle
of many nieces and nephews. Sidney
was a 32nd degree Mason, Past Master
and a Shriner.
Relatives and friends are invited to
attend a Chapel Service on Monday,
November 7, 2022, at 1:00 PM, at
Stanetsky Memorial Chapel, 475
Washington Street, CANTON. Burial
will take place at Sharon Memorial
Park, 40 Dedham Street, Sharon.
Shiva will follow at Laurie and Seth’s
residence, Sharon.
In lieu of flowers, donations in
Sidney’s name may be made to the
Shriners Children’s Hospital at www.
shrinerschildrens.org
Stanetsky Memorial Chapel
www.StanetskyCanton.com
781-821-4600
Share a memory
Or add a condolensece
to the guestbook at
boston.com/obituaries
SMITH, Raymond III
Of Boston, passed away peacefully on
October 16, 2022, at the age of 78. Late
member of Omega Psi Phi Fraternity
Inc. and English High School Association Trustee. Ray is survived by his wife
and three children; and leaves a legacy
of love, laughter, strength, and commitment to all that knew him. A Celebration of His Life will be held on Saturday, November 12, 2022, at Twelfth
Baptist Church, 160 Warren Street,
Roxbury. Fraternal Service begins at 10
AM followed by a Memorial Service at
11 AM. Arrangements Davis Funeral
Home of BOSTON. To post a sympathy
message, visit www.DavisofBoston.com
STIMPSON, Edward Sutton
III
Edward Sutton Stimpson,
III, of Falmouth, passed
away on October 22, 2022
at his home in Naples, Florida. Born
in Boston, Massachusetts on January
11, 1932, he was the son of Margaret
(Williams) and Edward S. Stimpson,
inventor of golf’s Stimpmeter. He
lived his early years in Newton and
Wellesley, Massachusetts, and raised his
own family in Weston, Massachusetts
and Baltimore, Maryland. His later
years were spent in West Falmouth,
Massachusetts and then Florida.
Eddie was educated at Noble &
Greenough School (1950), Princeton
University (1954) and Harvard
Business School (1958). He wrote his
college thesis on Virginia Woolf and
therein identified his personal lodestars
- love, awareness and humility. He was
an accomplished athlete and devoted
alumnus. Among his most treasured
memories were those of his classmates
and teammates, whose names and
clutch plays were intertwined with his
own life’s lessons. He played baseball
and ice hockey in college and was
always a worthy opponent on the
tennis court or golf course. His love
of competition, which expressed itself
in many venues, was equaled by his
passion for honest play. He was a true
sportsman and an expert on the rules
of golf. In all things, he endeavored to
conduct himself as a gentleman. He
enjoyed both competitive fun and good
fellowship as a long-time member of
The Country Club and Woods Hole Golf
Club, where he served two separate
terms as president.
Eddie served as a lieutenant in
the U.S. Army in Hanau, Germany,
before starting his business career.
He spent a year as a case writer at
Harvard Business School and worked
as an analyst at Fidelity Investments
and later at T. Rowe Price. He
was an entrepreneur and capable
helmsman of various enterprises
which stemmed from his indomitable
curiosity and desire to master new
things, including photography,
videography, woodworking, Civil War
history, genealogy, flight simulators,
lighthouses, backgammon, chess,
checkers, weathervanes and fishing. He
read fiction and non-fiction with equal
vigor, often consuming an entire book
in an afternoon.
Eddie was married to Anne “Pinty”
Bolster, with whom he shared a
63-year romance, until her death
in 2012. He is survived by his wife,
Maura Jean (O’Donnell), who was
his dear companion for nine happy
years; his children, Joanna Stimpson
(Edward Vydra) and Sarah Strong; his
six grandchildren, Welles (Jennifer),
Gardner (Kelley) and Charlotte Vydra,
and Hilary (Thomas) Battey and
Audrey and Graham Strong; and his
three great-grandchildren, Brooks and
Edward Vydra and Phoebe Battey. He
also leaves his brothers and sisters-inlaw, Wally and Susie Stimpson, John
and Trish Stimpson, Alice Hatch and
Marshall Bolster; Maura’s children and
grandchildren; and many nieces and
nephews.
Burial will be private. A celebration
of life is planned for a later date.
In lieu of flowers, donations may be
made in his memory to West Falmouth
Library, 575 West Falmouth Highway,
P.O. Box 1209, West Falmouth, MA
02574 or Alzheimer’s Support Network,
1421 Pine Ridge Road, Suite 100,
Naples, FL 34109.
For online guestbook and directions,
please visit www.chapmanfuneral.com
Chapman Funerals & Cremations,
Falmouth 508-540-4172
Show your respect
View The Boston Globe’s complete list
of death notices and sign the guestbook
at boston.com/obituaries.
SULLIVAN, John Patrick Sr.
A longtime resident of Needham, and
most recently Dedham, passed away
at Brigham and Women’s Faulkner
hospital on October 30, 2022. He was
82 years old.
Born in Dorchester, MA, on October
22, 1940, he was the beloved son of
the late Joseph Sullivan (County Kerry,
Ireland) and Anna (O’Brien) Sullivan
(County Cork, Ireland). John was a
graduate of Northeastern University.
John served as Captain in the United
States Army - continuing his dedication
to the United States Army by working
with the Army Corps of Engineers
throughout his career as a recognized
leader in the field of Geotechnical
Engineering. John was President and
CEO of TGG, Inc. (Needham, MA) from
1984 to 2011. Mr. Sullivan also served
as President of the ASCE (American
Society of Civil Engineers). He was
a huge Patriots fan, and a voracious
reader of history and spy novels. John
loved Cape Cod Martha’s Vineyard, and
could often be heard saying, “Isn’t this
beautiful?” throughout the summer
months.
John is survived by his longtime
companion, Barbara Conry; sister
Eileen Roche (Needham, MA and
Marco Island, FL); son Brian Sullivan
(Somerville, MA); daughter in-law,
Donna Sullivan (Spring City, PA;
and his grandchildren, Brooke-Ellen
Sullivan, Jesse Sullivan, and Jack
Sullivan; as well as many nieces and
nephews.
John was proceeded in death by
his beloved wife Frances Josephine
(Gallagher) Sullivan (Donegal,
Ireland); sons John Patrick Sullivan,
Jr. and Kevin Sullivan; parents Joseph
and Anna Sullivan; mother in-law
Molly Gallagher; brother in-law Sean
Gallagher; sisters Mary Clune and Ann
Glancy; brother Joseph Sullivan; sister
in-law Patricia Sullivan; and nieces,
Patrica Roche and Priscilla Clune.
A private Burial will take place at
Mount Benedict Cemetery in West
Roxbury, MA. For online guestbook,
gfdoherty.com
TAYLOR, Kathryn I. “Kay”
(Orr)
Passed away peacefully at her home
in Needham on October 22, 2022,
at the age of 86, after a courageous
battle with cancer, surrounded by her
family. She was a creative force and
advocate for others. A retired guidance
counselor and avid gardener. Kay is
survived by her dear husband, Clark,
of 64 cherished years of marriage, a
son, Jeff (Anna) Taylor, daughter, Heidi
Olaska, and Ellen (David) Corbett,
grandchildren, Ryan, Brooke, Cole,
Henry, Nod Taylor, Emily, Jennifer and
Jared Olaska, great-grandchildren,
Grayson and Reece O’Leary. We are all
heartbroken at her loss. Her request
was to not be sad but to celebrate her
life.
A Memorial Gathering will be
held in her honor at the UU Church
in Needham on Saturday, Nov. 19, at
10:30am, with a “garden party” held
at the church directly following a brief
Service. All are welcome. The Service
will be livestreamed via: uuneedham.
org/memorial
In lieu of flowers, at her request
donations can be made to The
Guatemala Partnership www.
partnersguatemala.org or Agassiz
Village: www.Agassizvillage.org
Eaton Funeral Home
781-444-0201
THIEL, Mary
George F. Doherty & Sons
Needham 781 444 0687
SUNG, Nakho
Jun 13, 1931 Oct 6, 2022
TOWER, June B. (Fresen)
WASELCHUK, John Jr.
Of Needham, passed away peacefully on
October 25, 2022 at the age of 91. She
was predeceased by her loving husband
of 67 years, Walter T. Tower, Jr. She is
survived by her four boys, Seth, Ethan
and his wife Kay, Joshua and his wife
Molly, and Caleb and his wife Edith;
along with 10 grandchildren and 2
great-grandchildren. She was the
daughter of the late Joel Bernard Fresen
and Florence (Rosenwall) Fresen.
June was born in Hartford, CT, and
raised in New Britain, CT, where she
attended New Britain High School. She
graduated from Skidmore College in
1952 with a degree in art. She taught
high school art in Binghamton, NY
for several years before becoming a
full-time mother. She was a resident of
West Newton for most of her adult life,
until 2005 when she and Walter moved
to Wellesley, and later to Needham in
2015.
June was an accomplished artist
and gallery director. She created many
diverse and fanciful sculptures in
several media including metal, plaster,
and fabric. She was also the founder
and creative director of the Chapel
Gallery in West Newton from 1982
– 1991. Chapel Gallery was awarded
the “Best of Boston” award from the
Boston Globe, which described it as
“a place that launched important new
talents and gave seasoned artists a
noncommercial place to show.”
June was an avid sailor, and
together, with Walter and her boys, she
sailed far and wide in New England,
Eastern Canada (as far north as Goose
Bay, Labrador), and Northern Europe
(from the south coast of England, east
to Helsinki, north to Bergen, and many
points in between). She also enjoyed
spending summer days at her family
cottage on Lake Pocotopaug, CT.
Memorial Services will be private.
In lieu of flowers and remembrances,
please make a charitable donation to
an institution of your choosing in her
name. For online guestbook, gfdoherty.
com
Age 95, proud WWII
veteran and professional
baseball player. He was the
beloved husband of 68 years to Mary
(Murtagh) Waselchuk. He passed away
peacefully on Wednesday, November
2, 2022 at the Kaplan Family Hospice
House, surrounded by his loving family.
John was the loving father of Ellen
Alexio of Middleton and Janet Foley
and her husband, Ed of East Falmouth;
beloved grandfather to granddaughters,
Abby Hare and her husband, Matthew
of Somerville, Katherine Foley of
Denver, CO, his grandsons, John
Alexio of Boston and Edmund Foley of
Brookline, and great-grandchildren,
Madelyn and Charlie Hare; his brotherin-law Fred Murtagh; and many nieces
and nephews. His Funeral Service will
be held in O’Donnell Cremations –
Funerals – Celebrations, 167 Maple St.
(Rte. 62), DANVERS, on Wednesday,
November 9th at 11:30 A.M. Burial
in Cedar Grove Cemetery, Peabody.
Relatives and friends invited. Visiting
Hours prior to the Service from 9:30 to
11:30 A.M. In lieu of flowers, memorial
donations may be made to The Jimmy
Fund, C/O Dana-Farber Cancer
Institute, P.O. Box 849167, Boston, MA
02284.
Celebrate
their lives
Honor your loved ones
with a photo in the
Boston Globe.
Ask your funeral
director for details.
On Thursday, October 6, 2022, Mary
Thiel, a beloved wife and mother,
passed away peacefully in Sarasota, FL,
surrounded by her family. She was 91
years of age. She is predeceased by her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Welling
of Wilmington, MA, as well as her two
older brothers, Edward and James.
Mary is survived by her husband of 65
years, Joseph T. Thiel, and her sister,
Patricia Bishop, of Toledo, OH. Mary
will be greatly missed by two children
and their spouses, Jay and Gayle Thiel
of Townsend, MA, and Mary Beth and
Michael DiFiglia of Rydal, PA. A loving
grandmother, Mary is survived by three
grandchildren, Allison Thiel, Graham
Thiel, and Elizabeth DiFiglia.
Born in Boston, MA, Mary was a
graduate of Wilmington High School.
She went on to earn a Bachelor of
Science in Education from Salem State
College and Master of Education from
Boston University. Living for many
years in Tewksbury, MA, Mary taught
business courses to public high school
students for 25 years, predominately
in Wilmington. She worked to help
evolve the business curriculum from
shorthand and typing to include
offerings that develop entrepreneurial
and business management skills.
She obtained funding for a student
run school store and established a
Distribution Education Club of America
(DECA) chapter, serving as their
advisor for many years.
Mary was a striking, confident
woman, who relished time spent with
family and friends. Her talents and
passions included athletics, singing,
needlecrafts, gardening, reading,
baking and entertaining. She loved
to travel and to learn the history and
culture of the people in the places she
visited. Mary was devoted to her family
and enjoyed a long retirement and
happy life with Joe in Venice, FL.
A Funeral Mass will be held at St.
Dorothy’s Church, 11 Harnden Street
in Wilmington, MA, on Tuesday,
November 22, at 10 am. In lieu of
flowers, please consider a donation to
The Dementia Society of America.
WASS, Herbert F.
George F. Doherty & Sons
Needham 781 444 0687
TRANIELLO, Cosmo L.
Dedicated High
School Teacher
Of Lexington, MA, October 22, 2022, at
age 82. Beloved husband of Chong Sook
Paik Sung. Loving father of Andrew J.
Sung & wife Jinsil of Lexington, MA.
He is also survived by two grandchildren, Marcus & Alexis Sung. Dr. Sung
was a Professor of Chemical & Biological Engineering at Tufts University for
35 years. Over his prolific career, he
published more than 100 technical
papers, edited a book, held multiple
patents, and supervised dozens of
students. Many of his former students
have become Professors or other leaders in their fields across the world. Dr.
Sung was an active member of many
professional organizations, but none
more so than the Korean-American Scientists & Engineers Association (KSEA),
where he served as its 30th President.
He was beloved by his friends, family, students and colleagues, and he
particularly adored his grandchildren.
A memorial will be held at the Douglass
Funeral Home, 51 Worthen Rd. in
LEXINGTON, MA, on November 15, at
3pm. In lieu of flowers, please consider
making a donation to the KSEA, in
memory of Dr. Sung. More details and
a full obituary can be found at www.
douglassfh.com
www.odonnellfuneralservice.com
From Indiana
Journalist to VicePresident of the
Federal Reserve
Bank of Boston
Of Derry, New Hampshire, formerly of
Somerville, October 18, 2022. Beloved
husband of the late Patricia (Caffrey)
Traniello. Son of the late August and
Mary (Ferrazzani) Traniello. Cherished
brother of Pauline DiCecca and her
husband Joseph of Woburn, the late
Lewis Traniello and his surviving wife
Claire of Florida. Loving uncle of Lisa
Scannell of Westford, David Traniello
and Philip Traniello, both of FL, and
Joseph Traniello of NH. Stepfather of
John M. Walsh and his wife Sharon of
Plaistow, NH, William B. Walsh and
his companion Shirley Peaslee of Derry,
NH, David L. Walsh and his wife Mary
Ann of East Bridgewater. A Memorial
Prayer Service will be conducted in the
McLaughlin - Dello Russo Family Funeral Home, 60 Pleasant St., WOBURN,
Tuesday, November 8th at 12 p.m.
Relatives and friends are respectfully
invited to attend and may visit with
the family prior to the service from 10
a.m. to 12 p.m. It has been requested
that, in lieu of flowers, contributions
may be made in Cosmo’s memory to the
Alzheimer’s Assoc., 309 Waverley Oaks
Rd., Waltham, MA 02452. To leave an
online message of condolence, please
visit www.dellorusso.net
Dello Russo Family Funeral Homes
Woburn - Medford
Honor your loved one’s memory
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View The Boston Globe’s complete list of death
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director for details.
Of Topsfield, MA, died at the family
cottage in Oak Bluffs, October 24, 2022.
Despite health challenges dating back
to a stroke in 2011, Herb lived fully
into his 90th year, spending his final
summer at the family cottage. He and
wife Dorothy celebrated their 65th
wedding anniversary in August.
Herb retired as Vice-President &
Secretary of the Federal Reserve Bank
of Boston; he served from 1968-1995,
from Arthur Burns through Alan
Greenspan. He previously taught
Economics at Muskingum College, City
College of NY, and UVM. He was born
in Fort Wayne, IN on July 3, 1932 to
Donald & Margaret Wass. His writing
and entrepreneurial spirit started early,
writing and selling a neighborhood
newspaper for a nickel. At Earlham
College he simultaneously wooed
Dorothy Teal, wrote sports & news for
the Richmond Palladium, and worked
in the cafeteria, at funeral parlor, at
stock car races and as umpire. For his
Masters he chose economics at the
University of Chicago, over journalism,
but remained a lifelong letter writer,
known for his witty Christmas letters
(never holding back on liberal politics).
Thanks to Muskingum colleague,
artist William Blakesley, the Wasses
have a 64-year and four-generation
relationship with Martha’s Vineyard
and its arts community. Herb was also
active in Topsfield civic life, serving
on the Finance Committee and as a
Trustee.
After retirement Herb was
full-time “Gramp,” teasing another
generation (and teaching them money
management). He defied death more
times than a herd of cats.
Herb is survived by his wife,
Dorothy; daughters, Peggy Sturdivant
& her spouse Martin Tollefson,
and Gretchen Rehak & her spouse
Walter Rehak; and grandchildren,
Emily, Jonah, Sarah & Grace. He is
also survived by older sister, Nancy
Robertson, her husband Kenneth and
their children; and the three daughters
of his late sister, Mary Ellen Osborne,
all of whom were his favorite niece.
Donations can be made to World
Central Kitchen wck.org or the Herbert
Wass Memorial fund to support arts &
community at Martha’s Vineyard Camp
Meeting Association, PO Box 1685, Oak
Bluffs, MA 02557, mvcma.org
He always read the obituaries first.
Share a memory
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WASSER, Steven A.
WORTMAN, William J. “Bill”
Age 70, 40-year resident of Wellesley,
MA, died peacefully at home in the
Hudson Valley, surrounded by his family on November 2, 2022.
His professional career was characterized by creativity and entrepreneurial expertise and was rooted in the
global musical instrument manufacturing business he led from Waltham and
eventually Maynard, Massachusetts.
An excellent athlete, he loved to
bike and hike, and he was a standout
in track at Cornell. An avid hockey and
baseball fan, he loved playing in numerous summer leagues in MetroWest.
Mr. Wasser loved music and was an
accomplished woodwind musician. He
was fortunate to pursue his career in
the music world when he purchased
Verne Q. Powell Flutes in 1986 and,
over the next 30 years, re-established
the firm as the Stradivarius of the flute
world. Many of the instruments were
manufactured locally in the Boston
area. He tirelessly pursued improved instrument sound quality and introduced
innovative new products, resulting in a
number of U.S. patents.
Mr. Wasser received his MBA from
Harvard Business School, with Distinction, and obtained his A.B. from the
Cornell University School of Arts &
Sciences with Honors.
He was an avid art collector. In
2017, Mr. and Mrs. Wasser donated
their substantial collection of paintings/
prints to the Palmer Museum of Art at
Penn State University. The focus of the
collection was social realism (1930’s),
painted mostly by Jewish immigrants
about how they viewed their new country. A number of the donated artworks
can be seen in the Palmer’s permanent
exhibition.
One of Mr. Wasser’s interests was
CEO peer groups. He was a member
of Vistage for 10 years, then founded a
cooperative CEO peer group in Boston,
which he ran from 2006-2016. After
selling Powell Flutes and moving to the
Hudson Valley in New York State in
2018, Mr. Wasser, in conjunction with
Upstate Capital, established a CEO peer
group in the Hudson Valley area which
he facilitated until last month.
As the son of a Jewish refugee who
fled Austria in 1939 and served in the
U.S. military during World War II, Mr.
Wasser was committed to the Jewish
community his entire life. He and his
wife were members of Temple Beth Elohim, in Wellesley, MA, for 40 years. At
the time of his death, he was president
of the board of Jewish Federation of
Dutchess County (NY).
Mr. Wasser’s interest in the business
world began as a young child, learning about investments and business
from his grandfather, who fled Vienna
in 1939. Mr. Wasser started his first
business at 18, Odyssey Trucking,
and started his post-MBA career as a
management consultant for State Street
Consultants, in Boston. Subsequently,
he headed national expansion for the
staffing firm, Office Specialists.
He taught Entrepreneurship, Leadership, and Strategy at the undergraduate and graduate business levels, and
served as Entrepreneur in Residence
at Penn State University. He was an
extraordinary teacher and enjoyed
mentoring and advising so many of his
friends, family, and business associates.
His greatest joy was his family,
and he was a beloved and devoted
husband and father. He is survived by
his wife of 45 years, Stephanie (Sabloff)
Wasser; daughter Jacqueline Stauffer
(William Stauffer), of Redding, Ct.;
daughter, Merrill Cook (Matthew Cook),
of Washington, D.C., and brother,
Daniel Wasser (Marcia Zaiac), of Scotch
Plains, NJ. He is also survived by seven
nieces and nephews who all loved and
admired him.
Services will be held at Temple
Beth-El, Poughkeepsie, NY, with
burial in Liberty, NY. In lieu of flowers,
donations may be made to Jewish Federation of Dutchess County
(www.jewishdutchess.org), or the
Palmer Museum of Art at Penn State.
https://palmermuseum.psu.edu
Passed away on November 1, 2022,
after a long illness. Bill was born in
Melrose, MA, and was the son of the
late Gordan and Mary (MacNeil) Wortman. He was the husband of Barbara
(Aliberti) for 43 years, and father to Terrie (O’Brien) who predeceased him. He
was the brother of Michael Wortman of
North Carolina, Nancy Mack of Georgia, and the late Carol Pizzano, Barbara
St. George, and Marie Wortman.
Bill graduated from the Greater
Boston Academy and Northeastern
University. He worked at John Hancock
Insurance Co. in Boston, and the
Coca-Cola Company in Atlanta, GA. He
enjoyed spending his retirement playing golf and traveling with his wife. He
made many friends where they lived at
the Ridge Club in Sandwich, MA, and
Willoughby Golf Club in Stuart, FL.
Bill also leaves behind a grandson
Brendan; many family members, and
friends.
Funeral arrangements will be private.
In lieu of flowers, donations may be
made to the Alzheimer’s Foundation
of America, 322 Eighth Avenue, 16th
Floor, New York, NY 10001.
To sign the guestbook or leave an
online condolence, visit gatelyfh.com
Gately Funeral Home
781-665-1949
Family owned since 1889
WYSOCKI, Peter
Age 70, passed away on October 13, at
Kaplan Family Hospice House in Danvers after a brief illness. He was born
in Boston, MA, in 1952 to Marjorie and
Alvin Wysocki, and raised in Bristol,
CT, graduating in 1970 from Bristol
Eastern High School.
He attended Boston University and
went on to work in retail and on the
service staff of several notable restaurants and catering services, retiring
finally after many years with the Four
Seasons hotel. Concurrent with this he
worked independently as a fine art installer. He had a gift for creating spaces
with rhythms and conversation among
a collector’s artworks.
It is in his friendships that Peter
most distinguished himself, frequently
arranging gatherings to connect friends
from different circles of his life. He was
a voracious reader of newspapers and
magazines and loved late-night TV and
quirky new shows. Whether or not he
actually saw a movie or play, he knew
about it, he seemed to know about
everything going on in entertainment
and media in Boston and beyond. He
was knowing, witty, and enormous
fun, relishing a bit of gossip, a fond
but never a sentimental observer of
humanity with a delight in absurdity
whose signature “Ha” was in a league
with Auntie Mame’s.
Peter is survived by his brother,
David Wysocki; sister-in-law, Kathy
Meyer; and niece, Anna Wysocki, of
Hartland, VT; and his cousin, Lisa
Wysocki of McLean, VA. His remains
will be interred in a family plot on Cape
Cod. A Celebration of His Life will be
announced at a later date. Donations
in Peter’s memory may be made to a
charity of your choice.
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ones: from day-to-day details to big events. Sharing stories
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will be especially significant when it’s time to honor and
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NOVEMBER 6, 2022
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
A29
G l o b e
Obituaries
Dow Finsterwald, 93; first PGA champion in stroke play
By Doug Ferguson
ASSOCIATED PRESS
CHRIS DELMAS/ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILE 2001
Mr. Carter, pictured in 2001, had a triple-platinum album in
2000 and opened for Britney Spears and the Backstreet Boys.
Aaron Carter, at 34;
singer was child star
ASSOCIATED PRESS
LANCASTER, Calif. — Aaron Carter, the singer-rapper
who began performing as a
child and had hit albums starting in his teen years, was found
dead Saturday at his home in
Southern California. He was 34.
R e p r e s e n t a t i v e s f o r Mr.
Carter’s family confirmed the
singer’s death. They did not
provide any immediate further
comment.
Mr. C a r t e r, t h e y o u n g e r
brother of Nick Carter of the
Backstreet Boys, performed as
an opening act for Britney
Spears as well as his brother’s
boy band, and appeared on the
family’s reality series “House of
Carters” that aired on E! Entertainment Television.
Deputies responded around
11 a.m. following reports of a
medical emergency at the home
in Lancaster, a desert city about
70 miles north of downtown
Los Angeles, said Deputy Alejandra Parra with the LA County Sheriff’s Department.
Mr. Carter’s fiancé, Melanie
Martin, asked for privacy as the
family grieves.
“We are still in the process
of accepting this unfortunate
reality,” Martin said in a statement Saturday. “Your thoughts
and prayers are greatly appreci-
ated.”
Mr. Carter opened for the
Backstreet Boys tour in 1997 —
the same year his gold-selling
debut self-titled al bum released.
He reached triple-platinum
status with his sophomore album, 2000’s “Aaron’s Party
(Come Get It),” which produced
hit singles including the title
song and “I Want Candy.”
His videos received regular
airplay on Disney and Nickelodeon.
The singer earned acting
credits through his appearance
on television shows including
“Lizzie McGuire.” He starred
alongside his brother, Nick, and
their siblings B.J., Leslie, and
Angel Carter on the E! unscripted series “House of Carters” in
2006.
In 2017, Mr. Carter opened
up about his substance abuse
on an episode of “The Doctors.”
He was in rehab that same year
after he was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence and marijuana charges.
He checked himself in for treatment on a few occasions in an
effort to regain custody of his
son Prince.
Mr. Carter’s fifth and final
studio album, “LOVE,” was released in 2018.
Dow Finsterwald became a
footnote in history as the first
player to win the PGA Championship in stroke play and the
last US captain of a Ryder Cup
before continental Europe was
invited to join.
More than a major champion and Ryder Cup player, he devoted his life to golf as the longtime professional at The Broadmoor in Colorado.
Mr. Finsterwald, a 12-time
winner on the PGA Tour, died
Friday night at his home in Colorado Springs, Colo. He was 93.
His son, Dow Finsterwald Jr.,
said he died peacefully in his
sleep.
“He did all he could for the
game,” said his son, the head
professional at Colonial Country Club in Fort Worth, Texas.
“He enjoyed his friends and
they always remembered. He
loved the rules and he cared
about the game. He had a wonderful life and he felt like for
sure it was complete.”
Mr. Finsterwald was born in
Athens, Ohio, and played college golf at Ohio University.
One of his earliest matches was
against Arnold Palmer at Wake
Forest, and they became best
friends until Palmer's death in
2016. Mr. Finsterwald spent his
winters at Palmer's Bay Hill
Club and Lodge.
“He [shot] 29 [over the first
nine holes] we played together,
s o I d i d n' t h av e m u c h l u c k
there,” Mr. Finsterwald once
said.
Palmer came along as golf
was being shown on television.
That was a big reason why the
PGA Championship decided to
s w i t c h f r o m m a t c h p l ay t o
stroke play in 1958.
Mr. Finsterwald lost in the
championship match in 1957
to Lionel Hebert. The following
year at Llanerch Country Club
in Pennsylvania, Mr. Finsterwald was two shots behind Sam
Snead going into the final
round when he closed with a 67
and won by two over Billy
Casper.
“It certainly made a big impac t on my life and cer tain
Mr. Finsterwald
(pictured above
raising the Ryder
Cup trophy in 1977
and left in 2008),
was a 12-time
winner on the PGA
Tour, PGA player of
the year in 1958,
and winner of the
Vardon Trophy for
lowest scoring
average in 1957. He
played on four Ryder
Cup teams and was
captain of the victorious 1977 US team.
KIICHIRO SATO/ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILE (ABOVE); ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILE (TOP)
things were made available because of winning that championship,” Mr. Finsterwald said at
Oakland Hills in 2008 on the
50-year anniversary of his win.
“But as important as it was to
me — and believe me, it has
been very important — it was a
major step for the PGA of
America to go from match play
to stroke play.”
“It certainly was a little extra
there in that I had been the
runner-up in the finals of the
last match play. So I guess I’m a
little prejudiced about stroke
play,” he said. “But it was the
Philip Hiat, 95; rabbi forged bonds with other faiths
By Ed Shanahan
NEW YORK TIMES
NEW YORK — When Rabbi
Philip Hiat was installed in January 1967 as the spiritual leader
at Mount Neboh Synagogue, a
small Reform temple on the Upper West Side of Manhattan, a
Roman Catholic priest and a
Protestant minister took part in
the proceedings.
The minister, the Rev. Dan M.
Potter, said in his remarks that
“broad areas of social action
based on the moral, ethical, and
social ideals held in common between Christians and Jews have
been neglected seriously.”
Potter, underscoring the need
to address that neglect, turned
to Rabbi Hiat and added, “We
know you will place high on your
agenda continued interfaith involvement.”
Rabbi Hiat heeded that call,
forging bonds with followers of
other religions in what would be
a hallmark of his career as a
scholar and clergyman in the decades that followed.
“This was a man who only
wanted to bring people together,” Philip E. Miller, librarian
emeritus at the Klau Library of
the Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion in New
York and a close collaborator of
Hiat’s, said via e-mail.
Perhaps the most prominent
example of that desire was the
1987 book “A Visual Testimony:
Judaica From the Vatican Library,” which Rabbi Hiat edited.
There was also a companion exhibition that, like the book, was
assembled with the help of Miller and others. The exhibition
toured the US for two years and
put dozens of Jewish manuscripts on public display for the
first time.
Rabbi Hiat’s hope, he wrote
in the book’s acknowledgments,
was that widely sharing the Vatican’s collection of literary and
historical materials related to
Judaism would “enable both
Catholics and Jews to understand their unique relationship
through the ages.”
The manuscripts in the book
and exhibition were among
MARILYNN K. YEE/NEW YORK TIMES/FILE
In 1981, Rabbi Hiat (left) and others examined Torah scrolls
salvaged from Polish synagogues destroyed in World War II.
about 800 the Vatican had gathered over the years from collections donated by wealthy families and from some cities’ libraries. The works that were
featured included a Hebrew
translation of a medical encyclopedia completed in 1254 by a
doctor and Talmudic scholar
working from a text by a Christian surgeon; a book of 13thcentury Hebrew riddles; and a
15th-century copy of the Mishneh Torah, a Jewish legal code
written by Maimonides.
Access to the manuscripts —
produced in France, Germany,
Italy, and Spain from the eighth
to the 18th centuries, illustrated
in sumptuous reds, greens, and
golds — had previously been
mostly limited to scholars.
Rabbi Hiat, who undertook a
similar venture several years ear-
lier by bringing the show “Fragments of Greatness: Judaica
From Poland” to the US, approached Catholic officials in
1984 about sharing the works
publicly. Happily, he found them
receptive to the idea, and after
several trips to the Vatican and a
scouring of the library vaults led
by Miller and Michael Signer, a
professor of Jewish history at
Hebrew Union College-Jewish
Institute of Religion in Los Angeles, the project was complete.
Rabbi Hiat died Sept. 10 at
his home in Manhattan. He was
95. The death was confirmed by
his family.
Reviewers praised the “Visual Testimony ” exhibition. A
Globe critic called the collection
“breathtaking.” The show, The
New York Times said in its coverage, “not only offers a develop-
ment of thought within Judaism, but presents as well a millennium of cultural and intellectual exchange between Christians and Jews.”
Philip Hiat was born in
Brooklyn on Oct. 10, 1926, and
grew up on the Lower East Side
of Manhattan, the eldest of three
children in an Orthodox Jewish
family. His father, Samuel, an
immigrant from Russia, was a
tailor. His mother, Anna (Plisner) Hiat, an office manager at a
printing company, was born in
Austria.
Philip attended public
school, graduated from Seward
Park High School on the Lower
East Side and joined the Army
after turning 18. Assigned to a
combat regiment, he served in
the Pacific theater during World
War II.
Returning home, he enrolled
at Yeshiva University and graduated in 1948. That same year he
married Sylvia Tischler, whom
he had met in a Hebrew school
playgroup when he was 5.
In addition to his wife, a religious educator, Rabbi Hiat’s survivors include his son, Herschel
Hiat; two daughters, Merryl H.
Tisch, chair of the State University of New York’s board of trustees, and Susan Tisch; six grandchildren; and 13 great-grandchildren.
After earning his undergraduate degree, Rabbi Hiat attended the Hebrew Union CollegeJewish Institute of Religion. He
graduated and was ordained as a
rabbi in 1953.
Following his ordination, he
held executive positions with the
New York Board of Rabbis and
the Synagogue Council of America before taking the helm at
Mount Neboh.
In 1968, early in his tenure as
rabbi there, Mount Neboh hosted a ceremony in which Bishop
Fulton J. Sheen received a brotherhood award. It was the first
time a Catholic prelate in the
New York Archdiocese had addressed worshippers from a Jewish pulpit on the Hebrew Sabbath, according to the Jewish
Telegraphic Agency.
logical thing to do and the time
to do it.”
Mr. Finster wald was the
PGA player of the year in 1958
and won the Vardon Trophy for
the lowest scoring average in
1957. He also played on four
Ryder Cup teams, going 9-3-1.
He was the captain of the 1977
US team that featured Ryder
Cup rookies like Tom Watson
and Lanny Wadkins.
The US won easily, and it
was at that Ryder Cup at Royal
Lytham & St. Annes that Jack
Nicklaus suggested stronger
competition because the Amer-
icans were winning with regularity. The Britain & Ireland
team was then expanded to include continental Europe.
Mr. Finsterwald’s last win
was the 500 Festival Open Invitation in Indianapolis. He also
made 72 consecutive cuts, a remarkable feat from his era because it was not measured on a
36-hole cut but being among
the top 25 or so finishers who
were paid from the prize fund.
Mr. Finsterwald became the
head pro at The Broadmoor in
1963 and kept the position for
28 years.
Paul Morantz, at age 77;
crusading lawyer faced off
with variety of cults
By Michael S. Rosenwald
WASHINGTON POST
Paul Morantz, a California
lawyer who crusaded against
brainwashing self-help gurus,
crooked psychotherapists, and
menacing cults, including one
that nearly killed him with a rattlesnake, died Oct. 23 at a hospital in Santa Monica, Calif.
He was 77. Mr. Morantz’s
death was confirmed by his son,
Chaz Morantz.
In taking on Synanon, the
Church of Scientology, the Peoples Temple led by Jim Jones,
and a self-help group whose
therapists beat their clients, Mr.
Morantz fashioned himself as a
modern-day Davy Crockett, defending righteous ideals even if
his efforts put him in peril.
Mr. Morantz, his son said,
would often cite a maxim attributed to the folk-hero frontiersman: “Be always sure you are
right, then go ahead.’’
Just out of law school in the
early 1970s, Mr. Morantz said he
felt directionless. But one day in
1974, he received a phone call
that spun his life, he later wrote,
in “a direction I never would
have suspected.”
The call was from his brother’s high school friend, a liquor
store owner who said he knew
an alcoholic being held captive
at a nursing home in a government check scheme. Mr. Morantz decided to investigate,
talking to nurses and others at
multiple Los Angeles-area nursing homes.
Mr. Morantz discovered that
elderly alcoholics were being
sold for $125 to nursing homes
by a man posing as a volunteer
outreach counselor at the county’s drunk court. The nursing
homes sedated the “captives,” as
the Los Angeles Times called
them, and collected government
checks for their stays.
Mr. Morantz filed a class-action suit and won a $300,000
judgment. At least two of the
people involved in the scheme
served jail time for improperly
referring patients to a health
care facility for profit.
The “captives” case, Chaz Morantz said, launched his father’s
legal reputation.
Mr. Morantz was praised in
the media for his meticulous investigation and relentless legal
maneuvering. Soon, clients were
seeking him out.
In 1977, he was approached
by a man whose life had been destroyed by Synanon, a California
drug rehabilitation organization
that evolved into a religious
movement. Its founder, Charles
E. Dederich Sr., viewed himself
as a prophet and ordered his followers to undergo vasectomies
and abortions and to physically
attack enemies.
Mr. Morantz sued Synanon
on behalf of several members
who managed to escape. Three
weeks after winning a $300,000
judgment, he reached into his
mailbox and a rattlesnake sunk
its fangs into his left wrist.
As paramedics treated him,
four firefighters beat the rattlesnake with shovels and chopped
off its head. They discovered the
rattles had been removed, meaning there was no warning sound
to alert Mr. Morantz of the reptile in his mailbox.
Dederich and two members
of the group’s “Imperial Marines” hit squad were arrested a
few days later on charges of attempted murder and conspiracy
to commit murder. They all
pleaded no contest, with the followers receiving a year in jail
and Dederich, then in poor
health, receiving probation.
He represented a father who
tried to get his son back from
Jones, the leader of the Peoples
Temple, only to see those hopes
end with the group’s mass suicide in 1978. Mr. Morantz also
had many run-ins with the
Church of Scientology, in court
and in public.
A30
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
Today’s
outlook
Boston’s forecast
TODAY
MONDAY
6 A.M.
NOON
6 P.M.
6 A.M.
Breezy and warm
with the temperature
breaking the record
set in 2015 with
some partly cloudy conditions
and periods of sunshine during
the day.
TUESDAY
NOON
6 P.M.
Sunny to partly cloudy
and warm with the
temperature approaching the record set
in 1938. Temperatures are
expected to drop at night.
HIGH
72-77
LOW
61-66
HIGH
72-77
LOW
42-47
6 A.M.
WEDNESDAY
NOON
6 P.M.
6 A.M.
There will be a slight
breeze during the day
and conditions will be
cool. Temperatures
will be good for getting outside
and doing some yard work.
6 P.M.
6 A.M.
Plenty of sunshine
with cool conditions
present during the
day. Clouds will continue to be present during the
afternoon and move off by the
evening.
HIGH
53-58
LOW
37-42
For updated New England, national and international forecasts, visit boston.com/weather
For the latest weather forecast for your area, text “w” plus your city or town name (ex: “w hull”)
to BOSTON (267866)
THURSDAY
NOON
NOON
6 P.M.
New England forecast
There will be times of
clouds and sunshine
and conditions will
be quite comfortable. Clouds are expected to
continue to be present in the
evening.
HIGH
50-55
LOW
38-43
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
G l o b e
HIGH
60-65
LOW
50-55
TODAY: A center of high pressure remains parked over the
region today, allowing for record-breaking high temperatures today.
TOMORROW: Sunny conditions are expected to
continue into the day tomorrow. It will start to turn
cooler into the evening tomorrow night.
EXTENDED: Tuesday, it will be breezy as
the center of high pressure starts to move
off the coast; however, skies are expected
to remain clear.
Map
key
Temperatures are
today’s highs and
tonight’s lows.
New England marine forecast
Seas Temp
0-2 ft. 73/63
Martha’s
Boston Harbor SW 15-25 kts.
0-2 ft.
74/63
Vineyard
SW 15-25 kts.
2-4 ft.
71/61
Scituate
SW 15-25 kts.
1-3 ft.
73/62
Nantucket
S 10-15 kts.
2-4 ft.
69/60
Provincetown
S 10-20 kts.
1-3 ft.
69/60
Cod Canal
SW 15-25 kts.
0-2 ft.
72/61
Penobscot Bay SW 15-20 kts.
0-2 ft.
66/57
Buzzards Bay
SW 15-25 kts.
2-4 ft.
72/61
Georges Bank
3-5 ft.
69/60
Newport, R.I.
SW 15-25 kts.
2-4 ft.
69/60
100 miles south of
4-8 ft.
73/65
Marblehead
Wind
SW 15-25 kts.
Small craft advisory
Gale warning Storm warning
East Cape
Wind
Seas Temp
S 10-15 kts.
Nantucket Shoals S 10-15 kts.
For current Charles River Basin water quality, call (781) 788-0007 or go to http://www.charlesriver.org.
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Cities
Forecast high and low temperatures and conditions
Weather codes
Travel delays
possible
C Clouds
F Fog
H Haze
I Ice
Pc Partly Cloudy
R
Sh
S
Sn
Fl
T
W
Rain
Showers
Sun
Snow
Flurries
Thunderstorms
Windy
Today
Albany
74/61
Albuquerque
65/41
Anchorage
16/5
Atlanta
80/66
Atlantic City
75/63
Austin
84/67
Baltimore
78/62
Boise
50/40
Buffalo
65/51
Burlington VT 71/57
Butte
35/16
Charleston SC 82/64
Charleston WV 77/57
Charlotte
76/62
Chicago
63/40
Cincinnati
69/46
Cleveland
69/46
Dallas
82/65
Death Valley
81/62
Denver
52/29
Des Moines
58/33
Detroit
65/42
Fairbanks
3/-7
Fargo
43/17
Fort Myers
88/71
Honolulu
86/75
Houston
81/70
Indianapolis
67/43
Internat. Falls 42/23
Kansas City
62/42
Las Vegas
72/55
Los Angeles
69/57
Louisville
73/51
Memphis
76/63
Miami
86/76
Milwaukee
60/36
Minneapolis
51/29
Tomorrow
Sh
S
S
C
C
S
C
Pc
Pc
Sh
C
Pc
Sh
Sh
S
S
S
S
Pc
C
Pc
S
S
Pc
Pc
Pc
T
S
Fl
S
S
Pc
Pc
S
Sh
Pc
C
69/41
67/45
23/20
81/66
76/45
84/63
81/46
46/30
58/35
66/37
25/2
83/65
72/44
80/62
56/42
67/41
57/39
81/64
79/55
61/38
55/37
59/37
15/7
36/30
87/70
86/75
84/66
66/40
39/25
61/47
70/54
62/53
71/47
76/62
84/75
54/39
45/31
S
C
Sn
Pc
Sh
T
Pc
C
S
S
Fl
S
S
Pc
S
S
S
T
C
Pc
Pc
S
Pc
C
S
S
Pc
S
C
Pc
Pc
R
S
T
Sh
S
Pc
New Orleans
New York City
Oklahoma City
Orlando
Philadelphia
Phoenix
Pittsburgh
Portland OR
Raleigh
Sacramento
Salt Lake City
San Diego
San Francisco
Santa Fe
Seattle
Spokane
St. Louis
Tampa
Washington
Almanac
83/68
75/65
72/47
86/70
78/65
79/55
70/49
47/39
80/61
62/47
51/45
68/60
61/50
62/33
46/37
42/25
71/45
88/71
78/66
Pc
C
S
Pc
C
S
Sh
R
Pc
C
R
Pc
C
S
R
C
S
C
C
81/68
76/48
68/62
84/69
77/48
80/57
65/36
45/33
81/58
56/45
62/41
68/60
58/47
63/39
44/30
29/11
62/47
88/70
79/51
S
S
C
Pc
Pc
S
Pc
Sh
Pc
Sh
R
R
Sh
S
Sh
Sn
Pc
Pc
Pc
Canada & Mexico
Cancun
Edmonton
Halifax
Mexico City
Montreal
Quebec
Toronto
Vancouver
87/72
11/-2
65/54
78/50
67/46
66/48
64/43
43/35
S
C
Pc
S
Sh
Sh
S
R
86/73 Pc
10/2
Fl
64/37 C
77/52 S
59/33 S
54/33 S
53/38 S
42/30 Sn
Europe & the Middle East
Amsterdam
Athens
Baghdad
Barcelona
Berlin
Dublin
Frankfurt
Helsinki
Istanbul
Jerusalem
London
Lisbon
Madrid
Moscow
Oslo
53/48
64/60
85/54
69/53
53/44
55/47
53/45
49/46
71/61
74/53
57/49
68/56
66/42
34/31
48/44
R
R
S
S
Pc
Sh
C
Pc
Pc
S
R
Pc
Pc
C
Sh
56/50
70/55
83/56
68/54
55/47
59/47
54/43
48/45
64/51
68/52
58/53
67/59
66/46
39/35
47/37
Sh
R
S
Pc
C
R
Pc
C
C
S
C
C
Pc
C
R
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2022
Paris
Rome
Stockholm
Tel Aviv
Vienna
Warsaw
53/51
67/47
49/47
80/59
52/38
49/36
Sh
Pc
C
S
Pc
C
59/50 Pc
67/50 S
49/42 R
77/60 Pc
57/42 Pc
50/43 C
Sunrise
Sunset
Day length
Moonrise
Moonset
Day of year
Pc
Pc
Pc
T
C
Pc
C
Pc
R
C
C
Pc
92/75
63/33
77/71
87/78
61/38
77/59
89/67
58/44
84/76
73/58
77/71
63/54
Mount Washington (4 p.m. yesterday)
Asia & Australia
Bangkok
Beijing
Hong Kong
Jakarta
Kabul
Melbourne
New Delhi
Seoul
Singapore
Sydney
Taipei City
Tokyo
89/75
54/39
74/69
90/78
57/39
76/57
89/67
61/39
86/76
74/58
74/70
65/53
Pc
Pc
Pc
T
S
Sh
Pc
Pc
Sh
R
C
Sh
Africa
Cairo
Johannesburg
Lagos
Nairobi
78/60
78/57
88/75
79/60
S
T
Pc
T
80/64 S
73/57 R
88/76 Pc
79/60 T
88/62
66/47
73/64
89/75
69/59
66/48
72/65
64/55
S
Sh
S
C
S
R
Pc
Sh
87/62 Pc
66/48 R
74/64 S
89/75 T
71/59 S
66/48 R
70/66 T
64/55 T
South America
Asuncion
Bogota
Buenos Aires
Caracas
Lima
Quito
Rio de Janeiro
Sao Paulo
Central America & Caribbean
Bermuda
Havana
Kingston
Panama City
Saint John
San Jose
San Juan
78/73
86/69
86/76
84/75
83/76
74/67
87/74
C
Pc
T
T
T
R
C
77/72 C
87/69 S
86/77 S
84/74 Sh
83/77 T
73/67 R
87/76 Sh
6:23 a.m.
4:31 p.m.
10:08
3:46 p.m.
4:14 a.m.
310
Weather
Dense fog
Visibility
1/16 of a mile
Wind
southwest at 46 m.p.h.
High/low temperature
46/39
Snow depth at 4 p.m.
0.0”
Moon phases
Tides
A.M.
P.M.
High tides
A.M.
P.M.
High tides
Boston high
Height
Boston low
Height
9:21
10.4
3:02
0.2
9:47
10.0
3:33
0.0
Gloucester
Marblehead
Lynn
Scituate
9:21
9:21
9:27
9:25
9:47
9:47
9:53
9:54
Hyannis Port
Chatham
Wellfleet
Provincetown
10:12 10:48
10:20 10:55
9:35 10:01
9:19 9:46
Plymouth
Cape Cod
Canal East
Cape Cod
Canal West
Falmouth
9:30
9:58
9:14
9:42
8:07
9:05
Nantucket
Harbor
Oak Bluffs
New Bedford
Newport RI
10:21 10:58
9:51 10:12
5:59 6:20
5:52 6:13
9:31
High tides
Old Orchard ME 9:12
Hampton
Beach NH
9:26
Plum Island
9:31
9:53
9:58
Ipswich
9:38
9:11
9:39
Boston’s recent climate
Yesterday
High/low
77/58
Mean
68
Departure from normal+20
Departure for month 59
Departure for year 566
4 p.m. rel. humidity 63%
Degree days
Yesterday
Monthly total
Normal to date
Season total
Season normal
Last year to date
Actual Temperatures
LAST
Nov. 16
NEW
Nov. 23
FIRST
Nov. 30
Tonight’s fat waxing (thickening) gibbous (more
than half full) moon has already cleared the eastern horizon as the sun sets in the west-southwest.
As skies darken, Jupiter beams brightly to its upper
right. – Patrick Rowan
Source: Asthma & Allergy Affiliates, Inc.
Allergies
Trees
Weeds Grass
Mold
N.A.
Low
Low
Normal Temperatures
MOD.
79
60
Normal
high
40
Normal
low
55
41
Record
low
20
Yesterday’s low 58°
6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 1 2 3 4 5
October
1.2"
1.03
100
150
200
Ultraviolet index
MOD.
0.8"
0.6"
0.47
0.23 0.18
T
Forecast for noon today
V.HIGH
EXTREME
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Yesterday’s temperature extremes
>1 HOUR
High: 107 at Fitzroy Crossing, Australia
Low: -37 at Ilirney, Russia
Maximum unprotected safe time in the sun for people
with fair skin that sometimes tans but usually burns.
45 MIN.
1.0"
300
0.01
0.03
0.4"
0.07 0.1 0.05
T 0.04
6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 1 2 3 4 5
HIGH
30 MIN.
15-24 MIN.
<10
17
1879
November
1.19
HAZARDOUS
For more information on today’s conditions, call the
state hotline at (800) 882-1497 or Massachusetts
Department of Environmental Protection web site
www.state.ma.us/DEP
LOW
Record Temperatures
1994
31
50
Norm.
55.9
41.7
54.3
Record
high
0
UNHEALTHY
Actual
68.8
51.8
55.9
80
Eastern Massachusetts air quality
GOOD
Nov. readings
Avg. daily high
Avg. daily low
YTD avg. temp.
Yesterday’s high 77°
N.A.
Yesterday’s mold and spore rating.
P.M.
(valid at 4 p.m. yesterday)
Heat Cool
0
3
25
3
82
0
339 1027
482 808
272 1147
100
FULL
Nov. 8
A.M.
October
0.2"
0.0"
November
24 Hr. Precipitation (valid at 4 p.m. yesterday)
Yesterday
0.00”
Precip days in November 1
Month to date
0.04”
Norm. month to date 0.60”
Year to date
24.85”
Norm. year to date 36.23”
Climate data are compiled from National Weather Service records and are subject to change or correction.
Deadly tornadoes hit Texas and Oklahoma, flatten buildings
By Jake Bleiberg
ASSOCIATED PRESS
IDABEL, Okla. — Residents
in southeastern Oklahoma and
northeastern Texas began assessing weather damage Saturday, working to recover after a
storm stretching from Dallas to
northwest Arkansas spawned
tornadoes and produced flash
flooding, killing at least one, injuring others, and leaving homes
and buildings in ruins.
Oklahoma Governor Kevin
Stitt went to the town of Idabel
to see the damage. He said on social media that all the homes
had been searched and a 90year-old man was killed. Keli
Cain, spokesperson for the
state’s Department of Emergency Management, said the man’s
body was found at his home in
the Pickens area of McCurtain
County, about 36 miles north of
Idabel.
The Oklahoma Highway Patrol also reported a 6-year-old
girl drowned and a 43-year-old
man was missing after their vehicle was swept by water off a
bridge near Stilwell, about 135
m i l e s n o r t h o f Id a b e l . T h e
drowning has not been officially
attributed to the storm and will
be investigated by the medical
examiner, Cain said.
Saturday afternoon Stitt declared a state of emergency for
McCurtain County, where Idabel
is located, and neighboring Bryan, Choctaw, and LeFlore counties.
The declaration is a step in
qualifying for federal assistance
and funding and clears the way
for state agencies to make disaster-recovery-related purchases
without limits on bidding requirements.
Texas Governor Greg Abbott
said damage assessments and
recovery efforts were underway
in northeast Texas and encouraged residents to report damage
to the Texas Division of Emergency Management.
“I have deployed all available
resources to help respond and
recover,” Abbott said in a statement. ”I thank all of our hardworking state and local emergency management personnel
for their swift response."
National Weather Service
meteorologist Robert Darby in
Tulsa said the far-reaching
storm produced heavy rain in
the Stilwell area at the time,
around 4 inches.
Idabel, a rural town of about
7,000 at the foothills of the
Ouachita Mountains, saw extensive damage, Cain said. “There
are well over 100 homes and
businesses damaged from minor
damage to totally destroyed,”
Cain said.
Trinity Baptist Church in Idabel was preparing to complete a
new building when the storm
ripped apart the sanctuary and
flattened the shell of the new
structure next door, according to
Pastor Don Myer.
The 250-member congregation was to vote after the Sunday
service on whether to move
LM OTERO/ASSOCIATED PRESS
Adela Cox looked over debris at Trinity Baptist Church following a tornado in Idabel, Okla.
ahead with he final work to complete the building, Myer told the
Associated Press.
“But we didn’t get to that. Every vote counts and we had one
vote trump us all,” Myer, 67,
said. “We were right on the verge
of that. That’s how close we
were.”
Myer said the congregation is
going to pray on what happened,
see how much their insurance
covers, and work to rebuild.
Shelbie Villalpando, 27,
of Powderly, Texas, said she
was eating dinner with her family Friday when tornado sirens
prompted them to congregate first in their rented home’s
hallways, then with her children, ages 5, 10, and 14, in the
bathtub.
“Within two minutes of getting them in the bathtub, we had
to lay over the kids because everything started going crazy,”
Villalpando said.
“I’ve never been so terrified,”
she said. “I could hear glass
breaking and things shattering
around, but whenever I got out
of the bathroom, my heart and
my stomach sank because I have
kids and it could have been
much worse. ... What if our bathroom had caved in just like everything else? We wouldn’t be
here.”
Terimaine Davis and his son
were huddled in the bathtub until just before the tornado barreled through Friday, reducing
their home in Powderly to a roofless, sagging heap.
“We left like five minutes before the tornado actually hit,”
Davis, 33, told AP. “Me and my
son were in the house in the tub
and that was about the only
thing left standing.”
In their driveway Saturday
m o r n i n g , a c h i l d ’s c a r s e a t
leaned against a dented, gray
Chevrolet sedan with several
windows blown out. Around
back, his wife, Lori Davis, handed Terimaine a basket of toiletries from inside the wreckage of
their house.
The couple and the three kids
who live with them did not have
renter’s insurance, Lori Davis
said, and none of their furniture
survived. “We’re going to have to
start from scratch,” she said.
They hope to stay with family
until they can find a place to live.
“The next few days look like
rough times,” Terimaine Davis
said.
Judge Brandon Bell, the highest elected official in Lamar
County, where Powderly is located, declared a disaster in that area. Bell’s declaration said at least
two dozen people were injured
across the county.
Powderly is about 45 miles
west of Idabel and about 120
miles northeast of Dallas and
both are near the Texas-Oklahoma border.
The National Weather Service in Fort Worth confirmed
three tornadoes — in Lamar,
Henderson, and Hopkins counties — Friday night as a line of
storms dropped rain and sporadic hail on the Dallas-Fort
Worth area and continued to
push eastward.
The weather service's office
in Shreveport, La., said it was assessing the damage in Oklahoma.
Metro
GlobeLocal PAGE B9
Coming home was different for three
generations of veterans in one family.
B
B O S T O N S U N DAY G L O B E N O V E M B E R 6 , 2 0 2 2 | B O S T O N G L O B E .C O M / M E T R O
Question 1 backers make final push
Yvonne Abraham
Steps forward
— and back
By Laura Crimaldi
“It would tax the millionaires,”
Marianne Walles, 55, told three votIt’s a tax on workers who earn ers she encountered Saturday
$20,000 or more each week.
morning while knocking on
It will improve transportadoors in Somerville. “Our
tion and public education. It
tax system is scaled so that
will make the tax system
the more money you make
fairer.
the less taxes you pay.”
That was the drumbeat ELECTION
Question 1 targets the
Saturday for supporters of
state’s flat 5 percent state inQuestion 1 as they cancome by adding an additionvassed neighborhoods stateal 4 percent tax on every dolwide hoping to convince voters to lar of taxable income earned over
impose a new tax on the highest $1 million. The proceeds would be
QUESTION 1, Page B6
earners in Massachusetts.
GLOBE STAFF
Well friends, we’ve survived another campaign season, more or
less. Whether America can survive what comes next is another
question.
Here in Massachusetts, Tuesday will be short on suspense
when it comes to elected offices.
But what it lacks in excitement
it will more than make up for in significance.
Polls have continued to show what we’ve
known since primary day: Democrats Maura Healey and Kim Driscoll will almost certainly cruise
to victories over their Republican opponents to
become governor and lieutenant governor, respectively. Former city councilor Andrea Campbell is expected to best a Republican lawyer to become the state’s next attorney general. The women at the top of the ticket, and many incumbents,
have run smart, safe, and oh, so sleepy campaigns, bereft of the nitty-gritty and controversy
that make for October surprises and turned-off
voters.
So, no fireworks.
But holy moly, what a revolution we’re looking
at in Massachusetts. The state is set to elect its
first woman governor. (Republican Jane Swift became acting governor after Paul Cellucci left the
post.) There will now be two women leading the
state, one of whom, Healey, is a lesbian. In Campbell, the people of the Commonwealth will have as
their chief advocate a Black woman, another first.
If Diana DiZoglio wins the state auditor race, five
out of the state’s six constitutional offices will be
held by women, all of whom will have blazed impressive trails to get there.
It was unimaginable, until it wasn’t.
But let’s not skip straight from the grind of the
campaign to the stodge of governing: The ascension of so many talented women is a moment to
celebrate, a testament not just to them, but to the
fact that the world has finally changed, or at least
Massachusetts has. There’s plenty more work to
do — women are still way underrepresented in
the Legislature, for example — but this is a massive leap forward.
Lord knows, we need to take comfort in something as we look beyond our state’s borders. At
this writing, Republicans, including hundreds devoted to the former president, are favored to
make gains federally and locally on Tuesday. A
terrifyingly large share of them have no stomach
for abortion rights or even contraception, gay
marriage, fully funded Social Security, aid to
Ukraine, fiscal sanity, or democracy itself.
And they’ll likely ascend by running campaigns that have appealed to voters’ baser instincts, conjuring an us vs. them America in
which criminals, people of color, and immigrants
take power from white people.
We’re not immune to that ugliness here, of
course. Just look at the effort to repeal a law
granting driver’s licenses to undocumented immigrants.
The state’s law enforcement leaders overwhelmingly agree that licensing undocumented
immigrants who are going to drive anyway is best
for public safety. There’s absolutely no evidence
for opponents’ claim that undocumented immigrants are more dangerous drivers, or for their assertion that allowing them to get licenses will lead
to more road fatalities.
Unable to win on the facts, the people opposing the law have had to resort to the same ugly
racism and fear mongering used by the GOP and
their cheerleaders nationally.
“A storm is headed straight for Massachusetts,”
warns the main opposition group, Fair and Secure MA. If Question 4 passes, they say, the state
can look forward to “murder, sex trafficking,
fe[n]tanyl, voter-fraud, robbery, theft, and burglary.”
It’s ugly, deeply illogical stuff, led by a state Republican party emulating its demigod Donald
Trump.
The outcome of the electoral contests at the
top of the ballot in this state might well have been
decided long ago, but Question 4 is still very
much an open one. And what it is asking is not
just whether we should grant licenses to undocumented immigrants, but also whether we reject
the racism that seems to be winning elsewhere in
this broken country.
The answer, on both counts, should be a resounding yes. Let’s make it a landslide.
2022
In Bristol sheriff ’s race,
a challenger for Hodgson
By Alexander Thompson
GLOBE CORRESPONDENT
FALL RIVER — Almost as soon
as Thomas M. Hodgson was appointed Bristol County sheriff by
the governor in 1997, he became a
lightning rod for controversy.
Hodgson, a Republican and avid
Donald Trump fan in a county that
favored Joe Biden by 12 points in
2020, has been sharply criticized for
his harsh treatment of inmates,
and, most recently, for an ad some
describe as antisemitic — a characterization he vehemently rejects.
This year, Democrats believe
they’ve found the man to finally deSHERIFF, Page B6
Hayden
suspends
Suffolk
ADA
Exonerated man
says prosecutor
violated oath
By Andrew Ryan
GLOBE STAFF
GLOBE SANTA, Page B4
LEE, Page B5
PHOTOS BY JOHN TLUMACKI/GLOBE STAFF
VETERANS ON
THEIR MIND
The annual Veterans Day Parade
made its way from Copley Square to
Boston City Hall Plaza on Saturday as
hundreds of people, including 6-yearold Elliott Ferguson (right), from
Brookline, lined the route to watch.
Members of the Massachusetts 54th
Infantry Regiment (above) marched
down Boylston Street.
Taking ‘a step toward healing’ in Barre
History museum returns artifacts to tribal representatives
By John Hilliard
GLOBE STAFF
BARRE — For more than a century, a Barre museum held within
its collection heartbreaking reminders of the Wounded Knee Massacre
and the deaths of nearly 300 Lakota
men, women, and children slain by
US troops in South Dakota.
But in an emotional, poignant,
and at times joyful two-hour public
ceremony Saturday afternoon, the
leadership of the Founders Museum
symbolically returned more than
130 artifacts — including clothing,
weapons, arrows, and moccasins
looted from the people killed — to
representatives from the Oglala La-
kota and Cheyenne River tribes.
Saturday’s ceremony, held inside
the gym at the Ruggles Lane Elementary School, is far from the solemn grounds of the massacre site
on the South Dakota plains. But it
offered some relief to those who
came to Massachusetts to finally
ARTIFACTS, Page B4
In the letter room, providing help and hope
By Ellen Bartlett
globe santa
GLOBE CORRESPONDENT
For 67 years Globe Santa, a program of
the Boston Globe Foundation, has provided
gifts to children in need at holiday time.
Please consider giving by phone, mail, or
online at globesanta.org.
G L O B E S A N TA . O R G
It’s a rainy Wednesday morning and the
phones at Globe Santa are ringing off the
hook. This is unusual in the letter room,
where the primary occupation is reading
and processing letters — thousands and
thousands of letters.
Globe columnist Yvonne Abraham can be reached
at yvonne.abraham@globe.com.
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An early morning reminder of the approaching deadline for the 2022 season,
sent in a text from the Department of Transitional Assistance, sparked the flurry of
calls. They’re from families needing help to
enroll, needing information, and especially
needing reassurance that their children
won’t be left out this holiday season.
So the letter readers have pivoted and become switchboard operators of sorts. The
air fills with the sound of murmuring voices.
How can I help you? Yes, there’s still time.
No, applications can’t be taken over the
A high-profile Suffolk County
homicide prosecutor has been
suspended amid allegations he
withheld evidence that could
have freed a man who had been
wrongly convicted of murder.
That man, Robert Foxworth,
who was ultimately exonerated
in 2021, served an additional
dozen years in prison after prosecutor Mark Lee learned from a
federal informant that Foxworth
was innocent, according to a
complaint filed Thursday with
the Board of Bar Overseers. During those 12 years, Foxworth’s
mother died and he was not allowed to attend the funeral.
“Mark Lee, you played a major role in crippling me in life,”
Foxworth wrote in the complaint to the bar overseers,
which investigates complaints
against lawyers. Foxworth accused Lee of defying his obligations and oath as a prosecutor to
“keep me incarcerated … [and]
stand by and watch me slowly
die in prison.”
Foxworth was released on
Dec 23, 2020, and his conviction
was vacated in early 2021.
Suffolk County District Attorney Kevin R. Hayden said in a
statement that Lee was placed
on paid leave Thursday and that
the office was launching its own
probe of the allegations. The district attorney’s office had hired
John Benzan of Comprehensive
Investigations and Consulting to
investigate, according to the
statement.
The Board of Bar Overseers
will conduct its own investigation, which could take a year or
more.
In a statement, Lee said he
understood the need for transparency in any criminal prosecution and welcomed the review. “I expect that once a review has been completed, I will
return to doing the job I have
proudly done for 25 years,” Lee
said.
Lee’s attorneys, Tom Hoopes
and Elizabeth N. Mulvey, described their client as a “prosecutor of high ethical standards”
and said that the complaint
against him was “simply baseless.”
B2
Metro
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
G l o b e
New England
Eyeing ways to close health literacy gaps
Report touts
grassroots efforts
with immigrants
By Katie Mogg
GLOBE CORRESPONDENT
When COVID-19 vaccinations began to roll out in early
2021, it finally seemed as if there
were a light at the end of the
tunnel. But many immigrant
communities in Boston and
across the state remained in the
dark as they faced misinformation and language barriers to the
resources they needed to stay
healthy during the pandemic.
That’s when the Rev. Dieufort
Fleurissaint, a local Haitian
American leader better known
as Pastor Keke, stepped up to
help.
Fleurissaint took to the airwaves, using television programs, radio shows, and social
media to dispel myths about the
pandemic and try to help immigrant communities understand
the importance of getting vaccinated.
Fleurissaint’s efforts demonstrated the critical role local
leaders and grassroots organizations play in the effort to close
health literacy gaps among immigrant communities during
the pandemic and in the future,
according to a new report released Tuesday.
“That’s my duty, just to find
the correct information by list e n i n g t o h e a l t h e x p e r t s ,”
Fleurissaint, executive director
and chair of Haitian advocacy
groups True Alliance Center and
Haitian Americans United, told
researchers in the report by Equity Now & Beyond, an immigrant health equity coalition
DAVID L. RYAN/GLOBE STAFF/FILE
The Rev. Dieufort Fleurissaint spoke to Noel Belly at the
Immigrant Family Services Institute in Mattapan in 2021.
made up of Haitian, Brazilian,
African, and Latino immigrant
groups.
Fleurissaint said he also
aimed to learn how to access accurate information and how to
“disseminate the right information to our people.”
Those efforts paid off, according to the report, entitled “Expanding the Network: The Role
of Immigrant Community Based
Organizations in COVID-19 Vaccine Information and Access.”
Throughout the past year,
Equity Now & Beyond was able
to vaccinate more than 6,250
immigrants, educate more than
100,000 community members,
and distribute tens of thousands
of personal protective equipment like masks and hand sanitizer, said Kevin Whalen, co-director of the Center to Support
Immigrant Organizing, which
coordinated the coalition.
Equity Now & Beyond hired
research assistants from immi-
grant community organizations
to build trust and form relationships with immigrants and learn
about their health concerns and
knowledge gaps, the report said.
Researchers sought to discern
what role immigrant community organizations in Boston
played in responding to the pandemic, as well as how Equity
Now & Beyond was building
partnerships with communities
and health care organizations.
Over the summer and fall of
2021, researchers conducted
877 surveys, observations, and
informal interviews at 36 vaccination clinics. They interviewed
immigrants in their native languages. Besides gathering information, their goal was to ensure
community members felt heard,
were properly informed, and
had access to resources like
health insurance, vaccinations,
and referrals to health providers.
Now the coalition plans to
replicate those strategies to help
immigrant communities consistently access COVID-19 resources and other health needs to navigate everyday life and future
health crises, the report said.
The researchers also made
other recommendations about
how to improve the health of
members of immigrant communities.
“Resources should be put into ensuring that the health safety net is widened,” said Clare
Louise Okalany, chief operating
officer of African Community
Economic Development of New
England, one of the groups in
Equity Now & Beyond. Okalany
was among nine panelists at a
Tuesday morning press conference unveiling the coalition’s report.
The report outlines several
policy recommendations to improve social determinants of
health such as housing, job opportunity, and health care. It
calls for increased permanent
supportive housing, fast-track
certification for foreign-trained
health care personnel, and
“wrap-around” clinics offering
not only COVID-related resources, but primary care services as
well, like blood pressure, diabetes, and cholesterol screenings.
“We recognize the essential
role that social and structural
determinants of health play in
producing stark disparities in
health outcomes,” Fleurissaint
said at the press conference. “All
of these organizations [in Equity
Now & Beyond] will try to promote more equitable policies
and practices.”
Katie Mogg can be reached at
katie.mogg@globe.com. Follow
her on Twitter @journalistkatie
This day in history
Today is Sunday, Nov. 6, the
310th day of 2022. There are 55
days left in the year.
ºBirthdays: Actor Sally Field is
76. Singer Rory Block is 73. TV
host Catherine Crier is 68. News
correspondent and former California first lady Maria Shriver is
67. Actor Lori Singer is 65. Former Education Secretary Arne
Duncan is 58. Author Colson
Whitehead is 53. Actor Ethan
Hawke is 52. Retired NBA star
Lamar Odom is 43. Actor Emma Stone is 34. US Olympic
swimming gold medalist Bobby
Finke is 23.
ºIn 1860, former Illinois congressman Abraham Lincoln of
the Republican Party was electe d Pr e s i d e n t o f t h e Un i t e d
S t a t e s a s h e d e f e a t e d Jo h n
Breckinridge, John Bell and Stephen Douglas.
ºIn 1861, James Naismith, the
inventor of the sport of basketball, was born in Almonte, Ontario, Canada.
ºIn 1928, in a first, the results
of Republican Herbert Hoover’s
presidential election victory
over Democrat Alfred E. Smith
were flashed onto an electric
wraparound sign on the New
York Times building.
ºIn 1947, “Meet the Press”
made its debut on NBC; the first
guest was James A. Farley, former postmaster general and former Democratic National Committee Chair; the host was the
s h o w ’s c o - c r e a t o r, Ma r t h a
Rountree.
ºIn 1970, Aerosmith took the
stage for the first time, at Nipmuc Regional High School in
Mendon.
ºIn 1977, 39 people were killed
when the Kelly Barnes Dam in
Georgia burst, sending a wall of
water through Toccoa Falls College.
ºIn 1984, President Ronald
Reagan won reelection by a
landslide over former Vice President Walter Mondale, the Democratic challenger.
ºIn 1990, about one-fifth of the
Universal Studios backlot in
southern California was destroyed in an arson fire.
ºIn 2001, billionaire Republican Michael Bloomberg won
New York City’s mayoral race,
d e f e a t i n g D e m o c r a t Ma r k
Green.
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ºIn 2012, President Barack
Obama rolled to reelection, vanquishing Republican Mitt Romney as he picked up 332 electoral votes compared to 206 for the
former Massachusetts governor; Obama also received 51
percent of the popular vote as
opposed to 47 percent for Romney.
ºIn 2014, the march toward
same-sex marriage across the
United States hit a roadblock
when a federal appeals court
upheld laws against the practice
in four states: Ohio, Michigan,
Kentucky, and Tennessee. (A divided US Supreme Court overturned the laws in June 2015.)
ºIn 2015, President Barack
Obama rejected the proposed
Keystone XL pipeline, declaring
it would undercut U.S. efforts to
clinch a global climate change
deal at the center of his environmental legacy. (President Donald Trump would reverse the
Obama decision, but President
Joe Biden canceled the permit
for the pipeline on the day he
took office.)
ºIn 2016, FBI Director James
Comey abruptly announced
that Hillary Clinton should not
face criminal charges related to
newly discovered emails from
her tenure at the State Department.
ºIn 2017, President Donald
Trump told reporters in Tokyo
that North Korea was “a threat
to the civilized world.” The Television Academy became the latest movie or TV organization to
expel Harvey Weinstein. Former
Democratic congressman Anthony Weiner reported to prison
in Massachusetts to begin a 21month sentence for sexting with
a 15-year-old girl.
ºIn 2019, Democrats announced that they would
launch public impeachment
hearings against President Donald Trump the following week;
first to testify would be William
Taylor, the top US diplomat in
Ukraine.
ºIn 2020, the federal agency
that oversees US election security pushed back at unsubstantiated claims of voter fraud, saying that local election offices
had detection measures that
“make it highly difficult to commit fraud through counterfeit
ballots.” Senator Mitt Romney,
the 2012 Republican presidential nominee, said President
Donald Trump was “damaging
the cause of freedom” and inflaming “destructive and dangerous passions” by claiming,
without foundation, that the
election was rigged and stolen
from him.
in brief
BOSTON
Man fatally shot in South End
A man was shot and killed late Friday near the Back Bay MBTA
Station in the South End, according to police. Officers responded
to the area around 9 Yarmouth Place after receiving a call at
10:47 p.m. reporting a shooting, police said in a statement Saturday. The victim was found suffering from gunshot wounds and
pronounced dead at the scene, the statement said. He was not
immediately identified. The shooting is under investigation.
FA L L R I V E R
Teen arrested for running over officer
A 17-year-old boy was arrested early Saturday, hours after he allegedly ran over a police officer with an ATV and did not stop, according to police. The officer suffered serious injuries in the hitand-run that occurred just before 8 p.m. Friday. He was taken to
Rhode Island Hospital and later released, police said. The boy,
who is from Fall River, allegedly failed to comply with police during a traffic stop in the area of Robeson and Delcar streets, police
said. He fled the scene and hit the officer “carrying him an unspecified distance,” then knocking him to the ground and running him over, police said. The teen, who was not identified because of his age, is facing several charges, including assault and
battery on a police officer causing bodily injury, a statement said.
NORTH ADAMS
Woman charged in grandmother’s death
A 26-year-old woman has been arrested and charged with murdering her grandmother on Halloween night in North Adams,
the Berkshire district attorney’s office said Saturday. Kelsie Cote
is due to be arraigned Monday in Northern Berkshire District
Court for the death of 74-year-old Doris Cote, prosecutors said in
a statement. She was arrested Friday on charges of murder, assault with intent to murder, and destruction of evidence, the
statement said. The investigation began on Tuesday, after police
received a 911 call from a relative of Doris Cote, who said they
had found the woman dead inside her Church Street home, prosecutors said. North Adams and State Police investigators established probable cause that Kelsie Cote murdered her grandmother Monday evening and attempted to destroy evidence of the alleged crime, according to the statement.
S WA N S E A
Teen driver killed, 1 injured in crash
A 17-year-old boy was killed and his passenger injured Friday
night after he crashed into a fire hydrant and a utility pole on
Marvel Street, according to police. Ethan Kielec, of Swansea, was
pronounced dead at the scene, Police Chief Marc Haslam said in
a statement. A passenger, also a 17-year-old boy, was taken to
Hasbro Children’s Hospital in Providence, Haslam said. His condition was not known. Police responded to several 911 calls
around 11:20 p.m. reporting the crash near 171 Marvel St.,
where officers found a Ford Fusion off the roadway that had
struck the hydrant and utility pole, according to the statement.
The crash remains under investigation.
WINTHROP
Man charged over graffiti on beach sign
A Middleton man is facing charges for allegedly repeatedly
scrawling vulgar graffiti, at least once targeting President Biden,
on a sign owned by the state Department of Conservation and
Recreation at Winthrop Beach, police said Thursday. Mark Evans, 61, is charged with tagging property and malicious destruction of property under $1,200, police said in a statement. He has
been summonsed to appear in East Boston District Court at a later date, officials said. Evans allegedly defaced the signs at 254
Winthrop Shore Drive with a heavy marker on multiple dates,
typically early on Sunday mornings, from August through October, police said. Police released a photo of the sign featuring
“[Expletive] Joe Biden” in black ink. Detectives obtained camera
footage of Evans allegedly defacing the sign before leaving from
the area on foot, police said. He was identified as the suspect on
Oct. 24. The footage and Evans’s identification were shared with
State Police, which has jurisdiction over DCR property, police
said. After Evans was interviewed by State Police he was told he
was being charged and summonsed to court, police said.
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B3
Metro
G l o b e
Bacari enjoys arts and
crafts and basketball
Sunday’s Child is a weekly
column featuring a child currently in foster care awaiting
adoption.
PHOTOS BY JONATHAN WIGGS/GLOBE STAFF
ALL
THERE
TO SEE
ABIGAIL
Bacari is a healthy and happy
16-year-old.
He is active and energetic
and enjoys walking, playing basketball, and parSUNDAY’S ticipating in othCHILD
er outdoor activities.
Bacari warms up to people as
he gets to know them and enjoys
socializing with others.
He enjoys art and crafts and
expressing himself through narrative writing. Bacari also enjoys
discussing space and meteorites.
People who know him say that
he has a great sense of humor.
Bacari does well in school,
and although he is currently unsure of the type of career he
would like to pursue, he enjoys
animation and creating cartoons
and comics.
Legally freed for adoption,
Bacari is looking for a forever
family that he hopes will be loving, structured, but not too
strict. All family constellations
will be considered, including
those with older or younger children in the home. Bacari does
have biological connections that
an adoptive family would need
to help him maintain. He also
feels connected to his community and would love to have that
fostered, as well.
Bacari enjoys discussing
space and meteorites.
and room in your heart, you may
be a perfect match to adopt a
waiting child. Adoptive parents
can be single, married, or partnered; experienced or not; renters or homeowners; LGBTQ+
singles and couples. As an adoptive parent, you won’t have to
pay any fees, adoption from foster care is completely free in
Massachusetts.
The process to adopt a child
from foster care includes training, interviews, and home visits
to determine if adoption is right
for you. These steps will help
match you with a child or sibling
group that your family will fit
well with.
To learn more about adoption from foster care, call the
Massachusetts Adoption Resource Exchange (MARE) at
617-964-6273 or visit www.mareinc.org. Start the process today
and give a waiting child a permanent place to call home.
Can I adopt?
If you’re at least 18 years old,
have a stable source of income,
A large crowd was on
hand Saturday to see
the unveiling of a new
statue honoring Abigail
Adams in Quincy, the
city where she and
husband President John
Adams lived.
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B o s t o n
S u n d a y
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
G l o b e
Barre museum returns looted Wounded Knee artifacts
uARTIFACTS
‘I’m simultaneously reliving
the hurt of
[Wounded
Knee]... while also
being extremely
relieved that some
first steps like this
have taken place.’
Continued from Page B1
right a long-standing wrong.
“Ever since that Wounded
Knee massacre happened,
genocides have been instilled in
our blood,” said Surrounded
Bear, 20, who traveled to Barre
from the Pine Ridge Indian
Reservation in South Dakota.
“And for us to bring back these
artifacts, that’s a step towards
healing. That’s a step in the
right direction.”
On Dec. 29, 1890, US soldiers were attempting to disarm a group of Lakota near
Wounded Knee Creek on the
Pine Ridge reservation in South
Dakota when some believe a
Lakota man’s rifle discharged,
and troops opened fire. Many
of the Lakota killed at Wounded Knee were later found to be
unarmed.
Lakota bodies were buried
in a mass grave at the site, and
many of their personal belongings were looted and sold. The
Founders Museum obtained
the artifacts a few years after
the massacre from a salesman,
Frank Root, who had donated
the items after using them as
part of a traveling show.
Ann Meilus, president of the
Barre Museum Association,
said Saturday’s ceremony was
the end of about 30 years of
“trying to come to a positive
conclusion” with the artifacts.
“It was always important to
me to give them back,” Meilus
said. “I think the museum will
be remembered for being on
the right side of history for returning these items.”
In 1990, Congress passed a
resolution that expressed “deep
regret” for the Wounded Knee
Massacre. And in recent years,
lawmakers including US Senator Elizabeth Warren, have
backed legislation to strip Medal of Honor awards to nearly
two dozen troops who participated in the massacre.
The “soldiers’ acts of violence at Wounded Knee were
not heroic, but rather tragic
and profoundly shameful,”
Warren said in a statement last
year.
Saturday’s ceremony, which
included prayers from Lakota
representatives and a performance of a traditional song,
featured speakers like Wendell
Yellow Bull, who described how
the massacre affected their
families for generations.
Yellow Bull, 61, a member of
NICOLE MCGAA, MIT student
from Minneapolis and a
member of the Oglala Lakota
PHOTOS BY STEVEN G. SMITH FOR THE BOSTON GLOBE
Cheryl Angel (above, right) and Candi Brings Plenty (below, left) gave gifts to members of the Barre Museum Association at
the ceremony returning artifacts from the Wounded Knee massacre site. It was attended by representatives of various tribes.
the Oglala L akota, gre w up
with stories about his ancestor,
Joseph Horn Cloud.
Horn Cloud wrote a firsthand account of experiencing
the massacre as a 19-year-old,
Yellow Bull said.
Saturday’s public event was
a symbolic return of the artifacts, Yellow Bull said. A private ceremony will be held later
t o o ff i c i a l l y h a n d o v e r t h e
items. He wanted people to understand that Indigenous people are not simply relegated to
history.
Yellow Bull, who is also from
the Pine Ridge reservation, said
the return of the artifacts was
“the beginning of healing.”
“I want them to walk away
[from the public ceremony]
knowing that we are all human
beings,” he said.
Nicole McGaa, 20, an MIT
student from Minneapolis who
is a member of the Oglala Lakota joined a group of students
from Harvard University and
other local colleges who attended the ceremony.
McGaa’s great-grandfather,
as a 6-year-old, saw the
Wounded Knee site the day after the massacre, she said. A
few days ago, she asked her
aunt to share more de tails
from his experience with the
massacre’s aftermath.
She has been driven to
know the truth, she said,
though it’s been difficult to
hear it. Saturday’s ceremony
provided some relief, she said.
“ That was a ver y heavy
thing to deal with. And I’m still
thinking about it today,” she
said. “I’m simultaneously reliving the hurt of that... while also
being extremely relieved that
some first steps like this have
taken place.”
A i e s h y a Ja c k s o n , 3 8 , o f
Barre, said she hopes the return of the items serves as an
example to other institutions
that still hold onto Native
American artifacts.
Jackson, who attended the
public ceremony as a representative of the Nipmuc Tribe,
called it a “dream for all
tribes.”
T his is “some thing that
shows love and compassion
from the museum on behalf of
all of the people who were
wounded,” she said.
Surrounded Bear said he
grew up with stories of relatives who died at Wounded
Knee and the deep pain caused
by the massacre continues to
be felt by his family.
“I feel relieved that there’s
actually people that are wanting to work with us,” he said.
“Everything’s finally slowly
getting back into place.”
John Hilliard can be reached
at john.hilliard@globe.com.
A busy time in the letter room
uGLOBE SANTA
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phone or online. Did you receive
it in the mail? The green form?
You lost it? That’s OK! You can
print a new one from the DTA
Connect app. Yes, put it in the
mail, with a stamp.
The letter room is two small
offices, in an industrial park in
Randolph. It’s the nerve center
of Globe Santa, the Boston Globe
Foundation’s program that delivers holiday presents to children
in need across Greater Boston.
A refugee from Afghanistan
calls to say the family has just
had a baby, can she be added to
the application? A family will be
moving in December, what to
do? A woman — a veteran and a
mother — leaves a voice mail:
She cannot get through to the
DTA, despite repeated attempts.
“There is no way to speak to a
live person,” she says.
The letters arrive around
noon, in an enormous US Postal
Service tray. They come at a rate
of 500 to 700 a day, says Tammy
McFarland, Globe Santa’s manager for family requests. Last
year’s total was 17,407 letters,
on behalf of 30,000 children.
They’re on track this year for the
same or more.
“There are days, especially toward the deadline, when we are
very busy elves,” says Kathleen
Collins, one of the team of readers who have been helping McFarland, some for years.
Standard-sized envelopes are
fed into an old Pitney Bowes letter-opening machine. Letters
that arrive in small envelopes
are opened by hand, as are oddsized envelopes, previously used
envelopes. Sometimes there are
no envelopes at all. Some letters
come unstamped, and silent,
heartfelt thanks are sent to the
postal workers who put them
through anyway.
“They see they’re addressed
to Globe Santa, and they know
Santa’s Mailbox
Here are the ways
you can give:
Make a secure credit card
donation online:
www.globesanta.org.
Send check or money order
made payable to Globe Santa to
The Boston Globe Foundation
c/o Globe Santa Fund
PO Box 491
Medford, MA 02155-0005
what’s in those envelopes,” McFarland says. What’s inside are
the green forms, obtained from
the DTA or other social service
organizations, completed by
families with children, from
birth to 12, in need of Globe Santa’s help.
The forms are numbered, inspected; information is entered
into the Globe Santa database. If
an address has been crossed out,
or there’s a name change, or a
child added, the readers reach
out. They explain that all changes must be made via the DTA,
and the forms resubmitted.
A silence falls over the room
as the letters are read. Many are
short and to the point, one or
two sentences. Others are heartfelt essays. Parents putting their
pride aside, for the sake of children. One woman, an immigrant from Haiti, encloses two
small flags, every year, one from
her old home and one from her
new.
“ You put yourself in their
shoes. You think of the children
you’re helping,” McFarland says.
“Some letters, when you read
them, you cry. You can’t help it.”
Some letters, because even in
the most difficult circumstances
children can be just naturally
funny, make you laugh. When
they’re accompanied by drawings, intended as presents for
Globe Santa, the drawings are
pinned to the walls — a Christmas tree, a child’s self-portraitwith-toothy-grin, and monsters.
Globe Santa’s readers tend to
return, year after year. McFarland herself is in her 12th year
with the program, which “has allowed me to serve more than
400,000 children,” she says. “The
greatest gift.”
“This is my Christmas gift to
myself, being here, doing this,”
says Andrea Hancock, in her
fifth year as a Globe Santa reader.
Once the forms are processed, families receive confirmation that they’re enrolled in
Globe Santa, and that the next email they’ll get will contain a
tracking number.
E-mail is nearly universal
now, as are mobile phones. Still,
there are glitches, phones lost or
damaged, mailboxes full, accounts cancelled.
McFarland and reader Linda
Ryan stay till the end. Mindful of
calls in the past from tearful parents whose Globe Santa boxes
had not arrived, they have a goal
now of seeing every box delivered by mid-December, allowing
for glitches, mix-ups, for lost,
and occasionally stolen, boxes.
And when that happens, the
phones will ring, and they’ll answer them. “We’re here,” McFarland says. “We tell them, we’re
here. We’ll help you get through
this.”
Ellen Bartlett can be reached at
ellen.bartlett@globe.com.
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
Metro
G l o b e
B5
VOICES FOR WOMEN
Elnaz Saidifar (above) spoke to those gathered at
a rally in Copley Square Saturday to support
#Woman_Life_Freedom, a campaign advocating
for the freedom of women in Iran.
PHOTOS BY JONATHAN WIGGS/GLOBE STAFF
Bird sightings
Recent bird sightings as reported to the Mass Audubon:
A surprising scattering of evening grosbeaks statewide suggests the possibility of a winter
irruption of this species, according to Mass Audubon. Several
unusual sightings happened
last week, including a gray kingbird, a Cassin’s kingbird, at least
two bohemian waxwings, at
least one Townsend’s solitaire, a
tufted duck, a greater whitefronted goose and at least two
probable rufous hummingbirds.
ºCape Cod: A continuing Pacific loon in Sandwich, a bohemian waxwing at Provincetown
Beech Forest, a little gull and a
lingering piping plover at Race
Point Beach, a Western kingbird
at High Head Beach and four
“ Western” willets at Forest
Beach.
ºBristol County: A hybrid Eurasian x American wigeon at
Miller Street Pond in Seekonk, a
clapper rail in Fairhaven, a yellow-billed cuckoo at Horseneck
Beach State Reser vation, a
Nashville warbler at Gooseberry
Island, a Swainson’s thrush and
cattle egrets at Allens Pond
Wildlife Sanctuary and additional cattle egre ts at Nasketucket Bay State Reservation
and on Shaw Road in
Fairhaven.
ºPlymouth County: A greater
white-fronted goose in Plymouth, three continuing sandhill
cranes at the Burrage Pond
Wildlife Management Area, a
rufous hummingbird in Scituate and a clay-colored sparrow,
a Baltimore oriole and several
species of warblers at the Manomet bird observatory.
ºNorfolk County: A black guil-
lemot in Cohasset and a tardy
yellow warbler, a Nashville warbler and three evening grosbeaks in Randolph.
ºSuffolk County: A Townsend’s
solitaire in Winthrop and likely
the same bird in East Boston, a
Swainson’s thrush in Post Office
Square, an American goldenplover at Winthrop Beach, a
Tennessee warbler in West Roxbury and an evening grosbeak
at Franklin Park.
ºEssex County: In Ipswich, a
continuing red-headed woodpecker at Appleton Farms and
clay-colored sparrows. A bohemian waxwing in Essex, Middleton and at Plum Island, a whiteeyed vireo at the Marblehead
Neck Wildlife Sanctuary, a late
veery at Plum Island, 15 evening grosbeaks at Halibut Point
State Park and a rufous hummingbird in Beverly.
ºMiddlesex County: A redhead,
two lesser yellowlegs, two solitary sandpipers and a whiterumped sandpiper at the Arlington Reservoir, a Lark sparrow in Lexington, Lincoln’s
sparrows at Magazine Beach
Park Nature Center, Beaver
Brook North Reservation and
Captain Sargent Conservation
Land, a late yellow-billed cuckoo at Great Meadows National
Wildlife Refuge in Concord,
where a Nelson’s sparrow was
also sighted. At Horn Pond, an
indigo bunting and a Cape May
warbler.
ºBerkshire County: A lesser
black-backed gull at Lake Pontoosuc, and a dickcissel and six
evening grosbeaks elsewhere in
Pittsfield. Four evening grosbeaks were also in Williamstown. A clay-colored sparrow
in Windsor and four red cross-
bills in Washington.
ºFranklin County: A black-bellied plover in New Salem, a
Northern goshawk in South
Ashfield, a Lincoln’s sparrow at
Turners Falls and two cackling
geese in Whately.
ºHampden County: A flock of
24 brant flying and two Northern shovelers at the Longmeadow Flats.
ºHampshire County: A bluewinged teal and four black vultures in Easthampton, a redthroated loon, five Bonaparte’s
gulls, and a red phalarope in
Belchertown, a tardy bobolink
in Hadley and five evening grosbeaks in Plainfield.
ºWorcester County: A lingering Western kingbird at Tufts
Farm Field and a lingering LeConte’s sparrow in Clinton, 10
black vultures in Blackstone
and two golden eagles soaring
over Mount Wachusett in Princeton.
ºMartha’s Vineyard: The most
unusual bird sighted this week
was spotted here, according to
Mass Audubon. A gray kingbird
was found and photographed
near the Gay Head Lighthouse
for one of very few state records.
ºNantucket: A tufted duck at
Long Pond. A Cassin’s kingbird,
also likely sighted at Tuckernuck Island last week, near
where a cattle egret and a Lark
sparrow were also found.
For more information about
bird sightings or to report bird
sightings, call Mass Audubon at
781-259-8805 or go to
www.massaudubon.org.
Isabela Rocha can be reached at
isabela.rocha@globe.com.
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SCOTT EISEN FOR THE BOSTON GLOBE/FILE
Mark Lee has worked in the Suffolk district attorney’s office for more than two decades.
Suffolk prosecutor suspended
amid misconduct investigation
uLEE
Continued from Page B1
Lee is deputy chief of the homicide unit. His high-profile
work included helping prosecute a murder case against former New England Patriots star
Aaron Hernandez.
Lee did not prosecute the
original case against Foxworth,
who was convicted of a 1991 fatal shooting in Roxbury of Kenneth McLean. The sole eyewitness initially only identified Foxworth from a photo array after
being told by police that the suspect had a ponytail, according to
court documents. Foxworth was
the only man in the group of
photos with a ponytail.
After his conviction, Foxworth maintained his innocence. He was released in March
2008 for 18 months by a federal
court as his conviction came under scrutiny, but he was sent
back to prison in October 2009.
The key moment involving
Lee was in March 2007, when
the prosecutor participated in
an interview of a federal informant, according to Foxworth’s
complaint. The informant told
‘Mark Lee’s
misconduct was
directly
responsible for
Robert’s years of
... excessive
incarceration.’
AMY M. BELGER, one of
Robert Foxworth’s attorneys
Lee and others that he knew
Foxworth did not commit the
murder, according to the complaint, because he had been involved and knew the circumstances.
Lee recognized the significance of what he had learned because he ordered Foxworth’s file
from the district attorney’s archives and told others in the office they needed to investigate,
according to the complaint. But
Lee never followed through on
his obligation to notify a judge
and Foxworth of the evidence.
In 2012, Foxworth’s attorneys began pressing Lee and
other law enforcement officials
about the evidence provided by
the federal informant. Foxworth’s attorney alleged that not
only did Lee fail to provide the
information, but he “delayed,
obstructed, and interfered” with
efforts to obtain the evidence,
according to the complaint.
“Mark Lee’s misconduct was
directly responsible for Robert’s
years of ... excessive incarceration,” said one of Foxworth’s attorneys, Amy M. Belger. " We
don’t want that to happen to
anyone else.”
Fox w o r t h s a i d i n a b r i e f
phone interview Friday night
that he would march with a
picket sign outside the district
attorney’s office to stop Lee from
wielding power as a prosecutor.
“He had this evidence. He
had it!” Foxworth said. “It’s not
right! He took an oath.”
Andrew Ryan can be reached at
andrew.ryan@globe.com Follow
him on Twitter
@globeandrewryan.
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B6
Metro
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
G l o b e
Question 1 backers make final push before Election Day
uQUESTION 1
Continued from Page B1
designated for education and
transportation.
Opponents said now is not
the time to raise taxes, noting
that Massachusetts has a $5 billion budget surplus from the
last fiscal year.
“Question 1 would impose
one of the largest tax hikes in
Massachusetts history with no
guarantee that spending will increase for either education or
transportation as a result of this
ill-conceived amendment,” Dan
Cence, a spokesman for the Coalition to Stop the Tax Hike
Amendment, said in a statement on Friday.
The coalition opposing Question 1 represents more than
1,000 homeowners, retirees,
small business owners, large
employers, and organizations
that represent more than
25,000 small businesses, Cence
said.
“When given the facts, voters
across the state join our Coalition in voting No on Question
1,” he said.
Two recent polls show the
measure has support. A poll last
month by Suffolk University/
Boston Globe/NBC10 Boston/
Telemundo found 58 percent of
500 likely voters would vote yes.
Another poll by MassINC Polling Group found 59 percent of
JOHN TLUMACKI/GLOBE STAFF
Supporters of Question 1 on Tuesday’s ballot canvassed for votes in Somerville Saturday.
voters back the new tax.
The effort to impose the new
tax has also received more campaign contributions than the
opposition, according to the
state Office of Campaign and
Political Finance
Supporters have raised more
than $27.6 million to pay for
their campaign, compared to
more than $14.1 million collected by the opposition, records
show.
Democratic Congresswoman
Ayanna Pressley spoke Saturday
afternoon at a rally supporting
Question 1 at the Boston Teachers Union in Dorchester.
“Human infrastructure is the
greatest investment we can
make,” she told the gathering.
“ There is not a deficit of resource, there is only one of empathy. We have the resources
and we have millionaires who
are not paying their fair share.
And that ends when we pass
Question 1.”
US Senators Elizabeth Warren and Edward J. Markey, as
well as their Democratic colleague, Andrea Campbell, a candidate for state attorney general, are also making public app e a ra n c e s t h i s w e e ke n d t o
support Question 1, according
to the campaign for the measure.
Question 1 supporters are also encouraging voters to back
Question 4, which would uphold a new law that allows immigrants without legal status to
apply for a Massachusetts driver’s license.
Wendy Carballo, 20, a college
sophomore who graduated from
Chelsea High School, told the
those attending the rally in Dorchester that young people need
the services that would be paid
for by Question 1.
“ Without enough school
funding, students like me often
lose their way because we didn’t
have enough teachers or mental
health support, or after-school
programs,” she said. “When we
don’t have those supports, it’s
easy to feel discouraged or even
hopeless.”
Joel Richards, who teaches
at Blackstone Elementary
School in the South End, shared
a story about an eighth-grade
student he encountered while
taking a bus to work. The student talked about cuts to sports
and after-school programs.
“I just imagined my own
children at a school, seeing the
things they enjoy going away
piece by piece,” he said.
Passing Question 1, Richards
said, would reverse that experience and provide more opportunity to students.
Walles, the Question 1 supporter who was canvassing in
Somerville, said homeowners
ask her whether the new tax
would affect their earnings if
they sell their home.
This takes some explaining,
she said, because homeowners
must estimate the capital gain,
which is calculated by substracting the home’s original purchase
price, the cost of any capital improvements made to the residence, and some fees associated
with the sale from the sale price.
The taxable amount is furthered
reduced by exemptions,
$500,000 for married couples
and $250,000 for single people.
“I bought my house when it
was still ‘Slummerville’ and I’m
not going to have to pay,” said
Walles, a social worker who purchased a three-family home in
Somerville in 1997. She said her
home’s assessed value now exceeds $1 million. “That’s my retirement too.”
On Saturday, the four voters
Walles spoke to in person were
receptive to Question 1. She put
in a pitch for voting yes on the
three other ballot questions,
which deal with dental insurance, alcohol sales, and driver’s
licenses for undocumented immigrants,
“Yes on all of them,” Walles
told Rebekah Pavelle during a
conversation on her doorstep.
A s Wa l l e s w a l k e d a w a y,
Pavelle thanked her for the advice.
Laura Crimaldi can be reached
at laura.crimaldi@globe.com.
Follow her on Twitter
@lauracrimaldi.
In Bristol sheriff ’s race, a challenger for Hodgson
uSHERIFF
Continued from Page B1
feat Hodgson, the state’s longest-serving sheriff, in Paul Heroux, the mayor of Attleboro.
“I almost want to talk about
his race more than the AG’s
race,” Democratic nominee for
state attorney general Andrea
Campbell said Saturday at a
campaign event for Heroux in
Fall River.
An internal poll released by
Heroux’s campaign found the
two are neck and neck.
“This is a winnable race,”
Heroux, told the crowd. “I want
to run a much more modern jail
system, a jail system that is actually going to help people.”
In the late 1990s, Hodgson
attracted national attention
when he introduced the use of
chain gangs, the Globe reported
at the time.
More recently, the sheriff volunteered inmates to help build a
wall on the country’s southern
border and faced accusations of
harsh treatment at an immigration detainment facility in Dartmouth for the Immigration and
Customs Enforcement Agency.
Last year the Biden administration ended the contact with
Hodgson over those complaints.
DEBEE TLUMACKI FOR THE BOSTON GLOBE
JONATHAN WIGGS/GLOBE STAFF
Paul Heroux was joined by Andrea Campbell (center) and
state Senator Diana DiZogilo at his Fall River rally.
Bristol County Sheriff Tom Hodgson held a get-out-the-vote
rally in Somerset.
A state commission report released in Januar y found he
spends just over $1,000 per inmate on reentry programs, a
third of what the next lowest
county spends. His jails account
for 25 percent of inmate suicides
in Massachusetts, but only 13
percent of the jail population,
the New England Center for Investigative Reporting found.
Hodgson called the criticisms
of his immigrant detention facility partisan political attacks, and
he pointed to repeated accredita-
never been a more important
time ... to reclaim the rule of law
in our communities and give the
people back the safety and security they rightfully deserve.”
Hodgson repeatedly accused
Heroux of wanting to “defund
the police” and said he doesn’t
have the requisite experience.
Heroux said he has never
wanted to defund the police and
that the sheriff’s office cannot reduce local police budgets. Heroux said he worked in the Philadelphia prison system and head-
ed the Massachusetts
Department of Correction research unit.
Though Hodgson casts himself as a lawman, that is not the
role of sheriffs in Massachusetts,
Heroux said. Unlike elsewhere,
sheriffs here run the jails and
don’t have a major law enforcement role.
Heroux said his top priorities
if elected would be an audit of
the suicide issue, working with
community groups to beef up reentry programs, and introduc-
Amanda McNamara
and Kyle Nocera
Marc Davis &
Frances Grimaldo
tion from the National Commission of Correctional Health Care
when asked about the suicides.
Speaking on the sidelines of a
rally with dozens of supporters
in Somerset on Friday evening,
Hodgson said he wants to expand inmates’ access to vocational schools so they can learn
trades, but mostly he focuses on
a more existential message.
“We have these progressive,
left-wing groups that are suggesting that the real victims are
the criminals,” he said. “There’s
Celebrations
WEDDINGS
ENGAGEMENTS
Laukien Wedding
June 4, 2022
Dr. Frank Laukien of Boston
& North Hampton, NH and
Ms. Tamra Thorne of Newbury,
MA were married June 4, 2022.
The ceremony & reception
was held at Galley Beach,
Nantucket, MA.
The couple exchanged vows,
surrounded by their young
children, family & friends.
Dr & Mrs. Laukien met on
Nantucket in 2016 and got
engaged on Nantucket in 2020;
the island holds many special
memories for the couple and
their children.
A Germany/Italy
honeymoon followed.
Thanks for all the kind and
loving thoughts sent our way!
Mary Eileen Lohan
Jessica K. Feiden photography
Ms. Donna Yin and Mr. James Lohan
Ms. Donna H. Yin and Sgt.
James M. Lohan, USMC were
engaged on October 4, 2022 at
the Mount Washington Hotel,
Bretton Woods, New Hampshire
under blue skies and surrounded
by the beautiful colors of the
White Mountains. Ms. Yin is the
daughter of Mrs. Thyda Jones
and Mr. Mark Jones of Tampa,
Florida. Mr. Lohan is the son
of Mrs. Mary Jane McKenna
Lohan and Mr. Brendan Lohan
of Lynnfield, Massachusetts. Ms.
Yin is a graduate Countryside
High School, Clearwater, FL
and of Temple University with
a BS in Chemistry. She is
employed by Aranta Bio. Mr.
Lohan is a graduate of St. John’s
Preparatory School, Danvers, MA
and attended Hofstra University
before joining the Marine Corps,
serving for five years. He is
employed by ElevateBio. They
met while working for another
company but were many miles
apart. The good fortune of work
email and the beautiful photo of
the bride- to- be on her email was
the beginning of an abiding love.
The couple presently reside in
Belmont with their furry “baby”
Hemsworth and look forward to
many happy and healthy years to
come.
Amanda J. McNamara,
daughter of William and Debra
McNamara of Weston, and Kyle
A. Nocera, son of Joseph and
Jeanne Nocera of Waltham,
are proud to announce their
engagement.
Amanda is a graduate of The
University of Vermont with a
BA in Art History and is now
employed by Toast, Boston.
Kyle is a graduate of
Bentley University with a BA
in Business Management. He
is employed by Buyers Edge
Platform, Waltham.
The couple lives in San
Diego, CA with their dog,
Winnie, and will be married in
Lincoln, MA in September of
2023.
Marc Davis and Frances
Grimaldo, both residents of
Cambridge, are pleased to
announce their engagement.
The couple met at and
graduated from the University
of California, Berkeley. Miss
Grimaldo is employed as a
Product Marketing Manager
at Aisera and Mr. Davis is a
graduate student researching
Quantum Computing at MIT.
The wedding date is to be
determined.
ing data collection to find out if
programs are working.
“[Hodgson] talks a really
good game, but he doesn’t actually have any evidence he’s keeping people safe,” he said.
The latest twist in the race
came last week when Hodgson
posted an ad online that some
have called antisemitic.
“Everyday cities such as New
York and Chicago are being taken over by violent criminals because politicians supported by
George Soros and his followers
don’t believe that criminals
should be in jail,” Hodgson narrates as ominous-looking blackand-white photos of Soros, a financier and philanthropist,
flash across the screen.
Two days after the posting,
the Jewish Community Relations Council of Boston tweeted
that “casting a Jewish individual
as a puppet master who manipulates national events for malign
purposes has the effect of mainstreaming antisemitic tropes &
giving support, however unwitting, to bona fide antisemites.”
Heroux called the ad an antisemitic dog whistle.
Hodgson bristles at the accusations, pointing to his appearances at American Israel Public
Affairs Committee events.
However, while listing his
concerns about Heroux on Friday, Hodgson re turned unprompted to Soros.
“[Heroux] really is being supported by the defund the police
movements, the George Soroses
of the world, funding organizations, Bloomberg,” he said, referring to former New York City
mayor Michael Bloomberg, who
is also Jewish.
Neither Soros nor Bloomberg
have given directly to Heroux’s
campaign, according to campaign finance reports. Hodgson’s
campaign said Bloomberg and
Soros have given to super PACs
supporting Democrats.
Heroux has also attracted
criticism. He appeared on Russia
Today as a Middle East expert
even after concerns were raised
that the channel serves as the
Kremlin’s propaganda arm, as
the Globe reported in 2018. Heroux said he cut ties with the
channel after learning it had registered as a foreign agent.
Hodgson pitches himself as a
one-man bulwark between Bristol County and bedlam brought
on by shadowy outsiders, be
they Beacon Hill Democrats, undocumented immigrants, gangs
that he says are taking over Fall
River, or national progressives
funded by two Jewish investors.
It’s a message that appeals to
some. “He’s a true American,”
said John Haran, a 72-year-old
Dartmouth resident, as he held a
sign for Hodgson Friday. “He’s
one of ours.”
To his supporters, Hodgson is
Bristol County’s lone ranger, and
he’s circling the wagons.
Alexander Thompson can be
reached at alexander.thompson
@globe.com.
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
Business
G l o b e
B7
THE COLOR OF MONEY | MICHELLE SINGLETARY
Many children being raised by grandparents face hunger
After Kathy Coleman and her
husband became the primary
caregivers to their six grandchildren in Baton Rouge, she found
a way to temper her hunger
pains.
She drank coffee.
Going without food became
a necessary trade-off to ensure
the children didn’t have to.
“I just couldn’t fathom eating
something that one of my babies needed,” said Coleman, director of the Grandparents Raising Grandchildren Information
Center of Louisiana. “You make
your coffee a little stronger.”
Eugene Vickerson also
stepped in to care for grandchildren — one 7 years old, the other 16 months — when they
came to live with him just as the
housing crisis hit. He had a
predatory mortgage with an adjustable rate, and soon his Atlanta home became unaffordable. For a time, until he could
get his lender to modify his
loan, he stopped paying the
mortgage, partly to ensure the
children were fed.
In households across the
country, many grandparents are
struggling to feed the children
in their care. And inflation has
only made that harder: The cost
of food has jumped 11.2% in the
past year, according to the September report on the consumer
price index released by the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Coleman experienced what
researchers call “food insecurity.” Such households are uncertain how to or unable to get
enough food to meet all of their
family’s needs, because they
don’t have enough money or
other resources.
The number of Americans
who fall into this category is
staggering: In 2021, about 34
million people lived in food-insecure households, Agriculture
Department data shows.
Food insecurity is far worse
for Americans who have taken
over the raising of their grandchildren than those who haven’t, according to a new report
MARIO TAMA/GETTY IMAGES
by Generations United, an organization dedicated to helping
what it calls “grandfamilies.”
I interviewed Coleman and
Vickerson for a panel discussion
on food insecurity. And they
both illustrated one figure in the
Generations United report that
resonated with me, having been
raised by my grandmother from
the time I was 4, along with four
siblings.
Roughly a quarter of grandparent-headed households experienced food insecurity between
2019 and 2020. That’s more
than twice the national rate.
The stories the caregivers
shared in the report are heart-
breaking.
“Sometimes people would
give us food that had been in
their refrigerator for two weeks,
but it was better than nothing,”
said a Wyoming woman who
raised two grandchildren.
“Someone gave us a bag of oranges and we ate nothing but
oranges for four days.”
One finding, in particular,
stood out: In 2019, only 42% of
low-income, grandparent-headed households with grandchildren younger than 18 participated in the USDA’s Supplemental Nutrition Assistance
Program, or SNAP.
There are a lot of reasons
these families don’t seek those
benefits.
Grandparents who responsibly accumulated assets don’t always meet the low-income eligibility in their state to qualify for
SNAP. About 46% of grandparents responsible for raising their
grandchildren are 60 or older.
“Children shouldn’t go hungry because their caregivers
were careful financially,” said
Donna Butts, the executive director of Generations United.
One way to improve access
to assistance would be to create
a “child-only” SNAP benefit
based on the needs of the child
as opposed to household in-
come, the report recommended.
Grandparents often aren’t
aware they qualify for federal
food assistance, because they
mistakenly believe they must
have legal custody of the children to qualify.
“I hear from the grandfamily
caregivers that they don’t want
to be a part of ‘the system,’”
Keith Lowhorne, vice president
of kinship with the Alabama
Foster and Adoptive Parents Association, said in the report.
“They worry that applying for
food and nutrition programs
would cause someone to come
and take the children away if
they don’t have legal custody, or
go after the parents for child
support, which would cause
problems.”
Unlike many other public
benefit programs, federal nutrition programs such as SNAP
don’t require caregivers to obtain legal custody to receive aid.
The Biden administration
held a summit on combating
hunger and later released a 44page report that included improving outreach and countering misconceptions about the
government’s food programs.
“We need to improve outreach for existing federal nutrition programs like SNAP and to
better reach more grandfamilies
and connect them to benefits
that they’re eligible for and
should be receiving,” said Alexandra Ashbrook, director of root
causes and specific populations
at the Food Research and Action
Center, which contributed data
to the report.
But there’s another reason
families don’t apply for SNAP
benefits: embarrassment.
My grandmother, Big Mama,
hated using food stamps, what
SNAP was previously called. It
wasn’t her fault my parents
failed at parenting. Nonetheless, she felt shame in asking for
help and would try to shop at
times when she was less likely
to see someone she knew.
She would try to slip the food
stamps to the cashier without
anyone in line behind her noticing. But even as a child, I could
see the judgmental glares she
received.
Eventually, she stopped reapplying for food stamps. The stigma was just too much for her.
Somehow she made do with the
money she had.
Whenever you may be
tempted to judge families facing
food insecurity and their need
for assistance, think about Coleman and her strong cups of coffee.
Michelle Singletary can be
reached at michelle.singletary
@washpost.com.
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Business
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G l o b e
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
TA L K I N G P O I N T S
T H E W E E K I N B US I N E S S
MEDICAL DEVICES
J & J to buy
Danvers
company for
$16.6 billion
MEDICAL DIAGNOSTICS
Thermo Fisher
to buy British
firm for $2.6
billion
Johnson & Johnson said Tuesday it will pay $16.6 billion for a
Danvers medical device firm that makes heart pumps, a deal
that sent the Massachusetts company’s stock soaring more than
50 percent. The health care products conglomerate will pay
$380 for each share of Abiomed, a premium of more than 50
percent over the closing price on Monday of $252.08. J&J will
also provide another $35 a share if certain commercial and clinical goals are met. J&J
said the acquisition
broadens the New
Brunswick, N.J.-based
company’s efforts to
treat cardiovascular
disease and, in particular, heart failure. That
condition occurs when
the heart muscle
doesn’t pump blood as
well as it should and is
the leading cause of
hospitalization in people over 65 years old, according to the
Food and Drug Administration. About 650,000 new cases are
diagnosed in the United States each year. Abiomed makes Impella heart pumps, small devices with catheters that are threaded through arteries into the heart to help keep blood moving
through the body. The pumps have been used to treat patients
in the United States since 2008, according to the company. The
firm has shown explosive growth recently, with sales jumping
22 percent to exceed $1 billion in its most recent fiscal year.
J&J, which has more than 140,000 employees worldwide, said
in November that it was splitting its consumer products business from its pharmaceutical and medical device operations,
creating two publicly traded companies. Abiomed was founded
in 1981 with the goal of developing the world’s first artificial
heart, according to a company history. The company turned its
focus to heart and lung recovery with the acquisition and development of technologies such as Impella and the OXY-1 System,
a device that adds oxygen to blood and removes carbon dioxide.
In 2018, Abiomed agreed to pay $3.1 million to the federal government to settle allegations that sales representatives violated
an antikickback statute to get doctors and nurses to use the
firm’s heart pumps on Medicare patients between 2012 and
2015. — JONATHAN SALTZMAN
Thermo Fisher Scientific said Monday it will buy the British
specialty diagnostics firm Binding Site in a deal valued at $2.6
billion. Waltham-based Thermo Fisher, the largest Massachusetts company by stock market value at more than $197 billion,
will take over the firm headquartered in Birmingham, England,
in an all-cash deal led by the private equity firm Nordic Capital.
Serving clinicians and laboratory professionals worldwide,
Binding Site provides diagnostic tests and instruments to improve the diagnosis and management of blood cancers and immune system disorders. It has more than 1,100 employees globally, Thermo Fisher said. Binding Site’s business has been growing about 10 percent a year and is on track to generate more
than $220 million in revenue this year, Thermo Fisher said.
Marc N. Casper, Thermo Fisher’s chief executive, said Binding
Site is particularly well respected for diagnosing and monitoring multiple myeloma, a rare blood cancer that affects plasma
cells. Roughly 35,000 new US cases are expected to be diagnosed this year, according to the American Cancer Society.
Thermo Fisher, which makes scientific instruments and helps
manufacture drugs, has made a series of multibillion-dollar acquisitions in recent years. Last year it announced it was paying
$17.4 billion for PPD, a North Carolina company that helps
drug makers run clinical trials. In August, Thermo Fisher officially opened a 300,000-square-foot manufacturing plant in
Plainville that underscored the firm’s investment in the growing
field of gene therapy. The company made a major commitment
to gene therapy in 2019 when it bought Brammer Bio, a Cambridge manufacturer of viral vectors, for about $1.7 billion.
Thermo Fisher employs more than 100,000 people worldwide.
That includes at least 3,500 employees in Massachusetts at 15
sites in Cambridge, Waltham, Lexington, Franklin, and nine
other cities and towns, said the company. — JONATHAN
SALTZMAN
STARTUPS
AI Proteins has
$18.2 million in
seed capital
LABOR
Food workers
at Logan
threaten strike
Chris Bahl is a self-proclaimed protein geek. He’s spent the better part of 10 years studying the intricate structures of proteins
— complex molecular machines responsible for nearly all facets
of life, from metabolism to movement. His goal was to create
completely synthetic proteins using computer programs, and to
open up a new avenue for making medicines. His work, which
relies heavily on recent advances in artificial intelligence and
synthetic biology, had taken him from one prestigious protein
lab in Seattle to another one in Boston. But last fall, after a
stream of queries from drug companies hoping to partner with
him, Bahl decided to cancel his six research grants, close shop
at his four-year-old academic lab, and launch a biotech startup
to focus on making protein therapies full time. After a year of
working in stealth mode, Bahl’s startup, AI Proteins, emerged
on Thursday with $18.2 million in seed funding led by venture
capital firms Cobro Ventures and Lightchain Capital. The money will help the startup, where Bahl is president and chief scientific officer, refine its protein creation technology and further
progress on a dozen experimental therapies it’s already developing for immune diseases and cancer. Lightchain, a St. Louis
firm that invests in life science and software companies, was
shocked by how quickly the startup could design and optimize
the potential drugs. The startup is the latest entrant to a large
and growing field of biotech firms making bold and often untested claims about how artificial intelligence and machine
learning will help them make better drugs more quickly and at
lower cost. “There’s no question that this space is incredibly
overhyped,” said Peter Sorger, a professor of systems biology at
Harvard Medical School. “Investors want to imagine that drug
discovery is going to be easy now, and that will never be true.”
But if artificial intelligence can help make drugs even 10 percent better or faster, “that is really meaningful,” he added. —
RYAN CROSS
Leaders of a hospitality union representing around 400 concession workers at Boston Logan Airport warned of a holiday-season strike Wednesday in a meeting that gathered local politicians and officials from UNITE HERE Local 26. Employees who
work behind counters and in kitchens or lounges at 30 outlets
at Logan say they are struggling with severe understaffing issues and low pay. They’re employed by six companies: Air Ventures, Delaware North, HMS Host, SSP, Lufthansa Lounge, and
United Club. Carlos Aramayo, president of Local 26, said in an
interview that the workers account for about half of the food
service employees at the airport. “There is what I would call a
labor crisis at Logan Airport in concessions right now,” he said.
“They’re short dozens and dozens and dozens of people.” Workers want raises and more affordable health insurance woven into the next contract, but none of the companies have reached
agreements with the union since the previous contacts expired
between January and September of this year. Even with the
busy holiday travel season fast approaching, Aramayo said that
bargaining has been like “cold molasses, dragging on extremely
slowly.” The possibility of a strike is growing. “We’re not going
on strike tomorrow,” he added. “But it’s become a very serious
discussion.”— DITI KOHLI
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NOVEMBER 6, 2022
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
Metro
G l o b e
B9
GlobeLocal
World War II
Vietnam War
Iraq War
Thomas
J. Fahey Jr.
Thomas
J. Fahey III
Mikaela
(Fahey) Felcher
ª Served in Army, staff
sergeant, 1943-45
ª Stationed in Italy
ª Served in Air Force, staff
sergeant, 1972-77
ª Stationed in Thailand 1972-73,
Okinawa 1974-75
ª Served in Army, National Guard,
master sergeant, 1998-2021
ª Stationed in Iraq and Kuwait
2003-04, 2005-06, 2010-11
Thomas J. Fahey III with partner Kathy
Mayne. He said when he got back, “We
were told not to wear our uniforms.”
Mikaela Fahey and husband Michael
Felcher both served in the military. She
said, “I’m grateful we had support.”
Thomas J. Fahey Jr in 2014. When he
returned from Europe, he felt the
warm embrace of a grateful nation.
Vs y
Back on the home front
For three generations of veterans in one family, returning to the US meant something different
A
BY RICH FAHEY | GL OBE CORRESPONDENT
s we prepare to mark Veterans Day Nov. 11, it is easy to forget that US servicemen and women returning home from wars have not always received a warm welcome.
If the public is divided over the conflict — bitterly so, as in the case of the Vietnam War or to a lesser degree, the war in Iraq — there
may be no parades or celebrations such as those the nation bestowed on returning veterans from World Wars I and II.
My father, the late Thomas J. Fahey Jr., was a staff sergeant in the Army and a gunner on a B-17 bomber during World War II.
His son, my older brother Thomas J. Fahey III, served in the Air Force starting at the end of the Vietnam War. His daughter, Mikaela
(Fahey) Felcher, served in the Army and the National Guard in Iraq and Kuwait at various times during the 2003-2011 conflict.
Coming home was a different experience for all of them.
Thomas J. Fahey Jr., who passed away in 2017 at the age of 91, enlisted after graduating from Milton High and was a member of
the 342nd Bomb Squadron, 97th Bomb Group, of the 15th Army Air Force. He was shot down during a mission over Croatia but
survived, and the partisans in the area rescued him and got him back to his unit in Italy.
Flying missions in the B-17 — nicknamed by its crew “The Flying Flak Hole” — was a harrowing experience. “We cruised at altitudes between 27,000 and 30,000 feet,” he wrote in his self-published book, “and the temperatures in the plane got down to
60 below — and lower, since that’s as low as the gauge went.”
Fahey felt the warm embrace of a grateful nation in several ways when he returned to the US.
One was using the expanded GI Bill to get a
mortgage that allowed him to move his growing
family into a new home in Randolph.
He recalled both small and large gestures of
gratitude that came his way, including the times
he entered bars in uniform while still under 21
and was not questioned. “The owner would say
if you were old enough to wear a uniform and
fight and die for your country, you were old
enough to drink a beer,” he said.
He worked for the MBTA for many years and
on weekends delivered a truckload of Sunday
Globes to cities and towns all over New England.
We spent our summers in a cottage near a lake
in Hanson, and he loved the water.
My dad was a celebrated storyteller and decided to preserve his war experience. My siblings
and I eventually helped him turn his story into
“One Man’s World War II Journal” — a book coordinated by my daughter, Meredith Fahey — as
a gift to our family. He went on cable TV and
spoke to veterans’ groups, and to the day of his
death, he felt appreciated.
His son, Thomas J. Fahey III, 73, grew up in
Randolph and was a longtime Stoughton resident who now lives in Hawaii. He chose to enlist
in the Air Force after being drafted in 1972, and
as a staff sergeant spent a year in Thailand and
More
VETERANS, Page B12
NEWTON
SEARCH
COMMITTEE
EXPANDS
FIELD GUIDE
LEARNING TO LIVE
WITH COYOTES
three two-month deployments in Okinawa.
“We were sent into the war zone right out of
tech school, the first class since World War II to
do that,” he said. That meant learning a lot of
things on the fly.
While in Thailand, he and his crew supported US military aerial operations that included
Operation Linebacker II, a large-scale bombing
of North Vietnam in December 1972.
“We worked 12-hour shifts seven days a week
during it,” he said.
When returning home to his unit’s base in
California between deployments, he was warned
to lay low.
THE ARGUMENT
The wily wild dogs will eat anything
and go anywhere — including your
backyard — for a meal.
Should Massachusetts eliminate the
subminimum wage for restaurant workers?
B10
B10
17 will now
serve on panel to
recommend new school
superintendent.
B13
B10
Metro
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
G l o b e
Voices
Don Lyman
THE ARGUMENT
FIELD GUIDE
Should Massachusetts
eliminate the
subminimum wage for
restaurant workers?
Learn how to live with coyotes
because they’re here to stay
Vote in our online poll at
www.bostonglobe.com/globelocal.
A
couple of years ago while
walking along a hiking trail on
a steep hillside in the Middlesex Fells, I heard a commotion
up ahead. It sounded like a
large animal running through the dried
leaves of the forest floor. I figured maybe I
had spooked a deer.
When I rounded the turn in the trail, I
was surprised to see a coyote chasing a
woodchuck in a rocky area. It looked like a
scene from a wildlife documentary, but
there it was, in real life, about 30 feet from
where I was standing.
The chase only lasted a minute or so,
then the woodchuck escaped into its burrow. The coyote continued sniffing around
for several minutes, trying to find its lost
prey. Eventually, the coyote gave up and
just sat for a few more minutes panting and
catching its breath before scrambling up
the hillside and disappearing into the
woods.
I had never seen a coyote in the Fells,
and it was quite an exciting experience.
There are an estimated 10,000 to 12,000
coyotes in Massachusetts, said Dave Wattles, black bear and furbearer biologist for
the Massachusetts Division of Fisheries and
Wildlife. They appear everywhere in the
state, except Nantucket and Martha’s Vineyard.
The first confirmed documentation of
coyotes in Massachusetts occurred in the
1950s, according to Wattles.
“By 1980, they were in two-thirds of the
state and on the Cape,” said Wattles. “In the
‘90s, they were everywhere.”
This pattern played out in New England
and across the eastern United States, Wattles said.
“Coyotes are superabundant animals
throughout the US,” said Wattles, “and they
have an enormous ability to adapt to a wide
variety of habitats and food.”
Wattles said there are large amounts of
forest and wetlands in Massachusetts, even
in urban areas — cemeteries, golf courses,
abandoned lots, strips of forest — knitting
together a combination of habitats that
coyotes can use. And there’s lots of natural
habitat in the suburbs.
Coyotes breed in winter, from January
to March, and give birth in April or May to
anywhere from two to a dozen or so pups,
Wattles said. They dig holes in the ground
under such protection as rock piles and
logs to use as dens where they give birth
and raise their pups. It’s the only time they
truly use a den.
“MassWildlife gets calls in the autumn
because the pups are dispersing, and people see more coyotes,” said Wattles.
MassWildlife also gets calls from people
when they hear coyotes howling because
they are concerned about possible attacks.
But howling is just their way of communi-
Yes
John Tompkins
DAVID L. RYAN/GLOBE STAFF/FILE 2012
There are now an estimated 10,000 to 12,000 coyotes in Massachusetts —
everywhere in the state except Nantucket and Martha’s Vineyard.
cating.
“They talk to members of their family
group, and to other family groups to let
them know they have a territory,” said Wattles. “They’re excited when they get together, when they make a kill, and so forth.”
Coyotes mate for life, said Wattles, but
will take another mate if their original
mate dies. Surprisingly, coyotes only live
about 3 to 3½ years in the wild.
Causes of mortality include being killed
by people, especially by motor vehicle collisions, said Wattles. Coyotes can be hunted
from the fall through March.
“Hunters take about 550 coyotes a year
in Massachusetts, which has no impact on
the state’s population,” said Wattles.
Eastern coyotes resemble medium-sized
dogs, but have longer, denser fur and pointed, erect ears, according to MassWildlife.
They have long, bushy tails and grizzled
gray fur, but color can vary. Females typically weigh 33-40 pounds, males 34-47
pounds. Some weigh over 50 pounds, said
Wattles.
“Eastern coyotes have a mix of coyote,
wolf, and dog DNA — 65-80 percent western coyote, 10-25 percent wolf, and 8-15
percent domestic dog,” said Wattles.
Coyotes are mostly active at dawn, dusk,
and at night, and prey mainly on rodents
and small mammals such as mice, voles,
woodchucks, and rabbits, said Wattles.
“They’ll also take sick, injured, and
abandoned deer fawns in early spring, as
well as grasshoppers and crickets in summer,” said Wattles. “Eggs of ground-nesting
birds, like wild turkey, are also eaten. And
they’ll eat apples and berries in summer
and fall.”
Coyotes can take down adult deer, but
it’s not common, said Wattles, and likely involves injured or compromised deer, such
as animals in deep snow. They often hunt
individually, but there are reports of them
hunting in small packs of two or more.
Coyotes also feed on human-associated
foods such as compost, garbage, and birdseed, said Wattles. There may be an increase in coyotes eating human foods in
winter because there’s less natural food
available. This summer’s drought probably
didn’t affect coyotes, because they eat a variety of foods.
“Coyotes regularly take pets in Massachusetts,” said Wattles. “Fifteen to 25 a year
are reported to MassWildlife. But it’s more
common than that. A lot of coyote attacks
on pets are not reported. It’s almost a daily
occurrence in Massachusetts.”
“Keep cats inside,” Wattles advised. “And
keep dogs on a leash. You can prevent attacks by being with your dog.”
Wattles said coyote attacks on pets, including large dogs, increase in winter months.
“January, February, and March is coyote
breeding season,” said Wattles, “and coyotes may see large dogs as competitors.”
Coyotes occasionally attack people.
“Thirty people have been bitten by coyotes
in Massachusetts since 1998,” said Wattles.
Many coyote bites are due to people
feeding them, or people defending their
dogs. “Never feed coyotes or any wildlife,”
said Wattles. “People providing food to animals is the main driver for conflict.”
Wattles recommended acting aggressively toward coyotes if you want to scare
them away from your yard.
“Come out running and screaming like a
crazy person,” he said. “Yell, blow your
horn, throw small pebbles and sticks.”
Send your questions about nature and
wildlife in the suburbs to
donlymannature@gmail.com.
Emily Sweeney
BLOTTER TALES
Injured hawk saved from an illegal trap
ing at Stodder’s Neck state
park. The caller told police that
someone “threw a dog toy” and
tried to hit him in the face. Police then received a call from
another person at the park who
said a man “tried to swing his
fist at him to punch him” and
he responded by throwing a
“soft squishy toy at him.” And
the cause for this (alleged)
ruckus? According to the log
entry, it was an “argument over
a parking space.”
Every day, police officers respond to reports of all sorts of
events and nonevents, most of
which never make the news.
Here is a sampling of lesserknown — but no less noteworthy — incidents from police log
books (a.k.a. blotters) in our
suburbs.
INJURED HAWK RESCUED
On Sept. 27, Norfolk Animal
Control Officer Hilary Cohen
shared a tale of a call she received just before her shift was
over for the day. Her help was
needed to capture a hawk that
was injured at a business off
Route 1 in Foxborough. Cohen
grabbed her equipment and
when she arrived at the scene,
she found some employees
keeping an eye on the hawk
from a distance. They told her
he couldn’t fly because he was
caught in a leg-hold trap. After
several tries, Cohen managed to
net the hawk on the far side of a
river and carry him back to her
truck. After securing the bird in
a cage, she handed him over to
the Foxborough animal control
officer, who brought him to
Tufts Wildlife Clinic in Grafton
for treatment. “Folks, leg hold
traps are not only illegal, they
are deadly dangerous,” Cohen
wrote on Facebook. “Animals
suffer and perish attached to
these snap closures. This guy
has a 2 foot chain dragging off
NORFOLK ANIMAL CONTROL
Hilary Cohen rescued this injured hawk in Foxborough.
the trap that could have easily
been caught up on branches.
Imagine if this was a human
foot or hand stuck in this? I
come across a call every few
years for leg hold traps and it is
horrifying to see them in action. Please, if you see a leg hold
trap anywhere call an ACO, police, Environmental Police, etc.
They should NOT be set anywhere as they are an inhumane
device. Thankfully this hawk
had great people trying to help
and he’ll get great help from
Tufts Wildlife.”
WHO’LL BE SORRY?
At 7:32 p.m. on Sept. 21,
Watertown police received a report that four packages were
delivered to a local home.
When the resident checked, he
saw the name on the package
was “Yul Be Sorry.” The packages arrived at 3 p.m. that day
and they contained rapid
COVID-19 testing kits. Police
notified the US Postal Service
about the incident and gave
them the tracking numbers for
the packages. Was it a prank?
Or some kind of scam? We
asked USPS spokesman Steve
Doherty about it, and he said
because the sender wasn’t asking for money or anything, it
may have been a prank or some
kind of “inside joke.”
DISTURBANCE AT THE DOG PARK
At 9:20 a.m. on Oct. 13,
Hingham police received a 911
call about a disturbance unfold-
SPIDER SIGHTING
At 12:12 p.m. on Oct. 7,
Hingham police answered a
rather unusual call from the
bathing beach on Otis Street. A
woman had called police to
alert them that there was a
jumping spider near the beach,
and wanted someone to take a
look at it. According to the log
entry, she was concerned because she had been bitten by a
spider a month before and had
become sick. She said another
woman also was sitting nearby
and saw a jumping spider, and
she killed it. The animal control
officer responded, checked all
the bushes in that location, and
couldn’t find any spiders.
Emily Sweeney can be reached
at emily.sweeney@globe.com.
Follow her on Twitter
@emilysweeney and on
Instagram @emilysweeney22.
No
Jessica Muradian
Member of Boston area
chapter of Restaurant
Opportunities Centers United;
works at restaurant in
Sandwich; New Bedford
resident
Director of Government
Affairs, Massachusetts
Restaurant Association;
MetroWest resident
I am 62 years old. Since
1976, I have been working in
restaurants. At 14, I got my
first job as a dishwasher. I
was beyond proud when I got
$37 in my pocket, after working long hours for a week. I
thought I was rich!
Fast forward 46 years,
and I am now a kitchen manager at an Italian restaurant
on Route 130 in Sandwich.
But for many restaurant
workers, wages have not significantly changed in more
than three decades. Tipped
workers in Massachusetts are
still paid $6.15 per hour; and
worse, $2.13 per hour in 16
states.
That’s why it is important
for Massachusetts to eliminate the subminimum wage
— the lower minimum wage
for tipped workers. Every
worker — most particularly
servers and other front-ofthe-house workers — needs to
be paid at least the full minimum wage for every hour of
work, plus tips on top. Period.
Tips are not guaranteed, but
your electric bill, car insurance, and rent are!
Over the years, I have seen
and been through a lot. I’m
the youngest in my family,
and my parents worked really
hard — especially my father
who was often assigned to the
graveyard shift — just to
make ends meet for their six
boys. So I know how every
penny earned could go a long
way for hard-working families. I’m not currently a
tipped worker, but having
been one in the past, I have
experienced firsthand the
struggle of relying on tips to
survive.
But there are restaurants
that only want to fill their
own pockets. And if you don’t
work for large restaurants, it
also is unlikely that you
would receive paid leave and
health insurance benefits.
This is a race and gender
equality issue, as the majority
of restaurant workers — in
my experience — are people
of color, immigrants, and
women. This is also an
economic issue, because restaurant jobs in general are
very low-paying compared
with those in other industries.
In order for us to make the
restaurant industry thrive —
and to see more people who
would like to work in
restaurants again — things
definitely need to change:
Eliminate the subminimum
wage now. We will be able to
lift workers out of poverty,
help businesses prosper, mitigate cases of wage theft and
harassment, and grow the
economy.
All workers should earn
minimum wage, and they do.
The highest-paid employee in
any restaurant is the tipped
employee, frequently averaging $20, $30, and sometimes
even $50 per hour.
If you are like any of the
thousands of restaurant guests
that dine in one of Massachusetts’ full-service restaurants
each year, you are adding a
gratuity of 18-30 percent when
the final bill comes. This is not
a discussion about the minimum wage, but rather about a
compensation model.
The beauty of the tip credit
— in which tips are counted toward a portion of their full
$14.25-per-hour minimum
wage — is that the server is
guaranteed to make minimum
wage. This is precisely why
many people choose employment as a server or bartender.
Federal and state law require
employers to make up the difference for any hours worked
where the employee’s earnings
— including tips — fall below
minimum wage. While those
circumstances are rare, servers
have peace of mind knowing
they are leaving work with a
minimum hourly wage.
The tip credit allows restaurants to staff multiple employees in a busy dining room. A
restaurant owner can employ
more than two full-time waitstaff employees for the same
hourly rate as one minimumwage employee. This is a win
for tipped employees because
they’re the highest compensated employees in the restaurant, a win for the guest who is
getting a full-service experience, and a win for the restaurant operator who can employ
as many people as possible to
ensure a smooth operation.
The proposal to require employers to pay tipped workers
the full minimum wage is not
coming from servers, but from
activists outside the restaurant
industry. We’ve heard from
countless servers imploring us
to ensure their tips are protected.
During a time where employers continue to struggle to
find employees — especially
for in-person work — we
shouldn’t be changing compensation models. Restaurants
are battling supply chain issues and inflation, not to mention rising credit card fees. The
restaurant industry is an industry of pennies, but these
are dollar decisions. As a restaurant owner can only pay so
much in labor costs, eliminating the tip credit would only
transfer money from a truly
deserving cook or dishwasher
to the server or bartender who
already is making the most
money in the restaurant.
As told to Globe correspondent John Laidler. To suggest a topic,
please contact laidler@globe.com.
abcde
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1 Exchange Place, Suite 201,
Boston, MA 02109-2132
EDITORIAL
ADVERTISING
Editor Marcia Dick
marcia.dick@globe.com
Carolyn Sullivan
carolyn.sullivan@globe.com
617-281-5633
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
Metro
G l o b e
B11
COMMUNITY NEWS
BROOKLINE
Town starts
free clothing,
textile pickup
Brookline’s Department of
Public Works has announced a
new free service for residents to
recycle old clothes and textiles.
The program allows residents to request their unwanted
clothes and textiles be picked up
from their homes on Saturdays
by Helpsy, a textile collection
company, according to a statement.
Katie Weatherseed,
Brookline’s zero waste program
manager, said in the statement
the town and Helpsy “share a
commitment to keep clothing
out of our landfills, and give
clothing the longest life possible” through recycling.
“We are thrilled to begin this
partnership with Helpsy so that
we may combine our efforts to
keep unwanted textiles from incineration and reduce greenhouse gas emissions,” Weatherseed said.
In Brookline, textile pickups
will take place on Saturdays between 7 a.m. and 5 p.m., and
residents can schedule one by
visiting www.helpsy.co/
brooklinema or calling 800244–6350.
Any items left for pickup
should be placed in a closed bag
and left by the curb. Helpsy will
accept donations in any type of
bag, so long as the items are dry
and clean, the statement said.
Residents can also drop off
clothing, shoes, and textiles at
two Helpsy drop-off boxes at
815 Newton St., across from
Skyline Park. Items should be
bagged and placed inside the
bins.
The Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection recently expanded its waste
disposal ban, which now prohibits textiles from being disposed
of in the trash, according to the
department. Instead, these
items have to be recycled, the
department said on its website.
JOHN HILLIARD
CA N TO N
Middle school
project gets key
nod from state
The Massachusetts School
Building Authority has moved
Canton’s Galvin Middle School
project a step closer to getting
built.
The authority, which helps finance public school construction across the state, voted
unanimously on Oct. 26 to ask
Canton to start the feasibility
phase of the proposal, which includes choosing an architect and
developing and evaluating alternative designs. The process usually takes about two years.
“We are thrilled to continue
to move forward in the MSBA
process,” Canton Superintendent Derek Folan said in a statement. “This is great news for
Canton and the school community. Funding for these projects
is highly competitive, and to be
chosen to enter this next phase
reflects not only the great need
that exists for this project, but
also the hard work of so many
individuals whose passion and
dedication for (Canton Public
Schools) is unwavering.”
The Galvin Middle School,
which serves about 700 students
in grades 6 through 8, opened in
1971 and was last renovated in
2002. It is the only middle
school in the community.
JOHANNA SELTZ
M I LTO N
Schools head
on paid leave
exits the job
The Milton School Committee unanimously accepted the
resignation of Superintendent
James Jette — effective Nov. 4 —
saying it was a mutually agreed
upon decision.
Jette has been on paid administrative leave since July following his arrest on a domestic
violence charge. The charge was
dropped in August and the case
dismissed, according to the
School Committee.
In a letter to the school community, Committee Chair Ada
Rosmarin praised Jette and said
he and committee members
agreed that his resignation was
“in the best interests of everyone
involved and affords Mr. Jette
the opportunity to pursue a new
chapter in his distinguished career.”
Jette was with the Milton
public schools for 26 years, including eight as principal of Milton High School. He took over as
superintendent during the pandemic “providing steady, courageous leadership during two
years of disruption and uncertainty,” Rosmarin wrote.
Acting Superintendent Janet
Sheehan will continue in her job
through January while the
School Committee conducts a
search for a new superintendent. Sheehan had retired from
the Milton schools but stepped
in when Jette was placed on
leave.
“I join the School Committee
in thanking Mr. Jette for his 26
years of dedicated service to the
Milton Public Schools and wish
him the very best in the future,”
Sheehan wrote in her blog on
Oct. 27.
JOHANNA SELTZ
G LO U C E ST E R
Effort made to
link seniors
with services
Gloucester has launched an
initiative to help older residents
better meet their health and
safety needs while also keeping
active.
The new program is a
collaboration between the
Health Department and the
Police Department’s Community
Impact Unit.
Officials said the goal is to
provide seniors easier access to
resources from governmental
agencies and community
organizations to address
personal health and safety
challenges.
The program kicked off in
October with the start of a
series of presentations at
which Health Department staff
and the Community Impact
Unit discuss the services they
offer. In addition, police
detectives talk about Internet
and phone scams that often
target seniors.
Future activities could
include trips to local service
organizations, visits to the
YMCA to try an exercise class,
social events, bowling, and
observing court trials.
“This community has a
strong history of caring for
one another across
generational lines, and we
want to preserve that culture
for generations to come,”
Health Director Mary Ellen
Rose said.
For more information,
contact Rose at 978-325-5268
or mrose@gloucester-ma.gov.
JOHN LAIDLER
MALDEN
Two nonprofits
bolstered by
ARPA grants
Drawing from funds it is
receiving from the 2021
American Rescue Plan Act,
the city of Malden awarded a
grant of $50,000 to the Chinese Cultural Connection and
one of $25,000 to the Food
Drive.
Both awards were
recommended by the city’s
ARPA Subcommittee on NonProfit Support and approved by
Mayor Gary Christenson.
The Chinese Cultural
Connection works to promote
intercultural harmony in the
city through its programs and
resources. The grant will help
the group meet a large increase
in demand for its services that
resulted from the COVID-19
pandemic.
Founded during the
pandemic, the Melrose-based
Food Drive collects surplus or
donated foods in the region and
provides it to local pantries and
other programs that serve
people in need.
The program to date has
delivered over 50 tons of food to
Malden residents through
organizations that include
Bread of Life, Housing Families,
and the Malden Warming
Center.
JOHN LAIDLER
Q U I N CY
Costs soar for
new public
safety building
The new public safety building in Quincy will cost $23 million more than anticipated because of what officials described
as “hyper escalation” of material
and labor costs.
If the City Council approves
the extra money, the total cost
for the project would be $143
million, officials said. A council
vote is scheduled for Nov. 21.
The council first took up the
cost overrun at its Oct. 17 meeting and referred the issue to its
finance committee. The council
had approved building the fourstory, 118,000-square-foot
building at the intersection of
Southern Artery and Broad
Street in 2021.
The building will house the
police station, administrative offices for the fire department, a
firearm training range, and a
COMMUNITY NEWS, Page B13
B12
Metro
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
G l o b e
SOUTH OF BOSTON
One family, three contrasting returns from serving in wars
Veterans are back on the ice
for new Quincy College team
By Daniel Kool
GLOBE CORRESPONDENT
Three Massachusetts veterans and one National Guardsman are among those on Quincy College’s inaugural hockey
team, which joined the Collegiate Hockey Federation’s New
England Independent Conference this season.
Greg Simeone, 27, of Milton,
Brendan Cabey, 26, from Westwood, and Robbie Cameron, 26,
and John Early, 22 — both from
Quincy — are among 21 members of the school’s ne west
team, the Granite. After a slow
start, the team nabbed its first
win Oct. 30, taking down Nichols College, 7-6.
Quincy College tapped longtime junior hockey coach Kyle
Robertson to lead its new team.
Matt Gibbons, varsity coach at
North Quincy High School,
came on as assistant coach.
Robertson said the team’s
military men have taken a natural leadership position among
their teammates, some of whom
are first-year students fresh out
of high school.
“ They ’re providing the
young guys great leadership
and, I’m sure, some great stories
in the locker room,” Robertson
said. “There’s definitely a lot of
character on the team.”
He recalled a pep talk given
by Simeone, a former Marine,
during a hard-fought game
against Babson College.
“The boys just needed a little
bump. I was just getting them
fired up,” Simeone said. “I told
them we need to keep our heads
up.”
Simeone said he and his
teammates developed a strong
rapport during preseason training, despite the nearly 10-year
age difference between the oldest and youngest players.
J. KIELY JR./LIGHTCHASER PHOTOGRAPHY
Brendan Cabey, John Early, Greg Simeone, and Robert
Cameron all play for Quincy College’s new hockey team.
He said his biggest hurdle
has been just getting back into
the mind-set of playing competitive hockey. When Simeone
graduated high school in 2014,
he assumed that was the last
time he’d lace up his skates.
“It was a huge culture shock
going back into all the drills and
stuff,” Simeone said. “After
about a week of figuring out
how to actually run drills, how
to be a player, and how to actually practice as a team, we started getting it down and it started
jelling a lot better.”
Cabey said he holds onto the
high values of collaboration and
communication instilled by his
time as a Marine.
“What I said when I enlisted
was ‘Oh, it’s like being on the
hockey team again,’” Cabey said,
laughing. “And now that I’m out
and playing hockey again, it’s
like being in the military again.”
For National Guardsman
Early, the season is something
of a homecoming. A Quincy native, Early grew up playing for
the city’s youth hockey teams —
cutting up the same ice he does
with the college team.
“All the memories come up
from the past, and it’s good to
be back there,” Early said. “I
love that rink.”
In high school, he played under Gibbons, who personally invited him to join the new college
team. Fitting another activity
into his tight schedule was a
“long shot” at first, Early said,
but the opportunity to play
competitively again was enough
motivation to make it work.
Cameron, another Quincy local who served in the Navy, said
he was proud to play hockey in
his city again. Cameron also
played under Gibbons before
enlisting and said that connection is part of what drew him to
the Granite.
“I woke up to a text from
him, probably like six months
ago, and he was like ‘Hey, do
you want to play college hockey?’” Cameron said. “Yeah, of
course.”
Daniel Kool can be reached at
daniel.kool@globe.com. Follow
him on Twitter @dekool01.
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uVETERANS
Continued from Page B9
“We were told not to wear
our uniforms when returning to
California,” he said.
He had heard from other soldiers — and seen on TV — people
spitting at soldiers in uniform
returning to their bases.
Fahey recalled there were no
parades, no brass bands, no welcoming committees. And very
few choruses of “Thank you for
your service.”
His experience jibed with
many of his fellow veterans.
Many Americans came to see the
Vietnam conflict as an unjust
war, and the number of US combat deaths — approximately
58,220 — was far too high, and
the war’s unpopularity just grew
over time.
In a 2019 essay on the History.com website, Dante A. Ciampaglia cited other possible reasons Vietnam vets didn’t return
to open arms.
One was the sheer length of
the conflict: from 1964 to 1973,
the longest war until Afghanistan overtook it (2001–2021).
That meant servicemen — usually on one-year tours — were constantly coming and going, instead of being demobilized en
masse as at the end of World
Wars I and II.
Because the y came to be
identified with the first American war abroad that was lost, Ciampaglia found Vietnam vets
who said they were discriminated against when it came to hiring, and others who found their
veterans’ benefits woefully lacking.
Vietnam vet and author Jerry
Lembke also noted, “You don’t
have parades for soldiers coming
home from a war they lost.”
In his essay, Ciampaglia also
cited popular culture, the stereotype of the broken, homeless
Vietnam vet that began to take
hold thanks to films like “The
Deer Hunter” (1978), “Coming
Home” (1978), and “First Blood”
(1982).
After leaving the service,
Thomas J. Fahey Jr. returned to
Stoughton, earned a college degree, went to work at the MBTA,
and helped raise four children.
He and his wife Gale later divorced.
He realized a dream later in
life when he purchased a 31-foot
sailboat named Andante in
2005. A skilled sailor, in 2006 —
along with partner Kathy Mayne
and their dog Sasha — he completed a 4,000-mile round trip
on the Intracoastal Waterway
between Englewood, Fla., and
Plymouth.
Thomas’s daughter, Mikaela
(Fahey) Felcher, 43, who grew
up in Stoughton, enlisted in the
Army in 1998, became a helicopter mechanic, and was stationed
in Iraq and Kuwait in 2003 as
part of a crew supporting the
Boeing CH-47 Chinook. It was a
time when women could only
serve supporting roles in combat
areas.
In Januar y 2004, she re turned from a base in Germany
and joined the Massachusetts
National Guard. In 2005, she assumed full-time duties with the
Guard, as a technical inspector
supporting the Black Hawk helicopter. Her stint included deployments to Kuwait in 2005-06
and 2010-11.
Her first deployment, when
she started in Kuwait and moved
up through Iraq during the invasion, was the toughest.
“There was nothing there,”
she said. “We were living in tents
and we built our own showers. It
FAHEY FAMILY
Thomas J. Fahey Jr. as a waist gunner on a B-17 bomber in
World War II. Conditions on the plane could be harrowing.
A pioneer woman
during the Iraq War
By Rich Fahey
GLOBE CORRESPONDENT
It was 2003, and there
weren’t that many Mikaela Faheys in the Army.
There were even fewer serving in the Middle East in combat
support roles during the invasion of Iraq by a coalition led by
the United States.
Fahey, now Mikaela Felcher,
43, grew up in Stoughton and
now lives in Little Rock, Ark. She
works in corporate security for
Wal-Mart.
As Mikaela Fahey, she was a
helicopter mechanic, part of a
crew maintaining the Boeing
CH-47 Chinook that played a vital role in the war effort.
Women would not be allowed
on the front lines in combat situations until the Obama administration. When Mikaela served,
they were relegated to support
roles, and even there didn’t find
much female company.
“There weren’t many of us in
general, and few of us working
on helicopters,” said Felcher,
who served in the Army and National Guard from 1998-2021.
“On a few occasions, some of my
male superiors didn’t appreciate
me doing the job. I felt I had to
prove myself.”
But she did the work well,
serving other tours in Kuwait in
2005-2006 and 2010-11. Along
the way, she was pleased to see
the increasing numbers of women along her near the front lines.
In more recent years, things
was hard living.”
Felcher still has a photo of
her standing next to a thermometer in the sun that read 140 degrees.
“It was like opening up an oven and sticking your head in it,”
she recalled. “It was a great place
to lose weight, especially if the
food didn’t agree with you.”
In 2012, after her marriage to
fellow Guardsman Michael
Felcher, she moved to Little
Rock and served in the Arkansas
National Guard in several capacities, retiring as a master sergeant in 2021.
There were no parades for
vets returning from the Gulf, but
I have seen the appreciation for
her service firsthand. On a Saturday night in November 2008,
she was part of a group of Massachusetts veterans honored for
their service at a Boston Bruins
game. The next day, she and her
crew were cheered on the field at
a Patriots game at Gillette Stadium. They then made a flyover
that was shown on national TV.
Felcher said that 2008 weekend typified the attitude of much
MIKAELA FELCHER
“I felt I had to prove myself,”
says Felcher of her service.
changed even more.
“ We were no longer alone
and we were playing a larger role
on the front lines,” she said. “I
even had a few female friends in
the infantry.”
According to a 2021 report
released by the Department of
Defense, in 2020 women made
up 17.2 percent of active-duty
soldiers, ranging from 8 percent
in the Marines to 19 percent in
the Air Force. That number has
roughly doubled since Felcher
first joined the Army in 1998.
The glass ceiling is crashing
down. Air Force General Lori
Robinson, for example, became
the first woman to lead a combat
unit when she took charge of the
United States Northern Command and the North American
Aerospace Defense Command in
2016.
“Seeing the changes through
the years has been rewarding,”
said Felcher. “As time has gone
on, we’ve had more and more
support and some outstanding
female mentors in high places.”
of the public. “It was generally
positive,” she said. “I can’t say
there were many negative responses. Even if people didn’t
agree with the war itself, I think
they tried to support us.
“I know it was different for
my father [the Vietnam era vet].
I’m grateful we had support
from family members, friends,
and the public, who all pretty
much thanked me for my service.”
Felcher said she also believes
that as a group, today’s veterans
are better supported than their
predecessors. “There’s a lot of organizations for veterans and a
lot of resources out there.”
My family members all came
home. On this Veterans Day, we
especially remember those soldiers who never did.
They were never far from the
mind of my late father. Thomas
J. Fahey Jr., the World War II vet.
He dedicated his book “to those
who never had the chance to
come home and tell their story.”
Rich Fahey can be reached at
fahey.rich2@gmail.com.
Local actors, musicians back on stage this fall
By Robert Knox
GLOBE CORRESPONDENT
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Talented regional actors in a
Hingham Civic Music Theatre
upcoming production were
forced to wait two years for their
prompts to shoot craps on city
streets, dance at the Hot Box
Club, and pitch a little woo. The
regional theater will stage its
fourth and final production of
“Guys and Dolls,” a recognized
classic of the American musical
theater, at the Sanborn Auditorium stage in Hingham Town Hall
at 2 p.m. on Sunday, Nov. 6. Like
so many other planned live performance productions, the show
was put on hold when COVID
turned all theaters dark in 2020.
Many more opportunities for
live entertainment and other
public programs present themselves this month in the first full
fall schedule of live events since
the onset of the pandemic. Also
on Nov. 6, at 3 p.m., Milton Community Concerts, a series offering classical performances in the
town’s First Parish Meetinghouse, presents “Sharing Ourselves, Reuniting Our Voices:
Music by Carol Koffinke,” at the
church at 535 Canton Ave.
Fall craft fairs are underway
as well. In Plymouth, the artists
and crafters of the Great Island
Artisans’ Guild, based in The
Pinehills, holds its “Holiday
Arts” fair indoors at the Great Island Overlook Clubhouse, located at 149 Great Island Road. on
Saturday, Nov. 12 from 10 a.m.
to 4 p.m.
Regional museums are also
opening their doors to new exhibits. Through Dec. 10, Hull
Lifesaving Museum presents
“Crossroads: Change in Rural
America,” an exhibit produced in
partnership with the Smithsonian Institution’s Museum on
Main Street Initiative.
The region’s public libraries
are back to offering full slates of
public programs, generally free.
Kingston Public Library this
month will be exhibiting realistic, Impressionist and abstract
work by artist Anita Uhlan in the
library’s art gallery.
The Hull Artists’ exhibit,
“Our Captivating South Shore,”
will be on display in the Hingham Public Library’s Dolphin
Gallery through Dec. 1.
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
Metro
G l o b e
B13
WEST OF BOSTON
Newton adds 4 to panel seeking new school chief
By John Hilliard
GLOBE STAFF
Newton’s superintendent
search committee has added
four new members — including
a second educator — after listening to community feedback, according to leaders of the search
process.
But the 17-member committee won’t include a designated
representative of the teachers
union, unlike the city’s previous
search for a superintendent.
The search process is seeking
a successor for Newton’s interim
superintendent, Kathleen
Smith, who took charge after the
departure of former schools
leader David Fleishman earlier
this year.
The search panel is expected
to present the School Committee
with three or four finalists for
superintendent. The goal is to
have a new leader in place by July 1, 2023.
The expansion of the search
committee was announced more
than a week after it began work
to review candidates to lead
Newton’s public schools, which
has about 12,000 students and
about 2,500 employees.
“Over the past week, we have
listened carefully to feedback
and have decided to make a
modest expansion in order to
NEWTON PUBLIC SCHOOLS
Lija Kurens with her students at Ward Elementary. A group
seeking a new school superintendent now has two teachers.
provide important additional
representation on the Search
Committee,” according to an
Oct. 27 memo from Tamika
Olszewski and Emily Prenner,
the School Committee members
who serve as the cochairs of the
search committee.
The original 13-member
search panel included school administrators, parents, a school
custodian, an 11th-grade stu-
dent, and School Committee
member Rajeev Parlikar, alongside Olszewski and Prenner.
That group also included a high
school special education reading
specialist.
“Our guiding principles in reviewing the submissions were
that we strived to assemble a
cross-section of stakeholders
that honored different perspectives, preserved balance across
the different schools and levels
within our district, and welcomed new voices to the table
who had not previously served
in this type of district-wide effort,” the memo said.
The expansion adds a high
school teacher and three parents, including a Boston resident
who is involved in the Newton
schools through the METCO
program.
“We needed balance between
community and staff voices,”
Olszewski and Prenner wrote.
They noted that the expansion is
the “final change to the makeup
of the Search Committee.”
Michael Zilles, the president
of the Newton Teachers Association, praised the addition of a
second educator to the committee, and said he was confident in
the ability of the two union
members to serve on the panel.
He said both educators also have
the support of the NTA.
But the appointments came
after Olszewski, who doubles as
the School Committee chairwoman, declined to set aside a
spot on the search committee for
a representative selected by the
union itself, according to Zilles.
“They lose some credibility
because of this. They didn’t,
from the get-go, recognize the
NTA as an essential partner in
finding a superintendent,” Zilles
said in an interview. “It raises
skepticism, it doesn’ t build
trust.”
Olszewski, in an e-mail, said
the search committee was a “totally open process” that welcomed parents, guardians, residents, faculty, and staff to volunteer, and no group was asked to
designate a representative.
“I acknowledged [to Zilles]
that this was a different process
than used in the past and I asked
Mike to encourage his members
to volunteer because educators
are such [a] crucial voice for this
search,” Olszewski said.
The last time Newton
searched for a full-time superintendent was in 2009, when thensuperintendent Jeff Young left
Newton to lead Cambridge’s
schools.
During that process, thenNewton Teachers Association
president Cheryl Turgel served
on a search committee that included School Committee members, parents, students, school
administrators, city officials, and
other community members.
That process ultimately led to
Fleishman’s hiring.
“I felt heard, I felt that the
union was being listened to
[about] what we needed in the
superintendent,” Turgel said of
the 2009 search. “The teachers
need to be able to go to the superintendent, and be comfortable with that person.”
Turgel, who is now retired after working for more than 20
years as an educator, criticized
the decision to not include an official union representative on
Newton’s 2022 search committee.
“ You can’t just bypass the
teachers and pick who you want.
I believe it sets up an adversarial
situation from the get-go,” Turgel said.
Olszewski said officials welcomed the union’s assistance
and that volunteers were needed
for the search committee.
“I am proud that this process
held the door widely open for
any NPS employee to volunteer
to help find our next superintendent,” she said.
She said that members of the
union will also be able to “share
their voices” during an upcoming community engagement
phase that will offer members of
the union participation in focus
groups and surveys.
Those efforts will help develop the leadership profile of the
next superintendent, she said.
John Hilliard can be reached at
john.hilliard@globe.com.
NORTH OF BOSTON
In Somerville, all pollinators are local
City gets serious
about extending
them a welcome
By John Laidler
GLOBE CORRESPONDENT
Amid rising concern nationwide about declining numbers
of insect pollinators, Somerville
is determined to be part of the
solution.
Believing that even thickly
populated urban communities
have a vital role to play in addressing ecological challenges,
the city has launched the creation of a Pollinator Action Plan.
The plan, to be developed by
an expert team including biologists, horticulturalists, and landscape architects, will detail how
the city and community members can build and enhance habitat suitable for bees, butterflies,
beetles, and other pollinators.
City officials said other communities in the US — including
several in Massachusetts — have
prepared such plans, but to
their knowledge none with a
population as dense as Somer-
ville’s.
“In Somerville, we are committed to supporting the health
of all our residents, human and
non-human alike,” said Mayor
Katjana Ballantyne, who is taking an active role in the initiative. “Municipalities have the
power, and the responsibility, to
support pollinators through our
policies, designs, and public engagement.
“We think this can be a real
model for other densely populated cities that want to be part of
building a healthier urban ecosystem that supports pollinators,” said Luisa Oliveira, Somerville’s director of public space
and urban forestry.
Oliveira said the plan, funded
through $100,000 budgeted by
the city, will likely include recommendations for plantings the
city can install in its parks and
other public places, and initiatives, including pilot projects, to
encourage private gardeners to
do their part.
The city is forming a resident
advisory committee to assist in
creating the plan and engaging
the public in the process, accord-
ing to Oliveira, who credited
community activists with making the crisis in pollinator decline a focus of concern for city
staff.
Somerville has taken previous actions to support its pollinators and overall natural ecosystem, including adopting a
2021 ordinance — proposed by
Ballantyne as a city councilor —
requiring the inclusion of certain percentages of native species in plantings on city land,
and a 2019 ordinance limiting
removal of healthy trees on private property.
The city has also funded demonstration pollinator gardens,
and hosted scientific research
and public education activities
by the Tufts Pollinator Initiative,
a community-based conservation program run by Tufts University graduate students that
supports urban pollinators.
Oliveira said the action plan
will build on those efforts by enlisting specialists to pinpoint
specific insects and plants the
city can target to boost pollination. “It’s not enough to say we
are going to plant native species.
We need to understand which
pollinators we have in the city
and which of the plants nourish
them.”
Nicholas Dorian, a PhD candidate in biology at Tufts and cofounder and co-president of the
Tufts Pollinator Initiative, said
there is an urgency to supporting pollinators.
“About 75 percent of the food
crops in the world — including
apples, coffee, and blueberries —
depend on pollination by animals to be produced,” said the
Medford resident. “In recent
years, scientists have documented alarming declines in the population of some of these pollinators,” with habitat loss, pesticide
use, and climate change believed
to be primary causes.
“Somerville’s plan can provide an important precedent for
how cities can engage community members in conservation,”
Dorian said, calling public involvement crucial to the success
of any ecological initiative in an
urban setting.
Dorian is also excited at the
prospect the plan will increase
Somerville’s pollinator habitat,
KAREN DOOLEY
Grimmons Park in Somerville, where Tufts University
students conducted research on monarch butterflies.
including by inspiring residents
to plant gardens.
“The easiest thing someone
can do to support a pollinator is
to plant flowers and not treat
those flowers with pesticides,” he
said. “It can be as small as a single sunflower, or it can be a
small flower garden in your
front yard.”
“I think this has to happen,”
Oliveira said of public and private efforts to support pollinators. “We need to start thinking
this way given the ecological
challenge in front of us right
now in this moment.”
John Laidler can be reached at
laidler@globe.com
outstanding choral program
that provides not just exceptional music education, but fosters
joy and creativity, and has inspired scores of students to pursue their interest in performing
arts beyond high school,” Lussier said in a statement.
Foxborough Superintendent
Amy A. Berdos said Bush is “an
educator in every sense of the
word and his energy is unmatched.
“These last couple of COVID
years, music programs have
been deeply impacted, yet Mr.
Bush’s advocacy and unwavering dedication to supporting
students, music educators, and
programs has not faltered,” Berdos said.
JOHN HILLIARD
COMMUNITY NEWS
uCOMMUNITY NEWS
Continued from Page B11
911 dispatch center.
Site work has begun, but the
project cannot move forward
unless the extra money is approved, officials said.
Steve Chrusciel of the Chrusciel Group — part of the team
working on the project —
blamed the spiraling cost on everything from labor shortages to
pandemic-induced supply chain
problems, to general inflation
and the war in Ukraine.
“These things have all just
come together as a perfect storm
[like] six hurricanes coming together at once,” Chrusciel told
the council.
Some councilors objected to
getting the information when it
was too late to do much about it.
“It’s very frustrating,” Councilor Anne Mahoney said. She
questioned why Mayor Thomas
P. Koch didn’t use part of the
city’s $46 million in COVID relief money from the federal government to offset the expense.
JOHANNA SELTZ
W E L L E S L E Y,
FOX BO R O U G H
Two teachers
contending
for a Grammy
Two music teachers from local schools are among the semifinalists for the Recording Academy & Grammy Museum’s 2023
Music Educator Award, according to a statement.
The award “recognizes current educators who have made a
significant and lasting contribution to the field of music education and demonstrate a commitment to maintaining music education in schools,” the statement
said.
Educators Aaron Bush of
Foxborough High School and
Kevin McDonald of Wellesley
High School were included in a
list of 25 semifinalists released
by organizers in the Oct. 27
statement.
The semifinalists were chosen from more than 1,200 nominations, organizers said.
A group of 10 finalists will be
announced in December, and
the winner will be announced
during Grammy week next year.
The winner will receive
$10,000 and a matching grant
for their school’s music program.
David Lussier, the superintendent of Wellesley Public
Schools, hailed the recognition
of McDonald as “well-deserved.”
“[McDonald] has built an
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G l o b e
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Sports
TV HIGHLIGHTS
NFL: Colts-Patriots, 1 p.m., CBS
NFL: Rams-Buccaneers, 4:25 p.m., CBS
NFL: Titans-Chiefs, 8:20 p.m., NBC
Listings, C16
C
B O S T O N S U N DAY G L O B E N O V E M B E R 6 , 2 0 2 2 | B O S T O N G L OB E .C O M / S P O RT S
Celtics are breaking their own precedent
Dan Shaughnessy
Picked-up pieces while remembering when Patriots-Colts and
Brady-Manning was appointment television . . .
R The Celtics must really want
Ime Udoka out of their lives. It’s
pretty clear that Udoka — even
after the disgrace of bad behavior that earned him a one-season
suspension in Boston — is of great value to the
COLTS AT PATRIOTS
Sunday, 1 p.m., CBS
Brooklyn Nets.
And yet it looks like the Celtics are
willing to part with Udoka without
asking for compensation from a conference rival.
I know these are different times
and far different circumstances, but
Red Auerbach would never have
done such a thing. If the Nets wanted
a guy who was under contract to the
Celtics, Red would have made the
Nets pay. Even if Red didn’t want the
guy around anymore.
BOB COUSY
Promotional stunt
Let’s go all the way back to the
1969-70 season when 41-year-old
Bob Cousy was coaching the Cincinnati Royals and reluctantly agreed to
come out of retirement to help the
cash-strapped team sell a few tickets.
Coach Cousy hadn’t played a game in
seven years but agreed to lace ’em up
to help the struggling franchise.
“Not so fast,” said Red, who was
rebuilding the Celtics after the retirement of Bill Russell. The Celtics still
owned Cousy’s NBA rights; he was on
YES, IT’S A DYNASTY
By Kevin Paul Dupont
GLOBE STAFF
TORONTO — Mitchell Miller’s long, jagged shadow stretched across the Bruins dressing room late Saturday morning, with members of the club’s leadership core echoing
some of the bewilderment that many Blackand-Gold fans expressed in the immediate
wake of the troubled Miller signing a threeyear deal with the club on Friday.
Ben Volin
ON FOOTBALL
In scanning the Patriots’ team statistics this past week, two jumped out:
The Patriots are second in the NFL
with 16 takeaways. And they are tied
for the lead with 16 giveaways.
A 4-4 record in a nutshell.
“That’s a column we don’t want to
be in,” quarterbacks coach Joe Judge
said of the giveaways. “But what’s important is how we execute this Sunday.
Nothing that happened before will have
an effect on this Sunday’s game.”
The Patriots’ defense has always
been opportunistic under Bill
Belichick, finishing in the top five in
takeaways in nine of his 22 seasons.
ºMatthews scores twice as Maple Leafs
hand Bruins second loss. Story, C12
The clear message: Miller won’t be welcomed unless he proves he is of worthy character, and he’ll be shown the door promptly if
he doesn’t live up to standards and expectations cultivated over the last 15 years.
Sounds like it’s going to be one tough room
to work for Miller — if he’s ever allowed a foot
in the door.
“It’s a really hard topic,” said veteran forward Nick Foligno, once the captain of the
Blue Jackets. “I think first and foremost, the
ºPatriots safety Peppers hopes he
made a winning move. C4
ON FOOTBALL, Page C7
BRUINS, Page C12
Celtics hit 27
3-pointers to
bury Knicks
DAVID J. PHILLIP/ASSOCIATED PRESS
For the second time in six years, Jose Altuve and the Astros are atop the baseball world. Yordan
Alvarez’s majestic three-run home run propelled Houston over Philadelphia in Game 6. Story, C2.
ON BASEBALL
Dominating run
Unbeaten Flightline pulls away to win
Breeders’ Cup Classic at Keeneland. C2
On the right foot
LAFC beats Philadelphia Union on
PKs for first MLS Cup title. C11
Sunday notes
Baseball, C3
Basketball, C9
Football, C5
Hockey, C13
HOUSTON — The deciding
game of this World Series will be
remembered for the 450-foot
home run Yordan Alvarez
launched over the batter’s eye in
center field in the sixth inning.
It was an Ortizian blast, the
three-run shot landing among
fans who surely didn’t expect to be
scrambling for a precious souvenir
in Game 6.
ON BASEBALL, Page C2
CELTICS, Page C8
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ering he replaced Carlos Correa at
such an important position. He
also was MVP of the American
League Championship Series.
Former Red Sox catcher Christian Vázquez also played a role. He
was in the lineup as the designated hitter and cracked an RBI single later in the sixth inning.
After rounding first base,
Vázquez turned and looked at the
Houston dugout and pumped his
fist so hard it’s a wonder he didn’t
separate his shoulder. Several of
Latest Astros championship has New England touches
Alvarez gave the Houston Astros the lead and eventually a 4-1
victory over the Philadelphia Phillies. It also was a championship
with plenty of New England flavor.
Rookie shortstop Jeremy Peña
was named Most Valuable Player.
A native of the Dominican Republic who grew up in Providence before playing at the University of
Maine, Peña was 10 of 25 in the
Series with three extra-base hits
and five runs.
It was a remarkable performance for Peña, especially consid-
By Adam Himmelsbach
Celtics 133 NEW YORK — Jayson Tatum
sat at his locker and smiled as
Knicks 118 he called out to Sam Hauser,
a few stalls away.
The two Celtics sharpshooters had just
combined to hit 11 of their team’s franchiserecord 27 3-pointers in a 133-118 win over
the Knicks on Saturday. But to Tatum, one
stood out.
He said he’s been waiting for Hauser to
create a celebration for his big shots. Tatum,
for example, usually throws out a chef’s kiss.
And after one of Hauser’s 3-pointers Saturday, Tatum said, the forward yelled “boom”
along with an expletive. Tatum found it funny
and could hardly believe it, but also wasn’t
sure it quite fits the mild-mannered Hauser,
so maybe the wait will go on.
Finding new ways to have fun is the easy
part, of course. But the Celtics continue to
make the hard parts look easy, too. They are
now averaging 117.5 points per 100 possessions, tied for the second-best offensive rating
in the NBA, along with averaging a league-
Plenty of local flavor
Peter Abraham
INSIDE
SHAUGHNESSY, Page C11
Bruins
leaders
baffled
by signing
Patriots
in a giving
mood this
season
But the poor ball security by the offense is shockingly out of character.
The Patriots have finished in the top
five in fewest giveaways in 17 of
Belichick’s 22 seasons. They have never
finished lower than 17th. Belichick is
famous for squirting water on the football in practice, and making Stevan
Ridley inactive due to fumbles and forcing him to hold a football on the sideline as punishment.
But the Patriots’ 16 giveaways are
tied for the most in the NFL with the
Saints and Colts, Sunday’s opponent at
Gillette Stadium. The Patriots haven’t
had a game with zero turnovers this
year.
And the Patriots have more turnovers in eight games than they had in
the 2007, 2010, 2014, 2015, 2016,
2017, and 2019 seasons.
“As the season goes on, it’s something that we’re obviously keeping an
eye on,” offensive play-caller Matt
their “retired” list. He could not play for another
team without their permission. So Red demanded
compensation.
“How do we know Cousy isn’t better than ever
at 41?” asked Red. “Like Gordie Howe and Pancho
Gonzales?” (Tom Brady hadn’t been born yet.)
The Royals grudgingly parted with 6-foot-7inch forward Bill Dinwiddie to grant the Cooz his
“freedom.”
Cousy wound up playing only 34 minutes over
seven games, scoring a grand total of 5 points for
the Royals, but he never forgot Red’s
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C2
Sports
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
G l o b e
Alvarez blast delivers Astros title
Peña takes MVP;
Baker wins at last
By Stephen Hawkins
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Astros 4 HOUSTON — Yordan Alvarez hit a
Phillies 1 towering go-ahead
homer and the Houston Astros
clinched their second World Series title in six seasons, and got
Dusty Baker his first crown as a
manager, with a 4-1 win over the
Philadelphia Phillies in Game 6
on Saturday night.
As Alvarez’s 450-foot blast in
the sixth inning disappeared,
Astros starter Framber Valdez
jumped and wildly screamed in
the dugout as fans in the crowd
of 42,948 went into a frenzy
waving their orange rally towels.
Baker finally got his first title
in his 25th season as a manager,
the past three since being hired
by the Astros to help the team regain credibility after the signstealing scandal that cost manger A.J. Hinch and general manager Jeff Luhnow their jobs, and
made Houston the most reviled
team in baseball.
The 73-year-old Baker, who
had been to the World Series
twice before as a skipper, is the
oldest championship manager.
Houston’s coaching and
training staffs circled around
Baker after Nick Castellanos
flied out to end it, jumping up
and down, and chanting “Dusty!
Dusty! Dusty!” in the dugout be-
DAVID J. PHILLIP/ASSOCIATED PRESS
Yordan Alvarez blasted a three-run homer 450 feet in the
sixth inning, leading the Astros to a Series-clinching 4-1 win.
fore they joined the players on
the field.
Astros rookie shortstop Jeremy Peña was the World Series
MVP after getting another key
hit, a single to set up Alvarez’s
drive. The 25-year-old star from
the Dominican Republic, who
gre w up in Providence and
played at the University of
Maine, also won a Gold Glove
and AL Championship Series
MVP. Peña is the first hitter to
win those three awards in a career, and he did it all in his first
season, per OptaSTATS.
Alvarez’s homer cleared the
batter’s eye in straightaway center, the backdrop that extends 40
feet above the field, and made it
3-1. It was the first time the Cuban slugger connected since the
first two games this postseason.
Former Red Sox catcher Christian Vázquez, serving as the designated hitter, added an RBI single later in the inning to make it
4-1.
Valdez earned his second win
of this Series. He had been in the
dugout only a few minutes after
throwing his 93 rd and final
pitch while striking out nine
over six innings.
But the lefty had walked off
the mound with the wild-card
Phillies up, 1-0, on Kyle Schwarber’s solo homer leading off the
sixth. Schwarber, who hit his
third homer in the past four
games, rounded the bases waving his raised empty hand in the
same motion as the fans with
their towels.
But by the time Schwarber
batted in the eighth, the NL’s
home run leader was reduced to
bunting, trying for a hit to stir a
dormant Phillies offense. His
bunt went foul with two strikes,
resulting in a strikeout.
In the sixth, Houston got two
runners on base against starter
Zack Wheeler for the first time
in the game, with Jose Altuve
reaching on a forceout after a hit
batter and Peña singling.
Phillies manager Rob Thomson went to lefthanded reliver
Jose Alvarado to face the lefty
slugger for the fourth time in the
series — Alvarez had popped out
twice and been hit by a pitch.
And Alvarado had allowed
only three homers to left hitters
in his six big league seasons, until his 2-and-1 pitch, when Alvarez crushed the 99-mile-per-hour
sinker.
Alvarez hadn’t homered since
Game 2 of the AL Division Series
against Seattle, when his tworun shot in the sixth inning put
them up to stay. That came after
his game-ending, three-run shot
in Game 1 for an 8-7 win.
Houston won an American
League-best 106 games and
reached its fourth World Series
during a span in which it made it
to the AL Championship Series
six seasons in a row. The Astros
made their only other World Series appearance in 2005, while
still in the National League, and
were swept in four games by the
Chicago White Sox.
Philadelphia was 22-29 when
Joe Girardi was fired in early
June and replaced by bench
coach Thomson, the 59-year-old
baseball lifer getting his first
chance a big league manager —
he was on the Yankees big league
staff for 10 seasons with Girardi,
and was part of their last World
Series and title in 2009.
The Phillies finished the regular season 65-46 under Thomson, their 87 wins good for the
sixth and final spot in the NL
playoffs, on way to their first
World Series since 2009.
Va l d e z b e c a m e t h e o n l y
lefthander other than Sandy Koufax in 1963 to strike out five
consecutive batters in a World
Series game. He fanned the side
in the third, then Bryce Harper
swung and missed a 97-m.p.h.
sinker to start the fourth before
Castellanos’s 10-pitch at-bat that
ended with him taking a
96-m.p.h. pitch on the inside
corner — and clearly disagreeing
with home plate umpire Lance
Barksdale.
Wheeler finished with 70
pitches, allowing two runs on
three hits over 5‚ innings. He
struck out five and walked one.
The Phillies had two runners
on in the second, around two
called third strikes, when No. 9
batter Edmundo Sosa hit a drive
to deep left. The ball was caught
more than 360 feet away from
the plate by Alvarez, in the cutout beyond the Crawford boxes.
That ball that would have been a
home run in at least two MLB
parks.
Astros 4, Phillies 1
At Minute Maid Park, Houston
PHILADELPHIA
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Schwarber lf
3 1 1 1 1 2 .250
Hoskins 1b
4 0 0 0 0 1 .120
Realmuto c
3 0 1 0 0 1 .167
Harper dh
4 0 0 0 0 2 .200
Castellanos rf
4 0 0 0 0 2 .125
Bohm 3b
3 0 1 0 0 1 .286
Segura 2b
3 0 0 0 0 2 .143
Vierling cf
1 0 0 0 1 0 .000
Stott ph-ss
1 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Sosa ss
2 0 0 0 0 1 .000
Marsh ph-cf
1 0 0 0 0 0 .231
Totals
29 1 3 1 2 12
HOUSTON
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Altuve 2b
4 1 1 0 0 2 .308
Peña ss
4 1 2 0 0 1 .400
Alvarez lf
4 1 1 3 0 1 .130
Bregman 3b
3 1 1 0 1 1 .238
Tucker rf
3 0 0 0 1 1 .190
Vázquez dh
3 0 1 1 0 0 .286
Mancini 1b
3 0 1 0 0 1 .111
3 0 0 0 0 2 .211
McCormick cf
Maldonado c
2 0 0 0 0 0 .200
Totals
29 4 7 4 2 9
Philadelphia......................000 001 000 — 1 3 1
Houston.............................000 004 00x — 4 7 0
E—Schwarber (1). LOB—Philadelphia 4, Houston 4. HR—Schwarber (3), off Valdez, Alvarez (1),
off Alvarado. DP—Philadelphia 1; Houston 1.
Philadelphia
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Wheeler L 0-2 5‚ 3 2 2 1 5 70 5.23
Alvarado BS 1
‚ 1 2 2 1 1 18 10.80
Domínguez
‚ 1 0 0 0 0 9 3.00
Eflin
1 1 0 0 0 2 18 0.00
Robertson
1 1 0 0 0 1 15 0.00
Houston
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Valdez W 2-0
6 2 1 1 2 9 93 1.46
Neris
1 0 0 0 0 2 10 0.00
Abreu
1 0 0 0 0 1 10 0.00
Pressly S 2
1 1 0 0 0 0 7 0.00
WP—Alvarado. Umpires—Home, Lance Barksdale; First, James Hoye; Second, Pat Hoberg;
Third, Dan Iassogna; Left, Tripp Gibson; Right,
Jordan Baker. T—3:13. A—42,958 (41,168).
World Series
PHILADELPHIA VS. HOUSTON
Astros win series, 4-2
Friday, Oct. 28
Philadelphia 6.......at Houston 5 (10)
Saturday, Oct. 29
At Houston 5...............Philadelphia 2
Tuesday, Nov. 1
At Philadelphia 7...............Houston 0
Wednesday, Nov. 2
Houston 5...............at Philadelphia 0
Thursday, Nov. 3
Houston 3...............at Philadelphia 2
Saturday, Nov. 5
At Houston 4...............Philadelphia 1
New England has reasons to celebrate the Astros
uON BASEBALL
Continued from Page C1
the Astros jumped out of the dugout
and pointed at Vázquez.
In 2018, Vázquez caught the final
pitch of the World Series for the Sox, the
team that drafted him in 2008. He
hoped to spend his entire career with
Boston but was traded to Houston on
Aug. 1.
The move was stunning at the time,
but Sox chief baseball officer Chaim
Bloom ultimately did Vázquez a favor.
Now he has two World Series rings and
the honor of having caught a four-man
no-hitter in Game 4. That will send him
into free agency with better credentials
than having finished out the season
with a last-place team.
That Vázquez was in the lineup was
made possible by a pregame roster
move. The Astros received permission
from Major League Baseball to drop
first baseman Yuli Gurriel because of a
knee injury and add catcher Korey Lee.
That allowed manager Dusty Baker to
play a hunch and use Vázquez as the
designated hitter.
“So this is something that I had
thought about, talked about, especially
with my batting coaches, many times,
but wasn’t in a position to do so without
the third catcher,” Baker said before the
game.
Baker hit Vázquez sixth, and when
he came up in the sixth inning with Alex
Bregman on second base, he hammered
a sinker from Seranthony Domínguez to
give the Astros an insurance run.
It was fitting it paid off for Baker.
The 73-year-old won his first World Series in 25 years as a manager. He previously lost a seven-game Series with the
San Francisco Giants against the Anaheim Angels in 2002, and last season
when the Astros fell in six games
against the Atlanta Braves.
For Baker, whose accomplishments
already merited a plaque in the Hall of
Fame, it was a crowning achievement.
“How about those Astros!” he told
the crowd.
That it was former Red Sox slugger
Kyle Schwarber who gave the Phillies a
1-0 lead in the top of the sixth inning
was no surprise. That’s what he does.
Schwarber hit 46 home runs during the
regular season for the Phillies and six
more in the postseason.
The circumstances were the unusual
part.
Astros lefthander Framber Valdez
had allowed one home run by a
lefthander all season and hadn’t given
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DAVID J. PHILLIP/ASSOCIATED PRESS
Rhode Island native Jeremy Peña was crowned World Series MVP as
a 25-year-old rookie after hitting .400 with a home run in six games.
BREEDERS’ CUP
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Unbeaten colt
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up a home run at Minute Maid Park
since July 3. He was working on a twohit shutout when Schwarber drove a
two-strike slider into the seats in right
field.
The Phillies to that point had scored
two runs the previous 23 innings.
Houston came right back in the bottom of the inning. With Jose Altuve on
first base with one out, Peña singled. Alvarez was next.
The All-Star left fielder had homered in the first two games of the postseason before going 5 for 40 with four
RBIs in the next 10 games. He was overdue to make an impact, and he did
when Phillies reliever Jose Alvarado left
a sinker up just enough for Alvarez to
drive.
Houston’s bullpen, which allowed
only five earned runs over 54‚ innings
in the postseason, handled it from
there. Ryan Pressly, a former Red Sox
minor leaguer, got the save. It was his
sixth of the postseason.
The Astros were the first team to
clinch a championship at home since
the 2013 Red Sox.
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LEXINGTON, Ky. — Running
the biggest race of a brief career,
Flightline left no doubt about
this year’s top thoroughbred.
The unbeaten colt posted another dominant run, overtaking
Life Is Good entering the top of
the stretch and pulling away to
an 8¼-length victory in the $6
million Breeders’ Cup Classic on
Saturday at Keeneland, and all
but locking up honors as Horse
of the Year.
“Brilliant is his normal,”
trainer John Sadler said. “He
didn’t disappoint, and never has
. . . This race, he’s just a remarkable, remarkable horse.”
The 4-year-old bay colt entered the Grade 1 race 5-0 lifetime with an average victory
margin of nearly 13 lengths,
making him the overwhelming
3-5 favorite over the eight-horse
field that included Kentucky
Derby upset winner Rich Strike
and 5-1 second choice Epicenter.
Flightline went off at 2-5 from
the No. 4 post and he and Todd
Pletcher-trained Life Is Good, at
8-1, separated themselves from
the pack with a blistering pace
and building a 9-length gap
DYLAN BUELL/GETTY IMAGES
Jockey Flavien Prat celebrated after guiding Flightline to an 8¼-length victory.
through the far turn.
Sadler’s pupil was moving up
at that point and eventually
passed Life Is Good before the
stretch and quickly built a twolength gap that steadily grew
from there. Olympiad (10-1)
soon overtook Life Is Good with
Bob Baffert-trained Taiba gaining, though both were far be-
hind the horse who has earned
lofty comparisons to legendary
Triple Crown champion Secretariat.
His remarkable run in the
Classic will likely ratchet up the
praise, and the trainer didn’t shy
away from it.
“He’s just that rare horse that
happens every 20 or 30 years,”
Sadler added. “One of the best
American racehorses we’ve seen
in a long, long time. And I’m
talking back to Secretariat, Seattle Slew, you go through the list.
“What I try to be is a good
steward to him. If you’re good
with your horse, he’ll be good
with you.”
R i d d e n b y F l av i e n Pr a t ,
Flightline covered the 1¼ miles
in 2:00.05 and paid $2.88,
$2.92, and $2.30. His winning
time was just off Authentic’s record of 1:59.60 set here two
years ago.
Olympiad returned $12.38
and $7.16 for place and Taiba
paid $4 to show. Rich Strike was
fourth and Life Is Good fifth.
E p i c e n t e r, c o n s i d e r e d a
strong Horse of the Year favorite
with four wins and three seconds, was pulled up by jockey
Joel Rosario in the backstretch
with an injured right forelimb.
He walked into a van and was
taken to Rood & Riddle Equine
Hospital for evaluation.
While Pletcher came up short
in the Classic, filly Malathaat
provided the day’s most exciting
finish by winning the $2 million
Distaff by a nose over Stripe and
Clairiere and in a three-wide
photo finish.
The 2021 3-year-old champion filly and 3-1 choice surged
from the middle between the final turns and was on the outside
among five horses in the stretch
before she broke free with Clairiere to her left and Blue Stripe on
the rail over the final 100 yards.
Malathaat eventually caught
Clairere and nosed past Blue
Stripe at the wire, which replay
confirmed.
Third in last year’s Distaff,
Malathaat this time paid $7.76,
$4.04, and $3 for her fourth win
this year and 10th in 13 career
races. Blue Stripe was second by
a nose over Clairiere, who beat
Malathaat’s stablemate Nest
(9-5) by 3¼ lengths.
The nine-race Breeders’ Cup
card went off with partly sunny
skies and stiff crosswinds blowing across the infield and backstretch. It became more overcast
as the Classic neared but without precipitation.
Most importantly, the grandstands were full, a stark and welcome contrast to the 2020 edition held here without spectators because of the pandemic.
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
Sports
G l o b e
C3
Baseball
Phillies’ Fuld seems to be managing just fine
Peter Abraham
T
here was a real chance two
years ago the Red Sox could
have introduced Sam Fuld
as their new manager.
The Durham, N.H., native fit all the qualifications chief baseball officer Chaim Bloom was seeking in
a replacement for Ron Roenicke.
Fuld learned the game as a player
and refined that knowledge working in
the Phillies’ analytics department. He
also had the disposition and credibility
to succeed in Boston.
Another factor, an important one,
was that Bloom had an established rapport with Fuld from their time together
with the Tampa Bay Rays.
Fuld was an outfielder with the Rays
from 2011-13 while Bloom was the
team’s director of baseball operations.
Bloom was still a relative newcomer to
the Red Sox organization in 2020 and
Fuld would have been an ally.
“It was an attractive job,” Fuld said.
“They’re the Red Sox.”
The decision came down to hiring
Fuld or bringing back Alex Cora, who
had been fired earlier that year after being suspended by Major League Baseball for his role in the Astros’ 2017
cheating scandal.
have in that seat.”
Fuld hasn’t looked at what comes
next in his career beyond what’s directly in front of him.
“Hopefully making [the Phillies] a
continual consistent contender and giving this fan base and ownership and everybody involved something to be
proud of both in on-field performance
and how we treat people and the community,” he said.
“That and giving people around me
the power to be the best they can be.
Whether that’s players, coaches, front
office members, scouts, or player development. That’s all really important.”
Had the Red Sox hired him, Fuld
would have been back in uniform. But
he’s embraced the path he’s on.
“When I stepped off the field as a
player, I took time thinking about it
with my family,” he said. “We pretty
quickly recognized that my love for the
game was strong enough that I wanted
to continue to pursue it in different
ways.
“I’m really excited I didn’t decide to
go run a fast-food chain or go in a different direction outside of baseball.”
Fuld and his wife, Sarah, have four
children. His parents, Ken and Amanda, live in the house he grew up in and
he tries to get home to New Hampshire
as often as he can, although his job
makes that tough.
Would Fuld have made a good manager? The Red Sox and several other
teams were interested in finding out.
But his next step is more likely running
his own team someday.
Something was missing
There wasn’t much question about what led to the Yankees’ collapse in the
2022 postseason — dismal hitting. New York batted only .173 in its nine
games — averaging 11.4 strikeouts per outing — which ended in a sweep
by the Astros in the AL Championship Series. In the process they became
just the third team to strike out 100 or more times in 10 or fewer
games in a single postseason, according to baseball-reference.com. The
Padres would have joined them, whiffing 105 times in their first 10 games
this postseason, but they played two more games to finish with 125 in 12
games.
COMPILED BY RICHARD McSWEENEY
2017 CUBS | LOST NLCS, 4-1
105
MITCHELL LEFF/GETTY IMAGES
It was Bloom’s call. He flew to Puerto Rico to meet with Cora and whatever
questions he had were answered during
that session. Cora was rehired.
The disappointment Fuld felt at the
time has since vanished.
“I’m really happy with the way
things turned out,” said Fuld, now general manager of the Phillies. “I love this
organization and I love the role I’m in.
Obviously, the results of this year have
been fantastic.
“There will always be that ‘What if?’
in the back of my mind. But from a professional and personal standpoint,
what I’m doing right now is a dream
job and I love the people I get to work
with.”
Fuld, who turns 41 later this month,
knew he wanted to stay in baseball after his playing career ended in 2015.
The question was whether to stay in
uniform or join a front office.
With his playing experience and educational background — Fuld has an
economics degree from Stanford —
many doors were open. The Blue Jays,
Cubs, Mets, and Pirates were among
the teams that considered him as a
manager.
Fuld joined the Phillies in 2017 as
their player information coordinator,
serving as a liaison between the analytics staff and the clubhouse.
The Phillies promoted him to director of integrative baseball performance
in January 2020. When Dave Dombrowski came in as president of baseball operations in December at the end
of that year, one of his first big decisions was to name Fuld as the GM.
He saw Fuld as having a good mix of
traditional and modern approaches.
“Dave has been tremendous,” Fuld
said. “He’s opened his world up to me,
to my family. The poise with which he
makes each and every decision on a daily basis is something I continue to admire and try to replicate.
“He’s seen everything this game has
to offer. This past month in particular
has been eye-opening for me to see how
he handles high-leverage decisions and
all the noise that accompanies being in
the postseason.
“He’s thorough and he has his finger
on the pulse of the whole organization.
He’s allowed me to be a part of that.”
In an age when many executives
seek the least risky path to success,
Dombrowski is quick to identify weaknesses in the roster and how best to fill
them.
That was how he built a championship team for the Red Sox in 2018, and
the same methods worked for the Phillies in winning the National League
pennant this season.
“He’s decisive,” Fuld said. “Part of
why he’s had success in this game is he
has the unique ability to make quick decisions. That’s a really valuable skill to
10.5
GAMES
Ks/GAME
BA / OBP / SLUG
Player
Pos.
H-AB
Avg.
Ks
Kris Bryant
3B
8-40 .200 14
Anthony Rizzo
1B
5-37 .135 14
Addison Russell
SS
6-34 .176 13
2018 BREWERS | LOST NLCS, 4-3
104
10
Ks
10.4
GAMES
Ks/GAME
.244 / .319 / .398
BA / OBP / SLUG
Player
What can Red Sox
expect from Sale?
Chris Sale has informed the Sox he
will not opt out of the final two years
and $55 million of his contract. No surprise there.
The bigger question: How many innings the team can reasonably expect
from the lefthander, who will turn 34
on Opening Day.
Sale pitched 48‚ innings from
2020-22. When he arrives at spring
training, Sale will have pitched six innings in a game once over the previous
3½ years.
Sale had Tommy John surgery on
March 30, 2020, but did not return to
the majors until Aug. 14, 2021. He then
missed the first 87 games of last season
with a rib cage fracture.
That comeback lasted two games before Sale was hit in the left hand by a
batted ball and fractured his pinkie. He
then fractured his right wrist falling off
a bike.
Finding a comparable situation isn’t
easy.
Corey Kluber was hit by a batted ball
and fractured his arm on May 1, 2019.
He didn’t pitch again until July 2020
and lasted one inning before tearing a
shoulder muscle.
He returned again in April 2021 and
gave the Yankees 16 starts, 80 innings,
and a 3.83 ERA.
“Look at [Sale] like a marathon runner. You can’t run 3-4 miles for a few
years and then run a marathon,” said
former major league pitching coach
Rick Peterson, who has studied biomechanics and injury patterns with pitchers. “This is going to be a process.”
Without being privy to what the Sox
are planning, Peterson believes they
will build in extra days of rest for Sale
whenever possible to control his innings.
“What he did before Tommy John
will give you a sense of what he can do
now with the injuries being healed,” Peterson said. “That’s a guide. Rest and
recovery will be crucial.”
Sale pitched 147‚ innings in 2019.
The Red Sox surely would be thrilled to
get that. Given his recent history, 100120 innings might be a better goal.
A few other observations on the Red
Sox:
R Philadelphia’s Alex Bohm hit the
1,000th home run in World Series history when he connected in Game 3 off
Lance McCullers.
The Sox accounted for 50 of those
1,000 dingers. Dwight Evans, Larry
Gardner, David Ortiz, Steve Pearce,
and Carl Yastrzemski had three each.
Gardner was an infielder from Enosburg, Vt., who played for the Sox from
1908-17 and was 12 of 62 in 18 World
Series games.
The Sox have not yet had a World
Series grand slam.
R Righthanders Tanner Houck
(back) and Garrett Whitlock (hip) have
recovered from the surgeries they had
in September. Whitlock finished his rehab in Boston and is back home in Ala-
Extra bases
.168 / .240 / .289
GREAT UNKNOWN
Sam Fuld was a finalist to become
Red Sox manager two years ago.
10
Ks
Pos.
H-AB
Avg.
Ks
8-37 .216 15
Jesus Aguilar
1B
Ryan Braun
OF 12-42 .286 13
Mike Moustakas
3B
8-40 .200 13
2022 YANKEES | LOST ALCS, 4-0
103
9
Ks
11.4
GAMES
Ks/GAME
.173 / .255 / .324
BA / OBP / SLUG
Player
Pos.
H-AB
Avg.
Ks
Josh Donaldson
3B
5-29 .172 16
Aaron Judge
OF
5-36 .139 15
Oswaldo Cabrera OF
2-28 .071 12
Individual (dis)honors
Most strikeouts in 10 or fewer games
in a single postseason:
Player
Jarrod
Saltalamacchia º
2013 Red Sox
Pos.
H-AB Avg.
G Ks
C
6-32 .188 10 19
Reggie Sanders
1995 Reds
OF
4-29 .138 7 19
Ryan Howard
2010 Phillies
1B 10-33 .303 9 17
ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTO
bama. Houck is still working with team
staff but will head home soon.
The Sox haven’t definitively said
how they plan to use Houck and Whitlock next season. But every indication is
Houck will remain in the bullpen and
Whitlock will be a candidate for the rotation.
R Houston’s Cristian Javier was 25
years, 221 days old when he carried a
no-hitter for six innings on Wednesday
in Game 3 of the World Series. Jim Lonborg is the youngest pitcher to accomplish that, having no-hit the Cardinals
for 7„ innings of Game 2 in 1967. Gentleman Jim was 25 years, 172 days.
Lonborg lost his no-hitter when Julian Javier doubled. He settled for a
one-hit shutout with one walk and four
strikeouts as the Red Sox won, 5-0.
ETC.
WooSox continue
a worthy tradition
A major league umpire who died 21
years ago helped send two kids from
year arranged for 9-year-old Nolan Myers of East Providence and 10-year-old
Nallah Gross of Pawtucket to attend
Games 1 and 2 in Houston along with
their chaperones.
The all-expenses-paid trip was taken
care of by the WooSox Foundation in
conjunction with the team. Myers and
Gross were chosen during a Boys &
Girls Club outing at Polar Park.
It’s admirable that the WooSox have
kept up the tradition started by Soar
even though they’re no longer in Rhode
Island.
Rhode Island to the World Series this
season.
What?
It’s true, thanks to the Worcester
Red Sox remembering their history.
Hank Soar grew up in Pawtucket
and attended Pawtucket Senior High
(now known as Tolman High) and
Providence College before playing for
the New York Football Giants from
1937-44 and again in 1946 after a stint
in the Army.
He umpired on the side and was recommended for a job in the majors by
legendary manager and executive Connie Mack.
Soar was an American League umpire from 1950-72. He did five World
Series, including the classic between
the Mets and Orioles in 1969 as the
crew chief.
Soar made it a tradition to provide
tickets for two children from his hometown to attend the World Series. City officials handled the details before the
Pawtucket Red Sox took charge in
1990.
The PawSox moved to Worcester in
2021 but kept up the program and this
You’re going to hear a lot in the
months to come about righthander Mavrick Rizy, a 6-foot-8-inch, 235-pound
junior at Worcester Academy. Rizy, who
is from Fiskdale, has committed to
UConn but has been impressing scouts
in showcase events. His fastball is 92-93
miles per hour and he’s working on a
changeup. “He has all the talent in the
world,” said Worcester Academy coach
Mike Abraham, whose brother Brian is
the Red Sox director of player development. “But for being such a talented
player at such a young age, he is incredibly humble and mature. His teammates love him, and when he is on the
field, he’s just another kid.” Abraham
(who is not related to this scribe) compared Rizy to White Sox prospect Sean
Burke, a righthander from St. John’s
Shrewsbury who was a third-round
pick in 2021 out of Maryland. “From a
performance standpoint he is only going to keep getting better and better,”
Abraham said. “It’s easy to forget how
young he is because he’s so physically
advanced. Elite athletes really take big
strides once their mental skills catch up
to their special physical talents” . . .
Mookie Betts now has six Gold Gloves
in right field, winning the award in six
of the last seven years . . . The White
Sox make interesting choices. They
hired Hall of Famer Tony La Russa as
manager before the 2021 season. He
had 33 years of experience. Now their
pick is Pedro Grifol, who hasn’t managed since 2012 in Single A. Grifol
spent the last three seasons as Royals
bench coach. Grifol will bring former
Blue Jays manager Charlie Montoyo
with him as bench coach. The White
Sox also showed the gate to Joe McEwing, a coach for the previous 11 seasons . . . Phillies manager Rob Thomson
on Christian Vázquez: “I’ve been a big
fan of his for a long time. He can really
catch and throw. His offensive game
has improved over the course of the
years. He was always a guy that, you go
into Boston, do an advance report on
them, he would be a guy that I would
highlight all the time just because he
can throw and he can back pick and he
can do a lot of things. He was really athletic. He could block the ball” . . . You
would not expect a pitcher to be in favor of rules regulating defensive shifts.
But Justin Verlander understands what
MLB is trying to accomplish. “I see the
effort behind the banning of the shift,
which I am for that effort, which is incentivizing more balls in play, getting a
little more action, having guys have the
ability to shorten up with two strikes
and put the ball in play and be rewarded with a hit for that,” he said. “I think
the game needs to move past the three
true outcomes, so if that is the result of
banning the shift, then I am pro. It’s to
be determined whether that happens or
not. We’ll see” . . . There’s a Hard Rock
Casino opening in Cincinnati Jan. 1.
Pete Rose, naturally, has a promotional
deal and will place the first sports bet at
its book. Stunts like this are why Rose
will never make the Hall of Fame. He
lied for years about gambling on baseball and now happily admits it and will
place bets for the cameras. Rose remains suspended by Major League
Baseball and is ineligible for the Hall as
a result. Unless Rob Manfred changes
course, which seems unlikely, Rose will
always be on the outside . . . Best to Ken
Powtak of the Associated Press, who is
recovering from a back injury after being hit by a car earlier this month. He’s
one of the regulars at Fenway Park . . .
Happy 43rd birthday to Adam LaRoche, who played six games for the Red
Sox in 2009. Theo Epstein acquired LaRoche from the Pirates on July 22 then
flipped him to the Braves nine days later for another first baseman, Casey
Kotchman. LaRoche went on to play six
more years and hit 119 home runs. Jim
Gosger is 80. The outfielder was with
the Red Sox from 1963-66. He went on
to play for the Athletics (in Kansas City
and Oakland), Expos, and Mets. In
2019, the Mets included a photo of Gosger in a video that honored members of
their 1969 team who had died. Gosger
was alive and still is.
Peter Abraham can be reached at
peter.abraham@globe.com. Follow him
on Twitter @PeteAbe.
C4
Sports
B o s t o n
Rare victory
for baseball
Chad Finn
SPORTS MEDIA
With one out in
the top of the
ninth inning of
Game 4 of the
World Series — a
game that would
end with a 5-0
Astros victory
and a combined
no-hitter — Fox broadcasters Joe
Davis and John Smoltz couldn’t
resist getting momentarily sidetracked by a pending quirk of the
sports calendar.
Smoltz, the color analyst, began their amusing dialogue between pitches, noting that on
Thursday night, the Astros and
Phillies would play Game 5, while
the NFL matchup that evening
would feature the Eagles and Texans.
Smoltz wondered whether it
was the first time two cities’ teams
would square off in a World Series
game and an NFL game on the
same night.
Davis, in his first season as
Fox’s No. 1 baseball play-by-play
voice, said good-naturedly, “Hey,
look, 7-0 [the Eagles’ record]
against 1-5 [the Texans’ mark entering Thursday], would you rather watch that or would you rather
watch a World Series tied at 2?”
Then, with a little extra emphasis,
“We’ll see ya on Fox!”
After Davis called a pitch,
Smoltz asked, “What’s your guess?
You think that it’s ever happened
before?”
Replied Davis, “No, probably
not,” then after a fraction of a second added, “seven times I’m actually told. So by no, probably not, I
mean, many times, partner.”
The conversation and that final
response, which brought a burst
of laughter out of Smoltz, served
as another reminder of how seamlessly Davis has fit in after Joe
Buck decamped for ESPN.
That the back-and-forth happened when it did — late in a
World Series game that, with the
oddball no-hitter, became instant
Fall Classic lore — also seemed to
confirm that Thursday’s head-tohead matchup with “Thursday
Night Football” featuring the
same two cities was never far from
mind for anyone involved.
As it turned out — and perhaps
this counts as a mild upset given
how the NFL dominates television
viewership — the World Series
proved to be a bigger draw Thursday than the football game.
The Astros’ 3-2 win over the
Phillies in a taut Game 5 averaged
a 7.0 rating and 12.77 million
viewers nationally on Fox, making
it the most-watched game of the
World Series to that point. Meanwhile, the Eagles’ closer-than-expected 29-17 win over the Texans
averaged a 3.7 rating and 7.86
million viewers on the streaming
service Amazon Prime. It marks
the first time since 2017 that a
World Series game has won a
head-to-head matchup with an
NFL game.
The baseball game also was the
choice in the Houston and Philadelphia markets, though the total
viewership data is hard to come
by since Amazon Prime does not
often share its ratings in local
markets.
However, Amazon Prime
broadcasts do air on the over-theair local Fox affiliate in the competing teams’ home markets —
keep this in mind when the Patriots play the Bills on Thursday,
Dec. 1. And it seems more likely
that viewers who have their local
teams playing an NFL game and
in the World Series at the same
time would prefer to watch overthe-air — meaning cable or local
network affiliates — rather than
toggling between Amazon Prime’s
stream and Fox’s conventional
broadcast.
With that in mind, Fox has to
be thrilled with its Game 5 numbers in Houston and particularly
Philadelphia, since the Eagles
have been the best team in football this season. Game 5 in Philadelphia earned a 25.9 rating and
50 share, while the Eagles-Texans
simulcast on WPHL got an 8.7 rating and 16 share.
In Houston, Game 5 drew a
25.5 rating/55 share, while the
“Thursday Night Football” simulcast on KTXH got a minuscule 1.5
rating/3 share.
It should be noted that Amazon Prime did end up with some
bragging rights in specific demographics. Despite having 5 million
fewer viewers overall, it had
slightly higher ratings in the important adults 18-49 and 25-54
demos.
In a press release Friday night,
Amazon couldn’t resist amplifying
the notion that baseball appeals
mostly to older people, noting that
the median age for its “Thursday
Night Football” broadcast was 45,
while it was 58 years old for the
World Series game.
But in the big picture? Thursday was a good night for baseball,
and a better one for Houston
sports fans, who surely enjoyed
the Astros’ thrilling Game 5 win
more than they bemoaned another Texans loss.
Chad Finn can be reached at
chad.finn@globe.com. Follow him
on Twitter @GlobeChadFinn.
Chastain wall-rides
into NASCAR final
By Jenna Fryer
ASSOCIATED PRESS
AVONDALE, Ariz. — Ross
Chastain skyrocketed to motorsports infamy for wall-riding his
way into NASCAR’s championship
race with a video-game style move
that has overshadowed the finale
and his fellow title contenders.
With that comes a ton of pressure on the eighth-generation
Florida watermelon farmer and
journeyman NASCAR driver who
once took a side gig driving a motorhome just to earn extra cash.
This year, his first with secondyear team Trackhouse Racing, has
been the breakout the 29-year-old
has long been chasing. Chastain’s
decision to slam his Chevrolet into
the Martinsville Speedway wall
and ride it into the fourth and final playoff spot just might have
made him the fan favorite in Sunday’s winner-take-all finale at
Phoenix Raceway.
In his 151st career Cup start,
Chastain will race for his first
championship.
“There are nerves and there’s
anxiety and there is fear of failure.
How cool is it that I’m getting to
experience this?” he said. “In the
moment, it’s not pleasant, the
ner ves. I wish they would go
away.”
The field is stacked.
Christopher Bell has been redhot with two walkoff wins in a pair
of playoff elimination races to advance to his first championship.
Bell is the only Toyota driver in the
field.
Joey Logano is Ford’s only rep-
Cup standings
Four drivers will compete Sunday for
the NASCAR Cup title in the season
finale at Phoenix Raceway in Avondale, Ariz. (3 p.m., NBC).
W
Joey Logano............. 3
Christopher Bell...... 3
Ross Chastain.......... 2
Chase Elliott............. 5
T5 T10 DNF
10 16
4
12 19
6
14 20
5
12 20
4
resentative but will try to give Roger Penske both the NASCAR and
IndyCar championships in the
same season. Will Power won the
IndyCar title for Team Penske in
September and the organization
has never won both championships in the same season.
Then there’s Chase Elliott, the
2020 champion who began a run
of two consecutive Cup championships for Hendrick Motorsports.
Defending champion Kyle Larson
was eliminated in the first round,
so Elliott, in his Chevrolet, is Hendrick’s only shot at winning three
straight Cup titles.
NASCAR’s most popular driver
won the regular-season crown and
led the Cup standings most of the
year. But he’s had a mediocre playoffs and only won at Talladega —
his career-high fifth victory of the
season.
The top finisher among the
four contenders wins the title. Only Elliott and Logano have raced in
the championship finale before.
Chastain had never before made
the playoffs, and Bell made it to
the second round in last year’s
playoff debut.
S u n d a y
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
G l o b e
NFL
AFC
EAST
Buffalo
NY Jets
Miami
New England
W
6
5
5
4
L
1
3
3
4
T
0
0
0
0
Pct.
.857
.625
.625
.500
PF
29.0
22.0
22.3
22.1
PA Conf.
14.0 4-1-0
19.9 4-3-0
24.0 4-2-0
20.4 3-2-0
Div.
0-1-0
1-1-0
2-1-0
1-1-0
Strk.
W4
L1
W2
W1
NORTH
Baltimore
Cincinnati
Cleveland
Pittsburgh
W
5
4
3
2
L
3
4
5
6
T
0
0
0
0
Pct.
.625
.500
.375
.250
PF
26.0
23.3
25.0
15.0
PA Conf.
22.9 4-2-0
20.5 2-3-0
24.9 2-4-0
24.6 1-5-0
Div.
2-0-0
0-3-0
2-1-0
1-1-0
Strk.
W2
L1
W1
L2
SOUTH
Tennessee
Indianapolis
Jacksonville
Houston
W
5
3
2
1
L
2
4
6
6
T
0
1
0
1
Pct.
.714
.438
.250
.188
PF
18.9
16.1
21.5
16.6
PA Conf.
19.7 4-1-0
19.6 3-3-1
19.8 2-3-0
22.9 1-4-1
Div.
3-0-0
1-3-1
1-2-0
1-1-1
Strk.
W5
L2
L5
L3
WEST
Kansas City
LA Chargers
Denver
Las Vegas
W
5
4
3
2
L
2
3
5
5
T
0
0
0
0
Pct.
.714
.571
.375
.286
PF
31.9
23.4
15.1
23.3
PA Conf.
24.6 2-2-0
27.0 4-2-0
16.5 2-4-0
24.9 2-3-0
Div.
2-0-0
2-1-0
0-2-0
1-2-0
Strk.
W1
L1
W1
L1
EAST
Philadelphia
Dallas
NY Giants
Washington
W
8
6
6
4
L
0
2
2
4
T
0
0
0
0
Pct.
1.000
.750
.750
.500
PF
28.1
22.9
20.4
17.8
PA Conf.
16.9 5-0-0
16.6 5-2-0
19.6 3-2-0
21.5 2-3-0
Div.
2-0-0
2-1-0
0-1-0
0-2-0
Strk.
W8
W2
L1
W3
NORTH
Minnesota
Green Bay
Chicago
Detroit
W
6
3
3
1
L
1
5
5
6
T
0
0
0
0
Pct.
.857
.375
.375
.143
PF
24.7
18.1
19.4
24.7
PA Conf.
20.6 5-1-0
21.6 2-3-0
22.6 1-5-0
32.1 1-4-0
Div.
3-0-0
1-1-0
0-2-0
0-1-0
Strk.
W5
L4
L1
L5
SOUTH
Atlanta
Tampa Bay
New Orleans
Carolina
W
4
3
3
2
L
4
5
5
6
T
0
0
0
0
Pct.
.500
.375
.375
.250
PF
25.0
18.3
24.9
19.8
PA Conf.
25.6 3-3-0
18.9 3-2-0
25.0 2-4-0
23.3 2-5-0
Div.
1-2-0
2-1-0
1-2-0
2-1-0
Strk.
W1
L3
W1
L1
WEST
Seattle
San Francisco
LA Rams
Arizona
W
5
4
3
3
L
3
4
4
5
T Pct.
PF
PA Conf.
0 .625 26.3 24.9 3-3-0
0 .500 22.0 18.4 4-2-0
0 .429 16.9 22.4 3-3-0
0 .375 22.8 26.3 2-4-0
SUNDAY’S GAMES
Div.
1-1-0
3-0-0
1-2-0
0-2-0
Strk.
W3
W1
L1
L1
NFC
Indianapolis at New England
1
Carolina at Cincinnati
Minnesota at Washington
1
Miami at Chicago
1
1
Buffalo at NY Jets
1
Seattle at Arizona
4:05
LA Chargers at Atlanta
1
LA Rams at Tampa Bay
4:25
Las Vegas at Jacksonville
1
Tennessee at Kansas City
8:20
Green Bay at Detroit
1
MONDAY’S GAME
Baltimore at New Orleans
8:15
THURSDAY’S RESULT
Philadelphia 29
at Houston 17
NFL UPDATE WEEK 9
Minnesota at Washington
Time: 1 p.m. Line: Minnesota by 3
Records: Vikings 6-1 (3-4 vs. spread), Commanders 4-4 (4-4 vs.
spread).
Key injuries: MINNESOTA: OUT: DT Dalvin Tomlinson (calf), QUESTIONABLE: CB Cameron Dantzler (neck), WR Jalen Nailor (illness). WASHINGTON: OUT: WR Jahan Dotson (hamstring), LB
Cole Holcomb (foot), LB David Mayo (hamstring), RB J.D. McKissic (neck), QUESTIONABLE: DE Shaka Toney (calf).
Buffalo at NY Jets
Time: 1 p.m. Line: Buffalo by 10½
Records: Bills 6-1 (4-2-1 vs. spread), Jets 5-3 (5-3 vs. spread).
Key injuries: BUFFALO: OUT: S Jordan Poyer (elbow), QUESTIONABLE: T Spencer Brown (ankle), LB Matt Milano (oblique). NY
JETS: OUT: WR Corey Davis (knee).
Las Vegas at Jacksonville
Time: 1 p.m. Line: Las Vegas by 2½
Records: Raiders 2-5 (3-4 vs. spread), Jaguars 2-6 (2-6 vs. spread).
Key injuries: LAS VEGAS: QUESTIONABLE: LB Divine Deablo
(back, wrist), DT Neil Farrell Jr. (knee), TE Darren Waller (hamstring). JACKSONVILLE: QUESTIONABLE: WR Jamal Agnew
(knee).
Green Bay at Detroit
Time: 1 p.m. Line: Green Bay by 3½
Records: Packers 3-5 (3-5 vs. spread), Lions 1-6 (3-3-1 vs. spread).
Key injuries: GREEN BAY: OUT: LB De’Vondre Campbell (knee), CB
Shemar Jean-Charles (ankle), QUESTIONABLE: T David Bakhtiari
(knee), G Elgton Jenkins (knee, foot), WR Allen Lazard (shoulder),
LB Preston Smith (shoulder, neck), WR Christian Watson (concussion). DETROIT: OUT: CB Chase Lucas (ankle), S Ifeatu Melifonwu (ankle), T Matt Nelson (calf), CB AJ Parker (hip), DOUBTFUL: WR Josh Reynolds (back), QUESTIONABLE: T Taylor Decker
(groin), DE Charles Harris (groin), RB D’Andre Swift (ankle, shoulder), TE Brock Wright (concussion protocol).
Carolina at Cincinnati
Time: 1 p.m. Line: Cincinnati by 7
Records: Panthers 2-6 (3-5 vs. spread), Bengals 4-4 (5-3 vs.
spread).
Key injuries: CAROLINA: OUT: S Juston Burris (concussion), WR
Rashard Higgins (illness), RB Chuba Hubbard (ankle), DOUBTFUL:
TE Stephen Sullivan (illness), QUESTIONABLE: DE Amare Barno
(knee). CINCINNATI: OUT: CB Chidobe Awuzie (knee), WR Ja’Marr
Chase (hip), CB Mike Hilton (finger), DT Josh Tupou (calf), QUESTIONABLE: QB Brandon Allen (knee), T La’el Collins (illness), CB
Tre Flowers (hamstring).
Miami at Chicago
Time: 1 p.m. Line: Miami by 4½
Records: Dolphins 5-3 (3-4-1 vs. spread), Bears 3-5 (3-4-1 vs.
spread).
Key injuries: MIAMI: OUT: WR River Cracraft (illness), DOUBTFUL:
T Austin Jackson (ankle, calf), QUESTIONABLE: T Terron Armstead (toe, Achilles’), TE Tanner Conner (knee), LB Jaelan Phillips
(quadriceps), S Eric Rowe (hip). CHICAGO: QUESTIONABLE: CHICAGO: Ja’Tyre Carter (illness).
LA Chargers at Atlanta
Time: 1 p.m. Line: LA Chargers by 3
Records: Chargers 4-3 (4-3 vs. spread), Falcons 4-4 (6-2 vs.
spread).
Key injuries: LA CHARGERS: OUT: WR Keenan Allen (hamstring),
K Dustin Hopkins (hamstring), TE Donald Parham (hamstring), LB
Chris Rumph (knee), DT Jerry Tillery (back), WR Mike Williams
(ankle), QUESTIONABLE: WR DeAndre Carter (illness), LB Amen
Ogbongbemiga (groin). ATLANTA: OUT: CB A.J. Terrell (hamstring), T Elijah Wilkinson (knee).
Seattle at Arizona
Time: 4:05 p.m., Fox. Line: Arizona by 1½
Records: Seahawks 5-3 (5-3 vs. spread), Cardinals 3-5 (4-4 vs.
spread).
Key injuries: SEATTLE: OUT: WR Marquise Goodwin (groin), LB
Darrell Taylor (groin), QUESTIONABLE: S Joey Blount (quadriceps), WR Penny Hart (hamstring). ARIZONA: OUT: G Max Garcia
(shoulder), C Rodney Hudson (knee), CB Christian Matthew
(hamstring), QUESTIONABLE: S Budda Baker (ankle), RB James
Conner (ribs), LB Dennis Gardeck (ankle), T D.J. Humphries
(back), DE Jonathan Ledbetter (ribs).
LA Rams at Tampa Bay
Time: 4:25 p.m., CBS. Line: Tampa Bay by 3
Records: Rams 3-4 (2-5 vs. spread), Buccaneers 3-5 (2-6 vs.
spread).
Key injuries: LA RAMS: OUT: LB Jake Hummel (hip), QUESTIONABLE: WR Van Jefferson (knee). TAMPA BAY: OUT: TE Cameron
Brate (neck), WR Russell Gage (hamstring), G Luke Goedeke
(foot), S Antoine Winfield (concussion), QUESTIONABLE: CB Carlton Davis (hip), DT Akiem Hicks (foot), CB Sean Murphy-Bunting
(quadriceps).
Tennessee at Kansas City
Time: 8:20 p.m., NBC, Universo. Line: Kansas City by 12½
Records: Titans 5-2 (5-2 vs. spread), Chiefs 5-2 (3-4 vs. spread).
Key injuries: TENNESSEE: OUT: RB Tory Carter (neck), S Amani
Hooker (shoulder), QUESTIONABLE: LB Bud Dupree (illness), DT
Jeffery Simmons (ankle), DE Kevin Strong (ankle), QB Ryan Tannehill (ankle). KANSAS CITY: OUT: TE Jody Fortson (quadriceps,
illness).
Baltimore at New Orleans
Time: Monday, 8:15 p.m., ESPN, ESPN2. Line: Baltimore by 1½
Records: Ravens 5-3 (3-4-1 vs. spread), Saints 3-5 (3-5 vs. spread).
Key injuries: BALTIMORE: OUT: WR Rashod Bateman (foot),
DOUBTFUL: TE Mark Andrews (knee, shoulder), RB Gus Edwards
(hamstring), QUESTIONABLE: OLB Malik Harrison (foot), OL Patrick Mekari (back), CB Marcus Peters (quadricep, knee), WR Demarcus Robinson (groin). NEW ORLEANS: OUT: LB Chase Hansen
(knee), RB Mark Ingram (knee), CB Marshon Lattimore (abdomen), QUESTIONABLE: WR Jarvis Landry (ankle).
ADAM HUNGER/ASSOCIATED PRESS
Patriots safety Jabrill Peppers played a season-high 40
defensive snaps in last Sunday’s win over the Jets.
Safety Peppers
hopes he made
winning move
By Julian Benbow
GLOBE STAFF
FOXBOROUGH — If you
want to know how hard it is to
win in the NFL, ask someone
who’s never done it.
Winning was a way of life for
Jabrill Peppers. He won four
state titles at Paramus Catholic
High School in New Jersey. He
spent three years in a winning
culture at the University of
Michigan. He was a first-round
draft pick in 2017.
The Cleveland Browns took
Peppers 25th overall. His first
year in the league was jarring.
The Browns went 0-16. He lost
more that year than he had in
his entire life. The next year,
they went 7-8-1. That offseason,
the Browns bundled him with
two draft picks for Odell Beckham Jr. Peppers spent three
years in New York, and the Giants went 14-35.
Peppers signed a one-year
deal this past offseason as a player who had gone his entire NFL
career not knowing what it was
like to have a winning season.
“Oh, that’s always on my
mind,” he said. “High school, I
won. College, I won. It’s just in
the league. I haven’t been winning.”
Losing so much that it feels
inevitable can change a player’s
perspective.
“It changed a lot,” Peppers
said. “Because when you’re winning all the time, you kind of get
spoiled. But it kind of put a lot of
things in perspective. I kind of
had to hone in on things differently, do a lot of things differently to give myself a different edge.
So it definitely makes you look at
yourself in the mirror.”
Peppers didn’t come to the
Patriots with selfish motives. Instead, the 5-foot-11-inch, 215pound safety saw New England
as a place where he could make
contributions — big or small —
to winning.
“I feel like I always had that
mind-set,” Peppers said. “I just
want to win games, I haven’t
won too much since I’ve been in
the league . . . I knew it was a
winning culture here. I wanted
to come play for Bill [Belichick]
because he knows the game a little better than most. He puts his
players in the best positions to
make plays, and they win. So I
wanted to come be a part of a
winning culture.”
It wasn’t hard for Peppers to
learn the Patriots system because of the years he spent in
New York under Patrick Graham
and Joe Judge — two branches
on the Belichick coaching tree.
“It really wasn’t too much of
a culture shock for me,” Peppers
said. “The defense was very, very
similar, certain nuances are different, certain verbiage is different, but for the most part it
wasn’t like I had to come into a
whole new situation without
practice and learn a whole new
defense. Certain things were
kind of hard for me because
they’ve got different words that
meant something different in
the las t system that means
something new here. So I might
say the wrong word one time.
Other than that, it’s been cool.”
But what has impressed safety Devin McCourty was Peppers
coming into the locker room as a
six-year veteran who had carved
out an identity as a starter, and
not demanding a role but instead asking what needed to be
filled.
“He’s been a good player. He
just came in like, ‘What do ya’ll
need?’ ” McCourty said.
Coming off a season-ending
knee injury in 2021, Peppers
didn’t get much time to get acclimated prior to training camp.
Knowing how crowded the secondary was, he embraced the
chance to be an impact player on
special teams.
“I knew coming here, coming
off injury, special teams was going to be a big thing for me,” Peppers said. “I wanted to show
them that even if I’m not returning, I could still be valuable on
special teams.
“We’ve already got a lot of talented safeties here, so it rotates
week to week. So it’s got to be
other ways that you’ve got to
make plays and impac t the
team. So I was just trying to embrace that.”
Last week against the Jets exemplified all the ways Peppers
contributes. With Kyle Dugger
out because of a leg injury, Peppers stepped in. He was on the
field for a season-high 40 defensive snaps, while holding down
his normal special teams duties.
He sprung Marcus Jones for a
32-yard punt re turn with a
crushing block on gunner Justin
Ha r d e e , a n d h e w a s o n t h e
hands team and recovered an
onside kick that helped the Patriots ice a 22-17 win.
“Obviously, he showed the
level that he can still play at
from a defensive standpoint,”
McCourty said. “And that didn’t
take away the big punt return
we had. He had the big gest
block on the play. Then ending
the game on the hands team. I
j u s t t h i n k t h e e n e r g y h e ’s
brought to the team has been
very positive.”
That energy of appreciation
was forged from years of not
knowing if a winning season will
ever come.
“I think when young guys see
that, they understand,” McCourty said. “Again, his talent
level, what he can do on the football field, everyone knows about
that. I think he plays to any role
that he’s in, and that’s been big
for us.”
Julian Benbow can be reached at
julian.benbow@globe.com.
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
Sports
G l o b e
C5
Football
Surprisingly, the Seahawks are flying high
Ben Volin
T
he Seahawks had a lot of
reasons to celebrate this
past week.
On Sunday, they annihilated the hottest team in the
NFL, the Giants, to improve to 5-3, first
place in the NFC West.
With the win, coach Pete Carroll
tied his mentor, Bud Grant, with his
168th NFL victory, 18th most in league
history.
And on Wednesday, the Seahawks
cleaned up with the NFL’s awards for
October. Quarterback Geno Smith was
named NFC offensive player of the
month, while running back Kenneth
Walker and cornerback Tariq Woolen
were named the NFL’s offensive and defensive rookie of the month, respectively. It was the first time that rookies
from the same team won those awards
in the same month.
“It’s amazing to see,” eight-year veteran receiver Tyler Lockett said by telephone after Thursday’s practice. “We
have had so many guys that are deserving and have had a chance to win. We’re
starting to come along on all sides of
the ball, and it’s really a beautiful thing
to see.”
Lockett is used to being in the thick
of the NFC playoff race, but Seattle’s
success this year is sweeter than usual.
Because few inside or outside of the
NFL saw this coming.
The Seahawks finished 7-10 in 2021,
their first losing season in a decade.
Their offseason was highlighted by major subtractions — releasing defensive
captain Bobby Wagner and trading
franchise quarterback Russell Wilson.
Their big plan to replace Wilson
seemed like the worst quarterback
competition of the decade — Geno
Smith vs. Drew Lock. They ended the
preseason with the third-worst Super
Bowl odds in the NFL, tied with the Lions and Bears. Carroll was listed near
the top of most “next coach fired” lists.
Instead, the Seahawks are No. 3 in
the NFC and one of the best stories of
the season.
“I mean, of course this year is special, because everybody counted us
out,” Lockett said. “And honestly, that’s
the best way to go, if you ask me, is
when everyone is counting you out. It’s
hard to play with expectations. We already know we’re going to make mistakes, but it’s not like we’ve got to beat
ourselves up. We’re learning how to
play through the mistakes rather than
point the finger.”
The Seahawks have won shootouts
(48-45 over the Lions and 37-23 over
the Chargers) and defensive battles (1716 over the Broncos and 19-9 over the
Cardinals). And each win in their current three-game streak has been decisive — a 10-point win over the Cardinals, a 14-point win at the Chargers,
and a 14-point win over the Giants to
wreck their six-game win streak.
The Seahawks had early hiccups in
losses to the 49ers, Falcons, and Saints,
but are now hitting their stride.
“I hate that we were crappy early in
the year and we weren’t doing stuff
right,” Carroll said this past week. “But
we held on to it and we felt like we
knew where we could go, and we’re getting going.”
The Seahawks have so many great
story lines, but none better than Smith.
A bust with the Jets, Smith hasn’t been
a regular starting quarterback since the
2014 season, bouncing between four
teams and sitting on the bench behind
Ryan Fitzpatrick, Eli Manning, Philip
Rivers, and Wilson.
Smith has been with the Seahawks
since 2019, and he acquitted himself
well in a three-game stint last year, but
even the Seahawks didn’t really know
what they had. They traded for Lock in
the Wilson deal, and entered training
camp with an open competition.
But Smith grabbed control of the job
early and has been remarkable. A 57.9
percent passer in two seasons with the
Jets, Smith now leads the NFL at 72.7
percent. He is fourth among all quarterbacks with a 107.2 passer rating,
thanks to 13 touchdowns and just three
interceptions. Smith went 4-1 as a starter in October and is in the short conversation for midseason MVP.
“I think the only thing we saw that
was different was just opportunity,” said
Lockett, who leads the Seahawks with
46 catches for 531 yards and three
touchdowns. “Imagine how much
knowledge and wisdom he learned just
from being behind so many great quarterbacks. Now it’s time for you to be
able to show that it’s paid off.”
Another great story line is the emergence of pass rusher Uchenna Nwosu,
who signed a surprising two-year, $20
million contract in free agency. His career high in four seasons with the Chargers was just five sacks, but Nwosu has
Staying grounded
With Ryan Tannehill out and the Titans starting a rookie quarterback, they leaned on their fearsome rushing attack to overwhelm the Texans last week.
Derrick Henry led the way as Tennessee racked up more than 300 yards on the ground and just 40 through the air. According to stathead.com, it was
just the third time since 2000 that a team had more than 300 yards rushing and 50 or fewer passing yards in a game. COMPILED BY MICHAEL GROSSI
TITANS
RAVENS
BENGALS
17-10 win at Texans, 10/30/2022
33-13 win vs. Browns, 9/14/2003
31-21 win vs. Broncos, 10/22/2000
RUSHING
RUSHING
RUSHING
314 YARDS | 2 TDs
343 YARDS | 2 TDs
407 YARDS | 4 TDs
PASSING
PASSING
PASSING
55 YARDS | 3 SACKS | 15 YARDS LOST
78 YARDS | 4 SACKS | 28 YARDS LOST
34 YARDS | 2 SACKS | 20 YARDS LOST
NOTE: Derrick Henry rushed for 219
yards and two scores; it was his sixth
career 200-yard rushing game
NOTE: Jamal Lewis set the single-game
rushing mark (which has since been broken by
Adrian Peterson) with 295 yards on the ground
NOTE: Corey Dillon had 278 yards
rushing, and wide receiver Peter Warrick
added another 90
ASSOCIATED PRESS, REUTERS PHOTOS
thrived in Seattle, already logging five
to go with three batted passes, two
forced fumbles, and 12 quarterback
hits.
The Seahawks’ rookie class also has
been fantastic. Tackles Charles Cross
and Abraham Lucas have each started
eight games. Linebacker Boye Mafe
and cornerback Coby Bryant have been
productive rotational players.
And Walker and Woolen have been
home runs. Walker, drafted 41st overall, has rushed for 432 yards and five
touchdowns in his last five games.
Woolen, drafted in the fifth round,
ranks second in the NFL with four interceptions, including a pick-6. Woolen
has four of the Seahawks’ five interceptions, and also two fumble recoveries.
Finally, there’s Carroll, who is overseeing an unexpectedly quick turnaround. The oldest NFL head coach at
71 and in his 13th year in Seattle, Carroll is proving that his methods aren’t
getting stale.
“A lot of coaches don’t get as many
chances as I’ve had,” Carroll said last
Sunday. “This is a very special opportunity right now.”
The Seahawks’ hot start won’t mean
much if they stumble in games at Arizona and Tampa Bay before hitting their
bye week. And the gambling world still
isn’t quite buying the Seahawks, currently giving them the 16th-best Super
Bowl odds.
But Carroll acknowledged that he’s
loving his underdog team.
“I like this challenge. I like this
whole thing,” he said. “All the people
that doubt, like you’re losing it — ‘We
run the ball too much, you don’t understand football, and you can’t stay up
with the new game,’ and all that kind of
stuff — that’s a bunch of crap, I’m telling you. Look, we’re doing fine. We’re
all right. I don’t mind proving it day in
and day out.”
the remaining 40.5 percent share, but
the NFL had to grant Snyder a waiver of
its debt limit in order to make it happen.
But the walls may be closing in on
Snyder this time. Irsay, the Colts owner,
has gone on a public crusade to encourage his fellow owners to consider voting
Snyder out of the league (it would require 24 of the 31 other owners). ESPN
reported last month that Snyder “lost” a
supporter in Jerry Jones, and Sports
Business Journal reported this past
week that several owners have privately
told commissioner end Roger Goodell
that Snyder needs to go.
And perhaps not coincidentally, on
the same day that Snyder announced he
may sell the team, ESPN reported that
the US attorney’s office for the Eastern
District of Virginia has opened a criminal investigation over allegations of deceptive business practices, including
misreporting ticket revenue. Snyder
could be the NFL’s Al Capone, going
down not for his main crime — creating
a disgusting workplace culture of sexual harassment and misogyny — but for
cooking the books.
Commander fans would throw a parade down Constitution Avenue if Snyder sold the team after 24 years of disastrous ownership. Snyder almost certainly would receive a record price,
surpassing the $4.6 billion spent on the
Broncos this past summer.
Amazon founder and Washington
Post owner Jeff Bezos confirmed to his
newspaper that he is interested. The
NFL surely is enticed by billionaires
who can just cut a check, but the league
also is desirous of improving its minority record among ownership, which
could give a leg up to an investment
group run by Black entertainment moguls Byron Allen or Jay-Z.
ETC.
Britt Reid gets off
Time running out lightly once again
Britt Reid, the son of Chiefs coach
for the Snyders?
Andy Reid, was sentenced on Tuesday
COMMAND DECISION
It was less than three weeks ago that
Dan Snyder dug in his heels and told
the world he wouldn’t be selling the
Commanders.
“We are confident that, when he has
an opportunity to see the actual evidence in this case, Mr. [Jim] Irsay will
conclude that there is no reason for the
Snyders to consider selling the franchise,” the team said in a statement.
“And they won’t.”
Except now they might. In a shocking announcement Wednesday, Snyder
confirmed a report from Forbes that he
has retained Bank of America Securities
to “consider potential transactions,”
a.k.a. selling the team.
Snyder’s statement was vague about
whether he intends to sell the entire
team or a minority share. In 2021, he
bought out his minority partners for
after being found guilty of one count of
felony driving while intoxicated with
serious bodily injury. And everyone
from local prosecutors to the NFL is doing its best to sweep the episode under
the rug.
Reid, 37, put a 5-year-old girl in a
coma in February 2021 when he
slammed his pickup truck, which had
reached 84 miles per hour, into two
cars parked on an offramp on I-435.
The girl, Ariel Young, was in a coma for
11 days, in the hospital for two months,
and still deals works daily with a speech
pathologist and physical therapist. The
Chiefs reached a private settlement
with her family.
Reid was previously arrested twice
in his 20s and spent five months in jail
for road rage and drug incidents. This
time, he faced a maximum of seven
years in jail but had the gall to ask for
probation. Prosecutors for some reason
only sought four years, and the judge
gave him three. No one will explain
why.
“Given the damage Reid did to the
family and his prior criminal record,
this defendant did not deserve a deal,”
the Youngs’ attorney, Tom Porto, told
the New York Times. “The prosecutor
should have gone to trial or had him
plead to the maximum seven years.”
And the NFL appears to want to
bury this story instead of punishing Andy Reid or the Chiefs. Britt Reid admitted in his statement to police that he
consumed Adderall and multiple alcoholic drinks at the team’s facility before
the crash. It should be a clear-cut violation of the personal conduct policy. But
an NFL spokesman didn’t respond to a
request for comment after Reid’s sentencing.
It’s a shameful ending to a heartwrenching episode. Reid gets off lightly
again because his father is famous.
Heinicke coming full circle
Commanders quarterback Taylor
Heinicke will get a start against Minnesota on Sunday, about six years after he
could’ve been starting for the Vikings.
Heinicke was an undrafted rookie
for the Vikings in 2015, and had a
chance to win the backup job in 2016.
But that chance never came because
Heinicke severed a tendon in his foot
before training camp while trying to
kick out a window. Heinicke could have
gotten his big chance in 2016 when
Teddy Bridgewater suffered a knee injury in camp, but Heinicke was done
for the season, and the Vikings traded
for Sam Bradford instead.
“That was one of the dumbest mistakes I’ve ever made,” Heinicke said of
kicking the window. “I feel like maybe if
that didn’t happen and then Teddy
blows out his knee, I might’ve got a
chance that year and maybe not have
traded for Sam Bradford. Who knows?”
The Vikings released Heinicke after
2016, and he bounced between the Patriots, Texans, Panthers, and the XFL
before finally sticking with the Commanders late in 2020. Heinicke went
7-8 as a starter last year and is 2-0 this
year.
Extra points
The Eagles are 8-0 after beating the
Texans on Thursday night, but is a regression coming soon? They have an
NFL-high 18 takeaways and an NFLlow three giveaways for a remarkable
plus-15 turnover margin. For context,
Baltimore, Dallas, and Minnesota are
tied for second at plus-6. The Eagles
will be hard pressed to maintain this
pace, especially on offense. They have
fumbled seven times but didn’t lose any
until Jalen Hurts did so on Thursday . . .
Tyreek Hill isn’t just lapping the field in
receiving yards, his 961 are 197 more
than anyone else in the league. But Hill
also leads the NFL in yards from scrim-
mage with 986, a remarkable feat considering that the next eight players in
the rankings are
running backs.
Hill is averaging
120.1 receiving
yards per game,
second only to
Calvin Johnson
(122.8 in 2012)
since the 1970
TYREEK HILL
merger (excludLapping the field
ing strike seasons) . . . Browns
GM Andrew Berry confirmed that Deshaun Watson will take over as starting
quarterback Week 13 at Houston after
his suspension ends. If Watson starts all
six remaining games, he’ll make
$7,561,250 per start for a total of
$45,367,500, since the Browns crafted
his contract that would minimize the financial damage of a suspension. Not
bad work if you can get it . . . Eagles defensive end Robert Quinn and Bills safety Dean Marlowe, both acquired at the
trade deadline, could each play in 18
games since they missed their teams’
bye weeks. Quinn played just seven
snaps for the Eagles on Thursday night
. . . Josh McDaniels had the Raiders
staying in Sarasota, Fla., and practicing
at nearby IMG Academy this past week
between games at New Orleans and
Jacksonville. It probably wasn’t much
of a vacation after last week’s 24-0 loss
. . . The Dolphins must really believe in
Bradley Chubb, because they sure did
give up a lot — a first-round pick, then a
five-year, $119 million contract with
$63 million guaranteed — for a guy
who has missed 24 games over the last
three seasons . . . Tom Brady needs 164
passing yards on Sunday against the
Rams to give him 100,000 for his career, including postseason . . . A rarity
on Sunday — a 1 p.m. kickoff for Patriots-Colts. Seventeen of the last 21
matchups have come in the late afternoon or night, including the last seven.
The last 1 p.m. kickoffs — 2011 (with
Dan Orlovsky at quarterback for the
Colts), 2003, and both in 2001 . . .
Saints receiver Michael Thomas signed
a five-year, $97 million contract before
the 2019 season, and he set an NFL record that year with 149 catches for
1,725 yards. But his career has been
marred by injuries since, missing nine
games in 2020 with an ankle injury, the
2021 season with an ankle injury, and
now he will miss 14 games this year as
he awaits toe surgery. The Saints have
paid him $39 million for 10 games for
2020-22 . . . RIP Ray Guy, the only
punter inducted into the Pro Football
Hall of Fame (2014), thanks in part to a
campaign from Bill Belichick. A sixtime All-Pro who redefined the position, Guy was also an accomplished
pitcher, throwing one of six no-hitters
in University of Southern Mississippi
history.
Ben Volin can be reached at
ben.volin@globe.com.
C6
Sports
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
G l o b e
Pro football
COLTS at PATRIOTS WHEN: Sunday, 1 p.m. WHERE: Gillette Stadium TV, RADIO: CBS, WBZ-FM (98.5) LINE: Patriots by 4½
Colts appear ripe for a defeat
Chad Finn
THE UNCONVENTIONAL PREVIEW
A serious yet lighthearted,
nostalgia-tinted look at the
Patriots’ weekly matchup.
The Patriots can’t afford to think
of anything as a revenge game right
now. After getting back to .500 with
a 22-17 win over interception specialist Zach Wilson and the Jets last
Sunday, all focus needs to be on how
they’re playing, not who they’re playing. They need to
stack some wins together in November — before that
first showdown with the loaded Bills on Dec. 1 — if
they’re going to make a legitimate playoff run.
But there is something to avenge in Sunday’s
matchup with the Colts. The Patriots’ 2021 season
took the wrong detour with a 27-17 loss to Indianapolis in Week 15. The Patriots, coming off their bye
week with a 9-4 record and a seven-game winning
streak, made fundamental mistake after fundamental
mistake on offense, while the defense could not slow
star Colts running back Jonathan Taylor, who accumulated 67 of his 170 rushing yards on a clinching
touchdown run just before the two-minute warning.
The Patriots would win just one more game the rest of
the season.
The Patriots have been so unpredictable this season, in both good ways and — I’m thinking of the 19point loss to the Bears here — bad, that it’s difficult to
draw conclusions about where
they’re headed. But this matchup should provide some valuable clues.
If the Colts aren’t in turmoil,
they’re on the verge of it. Quarterback Matt Ryan, the 37-yearold former Boston College star
and high-profile offseason acquisition, was benched after
throwing nine interceptions and
nine touchdown passes in seven
games. He also had 11 fumbles
in his first five starts.
He was replaced by former
sixth-round pick Sam Ehlinger,
who is essentially Bailey Zappe
with fleeter feet, having scored
16 rushing touchdowns during
his sophomore season at the
University of Texas. Ehlinger
played competently in his first
MARK ZALESKI/ASSOCIATED PRESS
start last Sunday against the
Colts quarterback Matt Ryan was
Commanders, completing 17 of
benched after throwing nine INTs
23 passes without a touchdown
or interception in the 17-16 loss.
and nine TD passes in seven games.
His first start screams “game
manager at best,” but Ehlinger does present an interesting test for Bill Belichick and the Patriots defense.
He is the kind of inexperienced quarterback Belichick
usually torments, but he does run well, which is something they’ve had trouble defending lately, most notably when the Bears’ Justin Fields ran past them for 82
yards two weeks ago.
More about that pending turmoil: The Colts fired
offensive coordinator Marcus Brady after the Washington loss, making him the greatest scapegoat in
sports this week that doesn’t answer to the name
Steve Nash. Coach Frank Reich is the so-called architect of the Colts’ 30th-ranked scoring offense (16.1
points per game). Taylor hasn’t been the same this
season (462 yards, one touchdown) as he deals with
an ankle injury, and speedy backup/third-down running back Nyheim Hines was dealt to the Bills at the
deadline. And now they’re leaning on a rookie quarterback with a modest pedigree?
Sometimes it’s not obvious when a team is about to
fall apart. Who saw it coming with the Patriots last
year? But sometimes it is. The Colts are ripe for defeat
Sunday. If the Patriots can deliver it, maybe we’ll learn
a little something about them, too.
Kick it off, Bailey, and let’s get this one started . . .
Three players to watch
other than the quarterbacks
Stephon Gilmore: Most of the successful big-money free agent signings in NFL history have been quarterbacks — Drew Brees with the Saints, Peyton Manning with the Broncos, and Tom Brady with the Buccaneers, all of whom won Super Bowls with their
second teams.
But the best overall free agent addition in NFL history was a defensive player — end Reggie White with
the Packers in 1993, when he signed a massive (well,
for the time) four-year, $17 million deal. He, too, was
essential in a Super Bowl victory, as Drew Bledsoe’s
DUSTIN BRADFORD/GETTY IMAGES
Stephon Gilmore, who was named NFL Defensive Player of the Year with the Patriots, is in his first year with the Colts.
ribcage can attest.
I bring this up because I think a case can be made
that Gilmore, now in his first season with the Colts,
turned out to be the second-best high-priced free
agent signing of a defensive player ever when the Patriots plucked him from the Bills with a five-year, $65
million deal in March 2017. The move was a stunner
— the majority of Patriots observers figured incumbent cornerback Malcolm Butler would get the big
payday.
After a rough first few games, Gilmore’s time in
New England was mostly brilliant, validating what
Belichick saw in him. He clinched the 2018 Patriots’
Super Bowl victory over the Rams by baiting hapless
quarterback Jared Goff into a late interception. The
next season was his individual pinnacle: He was
named NFL Defensive Player of the Year after leading
the league with six interceptions and 20 pass breakups.
After contract and injury issues that may not have
been mutually exclusive, the Patriots sent Gilmore to
the Panthers at the trade deadline last year. He signed
with the Colts in the offseason, and he teams with
Kenny Moore — a Patriot for a brief time — as their
starting cornerback tandem. In his 11th NFL season,
it would not be a surprise if he pulls a sly one and
baits Mac Jones into an interception Sunday. Gilmore
has played well for the Colts. But for the Patriots, he
was often spectacular, and big money well spent.
Hunter Henry: One of the most perplexing ongoing
story lines with the Patriots offense is the inability or
failure to get Henry involved. He was their most dependable non-Jakobi Meyers option in the passing
game last year, catching 50 passes on 75 targets for
603 yards and 9 touchdowns. It was a solid first season in New England, right in line with his production
in 2020 with the Chargers (60-613-4).
But through eight games this season, his stat totals
— 15 catches, 190 yards, 1 touchdown — look like
they belong on the profootballreference.com pages of
his ineffective tight end predecessors, like Matt LaCosse or Ryan Izzo.
Stranger still, after building that connection with
Jones last year, his two most productive games — a 461-1 performance against Cleveland in Week 6, which
followed up a 4-54-0 game against the Lions in Week
5 — came with Zappe at quarterback. That might indicate that some of this is on Jones, who has had issues
seeing the field this season, but the hunch here is that
it’s more a Matt Patricia thing.
Conventional wisdom or recency bias might suggest that Henry will be a non-factor this week given
the pattern of his season, but this might just be the
week and the opponent to get a talented player properly involved again.
Henry delivered his best performance as a Patriot
against the Colts in Week 15 last season, catching six
passes for 77 yards and a pair of fourth-quarter touch-
Shaquille
Leonard (53)
made his return
from a
concussion, as
well as nose and
back injuries,
last Sunday
against the
Commanders,
and finished
with three
tackles an an
interception.
downs, including one with a little more than two minutes left that cut the Colts’ lead to 20-17. The Patriots
could use that player right now. It’s Patricia and
Jones’s duty to find him.
Shaquille Leonard: The last time the Patriots ran
into this guy, he had a hellacious game under a different name. Known as Darius Leonard until deciding to
go by his middle name this season, the three-time AllPro linebacker was a one-man swarm in last year’s
matchup, making a game-high 10 tackles, forcing a
Rhamondre Stevenson fumble, breaking up a pass,
and picking off another on a Jones throw intended for
Henry. (Jones did not appear to see the defender on
Leonard’s pick, which has been a problem with the
quarterback this season.)
Leonard has played just two games this season. He
missed the first three games while recovering from
offseason back surgery, made his season debut in
Week 4 against the Titans, but suffered a concussion
as well as nose and back injuries that kept him out until his return last Sunday against the Commanders.
The Colts, who have the 17th-ranked run defense
at 120 yards per game, eased him back in their loss to
Washington, limiting him to 24 snaps. But he was typically effective, with three tackles and an interception.
Leonard, with assistance from a talented defensive
line that includes DeForest Buckner and Yannick Ngakoue (who have a combined eight sacks and 19 QB
hits), could dominate against the Patriots. Their offensive line struggled against the Jets without center David Andrews (concussion), allowing Jones to be
sacked six times.
Grievance of the week
After mentioning this past week that Jabrill Peppers — who has been a heck of a pickup, by the way —
made a “big-time shortstop play” in fielding a skittering onside kick to secure the win over the Jets,
Belichick was asked who his favorite shortstop was
growing up.
His answer indicated two things: He is sadly not
familiar with the work of one Anthony Nomar Garciaparra. And he apparently matured way later than we
thought.
“There’s a lot of good ones, but I’d have to go with
[Derek] Jeter here in the long haul — not that I was
growing up then,” he said, clarifying at least that
much. “It’d be hard to put anyone ahead of Jeter.”
I suppose this is somewhat understandable.
Belichick was riding shotgun to Bill Parcells with the
Jets from 1997-99, when Jeter was the toast of New
York, New Jersey, certain parts of Connecticut, and
every single Fox baseball broadcast. Belichick was
probably in a film bunker cooking up new ways to torment Bledsoe while Garciaparra was ripping line
drives every single at-bat on those “Nomar, Pedro, and
23 role players against the world” Red Sox teams.
He missed out on the Nomar heyday. I’d feel for
him if he wasn’t so mistaken. Jeter? We’re shocked
you didn’t say Mark Belanger. Stick to football and
some occasional lacrosse, Bill.
Prediction, or when did Jim Irsay
become the conscience of the NFL?
There’s no other word for it. The Patriots were
sloppy against the Colts last year. Jones threw two
interceptions, including one in the red zone. The Colts
blocked a Jake Bailey punt and recovered for a touchdown. The Patriots committed two false-start penalties in short-yardage situations. Another penalty negated a missed Colts field goal, with kicker Michael
Badgley hitting the second chance.
They’ve been sloppy too often this season. Jones
has seven interceptions and just three touchdown
passes. The offensive line has been penalty-prone.
Promising drives too often end with 3 points rather
than 7. This has to be a week to keep it simple, protect
the football, give Stevenson touches, and let Matthew
Judon and the defense flummox Ehlinger. That is not
much to ask.
Patriots 23, Colts 6.
ZACH BOLINGER/ASSOCIATED PRESS
Chad Finn can be reached at chad.finn@globe.com.
Follow him on Twitter @GlobeChadFinn.
TAKE A
NUMBER
The Patriots’
record
against the
Colts:
52-30
ALL
TIME
(with playoffs)
30-12
AT
HOME
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
C7
Sports
G l o b e
Pro football
PATRIOTS NOTEBOOK
Patriots
ROSTER
Pos.
No.
1. DeVante Parker ........................WR
2. Jalen Mills......................................S
3. Jabrill Peppers ..............................S
4. Bailey Zappe ..............................QB
6. Nick Folk ....................................... K
7. Jake Bailey.................................... P
8. Ja’Whaun Bentley...................... LB
9. Matthew Judon.......................... LB
10. Mac Jones...................................QB
11. Tyquan Thornton......................WR
13. Jack Jones...................................CB
15. Nelson Agholor .........................WR
16. Jakobi Meyers...........................WR
18. Matthew Slater.........................WR
21. Adrian Phillips...............................S
23. Kyle Dugger...................................S
24. Joshuah Bledsoe...........................S
25. Marcus Jones.............................CB
26. Shaun Wade...............................CB
27. Myles Bryant..............................CB
30. Mack Wilson .............................. LB
31. Jonathan Jones ..........................CB
32. Devin McCourty............................S
35. Pierre Strong.............................. RB
36. Kevin Harris................................ RB
37. Damien Harris............................ RB
38. Rhamondre Stevenson............. RB
41. Brenden Schooler......................CB
44. Raleigh Webb............................WR
46. Raekwon McMillan ................... LB
48. Jahlani Tavai .............................. LB
49. Joe Cardona ............................... LB
55. Josh Uche.................................... LB
58. Anfernee Jennings .................... LB
60. David Andrews ............................ C
61. Marcus Cannon ............................T
65. James Ferentz.............................. C
69. Cole Strange ................................ G
71. Mike Onwenu............................... G
72. Yodny Cajuste...............................T
76. Isaiah Wynn ..................................T
77. Trent Brown ..................................T
81. Jonnu Smith................................ TE
84. Kendrick Bourne.......................WR
85. Hunter Henry ............................. TE
90. Christian Barmore..................... DT
91. Deatrich Wise ............................ DE
92. Davon Godchaux ....................... DT
93. Lawrence Guy............................ DE
95. Daniel Ekuale ............................. DT
96. Sam Roberts............................... DT
97. DaMarcus Mitchell.................... DE
98. Carl Davis ................................... DT
Ht.
6-3
6-0
5-11
6-1
6-1
6-2
6-2
6-3
6-3
6-2
5-11
6-0
6-2
6-0
5-11
6-2
5-11
5-8
6-1
5-9
6-1
5-10
5-10
5-11
5-10
5-11
6-0
6-1
6-2
6-2
6-2
6-3
6-3
6-3
6-3
6-6
6-2
6-5
6-3
6-5
6-2
6-8
6-3
6-1
6-5
6-5
6-5
6-3
6-4
6-3
6-5
6-3
6-5
Wt.
218
191
213
220
222
205
244
261
217
182
175
198
200
205
210
220
201
175
191
185
233
190
195
205
225
213
230
205
204
242
246
245
245
259
300
335
300
305
350
310
310
370
248
190
250
310
275
311
315
305
295
260
320
INJURIES
Cannon placed on injured reserve
By Nicole Yang
GLOBE STAFF
The Patriots placed offensive
tackle Marcus Cannon on injured reserve Saturday afternoon.
The team already had ruled
Cannon out for Sunday’s game
against the Indianapolis Colts,
and he’ll now miss at least three
additional games. Cannon did
not practice all week because of
a concussion.
Cannon, 34, arrived in New
England in September for his
second stint with the team, first
as a member of the practice
squad, before getting moved to
the active roster in October. He
appeared in five games, often
playing as a jumbo tight end on
the offensive line or in relief of
starting right tackle Isaiah
Wynn, who has struggled this
season.
When a shoulder injury sidelined Wynn against the Bears in
Week 7, Cannon filled in and
GREG M. COOPER/ASSOCIATED PRESS
Marcus Cannon has played
in five games this season,
often as a jumbo tight end.
played 100 percent of the offensive snaps.
The Patriots did not move
Wynn at the trade deadline this
past week, a move that seems
shrewd now given their lack of
depth on the offensive line. Yod-
ny Cajuste, a 2019 third-round
draft pick, is New England’s only
available backup tackle now that
Cannon is on IR.
With starting center David
Andrews also ruled out for Sunday’s game because of a concussion, the Patriots temporarily elevated center Kody Russey from
the practice squad to the gameday roster. Russey also was elevated last week against the Jets
but did not take any snaps.
The Patriots used the open
spot on the 53-man roster to
sign running back J.J. Taylor off
the practice squad. Taylor offers
immediate depth at the position,
with Damien Harris listed as
questionable to play Sunday because of an illness and rookie
Pierre Strong Jr. questionable
because of a hamstring injury.
Taylor, a member of the active roster in 2020 and 2021, has
yet to take a snap this season.
Last year, he played just 4.7 percent of the offensive snaps, rush-
ing for 37 yards and two touchdowns on 19 carries.
Wide receiver/running back
Lynn Bowden Jr. also was temporarily elevated from the practice squad for Sunday’s game.
Colts transactions
The Colts elevated running
backs Phillip Lindsay and Jordan Wilkins from the practice
squad to the active roster. With
Jonathan Taylor (ankle) sidelined and Nyheim Hines recently
traded to the Bills, Lindsay and
Wilkins will join Deon Jackson
in the backfield. Zack Moss,
whom the Colts received in exchange for Hines, is also an option, though coach Frank Reich
is unsure how much he can contribute since he only practiced
with the team on Thursday and
Friday.
Nicole Yang can be reached at
nicole.yang@globe.com.Follow
her on Twitter @nicolecyang.
Colts
ROSTER
Pos.
No.
1. Parris Campbell........................WR
2. Matt Ryan...................................QB
4. Sam Ehlinger..............................QB
5. Stephon Gilmore .......................CB
6. Matt Haack................................... P
7. Chase McLaughlin....................... K
9. Nick Foles ...................................QB
11. Michael Pittman .......................WR
14. Alec Pierce ................................WR
15. Keke Coutee..............................WR
17. Mike Strachan...........................WR
20. Nick Cross......................................S
21. Zack Moss .................................. RB
23. Kenny Moore..............................CB
25. Rodney Thomas............................S
26. Rodney McLeod............................S
28. Jonathan Taylor......................... RB
31. Brandon Facyson.......................CB
32. Julian Blackmon ...........................S
33. Dallis Flowers.............................CB
34. Isaiah Rodgers...........................CB
35. Deon Jackson ............................. RB
38. Tony Brown................................CB
41. Grant Stuard .............................. LB
43. Trevor Denbow.............................S
44. Zaire Franklin............................. LB
45. E.J. Speed.................................... LB
46. Luke Rhodes................................. C
51. Kwity Paye ................................. DE
52. Ben Banogu ................................ DE
53. Shaquille Leonard ..................... LB
54. Dayo Odeyingbo........................ DE
56. Quenton Nelson........................... G
57. JoJo Domann.............................. LB
58. Bobby Okereke .......................... LB
59. Ifeadi Odenigbo......................... DE
62. Wesley French ............................. C
63. Danny Pinter ................................ G
69. Matt Pryor .....................................T
72. Braden Smith ................................T
73. Dennis Kelly...................................T
75. Will Fries....................................... G
78. Ryan Kelly..................................... C
79. Bernhard Raimann.......................T
80. Jelani Woods.............................. TE
81. Mo Alie-Cox................................ TE
83. Kylen Granson ........................... TE
90. Grover Stewart .......................... DT
91. Yannick Ngakoue ...................... DE
93. Eric Johnson ............................... DT
95. Chris Williams............................ DT
96. Byron Cowart............................. DT
99. DeForest Buckner...................... DT
Ht.
6-0
6-4
6-1
6-0
6-0
6-0
6-6
6-4
6-3
5-11
6-5
6-0
5-9
5-9
6-1
5-10
5-10
6-2
6-0
6-1
5-10
6-0
6-0
5-11
5-10
6-0
6-3
6-2
6-2
6-3
6-2
6-6
6-5
6-1
6-1
6-3
6-4
6-4
6-7
6-6
6-8
6-6
6-4
6-6
6-7
6-5
6-2
6-4
6-2
6-4
6-2
6-3
6-7
Wt.
208
220
222
190
205
190
243
223
211
180
224
212
205
190
196
183
226
197
187
196
170
218
199
230
208
235
224
238
261
252
230
276
330
230
235
258
307
306
332
315
321
309
307
303
253
267
242
315
246
299
300
300
295
INJURIES
OUT: C David Andrews (concussion), T Marcus
Cannon (concussion), WR DeVante Parker
(knee); QUESTIONABLE: DT Christian Barmore
(knee), S Kyle Dugger (ankle), RB Damien Harris
(illness), CB Jack Jones (illness), RB Pierre
Strong (hamstring), LB Josh Uche (hamstring),
DE Deatrich Wise (ankle).
OUT: CB Tony Brown (hamstring), QB
Matt Ryan (shoulder), LB Grant Stuard
(pectoral), RB Jonathan Taylor (ankle);
QUESTIONABLE: T Dennis Kelly (ankle,
calf), LB E.J. Speed (ankle).
STATISTICS
STATISTICS
PASSING
Att. Com.
M.Jones................138
91
Zappe .....................92
65
Hoyer........................6
5
TEAM....................236 161
OPPONENTS........272 156
PASSING
Pct. Yds. TD Int.
65.9 993 3 7
70.7 781 5 3
83.3
37 0 0
68.2 1571 8 10
57.4 1656 12 10
Att. Com.
Ryan......................297 203
Ehlinger..................23
17
TEAM....................320 220
OPPONENTS........236 162
Yds.
558
302
80
16
14
7
5
5
0
-2
985
1008
Avg.
4.9
4.3
3.3
5.3
7.0
7.0
5.0
1.7
0.0
-1.0
4.3
4.8
Lg
49
16
15
19
15
7
5
3
5
0
49
38
TD
4
3
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
9
4
Avg.
11.9
21.4
15.1
6.8
12.7
14.2
10.2
9.5
4.3
10.0
5.0
-6.0
11.2
12.4
Lg
30
43
44
22
31
41
53
21
11
11
7
-6
53
63
TD
3
1
1
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
8
12
Att.
Taylor..................... 107
Jackson .................... 30
Lindsay..................... 14
Campbell ................... 1
Ehlinger...................... 6
Ryan ......................... 12
Dulin ........................... 1
TEAM...................... 189
OPPONENTS.......... 240
Yds.
415
321
227
217
190
156
133
76
47
20
15
-6
1811
1936
No.
Pittman .................... 51
Pierce ....................... 24
Campbell ................. 30
Granson ................... 20
Dulin ......................... 12
Alie-Cox ................... 11
Jackson .................... 14
Woods........................ 6
Taylor....................... 16
Strachan .................... 3
Patmon ...................... 2
Lindsay....................... 6
TEAM...................... 220
OPPONENTS.......... 162
Avg.
18.0
20.0
14.0
7.0
0.0
11.0
15.0
13.7
10.4
Lg
36
40
15
7
0
11
15
40t
42
TD
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
PUNTING
No.
Bailey ........................30
TEAM.........................30
OPPONENTS.............27
Inside
Avg. 20
42.9 11
42.9 11
45.3
9
Yds.
1286
1286
1222
Lg
62
62
69
PUNT RETURNS
No.
Mar.Jones ............ 10
Bryant .................... 7
TEAM.................... 17
OPPONENTS........ 12
FC Yds.
1 140
1
46
2 186
8 122
Avg.
14.0
6.6
10.9
10.2
Lg
32
16
32
43
TD
0
0
0
0
Lg
37
26
37
28
16
37
47
TD
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
KICKOFF RETURNS
No.
Mar.Jones..................13
Strong..........................2
Dugger.........................1
Montgomery...............1
Smith ...........................1
TEAM .........................18
OPPONENTS .............17
Yds.
308
48
37
28
16
437
377
Avg.
23.7
24.0
37.0
28.0
16.0
24.3
22.2
FUMBLES
Tot.
Lost
Zappe........................................... 4
3
Agholor........................................ 2
2
M.Jones........................................ 2
1
Bryant .......................................... 1
0
Bourne ......................................... 1
0
TEAM.......................................... 10
6
OPPONENTS.............................. 15
6
SCORE BY QUARTERS
1
TEAM..................15
OPPONENTS......26
2
64
51
3
65
39
4
33
44
OT
0
3
Own
rec.
0
0
0
1
1
4
9
Tot.
177
163
2022 SEASON
RESULTS (4-4)
At Miami..........................................................L, 20-7
At Pittsburgh...............................................W, 17-14
Baltimore.......................................................L, 37-26
At Green Bay.................................................L, 27-24
Detroit.............................................................W, 29-0
At Cleveland................................................W, 38-15
Chicago..........................................................L, 33-14
At NY Jets....................................................W, 22-17
SCHEDULE
Nov. 6
Indianapolis...........................1 p.m.
Nov. 20
NY Jets....................................1 p.m.
Nov. 24
at Minnesota....................8:20 p.m.
Dec. 1
Buffalo...............................8:15 p.m.
Dec. 12
at Arizona......................... 8:15 p.m.
Dec. 18
at Las Vegas.....................8:20 p.m.
Dec. 24
Cincinnati...............................1 p.m.
Jan. 1
Miami......................................1 p.m.
Jan. 8
at Buffalo...................................TBA
Lg
28
47
38
20
39
34
22
33
9
23
17
7
47
53
TD
1
1
2
0
0
2
0
3
0
0
0
0
9
9
50+
4/5
4/5
1/1
DEFENSE
FF
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
PD
3
3
2
2
3
1
4
1
2
0
0
0
2
1
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
Lg
15
0
0
35
35
76t
TD
0
0
0
0
0
1
INTERCEPTIONS
INTERCEPTIONS
Yds.
36
40
28
7
0
11
15
137
104
Avg.
10.4
15.5
9.4
8.8
14.0
12.4
7.7
12.8
4.4
19.7
12.0
3.2
10.0
10.6
Tackles
Tot. Solo Ast. Sacks
Franklin................80 51 29
0.0
Okereke ...............72 47 25
0.0
Stewart ................43 30 13
2.0
Moore...................40 31
9
1.0
McLeod ................36 23 13
0.0
Buckner................31 15 16
4.0
Gilmore ................29 26
3
0.0
Speed ...................28 17 11
1.0
Thomas ................19 12
7
0.0
Rodgers................17 11
6
0.0
Paye......................16 12
4
3.0
Ngakoue...............16
9
7
4.0
Lewis ....................14
8
6
1.0
Facyson................13 12
1
0.0
Odeyingbo...........10
5
5
1.5
Cross ...................... 8
7
1
0.0
Odenigbo ............... 7
3
4
1.5
Leonard.................. 6
4
2
0.0
Blackmon............... 6
5
1
0.0
Cowart ................... 5
2
3
0.0
Banogu................... 2
1
1
0.0
Williams................. 1
1
0
0.0
Johnson.................. 1
0
1
0.0
TEAM..................499 332 167 19.0
OPPONENTS......550 332 218 26.0
DEFENSE
No.
McCourty................... 2
Ja.Jones...................... 2
Mills............................ 2
Bentley....................... 1
Dugger ....................... 1
Bryant ........................ 1
Jo.Jones...................... 1
TEAM........................ 10
OPPONENTS............ 10
Yds.
528
373
282
176
168
136
108
77
71
59
24
19
2209
1724
FIELD GOALS
50+
2/3
2/3
4/4
PD
1
3
3
4
2
3
0
0
2
0
4
3
2
1
0
1
0
0
0
1
0
2
0
0
0
0
TD
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
3
7
1-19 20-29 30-39 40-49
McLaughlin .......0/0
3/3
2/2
4/4
TEAM..................0/0
4/4
2/2
5/6
OPP.....................0/0
4/4
2/4
6/6
FIELD GOALS
FF
0
0
0
0
2
1
0
0
0
0
1
2
0
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Lg
27
17
15
28
7
10
3
28
61
SCORING
TD TD TD TD
Tot. Ru. Rc. Rt. XP FG Pts.
Folk ........................ 0
0
0
0 18 15 63
Stevenson............. 4
4
0
0
0
0 24
D.Harris................. 3
3
0
0
0
0 18
Meyers .................. 3
0
3
0
0
0 18
Thornton............... 2
1
1
0
0
0 12
Agholor ................. 1
0
1
0
0
0
6
Dugger .................. 1
0
0
1
0
0
6
Henry..................... 1
0
1
0
0
0
6
Ja.Jones................. 1
0
0
1
0
0
6
M.Jones................. 1
1
0
0
0
0
6
Montgomery ........ 1
0
1
0
0
0
6
Parker.................... 1
0
1
0
0
0
6
TEAM................... 19
9
8
2 18 15 177
OPPONENTS....... 17
4 12
1 14 15 163
Tackles
Tot. Solo Ast. Sacks
Bentley.................45 16 29
1.0
McCourty.............42 34
8
0.0
Phillips..................35 20 15
0.0
Bryant...................30 17 13
0.0
Wise......................29 18 11
5.0
Judon....................29 16 13
8.5
Tavai.....................28 11 17
1.0
Godchaux ............28 11 17
1.0
Mills......................25 21
4
0.0
Peppers................23 14
9
0.0
Ja.Jones................23 19
4
0.0
Jo.Jones................23 19
4
0.0
Dugger .................22 14
8
0.0
Wilson ..................20
8 12
1.0
Guy........................16
7
9
1.0
Jennings...............15
8
7
1.5
Barmore...............15
9
6
1.0
McMillan..............14 10
4
0.0
Davis.......................5
2
3
0.0
Ekuale..................... 5
4
1
0.0
Uche........................ 5
5
0
1.0
Mar.Jones ..............3
3
0
0.0
Roberts................... 2
1
1
0.0
Wade ......................1
1
0
0.0
TEAM..................484 289 195 23.0
OPPONENTS......480 314 166 18.0
Avg.
4.3
3.3
3.4
28.0
2.5
0.9
3.0
3.7
4.0
TD TD TD TD
Tot. Ru. Rc. Rt. XP FG Pts.
McLaughlin........... 0
0
0
0
8 13 47
Woods ................... 3
0
3
0
0
0 18
Alie-Cox................. 2
0
2
0
0
0 12
Campbell .............. 2
0
2
0
0
0 12
Jackson ................. 1
1
0
0
0
0
6
Pierce .................... 1
0
1
0
0
0
6
Pittman ................. 1
0
1
0
0
0
6
Taylor .................... 1
1
0
0
0
0
6
Lindsay.................. 0
0
0
0
0
0
2
TEAM................... 12
3
9
0 10 15 129
OPPONENTS....... 17
7
9
1 14 13 157
SCORING
1-19 20-29 30-39 40-49
Folk.....................1/1
2/2
6/6
4/5
TEAM..................1/1
2/2
6/6
4/5
OPP.....................0/0
2/2
5/5
4/5
Yds.
462
100
47
28
15
11
3
702
960
RECEIVING
RECEIVING
No.
Meyers..................... 35
Parker ...................... 15
Agholor .................... 15
Stevenson................ 32
Henry........................ 15
Bourne...................... 11
Smith........................ 13
Thornton.................... 8
D.Harris.................... 11
Humphrey ................. 2
Montgomery ............. 3
Zappe ......................... 1
TEAM...................... 161
OPPONENTS.......... 156
Yds. TD Int.
2008 9 9
201 0 0
1817 9 9
1472 9 4
RUSHING
RUSHING
Att.
Stevenson.............. 114
D.Harris.................... 71
M.Jones.................... 24
Thornton.................... 3
Bourne........................ 2
Meyers....................... 1
Strong ........................ 1
K.Harris...................... 3
Zappe ....................... 10
Montgomery ............. 2
TEAM...................... 231
OPPONENTS.......... 211
Pct.
68.4
73.9
68.8
68.6
LYNNE SLADKY/ASSOCIATED PRESS
No.
Leonard...................... 1
McLeod ...................... 1
Gilmore ...................... 1
Thomas ...................... 1
TEAM.......................... 4
OPPONENTS.............. 9
uON FOOTBALL
Continued from Page C1
Patricia said of the turnovers.
“And that’s got to be our focus
every day, absolutely.”
The Patriots’ offense is a respectable 17 th in points (22.1
per game), and has had its share
of bright spots in its first season
without former coordinator
Josh McDaniels. But the Patriots
have been uncharacteristically
sloppy in two key areas — redzone efficiency, where they rank
29 th, touchdown percentage
(45.8), and turnovers.
Hall of Fame coach Bill Parcells told colleague Dan Shaughnessy a couple of weeks ago that
turnovers are “the No. 1 statistic
in football . . . This is a field-position game, and when you turn
the ball over, you don’t get to
punt. So you lose 40-something
yards in field position.”
This year, teams that win the
turnover margin are 78-16-1
(.826). Last year, they won at an
.800 clip. Nineteen teams are
undefeated this year when winning the turnover battle. Eigh-
teen teams are winless when losing it.
The Patriots are part of the
trend. They are 4-1 when winning the turnover margin, with
their only loss coming to the
Packers in overtime. They are
0-3 when losing the turnover
battle, with double-digit losses
to the Dolphins, Ravens, and
Bears.
The Patriots’ 16 turnovers are
assigned to just three players.
Mac Jones has eight (seven interceptions and a fumble). Bailey Zappe has six (three interceptions, three fumbles). And
Nelson Agholor has two (both
fumbles).
But those stats don’t include
context. The offensive line is responsible for some of the lost
fumbles and interceptions. Agholor is responsible for one of
Zappe’s interceptions after bobbling a perfect pass into the air.
And the stats don’t say whether
the receiver ran the wrong
route, or if the quarterback’s
arm got hit while he was throwing.
“It’s never one player, it’s never one thing,” Judge said. “It’s
something we have to be better
as an entire team, and it’s definitely a focus of ours going forward.”
Some of the Patriots’ turnover issues may be a bit fluky.
They have lost six fumbles, tied
for fourth most in the NFL. But
t h e y h av e o n l y f u m b l e d 1 0
times, which is tied for 12 th
most. Fumble recoveries are often random, and the Patriots’
numbers could smooth out over
the second half of the season.
The Patriots have lost 60 percent
of their fumbles, but the league
average this year is 43 percent.
The Raiders have lost just 1 of 9.
The Cardinals have lost 2 of 13.
And the good news is that the
Patriots’ turnovers have come in
bunches — 11 of 16 in their
three losses. In their other five
games, the Patriots have just one
giveaway each.
But their league-high 10 interceptions are a problem. Jones
has thrown an interception on 5
percent of his passes, the highest
rate this season out of 35 qualifying quarterbacks, and more
than double the league average
(2.3 percent). Only two other
quarterbacks are even over 4
percent (Jameis Winston and
Kenny Pickett).
Tom Brady’s worst season in
Foxborough was 3 percent in
2004. Brady at his best was 0.5
percent in 2016. Even Cam Newton threw an interception on
just 2.7 percent of his attempts
in 2020.
The Patriots won’t be making
much noise if Jones continues to
throw interceptions at a 5 percent clip.
“The ball is No. 1,” Jones said.
“We have to do a better job with
that, and I do, too. So, definitely
just watch the tape and see what
we can do better. But they’re
part of the game. You just have
to move on from them. We’re
trying to identify how we can be
better, and that’s the important
part, right?”
Ben Volin can be reached at
ben.volin@globe.com.
Avg.
15.0
0.0
0.0
35.0
12.5
15.9
PUNTING
Mac Jones has eight of the Patriots’ 16 giveaways, seven interceptions and this fumble against the Dolphins in Week 1.
Patriots are in a giving mood this season
Yds.
15
0
0
35
50
143
No.
Haack........................33
TEAM.........................33
OPPONENTS.............36
Inside
Avg. 20
43.9 16
43.9 16
49.0 12
Yds.
1450
1450
1765
Lg
70
70
65
PUNT RETURNS
No.
Coutee.................... 6
Rodgers.................. 2
Cross ...................... 1
Flowers .................. 1
TEAM.................... 21
OPPONENTS........ 10
FC Yds.
5
57
1
13
0
0
0
9
9 190
10
56
Avg.
9.5
6.5
0.0
9.0
9.0
5.6
Lg
19
13
0
9
24
12
TD
0
0
0
0
0
0
Lg
34
15
34
37
TD
0
0
0
0
KICKOFF RETURNS
No.
Rodgers .....................10
Granson.......................1
TEAM .........................11
OPPONENTS .............18
Yds.
216
15
231
383
Avg.
21.6
15.0
21.0
21.3
FUMBLES
Tot.
Lost
Ryan ........................................... 11
3
Taylor........................................... 2
2
Rodgers ....................................... 1
0
Coutee ......................................... 1
0
Granson....................................... 1
0
Cross............................................ 1
0
Pittman........................................ 1
1
Ehlinger ....................................... 1
1
Pierce........................................... 1
0
TEAM.......................................... 21
7
OPPONENTS................................ 8
4
SCORE BY QUARTERS
1
TEAM..................10
OPPONENTS......40
2
32
65
3
29
30
4
55
22
OT
3
0
Own
rec.
3
1
3
0
0
0
0
0
0
14
4
Tot.
129
157
2022 SEASON
RESULTS (3-4-1)
At Houston....................................................T, 20-20
At Jacksonville................................................L, 24-0
Kansas City..................................................W, 20-17
Tennessee......................................................L, 24-17
At Denver.......................................................W, 12-9
Jacksonville................................................. W, 34-27
At Tennessee................................................L, 19-10
Washington...................................................L, 17-16
SCHEDULE
Nov. 6
at New England.....................1 p.m.
Nov. 13
at Las Vegas.....................4:05 p.m.
Nov. 20
Philadelphia...........................1 p.m.
Nov. 28
Pittsburgh.........................8:15 p.m.
Dec. 4
at Dallas............................8:20 p.m.
Dec. 18
at Minnesota.............................TBA
Dec. 26
LA Chargers......................8:15 p.m.
Jan. 1
at NY Giants.......................... 1 p.m.
Jan. 8
Houston......................................TBA
C8
Sports
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
G l o b e
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
Celtics in a good place with Mazzulla
Tara Sullivan
NEW YORK —
Not that long ago
it seemed the
Celtics were destined for a starring role as an
early-season carwreck curiosity,
the must-watch
local team for drama and discord, after
a shocking season-long suspension of
head coach Ime Udoka and the stunning elevation of little-known assistant
Joe Mazzulla just days before training
camp.
But here the Celtics are, fresh off a
franchise record-setting night of 3pointers, 27 in all as they beat up on the
Knicks, 133-118, Saturday night Madison Square Garden. Led by six 3s apiece
from Jaylen Brown and Jayson Tatum
and five more from Sam Hauser, Boston
upped its record to 6-3, winning its second straight on back-to-back nights.
Quietly, the Celtics are chugging along
as the area’s most stable team, helped
in no small part by the fact that the
Nets emerged as potential takers for
Udoka as their new head coach.
Though the jury remains out on
whether Udoka ends up in Brooklyn,
with a seemingly foregone conclusion
in the wake of Steve Nash’s unceremonious firing now rounding the corner
into a second week of speculation, one
thing remains certain as the rumor mill
grinds on: Udoka won’t be back coaching the Celtics.
Not this year, not next year, and
most likely never again.
That is good news for Mazzulla, and
not because the 34-year-old surprise selection to move from the second row of
coaches to the main chair on the bench
has shown any indication he’s been
bothered by the specter of Udoka’s
shadow.
Instead, as Mazzulla emerged from a
victory in which he continued to see his
team craft an offensive identity built on
consistent effort, he did so with what is
emerging as a trademark even-tempered countenance. It seems clear that
despite his relative youth and regardless of his relative inexperience, the
Celtics interim coach is motivated not
by being the next iteration of any coach
who’s gone before him, but to be the
first, best version of himself.
“I think every game, I’m going to
learn something good that I did and
something bad that I did,” he said.
“Maintaining that perspective and
bringing it into each game is important,
and remembering that each game is its
own entity.”
There’s no ignoring that specter of
Udoka’s memory, particularly among
players who’d fought their way within
two games of an NBA title under Udoka’s watch in his first season as a head
coach, and who still feel blindsided by
the mystery surrounding his exit. The
suspension, at least initially, left a sliver
of possibility he could return to the
Celtics’ bench when it was over.
But now the Nets seem ready to take
Udoka off Boston’s hands, to reunite
him with players he’d been an assistant
coach to on Nash’s staff, to hand him
the keys to the NBA’s most dysfunctional team and hope he can do anything to
solve the complex riddle of idiocy, confusion and happiness that is Kyrie Irving, Ben Simmons, and Kevin Durant.
Good luck to Udoka, who would inherit a situation with the currently suspended Irving that exposed everything
that is wrong with the Nets as a franchise, their response to Irving’s many
public missteps looking both too slow
to indicate they understand the gravity
of his antisemitic words and too reactionary to make us believe they have actually put reasoned, logical thought behind their actions.
The only current team with a worse
public relations approach? Our very
own Bruins, whose seven-game win
streak was snapped in Toronto while
they continue to bungle the signing of
defenseman Mitchell Miller. A day after
general manager Don Sweeney spent
30 minutes defending the decision to
add the player with a troubled past, the
franchise was deservedly embarrassed
by NHL commissioner Gary Bettman,
who revealed to The Athletic that the
Bruins had not reached out to the
league to confirm Mitchell’s availability.
As it turns out, the onetime Coyotes
draft pick who was later renounced after the Arizona Republic exposed his
racist/bullying history with a developmentally disabled classmate, isn’t even
eligible to play in the NHL.
While the Nets and Bruins stumble
and fumble around, the Celtics are finding their footing.
A lot of that has to do with Mazzulla.
The calling of timeouts aside — and
Mazzulla earned a good chuckle before
Saturday night’s win when he quickly
admitted timeouts are the one area he
hopes to improve on — he has managed
to effect a pretty seamless transition to
head coach. Yes, it helps to have holdover talents like Tatum, Brown, and
Marcus Smart (Al Horford was unavailable to play against the Knicks), but
Mazzulla has also done a good job
working in the addition of Malcolm
Brogdon as well as navigating a defense
without the injured Robert Williams.
And he’s continued to be an ear for
his players, many of whom were understandably shocked when stories of Udoka’s imminent return surfaced.
“I care about what they’re going
through,” Mazzulla told the Globe’s Adam Himmelsbach after Udoka emerged
as the Nets’ likely candidate. “I hope
that they know we can always talk
about anything.
“I’ve had plenty of conversations
with them about multiple things. But
the most important thing for me is that
they feel that they can be heard and
they can talk to me.”
That might be easier than getting
him to talk about himself. I asked Mazzulla about coming to the Garden, the
site of one of his greatest college highlights as a player, when he helped West
Virginia beat Georgetown for the 2010
Big East championship.
“Obviously they are good memories,
but they don’t have anything to do with
playing the Knicks tonight,” Mazzulla
said. “I could feel it walking in, but
playing the Knicks is the most important thing.”
Tara Sullivan is a Globe columnist. She
can be reached at
tara.sullivan@globe.com. Follow her on
Twitter @Globe_Tara.
CELTICS NOTEBOOK
Williams ramps up
activity, no setbacks
By Adam Himmelsbach
GLOBE STAFF
NEW YORK — Celtics center Robert
Williams said Saturday that he’s been
completing on-court workouts for the
last two weeks as he recovers from the
Sept. 23 left knee surgery that was expected to sideline him for 8-12 weeks.
He accompanied the team on this
road trip to face the Knicks and said
he’s “feeling good” and has not had any
setbacks. He has raised the intensity of
his workouts over the last few days.
When he was asked about specifics, he
flashed a sheepish grin.
“Yeah, yeah,” the high-flying big
man said, “I’m dunking.”
Williams said the training staff is
mostly letting him work out without
limitations, but said they want to ensure his sessions don’t get too explosive
just yet.
“Just increasing the load and everything, seeing how the knee reacts,” Williams said. “Hitting checkmarks there.”
Williams tore the meniscus in his
left knee last March and returned midway through Boston’s opening-round
playoff series against the Nets. He appeared hobbled throughout the postseason, however, often unable to display his usual burst.
At season’s end the Celtics were confident he just needed an offseason of
rest. But as he ramped up his workouts
prior to training camp, pain resurfaced
and he underwent the maintenance
surgery.
The Celtics initially said Williams
would be sidelined for 4-6 weeks before
later extending the timeline to 8-12.
Last month, Williams also received a
platelet-rich plasma injection to accelerate the healing process. He said the
longer recovery time and wider range
were established in order to give him
some wiggle room as he worked his way
back.
“You’re always kind of nervous, but
that’s kind of why they give me a window, just in case we try something and
there’s a setback you’ve got time to deal
with it,” Williams said.
Williams said he has tried to stay engaged while watching workouts from
the sidelines.
“I yell at them sometimes in practices,” he said, smiling. “[I’m] just trying to impose the energy I bring when
I’m playing.”
But he said he is most eager to just
rejoin his teammates.
“It feels great just getting back on
the court, to be honest, man,” Williams
said. “I need them just like they need
me.”
Horford tweaks back, sits
Celtics center Al Horford missed Saturday’s 133-118 win over the Knicks because of back soreness. Coach Joe Mazzulla said that after Horford played 40
minutes in Wednesday’s overtime loss
to the Cavaliers and 33 in Friday’s win
over the Bulls, the Celtics wanted to err
on the side of caution while playing
their second game in as many nights.
A quick study
Mazzulla is nine games into his first
season as an NBA head coach, and he
said he is continuing to learn as he
goes.
“Just being patient and understanding it’s not going to be perfect,” he said.
“You want to give guys room to play,
and at the same time find areas where
you can make an impact. Just being
patient through those moments and
trying to learn something every game
that you can apply to the next game I
think is important.”
Adam Himmelsbach can be reached at
adam.himmelsbach@globe.com. Follow
him on Twitter @adamhimmelsbach.
JESSIE ALCHEH/ASSOCIATED PRESS
Jayson Tatum scored 13 points in the fourth quarter, including a recordsetting, back-breaking 3-pointer with 3:34 left that secured a Celtics win.
JESSIE ALCHEH/ASSOCIATED PRESS
Jaylen Brown hit six 3-pointers as part of a franchise-record 27 makes from beyond the arc for the Celtics.
Celtics bury Knicks from 3
uCELTICS
Continued from Page C1
leading 16 made 3-pointers per game.
With big men Robert Williams (knee
surgery), Al Horford (back soreness),
and Luke Kornet (personal reasons) all
sidelined, the Celtics quickly made it
clear that this game would be decided
much farther from the hoop.
“For the most part I thought we shot
great 3s,” interim coach Joe Mazzulla
said. “Our guys are getting comfortable
with the fact that when we run good offense and we have good spacing and we
read the defense, we’re going to get a
great look. When you’re shooting that
volume there’s going to be some tough
ones, but for the most part I think our
guys do a great job of shooting the right
ones.”
Nine of the Celtics’ first 10 shots
came from beyond the 3-point arc, and
that was a harbinger, not an accident.
They spread the floor with shooters and
sprayed from all angles.
Hauser hit a career-high five and
was unaware of the team record after
the game. When it was relayed to him,
he raised his eyebrows.
“Oh, wow,” he said.
Fourth-string center Noah Vonleh
drilled his first 3-pointer since February
2020. All nine Celtics who appeared in
the game made at least one.
This approach was nothing new for
Tatum, of course, and his step-back dart
with 3:34 left in the game both set the
franchise’s single-game record and essentially put the finishing touches on
the win.
“I think we were just real confident
Celtics 133, Knicks 118
At Madison Square Garden, New York
BOSTON
FG
FT
Reb
Min
M-A
M-A
O-T A F
Pt PPG
Tatum............ 37
8-17
4-4
0-4 5 3 26 30.3
Brown............ 37 10-19
4-4
2-5 3 5 30 25.3
Griffin............ 15
3-4
0-0
0-1 2 1
7 3.4
White............. 22
3-5
0-0
1-3 1 1
7 8.3
Smart ............ 36
5-9
0-0
0-2 11 2 13 10.9
G.Williams.... 28
4-7
2-2
1-4 1 0 12 9.4
Hauser .......... 21
6-9
1-3 2 2 17 6.4
0-0
Brogdon........ 28
5-14
2-2
0-5 5 1 14 14.9
Vonleh........... 16
3-4
0-0
3-7 0 2
7 3.0
Totals ...... ...... 47-88 12-12
8-34 30 17 133
FG%: .534, FT%: 1.000. 3-pt. goals: 27-51, .529 (Tatum 6-13,
Brown 6-11, Griffin 1-2, White 1-2, Smart 3-5, G.Williams 2-4,
Hauser 5-8, Brogdon 2-5, Vonleh 1-1). Team rebounds: 6.
Team turnovers: 13 (20 pts.). Blocks: 2 (Tatum 2). Turnovers:
12 (Tatum 3, Brown, Griffin 2, White, Smart, G.Williams 2,
Brogdon, Vonleh). Steals: 5 (Tatum, G.Williams 2, Brogdon 2).
NEW YORK
FG
FT
Reb
Min
M-A
M-A
O-T A F
Pt PPG
Barrett .......... 37
9-15
6-6
0-4 4 2 27 19.3
Randle........... 40 10-19
6-6
5-9 2 3 29 18.9
Hartenstein .. 38
5-6
0-0
3-14 1 3 10 8.4
Reddish......... 37
1-6
1-2
1-2 2 1
4 7.8
Brunson ........ 33 10-17
2-2
0-3 10 1 22 19.3
D.Rose........... 14
4-10
0-0
1-3 1 0 10 7.1
Quickley........ 13
2-6
0-0
0-2 1 0
4 7.9
Fournier ........ 11
1-1
0-0
0-1 1 2
3 8.8
Toppin........... 15
3-9
0-0
2-6 0 1
7 10.3
J.Sims.............. 3
1-1
0-0
0-0 0 1
2 0.5
Totals ...... ...... 46-90 15-16 12-44 22 14 118
FG%: .511, FT%: .938. 3-pt. goals: 11-27, .407 (Barrett 3-5,
Randle 3-7, Reddish 1-2, Brunson 0-2, D.Rose 2-3, Quickley
0-2, Fournier 1-1, Toppin 1-5). Team rebounds: 2. Team turnovers: 14 (30 pts.). Blocks: 4 (Hartenstein, Reddish, Toppin,
J.Sims). Turnovers: 13 (Barrett 6, Randle 3, Reddish, D.Rose,
Fournier 2). Steals: 6 (Barrett, Reddish, D.Rose, Quickley,
Fournier, Toppin). Flagrant fouls: Randle, 1:34/4th.
Boston ....................................... 32 35 34 32
—
133
New York.................................. 29 37 30 22
—
118
A — 19,812 (19,763). T — 2:04. Officials — Zach Zarba, Kevin
Cutler, Phenizee Ransom.
in the shots we were getting, the way
the ball was moving,” Tatum said, “Guys
were in the right spots getting the shots
we want them to shoot, and we were
knocking shots down, so that always
helps.”
The Celtics made 27 of 51 3-pointers
overall, breaking their old mark of 25.
They fell two short of tying the NBA record of 29, held by the Bucks. Jaylen
Brown finished with 30 points, Tatum
added 26, and Marcus Smart had an ef-
ficient night, with 13 points, 11 assists,
and just 1 turnover.
“I’m just doing all the right things,”
Smart said. “I’m getting downhill, finding guys, they’re making shots. When
I’m able to have 11 assists or more, it’s
really hard for us to be beat, and it does
help a rhythm.
“You got Jayson and Jaylen just spotting up and knocking down easier
shots. You got Grant [Williams] and
Sam hitting those easier shots, and then
it just makes the game that much easier
for us.”
For the second game in a row, the defense was hardly perfect. The Knicks
shot 51.1 percent and had success attacking the rim against Boston’s depleted frontcourt. New York lingered for
most of the night, despite Boston’s
scorching shooting.
The Knicks clawed back from a 14point first-half deficit and briefly led, by
three, early in the third quarter. New
York still trailed just 116-112 with 4:51
left in the fourth.
But a pair of 3-pointers by Tatum extended the lead, then Williams added to
the record-setting night with one more
in the final minute.
“Because of our spacing we can get a
really good look the majority of the
time,” Mazzulla said. “Right now, we’re
learning what’s a great shot and what’s
a good shot, and we’re also learning that
if we miss four in a row, we still have to
guard the other end.”
Adam Himmelsbach can be reached at
adam.himmelsbach@globe.com. Follow
him on Twitter @adamhimmelsbach.
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
Sports
G l o b e
C9
Basketball
Irving appears to be his own worst enemy
Gary Washburn
T
he consensus is that Kyrie
Irving is his own worst enemy, refusing to back down
from his confusing views on
politics, religion, and race
relations. He would say that he is the
knowledgeable one, and that those who
cover or scrutinize him fail to understand his ideologies.
So, when Irving faced the media and
refused to apologize for posting on his
Twitter feed a link to a film containing
antisemitic material, and he also declined to say whether he was antisemitic, he viewed it as a means of protest against a system he feels tries to
stifle his freedom of thought.
Irving is not the first NBA player
with nonconformist views. He is not the
first player who views the media as
adversaries. What is troubling is that
Irving refused to truly explain his stances and his diatribes are so confusing,
perhaps intentionally, that it’s nearly
impossible for him to gain support.
He shouldn’t get any support on his
latest stance, which was to vigorously
defend his right to post a link for “Hebrews to Negroes.” The movie’s goal is
to prove that Blacks and Africans were
the true original people on Earth, but to
do that, the movie makes antisemitic
references and Jewish stereotypes.
According to the Anti-Defamation
League website, the nearly four-hour
film “promotes beliefs commonly found
among antisemitic and extremist factions of the BHI [Black Hebrew Israelite] movement, including claims that
modern Jews are imposters who stole
the religious heritage of Black people
and have engaged in a ‘cover-up’ to prevent Black people from knowing their
‘true’ identity.
“While much of the film deals with
historical and genetic arguments about
various racial and ethnic groups, it also
includes extensive antisemitism, including claims of a global Jewish conspiracy to oppress and defraud Black
people, allegations that Jews are in part
responsible for the transatlantic slave
trade, and the claim that Jews falsified
the history of the Holocaust in order to
‘conceal their nature and protect their
status and power.’ ”
It’s one thing for Irving to believe
that Blacks are the original people of
the Earth. He is not alone in that belief,
but this movie is obviously the wrong
vehicle to promote his philosophy. And
instead of admitting that, Irving defended his rights until he was suspended for at least five games by the Nets for
his refusal to apologize. Finally, late
Thursday night, he posted an apology
on Instagram that appeared sincere
and well written but perhaps too late.
The Nets and the NBA wanted an
early apology from Irving, but he
appears determined to challenge the
system until it ends his career.
Colin Kaepernick kneeled for the
national anthem and protested against
police brutality, and he was blackballed
by the NFL as a result. Irving is not in
this category. Irving has not explained
his stances. He has not galvanized those
he wishes to reach. While he has given
money to charitable causes, donated
cash to WNBA players, and carried out
other philanthropic efforts, he also confuses those who want to understand his
cause and his purpose with statements
that at times are thoughtful but don’t
make much sense.
Before Irving’s apology on Thursday,
he spoke with the media and referred to
the plight of Black Americans. “Where
were you when I was a kid, figuring out
that 300 million of my ancestors are
buried in America,” he said. “I’m a
human being that is 30 years old and
I’ve been growing up in a country that’s
told me that I wasn’t worth anything,
and I came from a slave class and that I
come from a people that are meant to
be treated the way we are treated every
day.”
These are poignant thoughts, but
they have nothing to do with antisemitism. Irving can be pro-Black and
not antisemitic at the same time. And if
Irving wants those who follow him,
cover him, and consider him not only a
brilliant basketball player but an astute
person (in most situations) to understand him, he needs to find a forum to
clearly explain his thoughts.
If what he posted gave the perception that he is antisemitic, he has to be
courageous enough to admit he was
wrong. His stubbornness has only gotten him suspended, and honestly, on
the verge of being out of the NBA.
It’s not about his beliefs but rather
the headaches he gives his organizations. The Celtics are doing cartwheels
that he’s gone, and so are the Cavaliers.
He promised this season would not include any drama after last year’s nonvaccination controversy. It took four
games for Irving to again be at the center of a non-basketball firestorm.
What happens now is up to the Nets.
They can extend the suspension beyond
five games. They can release him. They
can welcome him back but prevent him
from speaking to the media, or Irving
can have frank and honest conversations with his teammates, the organization, and the NBA about his principles.
But it takes fortitude to approach
these conversations with an open mind
and be prepared to learn just as much
as you teach. This could be a crossroads
in Irving’s career, and it’s up to him
whether it will boost or damage his
already blemished reputation.
Scoring touch
Paolo Banchero has been as advertised for the Magic, despite their
slow start to the season. The 2022 first overall pick has pumped in 20
or more points in each of his first five games. According to stathead.
com, he is just the sixth rookie to score at least 20 points in each of his
first five contests.
COMPILED BY MICHAEL GROSSI
PAOLO BANCHERO | MAGIC | 2022, FIRST OVERALL
GAME
POINTS
1
2
3
4
5
27
20
23
21
29
FG-FGA
11-18
6-18
6-19
6-13
10-19
61.1%
33.3%
31.6%
46.2%
52.6%
TEAM W-L
0-5
RESET BUTTON
Nets looking
to save season
Not surprisingly, the Nets parted
ways with Steve Nash after a 2-5 start.
Coaching the Brooklyn Nets was a job
that never fit Nash and he looked uncomfortable at times trying to lead a
franchise in chaos.
The Nets handed Nash a talented
but dramatic team with Kyrie Irving,
Kevin Durant, and James Harden, and
he was never able to find consistency
with his roster or to develop a coaching
style. He was constantly outcoached,
including by Ime Udoka in the playoffs
last season, and looked overwhelmed
with the moment.
Nets general manager Sean Marks
said management had decided last
week to make the move, and Nash appeared relieved to be rid of the responsibility. But, in many ways, it’s Marks’s
fault. Yes, the Nets have star power
with Durant and Irving, but that monumental trade to acquire Ben Simmons
has been a bust.
Simmons is playing with the same
pass-always style that plagued his final
years in Philadelphia and has shown no
offensive improvement even after a
year off. He is out indefinitely with knee
issues after not playing last season because of back issues.
Irving and Durant are scoring but
the team isn’t playing any defense. Seth
Curry remains out with ankle issues,
Joe Harris is working back to form after
a year off with a foot injury, and TJ Warren remains out because of a foot injury
he sustained while with the Pacers in
December 2020. The Nets roster wasn’t
built to contend unless Simmons returns to All-Star form, which hasn’t
happened.
Nash didn’t have the personality or
disposition to galvanize the team and
deal with the personalities. Maybe Udoka does have that disposition, and the
Nets are seriously considering bringing
back their former assistant.
“The team was not doing what we’re
supposed to be doing,” Marks said. “It
was time now because we have lofty aspirations that we need to get to.”
Marks and Nash are friends; the potential hiring of Udoka is a plea for
Marks to keep his job. He is the one
who signed Irving with the agreement
that Durant would follow. He traded for
Harden and then traded him for Simmons. He allowed Bruce Brown to leave
for the Nuggets. He signed DeAndre
Jordan because he’s close with Durant.
Durant then demanded that Nash
and Marks be fired if he was to remain
in Brooklyn. That didn’t happen. Both
kept their jobs, Durant was talked into
staying, and Irving was supposed to be
engaged this season, with no drama.
“The players were not consulted,”
Marks said of the decision. “I don’t
think we needed that input right now.
It wasn’t panning out on the court. I
could list the distractions. I don’t want
to get into them.
“[Nash] certainly has not had an
even playing field. I definitely feel some
responsibility because this does not fall
on him. It’s completely unfair to state
where we are as a team completely on
Steve.”
Short of saying the team quit on
Nash, Marks believed the team wasn’t
giving its best effort, Nash relayed to
management that he felt he wasn’t
reaching the players.
“We saw games this year where I
don’t think we brought it,” Marks said.
“We took quarters off, a half was taken
off, a game was taken off. We didn’t
compete. That falls on all of us.”
The Nets are one of the more chaotic
franchises in professional sports, from
Durant’s trade demand to Simmons’s
back injury to Harden’s trade demand
to Irving’s many issues. And now they
are interested in a coach who is serving
an unprecedented suspension from a
division rival.
The focus is almost never on basket-
GRANT HILL | PISTONS| 1994, THIRD OVERALL
GAME POINTS
FG-FGA
1
2
3
4
5
25
24
22
23
25
8-19 42.1%
9-14 64.3%
10-11 90.9%
8-15 53.3%
7-16 43.8%
TEAM W-L
3-2
DOMINIQUE WILKINS | HAWKS | 1982, THIRD OVERALL
GAME POINTS
FG-FGA
1
2
3
4
5
23
22
30
20
29
11-17 64.7%
10-22 45.5%
13-20 65%
9-21 49.9%
13-26 50%
TEAM W-L
2-3
ELVIN HAYES | ROCKETS | 1968, FIRST OVERALL
GAME POINTS
FG-FGA
1
2
3
4
5
25
32
24
25
23
11-21
13-23
10-24
NA
11-30
52.4%
56.5%
41.7%
TEAM W-L
2-3
Layups
36.7%
OSCAR ROBERTSON | ROYALS | 1960, FIRST OVERALL
GAME POINTS
FG-FGA
1
2
3
4
5
21
28
23
32
25
8-20 40%
10-24 41.7%
6-13 46.2%
13-23 56.5%
7-25 28%
TEAM W-L
4-1
WILT CHAMBERLAIN | WARRIORS | 1959, THIRD OVERALL
GAME POINTS
FG-FGA
1
2
3
4
5
43
36
41
30
32
17-27
13-32
17-40
12-38
12-32
ball in Brooklyn, and it won’t be any
time soon, especially if they hire Udoka.
But Marks insists the team still has
championship aspirations, as minuscule as they seem now.
“I’m completely empathetic to
what’s going on here and I’m certainly
not proud of the situation we find ourselves in,” he said. “I’d like to get back to
basketball.
“We wouldn’t have made moves like
this if we didn’t think we could win. We
do realize we have a window here.
When you have this group of players
and this salary cap, we hope to achieve
that. We hope this is a catalyst for a
turnaround.”
ETC.
Bulls trying to
find their way
With Lonzo Ball out indefinitely, the
Bulls have been trying to find themselves in the Eastern Conference. Expectations were rather low, with the
Bulls expected to fight for a play-in spot
last month.
LaVine has been trying to get back
to playing consistent minutes. He
missed the first two games and then
rested in a loss to the Spurs.
“Everybody is trying to figure out
their teams and combinations of players,” Donovan said. “The good part of it
is he’s been in the league for a while.
That helps. He’s bright enough and
smart enough to know his reps are limited, and that’s not ideal from a coaching perspective. We’ve got to manage
his health, that’s the most important
thing for us. He’s getting into routine to
know what is best to keep him at a
place where he is feeling good.”
There are going to be times where
LaVine will sit out practice or even
shootarounds to rest his knee. The
organization is being cautious after the
fate of Ball, who required a second knee
procedure this month.
“You have routine and when you go
through routines for a number of years,
you get settled into that,” Donovan said
of LaVine. “He’s been very open to
changing that routine because I think
he knows the most important thing is
playing in a game. It’s certainly not
ideal to have him going game, no practice, no shootaround, game. We’ve got
to figure out a way. He’s going to want
that to a certain extent.”
Donovan was the University of Florida coach when Celtics center Al Horford and the Gators won back-to-back
national championships in 2006 and
’07. In his 16th season, Horford is the
last player from those teams active in
the NBA.
The Bulls coach said he is not surprised at Horford’s longevity.
“I think when you’re with a player
when he’s younger, when we were playing against Ohio State and he had a
high ankle sprain and this is when they
had [Greg] Oden and they were really,
really good,” Donovan said. “Mike Conley was on that team. The detail that he
had as a young player, taking care of his
body, he really got it. And I think a lot
of that probably stems from that.”
Those Florida teams had Joakim
Noah, Taurean Green, and Horford, all
sons of professional athletes. Donovan
believes that contributed to them being
serious about conditioning and health.
“At a young age, these guys were
taught the importance of taking care of
themselves,” Donovan said. “And Al has
always been incredibly meticulous with
his health and I feel like he’s had a very,
very long career because of that concept.”
63%
40.6%
42.5%
31.6%
37.5%
TEAM W-L
4-1
or perhaps a fifth or sixth seed. The
Bulls entered Friday at 5-4, with impressive wins over Miami and Boston,
and puzzling losses at home to Cleveland and at San Antonio.
The Bulls are trying to become a
more up-tempo team, but the challenge
is playing with so much size. Chicago is
22nd in scoring and 25th in field goal
percentage despite the presence of DeMar DeRozan and Zach LaVine, who is
coming off knee surgery.
“We have not been productive on
the fast break,” coach Billy Donovan
said. “Our numbers have not been
good. We have to be able to convert better. At the end of the day, your offensive
rating is always going to be tied to missing or making shots. I don’t feel like
we’re necessarily getting poor shots, but
the fast break is something we’ve got to
get better.”
Donovan said he’s still trying to develop rotations, with 11 players averaging at least 15 minutes per game. Reserves Derrick Jones, Goran Dragic, Andre Drummond, and former Celtic
Javonte Green blitzed their Boston
counterparts in Chicago’s 18-point win
Former Hornets forward Miles
Bridges pleaded no contest to a domestic assault charge stemming from an incident with his then-girlfriend in May.
Bridges will not serve jail time, but because he pleaded no contest, the NBA is
likely to suspend Bridges for multiple
games if he signs with a club. The Hornets did not offer Bridges a contract,
but they have the right to match any offer. The Hornets would have to negotiate a new deal with Bridges to bring
him back. He was considered a rising
star and arguably the team’s best player,
but he may remain unsigned indefinitely considering the serious circumstances . . . The Spurs shocked the league
with the release of former first-round
pick Joshua Primo, but it has been disclosed the 19-year-old made inappropriate sexual advances toward a team
employee on multiple occasions. Primo,
who is a free agent after clearing waivers, released a statement saying he is
undergoing therapy for previous trauma. A former Spurs psychologist who
has sued Primo and the team said
Primo exposed himself to her multiple
times. Primo is considered untouchable
around the NBA until more information surfaces about his actions. The
Spurs had recently guaranteed Primo’s
contract for next season, meaning they
are still paying him . . . There is reason
for concern for Miami’s Victor Oladipo,
who has not played this season because
of knee issues. Oladipo, felled by injuries over the past few years, had his moments in last season’s playoff series
against the Celtics and was expected to
be a key bench player. Coach Erik
Spoelstra said the Heat are being cautious with Oladipo, but it’s apparent he
won’t have the expected immediate impact and the offense has suffered.
Spoelstra has opted to bring Duncan
Robinson off the bench, and he is
shooting 40 percent from the 3-point
line in 15 minutes per game. The Heat
also have been affected by slow starts
from Kyle Lowry (40.4 percent from the
field) and Gabe Vincent (36.5). Speaking of Vincent, he is 7 for 13 against the
Celtics and 16 of 50 against the rest of
the league.
Gary Washburn can be reached at
gary.washburn@globe.com.
C10
Sports
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
G l o b e
NBA
EASTERN CONFERENCE
ATLANTIC
Boston
Toronto
New York
Philadelphia
Brooklyn
W
6
5
4
4
3
L
3
4
5
6
6
Pct.
.667
.556
.444
.400
.333
GB
—
1
2
2½
3
Streak
W2
L1
L1
L2
W1
Home
3-1
3-1
3-2
1-4
2-4
Conf.
6-3
4-3
4-4
4-5
3-3
CENTRAL
Milwaukee
Cleveland
Chicago
Indiana
Detroit
W
9
7
5
4
2
L
0
1
5
5
8
Pct.
1.000
.875
.500
.444
.200
GB
—
1½
4½
5
7½
Streak
W9
W7
L1
W1
L3
Home
7-0
4-0
3-2
2-2
2-3
Conf.
6-0
7-1
5-4
4-4
1-8
SOUTHEAST
Atlanta
Washington
Miami
Charlotte
Orlando
W
6
4
4
3
2
L
3
5
6
6
8
Pct.
.667
.444
.400
.333
.200
GB
—
2
2½
3
4½
Streak
W2
L1
L1
L3
L1
Home
3-1
2-3
3-3
1-2
2-2
Conf.
4-3
4-5
1-4
1-3
1-5
WESTERN CONFERENCE
JACOB KUPFERMAN/GETTY IMAGES
There is no denying Nets guard Kyrie Irving’s extraordinary skill,
but once again he has become a distraction.
Fair to label
Nets franchise
as ‘tortured’
Bob Ryan
I mean, what do
you expect from a
franchise named
after a piece of
equipment?
For the record,
they began American Basketball Association life in
1967 as the New Jersey Americans.
But when they relocated the following year to Long Island, they needed a new nickname. And the best
idea someone could come up with
was a rhyme for the Jets and Mets?
Hence the New York “Nets.” Really?
Starting life in the Teaneck Armory, their perambulations have taken them to such homes as Commack Arena; the Island Garden in
Hempstead (where, if memory
serves correctly, the Celtics refused
to dress and shower in the decrepit
locker room for an exhibition game,
encamping instead to their nearby
hotel); the Nassau County Coliseum; the Rutgers Athletic Center;
Brendan Byrne/Continental Arena/
Izod Center; the Prudential Center;
and, finally, to the Barclays Center
in Brooklyn, where they are currently making news for all the
wrong reasons.
I think it is fair to label this franchise as “tortured,” and not simply
because it has yet to hoist a championship banner in its NBA existence, which began with the 197677 season. After all, fellow ABA expatriates Denver and Indiana have
yet to win, either. They each envy
their old ABA pals from San Antonio, who have won it all five times.
To be fair, the Nets definitely
had their share of ABA success,
winning the championship in 197374 and 1975-76, the final season of
the ABA prior to its merger with the
NBA. So you might think they
would have been entering the NBA
with heads high.
There was one little problem.
Their best player happened to be
Julius Erving, the renowned Dr. J.
But for very Nets-like reasons owing
to finance, Dr. J was no longer a
member of the Nets when they began play in the NBA. He had been
sold to the Philadelphia 76ers. So in
their inaugural NBA season they
went 22-60, and Dr. J and the 76ers
went to the Finals.
Their New Jersey existence was
tedious, to say the least. The Rutgers existence was unbecoming of
an NBA franchise. About the only
good thing about it was that their
departure was immortalized in
John Pizzarelli’s hilarious song, “I
Love Jersey Best.” Among the lyrics:
“The Jersey Nets went thataway.
Piscataway no more.”
Off they went to the newly constructed Brendan Byrne Arena.
Even with half-decent teams, a Nets
home game had the atmosphere of
a funeral parlor. Brendan Byrne
Arena sat next to the Jersey Turnpike. Its mailing address was East
Rutherford, N.J. To borrow from
Gertrude Stein, there was no there
there. The tepid fandom reflected
that fact. When the 1983-84 team
began its first-round series against
the defending champion 76ers with
a pair of victories in Philadelphia,
you might expect them to return
home before a raucous sellout
crowd for Game 3. Nope. The joint
was two-thirds full.
The building name kept changing, but the atmosphere never did. I
began referring to them as the “Exit
16W Nets,” a franchise that really
had no great reason to exist.
Their shining moments took
place earlier in this century when
Jason Kidd sparked them to Finals
trips in 2001-02 and 2002-03. They
were swept by the Lakers in ’02 and
lost to the Spurs in six games the
following year. They deserve special
credit for their ’02 performance
against the Celtics. They responded
to a humiliating loss in Game 3 —
remember the fourth-quarter Celtics comeback from 21 down? — by
taking the next three games.
Since then? Not so much.
I must acknowledge I thought it
was great when they moved to
Brooklyn. A franchise that had never been exactly what you would call
“stable” now had a shiny new home.
And it is a good facility, easily
reachable by subway from Manhattan.
But things have not gone very
well on the court. The franchise is
still trying to recover from the disastrous deal then-general manager
Billy King made with the Celtics,
when he forfeited valuable draft
picks for what was left of Paul
Pierce and Kevin Garnett.
The current mess is courtesy of
GM Sean Marks. On his watch the
Nets have assembled a dysfunctional group that has looked good on
paper, but doesn’t mesh too well
when the ball gets thrown up.
James Harden talked his way into
Brooklyn before forcing his way out
the door. Kevin Durant will go
down in history as a top-10-12 player, but he has evolved into a peculiarly unhappy personality. Ben
Simmons seems neither physically
nor psychologically destined to
have a lengthy NBA career.
And then there is Kyrie Irving.
We in Boston are happy to say,
“We told ya’ so.” The Nets are the
latest to discover that Irving is a
transcendent talent who once upon
a time earned the highest accolades
for his skill from no less a point
guard authority than Bob Cousy,
but who is so wrapped up in himself as a supposed intellect that he
becomes impossible to live with.
There is no denying Irving’s
skill. He gets to the basket with
extraordinary ease, finishing adeptly with either hand. He is a fearless
shooter. I’d go so far as to say he has
a touch of Andrew Toney in him
(that’s high praise from me, folks).
But the rest? Please. He just isn’t
as smart as he thinks he is. There
seems to be no end to his willingness to embrace, shall we say, erroneous theories. He is a distraction,
pure and simple.
Many say that departed coach
Steve Nash was simply overmatched, but I don’t think we’ll
ever know what he could have done
in a better circumstance. I hope he
gets another chance to coach,
assuming he wants one.
And as for even contemplating
the tone-deaf hiring of the tainted
Ime Udoka as the appropriate Nash
replacement? Really and truly . . .
what were they thinking?
But once again, I ask: What else
could we expect from a franchise
named after a piece of equipment?
Bob Ryan’s column appears
regularly in the Globe. He can be
reached at robert.ryan@globe.com.
PACIFIC
*Phoenix
LA Clippers
Sacramento
Golden State
LA Lakers
W
6
5
3
3
2
L
2
4
5
7
6
Pct.
.750
.556
.375
.300
.250
GB
—
1½
3
4
4
Streak
L1
W3
W1
L5
L1
Home
5-1
1-2
1-3
3-1
2-3
Conf.
6-2
5-4
0-4
2-3
2-6
SOUTHWEST
Memphis
Dallas
New Orleans
San Antonio
Houston
W
6
5
5
5
1
L
3
3
4
5
9
Pct.
.667
.625
.556
.500
.100
GB
—
½
1
1½
5½
Streak
W2
W3
L1
L3
L6
Home
3-0
4-1
2-1
2-3
1-2
Conf.
3-3
2-3
3-3
2-3
1-7
NORTHWEST
*Portland
Utah
Denver
Minnesota
Okla. City
W
6
7
6
5
4
L
2
3
3
5
5
Pct.
.750
.700
.667
.500
.444
GB
—
—
½
2
2½
Streak
W1
W1
W2
W1
L2
Home
3-2
4-0
4-0
4-3
3-2
Conf.
6-1
7-3
6-3
5-4
3-4
* — Not including late game
SATURDAY’S RESULTS
BOSTON 133
Sacramento 126
at New York 118
At Milwaukee 108
at Orlando 123 (OT)
At Minnesota 129
Brooklyn 98
at Charlotte 94
At Atlanta 124
New Orleans 121 (OT)
Okla. City 94
Houston 117
At Denver 126
San Antonio 101
Portland
at Phoenix
SUNDAY’S GAMES
Cleveland at LA Lakers
3:30
Chicago at Toronto
6
Washington at Memphis
6
Utah at LA Clippers
10
FRIDAY’S RESULTS
At BOSTON 123
Chicago 119
LA Clippers 113
Cleveland 112
at Detroit 88
At Dallas 111
At Indiana 101
Miami 99
New York 106
at Philadelphia 104
Brooklyn 128
at Washington 86
At Memphis 130
Charlotte 99
at San Antonio 106
At New Orleans 114
Milwaukee 115
Portland 108
Utah 130
GOLF ROUNDUP
BUCKS 108, THUNDER 94
Toronto 110
Golden St. 105
at Minnesota 102
at Phoenix 106
at LA Lakers 116
OKLAHOMA CITY
FG
FT Reb
Min M-A M-A O-T A F Pt
Dort........... 24
1-5
1-2
0-4 7 2
3
Earl ........... 18
5-7
0-0
2-3 1 1 12
Muscala ... 17
3-8
2-4
0-5 0 1
9
Giddey...... 26 6-14
1-1
1-6 2 1 15
Alexndr .... 32 7-16
4-5
0-1 3 3 18
Omoruyi..... 2
0-2
0-0
0-0 0 0
0
JWillims ... 20
2-6
0-0
0-5 1 2
5
Bazley ...... 19
3-7
0-0
3-5 2 1
8
Dieng........ 22
3-4
0-0
1-4 5 0
8
Mann ........ 14
1-3
1-2
0-0 0 1
3
KWillims .. 17
1-3
1-2
1-3 1 3
3
Joe ............ 15
3-6
0-0
0-1 0 0
8
Wiggins...... 9
0-0
0-0
0-0 0 3
0
JyWillims ... 5
1-3
0-0
1-1 0 0
2
Totals .. ..... 36-84 10-16 9-38 22 18 94
FG%: .429, FT%: .625. 3-pt. goals: 12-35,
.343 (Dort 0-2, Earl 2-4, Muscala 1-6, Giddey
2-3, Alexander 0-1, JWilliams 1-3, Bazley 2-4,
Dieng 2-3, Mann 0-2, KWilliams 0-2, Joe 2-4,
JyWilliams 0-1). Team rebounds: 9. Team
turnovers: 16 (10 pts.). Blocks: 3 (Earl, Alexander, Bazley). Turnovers: 15 (Dort 2, Earl,
Muscala, Giddey 4, Alexander 2, Mann 2, Wiggins 3). Steals: 6 (Dort, Alexander, Bazley 2,
KWilliams, JyWilliams).
MILWAUKEE
FG
FT Reb
Min M-A M-A O-T A F Pt
Beachmp . 25
1-9
0-0
3-5 0 6
2
Portis........ 29 5-15
0-0 4-21 2 0 12
Lopez........ 24 10-16
1-1
2-3 1 3 25
4-4
Holiday..... 29 3-10
4-6 13 0 10
Carter....... 31 6-12
1-1
0-2 0 2 18
Ibaka ........ 24
2-5
4-4
1-6 2 2
8
Allen ......... 21
6-8
2-2
0-1 1 0 19
Matthws .. 13
0-3
0-0
4-5 1 0
0
Nwora ...... 22 4-10
3-3
0-3 1 0 12
Hill ............ 21
1-2
0-2
0-2 2 3
2
TAntkpo ..... 1
0-0
0-0
0-1 0 0
0
Totals .. ..... 38-90 15-17 18-55 23 16 108
FG%: .422, FT%: .882. 3-pt. goals: 17-47,
.362 (Beauchamp 0-6, Portis 2-5, Lopez 4-9,
Holiday 0-3, Carter 5-9, Ibaka 0-2, Allen 5-6,
Matthews 0-2, Nwora 1-5). Team rebounds: 6.
Team turnovers: 19 (20 pts.). Blocks: 6 (Lopez, Carter, Ibaka 2, Allen, T.Antetokounmpo). Turnovers: 18 (Beauchamp 2, Portis, Lopez 3, Holiday 3, Carter 2, Ibaka 2, Allen 2, Hill
3). Steals: 7 (Beauchamp, Lopez, Holiday,
Carter, Allen 2, Nwora). Technicals: def. 3second, 7:06/1st.
Oklahoma City...........34 19 25 16 — 94
Milwaukee..................34 33 26 15 — 108
A — 17,713 (17,500). T — 2:06. Officials —
Jacyn Goble, Eric Dalen, Jonathan Sterling.
T’WOLVES 129, ROCKETS 117
HOUSTON
FG
FT Reb
Min M-A M-A O-T A F Pt
Gordon..... 27
4-9
1-2
0-1 4 1 11
Martin ...... 31
6-8
2-3
1-3 1 1 17
Sengun..... 20
8-9
1-3
5-7 5 3 17
Porter....... 29 3-12
5-5
1-5 2 4 13
Green........ 29 6-16
5-7
1-2 4 1 21
Garuba ..... 25
2-4
3-4
0-3 1 2
7
Eason........ 24
6-8
3-5
3-6 2 3 17
Nix............. 19
0-4
0-0
0-2 6 1
0
Mathews.. 18
3-7
0-0
0-1 1 0
9
Christphr . 15
2-6
0-0
1-2 1 1
4
Marjnvic..... 3
0-1
1-2
0-1 0 1
1
Totals .. ..... 40-84 21-31 12-33 27 18 117
FG%: .476, FT%: .677. 3-pt. goals: 16-38,
.421 (Gordon 2-6, Martin 3-5, Porter 2-4,
Green 4-11, Eason 2-2, Nix 0-2, Mathews 3-6,
Christopher 0-2). Team rebounds: 15. Team
turnovers: 23 (36 pts.). Turnovers: 22 (Gordon, Martin 2, Sengun 2, Porter 3, Green 5,
Garuba 2, Eason, Nix 4, Mathews, Christopher). Steals: 10 (Martin, Garuba 2, Eason,
Nix 3, Christopher 2, Marjanovic).
MINNESOTA
FG
FT Reb
Min M-A M-A O-T A F Pt
McDniels.. 35
6-9
0-0
1-5 3 4 13
Andersn ... 31
6-7
2-3
1-3 6 3 16
Towns ...... 30 9-14
4-5
3-9 6 5 25
Russell...... 27
5-9
2-3
3-6 4 4 13
AEdwrds .. 33 7-13
3-3
0-2 3 2 19
Prince....... 32 6-12
1-1
1-6 2 2 16
McLghlin.. 22
2-3
2-2
0-2 11 1
6
Reid .......... 13
4-7
1-2
0-3 0 6 11
Nowell...... 16
3-5
0-0
0-0 3 0
7
Rivers ......... 0
0-0
0-0
0-0 0 0
0
Knight......... 2
1-1
1-1
0-0 0 0
3
Totals .. ..... 49-80 16-20 9-36 38 27 129
FG%: .613, FT%: .800. 3-pt. goals: 15-33,
.455 (McDaniels 1-2, Anderson 2-2, Towns 3-6,
Russell 1-3, A.Edwards 2-5, Prince 3-8,
McLaughlin 0-1, Reid 2-4, Nowell 1-2). Team
rebounds: 5. Team turnovers: 24 (26 pts.).
Blocks: 5 (McDaniels, Towns 2, Prince, Reid).
Turnovers: 24 (McDaniels 2, Anderson,
Towns 3, Russell 3, A.Edwards 4, Prince 3,
Reid 5, Nowell 2, Knight). Steals: 11 (Anderson 3, Towns, Russell 2, A.Edwards 2,
McLaughlin 2, Nowell).
Houston ......................34 15 34 34 — 117
Minnesota ..................40 28 35 26 — 129
A — 16,412 (19,356). T — 2:16. Officials —
Brian Forte, Aaron Smith, Marat Kogut.
HAWKS 124, PELICANS 121
NEW ORLEANS
FG
FT Reb
Min M-A M-A O-T A F Pt
Ingram ..... 38 7-23
0-0
1-5 7 4 16
Willimsn... 37 11-20 7-10
2-8 4 2 29
Valncnas.. 26 5-12
3-4 7-17 1 2 13
Jones ........ 34 7-13
5-9
4-9 2 5 19
McCollm .. 41 12-23
1-1 2-10 0 4 29
Daniels ....... 5
0-1
0-0
1-3 0 0
0
Murphy .... 17
0-3
2-2
0-0 2 0
2
Marshall... 12
0-3
0-0
1-2 0 2
0
Alvarado .. 16
2-5
0-0
0-1 4 2
5
Nance....... 27
3-4
2-2
1-4 2 1
8
Graham.... 11
0-1
0-0
0-0 1 2
0
Totals .. ..... 47-108 20-28 19-59 23 24 121
FG%: .435, FT%: .714. 3-pt. goals: 7-23, .304
(Ingram 2-4, Williamson 0-1, Jones 0-2, McCollum 4-9, Daniels 0-1, Murphy 0-3, Alvarado
1-2, Graham 0-1). Team rebounds: 12. Team
turnovers: 16 (23 pts.). Blocks: 6 (Ingram 2,
Valanciunas, McCollum, Alvarado, Nance).
Turnovers: 16 (Ingram, Williamson 7, Valanciunas 2, McCollum 2, Daniels, Murphy, Alvarado, Graham). Steals: 8 (Valanciunas, Jones 3,
McCollum, Nance 3).
ATLANTA
FG
FT Reb
Min M-A M-A O-T A F Pt
Collins ...... 36
3-6
0-0
1-5 1 4
7
Hunter...... 39 6-13
1-2
2-6 1 4 15
Capela...... 35 10-15
1-2 5-19 1 3 21
Murray ..... 42 9-23
3-4 2-10 11 3 22
Young....... 42 9-26 14-15
1-1 10 3 34
JHoliday ... 16
2-7
0-0
0-1 0 1
5
Okongwu . 18
1-2
2-2
0-1 1 5
4
AHoliday.. 22
2-4
0-0
1-3 2 0
5
Johnson.... 15
5-7
0-0
0-4 1 0 11
Totals .. ..... 47-103 21-25 12-50 28 23 124
FG%: .456, FT%: .840. 3-pt. goals: 9-36, .250
(Collins 1-2, Hunter 2-6, Murray 1-8, Young
2-9, J.Holiday 1-6, A.Holiday 1-2, Johnson 1-3).
Team rebounds: 8. Team turnovers: 13 (16
pts.). Blocks: 8 (Collins 2, Hunter, Capela 4,
Young). Turnovers: 13 (Hunter 2, Capela,
Murray 2, Young 5, J.Holiday, A.Holiday, Johnson). Steals: 12 (Capela, Murray 3, Young 2,
J.Holiday 2, Okongwu, A.Holiday, Johnson 2).
New Orleans .......... 28 24 33 24 12 — 121
Atlanta .................... 29 31 28 21 15 — 124
A — 17,654 (18,729). T — 2:32. Officials —
Scott Foster, JB DeRosa, Robert Hussey.
JAZZ 130, LAKERS 116
Friday night game
KEVIN KOLCZYNSKI/ASSOCIATED PRESS
Paolo Banchero gets tied up with the Kings’ Domantas Sabonis (10) in the first half. Despite Banchero’s
33 points and 16 rebounds, the Magic fell, 126-123,
on De’Aaron Fox’s buzzer-beating 3-pointer in OT.
KINGS 126, MAGIC 123
Min
Murray ..... 24
Barnes...... 35
Sabonis .... 38
Huerter .... 32
Fox............ 40
Mitchell.... 13
Lyles ......... 30
Monk ........ 29
Holmes....... 5
Davis........... 8
Metu......... 11
Totals .. .....
SACRAMENTO
FG
FT Reb
M-A M-A O-T A F Pt
1-6
0-0
0-2 0 1
3
4-10
0-0
2-5 1 1
9
10-14 5-12 2-11 6 4 25
3-7
0-2
0-1 2 2
9
14-24
7-7
0-5 3 3 37
0-2
0-0
0-1 1 2
0
5-10
1-1
0-3 2 2 15
5-10
2-2
0-1 5 3 15
1-2
0-0
2-3 0 1
2
2-5
0-0
0-1 3 1
5
2-3
2-2
0-3 1 0
6
47-93 17-26 6-36 24 20 126
FG%: .505, FT%: .654. 3-pt. goals: 15-40,
.375 (Murray 1-4, Barnes 1-4, Sabonis 0-1,
Huerter 3-6, Fox 2-7, Mitchell 0-1, Lyles 4-7,
Monk 3-7, Davis 1-3). Team rebounds: 9.
Team turnovers: 14 (21 pts.). Blocks: 4 (Sabonis, Huerter, Lyles, Davis). Turnovers: 14
(Murray, Barnes, Sabonis 2, Huerter, Fox 4,
Mitchell 2, Lyles 2, Monk). Steals: 5 (Murray,
Barnes, Sabonis, Fox, Davis).
Min
Bol............. 37
Banchero . 40
Carter....... 39
Suggs ....... 35
FWagner .. 40
Schofield.... 3
Okeke....... 23
Ross.......... 16
K.Harris.... 16
Hampton.. 17
Totals .. .....
ORLANDO
FG
FT
M-A M-A
10-11
1-1
14-26
5-5
6-8
4-4
2-7
2-2
13-22
4-5
0-0
0-0
2-6
0-0
0-2
0-0
1-4
2-2
2-6
1-1
50-92 19-20
Reb
O-T A F Pt
1-7 2 5 23
1-16 4 2 33
0-9 6 6 17
1-1 7 5
6
0-3 6 4 31
0-0 0 0
0
2-6 0 1
4
0-1 1 1
0
1-3 0 1
4
1-2 1 1
5
7-48 27 26 123
FG%: .543, FT%: .950. 3-pt. goals: 4-23, .174
(Bol 2-3, Banchero 0-3, Carter 1-3, Suggs 0-3,
F.Wagner 1-5, Okeke 0-3, K.Harris 0-2, Hampton 0-1). Team rebounds: 5. Team turnovers:
18 (26 pts.). Blocks: 4 (Banchero, Suggs,
Okeke 2). Turnovers: 17 (Banchero, Carter 4,
Suggs 6, F.Wagner 2, Okeke, Ross 2, Hampton). Steals: 8 (Carter, Suggs, F.Wagner 3,
Okeke 2, Ross).
Sacramento............ 25 22 36 23 20 — 126
Orlando ................... 33 32 12 29 17 — 123
A — 18,846 (18,500). T — 2:34. Officials —
David Guthrie, Lauren Holtkamp, Leon Wood.
NUGGETS 126, SPURS 101
SAN ANTONIO
FG
FT Reb
Min M-A M-A O-T A F Pt
Sochan ..... 24
2-2
0-0
1-2 1 2
5
KJohnsn ... 31 8-14
5-6
0-3 4 0 25
Poeltl........ 29 7-12
0-2
3-8 2 2 14
Branham.. 23
2-7
0-0
0-2 2 0
4
Jones ........ 24
2-7
0-0
0-0 7 1
4
Diop .......... 18
3-5
2-2
2-3 1 0
8
Vassell ..... 25 7-12
2-3
0-4 4 1 20
Richrdsn .. 19
3-7
0-0
0-1 3 4
8
Dieng........ 10
2-3
0-0
0-1 1 1
5
McDermt.. 16
0-3
1-3
0-0 0 1
1
Roby ......... 16
3-7
1-3
0-4 3 0
7
Hall ............. 5
0-1
0-0
0-0 0 1
0
Totals .. ..... 39-80 11-19 6-28 28 13 101
FG%: .488, FT%: .579. 3-pt. goals: 12-30,
.400 (Sochan 1-1, K.Johnson 4-7, Branham 0-4,
Jones 0-1, Diop 0-1, Vassell 4-6, Richardson
2-4, Dieng 1-2, McDermott 0-2, Roby 0-1, Hall
0-1). Team rebounds: 7. Team turnovers: 15
(21 pts.). Blocks: 3 (Sochan, Poeltl, Vassell).
Turnovers: 15 (K.Johnson 3, Poeltl 2, Branham 2, Jones, Diop, Vassell, Richardson 2,
Dieng 3). Steals: 8 (Sochan, Poeltl, Branham,
Jones, Diop 2, Vassell, Dieng).
DENVER
FG
FT Reb
Min M-A M-A O-T A F Pt
Gordon ..... 23
4-6
0-2
2-6 2 1
8
Porter....... 30 6-10
0-0
1-9 0 3 15
Jokic ......... 27 9-10
2-2
0-6 10 2 21
Pope ......... 27
5-6
0-3
0-1 3 3 12
Murray ..... 23 6-10
0-0
1-1 9 0 13
Brown....... 20
3-9
3-3
1-3 3 2
9
Green........ 25
4-8
0-0
2-4 1 1
9
Hyland...... 25 9-17
0-0
1-5 7 0 24
Jordan ...... 17
5-6
0-0
2-8 1 3 10
Braun........ 14
1-4
0-0
0-2 1 0
2
Reed ........... 5
0-0
0-0
0-0 0 0
0
Cancar........ 5
1-1
0-0
0-2 0 0
3
Totals .. ..... 53-87 5-10 10-47 37 15 126
FG%: .609, FT%: .500. 3-pt. goals: 15-29,
.517 (Gordon 0-1, Porter 3-6, Jokic 1-1, Pope
2-3, Murray 1-3, Brown 0-3, Green 1-2, Hyland
6-8, Braun 0-1, Cancar 1-1). Team rebounds:
6. Team turnovers: 18 (22 pts.). Turnovers: 16
(Porter 2, Jokic 4, Pope 2, Murray, Green 4,
Hyland, Jordan, Reed). Steals: 10 (Porter, Jokic 2, Pope 4, Brown, Hyland 2).
San Antonio ...............27 24 25 25 — 101
Denver.........................40 30 29 27 — 126
A — 19,641 (19,155). T — 1:58. Officials —
Ben Taylor, Sean Corbin, Brett Nansel.
UTAH
FG
FT Reb
Min M-A M-A O-T A F Pt
2-4 3 4 18
Olynyk...... 30 7-10
1-2
Marknen .. 33 9-17
6-6 3-13 4 1 27
Vnderbilt.. 25
4-7
0-0
2-6 4 5
9
Conley...... 31 6-11
1-1
2-2 10 0 15
Clarkson .. 29 9-19
0-0
0-7 3 5 20
Kessler ..... 11
4-5
0-0
3-4 0 0
8
Sexton...... 29 7-13
0-0
2-4 3 3 17
Beasley .... 15
1-7
0-0
0-2 1 2
3
Tucker...... 16
3-7
0-0
1-3 1 0
7
Gay ........... 10
0-2
0-0
0-1 2 1
0
Walker ....... 8
0-1 0 1
6
2-4
1-1
Agbaji......... 1
0-0
0-0
0-0 0 0
0
Azubuike.... 1
0-0
0-0
0-0 0 0
0
Fntecchio... 1
0-1
0-0
0-1 0 0
0
Totals .. ..... 52-103 9-10 15-48 31 22 130
FG%: .505, FT%: .900. 3-pt. goals: 17-40,
.425 (Olynyk 3-3, Markkanen 3-9, Vanderbilt
1-1, Conley 2-5, Clarkson 2-7, Sexton 3-5, Beasley 1-4, Tucker 1-2, Gay 0-1, Walker 1-2, Fontecchio 0-1). Team rebounds: 4. Team turnovers: 8 (13 pts.). Blocks: 3 (Markkanen, Kessler 2). Turnovers: 8 (Markkanen, Vanderbilt,
Conley 2, Sexton 2, Gay, Walker). Steals: 8
(Olynyk, Markkanen, Vanderbilt, Conley,
Beasley 2, Tucker 2).
LA LAKERS
FG
FT Reb
Min M-A M-A O-T A F Pt
Brown....... 22 4-10
2-2
1-2 0 2 12
James....... 34 7-19
3-5 2-10 8 3 17
Davis......... 35 9-17
3-3
3-8 2 3 22
Beverley... 28
2-2
0-0
1-5 1 2
5
Walker ..... 30 6-12
5-5
0-1 1 2 19
Westbrk... 29 9-14
5-5
0-3 6 1 26
Ryan ......... 10
1-4
0-0
1-4 0 1
3
Reaves ..... 22
1-1
2-2
0-2 3 1
5
Andersn ... 15
0-0
2-2
0-1 0 1
2
Gabriel ..... 11
1-1
3-4
1-4 1 1
5
Christie ...... 1
0-1
0-0
0-0 0 0
0
D.Jones....... 1
0-0
0-0
0-0 0 0
0
Nunn........... 1
0-2
0-0
0-0 0 0
0
Totals .. ..... 40-83 25-28 9-40 22 17 116
FG%: .482, FT%: .893. 3-pt. goals: 11-26,
.423 (Brown 2-6, James 0-5, Davis 1-2, Beverley 1-1, Walker 2-3, Westbrook 3-5, Ryan 1-3,
Reaves 1-1). Team rebounds: 6. Team turnovers: 11 (17 pts.). Blocks: 6 (James, Davis 2,
Reaves 2, Anderson). Turnovers: 11 (Brown
2, James 3, Davis, Westbrook 4, Reaves).
Steals: 6 (Brown, Walker 2, Westbrook 2,
Reaves).
Utah.............................40 35 25 30 — 130
LA Lakers....................34 28 33 21 — 116
A — 18,997 (18,997). T — 2:09. Officials —
Josh Tiven, Natalie Sago, Andy Nagy.
LEADERS
Not including Saturday’s games
SCORING
FG
FT Pts.
Doncic, DAL .................... 99
73 288
Antetokonmpo, MIL ...... 94
65 261
Alexander, OKC.............. 84
51 226
Durant, BKN.................... 95
82 288
Mitchell, CLE................... 77
36 218
Curry, GSW ..................... 91
51 279
Tatum, BOS..................... 80
62 247
Morant, MEM ................. 77
63 232
Young, ATL ..................... 69
62 220
Booker, PHX ................... 78
45 219
Irving, BKN...................... 78
38 215
DeRozan, CHI.................. 85
82 256
Maxey, PHI ..................... 90
36 249
Siakam, TOR................... 80
50 223
Brown, BOS..................... 72
36 198
PPG
36.0
32.6
32.3
32.0
31.1
31.0
30.9
29.0
27.5
27.4
26.9
25.6
24.9
24.8
24.8
Henley
cards 65,
doubles
lead to 6
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Russell Henley rolled in a
25-foot birdie putt on his first
hole and never really let up Saturday until he had a 6-underpar 65 and doubled the size of
his lead to six shots in the World
Wide Technology at Mayakoba.
This is the sixth time Henley
has had at least a share of the
54-hole lead on the PGA Tour,
and while he has converted only
one of them into a victory — his
rookie start in 2013 in Hawaii —
he has never had a lead like this.
Will Gordon bogeyed the
18th hole for a 68 to fall farther
back, tied with Patton Kizzire,
who had a 67.
Henley was at 22-under 191,
breaking his career low for the
opening 54 holes on the PGA
Tour by one shot. He had a 192
in the Sony Open in January, ultimately losing in a playoff to
Hideki Matsuyama.
Equally impressive by Henley was going bogey-free, the
only player in the field who has
yet to drop a shot at El Camaleon.
Henley sure had his chances.
He put his tee shot into the hazard on the 428-yard second
hole, took a penalty drop, and
then hit his approach to 4 feet to
save par.
Henley will be going for his
fourth career victory, and first
since the 2017 Houston Open.
This round had plenty of
stress compared with the opening two days, though that made
it feel more satisfying because of
the key putts he made that
saved par and kept momentum
in his favor.
He started with a three-shot
lead and no one made up any
ground.
Sam Ryder was three behind. He was six back after making a double bogey on his first
hole, while Henley made his
long birdie. Gordon had three
straight birdies early on the
back nine to try to stay in the
game.
Seamus Power of Ireland,
coming off a win in Bermuda,
had a 63 and was seven shots
behind. His round featured a
hole-in-one on the eighth hole,
and he didn’t even get the stage
to himself.
Greyson Sigg moments later
made an ace on the par-3 10th
hole, and Sigg didn’t even realize it. He hit 7-iron, hit it well,
knew it was a good shot, but
needed to get to the bathroom,
and so he rushed off to the clubhouse near the tee.
LPGA — Momoko Ueda of Japan
shot a 4-under-par 68 to take a
one-stroke lead after three
rounds of the Toto Classic in
Shiga, Japan. Ueda also held a
one-shot lead after the second
round.
Ue d a , w h o h a d a t h r e e round total of 14-under 202, is
one shot ahead of Gemma Dryburgh, who shot a 65 for the
best round of the day. Pornanong Phatlum of Thailand also
had a 65 but was far off the pace
at the Seta Golf Course in western Japan.
Ueda won this tournament
in 2007 and 2011.
Japanese player Miyu Yamashita shot a 69 and was two
strokes back. The field is tightly
bunched with nine other players within five shots of the lead.
Champions — Bernhard Langer
beat his age by two shots with a
9-under 63, giving him a oneshot lead over Paul Goydos in
the TimberTech Championship
i n B o c a R a t o n , F l a ., a n d a
chance to move closer to the
PGA Tour Champions record for
career wins.
Langer opened with three
straight birdies, came one turn
away from another, and then
holed a bunker shot on the
par-3 fifth at Royal Palm Yacht
and Country Club. He got one
more birdie to reach 11-under
133.
It was the sixth time in his
career Langer, a two-time Masters champion, has shot his age
o r l o w e r o n t h e P G A To u r
Champions, and the fourth time
this season.
A victory Sunday would be
his 44 th on the Champions
Tour. Hale Irwin holds the record with 45 senior titles.
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
MLS CUP
LAFC tops via Cup classic
Equalize late, win
title in shootout
By Greg Beacham
ASSOCIATED PRESS
LAFC 3 (3) LOS ANGELES —
Gareth Bale tied
Union 3 (0) the score on a dramatic header in the eighth minute
of extra-time stoppage time, backup goalkeeper John McCarthy
stopped two Philadelphia shots in
the shootout, and Los Angeles FC
beat the Union, 3-0, on penalty
kicks to claim its first MLS Cup
championship Saturday.
After Bale came on as a substitute in extra time and scored to
make it 3-3 in the 128th minute
for 10-man LA, Denis Bouanga,
Ryan Hollingshead, and Ilie Sanchez converted penalty kicks in
the shootout, capping the most
dramatic of MLS’s 27 title games.
LA became the eighth team in
MLS history to win both the Supporters’ Shield as regular-season
champion and the MLS Cup playoff tournament.
“This place deserves this,” firstyear coach Steve Cherundolo said.
“These fans are amazing. They deserve a Cup, and they got it.”
McCarthy, a Philadelphia native and former Union keeper
who had exactly one previous
game of MLS action for LAFC this
season, was forced to come on
during the second extra period
when starter Maxime Crépeau
badly injured a leg while committing a red-card foul on Cor y
Burke.
McCarthy yielded Jack Elliott’s
second goal of the game to put
Philadelphia ahead in the 124th
minute — the fourth minute of injury time after 30 minutes of extra
time. Bale entered in the 97 th
minute and the 33-year-old
scored in the eighth of a scheduled nine minutes of stoppage
time with a thrilling header for
the Welsh superstar’s third MLS
goal and first in three months.
C11
NHL
EASTERN CONFERENCE
ATLANTIC
Boston
Tampa Bay
Detroit
Buffalo
Toronto
*Florida
Montreal
Ottawa
GP
12
12
11
12
12
11
12
11
W
10
7
6
7
6
6
5
4
L
2
4
3
5
4
4
6
7
OL
0
1
2
0
2
1
1
0
Pts.
20
15
14
14
14
13
11
8
ROW
9
7
6
7
6
5
5
4
GF
51
40
34
49
34
34
34
38
GA
30
38
33
38
33
34
40
38
METROPOLITAN
Carolina
*New Jersey
Philadelphia
NY Islanders
NY Rangers
Washington
Pittsburgh
Columbus
GP
11
11
11
12
12
13
12
12
W
8
8
6
7
6
5
4
3
L
2
3
3
5
4
6
6
9
OL
1
0
2
0
2
2
2
0
Pts.
17
16
14
14
14
12
10
6
ROW
6
8
6
7
6
5
4
3
GF
38
40
28
41
34
35
42
30
GA
31
28
28
30
36
38
44
55
WESTERN CONFERENCE
MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ/ASSOCIATED PRESS
CENTRAL
Dallas
Winnipeg
Colorado
Chicago
Minnesota
*Nashville
Arizona
St. Louis
GP
12
11
11
12
11
11
11
9
W
8
7
6
5
5
4
4
3
L
3
3
4
5
5
6
6
6
OL
1
1
1
2
1
1
1
0
Pts.
17
15
13
12
11
9
9
6
ROW
8
7
5
5
4
4
4
3
GF
46
33
40
34
35
30
31
21
GA
27
27
31
39
40
37
45
35
PACIFIC
Vegas
Seattle
Edmonton
*Los Angeles
*Calgary
*Vancouver
*San Jose
*Anaheim
GP
13
13
12
13
9
11
13
11
W
11
7
7
6
5
3
3
3
L
2
4
5
6
4
6
8
7
OL
0
2
0
1
0
2
2
1
Pts.
22
16
14
13
10
8
8
7
ROW
11
7
7
5
5
3
3
2
GF
46
45
46
44
29
38
32
31
GA
27
40
42
49
29
45
44
52
* — Not including late game; ROW — Regulation plus overtime wins
SATURDAY’S RESULTS
Carlos Vela hoisted the trophy for Los Angeles FC, which also topped MLS in the regular season.
At Toronto 2
In the shootout, McCarthy
didn’t allow a goal on the Union’s
three attempts, watching Dániel
Gazdag slip and sky Philadelphia’s
first attempt over the crossbar,
then diving to make saves on José
Martínez and Kai Wagner. Sánchez sealed the victory in front of
LAFC’s ecstatic home crowd.
“You feel for their goalkeeper
when he gets stretchered off,”
Union coach Jim Curtin said.
“[McCarthy is a] great kid, a Philly
kid who did great things in Philadelphia. Soccer gods have a funny
way of working. I half-joked on
the bench that I can’t believe
Johnny is going to be there, and
it’s probably going to go to penalty
kicks.”
Elliott also forced extra time by
scoring the tying goal in the 85th
minute of regulation for the
Union, who rallied from a pair of
one-goal deficits in their first MLS
Cup final appearance. Philadelphia then took the lead deep in extra time when their English defender set the record for the latest
goal in MLS history.
Elliott held that record for only
four minutes, until Bale rose and
headed home Diego Palacios’s
cross.
Bale, who left Real Madrid
during the summer with an eye
on preparation for Wales’ World
Cup appearance later this month,
was getting his first minutes with
LA since Oct. 2.
Philadelphia rallied twice in
regulation to tie it after the hosts
went ahead at Banc of California
Stadium, which was packed with
black-clad fans anticipating the
crowning achievement of their
high-profile expansion franchise’s
impressive first half-decade,
which includes two regular-season league titles.
Kellyn Acosta scored in the
first half for LAFC, and Philadelphia top scorer Gazdag tied it early in the second. Jesús David
Murillo headed home a tiebreaking goal for LAFC in the 83rd minute off a corner from Carlos Vela,
but Elliott evened it again for Philadelphia two minutes later.
The MLS Cup final was an appropriate postseason matchup between the league’s best teams
throughout the regular season
and two of its most impressive organizations over the past half-decade. LAFC and Philadelphia finished on top of their respective
conferences this year with an
identical 67 points before surviving the two-game postseason
gauntlet to reach both clubs’ first
playoff championship game.
Celtics are breaking their own precedent
uSHAUGHNESSY
Continued from Page C1
intransigence.
“It was purely a promotional
gimmick, and I knew I wasn’t going to have an impact,” Cousy said
Thursday. “I was upset at the
time, but Arnold just did it like he
did everything else. He saw an opportunity there and he wasn’t going to let it slip by. That’s why Arnold was as successful as anyone
since Machiavelli.”
More than a decade later, Red
did the same thing when Dave Cowens, Boston’s onetime MVP, retired before the start of the 198081 season. Two seasons later,
when Cowens decided to make a
comeback, he knew he had to go
through Red.
“Red kept your rights,” Cowens
recalled this past week. “Just because you were retired, you still
weren’ t free. I thought I had
something worked out to come
back with Phoenix, but Red said,
‘No, you’re going to Milwaukee.’ ”
In exchange for Cowens — a
player who’d been retired for two
seasons and would play only 40
games the rest of his career — Auerbach acquired Bucks starting
g u a r d Q u i n n B u c k n e r, w h o
wound up helping the Celtics’
1984 championship team. In
1985, Red traded Buckner for Jerry Sichting, who was a key contributor when the Celtics won another championship in 1986.
Seven years after Auerbach
died, Danny Ainge and today’s
Celtics ownership went through a
month-long negotiation with the
Clippers for Doc Rivers, who still
had three years left on his Boston
contract. The Celtics ended up
with a 2015 first-round pick.
Like a lot of us, Cowens is surprised the Celtics aren’t getting
anything for Udoka.
“That’s how fans are going to
feel,” said the big redhead. “Why
be so gracious? They’re being
more magnanimous than Red
would have been, that’s for sure.”
The Celtics are being compassionate. They are being kind to
Udoka. They are ridding themselves of a headache and potential
litigation. And they are helping
the rival Nets.
“He’s possibly going to be the
coach of one of our biggest rivals?” Marcus Smart said to the
Globe’s Adam Himmelsbach
Wednesday. “It’s tough. It makes
Sports
G l o b e
2006 FILE/DIMA GAVRYSH/ASSOCIATED PRESS
Jerry Jones’s recent birthday party may have been the last
“concert” for Jerry Lee Lewis (above), who died on Oct. 28.
no sense.”
Red would have hated it.
R Quiz (courtesy of Tyler Kepner, author of “ The Grandest
Stage”): Phillies hitting coach
Kevin Long has been a coach for
four World Series teams: Phillies,
Nationals, Mets, Yankees. Fortytwo players have appeared on a
Series roster for three teams.
Name the only player to make a
World Series with four teams (answer below).
R The Philadelphia Phillies
have played 140 seasons and have
never been in a Game 7.
R New York Post baseball “insider” Jon Heyman (who has a
great pipeline to Xander Bogaerts’s agent, Scott Boras), predicts Bogaerts will get an eightyear deal worth $225 million on
the free agent market. The Red
Sox’ standing offer to Bogaerts is
four years, $90 million.
R I know it was the right baseball move, but I still hated seeing
Cristian Javier pulled from a
World Series no-hitter after six
sensational innings in Game 4.
R Phillies president of baseball
operations Dave Dombrowski told
USA Today he didn’t think he was
treated right by the Red Sox. He
chose not to elaborate on that
statement while at the World Series, but the New York Times reported that Dombrowski “never
thought he was treated unfairly
by any other organization.”
R The Cubs last weekend hired
Mike Sonne as team “Baseball Scientist.” Seriously.
R Hall of Famer Jim Kaat, after
seeing Phillies right fielder Nick
Castellanos’s game-saving catch in
the World Series opener: “I like
what he did. He played much
shallower than the analytics suggested because his instincts told
him to do that. What a concept!”
R When Philadelphia TV station NBC-10 delivered the news of
Brady’s divorce by identifying
Brady only as “the losing quarterback in Super Bowl 52,” it reminded me of a long-ago headline in a
now-defunct Philly newspaper.
In 1980, while the Phillies
were the talk of the town (en
route to their first World Series
win ever), a local scientist won a
Nobel Prize and was celebrated
with the headline, “Phillies Fan
Wins Nobel.”
Sports Illustrated declared this
to be something akin to Polish
cardinal Karol Jozef Wojtyla (a
recreational skier) being elected
pope in 1978 and a Warsaw newspaper announcing, “Local Ski Buff
Tabbed Pontiff.”
R While the team was staying
in Philadelphia, a couple of local
eating establishments refused to
sell catered orders to the Astros.
R How many of you knew that
George Brett was picked off first
base after getting his 3,000th hit?
Imagine.
On Sept. 30, 1992, Brett was
with the Royals in Anaheim, not
far from his boyhood home of El
Segundo. He was four hits shy at
the start of the day and wasn’t expected to play, but Hal McRae put
him in the lineup and Brett went
4 for 5, singling off Angels
lefthander Tim Fortugno in the
seventh to become the 17th play-
er in hardball history to reach
3,000.
After a pause for celebrations
(all of the Royals came out of their
dugout to congratulate Brett, and
the Angels provided fireworks),
the game resumed. Brett took a
lead and started chatting with
first baseman Gary Gaetti, then
got picked off by Fortugno.
R Cowboys owner Jerry Jones
turned 80 Oct. 13 and his birthday party featured a live, in-house
performance by none other than
Jerry Lee Lewis, who died Oct. 28
at the age of 87. Jones’s birthday
party may have been the last “concert” by The Killer, the man who
made his big splash in 1957 with
“Whole Lotta Shakin’ Goin’ On”
and “Great Balls of Fire.”
R Venus Williams sent out an
Instagram message indicating she
may be retiring. In 27 years on
tour, Venus won seven Grand
Slam singles titles and comported
herself with ultimate dignity.
R Good luck to former US Senator Scott Brown, who just became coach of the Amesbury High
School girls’ basketball team.
Brown was a star player at Wakefield High and Tufts back in the
day, and his daughter Ayla was
one of the great high school players in Massachusetts history, scoring 2,358 points at Nobles. Also
an “American Idol” star, Ayla had
a nice career at Boston College after Nobles.
Scott Brown most recently
coached a junior high team in
Rye, N.H.
Wonder if Coach Brown’s new
players will look up old clips of
Jon Hamm playing him on “Saturday Night Live.”
R According to Umpire Scorecards (an unofficial Twitter platform run by a Boston University
student), Pat Hoberg had a perfect game behind the dish in the
second game of the World Series
last weekend in Houston. The
website ruled that Hoberg made
the correct call on all 129 pitches
that were taken in the game. Take
that, Amica Pitch Zone!
R Quiz answer: Lonnie Smith
(Phillies, Cardinals, Royals,
Braves).
Dan Shaughnessy is a Globe
columnist. He can be reached at
daniel.shaughnessy@globe.com.
Follow him on Twitter
@dan_shaughnessy.
Boston 1
At Tampa Bay 5
At Detroit 3
NY Islanders 0
Philadelphia 2
Colorado 5
at Columbus 1
Vegas 6
At Winnipeg 4
Dallas 6
Chicago 0
at Edmonton 2
Arizona 3
at Washington 2
Seattle 3
at Pittsburgh 2
Buffalo 3
at Ottawa 1
at Montreal 4
New Jersey
at Calgary
Nashville
at Vancouver
Florida
at Los Angeles
Anaheim
at San Jose
SUNDAY’S GAMES
Detroit at NY Rangers
5
Toronto at Carolina
5
Florida at Anaheim
9
FRIDAY’S RESULTS
At Colorado 6
Columbus 3
At Carolina 5
Buffalo 3
STARS 6, OILERS 2
FLYERS 2, SENATORS 1
Dallas ..................................1
3
2 —
6
Edmonton...........................0
1
1 —
2
First period — 1. Dallas, Pavelski 6 (Hintz,
Robertson), 6:15. Penalties — Ryan, Edm (interference), 7:12. Johnston, Dal (slashing),
13:13. Miller, Dal (hooking), 19:59.
Second period — 2. Dallas, Miller 1 (Gurianov, Seguin), 6:46. 3. Edmonton, Draisaitl 7
(Nugent-Hopkins, McDavid), 10:16 (pp). 4.
Dallas, Robertson 8 (Pavelski, Hakanpaa),
14:48. 5. Dallas, Benn 2 (Robertson, Heiskanen), 15:27 (pp). Penalties — Faksa, Dal
(slashing), 8:49. Hintz, Dal (slashing), 12:30.
Ryan, Edm (hooking), 15:06.
Third period — 6. Edmonton, Nurse 3
(Puljujarvi, Kane), 3:41. 7. Dallas, Benn 3
(Heiskanen, Hintz), 4:01 (pp). 8. Dallas, Benn
4 (Dellandrea, Suter), 12:33. Penalties —
Kane, Edm (cross check), 3:48. Kiviranta, Dal,
double minor (hi stick), 5:03.
Shots on goal — Dallas 11-18-7 — 36. Edmonton 11-8-11 — 30.
Power plays — Dallas 2-3; Edmonton 1-6.
Goalies — Dallas, Wedgewood 3-2-1 (30
shots-28 saves). Edmonton, Campbell 5-3-0
(36 shots-30 saves).
Referees — Chris Schlenker, Ghislain Hebert.
A — 17,067 (18,347). T — 2:25.
Philadelphia.......................1
1
0 —
2
Ottawa................................1
0
0 —
1
First period — 1. Ottawa, Giroux 6 (Stuetzle, Tkachuk), 2:44. 2. Philadelphia, Hayes 2
(DeAngelo, Konecny), 5:17 (pp). Penalties —
Chabot, Ott (hi stick), 5:12. Sanheim, Phi
(holding), 19:18.
Second period — 3. Philadelphia, MacEwen
3, 18:24. Penalties — Seeler, Phi (hooking),
2:18. Kastelic, Ott (hi stick), 6:07. MacEwen,
Phi (interference), 7:53. Sedlak, Phi (interference), 14:08.
Third period — None. Penalties — Zaitsev,
Ott (cross check), 5:03. Sanheim, Phi (interference), 12:59.
Shots on goal — Philadelphia 5-17-6 — 28.
Ottawa 11-10-13 — 34.
Power plays — Philadelphia 1-3; Ottawa
0-5.
Goalies — Philadelphia, Hart 6-0-2 (34
shots-33 saves). Ottawa, Talbot 0-1-0 (28
shots-26 saves).
Referees — Kelly Sutherland, Michael
Markovic. Linesmen — Mitch Hunt, CJ Murray.
A — 16,722 (19,153). T — 2:30.
JETS 4, BLACKHAWKS 0
Buffalo ................................1
1
1 —
3
Tampa Bay.........................1
1
3 —
5
First period — 1. Tampa Bay, Paul 4 (Hedman, Hagel), 7:07. 2. Buffalo, Girgensons 3
(Power, Thompson), 16:24. Penalties —
Kucherov, TB (slashing), 13:46.
Second period — 3. Tampa Bay, Point 6
(Stamkos, Kucherov), 5:05 (pp). 4. Buffalo,
Mittelstadt 2 (Power, Okposo), 8:34 (pp).
Penalties — Thompson, Buf (tripping), 0:31.
Killorn, TB (hooking), 2:18. Cozens, Buf (tripping), 4:05. Maroon, TB (roughing), 7:19.
Third period — 5. Buffalo, Skinner 3 (Tuch,
Cozens), 4:25. 6. Tampa Bay, Hagel 4
(Kucherov), 7:40. 7. Tampa Bay, Perbix 1
(Kucherov, Hagel), 15:05. 8. Tampa Bay,
Kucherov 6 (Point), 19:02 (en). Penalties —
None.
Shots on goal — Buffalo 6-10-8 — 24. Tampa Bay 7-14-10 — 31.
Power plays — Buffalo 1-3; Tampa Bay 1-2.
Goalies — Buffalo, Comrie 4-4-0 (30 shots26 saves). Tampa Bay, Elliott 3-1-0 (24 shots21 saves).
Referees — Wes McCauley, Jean Hebert.
Linesmen — Devin Berg, Jonny Murray.
A — 19,092 (19,092). T — 2:35.
Chicago...............................0
0
0 —
0
Winnipeg............................0
3
1 —
4
First period — None. Penalties — None.
Second period — 1. Winnipeg, Morrissey 1
(Scheifele, Dubois), 10:04 (pp). 2. Winnipeg,
Lowry 3 (DeMelo, Dillon), 13:33. 3. Winnipeg,
Dubois 5 (Connor, Morrissey), 17:55 (pp).
Penalties — DeMelo, Wpg (holding), 6:25.
Khaira, Chi (interference), 9:21. Gagner, Wpg
(hooking), 13:23. Raddysh, Chi (slashing),
17:48.
Third period — 4. Winnipeg, Schmidt 2
(Perfetti), 4:59 (pp). Penalties — Chi, served
by Athanasiou (too many men on ice), 3:13.
DeMelo, Wpg (high stick), 15:59. CaJones, Chi
(slashing), 16:38.
Shots on goal — Chicago 12-9-9 — 30. Winnipeg 11-13-13 — 37.
Power plays — Chicago 0-3; Winnipeg 3-4.
Goalies — Chicago, Soderblom 1-2-1 (24
shots-21 saves). Chicago, Wells 0-0-0 (13
shots-12 saves). Winnipeg, Hellebuyck 6-2-1
(30 shots-30 saves).
Referees — Kevin Pollock, Marc Joannette.
A — 13,210 (15,294). T — 2:24.
AVALANCHE 5, BLUE JACKETS 1
Colorado.............................1
3
1 —
5
Columbus ...........................1
0
0 —
1
First period — 1. Colorado, Lehkonen 3
(MacKinnon, Rantanen), 0:33. 2. Columbus,
Jenner 2 (Werenski, Roslovic), 12:27 (pp).
Penalties — Nyquist, Cls (slashing), 4:49. Girard, Col (holding), 11:59.
Second period — 3. Colorado, Kaut 1 (Makar, MacKinnon), 1:22. 4. Colorado, O'Connor
3 (Makar, Toews), 4:13. 5. Colorado, Toews 1
(MacKinnon, Makar), 4:50. Penalties — Olivier, Cls, major (fighting), 18:53. MacDermid,
Col, major (fighting), 18:53.
Third period — 6. Colorado, Newhook 2
(Rodrigues, Kaut), 1:36. Penalties — None.
Shots on goal — Colorado 12-17-16 — 45.
Columbus 13-4-15 — 32.
Power plays — Colorado 0-1; Columbus 1-1.
Goalies — Colorado, Georgiev 6-1-1 (32
shots-31 saves). Columbus, Korpisalo 0-1-0
(45 shots-40 saves).
Referees — Chris Rooney, TJ Luxmore.
A — 12,897 (13,455). T — 2:28.
RED WINGS 3, ISLANDERS 0
NY Islanders ......................0
0
0 —
0
Detroit.................................0
2
1 —
3
First period — None. Penalties — NYI,
served by Palmieri (too many men on ice),
3:13. Romanov, NYI (hooking), 7:53.
Second period — 1. Detroit, Raymond 4
(Kubalik, Larkin), 6:29 (pp). 2. Detroit, Suter 2
(Erne, Seider), 12:51. Penalties — Wahlstrom,
NYI (roughing), 4:58. Pelech, NYI (hooking),
5:42. Larkin, Det (roughing), 11:47. Hronek,
Det (holding), 19:26.
Third period — 3. Detroit, Kubalik 5 (Copp),
10:13. Penalties — Lindstrom, Det (holding),
4:32. Lee, NYI (tripping), 15:15.
Shots on goal — NY Islanders 7-5-12 — 24.
Detroit 13-9-4 — 26.
Power plays — NY 0-3; Detroit 1-5.
Goalies — NY Islanders, Sorokin 5-3-0 (2
shots-1 saves). NY Islanders, Varlamov 2-2-0
(24 shots-22 saves). Detroit, Husso 5-1-1 (24
shots-24 saves).
Referees — Dan O'Rourke, Mitch Dunning.
A — 19,515 (20,000). T — 2:23.
KNIGHTS 6, CANADIENS 4
Vegas ..................................1
1
4 —
6
Montreal.............................1
0
3 —
4
First period — 1. Vegas, Hague 1, 13:25. 2.
Montreal, Caufield 8 (Dach, Edmundson),
14:16. Penalties — Xhekaj, Mon (roughing),
14:30. Kolesar, VGK (roughing), 14:30.
Second period — 3. Vegas, Smith 4 (Karlsson, Marchessault), 2:24. Penalties — Xhekaj,
Mon (cross check), 3:04.
Third period — 4. Montreal, Suzuki 7 (Dach,
Guhle), 0:56. 5. Vegas, Smith 5 (Kessel, Theodore), 4:45 (pp). 6. Vegas, Kolesar 2 (Hague),
8:14. 7. Vegas, Roy 3 (Kolesar, Carrier), 8:35.
8. Montreal, Suzuki 8 (Dach, Caufield), 10:21
(pp). 9. Vegas, Marchessault 6 (Eichel, Pietrangelo), 13:16 (pp). 10. Montreal, Slafkovsky 3 (Guhle), 15:21. Penalties — Harris,
Mon (holding), 2:53. Anderson, Mon (game
misconduct), 10:08. Anderson, Mon, served
by Slafkovsky, major (boarding), 10:08. Martinez, VGK (roughing), 10:08. Pietrangelo,
VGK (roughing), 10:08.
Shots on goal — Vegas 12-16-14 — 42. Montreal 14-8-9 — 31.
Power plays — Vegas 2-4; Montreal 1-2.
Goalies — Vegas, Hill 5-0-0 (31 shots-27
saves). Montreal, Allen 3-5-0 (42 shots-36
saves).
Referees — Justin StPierre, Kendrick Nicholson.
A — 21,105 (21,273). T — 2:28.
LEADERS
Not including Saturday's games
SCORING
G
A
McDavid, Edm..........................12
12
Draisaitl, Edm ............................6
16
Pastrnak, Bos.............................8
11
Karlsson, SJ..............................10
8
Necas, Car..................................7
10
Bratt, NJ......................................5
12
Pts.
24
22
19
18
17
17
LIGHTNING 5, SABRES 3
COYOTES 3, CAPITALS 2
Arizona ...............................0
0
3 —
3
Washington .......................0
1
1 —
2
First period — None. Penalties — Valimaki,
Ari (slashing), 0:30. Brown, Ari (hooking),
12:02.
Second period — 1. Washington, Ovechkin
7 (van Riemsdyk, Mantha), 8:55 (pp). Penalties — Maccelli, Ari (hooking), 7:02. Fehervary, Was (tripping), 9:07. Dowd, Was (holding), 13:48.
Third period — 2. Washington, Mantha 4,
3:23. 3. Arizona, Brown 2 (Gostisbehere,
McBain), 6:33. 4. Arizona, Ritchie 5 (Boyd,
Gostisbehere), 9:45. 5. Arizona, Ritchie 6
(Hayton, Keller), 19:24. Penalties — Was,
served by Ovechkin (delay of game), 6:33.
Shots on goal — Arizona 10-6-10 — 26.
Washington 16-7-13 — 36.
Power plays — Arizona 0-3; Washington
1-3.
Goalies — Arizona, Vejmelka 3-3-1 (36
shots-34 saves). Washington, Kuemper 4-5-1
(26 shots-23 saves).
Referees — Jon McIsaac, Francis Charron.
Linesmen — Scott Cherrey, Shandor Alphonso.
A — 18,573 (18,398). T — 2:30.
KRAKEN 3, PENGUINS 2
Seattle.................................0
1
2 —
3
Pittsburgh ..........................0
1
1 —
2
First period — None. Penalties — Wright,
Sea (hooking), 1:36. Eberle, Sea (hooking),
7:22. Malkin, Pit (tripping), 15:28.
Second period — 1. Pittsburgh, Crosby 6
(Guentzel, Letang), 5:24. 2. Seattle, Dunn 2
(Gourde), 7:48. Penalties — Gourde, Sea
(hooking), 11:09. Pettersson, Pit (cross
check), 15:08.
Third period — 3. Seattle, Gourde 2 (Tanev,
Geekie), 7:48. 4. Pittsburgh, Guentzel 6 (Crosby, Letang), 9:51. 5. Seattle, Tanev 2 (Gourde,
Geekie), 16:21. Penalties — Crosby, Pit (interference), 5:43.
Shots on goal — Seattle 10-9-9 — 28. Pittsburgh 13-15-9 — 37.
Power plays — Seattle 0-3; Pittsburgh 0-3.
Goalies — Seattle, Jones 6-3-1 (37 shots-35
saves). Pittsburgh, Jarry 4-3-1 (28 shots-25
saves).
Referees — Conor O'Donnell, Frederick
L'Ecuyer. Linesmen — Steve Barton, Julien
Fournier.
A — 18,302 (18,087). T — 2:10.
LEADERS
Not including Saturday's games
ASSISTS
GP
Draisaitl, Edm .................................... 11
MacKinnon, Col ................................. 10
Bratt, NJ.............................................. 11
McDavid, Edm ................................... 11
Barzal, NYI.......................................... 11
Kucherov, TB ..................................... 11
Pastrnak, Bos..................................... 11
Tkachuk, Fla....................................... 11
Panarin, NYR...................................... 12
Necas, Car.......................................... 11
Pettersson, Van................................. 11
Terry, Anh .......................................... 11
Fiala, LA .............................................. 13
Hayes, Phi .......................................... 10
Makar, Col.......................................... 10
Morrissey, Wpg................................. 10
Tkachuk, Ott ...................................... 10
Granlund, Nsh.................................... 11
Hintz, Dal............................................ 11
Lindholm, Bos.................................... 11
Marner, Tor........................................ 11
Rielly, Tor ........................................... 11
Pietrangelo, VGK............................... 12
PLUS/MINUS
GP
Lindholm, Bos.................................... 11
Theodore, VGK .................................. 12
Graves, NJ .......................................... 11
Eichel, VGK......................................... 12
Dahlin, Buf.......................................... 11
Marino, NJ .......................................... 11
POWER-PLAY GOALS
GP
McDavid, Edm ................................... 11
Nichushkin, Col ................................... 7
A
16
13
12
12
11
11
11
11
11
10
10
10
10
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
+/+12
+12
+11
+11
+10
+10
PPG
6
5
C12
Sports
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
G l o b e
Bruins leaders
baffled by signing
uBRUINS
Continued from Page C1
organization is not going to do something that is going to jeopardize [the culture]. But in saying that, it’s not something anyone in this room stands for. The
culture we’ve built, and these guys built
before I got here, is one of inclusion and I
think it goes against that.”
The controversial signing took a bizarre twist Saturday when NHL commissioner Gary Bettman told The Athletic
that Miller has not been cleared to play in
the league.
It’s possible, said Bettman, that Miller,
20, never will be cleared, a point Bettman
said he told Bruins president Cam Neely
subsequent to the Bruins announcing the
signing in a Friday afternoon news dump.
The Bruins, Bettman told The Athletic,
“understand that now.”
Foligno noted that he understood Miller was age 14 when he committed his
transgressions, which included brutal
hazing episodes.
“But it’s hard for us to swallow,” added
Foligno, “because we take a lot of pride in
here in the way we act, the way we carry
ourselves, what it is to be a Bruin.”
Foligno’s comments came hours before
the 10-1-0 Bruins, off to the hottest start
in team history, faced the Maple Leafs at
Scotiabank Arena in the first matchup this
season between the Original Six clubs.
Miller became a pariah in the hockey
community soon after the Arizona Coyotes made him the 111th pick in the 2020
draft. Local reporting found that Miller
years earlier in Ohio joined in the disgusting, persistent hazing of a Black classmate
who had developmental disabilities. Miller, then 14, pleaded guilty to one count of
assault and one count of violation of the
Ohio Safe Schools Act. Per the reporting at
the time, Miller coerced the victim, Isaiah
Meyer-Crothers, into licking a candy push
pop plucked from a urinal.
Early Friday afternoon, in classic news
dump style, the Bruins revealed that they
signed Miller to a three-year, entry level
contract, one that guarantees him more
than $500,000 across the next three years
regardless of whether he makes the varsity roster.
At the NHL level, the deal carries an
$862,000 cap hit, according to capfriendly.com.
Miller reported Friday to the AHL
Providence Bruins, with general manager
Don Sweeney making it clear that the 5foot-10-inch, 190-pound defenseman will
need to train for some time before he is
added to a game roster anywhere in the
organization. It was clear from Sweeney’s
remarks that there is no guarantee that
Miller, last season’s defenseman of the
year and player of the year in the USHL,
ever will make the Boston roster.
Yet the signing equally made clear that
the Bruins detect real upside in Miller,
who collected a prolific 39-44—83 line last
season with the USHL Tri-City Storm.
A source familiar with what he said
was a monthlong negotiation of Miller’s
contract said Saturday that five NHL clubs
also had offers on the table for the defenseman’s services. If true, then presumably
those clubs similarly weren’t aware of Bettman’s posture toward Miller being
cleared to play in the league.
Bruins captain Patrice Bergeron, who
helped curate the club’s culture in recent
years, dating to Zdeno Chara’s long tenure
as captain, said he met with the entire
team Saturday morning to discuss Miller’s
signing.
“I’d like to keep that, I mean, what I
said is what I said, right?” said Bergeron,
asked by a Globe reporter what he told the
group.
The comments to teammates,
Bergeron said, echoed what he said moments before in a scrum with reporters at
his locker.
“I was asked by Don, close to a week
ago, he asked for my opinion,” about the
signing, said Bergeron. “I had my concerns. I shared my opinion. In a way, I
think I was not necessarily agreeing with
it — to be honest with you, I think the culture that we’ve built here goes against that
type of behavior. I think we are a team
built on character and with character individuals. What he did, obviously is unacceptable. We don’t stand by that.”
Inclusion, diversity, and respect are the
pillars of the culture inside the dressing
room, added the 37-year-old Bergeron.
“Those are the key words and core values that we have,” he added. “We expect
the guys who wear this jersey to be highcharacter people with integrity and respect — that’s how they should be acting.”
Bergeron said he would want evidence
of “growth and change” from Miller before he entered the room.
“Truthfully, if it’s the same 14-year-old
that would be walking into this locker
room,” mused Bergeron, “he wouldn’t be
accepted and wanted and welcomed, to be
honest with you.”
Asked if Miller’s arrival could undermine the culture, or act as a rock through
the window, Bergeron added, “Our culture isn’t going to change. I think our culture is what it is, something that I am
proud of, something that we’ve worked
hard for and we don’t need to change that.
The changes are from the individual himself.”
Adding maturity, offered Brad Marchand, will take lengthy time and effort on
Mitchell’s behalf.
A vocal segment of the Bruins fandom
made their disgust for the deal known on
social media. Many questioned the timing, specifically how it could upset the
momentum of a team off to a torrid start.
“With a situation like this, I’m not sure
there is ever good timing,” said Bergeron.
“If they feel like it’s the time, then it’s the
time. I think it’s a long process for this kid
to make amends, show that he’s learned
and come a long way. That process has to
start at some point — I guess it’s now.”
Does the signing place a burden on
Marchand, Bergeron, and other members
of the room?
After a long pause, Marchand said, “I
guess how I’d answer that is, again, if a
kid’s going to be part of this room, we
have a standard that we hold our teammates to to be in this room, and if we don’t
feel like he’s there, then he will not be
here. Like anybody, if there’s a guy that
comes in and he’s not fitting in, he’s gone.
We’ve shown that year after year. I understand where it all comes from, but again,
if he ever makes it here, it will be because
he’s shown that he’s learned and come the
distance he needs to — a lot comes with
this, a lot of backlash and media attention
that the team’s going through.
“Like I said, he’s got a lot of work to do.
It’s a second chance he’s been gifted and
he’ll have to show that he’s earned it. He’s
got a long, long road ahead of him.”
Kevin Paul Dupont can be reached at
kevin.dupont@globe.com.
CHRISTOPHER KATSAROV/THE CANADIAN PRESS VIA AP
Erik Kallgren, an injury replacement for the third period, made seven saves for Toronto.
Matthews, Maple Leafs
get the jump on Bruins
By Kevin Paul Dupont
GLOBE STAFF
Maple Leafs 2 T O R O N T O —
Thick, intermitBruins
1 tent fog disrupted
flights into here in recent days, forcing the Bruins’ charter flight out of
New York Thursday night to be diverted to Buffalo. After an earlymorning ride across the border, they
didn’t settle into their hotel rooms
here until after 4 a.m. Friday.
And here at Scotiabank Arena Saturday night, the fog crept into the
Bruins’ game.
Paced by a pair of goals by Auston
Matthews, who led the league with 60
goals last season, the Maple Leafs
pinned a 2-1 loss on the Bruins, ending a seven-game Black-and-Gold
winning streak and dropping them to
10-2-0 for the season.
“We weren’t very sharp,” agreed
Bruins coach Jim Montgomery. “And
g i v e t h e Ma p l e L e a f s c r e d i t — I
thought they checked extremely well.
They protected middle ice well, but
you’re on the third game of a five-day
road trip [wins in Pittsburgh and
Manhattan] and we go into the third
period, 2-1, and we gave ourselves a
chance. I just like our ability to manage games and give ourselves a
chance.”
The loss also ended an eight-game
winning streak for Bruins goalie Linus Ullmark, who was tied with Tim
Thomas for the best start in net for
the Bruins from the beginning of a
season. Ullmark, now 8-1-0, finished
with 26 saves.
Brad Marchand scored the only
Boston goal, connecting on a penalty
shot in the second period for a 1-1 tie.
The loss, coupled with a 6-4 Vegas
win in Montreal, also slipped the Bruins into second place in the NHL’s
overall standings. Bruce Cassidy’s
Knights (11-2-0) moved to a 2-point
lead over Cassidy’s old club.
The Bruins, 6-0-0 on home ice,
take on the bedraggled Blues, losers
of six straight, Monday night on TD
Garden ice. Ullmark again is expected in net and Charlie McAvoy, still recovering from offseason shoulder surgery, will remain on the sidelines.
Maple Leafs 2, Bruins 1
At Scotiabank Arena, Toronto
FIRST PERIOD
Toronto 1, Boston 0 — Matthews 5 (Bunting, Marner)
7:19
No penalties
SECOND PERIOD
Penalty — Toronto, Tavares (slashing) 4:39
Toronto 1, Boston 1 — Marchand 4 4:59 (pp) (penalty
shot)
Penalty — Boston, DeBrusk (holding) 13:40
Toronto 2, Boston 1 — Matthews 6 (Nylander, Marner)
14:07 (pp)
Penalty — Boston, Clifton (roughing) 19:53
THIRD PERIOD
No scoring
Penalty — Boston, Zacha (tripping) 3:15
Penalty — Toronto, Tavares (interference) 8:44
Penalty — Toronto, Sandin (boarding) 11:30
SCORE BY PERIOD
Boston
0
1
0
—
1
Toronto
1
1
0
—
2
SHOTS BY PERIOD
Boston
7
7
7
—
21
Toronto
11
15
2
—
28
Power plays — Boston 1 of 3; Toronto 1 of 3.
Goalies — Boston, Ullmark 8-1-0 (28 shots-26 saves). Toronto, Kallgren 0-1-2 (7 shots-7 saves). Toronto, Samsonov
6-2-0 (14 shots-13 saves).
Referees — Brian Pochmara, Kyle Rehman. Linesmen —
Brad Kovachik, Brandon Gawryletz.
Attendance — 18,926 (18,819). Time — 2:14.
“Just wasn’t our best game,” said
Marchand, now with four goals in the
four games since returning from extensive hip surgeries. “We play 82
[games a season] for a reason. So we
regroup.”
The Bruins in the first two periods
were absent what has been their
trademark offensive jump here in the
first month of the season. They mustered but 14 shots across the opening
40:00 and entered the third period in
a deficit (2-1) for the second time in
the last three games.
“I just don’t think we played to our
s t r e n gt h ,” s a i d Ma r c h a n d . “ We
turned over too many pucks in the
neutral zone. Yeah, they played a
good game. I wouldn’t say they defended us better than other teams
have; we just didn’t play the way we
needed to to win.”
Matthews opened the scoring at
7:19 of the first period, his fifth strike
this season. The hulking pivot fished
out a loose puck from behind the net,
twisted toward the left post, and
tucked a side-of-the-net backhander
b y a n u n aw a r e U l l m a r k f o r t h e
night’s first goal.
The Bruins were awarded the first
power play at 4:39 of the second and
only 20 seconds into the advantage,
Marchand broke in alone on Ilya
Samsonov. When Marchand was
dragged down on Samsonov’s door-
step by TJ Brodie, the ref immediately whistled the play down and awarded Marchand the penalty shot.
Marchand, charging up ice from
halfway into his defensive zone, raced
in on Samsonov, faked him to the ice
with a low-slot deke, and then finished with a pinpoint backhander
(John Bucyk style) to the top shelf.
The goal, recorded as a power-play
strike, also delivered Marchand’s
800th career point in his 878th regular-season game (355-445–800).
Ma tt h e w s w a s b a c k f o r w h at
proved to be the game-winner at
14:07 of the second, ending a run of
20 straight penalty kills for the Bruins, and posting the Leafs to the 2-1
lead.
William Nylander set up the goahead goal, racing down the right
side on the power play (Jake DeBrusk
off for holding). Hampus Lindholm
chased the speedy Nylander 3-4 feet
too far from his defensive spot, slipping behind the goal line, which allowed Matthews to set up easily at the
top of the crease. Nylander popped
out on the other side of the net and
slid across a velvety feed for Matthews to slam home for the lead.
Erik Kallgren took over the Leafs
net for the start of the third period,
the Leafs still holding the 2-1 advantage. It appeared Samsonov was hurt
when he flopped back on his heels on
Marchand’s penalty shot.
. . .
David Krejci, injured by Detroit’s
Michael Rasmussen Oct. 27, was
back in the Bruins’ lineup after missing three-plus games. The smooth
Czech pivot worked again between
Taylor Hall and David Pastrnak and
landed two shots. Post-game, he explained it was Rasmussen’s high
stick, rather than body check, that
knocked him out of the lineup. “The
stick messed something up on the insides,” noted Krejci, wishing to remain unspecific about the nature of
the injury . . . Matthews’s second goal
was only the third power-play strike
allowed by the Bruins this season . . .
It was only the second time this season that the Bruins failed to hold a
lead at any point in the game.
For Bruins fans, there were reasons to go to Hartford
By Christopher Price
GLOBE STAFF
This excerpt from “Bleeding
Green: A History of the Hartford
Whalers” (Copyright 2022) by
Boston Globe sports web producer Christopher Price, is reprinted by permission of University
of Nebraska Press. It was released on Nov. 1.
While the Bruins didn’t always focus on the Whalers as
their primary foe — that ire was
usually reserved for the Canadiens — Hartford almost always
viewed Boston as its No. 1 rival.
Add in the fact that tickets at
the Civic Center were easier to
get than seats in Boston Garden, and it seemed like there
was just as much Black and
Gold as Green and White when
the Whalers and Bruins met in
Hartford.
“That was always a problem,” said Whalers PA announcer Greg Gilmartin. “I mean, the
season tickets sold well, but
there was always room for Bruins fans when they played in
Hartford. There was fighting
going on a lot of times. Put it
this way: everything was either
cheered or jeered, one way or
another. There was a sense of
real animosity at those games,
to a point where there was some
real intensity.”
“When the Bruins and Rangers were in town, and you were
on the concourse, if someone
scored, the cheers were such
that you had to wait a couple of
seconds for Brass Bonanza,”
said longtime Hartford sportscaster Rich Coppola. “If you
heard it, you knew the Whalers
had scored. If you didn’t, you
knew it was New York or Boston. That’s what the cheering
was like.”
Fifteen years later, Red Sox
fans would make a similar trek
to Baltimore; cheap seats, easy
location, and a team that would
beat up on a division rival. For
Bruins’ fans, the Hartford Civic
Center became their own version of Camden Yards.
“I loved going there through
the 1990s,” said veteran New
England hockey writer Mick Colageo. “I loved driving into town
and seeing this parade of black
and gold walking down Asylum
Street an hour before the start
of the game. It was like Camden
Yards for Boston hockey fans.
Just a pure takeover. And let’s
face it — it was easier to get a
ticket.”
You could argue that the rivalry peaked during the 199091 season, a year that included
a bitter brawl at the Boston Garden on the back end of a homeand-home series between the
two teams. There were 100 penalty minutes handed out in that
one, many of which came after
a third-period hit Hartford’s Ed
Kastelic put on Craig Janney,
one that set off a memorable
melee.
“I was coming back into my
zone as a winger, back checking
in the slot, and I was on the ice
with Janney and Neely. It wasn’t
my normal matchup — thinking
about it now, I’m not sure why I
was out there,” Kastelic recalled. “But I was just coming
back, and I had settled into the
slot, and Craig was coming into
that area, maybe five to 10 feet
away, and he was looking in the
other direction. I hit him. I
didn’t mean to clock him, but
he was coming my direction,
and he didn’t see me. I didn’t
hit him hard, but he looked like
he was hit and he went down. I
just didn’t move out of the way.”
The hit produced plenty of
fireworks. Dean Evason started
tangling with Cam Neely, and
Chris Nilan and Kastelic went at
it for a bit.
“Then, there were a couple
of guys trying to get at me . . . I
think Nilan was one of them.
Nothing really happened at
first, but they were escorting
me off the ice,” he added.
“The benches at the old Boston Garden were side by side,
and you basically had to walk
through the Bruins’ bench to
get to the locker room,” Kastelic
said. “I saw Byers there, ready
to meet me. I anticipated the
door opening up, I gave him a
quick jab, and that’s when he
tried to punch me and that’s
when the benches erupted. You
had [Pat] Verbeek, who is good
with the stick, working there as
well. He was a stand-up guy
who would score goals and was
feisty. The glass between the
benches started shaking. ‘Oh
my God. What’s going on.’
“So yeah, every time we
played them, there was a lot of
intensity. You could feel it all
the time.”
“It was a great rivalry,” recalled former Bruin Bobby Carpenter. “The place was always
packed — it was very exciting.
Hartford always rose to the occasion against the Bruins, so we
never went in there and played
soft or we’d get beat pretty
good. But you always knew you
were going in there to play a
game. It was always a tough
one. It was a great place to play.”
One night, after Neely gave
Geoff Sanderson a cheap shot,
Adam Burt went after him.
“The thing about Cam was that
he was a lot tougher than me,
but I knew I had to get into it
with him after that, especially
because Sandy was our best
scorer at the time,” recalled
Burt.
“So, we’re going at it pretty
good, and I get the idea to
switch up hands and clock him
with my left. I gave him a black
eye and knocked him down.
Well, our bench wouldn’t shut
up. They’re egging him on. ‘Burt
kicked your butt, Cam.’ You
could see him getting more and
more mad as it went in. I was
like, ‘Shut up, guys. I don’t want
to fight him all night.’ Sure
enough, when we got out of the
penalty box, he came after me
again. He wasn’t going to stop,
and he eventually got some payback.”
Things were equally as spicy
off the ice as well. One retired
Hartford policeman — who
chose to remain anonymous —
recalled one night in the late
1980s where the Bruins’ bus
was boxed in after an overtime
win for the Whalers at the Civic
Center, and Boston coach Terry
O’Reilly wasn’t happy about it.
“When the Bruins arrived at
their bus to travel home, a car
had blocked the bus in. Terry
became so upset, he was
screaming every swear in the
book. ‘[Expletive] Hartford.
This city sucks.’ Well, the Bruins
bus waited 5 minutes, when
Terry lost it. He grabbed a hockey stick and started whacking
the parked car. He destroyed it.
He then had some players pick
up the destroyed car to allow an
exit for the bus.
“Hartford Police were required to make an arrest. We
called a commander to the
scene to make the call. Terry
was foaming at the mouth. I
was just thinking that if we arrested this guy, the bus full of
Bruins were going to fight back.
Well, the District Chief issued a
summons to O’Reilly for criminal mischief with a court appearance. The ticket was issued
and four police motor units escorted the bus out of the city.
“By the way, the chief was
disciplined for his actions, by
not making a custodial [physical] arrest.”
Christopher Price can be
reached at christopher.price
@globe.com. Follow him on
Twitter at cpriceglobe.
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
Sports
G l o b e
C13
Hockey
Many factors involved in Bruins’ hot start
Kevin Paul Dupont
O
ther than when a pandemic intercedes, the Stanley
Cup nowadays is handed
out in June, days before
the official start of summer
and long after anyone remembers
much of hot October starts.
For Exhibit A, look to Buffalo, where
the Bruins, hotter than Albert Brooks
in “Broadcast News,” next Saturday
night will face the Sabres. Just three
years ago, the distant sons of Gil Perreault opened with a blistering 8-2-0
mark, then collapsed over the next 59
games (22-29-8).
The Bruins, and their franchise-best
10-1-0 start, took on the Maple Leafs in
Toronto Saturday night and, thankfully,
these Jim Montgomery Bruins are not
your 2019-20 Ralph Krueger Sabres. To
borrow from the ecology handbook,
there should be some sustainability to
what we’ve witnessed to this point.
Some of the most impressive points:
R First and foremost, Montgomery.
In less than a month, the ex-Maine
Black Bear has cooled the lament over
general manager Don Sweeney and
team president Cam Neely abandoning
a popular/successful Bruce Cassidy in
the desert (for a cool $5 million-a-year
payday, don’t ya know?). Good on them
all, especially the 53-year-old “Monty,”
who, if his start had been around .500,
would have been feeling the desert heat
of Cassidy’s 10-2-0 start with Vegas.
Cassidy’s Bruins never played with
the pace or execution that we’ve seen
from Montgomery’s charges the first
three-plus weeks. That’s a product of
his X’s and O’s, his day-to-day game and
practice management (including ample
days off), and the buy-in he’s fostered
across the roster.
One of Montgomery’s key tools is
praise, individual praise, such as referring to Charlie Coyle as a “beast” and
noting that Hampus Lindholm is “the
most underrated defenseman in the
league.”
No Bruins coach since Don Cherry,
who long ago had us convinced that
John Wensink was headed to the Hall of
Fame, has smooched out so many Black
and Gold chef’s kisses. Another week of
these results, and Bill Belichick will be
telling us he sees “a lot of Johnny Unitas
in that Mac Jones kid.”
The Monty magic is working and
those public kisses paying off, a reminder that even adults playing a kid’s game
for a living respond to overt praise from
the boss.
R The surge/renaissance in play
from Jake DeBrusk and Nick Foligno.
The wingers are entirely different performers.
DeBrusk, who wanted out if Cassidy
remained in, is using his abundant
speed effectively and showing more inclination to get to the net (plenty more
needed, by the way). He’s again looking
like a worthy first-round pick. Question
remains: Will he evolve into a bona fide
leader/driver of the offense, like, say,
Mike Gartner, a prolific blazer from
long ago.
Last Friday, following his breakaway
goal in Columbus, I asked the once-disgruntled DeBrusk if he is coming to the
rink each day with more energy, a different mind-set?
“It’s a pretty normal day in the life of
Jake DeBrusk,” said DeBrusk. “I’m comfortable. I get chirped a lot [by teammates]. Nothing’s really changed. I
don’t really have a different mind-set
It’s a great time to be at the rink right
now. We’re rolling, lots of fun things going on. I just try to stay hidden from the
chirps.”
Meanwhile, the 35-year-old Foligno,
3-4—7 in the first 11 games, must have
chugged Prevagen pills over the summer. His memory has recovered his
game from his late 20s, when he captained the Blue Jackets.
At no time last season did Foligno
have these legs and hands. His charge
up the right side in Pittsburgh Tuesday
night was a thing of beauty, bursting
wide on the wing and pinpointing his
pass into the slot for Jakub Lauko to
snap home for career goal No. 1. It was
hard to tell who looked younger, Foligno or the kid with the beaming smile.
R Lindholm’s emergence on offense.
Some of this is because Charlie McAvoy
has remained hors de combat following
offseason shoulder surgery. But as of
Friday morning, Lindholm ranked No.
3 in scoring among NHL blue liners
with his 4-9—13 line. Two of those
goals, by the way, were wired from
about 180 feet into empty nets. Now
that’s scoring touch.
Keep in mind, Lindholm, 28, never
produced more than 7-27—34 in all his
years with the Ducks. Suddenly, he’s delivering at a 97-point pace? Holy Helsingborg! He’s getting those prime power-play point minutes with McAvoy
Bearing down
In their 98-year history, the
Bruins have won at least
seven of their first 10 games
in a season 19 times. Five
times they have won eight
of their first 10. But this
year’s squad is the first in
franchise history to notch nine
victories among their first
10 games (with a plus-18
goal differential). None of the
other four teams that started
with eight wins in 10 games
ended the season hoisting
the Stanley Cup, with three of
them losing in the Cup Final.
COMPILED BY SEAN SMITH
1977 ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTO
1941-42 BRUINS
1929-30 BRUINS
10-GAME START
8-2-0
(PLUS-7 GOAL
DIFFERENTIAL)
REST OF THE WAY
30-3-1
(PLUS-74 GOAL
DIFFERENTIAL)
POSTSEASON
LOST CUP FINAL TO
CANADIENS IN TWO
GAMES
1976-77 BRUINS
REST OF THE WAY
8-2-0
41-21-8
(PLUS-58 GOAL
DIFFERENTIAL)
sidelined. Montgomery might be hard
pressed, at least initially, to yank Lindholm from PP1 upon McAvoy’s return.
The 6-foot-4-inch Lindholm is a horse.
Big. Light on his feet. Smart. Montgomery has teased more out his offensive
game by putting more on his plate and
encouraging him to attack (witness his
wraparound on Coyle’s go-ahead goal,
2-1, Thursday at Madison Square Garden).
Lindholm and McAvoy stand to be
the back end’s Patrice Bergeron-David
Krejci tandem for years to come. Will
be fascinating to see how they develop
in tandem.
R Linus Ullmark’s hot start. Unlike
last year, his first with the Bruins, the
Swedish stopper has been at the top of
his game since puck drop No. 1. His
lone stinker was Tuesday in Pittsburgh,
where Montgomery yanked him when
the Penguins’ lead reached 5-2 midway
through the second period.
Following the win Thursday in New
York, Ullmark was 8-0-0 with a .929
save percentage. Awaiting word from
Montgomery that he’s the modern-day
amalgamation of Dominik Hasek, Ken
Dryden, and Georges Vezina.
OK, now the one caveat (you knew it
was coming): Bergeron is 37 and Krejci
is 36. Heading into the weekend, the
elite pivots had logged 2,520 games, including more than 300 in the playoffs.
Which is to say, age and wear on the
1-2 centers, the key drivers of Boston’s
offense, present a legit concern over the
duration of the schedule. Bergeron is already making liberal, smart use of
maintenance days. Krejci has been recovering from the recent body slam he
took from behemoth Red Wings center
Michael Rasmussen.
Coyle (four goals across the last four
games upon leaving New York) has
been excellent. But he and No. 4 pivot
Tomas Nosek would not be prime candidates to fill No. 1 or 2 center duty.
So it’s good to see Pavel Zacha get
some reps in Krejci’s spot, and maybe
Marc McLaughlin, now with Providence, would be worthy of a look there,
too.
It would be a mistake, for sure, to
dwell on the potential vulnerability. But
it’s there, as it was before the season began, as other concerns existed, too.
Thus far, Monty magic has made them
all go away.
QUICK ON THE DRAW
Bergeron is still
among best at dot
Patrice “The Thief” Bergeron won
13 of his 17 faceoffs Thursday vs. the
Rangers, increasing his league-leading
win total to 163 for the season. Of the
19 other NHLers with 100 or more
wins as of Friday morning, Bergeron’s
63.2 winning percentage ranked behind only Nashville’s Ryan Johansen
(65.8) and Chicago’s Max Domi (65.0).
REST OF THE WAY
8-2-0
17-15-6
(PLUS-19 GOAL
DIFFERENTIAL)
POSTSEASON
LOST NHL SEMIFINALS
TO RED WINGS IN TWO
GAMES
(PLUS-23 GOAL
DIFFERENTIAL)
2012-13 BRUINS
10-GAME START
(PLUS-14 GOAL
DIFFERENTIAL)
10-GAME START
POSTSEASON
LOST CUP FINAL TO
CANADIENS IN FOUR
GAMES
Whenever the day comes, Bergeron
is a lock to retire No. 1 for faceoff wins,
based on NHL data that began tracking
puck drops at the start of the 1997-98
season. Headed into weekend play, he
topped the list with 14,302. His career
winning percentage (57.8) was just a
hair below Rod Brind’Amour’s 58.7,
among the eight centers to have won
more than 10,000 faceoffs.
“None better than Bergeron. I don’t
think he ever does the same thing
twice, and it’s obvious that it’s important to him,” said ex-Bruins center Derek Sanderson, who displayed an appreciation for the art in his celebrated playing days. “It’s one of the most
important facets of the game. You have
100 faceoffs a game, right? If you won
’em all, you’d have the puck 10 minutes
more than the other guy.”
Also, the team that went 0 for 100
on the draw would have a new coach in
the morning. But per usual, the Turk’s
point was on point: Puck possession is
key. Bergeron’s faceoff success is wired
directly into his record five Selke Trophies as the NHL’s top defensive forward.
Ex-Bruin Gerry Cheevers, a Hall of
Famer, often said rule No. 1 of netminding was never to give up short-side
goals.
“Cover the near post at all costs,”
said Cheevers.
What’s the cardinal rule for faceoffs?
“Never, ever, pull it toward your own
net,” said Sanderson. “If you’re pulling
it back, it’s going to have some pace,
isn’t it.? You don’t want to win it, and
be the guy who scores on your own
goalie.”
Sanderson, 76, last played in 197778. He was age 8, he recalled, when his
father, Harold, began preaching to him
about the importance of winning
draws. When he arrived in Boston full
time in 1967-68 (and was named Rookie of the Year), his coach, Harry Sinden,
also was preaching the importance of
faceoff wins and puck possession.
Ahead of his time, noted Sanderson,
Sinden was watching the stats.
“Frosty had pen and pad, he’d keep
track,” said Sanderson, recalling beloved trainer John “Frosty” Forristall.
“It was me, Phil [Esposito], Freddy
[Stanfield], and Eddie [Westfall].
Frosty would be behind the bench, ticking off wins and losses on his pad.
Come back to the bench, and he’d ask,
‘Turk, you win that one?’ I’d be, ‘Hell,
ya, I won it!’ Then he’d say, ‘Yeah, but
they got it.’ ‘Maybe they did,’ I’d say, ‘but
I won it!’ ” Sinden, said Sanderson,
would take Forristall’s math and post it
on the dressing room wall between periods. It created a rivalry between the
centers, and more importantly, placed
focus on Sinden’s desire to win the
drops and increase possession — often
with the idea, of course, to get the puck
to Bobby Orr.
“We also practiced it as a group after
workouts, me against Phil, and Phil
against Freddy,” recalled Sanderson.
10-GAME START
REST OF THE WAY
8-1-1
20-13-5
(PLUS-8 GOAL
DIFFERENTIAL)
(PLUS-14 GOAL
DIFFERENTIAL)
POSTSEASON
LOST CUP FINAL TO
BLACKHAWKS IN SIX
GAMES
“Loser had to buy lunch, and maybe a
beer or two.”
every summer and say hi to the guys,
but I don’t get on the roof.”
ETC.
Loose pucks
Frederic’s feet
planted firmly
If you’re just joining us, it’s happening again: Oilers wizard Connor McDavid leads the NHL scoring list: 1212—24 through 11 games prior to
weekend action. The 25-year-old center
topped the charts the last two seasons,
delivering an
average 114
points. Six of
his 12 goals
this season
have been on
the power play, CONNOR McDAVID
an astounding Familiar spot
pace of 45 for
the season. Chris Kreider led the NHL
last season with 26 PPGs . . . Meanwhile, Bruce Cassidy’s Golden Knights
are tearing it up (10-2-0 heading into
the weekend), led by North Chelmsford’s Jack Eichel (5-8–13), who is back
to being the player that made him the
No. 2 pick in the 2015 draft. Cassidy’s
start in the desert is reminiscent of his
February 2017 start in Boston, when
the Bruins went 7-1-0 in his first eight
games, and then inched into the playoffs after Cassidy pulled them out of the
26-23-6 doldrums that had them headed toward a third consecutive playoff
DNQ. Biggest surprise thus far for the
Golden Knights: the netminding of 6-4
Logan Thompson, who went undrafted
out of junior hockey and had played in
only 20 NHL games prior to this season. Now he’s the No. 1, backed by exCoyotes draftee Adin Hill . . . Lost in the
shuffle last weekend: Ex-Northeastern
forward David Poile became the first
NHL GM with 3,000 games, the accumulation of his four decades on the job
with the Capitals and Predators. Poile,
72, was new on the Capitals job when
he pulled off the monster trade (Sept. 9,
1982) with the Canadiens that brought
a 25-year-old Rod Langway to
Landover, along with Brian Engblom,
Doug Jarvis, and Craig Laughlin (Rick
Green and Ryan Walter headed north).
The Capitals, who had not made it to
the playoffs in their first eight seasons,
made it in each of the 11 seasons that
Langway was on the backline, and right
up until Poile left to lead the expansion
Predators in 1997. You’re a real Hub
hockeyphile if you remember that Poile,
upon graduating from Northeastern,
played the 1970-71 season with the
Braintree Hawks . . . Torey Krug and
the freefalling Blues will be at the Garden Monday night, with the Bruins
looking to improve their Causeway
Street record to 7-0-0. The Blues, who
captured the Cup at the Garden in
2019, have lost six in a row, drubbed by
an aggregate 30-10. Blues GM Doug
Armstrong lamented this past week,
“We’re in the bottom quartile of everything that matters.”
Prior to the start of the season, Bruins coach Jim Montgomery eyeballed
Trent Frederic as a net-front candidate
for the power play.
Frederic’s size, hands, and athleticism, noted Montgomery, earned him
the look. The coach went on to detail
Frederic’s prowess as a high school
quarterback in suburban St. Louis.
Coaches know a lot. It’s their business to know a lot. But few in the NHL
are able to drill down to such detail.
Granted, Montgomery ended his pro
playing career with the UHL Missouri
River Otters (where he also began his
coaching career) in 2004-05. Frederic
was age 7 that spring.
How would Montgomery know
Frederic’s athletic exploits?
“I’m pals with his dad,” explained
Montgomery, whose wife is from St.
Louis. “We both belong to the MAC.”
MAC?
“Missouri Athletic Club,” said Montgomery. “It’s kind of a big deal there.”
The MAC, said Frederic, has proven
to be a great networking tool for his
dad, whose father and uncle nearly a
century ago started Frederic Roofing,
which remains the family business. His
dad, Bob, runs the operation these
days, along with Trent’s brothers, Gene
and Grant.
St. Louis summers can be hot, noted
the 24-year-old winger, and the combination of heat and inherent danger of a
steep roof can make it hard to find labor.
“Pretty much my whole family is up
on the roof now,” he said, agreeing that
the roofing life can make sustaining
cross-checks at the net seem less intimidating.
“It’s hard work,” he said. “But it’s
pretty good pay. In the summer, you can
only go maybe from 5 a.m. to 1 p.m.,
but you can make $50 an hour. That’s
pretty good money. You can make a
good living doing it.”
On the Bruins’ books this season for
just north of $1 million, Frederic will be
a restricted free agent next summer. He
is becoming more of a presence in the
bottom six, and no doubt enhanced his
roster standing with his impressive
bout Thursday against the Rangers’
Barclay Goodrow. The Bruins need
someone to fill that toughness niche.
Trent Frederic worked only one
summer for Frederic Roofing.
“Between my junior and senior year
in high school,” he recalled. “But it kind
of messes with training for [hockey]. At
that point, I got drafted [by the Bruins]
and I went to college that summer, so
every summer I was at [the University
of Wisconsin] taking classes. I stop in
Kevin Paul Dupont can be reached at
kevin.dupont@globe.com.
C14
Sports
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
G l o b e
College football
FBS standings
AAC
Conf.
19 Tulane .............................. 4-0
25 UCF .................................. 3-1
Cincinnati ............................. 3-1
Houston ................................ 3-1
East Carolina ....................... 3-2
SMU ...................................... 2-2
Navy ...................................... 3-3
Memphis .............................. 2-3
Tulsa ..................................... 1-3
Temple .................................. 0-4
South Florida ....................... 0-4
All
7-1
6-2
6-2
5-3
6-3
4-4
3-5
4-4
3-5
2-6
1-7
ATLANTIC COAST
Atlantic
Conf.
5 Clemson ............................ 6-0
22 Syracuse ......................... 3-1
21 N.C. State ........................ 2-2
20 Wake Forest ................... 2-2
Louisville .............................. 3-3
Florida St. ............................ 3-3
Boston College .................... 1-5
Coastal
Conf.
17 North Carolina ............... 4-0
Duke ...................................... 3-2
Miami ................................... 2-2
Georgia Tech ....................... 2-3
Pittsburgh ............................ 1-3
Virginia ................................. 1-4
Virginia Tech ....................... 1-4
All
8-0
6-2
6-2
6-2
5-3
5-3
2-7
All
7-1
6-3
4-4
3-5
4-4
3-5
2-6
BIG 12
Conf.
7 TCU .................................... 5-0
13 Kansas St. ....................... 4-1
18 Oklahoma St. ................. 3-2
Baylor ................................... 3-2
Texas ..................................... 3-2
Oklahoma ............................ 2-3
Kansas .................................. 2-3
Texas Tech ........................... 2-3
West Virginia ....................... 1-4
Iowa State ........................... 0-5
All
8-0
6-2
6-2
5-3
5-3
5-3
5-3
4-4
3-5
3-5
BIG TEN
East
Conf.
4 Michigan ........................... 5-0
2 Ohio State ........................ 5-0
Maryland .............................. 3-2
16 Penn State ...................... 3-2
Rutgers ................................. 1-4
Indiana ................................. 1-4
Michigan St. ........................ 1-4
West
Conf.
14 Illinois .............................. 4-1
Purdue .................................. 3-2
Wisconsin ............................ 2-3
Iowa ...................................... 2-3
Minnesota ............................ 2-3
Nebraska .............................. 2-3
Northwestern ...................... 1-4
All
8-0
8-0
6-2
6-2
4-4
3-5
3-5
All
7-1
5-3
4-4
4-4
5-3
3-5
1-7
No. 1 Georgia comes out on top
Bulldogs stifle
No. 2 Tennessee
By Charles Odum
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Georgia
27 A T H E N S ,
Ga. — In the
Tennessee 13 b i g g e s t
games, Stetson Bennett seems to
rise to the occasion and above
his often more heralded counterparts.
Bennett threw two touchdown passes and ran for a score
as No. 1 Georgia shut down Hendon Hooker and Tennessee’s
high-powered offense to win a
Southeastern Conference showdown of the nation’s top-ranked
teams, 27-13, on Saturday.
After leading the Bulldogs to
a national title last season, Bennett improved to 23-3 as a starter at Georgia.
“Competitive excellence,
competitive toughness,” said
Georgia coach Kirby Smart
when asked about Bennett’s ability to shine on the grandest stages. “He’s a winner. Let’s be honest. The guy knows how to win.”
Bennett passed for 257 yards,
completing 17 of 25 passes. He
had a 13-yard scoring run in the
matchup against Hooker, regarded as a Heisman Trophy favorite.
But maybe Bennett should be
now?
Bennett insisted his only motivation was for the team’s hopes
of returning to the SEC championship game, not for his person-
JOHN BAZEMORE/ASSOCIATED PRESS
Tennessee’s Hendon Hooker, who was sacked six times, fumbles as he is hit by Jalen Carter.
al validation “because at the end
of the day we’re playing for the
East and if we lost it’s a lower
percentage we’re playing in Atlanta.”
Added Bennett: “I don’t really care about quarterback vs.
quarterback.”
All
6-2
5-4
4-5
5-4
5-4
4-4
4-4
4-6
4-4
2-6
2-7
By Eamonn Ryan
GLOBE CORRESPONDENT
Holy Cross 42 If it’s not broke, don’t fix it. At
least that’s what the Holy Cross
Lehigh
14 football team must have been
MID-AMERICAN
East
Conf.
Ohio ...................................... 4-1
Buffalo .................................. 4-1
Bowling Green .................... 4-1
Miami (Ohio) ....................... 2-3
Kent State ............................ 2-3
Akron .................................... 0-5
West
Conf.
Toledo ................................... 4-1
Ball State ............................. 3-2
E. Michigan .......................... 2-3
Central Mich. ....................... 2-3
W. Michigan ........................ 2-3
No. Illinois ............................ 1-4
All
6-3
5-4
5-4
4-5
3-6
1-8
All
6-3
5-4
5-4
3-6
3-6
2-7
thinking.
The Crusaders, ranked seventh in the Football
Championship Subdivision coaches’ poll, threw
just two passes in the second half of their 42-14
win over Lehigh on Saturday afternoon in Worcester, as the ground game worked, and they kept
their record spotless (9-0, 5-0 Patriot League) and
clinched their fourth straight league title at Fitton
Field in Worcester.
“I’m going to enjoy this one on purpose,” said
Holy Cross coach Bob Chesney. “It takes a full year
to put a trophy in a trophy case. It doesn’t happen
overnight.”
The Crusaders rushed 32 times for 212 yards
and three touchdowns in the second half, bringing
their total for the day to 338 yards and five touchdowns on 51 carries.
Quarterback Matthew Sluka (16 carries, 146
yards, TD) and Peter Oliver (17 carries, 136 yards,
TD) led the way in yardage, but sophomore Jordan
Fuller found the end zone three times for Holy
Cross.
Fuller, who entered the game with 328 rushing
yards and seven scores, picked up 39 yards on nine
carries against the Mountain Hawks (1-8, 1-3).
The Crusaders usually provide a balanced at-
MOUNTAIN WEST
Mountain
Conf.
Boise St. ............................... 5-0
Wyoming .............................. 4-1
Utah State ........................... 2-2
Colorado St. ......................... 2-2
Air Force ............................... 2-3
New Mexico ........................ 0-4
West
Conf.
Fresno St. ............................. 3-1
San Jose St. ......................... 3-1
San Diego St. ...................... 2-2
UNLV ..................................... 2-2
Hawaii .................................. 1-3
Nevada ................................. 0-5
All
6-2
6-3
3-5
2-6
6-3
2-6
All
4-4
5-2
4-4
4-4
2-7
2-7
PAC-12
Conf.
8 Oregon .............................. 5-0
9 USC .................................... 5-1
10 UCLA ................................ 4-1
12 Utah ................................. 4-1
Washington ......................... 4-2
24 Oregon St. ...................... 3-3
Arizona St. ........................... 2-3
Washington St. ................... 1-4
California ............................. 1-4
Arizona ................................. 1-4
Colorado .............................. 1-4
Stanford ............................... 1-5
All
7-1
7-1
7-1
6-2
7-2
6-3
3-5
4-4
3-5
3-5
1-7
3-5
SOUTHEASTERN
East
Conf.
1 Georgia ............................. 5-0
2 Tennessee ......................... 4-0
Missouri ............................... 2-3
South Carolina .................... 2-3
Kentucky .............................. 2-3
Florida .................................. 1-4
Vanderbilt ............................ 0-4
West
Conf.
6 Alabama ............................ 4-1
15 LSU ................................... 4-1
11 Mississippi ..................... 4-1
Mississippi St. ..................... 2-3
Arkansas .............................. 2-3
Texas A&M .......................... 1-4
Auburn ................................. 1-4
All
8-0
8-0
4-4
5-3
5-3
4-4
3-5
All
7-1
6-2
8-1
5-3
5-3
3-5
3-5
SUN BELT
East
Conf.
Coastal Carolina ................. 5-1
James Madison ................... 3-2
Georgia St. ........................... 2-2
Georgia So. .......................... 2-2
Old Dominion ...................... 2-2
Appalachian St. .................. 2-3
Marshall ............................... 1-3
West
Conf.
Troy ....................................... 4-1
South Alabama ................... 3-1
Southern Miss ..................... 3-1
Louisiana .............................. 2-3
Texas State .......................... 1-3
La.-Monroe .......................... 1-3
Arkansas St. ........................ 1-5
All
8-1
5-2
3-5
5-3
3-5
5-4
4-4
All
6-2
6-2
5-3
4-4
3-5
2-6
2-7
INDEPENDENTS
23 Liberty ....................................... 7-1
Notre Dame.................................... 5-3
UConn ............................................. 5-5
BYU.................................................. 4-5
Army................................................ 3-5
New Mexico St.............................. 3-5
UMass ............................................. 1-8
wide receiver Ladd McConkey,
who had five catches for 94
yards and a touchdown.
In a deafening and soggy
Sanford Stadium, Georgia led,
27-6, before Tennessee scored its
first touchdown with 4:15 remaining.
Holy Cross’s fourth straight
Patriot League title a rush
CONFERENCE USA
Conf.
UTSA ..................................... 4-0
North Texas ......................... 4-1
Fla. Atlantic ......................... 3-2
Rice ....................................... 3-2
Western Ky. ......................... 3-2
Fla. International ................ 2-2
UAB ....................................... 2-3
UTEP ..................................... 2-4
Middle Tenn. ........................ 1-3
Louisiana Tech .................... 1-3
Charlotte .............................. 1-4
Georgia (9-0, 6-0) turned the
25th regular-season matchup of
the top two teams in the AP poll
into a rout that made clear the
defending national champions
are still the team to beat.
“I kind of feel like it was a
statement win,” said Georgia
Ho o ke r, w h o s e He i s m a n
hopes were bolstered by a win
over Alabama last month,
passed for only 195 yards for
Tennessee (8-1, 4-1). Hooker was
sacked six times.
Tennessee wide receiver Jalin
Hyatt said Georgia’s defense was
“way more physical than Alabama.”
Georgia’s special teams put
more pressure on Tennessee.
Punter Brett Thorson nailed a
7 5 - y a r d e r t h at w e n t o u t o f
bounds at the Tennessee 1 in the
first quarter. Jack Podlesny
kicked two field goals.
Hooker threw an interception, lost a fumble that nearly resulted in a safety, and didn’t
throw a touchdown pass.
“They are a great ball team,”
Hooker said. “They played extremely hard, and they got the
win today. We have got to clean
some things up. It is a learning
process.”
Tennessee came in averaging
almost 50 points per game and
rode that Alabama win to the
top spot in the first College Football Playoff ranking. Georgia
was No. 3 in last week’s CFP.
That will change Tuesday.
The Volunteers were held to
two first-half field goals as Georgia took a 24-6 halftime lead.
Rain in the second half made it
only more difficult to move
against the Bulldogs’ defense.
Bennett threw scoring passes
of 37 yards to McConkey and 5
yards to Marcus Rosemy-Jacksaint in the first half.
tack, but the run game got going early as Fuller
found the end zone from 2 yards and Oliver finished an eight-play, 80-yard drive by punching in a
1-yard score in the first half.
“Nobody runs the ball against [Lehigh],”
Chesney said. “I think coach [offensive coordinator
Chris] Smith and the offensive line; they were so
physical, so tough up front. And then I thought the
running backs up front . . . they were just so tough,
so physical today.”
With 1:26 remaining in the first half, the Crusaders went into their two-minute drill. Sluka completed 5 of 6 passes on the drive for 51 yards and
rushed for 15 more, capping it with a 6-yard scoring strike to Spencer Gilliam for a 21-7 lead at halftime.
Lehigh quarterback Dante Perri found Jalen
Burbage for a 35-yard score in the second quarter.
Perri had a solid showing, going 18 of 27 for 200
yards and two scores, but couldn’t match the highpowered offense of the Crusaders.
From there it was all Sluka and Fuller. Sluka
rushed for a 4-yard score and Fuller added touchdowns from 5 yards and 1 yard. The Crusaders allowed just one score after the break on a 39-yard
pass from Perri to Geoffrey Jamiel to open the second half.
Eamonn Ryan can be reached at
eamonn.ryan@globe.com. Follow him on Twitter
@eamonn_ryan41.
Harvard falls short on missed FG
BARRY CHIN/GLOBE STAFF
Senior Peter Oliver ran for 136 yards as Holy Cross rushed
the ball 51 times against Lehigh and passed just 18.
How the AP Top 25 fared
TEAM
THIS WEEK
NEXT WEEK
1. Georgia (9-0)
Beat Tennessee, 27-13
at Mississippi St.
2. Ohio State (9-0)
Beat Northwestern, 21-7
vs. Indiana
2. Tennessee (8-1)
Lost to Georgia, 27-13
vs. Missouri
4. Michigan (9-0)
Beat Rutgers, 52-17
vs. Nebraska
5. Clemson (8-1)
Lost to Notre Dame, 35-14
vs. Louisville
6. Alabama (7-2)
Lost to LSU, 32-31 (OT)
at Mississippi
7. TCU (9-0)
Beat Texas Tech, 34-24
at Texas
8. Oregon (8-1)
Beat Colorado, 49-10
vs. Washington
vs. Colorado (Fri.)
9. USC (7-1)
Played California
10. UCLA (7-1)
Played Arizona St.
vs. Arizona
11. Mississippi (8-1)
Idle
vs. Alabama
12. Utah (7-2)
Beat Arizona, 45-20
vs. Stanford
13. Kansas St. (6-2)
Lost to Texas, 34-27
at Baylor
14. Illinois (7-2)
Lost to Michigan St., 23-15
vs. Purdue
15. LSU (7-2)
Beat Alabama, 32-31
at Arkansas
16. Penn State (7-2)
Beat Indiana, 45-14
vs. Maryland
17. North Carolina (8-1)
Beat Virginia, 31-28
at Wake Forest
18. Oklahoma St. (6-3)
Lost to Kansas, 37-16
vs. Iowa State
19. Tulane (8-1)
Beat Tulsa, 27-13
vs. UCF
20. Wake Forest (6-3)
Lost to N.C. State, 30-21
vs. North Carolina
21. N.C. State (7-2)
Beat Wake Forest, 30-21
vs. Boston College
22. Syracuse (6-3)
Lost to Pittsburgh, 19-9
vs. Florida St.
23. Liberty (8-1)
Beat Arkansas, 21-19
at UConn
24. Oregon St. (6-3)
Lost to Washington, 24-21 (Fri.)
vs. California
25. UCF (7-2)
Beat Memphis, 35-28
at Tulane
By Eamonn Ryan
GLOBE CORRESPONDENT
Columbia 21 I t a p p e a r e d
that the CoHarvard 20 lumbia football team would knot the score
at 20 headed into the waning
minutes of the fourth quarter as
Lions kicker Alex Felkins put a
point-after through the uprights
with 9:11 to play.
But Harvard’s Riley Jenne
was offside.
The Lions got aggressive and
elected to go for 2, as the ball
was moved to the 1-yard line. A
creative play call resulted in Ryan Young sneaking across the
line to catch a pass from quarterback Caden Bell, making it 21-20
and giving the Lions (4-4, 1-4
Ivy) their first win at Harvard
Stadium since 1995.
“I don’ t think you can be
scared in big moments,” said Columbia coach Al Bagnoli.
“You’ve got to show some confidence in your kids and you want
to take an aggressive mind-set
when you have an opportunity
to.”
With 1:17 remaining, Harvard coach Tim Murphy had a
similar decision with the Crimson (5-3, 3-2) down by 1 with the
ball on the 25 on fourth and 1.
Rather than gamble as Bagnoli
did, Murphy elected to kick the
Harvard in 2022
RESULTS (5-3)
Merrimack.............................W, 28-21
At Brown................................W, 35-28
Holy Cross...............................L, 30-21
At Cornell...............................W, 35-28
At Howard..............................W, 41-25
Princeton.................................L, 37-10
At Dartmouth........................W, 28-13
Columbia.................................L, 21-20
SCHEDULE
Nov. 12
Nov. 19
at Penn....................1 p.m.
Yale........................12 p.m.
field goal despite two earlier attempts being blocked.
This one from Jonah Lipel
was tipped at the line and
knuckled into the left upright
before falling to the ground, concluding an afternoon of missed
opportunities for the Crimson.
“When you have an opportunity like that it’s hard to turn it
down if you believe in your
guys,” said Murphy. “Could I
have gone for it? Sure. Was it a
conservative call? Probably. But
that’s something we should be
able to handle.”
While the defense held
strong, nabbing four takeaways
on three interceptions and a
fumble recovery, the Crimson
couldn’t capitalize.
After missing last week’s
game with an injury, Harvard
quarterback Charlie Dean (17for-29 passing, 220 yards, TD)
was without his top two receivers, Kym Wimberly and Ledger
Hatch. He established some
rhythm throwing to the next
men up, but it wasn’t enough.
Harvard running back Aidan
Borguet (23 carries, 108 yards)
eclipsed the 1,000-yard mark for
the season in the fourth quarter.
He added the second Crimson
touchdown on a 1-yard run but
had to work for his yards against
the best rushing defense in the
FCS, allowing just 60 yards a
game coming into the matchup.
The Crimson offense looked
more impressive than Columbia’s, but huge defensive stands
kept the Lions in the game. The
Crimson were 2 of 13 on third
down and 0 for 1 on four th
down despite putting up 408
yards of offense.
“The reality is that we had
our opportunities,” Murphy said.
“The game of inches part of it
was there today. It just looked
like we could get the first down
[but] we don’t get the first down
. . . just really one of those days
where it came down to a play
here or there.”
Eamonn Ryan can be reached at
eamonn.ryan@globe.com.
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
G l o b e
No bucking his adoration of Arlington
By Cam Kerry
GLOBE CORRESPONDENT
Noel Buck, 17, trained with his
19-year-old brother, Joe, and his father, Steve, at the field by Buzzell
Park in Arlington every morning at 8
for months during the pandemic.
Joe, who plays soccer at Georgetown University, and Noel, who
played seven games this season for
the New England Revolution and became the second-youngest goal scorer in franchise history, focused on
drill work.
Barnabas Kiss and Arno Huet, seniors on the Arlington High team, attended the sessions to spend time
with their friends and improve their
abilities. Steve Buck coached Noel,
Kiss, and Huet, along with fellow Spy
Ponders seniors Jamie Ellis, Will Hogan, Gus Kathan, and Aidan Sheehan, from third to seventh grade on a
travel team.
“That was our outlet for getting
energy out, being in a safe space finally, being together and playing soccer, which is what we love,” said
Huet.
Buck credits the sessions for im-
JIM DAVIS/GLOBE STAFF
Revolution player Noel Buck (third from left) will be on hand to
support his former Arlington boys’ soccer teammates when they face
No. 25 BC High in a Division 1 first-round matchup on Sunday.
proving the group’s abilities. Huet
has surrendered only 10 goals, fueling an unbeaten season for the fifthseeded Spy Ponders (14-0-3). Buck
will be supporting the Spy Ponders in
their quest for the Division 1 state
championship, beginning Sunday at
4 p.m. with a first-round matchup
against No. 25 BC High (7-8-4), a 2-0
winner over No. 37 Durfee in Friday’s
preliminary-round match.
Noel Buck attends Arlington’s
games, supporting his best friends
with whom he shares an an unbreakable bond. The close friendships
formed in grade school have not dissipated, as the group gets together in
person or plays Minecraft online.
Kiss and Hue t frequent Buck’s
games, serving as an extension of the
family. Kiss and Huet sport funky attire, such as Christmas-themed or
“Dumb and Dumber”-style suits,
drawing amused looks from Revolu-
tion coach Bruce Arena.
“Having them there as my rock is
one of the most important things,”
said Buck. “I try to show them how
much I appreciate them by going to
whatever I can, just by showing up
for them and recognizing their success.”
“I always thought he’s coming to
support his friends,” said Kiss. “It’s
super cool to see kids that didn’t
grow up with him or weren’t super
close with him. Just seeing the impact that he has on the fans and the
community, it’s just nice to have him
there as a friend but also realize that
he’s affecting other people.”
While supporting his teammates,
Buck signs autographs for children in
the crowd. Buck’s rise to hometown
hero playing for the local team has
galvanized the community.
“When someone from the community has done as well as he has, it’s
a great inspiration for the community and for the kids,” said Arlington
coach Lance Yodzio.
Cam Kerry can be reached at
cam.kerry@globe.com.
MIAA TOURNAMENT ROUNDUP
Lexington finishes
comeback in OT
By Olivia Nolan
GLOBE CORRESPONDENT
Lexington field hockey coach
Laura Galopim knew her team’s
No. 22 seeding was no reflection
of the Minutemen’s capabilities
in this season’s MIAA Division 1
tournament. A first-round upset
victory, 3-2, over host No. 11
Braintree on Saturday proved
her right.
“There’s not a lot you can do
about that, it’s the power ranki n g s , b u t I n e v e r f e l t l i ke a
[No. 22] seed,” said Galopim.
Entering the fourth quarter
facing a 2-0 deficit, the Minutemen (10-8-1) scored a pair of
goals on special teams in the final seven minutes. Freshman
Lola Capapey tipped in a corner
drive to pull Lexington within
one, and offensive catalyst Hannah Ward converted on a penalty stroke to tie it, 2-2, and force
overtime.
“We’ve never come back from
[being down], 2-0, so that was
fun,” said Galopim. “I had a good
feeling that if we could go to
overtime, that we would come
out winning.”
Ward was the hero in the extra frame, unleashing a powerful
reverse chip that sailed up and
over the Braintree corner defense corps, securing the Minutemen a ticket to the Round of
16, where Lexington will travel
to Chelmsford to face the No. 6
Lions.
Andover 7, Newton North 0 —
Emma Reilly scored two goals
and added three assists and Mia
Batchelder notched a goal and
an assist to lead the No. 2 Golden Warriors (18-1-0) to a firstround win.
Division 2
Milton 3, North Attleborough 2
— Junior Meghan Mylod scored
in overtime to lift the host
No. 15 Wildcats (9-8-2) in the
Round-of-32 victory over the
No. 18 Red Rocketeers (10-7-2).
Division 3
Sandwich 7, Old Rochester 0 —
Freshman Khloe Schultz and
sophomore Alivia Barnes netted
two goals apiece, freshman
Quinn Jordan and sophomore
Rachael Birch each recorded a
goal and an assist, and freshman
Megan Dwyer also scored for the
Blue Knights (17-0-1) in their
Round-of-32 triumph.
“We’re so young,” said Sandwich coach Kelsy Beaton, whose
team will host No. 15 Medway
(8-6-3) in the Round of 16 at 4
p.m. Tuesday. “When they were
reading the starting lineup, I
MARK STOCKWELL FOR THE GLOBE
Lexington’s field hockey
team beat Braintree in OT, 32, after trailing by two goals.
was thinking about it.”
Watertown 7, Norwell 0 — Molly and Maggie Driscoll had two
goals each and Caroline Andrade
added three assists to power the
top-ranked Raiders (18-0-0) past
the No. 33 Clippers (10-7-3). Watertown will host No. 16 Ashland in the Round of 16.
Ashland 3, Dennis-Yarmouth 2
— Melissa Leone’s hat trick sent
the No. 16 Clockers (8-8-3) to the
Round of 16 in an overtime win
against the No. 17 Dolphins (410-5).
Division 4
Uxbridge 7, Westport 1 — Kendall Gilmore notched a hat trick
and Meghan Smith, Ellie
Bouchard, Lily Brayman, and
Amelia Blood also scored for the
No. 1 Spartans (19-0-0) in a firstround victory over the No. 32
Wildcats (7-9-1).
Football
Division 8
KIPP Academy 44, Lee 12 —
Sidelined all week by the flu and
unable to practice, Juan Setalsingh delivered a monstrous effort in his return. The senior
quarterback passed for 264
yards and five touchdowns,
while rushing for 25 yards and a
10-yard TD, to guide No. 7 KIPP
Academy (5-4) through the first
round.
“He changes the game on
both sides of the ball,” said coach
Jim Rabbitt, noting how Setalsingh also had a forced fumble to
go along with several tackles on
defense.
Setalsingh connected with senior Vic Mafo on TD passes of 2,
20, and 4 yards, and junior
Morenel Castro on a 35-yard TD
strike.
Lowell Catholic 32, Millis 20 —
Senior quarterback Riley Nichols showcased his dual-threat capabilities, throwing for 108
yards on 4-of-6 passing, and
rushing for 150 yards and touchdowns of 70, 20, and 5 yards to
spark the second-ranked Crusaders (8-1) to a victory and a
quarterfinal matchup against
No. 7 KIPP Academy (5-4).
“It’s been a nice turnaround
for our program,” said coach
Paul Sobolewski. “We came out
last year and started out 4-1 and
had a whole slew of injuries that
derailed our season.”
Nick Sawyer rushed for 58
yards and a 1-yard TD on 12 carries.
Girls’ volleyball
Division 1
Andover 3, Quincy 0 — Marissa
Kobelski (18 kills, 11 aces) and
Adrie Waldinger (four blocks, 10
aces) powered the sixth-seeded
Golden Warriors (17-3).
Division 4
Ipswich 3, Stoneham 1 — Ella
Stein (five kills, seven aces),
Claire Buletza (11 kills, two aces), and Tess O’Flynn (seven assists, three aces) powered the
top-seeded Tigers (17-2) to the
first-round win.
Globe correspondents Olivia
Nolan reported from Braintree,
Brad Joyal from Sandwich.
Colin Bannen, Ethan Kagno and
A.J. Traub contributed.
Sports
C15
SportsLog
US gymnast Carey
wins gold in vault
American Jade Carey soared to victory in
the women’s vault final in Liverpool, England,
giving her a second gold medal after helping
the US women capture the team gold earlier
in the world championships. Carey’s average
score of 14.516 for her two vaults was just
enough to edge teammate and fellow 2020
Olympian Jordan Chiles. Chiles’s 14.350 average was good enough for silver, just ahead of
Coline Devillard of France at 14.166. Shilese
Jones of the United States added a third medal by earning a silver on uneven bars to go
with the team gold and a silver in the allaround. Jones’s set scored a 14.766, trailing
only two-time world champion Wei Xiaoyuan
of China at 14.966 and just ahead of Olympic
champion Nina Derwael of Belgium at 14.700.
Giarnni Regini-Moran of Britain gave the
hosts their first gold medal at the worlds with
a score of 14.533 in men’s floor exercise, followed by world and Olympic all-around
c h a m p i o n Da i k i H a s h i m o to o f Ja p a n .
Hashimoto’s teammate Ryosuke Doi earned
the bronze. Rhys McClenaghan of Ireland
gave his country its first gold medal at a world
championship by winning pommel horse
with a score of 15.300. Ahmad Abu Al-Soud’s
silver medal was the first of any color by a
men’s gymnast from Jordan. Harutyun
Merdinyan of Armenia, at 38 the oldest athlete in the field, captured the bronze. Adem
Azil of Turkey won gold in men’s still rings.
Azil’s 14.933 was just enough to edge Zou
Jingyuan of China at 14.866 and Courtney
Tulloch of Britain at 14.733.
TENNIS
Alcaraz out for season
ANDREW BURKE-STEVENSON FOR THE GLOBE
Brockton’s Josef Veiga looks for his teammates to join the celebration after
his winning goal in overtime helped topple No. 11 Newton North, 1-0.
MIAA SOCCER ROUNDUP
Veiga delivers in OT
for Brockton boys
By Cam Kerry
GLOBE CORRESPONDENT
Once Brockton senior Zion Afonso Depina poked the ball through a defender’s
legs, his eyes lit up.
Afonso Depina galloped into space
down the left side, hearing senior Josef
Veiga calling for the ball in the box on a
two-on-one break.
Afonso Depina slid the ball to the 6yard line and Veiga finished on the first
touch with the inside of his left boot,
sprinting across the field with his teammates in celebration as the ball rested in
the net.
Veiga’s dramatic goal with 1:32
elapsed in overtime sealed a 1-0 victory
for No. 22 Brockton over No. 11 Newton
North in the first round of the MIAA Division 1 boys’ soccer tournament.
“I had loads of space on the right side,”
said Veiga. “Zion had the ball, I called [for
it], he took an amazing touch through the
player’s legs, it was just me and the keeper, and I had the composure to finish it.”
The contest was fiercely physical, with
both teams jostling for sustained possession throughout.
The Boxers (15-2-2) knocked on the
door in the waning minutes of regulation
but broke through with the golden goal.
“For a good month and a half now,
we’ve been focusing on sticking together,
focusing on what we have to do, and it’s
been working,” said Brockton interim
coach Michael Cruise, the team’s third
coach of the season. “You can see how
much the guys love each other, work for
each other, and I couldn’t be more proud
to be their coach.”
Senior center back Walter Fernandes
stonewalled the Tigers, stepping up to
make clutch clearances as the last man
back.
“In my opinion, he’s one of the best
players in the state,” said Cruise. “We put
a lot on his shoulders and he holds it up
for us.”
The Tigers (9-6-4), a Division 1 finalist
a season ago, remained on the field for
more than 25 minutes after the conclusion of the game, overcome with emotion.
“You play games and hope that doesn’t
happen to you and when the golden goal
situation happens to you, it sucks,” said
Newton North coach Roy Dow. “There’s
really no other way to put it.”
Division 2
Reading 2, Northampton 1 — Nick Mirogiannis and Baxter McCarthy scored for
the No. 32 Rockets (7-9-1) in the preliminary-round win.
Sharon 1, North Attleborough 0 —
Miguel Vasconcelos netted the lone goal
on a rebound in the first half, sending the
No. 18 Eagles (7-6-6) into the second
round.
Division 3
Norwell 3, East Bridgewater 0 — Max
Flanders (two goals) and Garrett Fisher
combined to score three second-half goals
for the eighth-seeded Clippers (14-2-4) in
the first-round win.
Stoneham 3, Saugus 0 — Jacob Ribaudo,
Yves Maurer, and Anderson Illanes tallied
a goal in a first-round victory for the No.
12 Spartans (8-7-4).
Division 4
Cohasset 1, Nantucket 0 — Nathan Askjaer provided the scoring for the ninthseeded Skippers (8-8-3), netting the lone
goal in the first half of the first-round
win.
Randolph 7, Burke 2 — Jonas Norsica
notched three goals and Angelot Brun
added two to advance the 10th-seeded
Blue Devils (11-6-2) to the quarterfinals.
Girls
Division 1
King Philip 6, Beverly 0 — Addisyn Lamothe-Vaughn and Heidi Lawrence each
scored twice, propelling the No. 10 Warriors (14-4-1) to a first round win. Dani
Lomuscio and Ella Pisani tallied a goal
and an assist apiece.
Lincoln-Sudbury 4, Concord-Carlisle 3 —
Frankie Liu finished a corner from Annie
Rapisarda in double overtime, lifting the
No. 17 Warriors (13-3-4) to a first-round
victory over their Dual County League rival.
Attleboro 2, Bridgewater-Raynham 1 —
Jamie Davies scored the eventual winner
in the 20th minute, winning a solo rush
against the goalie with a shot to the left,
to guide the No. 31 Bombardiers (8-9-2)
through the preliminary round.
Division 2
Melrose 1, East Longmeadow 0 — Junior
goaltender Ava Tormo notched a shutout
and sophomore Chloe Mahoney scored
on an assist from junior Ellie Deeble in a
first-round victory for the No. 18 Red
Hawks (8-6-5).
Division 3
Archbishop Williams 1, Norton 0 —
Maeve White scored the winner five minutes into the second half to propel the No.
14 Bishops (14-5) to the victory.
Medway 2, Cardinal Spellman 1 — Cailyn
DiMinico scored the winner with 18 minutes left in the second half for the 15thseeded Mustangs (10-5-4). Shannon Mejia also scored for Medway in the firstround victory.
Globe correspondent Cam Kerry reported
from Newton. Globe correspondent Colin
Bannen also contributed to this report.
Top-ranked Carlos Alcaraz will miss the
rest of the season after sustaining an abdominal muscle tear while playing at the Paris Masters. The Spanish teenager pulled out during a
second-set tiebreaker against fellow 19-yearold Holger Rune in their quarterfinal Friday.
Following medical exams, the US Open champion posted details of his injury. “Unfortunately this is the result of my injury: an internal oblique muscle tear in the left abdominal
wall with an estimated recovery time of six
weeks,” Alcaraz wrote on Twitter. “I won’t
make the ATP Finals or the Davis Cup Finals.
It is tough and painful for me to miss these
two events, which are so important to me, but
all I can do is be positive and focus on my recovery.” Alcaraz will be replaced at the ATP Finals by American Taylor Fritz . . . Novak Djokovic beat Stefanos Tsitsipas for the eighth
straight time, edging an entertaining semifinal match, 6-2, 3-6, 7-6 (7-4), to stay on track
for a record-extending seventh Paris Masters
title. Djokovic faces the unseeded Rune, who
will be in his first Masters final Sunday. Rune
downed eighth-seeded Felix Auger-Aliassime,
6-4, 6-2, in the other semifinal.
SOCCER
Vines to miss World Cup
American left back Sam Vines injured a leg
and needed surgery, eliminating him from
consideration for the US men’s soccer team’s
World Cup roster. Vines said he broke his tibia
and will be sidelined for 3-4 months. A 23year-old from Colorado, Vines had ankle surgery at a hospital in Antwerp, Belgium,
Vines’s club, Royal Antwerp, announced. Forward Josh Sargent and defender Cameron
Carter-Vickers returned to their club starting
lineups Saturday, the last weekend of matches
before US coach Gregg Berhalter announces
his roster . . . Lionel Messi has inflammation
on his Achilles’ tendon and is being rested for
men’s club Paris Saint-Germain’s trip to Lorient on Sunday as a precautionary measure.
PSG said that the Argentina star is expected to
resume training next week.
COLLEGE HOCKEY
Merrimack men sweep BC
Filip Forsmark, Alex Jefferies, and Ben
Brar each posted a goal and an assist to help
the Merrimack men earn a 5-2 win against
Boston College at Conte Forum for a sweep of
their home-and-home series . . . Harvard men
shut out visiting Yale, 4-0 . . . Graduate forward Maureen Murphy scored a hat trick and
added an assist to lead Northeastern’s women
to an 8-2 win over New Hampshire at Matthews Arena . . . Graduate Sandra Abstreiter
made 29 saves to backstop Providence women
to a 4-1 win against visiting Boston University.
MISCELLANY
Ovechkin sets goal record
Alex Ovechkin scored his 787 th goal to
break Gordie Howe’s record for scoring with
one team, but the Arizona Coyotes scored
three times in the third period to rally for a
3-2 win against the Washington Capitals . . .
Artturi Lehkonen scored in his home country,
and the Colorado Avalanche beat the Columbus Blue Jackets, 5-1, for a sweep of the NHL’s
two-game series in Tampere, Finland. Lehkonen opened the scoring just 33 seconds into
the game . . . Loren Gabel scored two goals as
the Boston Pride routed the visiting Connecticut Whale, 4-0, in their season opener of the
women’s Premier Hockey Federation . . . Former NBA guard Ben Gordon was arrested after a Chicago McDonald’s security guard was
punched in the face, police said. Gordon, 39,
was charged with misdemeanor battery causing bodily harm and battery making physical
contact. Gordon was arrested about 3:30 a.m.
Friday when police responded to a report of a
disturbance by a man being escorted from the
McDonald’s.
C16
Sports
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
G l o b e
Scoreboard
Colleges
Y
Schools
SUN
11/6
FOOTBALL
ATLANTIC COAST
Florida St. 45...............................Miami 3
Georgia Tech 28...........Virginia Tech 27
Louisville 34..............James Madison 10
N.C. State 30..................Wake Forest 21
North Carolina 31..................Virginia 28
Notre Dame 35.....................Clemson 14
Pittsburgh 19......................... Syracuse 9
COLONIAL
Delaware 49......................Monmouth 17
Elon 27.........................................Albany 3
Richmond 40.................................UNH 34
Stony Brook 24.................Morgan St. 22
Towson 27..............................Villanova 3
URI 26......................................... Maine 22
William & Mary 20..............Hampton 14
IVY LEAGUE
Columbia 21...........................Harvard 20
Penn 28.....................................Cornell 21
Princeton 17......................Dartmouth 14
Yale 69.......................................Brown 17
NORTHEAST 10
AIC 18.......................................Bentley 10
Assumption 21..................St. Anselm 12
New Haven 50.............Franklin Pierce 6
COMMONWEALTH COAST
Endicott 42.................... Salve Regina 10
Husson 27................................Nichols 14
Western N.E. 33.........U. New England 0
ECFC
Anna Maria 36.............................Dean 22
Gallaudet 36.........................Alfred St. 22
Keystone 21..............SUNY-Maritime 20
MASCAC
Bridgewater St. 20..Framingham St. 19
Plymouth St. 21.........Mass. Maritime 7
Western Conn. 41.........Fitchburg St. 21
Westfield St. 28...........Worcester St. 18
NESCAC
Amherst 17............................Bowdoin 14
Middlebury 48......................Hamilton 34
Trinity 63.....................................Bates 14
Tufts 35.........................................Colby 7
Wesleyan 35..........................Williams 21
NEWMAC
Catholic 31.............................Norwich 14
Springfield 16................................MIT 14
WPI 30.............................Coast Guard 24
OTHER NEW ENGLAND
Bryant 43..............................Campbell 37
Duquesne 35........Sacred Heart 28 (OT)
Holy Cross 42...........................Lehigh 14
LIU 29............................Central Conn. 20
Stonehill 50.............................Wagner 10
OTHER EAST
Air Force 13...................................Army 7
Fordham 59...........................Bucknell 17
Lafayette 21............................Colgate 16
Michigan 52............................Rutgers 17
St. Francis (Pa.) 38........Georgetown 24
Temple 54.....................South Florida 28
SOUTH
Alabama St. 37...Bethune-Cookman 22
Austin Peay 38..........North Alabama 35
Charleston So. 34..........Robt. Morris 21
Chattanooga 31.......................Citadel 21
Davidson 56.................Stetson 48 (2OT)
Dayton 52.......................Presbyterian 28
Delaware St. 27South Crlina St. 24 (OT)
Eastern Ky. 42...........Cent. Arkansas 14
Florida A&M 30 Southern University 16
Georgia 27......................... Tennessee 13
Georgia St. 42.............Southern Miss 14
Grambling St. 36Arkansas-Pine Bluff 10
Kennesaw St. 44................UT Martin 27
La.-Monroe 31.................Texas State 30
Louisiana Tech 40........Middle Tenn. 24
LSU 32.......................... Alabama 31 (OT)
Marist 31.......................Morehead St. 21
Marshall 12.................... Old Dominion 0
McNeese St. 29.................Eastern Ill. 15
Mississippi St. 39..........Auburn 33 (OT)
N.C. Central 50.......................Howard 21
North Carolina A&T 49....Norfolk St. 24
Samford 34....................................VMI 15
SE Missouri St. 42........ Tennessee St. 0
South Alabama 38..........Georgia So. 31
South Carolina 38.............Vanderbilt 27
Tennessee Tech 35....... Lindenwood 34
Troy 23................................. Louisiana 17
UCF 35...................................Memphis 28
UTSA 44..............................UAB 38 (2OT)
W. Carolina 36.......................Wofford 29
Western Ky. 59......................Charlotte 7
MIDWEST
Cincinnati 20................................Navy 10
Iowa 24.......................................Purdue 3
Iowa State 31...............West Virginia 14
Kansas 37..................... Oklahoma St. 16
Kentucky 21.......................... Missouri 17
Michigan St. 23........................ Illinois 15
Minnesota 20.......................Nebraska 13
North Dakota 42.................Indiana St. 7
North Dakota St. 56 Western Illinois 17
Ohio State 21.................Northwestern 7
Penn State 45..........................Indiana 14
South Dakota 20.............Missouri St. 13
South Dakota St. 31..Northern Iowa 28
St. Thomas (Minn.) 34.......Valparaiso 7
Texas 34.............................Kansas St. 27
Wisconsin 23.......................Maryland 10
Youngstown St. 19.............Illinois St. 17
SOUTHWEST
Baylor 38.............................Oklahoma 35
Florida 41..........................Texas A&M 24
Jackson St. 41..........Texas Southern 14
Liberty 21............................. Arkansas 19
North Texas 52......Fla. International 14
Northwstrn St. 41Texas A&M-Comm 14
SE Louisiana 47........................ Lamar 31
SMU 77...................................Houston 63
TCU 34...............................Texas Tech 24
Tulane 27.....................................Tulsa 13
UIW 73...................Houston Christian 20
WEST
Butler 26..............................San Diego 23
BYU 31....................................Boise St. 28
Cal Poly 0..............................Montana 57
Idaho 48...................... E. Washington 16
Montana St. 41................No. Arizona 38
Oregon 49.............................Colorado 10
Portland St. 35..............No. Colorado 21
Sacramento St. 33.............Weber St. 30
San Diego St. 14.........................UNLV 10
UC Davis 43............................ Idaho St. 3
Utah 45.....................................Arizona 20
Utah State 27.................New Mexico 10
Washington St. 52................Stanford 14
Holy Cross, 42-14
Lehigh (1-8)............0 7 7 0 — 14
Holy Cross (9-0) ....7 14 14 7 — 42
First quarter
HolyCr—Jordan Fuller 2 yd run (Derek Ng kick), 6:00.
Second quarter
HolyCr—Peter Oliver 1 yd run (Derek
Ng kick), 9:30.
Lehigh—Jalen Burbage 35 yd pass
from Dante Perri (Dylan Van Dusen
kick), 5:24.
HolyCr—Spencer Gilliam 6 yd pass
from Matthew Sluka (Derek Ng kick),
0:11.
Third quarter
Lehigh—Geoffrey Jamiel 39 yd pass
from Dante Perri (Dylan Van Dusen
kick), 14:06.
HolyCr—Matthew Sluka 4 yd run
(Derek Ng kick), 9:15.
HolyCr—Jordan Fuller 5 yd run (Derek Ng kick), 3:24.
Fourth quarter
HolyCr—Jordan Fuller 1 yd run (Derek Ng kick), 5:30.
Attendance: 11,171
Lehigh HolyCr
First downs ............................. 11
24
Rushing-yards....................27-81 51-338
Passing .................................. 200
132
Comp-att-int ...................18-27-0 12-18-1
Return yards........................... 48
-2
Punts-avg. .........................7-31.6 4-41.5
Fumbles-lost .......................... 1-1
0-0
Penalties-yards .................10-96
6-41
Time of possession .......... 25:42 34:18
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHING—Lehigh, Garcia 16-63,
DiPietro 6-28, Johnson 1-(-2), Perri
4-(-8); HolyCr, Sluka 16-146, Oliver 17136, Fuller 9-39, Forrest 7-16, Pesansky
1-3, Shorter 1-(-2)
PASSING—Lehigh, Perri 18-27-0-200;
HolyCr, Sluka 11-17-1-126, Pesansky 11-0-6
RECEIVING—Lehigh, Jamiel 5-88,
Burbage 4-61, Kennedy 2-29, Johnson
2-13, DiPietro 2-4, Garcia 2-4, O'Connor
1-1; HolyCr, Coker 4-50, Shorter 3-36,
Gilliam 2-12, Asante 2-11, Morris 1-23
North Carolina, 31-28
North Carolina
....3 7 14 7 — 31
(8-1) .....................
Virginia (3-6)..........7 7 7 7 — 28
First quarter
UVa—Brennan Armstrong 4 yd run
(Will Bettridge kick), 10:48.
UNC—Noah Burnette 35 yd FG, 6:32.
Second quarter
UNC—Drake Maye 5 yd run (Noah
Burnette kick), 6:47.
UVa—Xavier Brown 3 yd run (Will
Bettridge kick), 2:04.
Third quarter
UNC—Elijah Green 4 yd run (Noah
Burnette kick), 12:05.
UVa—Ronnie Walker Jr. 1 yd run
(Will Bettridge kick), 7:49.
UNC—Josh Downs 19 yd pass from
Drake Maye (Noah Burnette kick), 4:13.
Fourth quarter
UNC—Elijah Green 22 yd pass from
Drake Maye (Noah Burnette kick),
13:19.
UVa—Brennan Armstrong 8 yd run
(Will Bettridge kick), 3:24.
Attendance: 44,156
UNC
UVa
First downs ............................. 29
25
Rushing-yards..................40-162 39-186
Passing .................................. 293
232
Comp-att-int ...................26-37-0 17-35-1
Return yards........................... 86
48
Punts-avg. .........................3-55.0 5-43.8
Fumbles-lost .......................... 0-0
0-0
Penalties-yards ................... 5-45
8-47
Time of possession .......... 33:38 26:22
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHING—UNC, Green 22-91, Maye
16-74, Team 2-(-3); UVa, Hollins 16-75,
Armstrong 12-64, Walker Jr. 6-30,
Brown 5-17
PASSING—UNC, Maye 26-37-0-293;
UVa, Armstrong 17-35-1-232
RECEIVING—UNC, Downs 15-166,
Green 3-33, Morales 2-23, Jones 2-21,
Green 1-22, Jones 1-14, Blackwell 1-9,
Paysour 1-5; UVa, Wood Jr. 6-94, Wilson 5-61, Kemp IV 2-17, Starling 1-40,
Brown 1-7, Davies 1-7, Misch 1-6
Columbia, 21-20
Yale, 69-17
Columbia (4-4).......0 10 3 8 — 21
Harvard (5-3) .........7 10 3 0 — 20
First quarter
Harv—Haven Montefalco 8 yd pass
from Charlie Dean (Jonah Lipel kick),
1:38.
Second quarter
Colum—Alex Felkins 44 yd FG, 14:12.
Colum—Bryson Canty 6 yd pass
from Caden Bell (Alex Felkins kick),
7:24.
Harv—Aidan Borguet 1 yd run (Jonah
Lipel kick), 3:48.
Harv—Jonah Lipel 30 yd FG, 1:26.
Third quarter
Colum—Alex Felkins 24 yd FG, 7:37.
Harv—Jonah Lipel 34 yd FG, 3:39.
Fourth quarter
Colum—Luke Painton 25 yd pass
from Caden Bell (Ryan Young 2pt pass
from Caden Bell), 9:11.
Attendance: 13,972
Colum Harv
First downs ............................. 12
22
Rushing-yards....................34-78 43-188
Passing .................................. 190
220
Comp-att-int ...................16-30-3 17-29-1
Return yards........................... 71
39
Punts-avg. .........................4-49.8 5-42.8
Fumbles-lost .......................... 1-1
0-0
Penalties-yards ................... 7-49
9-50
Time of possession .......... 27:55 32:05
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHING—Colum, Giorgi 6-40,
Young 10-30, Edwards 3-12, Terry II 6-7,
Team 3-(-5), Bell 6-(-6); Harv, Borguet
23-108, Ntoh 11-41, Dean 8-38, Bill 1-1
PASSING—Colum, Bell 16-30-3-190;
Harv, Dean 17-29-1-220
RECEIVING—Colum, Libman 6-42,
Canty 5-92, Painton 4-49, Jenkins 1-7;
Harv, Barkate 5-102, Young 3-42, Neville 3-27, Bill 2-22, Odermann 1-8, Henry
1-8, Montefalco 1-8, Borguet 1-3
Brown (3-5) ............0 3 7 7 — 17
Yale (6-2)..............17 35 14 3 — 69
First quarter
Yale—David Pantelis 15 yd pass from
Nolan Grooms (Jack Bosman kick),
10:40.
Yale—Joshua Pitsenberger 28 yd run
(Jack Bosman kick), 5:36.
Yale—Jack Bosman 42 yd FG, 1:50.
Second quarter
Yale—Tre Peterson 21 yd run (Jack
Bosman kick), 12:56.
Brown—Austin Alley 23 yd FG, 7:42.
Yale—Jay Brunelle 25 yd pass from
Nolan Grooms (Jack Bosman kick),
4:59.
Yale—Hamilton Moore 19 yd fumble
return (Jack Bosman kick), 3:55.
Yale—Jackson Hawes 13 yd pass
from Nolan Grooms (Jack Bosman
kick), 0:30.
Yale—Joseph Vaughn 35 yd interception return (Jack Bosman kick), 0:22.
Third quarter
Yale—Austin Tutas 6 yd run (Jack
Bosman kick), 11:41.
Yale—Tre Peterson 53 yd run (Jack
Bosman kick), 9:47.
Brown—Allen Smith 1 yd run (Austin
Alley kick), 5:32.
Fourth quarter
Brown—Wes Rockett 11 yd pass
from Will Jarvis (Austin Alley kick),
12:37.
Yale—Jack Bosman 41 yd FG, 7:05.
Attendance: 4,500
Brown
Yale
First downs ............................. 19
24
Rushing-yards..................38-108 46-340
Passing .................................. 166
218
Comp-att-int ...................26-41-2 13-17-0
Return yards............................. 6
35
Punts-avg. .........................8-32.3 3-38.3
Fumbles-lost .......................... 2-2
2-1
Penalties-yards ................... 4-50
4-32
Time of possession .......... 30:37 29:23
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHING—Brown, Smith 14-76, DeLucia 11-32, Jarvis 1-8, Baddoo 6-1,
Team 1-(-2), Gilman 5-(-7); Yale, Peterson 9-108, Pitsenberger 12-93, Tutas 545, Eboboko 3-42, Lee 3-24, Denney 713, Grooms 4-12, Daal 2-3, Team 1-0
PASSING—Brown, Gilman 24-36-2150, Jarvis 2-5-0-16; Yale, Grooms 1216-0-205, Tutas 1-1-0-13
RECEIVING—Brown, Rockett 6-50,
Walker 4-26, Sutton 3-35, Pezza 3-19,
Mahoney 2-14, Mcintyre 2-13, Golden
2-9, Miller 1-5, Houston III 1-0, DeLucia
1--2, Baddoo 1--3; Yale, Pantelis 4-38,
Lindley 3-33, Brunelle 2-64, Hawes 2-47,
Shipp 1-23, Belk 1-13
Ohio State, 21-7
Ohio State (9-0).....0 7 7 7 — 21
Northwestern
....7 0 0 0 —
7
(1-8) .....................
First quarter
NW—Evan Hull 16 yd run (Adam
Stage kick), 6:45.
Second quarter
OhioSt—Emeka Egbuka 15 yd run
(Noah Ruggles kick), 2:26.
Third quarter
OhioSt—Miyan Williams 27 yd run
(Noah Ruggles kick), 8:44.
Fourth quarter
OhioSt—Miyan Williams 2 yd run
(Noah Ruggles kick), 4:21.
Attendance: 42,774
OhioSt
NW
First downs ............................. 13
17
Rushing-yards..................35-207 59-206
Passing .................................... 76
79
Comp-att-int ...................10-26-0 10-17-0
Return yards........................... 39
20
Punts-avg. .........................7-50.3 6-40.8
Fumbles-lost .......................... 0-0
1-0
Penalties-yards ................... 3-20
4-27
Time of possession .......... 23:34 36:26
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHING—OhioSt, Williams 26-111,
Stroud 6-79, Egbuka 2-21, Team 1-(-4);
NW, Hull 30-122, Sullivan 12-55, Porter
11-50, Clair 1-1, Washington 1-(-2),
Team 4-(-20)
PASSING—OhioSt, Stroud 10-26-0-76;
NW, Sullivan 10-14-0-79, Hilinski 0-30-0
RECEIVING—OhioSt, Harrison Jr. 551, Stover 2-12, Egbuka 2-6, Fleming
1-7; NW, Washington 6-49, Porter 2-14,
Kirtz 1-12, Hull 1-4
URI, 26-22
Maine (2-7).............3 10 6 3 — 22
URI (6-3)..................0 7 13 6 — 26
First quarter
Maine—Cody Williams 29 yd FG,
5:22.
Second quarter
Maine—Elijah Barnwell 2 yd run
(Cody Williams kick), 7:22.
URI—Ed Lee 63 yd pass from Kasim
Hill (Harrison Leonard kick), 1:15.
Maine—Cody Williams 46 yd FG,
0:00.
Third quarter
URI—Kasim Hill 7 yd run (Harrison
Leonard kick), 10:43.
Maine—Rohan Jones 18 yd pass
from Joe Fagnano (failed 2pt rush),
2:20.
URI—Kasim Hill 9 yd run (failed 2pt
rush), 1:06.
Fourth quarter
Maine—Cody Williams 39 yd FG,
9:33.
URI—Marques DeShields 1 yd run
(failed 2pt pass), 7:17.
Attendance: 4,377
Maine
URI
First downs ............................. 21
19
Rushing-yards..................42-183 33-149
Passing .................................. 126
244
Comp-att-int ...................12-28-0 13-25-0
Return yards........................... 93
78
Punts-avg. .........................4-44.8 4-36.0
Fumbles-lost .......................... 0-0
0-0
Penalties-yards ................... 5-34
4-32
Time of possession .......... 35:26 24:34
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHING—Maine, Barnwell 20-98,
Scott 6-26, Fagnano 6-20, Banks 3-18,
Brock 5-17, Jones 1-3, Ewing 1-1; URI,
DeShields 23-110, Hill 8-41, Team 2-(-2)
PASSING—Maine, Fagnano 12-27-0126, Scott 0-1-0-0; URI, Hill 13-25-0-244
RECEIVING—Maine, White 4-37,
Scott 4-33, Moss 2-32, Jones 1-18,
Brock 1-6; URI, Lee 8-190, Sloat 1-20, Erby 1-13, Summers 1-12, Warren 1-5, Savedge 1-4
Georgia, 27-13
Tennessee (8-1).....3 3 0 7 — 13
Georgia (9-0)........14 10 3 0 — 27
First quarter
Tenn—Chase McGrath 47 yd FG,
10:05.
UGa—Stetson Bennett 13 yd run
(Jack Podlesny kick), 8:32.
UGa—Ladd McConkey 37 yd pass
from Stetson Bennett (Jack Podlesny
kick), 3:32.
Second quarter
UGa—Marcus Rosemy-Jacksaint 5 yd
pass from Stetson Bennett (Jack
Podlesny kick), 14:17.
Tenn—Chase McGrath 36 yd FG,
9:36.
UGa—Jack Podlesny 19 yd FG, 0:00.
Third quarter
UGa—Jack Podlesny 38 yd FG, 1:09.
Fourth quarter
Tenn—Jaylen Wright 5 yd run (Chase
McGrath kick), 4:15.
Attendance: 92,746
Tenn
UGa
First downs ............................. 21
18
Rushing-yards....................42-94 37-130
Passing .................................. 195
257
Comp-att-int ...................23-33-1 17-25-0
Return yards............................. 0
24
Punts-avg. .........................4-38.0 4-50.3
Fumbles-lost .......................... 2-1
2-2
Penalties-yards ................... 9-55
6-60
Time of possession .......... 29:00 31:00
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHING—Tenn, Wright 21-69,
Hooker 18-17, Small 3-8; UGa, McIntosh
10-52, Edwards 16-46, Bennett 1-13,
Milton 3-8, Bowers 1-7, Robinson 5-6,
Team 1-(-2)
PASSING—Tenn, Hooker 23-33-1-195;
UGa, Bennett 17-25-0-257
RECEIVING—Tenn, Tillman 7-68,
Hyatt 6-63, McCoy 6-38, Warren 3-21,
Fant 1-5; UGa, McConkey 5-94, Bowers
3-27, Rosemy-Jacksaint 3-20, McIntosh
2-57, Jackson 2-3, Smith 1-52
Notre Dame, 35-14
Clemson (8-1) ........0 0 0 14 — 14
Notre Dame
....7 7 0 21 — 35
(6-3) .....................
First quarter
ND—Prince Kollie 17 yd blocked punt
return (Blake Grupe kick), 9:08.
Second quarter
ND—Drew Pyne 5 yd run (Blake
Grupe kick), 0:38.
Fourth quarter
ND—Audric Estime 2 yd run (Blake
Grupe kick), 14:37.
ND—Benjamin Morrison 96 yd interception return (Blake Grupe kick),
12:58.
Clem—Will Shipley 1 yd run (B.T.
Potter kick), 10:14.
ND—Michael Mayer 17 yd pass from
Drew Pyne (Blake Grupe kick), 4:16.
Clem—Joseph Ngata 4 yd pass from
DJ Uiagalelei (B.T. Potter kick), 1:35.
Attendance: 77,622
Clem
ND
First downs ............................. 21
24
Rushing-yards....................25-90 47-263
Passing .................................. 191
85
Comp-att-int ...................27-40-2 9-17-0
Return yards........................... 21
139
Punts-avg. .........................6-37.5 5-38.2
Fumbles-lost .......................... 1-0
0-0
Penalties-yards ................... 7-55
5-67
Time of possession .......... 27:00 33:00
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHING—Clem, Shipley 12-63, Uiagalelei 9-23, Mafah 3-11, Team 1-(-7);
ND, Diggs 17-114, Estime 18-104, Tyree
7-26, Pyne 4-21, Team 1-(-2)
PASSING—Clem, Uiagalelei 27-39-1191, Klubnik 0-1-1-0; ND, Pyne 9-17-0-85
RECEIVING—Clem, Allen 7-60, Shipley 5-17, Williams 4-26, Ngata 4-22,
Randall 2-27, Collins 2-18, Ennis 2-17,
Mafah 1-4; ND, Mayer 4-44, Thomas 315, Tyree 2-26
Princeton, 17-14
Dartmouth (2-6) ....7 0 0 7 — 14
Princeton (8-0) ....14 3 0 0 — 17
First quarter
Prince—Ja'Derris Carr 4 yd run (Jeffrey Sexton kick), 12:13.
Prince—Blake Stenstrom 6 yd run
(Jeffrey Sexton kick), 4:52.
Dart—Jace Henry 6 yd run (Ryan
Bloch kick), 1:14.
Second quarter
Prince—Jeffrey Sexton 23 yd FG,
0:22.
Fourth quarter
Dart—Paxton Scott 8 yd pass from
Jackson Proctor (Ryan Bloch kick),
0:17.
Attendance: 6,413
Dart Prince
First downs ............................. 20
24
Rushing-yards....................24-66 38-112
Passing .................................. 190
264
Comp-att-int ...................21-30-0 31-40-0
Return yards............................. 0
-1
Punts-avg. .........................5-36.0 2-50.5
Fumbles-lost .......................... 0-0
1-1
3-35
Penalties-yards ..................... 1-5
Time of possession .......... 23:37 36:23
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHING—Dart, Bair 4-28, Proctor 427, Roper 5-20, Henry 2-7, Jones 3-6,
Crowther 1-4, Team 1-(-1), Cadwallader 4-(-25); Prince, Butler 20-62, Carr 830, Stenstrom 7-25, Powers 1-3, Iosivas
1-(-3), Team 1-(-5)
PASSING—Dart, Cadwallader 14-200-144, Proctor 7-10-0-46; Prince, Stenstrom 31-40-0-264
RECEIVING—Dart, Scott 5-34, Gerard
3-23, Roper 3-16, Henry 2-51, Bair 2-12,
Jones 2-12, Kramer 1-19, Barrett 1-13,
Sutherland 1-6, Crowther 1-4; Prince,
Classi 8-107, Barber 7-50, Iosivas 5-48,
Bobo 3-29, Axelrood 2-10, Cherry 2-9,
Carr 2-9, Butler 1-2, Colella 1-0
Oregon, 49-10
Oregon (8-1) ........14 14 14 7 — 49
Colorado (1-8) .......0 7 3 0 — 10
First quarter
Oregon—Josh Conerly Jr. 4 yd pass
from Bo Nix (Camden Lewis kick),
12:14.
Oregon—Bo Nix 18 yd pass from
Bucky Irving (Camden Lewis kick),
2:25.
Second quarter
Oregon—Noah Sewell 1 yd run
(Camden Lewis kick), 12:43.
Colo—Jordyn Tyson 81 yd pass from
J.T. Shrout (Cole Becker kick), 12:14.
Oregon—Moliki Matavao 16 yd pass
from Bo Nix (Camden Lewis kick), 0:53.
Third quarter
Colo—Cole Becker 44 yd FG, 11:51.
Oregon—Bo Nix 1 yd run (Camden
Lewis kick), 8:17.
Oregon—Noah Whittington 9 yd run
(Camden Lewis kick), 3:25.
Fourth quarter
Oregon—Bo Nix 1 yd run (Camden
Lewis kick), 12:53.
Attendance: 42,089
Oregon Colo
First downs ............................. 21
20
Rushing-yards..................39-195 36-120
Passing .................................. 284
247
Comp-att-int ...................22-27-0 17-34-2
Return yards........................... 77
37
Punts-avg. .........................2-32.5 1-41.0
Fumbles-lost .......................... 2-0
5-1
Penalties-yards ................... 4-40
6-47
Time of possession .......... 28:36 31:24
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHING—Oregon, Irving 11-120,
Whittington 8-37, Nix 9-16, Dollars 6-15,
Haasenritter 2-9, Sewell 1-1, Thompson
2-(-3); Colo, Hankerson 11-54, Fontenot
7-41, Smith 5-27, Stacks 6-15, Shrout
3-3, Carter 1-(-4), Team 3-(-16)
PASSING—Oregon, Nix 20-24-0-274,
Thompson 1-2-0--8, Irving 1-1-0-18; Colo, Shrout 17-34-2-247
RECEIVING—Oregon, Whittington 526, Hutson 4-80, Ferguson 3-40, Matavao 2-26, Thornton 2-17, Franklin 1-41,
Herbert 1-23, Nix 1-18, Dollars 1-9, Conerly Jr. 1-4, Irving 1-0; Colo, Tyson 5137, Russell 4-27, Fontenot 3-31, Sneed
II 2-22, Lemonious-Craig 2-15, Hankerson 1-15
HOCKEY
MEN
NEW ENGLAND
Anna Maria 4...................Plymouth St. 3
Assumption 7..............Franklin Pierce 4
Babson 3......................................Elmira 1
Brown 3................................Dartmouth 2
Connecticut 3..............................Maine 2
Curry 5................................ Wentworth 1
Endicott 4...................................Nichols 2
Harvard 4........................................ Yale 0
Hobart 2..................... Southern Maine 1
Holy Cross 3............................Canisius 2
Merrimack 5................Boston College 2
New England 5........Johnson & Wales 2
Niagara 4...................................Bentley 2
Northeastern 3..........New Hampshire 0
Norwich 2......................UMass-Boston 1
Providence 4............... Massachusetts 3
Quinnipiac 2...............................Cornell 0
RIT 4...................................................AIC 3
Rivier 5.......................Worcester State 1
Sacred Heart 4..................Mercyhurst 3
Salve Regina 3...........................Suffolk 1
Southern N.H. 2...............St. Michael’s 1
St. Anselm 3................................... Post 1
UMass-Lowell 2......................Vermont 0
Univ. of New England 5Western New
England 3
Wilkes 3....................Albertus Magnus 2
OTHER EAST
Clarkson 3...........................Rensselaer 0
Colgate 4................................Princeton 3
Lindenwood 5...............................Army 3
St. Lawrence 4.............................Union 1
WEST
Air Force 3............. Alaska-Anchorage 1
WOMEN
NEW ENGLAND
.....................................................................
Connecticut 3..............Boston College 1
Elmira 9............................. Salem State 0
Endicott 3...................................Nichols 1
Merrimack 3........................Holy Cross 2
Northeastern 8..........New Hampshire 2
Norwich 10....................UMass-Boston 0
Plymouth St. 3..............................Curry 2
Providence 4...........Boston University 1
Quinnipiac 4................................Brown 1
Suffolk 5...........................Salve Regina 1
Union 5.................................Dartmouth 4
Vermont 7....................................Maine 2
Western New England 1University of
New England 0
William Smith 3.........Southern Maine 0
Yale 2......................................Princeton 0
OTHER EAST
Cornell 8..................................Clarkson 1
St. Lawrence 3................................. RIT 0
FIELD HOCKEY
SOCCER
MIAA tourney
MIAA tourney
DIVISION 1
Sat., Nov. 5 — First round
Andover 7......................Newton North 0
King Philip 3................................Natick 1
Lexington 3............................Braintree 2
Shrewsbury 5......................Marshfield 0
Mon., Nov. 7 — First round
Attleboro at Walpole, 5; Lincoln-Sudbury at Concord-Carlisle, 6.
Tue., Nov. 8 — Second round
King Philip at Bishop Feehan, 5; Lexington at Chelmsford, 5:30; Belmont at
Wachusett, 6.
Wed., Nov. 9 — Second round
Needham at Franklin, 4; Hingham vs.
Winchester at Woburn High School,
Woburn, 4:30.
TBA — Second round
Acton-Boxborough at Andover, TBA;
Doherty at Shrewsbury, TBA.
DIVISION 2
Sat., Nov. 5 — First round
Hopkinton 2................................Nauset 1
Milton 3.......................North Attleboro 2
Reading 5............................Silver Lake 0
Sun., Nov. 6 — First round
Tewksbury at Masconomet, 11a; Westborough at Falmouth, 3; Plymouth
North at Oliver Ames, 4; Westfield at
Somerset Berkley, 4; Holliston at
Nashoba, 5; Wakefield at Minnechaug,
6:30.
Tue., Nov. 8 — First round
Marblehead at Longmeadow, 6.
Wed., Nov. 9 — Second round
Bishop Fenwick at Leominster, 6:30.
TBA — Second round
TBA at Danvers, TBA; TBA at Reading,
TBA; Canton at TBA, TBA; Hopkinton at
TBA, TBA; Scituate at TBA, TBA; Westwood at TBA, TBA.
DIVISION 3
Sat., Nov. 5 — First round
Ashland 3.................Dennis-Yarmouth 2
Hanover 4.................................. Auburn 1
Notre Dame (W) 2....E. Longmeadow 1
Sandwich 7....................Old Rochester 0
Triton 2...................................Bp. Stang 1
Watertown 7.............................Norwell 0
Sun., Nov. 6 — First round
North Middlesex at Oakmont, 11a;
Stoneham at Foxborough, 11a; Middleborough at Dover-Sherborn, 4; Wilmington at Gloucester, 6.
Tue., Nov. 8 — Second round
Medfield at TBA, TBA; Ashland at Watertown, 3:30; Medway at Sandwich, 4;
Weston at Newburyport, 5:30; Hanover
at Swampscott, 6.
TBA — Second round
North Reading at TBA, TBA; Notre
Dame (Worcester) at TBA, TBA; Triton
at TBA, TBA.
DIVISION 4
Sat., Nov. 5 — First round
Greenfield 3................................Carver 1
Joseph Case 6.................N. Brookfield 2
Manchester 5....................Northbridge 0
Monomoy 9..........................Amesbury 0
Sutton 2........................St. John Paul II 1
Uxbridge 7..............................Westport 1
Sun., Nov. 6 — First round
Nantucket at Franklin County Tech,
1:30; Littleton at Pioneer Valley Regional, 2.
Mon., Nov. 7 — Second round
Greenfield at Frontier, 2:30.
Tue., Nov. 8 — Second round
Georgetown at Monomoy, 5.
BOYS
DIVISION 1
Sat., Nov. 5 — Preliminary
Andover ...................Springfield Central
Cambridge ..................................Doherty
Peabody 8...........................South High 2
Sat., Nov. 5 — First round
Weymouth ..................... Acton-Boxboro
Marshfield ....................................Milford
Attleboro 2..............................Hingham 1
Brockton 1.....................Newton North 0
Sun., Nov. 6 — First round
Beverly at St. John’s Prep, 11a; Lowell
at Concord-Carlisle, 3; BC High at Arlington, 4; Brookline at St. John’s
(Shrewsbury), 4; Barnstable at Needham, 6:30; Leominster vs. Framingham
at Framingham State, Framingham,
7:30.
Mon., Nov. 7 — First round
TBA at Ludlow, 6; TBA at Shrewsbury,
6; Belmont at Franklin, 6; Peabody at
Newton South, 6.
Wed., Nov. 9 — Second round
Central Catholic at TBA, TBA.
Thu., Nov. 10 — Second round
Attleboro at TBA, TBA; Lexington at
TBA, TBA.
TBA — Second round
Brockton at TBA, TBA.
DIVISION 2
Sat., Nov. 5 — Preliminary
Chelsea 2..................................Woburn 1
Falmouth 4........................Marblehead 0
Reading 2........................Northampton 1
Sat., Nov. 5 — First round
Canton ....................................... Nashoba
Longmeadow 4.....................Mansfield 1
Marlborough 2.....................Wakefield 1
Nauset 2....................................Billerica 1
Sharon 1......................North Attleboro 0
Sun., Nov. 6 — First round
Fitchburg at Hopkinton, 2; Chicopee
Comprehensive at Melrose, 5;
Agawam at Plymouth North, 6.
Mon., Nov. 7 — First round
Chelsea at Westborough, 4; Falmouth
at Holliston, 4; Silver Lake at Bedford,
5; Somerville at Wayland, 5; East Longmeadow at Milton, 6; Walpole at Westwood, 6; Reading at Oliver Ames, 6:30.
Tue., Nov. 8 — Second round
Longmeadow at Masconomet, 6:30.
Wed., Nov. 9 — Second round
Sharon at TBA, TBA.
DIVISION 3
Sat., Nov. 5 — Preliminary
Gr. New Bedford ..................Commerce
Sat., Nov. 5 — First round
Lynnfield ...............................Wilmington
Norwell 3......................E. Bridgewater 0
Stoneham 3...............................Saugus 0
Sun., Nov. 6 — First round
Dighton-Rehoboth at Pembroke, 12;
Greater Lowell at Martha’s Vineyard,
12:45; Old Rochester at Newburyport,
1; Bishop Stang at Oakmont, 2; Hudson
at Dover-Sherborn, 2; Diman at Medway, 2:30; Norton at Gloucester, 2:30;
St. Mary’s at Dedham, 4; TBA at Medfield, 4:30.
Mon., Nov. 7 — First round
East Boston at Belchertown, 6; North
Middlesex at North Reading, 6:30.
Wed., Nov. 9 — Second round
Hanover at TBA, TBA.
Thu., Nov. 10 — Second round
Latin Academy at TBA, TBA.
DIVISION 4
Sat., Nov. 5 — Preliminary
Amesbury 3................... Madison Park 0
Sat., Nov. 5 — First round
Assabet 3...................Monument Mtn. 2
Cohasset 1............................Nantucket 0
Lynn Tech 4.........................Lunenburg 0
Randolph 7...................................Burke 2
Wahconah 4.......................Shawsheen 0
Sun., Nov. 6 — First round
Hamilton-Wenham at Littleton, 12; Ipswich at Blackstone Valley, 12; Uxbridge at Rockland, 12; Manchester Essex at Frontier, 1; Bay Path at Pope
Francis, 4; Amesbury at South Hadley,
4:30.
Mon., Nov. 7 — First round
West Bridgewater at Easthampton, 2;
Sturgis West at Hampshire, 6.
Wed., Nov. 9 — Second round
Cohasset at Abington, 6.
DIVISION 5
Sat., Nov. 5 — Preliminary
Granby 3.........................McCann Tech 1
Smith Academy 5........ Hoosac Valley 0
Mon., Nov. 7 — Preliminary
Matignon at Worcester North, 4.
Sun., Nov. 6 — First round
Saint Joseph Prep at Bromfield, 11a; St.
John Paul II at Tahanto, 12; Springfield
International at Boston International,
12; Hopkins at Douglas, 1:30; Hopedale
at Oxford, 2; Atlantis Charter at Sutton,
2:30; Blue Hills at Mt. Greylock, 3; Pathfinder at Gardner, 5; Westfield Tech at
Quaboag, 7.
Mon., Nov. 7 — First round
Granby at Westport, 2; Brighton at
Taconic, 3; Smith Academy at Keefe
Tech, 3; Holbrook at Millis, 5; Pioneer
Charter I at Maynard, 6:30; Rockport at
KIPP Academy, 7:30.
GIRLS
DIVISION 1
Sat., Nov. 5 — Preliminary
Attleboro 2...............Bridge.-Raynham 1
Durfee 2...................................Peabody 1
Marshfield 5......... Springfield Central 0
Wachusett 5................. Lynn Classical 0
Sat., Nov. 5 — First round
Lincoln-Sudbury .........Concord-Carlisle
King Philip 6..............................Beverly 0
Methuen 4..........................Winchester 3
Sun., Nov. 6 — First round
Woburn at Brookline, 12; Braintree at
Newton South, 4; Weymouth at Needham, 5; Newton North at Acton-Boxborough, 5:30; Andover vs. Framingham at Framingham State, Framingham, 7:30.
Mon., Nov. 7 — First round
Marshfield at Wellesley, 2; Belmont at
Franklin, 4; Waltham at Bishop Feehan,
4; Attleboro at Hingham, 6; Durfee at
Algonquin, 6; Wachusett at Natick, 6.
Wed., Nov. 9 — Second round
Methuen at TBA, TBA.
Thu., Nov. 10 — Second round
Hopkinton at TBA, TBA; Shrewsbury at
TBA, TBA.
TBA — Second round
King Philip at TBA, TBA.
DIVISION 2
Sat., Nov. 5 — Preliminary
Whit.-Hanson 6........Amherst-Pelham 0
Sat., Nov. 5 — First round
E. Longmeadow .........................Melrose
Sun., Nov. 6 — First round
Ludlow at Oliver Ames, 1:30; Dartmouth at Masconomet, 2; Nauset at
Longmeadow, 3; Billerica at Plymouth
North, 4; Wayland at Grafton, 5; West
Springfield at Silver Lake, 5; Wilmington at Danvers, 6:30; Nashoba at Medfield, 6:45.
Mon., Nov. 7 — First round
Marblehead at Stoughton, 4; Scituate
at Canton, 5; Whitman-Hanson at
Notre Dame (Hingham), 5; Pembroke
at Minnechaug, 6; Walpole at Mansfield, 6; Westwood at Duxbury, 6; Holliston at Westborough, 6:30.
DIVISION 3
Sat., Nov. 5 — Preliminary
Apponequet 4.........................O'Bryant 0
Sandwich 3.........................Shawsheen 0
Sat., Nov. 5 — First round
Abp. Williams 1......................... Norton 0
Medway 2....................Card. Spellman 1
Sun., Nov. 6 — First round
Auburn at Pentucket, 12; Martha’s
Vineyard at Hanover, 1; Foxborough at
Dedham, 2; East Bridgewater at Norwell, 3; Fairhaven at Newburyport,
3:30; Middleborough at Stoneham,
4:30; Lynnfield at Swampscott, 6; Watertown at Weston, 6; Advanced Math
and Science at South Hadley, 6:30.
Mon., Nov. 7 — First round
Sandwich at Nipmuc, 2:30; Bishop
Stang at Belchertown, 4; St. Mary’s at
North Reading, 4; Apponequet at Dover-Sherborn, 6; Saugus at Tantasqua,
7.
DIVISION 4
Sat., Nov. 5 — Preliminary
E. Boston 3........................... Amesbury 2
Sat., Nov. 5 — First round
Millbury .....................................Bay Path
Ipswich 3...................Notre Dame (W) 2
Manchester 2......................Tyngsboro 1
Monument Mtn. 3.....................Clinton 0
Pope Francis 6.......................Mashpee 0
Wahconah 5................... Malden Cath. 0
W. Bridgewater 4....................Whittier 0
Sun., Nov. 6 — First round
East Boston vs. Cohasset at Cohasset
High, Cohasset, TBA; Nantucket at
Northbridge, 2; St. Mary (Westfield) at
Uxbridge, 2; Monomoy at Littleton,
2:30; Sturgis West at Hamilton-Wenham, 4; Blackstone-Millville at Hampshire, 5.
Mon., Nov. 7 — First round
Southwick at Lunenburg, 5; Easthampton at Leicester, 6.
Tue., Nov. 8 — Second round
Blackstone Valley at West Bridgewater, TBA.
DIVISION 5
Sat., Nov. 5 — Preliminary
Granby 4............................Upper Cape 1
Sat., Nov. 5 — First round
Lenox 4...........................................Millis 2
Sun., Nov. 6 — First round
Hopkins at Douglas, 11a; Parker Charter at Monson, 12; Carver at Mt. Greylock, 1; Smith Academy at Bromfield,
1:30; Blue Hills at St. John Paul II, 3; Oxford at Quaboag, 4:30; Frontier at Hull,
5; Nashoba Valley Tech at Gardner, 7.
Mon., Nov. 7 — First round
Norfolk Aggie at Sutton, 2; Holbrook at
Whitinsville Christian, 3; Mystic Valley
at Maynard, 4:30; Granby at David
Prouty, 5; Hopedale at Tahanto, 5;
Drury at Palmer, 6; West Boylston at
Georgetown, 6:30.
Wed., Nov. 9 — Second round
Lenox at TBA, TBA.
FOOTBALL
MIAA tourney
DIVISION 1
Thu., Nov. 10 — Quarterfinals
Xaverian at Springfield Central, 6.
Fri., Nov. 11 — Quarterfinals
Everett at Central Catholic, 7.
TBA — Quarterfinals
Methuen at Franklin, TBA; St. John’s
Prep at Andover, TBA.
TBA — Semifinals
TBA — Final
DIVISION 2
Fri., Nov. 11 — Quarterfinals
Mansfield at Milford, 6; Marshfield at
King Philip, 7.
TBA — Quarterfinals
Bishop Feehan at Reading, TBA;
Chelmsford at Catholic Memorial, TBA.
DIVISION 3
Thu., Nov. 10 — Quarterfinals
Wakefield at Plymouth South, 7; Walpole at Hanover, 7.
Fri., Nov. 11 — Quarterfinals
Marblehead at Milton, 6; Billerica at
North Attleborough, 6:30.
DIVISION 4
Fri., Nov. 11 — Quarterfinals
Marlborough at Grafton, 6; Scituate at
Holliston, 6; Foxborough at Bedford, 7;
Middleborough at Duxbury, 7.
DIVISION 5
Thu., Nov. 10 — Quarterfinals
Apponequet at North Reading, 6.
Fri., Nov. 11 — Quarterfinals
Old Rochester at Shawsheen, 6; Bishop
Fenwick at Maynard/AMSA, 7; DoverSherborn at Hudson, 7.
DIVISION 6
Sat., Nov. 5 — First round
Blackstone Valley 33Arlington Cath. 21
Thu., Nov. 10 — Quarterfinals
Oakmont at Stoneham, 6:30.
Fri., Nov. 11 — Quarterfinals
Lynnfield at St. Mary's, 6.
Sat., Nov. 12 — Quarterfinals
Cardinal Spellman at Blackstone Valley, 1.
TBA — Quarterfinals
Abington at Rockland, TBA.
DIVISION 7
Sat., Nov. 5 — First round
Uxbridge 36.......................Lunenburg 34
Thu., Nov. 10 — Quarterfinals
Clinton vs. Cohasset at Scituate High
School, Scituate, TBA.
Fri., Nov. 11 — Quarterfinals
Uxbridge at St. Bernard's, 7; Wahconah
at West Boylston, 7.
TBA — Quarterfinals
Millbury at Amesbury, TBA.
DIVISION 8
Sat., Nov. 5 — First round
KIPP Academy 44..........................Lee 12
Lowell Cath. 32...........................Millis 20
TBA — Quarterfinals
Brighton at Oxford, TBA; Cathedral at
Hull, TBA; KIPP Academy at Lowell
Catholic, TBA; Old Colony at Manchester Essex, TBA.
VOLLEYBALL
MIAA tourney
GIRLS
DIVISION 1
Sat., Nov. 5 — First round
Andover 3...................................Quincy 0
Methuen 3...........................N. Andover 0
Mon., Nov. 7 — Second round
Concord-Carlisle at Newton North, 6;
Needham at Attleboro, 6.
Tue., Nov. 8 — Second round
Natick at Lincoln-Sudbury, 4:30;
Shrewsbury at Barnstable, 5; Algonquin at Newton South, 6.
Wed., Nov. 9 — Second round
Acton-Boxborough at Franklin, 5.
TBA — Second round
Haverhill at Andover, TBA; Winchester
at TBA, TBA.
DIVISION 2
Mon., Nov. 7 — Second round
Amherst-Pelham at Duxbury, 5; Canton
at Dartmouth, 5; Mansfield at Masconomet, 5; North Quincy at Longmeadow, 6.
Tue., Nov. 8 — Second round
Nashoba at King Philip, 5; Milton at
Westborough, 6; Woburn at Westwood, 6:30.
Wed., Nov. 9 — Second round
Billerica at Melrose, 6:30.
DIVISION 3
Mon., Nov. 7 — Second round
Dighton-Rehoboth at Medfield, 6.
Tue., Nov. 8 — Second round
Foxborough at Newburyport, 5; Wayland at Tewksbury, 5; East Longmeadow at Cardinal Spellman, 5:30; GrotonDunstable at Dennis-Yarmouth, 6; Hudson at Norton, 6.
Wed., Nov. 9 — Second round
Bedford at Old Rochester, 6; Greater
New Bedford at Ashland, 6.
DIVISION 4
Sat., Nov. 5 — First round
Ipswich 3...............................Stoneham 1
Medway 3..................Monument Mtn. 0
Wahconah 3.................E. Bridgewater 0
Mon., Nov. 7 — Second round
Blackstone Valley at Nantucket, 5.
Tue., Nov. 8 — Second round
Advanced Math and Science at Ipswich, 5; Wahconah at Medway, 5:30;
Hamilton-Wenham at Ursuline, 6.
Wed., Nov. 9 — Second round
Arlington Catholic at Weston, 5; Norwell at Nipmuc, 5; Sandwich at Joseph
Case, 6.
TBA — Second round
Rockland at Lynnfield, TBA.
DIVISION 5
Sat., Nov. 5 — First round
Douglas 3....................... Mohawk Trail 0
Sutton 3......................................Bourne 0
Mon., Nov. 7 — Second round
Whitinsville Christian at Turners Falls,
5.
Tue., Nov. 8 — Second round
Blackstone-Millville at Mt. Greylock, 5;
South Shore Voc-Tech at Frontier, 5.
Wed., Nov. 9 — Second round
Georgetown at West Bridgewater, 5;
Bourne at Paulo Freire, 6; Millis at Easthampton, 6; Southwick at Hopedale, 6.
TBA — Second round
Lee at Douglas, TBA.
TBA — Quarterfinals
TBA — Semifinals
TBA — Final
R For updated scores and highlights,
go to bostonglobe.com/sports/highschools.
MON
TUE
11/7
11/8
WED
THU
11/9
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FRI
11/11
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SAT
11/12
IND
1:00
CBS
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7:00
NESN
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7:00
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9:00
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BUF
7:00
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7:30
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Home games shaded
DEN
7:00
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NBCSB
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For updated scores: bostonglobe.com/sports
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NBA
Sunday
Favorite
Line
Underdog
At LA Lakers....OFF .............Cleveland
At Toronto........OFF ................Chicago
At Memphis..........7½ .........Washington
At LA Clippers.OFF ......................Utah
NFL
Sunday
Favorite
Pts.
Underdog
Green Bay.............3½ .............At Detroit
Minnesota.............3 ....At Washington
La Chargers..........3 ............At Atlanta
At New England...4½ .........Indianapolis
Miami.....................4½ ...........At Chicago
At Cincinnati.........7 ................Carolina
Las Vegas............. 2½ ....At Jacksonville
Buffalo.................10½ ............At NY Jets
At Arizona.............1½ ..................Seattle
At Tampa Bay...... 3 ...............LA Rams
At Kansas City...12½ ........... Tennessee
Monday
Baltimore..............1½ ..At New Orleans
NHL
Sunday
Favorite
Line Underdog
Line
At Carolina.....-164 Toronto..........+134
At NY Rangrs.-260 Detroit............+210
Florida.............-205 At Anaheim...+168
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Baseball
MLB: Announced approval of a roster substitution due to injury for 1B Yuli Gurriel. He will be replaced by C Korey Lee.
Houston: Placed 1B Yuli Gurriel on
the 10-day IL. Activated C Kory Lee.
NFL
Arizona: Signed P Nolan Cooney to
practice squad and promoted him to
the active roster. Promoted DL Manny
Jones to the active roster from practice squad. Released OL Koda Martin.
Atlanta: Reinstated RB Cordarrelle
Patterson to the active roster from injured reserve. Signed DL Jalen Dalton
to the active roster. Placed G Elijah
Wilkinson on injured reserve. Released
OLB Quinton Bell. Promoted S Jovante
Moffatt and OL Ryan Neuzil to the active roster from practice squad.
Carolina: Promoted S Marquise Blair
and Spencer Brown to the active roster
from practice squad.
Cincinnati: Signed DT Domenique
Davis to the active roster from practice
squad. Promoted DB Allan George and
WR Trenton Irwin to the active roster
from practice squad. Placed CB Chidobe Awuzie on injured reserve.
Detroit: Signe WR Stanley Berryhill
to the active roster. Promoted WR
Brandon Zylstra and TE Sahne Zylstra
to the active roster from practice
squad.
Green Bay: Reinstated LB Krys
Barnes to the active roster from injured reserve.
Indianapolis: Promoted RBs Phillip
Lindsay and Jordan Wilkins to the active roster from practice squad.
Kansas City: Promoted WR Marcus
Kemp to the active roster from practice squad.
Las Vegas: Promoted CB Nickell
Robey-Coleman to the active roster
from practice squad.
LA Chargers: Placed TE Donald Parham on injured reserve. Signed WR
Keelan Doss to the active roster. Promoted K Cameron Dicker and CB Kemon Hall to the active roster from
practice squad.
LA Rams: Signed T Chandler Brewer
to the active roster. Reinstated LB Travin Howard to the active roster from
injured reserve. Placed LB Jake Hummel on injured reserve. Promoted TE
Jared Pinkney and RB Ronnie Rivers to
the active roster from practice squad.
Miami: Promoted T Kion Smith to the
active roster from practice squad.
Minnesota: Promoted TE Nick Muse
and WR Dan Chisena to the active roster from practice squad.
New England: Signed RB J.J. Taylor
to the active roster from practice
squad. Placed OL Marcus Cannon on
injured reserve. Promoted WR Lynn
Bowden Jr. and Ol Kody Russey to the
active roster from practice squad.
NY Jets: Signed TE Kenny Yeboah to
the active roster. Promoted OL Connor
McDermott to the active roster from
practice squad. Signed S Jared
Mayden to practice squad.
Seattle: Promoted LB Joshua Onujiogu to the active roster from practice
squad.
Tennessee: Promoted QB Logan
Woodside and DL Larrell Murchison to
the active roster from practice squad.
Washington: Promoted FB/TE Alex
Armah and LB Nathan Gerry to the active roster from practice squad.
NHL
Arizona: Recalled F Laurent Dauphin
from Tucson (AHL).
Detroit: Recalled F Austin Czarnik
from Grand Rapids (AHL).
Los Angeles: Recalled C Rasmus Kupari from Ontario (AHL).
New Jersey: Reassigned F Andreas
Johnsson to Utica (AHL). Recalled G
Akira Schmid from Utica.
Toronto: Reinstated C David Krejci to
the active roster from injured reserve.
Washington: Assigned RW Garrett
Pilon to Hershey (AHL) on loan.
AHL
Lehigh Valley: Recalled G Pat Nagle
from Reading (ECHL).
Milwaukee: Recalled D Xavier
Bouchard from Norfolk (ECHL).
Providence: Acquired D Mitchell
Miller.
ECHL
ECHL: Suspended Trois-Rivieres
Brennan Saulnier two games and an
fined him an undisclosed amount for
boarding in a game against Adirondack on Nov. 4.
Adirondack: Signed D Wayne Letourneau to the active roster. Placed D
Jeff Taylor on injured reserve, effective
Nov. 5.
Florida : Activated D Nolan Kneen
from reserve. Placed D Cole Moberg on
reserve.
Greenville: Activated D Ethan Cap
from reserve. Placed D Bobby Russell
on reserve.
Iowa: Released D Connor Russell.
Jacksonville: Activated G Charles
Williams from injured reserve. Placed
G Parker Gahagen on reserve.
Kalamazoo: Activated D Anthony
Florentino from injured reserve and F
Weiland Parrish from reserve. Placed F
Darby Llewellyn and D Jeremy Masella
on reserve.
Kansas City: Activated F Garrett Klee
from reserve. Placed F Keeghan Howdeshell on reserve.
Norfolk: Traded D D.J. King to Fort
Wayne. Acquired D D.J. King from Fort
Wayne and activated him. Activated F
Kenny Hausinger from injured reserve.
Reading: Activated D Ryan Romeo
from injured reserve.
Tulsa : Loaned D Jarod Hilderman to
San Diego (AHL). Acquired G Colten Ellis.
Utah : Assigned G Mario Vrab to the
emergency backup goalie list (EBUG).
Wheeling: Suspended F Luke Santerno.
Worcester: Activated F Jacob Hayhurst from reserve. Placed F Quinn Ryan on reserve.
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PGA: WWT
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At El Camaleon Golf Club,
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Yardage: 7,034; par: 71
At Seta Golf Club, Otsu City, Japan
Yardage: 6,616; par: 72
Russell Henley..........63-63-65–191
Will Gordon...............62-67-68–197
Patton Kizzire...........65-65-67–197
Seamus Power.........67-68-63–198
Brian Harman...........66-66-67–199
Troy Merritt..............65-69-65–199
Thomas Detry...........70-66-64–200
Viktor Hovland.........65-69-66–200
Matthias Schwab.....66-68-66–200
Greyson Sigg............66-67-67–200
Joel Dahmen.............68-67-66–201
Harry Higgs...............70-62-69–201
Martin Laird..............65-67-69–201
Scott Piercy..............64-69-68–201
Brandon Wu..............68-66-67–201
Dean Burmester.......68-70-64–202
Lee Hodges...............67-71-64–202
David Lingmerth......65-66-71–202
David Lipsky.............66-70-66–202
Maverick McNealy...65-68-69–202
Taylor Montgomery 65-70-67–202
Collin Morikawa.......71-63-68–202
Henrik Norlander.....67-70-65–202
Davis Riley................67-67-68–202
Sam Ryder................ 64-65-73–202
J.J. Spaun...................65-70-67–202
Austin Cook..............70-67-66–203
Adam Hadwin...........66-70-67–203
Charley Hoffman..... 68-68-67–203
John Huh...................65-70-68–203
Alex Noren................67-69-67–203
Patrick Rodgers.......66-67-70–203
Justin Suh..................67-69-67–203
Danny Willett............65-71-67–203
Eric Cole....................70-68-66–204
Jason Day..................73-64-67–204
Austin Eckroat..........69-68-67–204
Nick Hardy................67-70-67–204
Matt Kuchar..............66-67-71–204
Scottie Scheffler......65-71-68–204
Joseph Bramlett.......65-72-68–205
Harris English...........64-70-71–205
Justin Lower.............68-68-69–205
Robert Streb.............68-67-70–205
Ben Taylor.................68-70-67–205
Aaron Wise...............67-71-67–205
Ryan Armour............67-69-70–206
Dylan Frittelli............72-66-68–206
Andrew Putnam.......71-66-69–206
Hayden Buckley.......68-68-71–207
Beau Hossler............71-65-71–207
K.H. Lee.....................69-68-70–207
Sebastian Munoz.....70-68-69–207
Billy Horschel...........70-67-71–208
Philip Knowles..........68-70-70–208
Carson Young...........70-67-71–208
Lucas Glover.............69-69-71–209
Ben Griffin.................66-71-72–209
Emiliano Grillo..........67-69-73–209
Chris Kirk.................. 71-67-71–209
Russell Knox.............71-67-71–209
Ryan Moore..............69-69-71–209
Nick Taylor................70-67-72–209
Brendon Todd...........67-68-74–209
M.J. Daffue................69-69-72–210
Danny Lee.................71-67-72–210
Rory Sabbatini..........67-70-73–210
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Soccer
PREMIER LEAGUE
GP W D L Pts.
Manchester City .... 13 10 2 1 32
Arsenal..................... 12 10 1 1 31
Tottenham............... 13 8 2 3 26
Newcastle................ 13 6 6 1 24
Man. United ............ 12 7 2 3 23
Brighton................... 13 6 3 4 21
Chelsea .................... 12 6 3 3 21
Fulham..................... 14 5 4 5 19
Liverpool.................. 12 4 4 4 16
Brentford................. 14 3 7 4 16
Crystal Palace ........ 12 4 4 4 16
Leeds United........... 13 4 3 6 15
Leicester City ......... 14 4 2 8 14
West Ham ............... 13 4 2 7 14
Everton .................... 14 3 5 6 14
Bournemouth.......... 14 3 4 7 13
Aston Villa............... 13 3 3 7 12
Southampton.......... 13 3 3 7 12
Wolverhampton ..... 14 2 4 8 10
Nottinghm Forest... 14 2 4 8 10
SATURDAY’S RESULTS
At Leeds United 4.AFC Bournemouth 3
At Manchester City 2..............Fulham 1
Brentford 2.......at Nottingham Forest 2
Brighton 3............. at Wolverhampton 2
SUNDAY’S GAMES
Arsenal at Chelsea...............................7a
Man. United at Aston Villa................. 9a
Newcastle at Southampton................9a
Crystal Palace at West Ham..............9a
Liverpool at Tottenham............... 11:30a
Autoracing
NASCAR CHAMPIONSHIP
Standings are for 35 races through
Xfinity 500, with points, wins, and top
10 finishes.
Pts. W T10
Joey Logano.....................5,000
3 16
Christopher Bell..............5,000
3 19
Ross Chastain..................5,000
2 20
Chase Elliott ....................5,000
5 20
Momoko Ueda.........65-69-68-–202
Gemma Dryburgh...71-67-65-–203
Miyu Yamashita..... 67-68-69-–204
Saiki Fujita...............71-66-69-–206
Linn Grant................69-70-67-–206
Sakura Koiwai.........66-70-70-–206
Jeongeun Lee..........69-68-69-–206
Yuna Nishimura......70-69-67-–206
P. Anannarukarn.... 69-69-69-–207
Ayaka Furue............66-71-70-–207
Kana Nagai..............68-70-69-–207
Ai Suzuki..................65-70-72-–207
H. Mrita-WnyaoLu..71-71-66-–208
Wei-Ling Hsu...........69-69-71-–209
Chisato Iwai............70-68-71-–209
Kana Mikashima.....74-67-68-–209
Emma Talley........... 71-69-69-–209
Yuri Yoshida............71-69-69-–209
Carlota Ciganda......69-71-70-–210
Ah-Reum Hwang....73-71-66-–210
Mone Inami.............70-70-70-–210
Minami Katsu..........73-70-67-–210
Matilda Castren......71-71-69-–211
Moriya Jutanugarn.70-71-70-–211
P. Phatlum...............74-72-65-–211
Yuting Shi................68-72-71-–211
Atthaya Thitikul......71-67-73-–211
Hyejin Choi..............70-71-71-–212
Miyu Goto................73-71-68-–212
Nasa Hataoka......... 74-71-67-–212
Mao Nozawa...........71-70-71-–212
Shuri Sakuma..........70-72-70-–212
Sayaka Takahashi..72-71-69-–212
Lilia Vu..................... 75-70-67-–212
Seon Woo Bae........69-74-70-–213
Esther Henseleit.....70-70-73-–213
P. Roussin-Bouchrd71-72-70-–213
Mao Saigo................72-72-69-–213
Jenny Shin............... 70-70-73-–213
Jiyai Shin..................70-72-71-–213
Na Rin An.................69-70-75-–214
Daniela Darquea.....72-70-72-–214
Mina Harigae.......... 70-71-73-–214
Min Young Lee........73-68-73-–214
Minjee Lee...............72-69-73-–214
Ayaka Watanabe....68-75-71-–214
Lindsey Weaver......69-74-71-–214
Serena Aoki.............73-72-70-–215
Kotone Hori.............68-76-71-–215
Mi Jeong Jeon.........75-71-69-–215
Erika Kikuchi...........75-70-70-–215
Ayako Kimura.........74-71-70-–215
N. Koerstz Madsen.73-72-70-–215
Miyu Sato.................71-76-68-–215
Sophia Schubert.....71-76-68-–215
Nana Suganuma.....71-72-72-–215
Kelly Tan..................71-76-68-–215
Mami Fukuda..........72-73-71-–216
Alison Lee................70-72-74-–216
Stephanie Meadow73-73-70-–216
Shoko Sasaki...........70-75-71-–216
Hinako Shibuno......75-69-72-–216
Patty Tavatanakit...71-71-74-–216
Pei-Ying Tsai...........75-71-70-–216
Albane Valenzuela.72-75-69-–216
Stephanie Kyriacou72-71-74-–217
Momoko Osato.......74-73-70-–217
Nozomi Uetake.......72-74-71-–217
Chella Choi..............74-71-73-–218
Maria Fassi..............73-71-74-–218
Wichanee Meechai 77-73-68-–218
Anna Nordqvist.......71-77-70-–218
Angel Yin..................75-70-73-–218
Ariya Jutanugarn....71-72-76-–219
Yealimi Noh.............72-71-76-–219
Marina Alex.............74-74-72-–220
Yuka Saso................73-79-70-–222
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+1
+1
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+6
CHAMPIONS: TIMBERTECH
At Royal Palm Yacht & CC,
Boca Raton, Fla.
Yardage: 7,015; par: 72
Bernhard Langer..........70-63-–133
Paul Goydos..................68-66-–134
Rod Pampling...............68-69-–137
Steven Alker.................70-68-–138
Stephen Ames..............70-68-–138
Darren Clarke...............72-66-–138
Joe Durant.....................71-67-–138
Thongchai Jaidee.........70-68-–138
Padraig Harrington..... 72-67-–139
Miguel Angel Jimenez.67-72-–139
John Huston..................71-69-–140
Kevin Sutherland.........74-66-–140
David Toms...................70-70-–140
Ken Duke.......................73-68-–141
Jim Furyk.......................71-70-–141
Shane Bertsch..............75-67-–142
Scott Dunlap.................73-69-–142
Robert Karlsson...........69-73-–142
Jerry Kelly.....................71-71-–142
Billy Andrade................74-69-–143
Doug Barron................. 73-70-–143
Paul Broadhurst...........70-73-–143
K.J. Choi.........................70-73-–143
Marco Dawson.............72-71-–143
Retief Goosen...............70-73-–143
Colin Montgomerie......70-73-–143
Paul Stankowski..........71-72-–143
Harrison Frazar............71-73-–144
Brian Gay.......................74-70-–144
Tom Pernice, Jr............69-75-–144
Gene Sauers................. 74-70-–144
Steve Flesch................. 74-71-–145
Scott Parel....................70-75-–145
Kirk Triplett...................73-72-–145
Scott McCarron............69-77-–146
Bob Estes...................... 77-70-–147
Woody Austin...............74-74-–148
Mark Hensby................74-74-–148
Lee Janzen....................74-74-–148
Jeff Maggert.................72-76-–148
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+4
Tennis
ROLEX PARIS MASTERS
At AccorHotels Arena, Paris
Men’s singles
Semi Finals
Holger Rune, def. Felix Auger-Aliassime (8), 6-4, 6-2; Novak Djokovic (6),
def. Stefanos Tsitsipas (5), 6-2, 3-6, 7-6
(4).
ALSO INSIDE: HELP WANTED AND CLASSIFIEDS
Address
ONLINE
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MARKET
UPDATE
YOUR REALESTATE GUIDE TO BUYING, SELLING, LIVING
B O S T O N S U N DAY G L O B E N O V E M B E R 6 , 2 0 2 2 | B O S T O N.C O M / R E A L E S TAT E
How a court ruling
in a double homicide could
cost condo owners
millions
Lawyers urge boards and associations to
review their security policies and call in
experts to protect residents.
By Jim Morrison
A
GLOBE CORRESPONDENT
July decision by a Superior Court
judge could open the door to
holding condominium associations responsible for the safety
and security of building occupants if the threat is reasonably
foreseeable.
And that could mean big costs for condo owners if properties are found to be negligent.
In Field, et al. v. Highbridge Concierge Inc., et
al., the estates of two anesthesiologists who were
brutally murdered in their South Boston penthouse condo in 2017 are suing the condominium
association as well as the management and concierge companies. On Oct. 20, the Supreme Judicial Court upheld the convictions of Bampumim
S. Teixeira, who is serving a sentence of life without the possibility of parole. Teixeira had worked
as a concierge in the building.
Lawyers for the condo association asked the
judge to dismiss the lawsuits by the doctors’ estates on the grounds that the group had no legal
requirement to protect residents against crimes
SECURITY, Page G3,
PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY MAURA INTEMANN/GLOBE STAFF
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*Based on Coldwell Banker Realty property spotlight marketing plan usage data from July 1, 2018 through December 31, 2021 with an average sales price of properties marketed through Listing Concierge of $603,666. Results are not guaranteed. ©2022 Coldwell Banker. All Rights Reserved.
Coldwell Banker and the Coldwell Banker logos are trademarks of Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. The Coldwell Banker® System is comprised of company owned offices which are owned by a subsidiary of Realogy Brokerage Group LLC and franchised offices which are independently owned and
operated. The Coldwell Banker System fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act.
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NOVEMBER 6, 2022
G l o b e
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Get your whole yard ready for the winter hiatus
The Gardener
CAROL STOCKER
Answers your questions
about flowers, plants,
vegetables, soil, and more.
What to do this week This is my last garden column
until next spring. We have been enjoying a surprisingly
colorful fall after last summer’s drought. Here in Milton
we have already unhooked and stored the garden hoses
and outdoor furniture in the basement after last week’s
first frost. But we will wait until next spring to cut down
the perennial garden and to prune trees and shrubs so
we can see what has survived this tough year and is
sprouting new growth. We will protect young trees from
gnawing rodents with 18-inch-high tree guards or collars
handmade from metal hardware cloth. We will keep
mowing the lawn to 1½ inches until daytime temperatures stay in the 50s. We rake the mowed leaves into piles
to turn into nutritious leaf mold for next year’s garden.
Before storing our walk-behind gasoline mower for the
winter, we will get rid of the old gas by running the mower dry. We also have to remove and store the battery and
wipe grass clumps off the deck underneath after removing the spark plugs. While we are at it, we will replace
any corroded or cracked spark plugs and coat the underside of the deck with WD-40. We check our mower’s
product manual for instructions on sharpening or replacing blades. And in search of easier machine maintenance
and less pollution, we will look into buying an electric
mower. During the winter downtime, I will dip into
“American Wildflowers: A Literary Field Guide”
(Abrams), a sensitive but substantial florilegium of poems, essays, and letters from the 1700s to the present
about wildflowers and their place in this world past,
present, and future, edited by Cambridge poet Susan
Barba. We gardeners especially need books like this.
Q. I was dismayed to see your advice to homeowners to
use high phosphorus fertilizer on their lawns. Please see
this link — www.mass.gov/doc/phosphorus-fertilizer-retail-sign/download — on the state website. Phosphorus
should be used only if a soil test shows it is needed.
G.C., Franklin
A. You are right. Massachusetts has outlawed the use of
phosphorus as lawn fertilizer unless you are seeding your
lawn, in which case you want to apply a starter fertilizer at
the time of seeding or when the new grass is an inch tall.
The other exception is if you have a soil test showing phosphorus insufficiency. You should test your soil before
starting a new lawn, anyway, using either a do-it-yourself
kit or preferably the University of Massachusetts Extension Service (soiltest@umass.edu), which gives more detail. Phosphorus is great for grass roots, but over-applications are polluting our watersheds and suffocating aquatic
life. It is delivered through our storm drain systems even
if you don’t actually live near a pond or stream.
Q. What is the best time to plant grass seed?
J.M., Hanson
A. September is the best month by far. It’s too late now
unless you are in a warmer area like Cape Cod.
Q. What is the best type of lawn seed to use?
R.E.L., Dedham
A. Look for a grass mix with more tall fescue than anything else. This is what survived last summer’s drought
best, though you also want bluegrass and ryegrass seed
in the mix.
Q. Is there an ornamental tree that can overwinter
outside in a plastic pot?
C.C., Ipswich
A. Dwarf evergreens are good choices for outdoor
containers. Not that they don’t get bigger. We transplanted our “dwarf” arborvitae from its heavy plastic
pot on our solid concrete front steps into our backyard
this fall when it exceeded 6 feet. Before that we had a
dwarf Alberta spruce. Both our potted trees were neat,
conical evergreens. We could even decorate them as
miniature Christmas trees. Use the largest and sturdiest pot you can find, one that is at least 17 inches in diameter. Fill it with a couple of 20-pound bags of potting soil, not backyard earth, to promote perfect drainage. Water during warm spells. Look for winter-proof
wood or metal pots. Some garden supply stores sell
wrap-around felted “wool blankets” to winterize plastic
pots by insulating tree roots from sudden changes in
temperature.
And don’t expect potted trees to have a long life.
“We don’t warranty trees that are not planted in the
ground,” said Jack Russell, a manager at Russell’s Garden
Center in Wayland. “Keep your expectations low and be
pleasantly surprised if it survives.”
Sometimes that sums up gardening in general!
Please note: Carol Stocker is on winter hiatus until
March. Subscribe to the Address newsletter on
Boston.com/realestate.
HOME OF THE WEEK
Here, nature and architecture have an understanding
2 6 H A N L O N R OA D, H O L L I S T O N
By Maya Homan
is recessed.
A hallway to the right off the sitature takes center stage
ting room contains a half bath with
in this four-bedroom
beige walls, white bead board wainColonial on 2-plus acres, scoting, a console/pedestal sink, and
from the beam work to
a glass-block window. A laundry
the hardwood flooring
room completes this floor.
to the expansive muntin-less winThe stairs to the second floor sit
dows that capture the natural light
to the right of the fireplace in the
and the beauty of the woodsy lot.
family room. The first bedroom on
Terra-cotta tiles line the foyer,
this level is the 552-square-foot ownwith a double-doored closet to the
er suite, which faces the side yard
right providing a place to store jackand gunite pool. The ceiling is vaultets and shoes. Straight ahead, one
ed and the space features rake winfinds a family room with tan walls
dows, exposed beams, a ceiling fan,
oak flooring, and sconces mounted
and exposed beams running across
the ceiling. There’s room for a couch
on either side of the bed. A woodand a few chairs around the brick
burning fireplace offers a convenient
fireplace, which has a wood stove inway to tame heating bills, and two
sert. Across from the way, a small,
walk-in closets with double louvered
tile-floored section of the family room
doors fill the right wall. (The owners
with tall windows overlooks the backhave never used the fireplace, howyard pool. The lighting throughout
ever.) A sliding glass door on the far
this room is recessed, and the floorend of the room leads out to a balcoing is oak.
ny with enough room for a few
The formal dining room sits deeplounge chairs.
The owner suite bath features
er in the house and features white upper walls and beige lower ones bisect’50s-style square black-and-white tile
ed by a chair rail. A track of four
running throughout the space and
lights
halfway up the walls.
hangs from
The fiberglass tub/
$860,000
an exposed
shower combo has
Style Colonial/Gambrel Cape
beam over
jets, and the dual
Year built 1974
the dining
vanity is topped with
Square feet 3,265
table. Two
Corian. A skylight fills
Bedrooms 4
windows
the space with natuBaths 2 full, 1 half
provide a
ral light.
Sewer/water Private/public
clear view
The remaining
Taxes $11,975 (2022 estimated)
of the surthree bedrooms,
rounding
which range from
woodland, and a set of glass doors
114 to 225 square feet, are down the
leads out to the pool area.
hall. The two bigger bedrooms conTo the right of this room, an open
tain a ceiling fan, a double-doored
layout encompassing an informal
closet, and several windows each,
dining area and the kitchen runs the
while the last room, which has an exlength of one side of the home.
posed beam running across the ceilThe kitchen has white cabinetry,
ing, is set up as a home office.
dark granite countertops, and oak
Those bedrooms share a full bath
flooring. The countertop is L-shaped,
with a tub/shower combination and a
with two pendant lights hanging over
dual vanity topped with white Corian
the shorter leg, which offers seating
that complements the seafoam-colfor two. The sink is at a diagonal, facored cabinetry. The flooring is a gray
tile, and bejeweled frames line both
ing out toward the dining area. A
mirrors above the vanity. The winshiny subway tile backsplash in a vadows, including a skylight, let in
riety of whitish hues lines two walls.
plenty of natural light.
The appliances are all stainless steel,
The basement is finished, and the
and the lighting is recessed.
home has an attached two-car garage
In the dining space, one wall is
with bonus space above it.
lined with nearly floor-to-ceiling winThe home has undergone several
dows, and a sliding glass door opens
updates, including the installation of
out to a wood deck. There’s enough
new sliders, an invisible fence, the
space for a dining table that seats six,
roof, heating system, all of the decks,
and a built-in pantry with double
kitchen and bath remodels, and intedoors sits to the right. The recessed
rior paint.
lighting and exposed beams continue
Liz Kelly from the Vesta Real Esthroughout this area as well, with a
tate Group has the listing.
elegantly carved support beam sitting
at its center.
Maya Homan can be reached
A mudroom with hooks for coats
at maya.homan@globe.com.
and bags and a wooden built-in
bench serves as the connection beSend listing candidates to
homeoftheweek@globe.com. Please
tween the kitchen/dining area and a
note: We do not feature unfurnished
sitting room where four white builthomes and will not respond to
in bookcases line a wall and there is
submissions we won’t pursue.
more than enough space for two
Subscribe to our newsletter at
chairs, an end table, and a couch. A
Boston.com/realestate and follow
set of three windows lets in natural
Address on Twitter @globehomes and
light. The walls in this room are gray,
Boston.com on Facebook..
the flooring is oak, and the lighting
N
GLOBE CORRESPONDENT
PHOTOS BY WHITNEY SHAW/BESTHDTOUR
TOP The owner suite
features a wall of
windows and a private
balcony.
LEFT A deck without
railings does not block
the woodsy view from
this home, which has a
built-in gunite pool and
sits on 2-plus acres.
BELOW In the kitchen,
the white cabinetry
makes for a pleasing
counterpoint to the dark
granite countertops.
See more
View additional photos
of this property at
boston.com/realestate.
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
Address
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*Incentive is subject to change or withdrawal at any time without notice. See sales consultant for more information on the select homesites and details. ©2022 Pulte Homes Illustrations and dimensions are
approximate. Features, options, amenities, floor plans, design, materials are subject to change without prior notice. Community Association fees and additional fees me be required. At least one resident must
be 55 or better, see community documents for any additional conditions that may apply. 11-3-22
H3
H4
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NOVEMBER 6, 2022
G l o b e
BRINGING
LUXURY HOME
New Luxury Construction
239 Jackson Street,
Newton, MA
$3,999,999
The Leah & Maureen Realty Group,
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$2,800,000
Charlotte Marrocco-Mohler,
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24 Kylie Drive,
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83 Central Street,
Millville, MA
$1,699,900
Amy Mullen Thornton, 617.899.2146
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Greenville, ME
$995,000
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51 Dodge Road,
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Cumberland, ME
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233 Cider Hill Road,
York, ME
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80 Albert Street,
Portsmouth, RI
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Charming Colonial, 5+ Acres
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Compass and Lila Delman Compass are licensed real estate brokerages and abide by Equal Housing Opportunity laws. All material presented herein is intended for informational purposes only. Information is compiled from sources deemed reliable but is subject to errors, omissions, changes in price, condition, sale, or withdrawal without notice. No statement is made as to the accuracy of any description.
All measurements and square footages are approximate. This is not intended to solicit property already listed. Nothing herein shall be construed as legal, accounting or other professional advice outside
the realm of real estate brokerage. . * Top Sale Ranking based on info from the RI Statewide MLS for period 1.1.22 - 10.28.22.
87 Kingstown Road, Richmond, Rhode Island 02898 l PreserveSportingClub.com l 401.539.4653 l SalesTeam@ThePreserveRI.com
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no binding contract for the sale or lease of any unit or other interest therein may be created or entered into.
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Compass is a licensed real estate broker and abides by Equal Housing Opportunity laws. All material presented herein is intended for informational purposes only. Information is compiled from sources deemed reliable but is subject to errors, omissions, changes in price,
condition, sale, or withdrawal without notice. No statement is made as to the accuracy of any description. All measurements and square footages are approximate. This is not intended to solicit property already listed. Nothing herein shall be construed as legal, accounting or other
professional advice outside the realm of real estate brokerage.
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Check rates daily at
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Mortgage Guide
Institution
30 yr APR
30 yr Fixed
6.055%
Institution for
Savings
30yr Fixed APR
5.934%
Mutual of Omaha
Mortgage, Inc
30yr Fixed APR
6.047%
Wrentham
Co-operative Bank
30yr Fixed APR
6.280%
Commonwealth
Mortgage Lending
30yr Fixed APR
Product
Rate
Points
Fees
% Down
APR
Phone / Website
Rate: 5.999
15 Yr Fixed
4.999
0.000 $1042
20%
5.074
Points: 0.000
20 Yr Fixed
5.750
0.000 $1042
20%
5.822
978-462-3106
Fees: $1,042
30 Yr Jumbo
5.999
0.000 $1042
20%
6.036
www.institutionforsavings.com
% Down: 20%
Portfolio Lender, all rates are for owner occupied purchase loans
NMLS# 409410
Rate: 5.875
30 Yr Fixed FHA 5.500
0.000 $850
5%
5.599
Points: 0.250
30 Yr Fixed Jumbo 6.250
0.000 $1150
20%
6.299
312-388-2176
Fees: $850
15 Yr Fixed
5.625
0.000 $850
20%
5.699
https://mutualmortgage.simplenexus.com/ujsyj
% Down: 20%
30 Yr Fixed VA 5.500
0.000 $850
0%
5.599
NMLS# 631472
Rate: 5.990
10 Yr Fixed
5.250
0.000
$558 20%
5.377
Points: 0.000
15 Yr Fixed
5.375
0.000
$558 20%
5.465
508-384-6101
Fees: $558
30 Yr Jumbo
5.990
0.000
$940 20%
6.047
www.wrenthamcoop.com
% Down: 20%
NMLS # / License #
NMLS# 627361
We also offer low fixed rate 10 & 15 year jumbo loans!
Rate: 6.250
15 Yr Fixed
5.500
0.000
$595 20%
5.560
Points: 0.000
20 Yr fixed
6.125
0.000
$595 20%
6.170
508-366-1776
Fees: $595
FHA 30 Yr Fixed 6.375
0.000
$595 3.5%
6.410
www.commonwealthloan.com
% Down: 20%
Call Jay Cox or apply online at WWW.COMMONWEALTHLOAN.COM
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TO PARTICIPATE IN THIS FEATURE, CALL SALES DEPARTMENT @ 773-320-8492
CHECK RATES AT WWW.RATESEEKER.COM/RATES
Rate Criteria: The rates and annual percentage rate (APR) are effective as of 11/02/22. All rates, fees and other information are subject to change without notice. RateSeeker, LLC. does not guarantee the accuracy of the information appearing above or the availability of rates and fees in this table. The institutions appearing in this table pay a fee to appear in this table. Annual percentage rates (APRs) are based on fully indexed rates for adjustable rate mortgages (ARMs).
The APR on your specific loan may differ from the sample used. All rates are quoted on a minimum FICO score of 740. Conventional loans are based on loan amounts of
$165,000. Jumbo loans are based on loan amounts of $647,200. Lock Days: 30-60. Points quoted include discount and/or origination. Payments do not include amounts
for taxes and insurance. The APR may increase after consummation and may vary. FHA Mortgages include both UFMIP and MIP fees based on a loan amount of
$165,000 with 5% down payment. Points quoted include discount and/or origination. Fees reflect charges relative to the APR. If your down payment is less than 20% of
!"# $$$ #% &$%
'(
) *
not available at press time. To access the NMLS Consumer Access website, please visit www.nmlsconsumeraccess.org. To appear in this table, call 773-320-8492.
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
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H9
Lawsuit could have implications for condo owners
uSECURITY
Continued from Page H1
committed by a third party.
In her decision to allow the case to go forward,
Associate Justice Christine M. Roach said, “a condominium association bears a duty to exercise due
care for the residents’ safety in those areas under
the association’s control.”
The decision has condominium lawyers advising their clients to review their security policies
and procedures to flag any vulnerabilities and address them.
Ed Allcock, a lawyer at Allcock Marcus in Braintree, said he’s telling his clients to reconsider their
approach to building safety. “Management and
concierge companies are both going to have disclaimers in their contracts with condominiums
that contractually disavow any security obligations,” Allcock said. “So then it falls back to the association. Maybe the best way for an association to
protect itself is to hire a security company.”
Thomas O. Moriarty, an attorney with Moriarty,
Troyer & Malloy, said the ruling didn’t really surprise him. He has been advising his condo clients
to consult with security experts and implement all
of the recommendations they can afford.
It’s about more than just risk management, Moriarty said.
“You’re not going to eliminate the risk, but you
can reduce it,” he said. “And boards should do everything they can do because it’s the morally correct thing to do. People who serve on condominium boards are volunteers, and they get involved
for the most part because they want to contribute
to their neighborhood and their communities.
They want to do the right things.”
Moriarty said many professionally managed
condominium associations are appropriately insured for most risks, but all policies have limits.
Condo owners should take the Roach decision seriously because damages awarded in a wrongful
death claim on a property could be several million
dollars or more. If the insurance policy doesn’t cover the entire judgment, individual unit owners
could be held responsible for the balance.
Christopher R. Lanni is the founder and president of Secure Residential Services, a Hudsonbased firm that consults with condominium and
homeowner associations to identify and address
security issues.
It all starts with an assessment, one that looks
at all areas of the property, Lanni said. “How do we
handle guests and visitors and parking and day-today operations? ... We look at things like lighting,
locks, keys, cameras, and other technology.”
He said he also analyzes area crime data and
goes through the condo rules and procedures to
ascertain whether they are being followed consistently.
“For example, it’s not uncommon to see a
loading dock that has a big overhead door,” he
said. “So the trucks come in in the morning. The
doors [are] up and often stay up all day. People
kind of come and go on foot, in and out of that
space, but there’s no interior separation. Someone walking by could just walk right in. And
where could they go from there?”
He said choosing the best solution depends on
the physical structure of the building, the security
budget, the relative size of the risk, and even the
building demographics, to some extent. However,
even something as simple as upgrading the locks
has to be thought through, he said. “Say you want
to take a condominium from metal keys to key fobs
or a credential on their smartphone. For a building
filled with relatively young people, it’s a quick and
easy change, but if most of the residents have been
there for 30 years, many won’t be comfortable with
the new technology.”
Some things, such as periodically changing the
lock codes to common areas or revising policies
and procedures are free or inexpensive. Other
things, like high-tech security systems or full-time
guards are more expensive. Lanni said he works
with associations to prioritize their security liabilities and provide as many solutions as possible. Often, associations end up increasing their security
budget and phasing in solutions over several years.
“We talk about must-haves, nice-to-haves, and
budget,” he said. “A $50 camera bought off the
shelf and installed outside the front door isn’t going to record license plates on passing vehicles, for
example. Cameras have to have a certain quality
with certain functions. They have to be installed in
specific locations at a certain angle from passing
vehicles to do that.”
Lanni said condo association trustees should
try to look at their building, policies, and procedures as if for the first time.
“Security is very often very narrowly defined,”
he said. “People might think they have ‘security’
because they see a security guard doing security
things, but security means something different in
every building. You’re always going to have some
level of risk, but if you can at least mitigate some of
the vulnerabilities, that’s a great start.”
Jim Morrison can be reached at
JamesAndrewMorrison@gmail.com.
Subscribe to the Globe’s free real estate newsletter
— our weekly digest on buying, selling, and
design — at Boston.com/realestate.
In real estate, so goes the nation,
so goes Mass. Well, yes and no.
Report looks at buyer and seller trends.
By Jim Morrison
GLOBE CORRESPONDENT
A report released by the National Association of Realtors on
Thursday reflects a real estate
market still acting like the
neighborhood jerk.
The report, based on data
collected from July 2021 to June
2022, doesn’t reflect the market
cooldown nationwide, but its
findings highlight trends with
lasting implications: Buyers and
sellers are getting older, properties are selling more slowly but
for more money, the racial gap
in homeownership is widening,
and first-timers are the smallest
percentage of home shoppers
since the organization began
collecting data.
Market experts in Greater
Boston said they are seeing
those effects here and blame the
historically low inventory of
homes for sale and pent-up demand for skyrocketing prices.
The state saw a 16.2 percent
year-over-year drop in singlefamily home sales and a 22.9
percent slide in condo sales in
September, according to a report
The Warren Group released Oct.
18. Meanwhile, median home
prices increased 7.8 percent and
3.7 percent, respectively.
It is important to note that
the National Association of Realtor data also do not reflect significant mortgage rate hikes
since June. According to Freddie
Mac, the average rate for a 30year, fixed-rate mortgage was
3.22 percent at the beginning of
the year. By mid-June, it was up
to 5.78 percent and on Nov. 3, it
was 6.95 percent.
Here are some takeaways
from the report — and reflections from local experts:
1. First-time buyers
Nation First-timers made up
26 percent of all buyers, the
smallest percentage of total buyers since data collection began.
That figure was 34 percent last
year, and the historical norm is
40 percent. Their average age
was 36, up from 33 in 2021.
Here “Younger first-time
home buyers, on average, have
lower incomes and less money
for down payments than other
home buyers,” said Richard J.
Rosa, cofounder and co-owner
of Buyers Brokers Only. “Until
recently, that group of buyers
faced a difficult Greater Boston
real estate market.”
2. Sales prices
Nation The median sales
price was 100 percent of the listing price, the highest recorded
since 2002, and 28 percent of
buyers paid over asking.
Here Everyone interviewed
for this story said this is also
true in Massachusetts, but Rosa
said those days may be over.
“The fierce competition during the first half of 2022 resulted
in home buyers paying tens of
thousands of dollars over asking
prices,” Rosa said. “During the
last month of the NAR survey
period, June 2022, home buyers
in the Commonwealth paid
106.2 percent, on average, of the
original listing price, according
to the Massachusetts Association of Realtors. That’s changing
quickly. In September, home
buyers paid 99.9 percent of the
original listing price.”
rely on traditional lending practices such as FHA, MFHA, the
MassDream program, the One
program, the STASH program,
or a five percent or ten percent
down payment, while others
had the luxury of putting down
twenty percent or more, using
cash or leveraging their savings
for a large down payment.”
The 2022 report by MassHousing’s Racial Equity Advisory Council for Homeownership
found that debt-to-income ratio
was the most common reason
why Black and Latino buyers
were denied mortgage credit
and that denial rates for people
of color were higher regardless
of that ratio or combinations of
DTI and income.
ADOBE STOCK
The average seller age was 60, up from 56 in 2021.
Nation Seventy-eight percent
of buyers financed their purchase, down from 87 percent in
2021.
Here This rang true to Lamacchia.
“Because of rising prices over
the last two years, buyers have
had to get creative about how to
come to the table with a cash offer, and many did,” he said.
“Many pulled money from their
401Ks, borrowed money from
family, took out equity lines on
existing homes, etc.”
whom to hire.
Here James Nemetz, senior
vice president and manager of
Hammond Residential Real Estate said Massachusetts sellers
are more savvy and interview
multiple agents.
“You always hear that axiom
that sellers always have to get
three opinions,” Nemetz said.
“We always assume when we go
to a listing appointment that
we’re up against other competitors. In this region, especially in
the high end, we’re usually competing against another agent.”
7. Typical buyer
9. Stay a little longer
Nation The average seller age
was 60, up from 56 in 2021.
Here “Many homeowners
who would have listed their
homes in 2020 or 2021 delayed
due to COVID and out of fear of
having strangers coming in their
homes,” Lamacchia said. “These
metrics will likely show these effects for years.”
Nation The typical seller
owned the home for 10 years, up
from eight in 2021.
Here Nemetz finds that scenario is playing out in Greater
Boston as well: “Suppose an
empty-nester still has a mortgage. Let’s just say that the kids
went to college, they took a halfa-million-dollar mortgage on the
house, and they have that mortgage at two point seven five percent,” he said. “All of a sudden,
downsizing becomes expensive
for them, because actually,
they’ll have to pay more for a
smaller home. And they’ll lose
6. Financing
4. Days on market
Nation Homes were staying
on the market for 14 days, up
from seven in 2021.
Here Cohen said properties
in Greater Boston may stay on
the market even longer than
that this fall.
“That’s probably about
right, depending upon the time
of year,” he said. “It’s a bit longer than that right now. That’s
the kind of figure that lulls buyers and sellers alike into the
false sense that real estate is a
readily liquid asset. Depending
on the market you’re in, it
might not be.”
3. The racial gap
5. The hunt
Nation Of all home buyers,
88 percent were white, up from
82 percent in 2021.
Here But what about in
Greater Boston? “Yes, the racial
gap has gotten worse within the
city of Boston,” said Melvin A.
Vieira Jr., a realtor with RE/Max
and president of the Greater
Boston Association of Realtors.
“Even though we had record
sales and record prices, the minority community wasn’t able to
take advantage of it. They had to
Nation The median buyers’
home search took 10 weeks, up
from eight in 2021 and 2020.
Here Anthony Lamacchia,
broker/owner of Lamacchia Realty, said buyers are taking longer to find their homes here as
well. “With all the bidding
wars, many buyers lost out on
the houses they wanted and
had to continue their search
before finally getting an offer
accepted on a home,” Lamacchia said.
8. So little research for such
a big buy
Nation Sixty-seven percent of
the buyers and 80 percent of the
sellers interviewed just one real
estate agent before deciding
43 Bicknell Hill Road. Onefamily Colonial, built in 1958,
1,624 square feet, 7 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, on 19,583square-foot lot. $585,000
73 Central St. One-family Conventional, built in 1880, 1,616
square feet, 5 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 1 bath, on 13,920square-foot lot. $440,000
64 Wales St. #4 Condo/Apt,
built in 2017, 835 square feet,
4 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 1 baths.
$370,000
ACTON
7 Ladyslipper Lane One-family
Cape Cod, built in 1987, 4,086
square feet, 10 rooms, 5 bedrooms, 5 baths, on 98,731square-foot lot. $1,275,000
AMESBURY
22 Greenwood St. One-family
Conventional, built in 1880,
2,538 square feet, 6 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, on 12,930square-foot lot. $850,000
10 Osgood Place One-family
Cape Cod, built in 1984, 1,152
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 9,486square-foot lot. $635,000
11 Cutter Lane #11 PS NEW
CONST Town House, built in
2021, 2,367 square feet, 6
rooms, 3 bedrooms, 3 baths.
$588,340
ANDOVER
14 Basswood Lane One-family
Contemporary, built in 1996,
4,165 square feet, 8 rooms, 4
bedrooms, 3 baths, on 30,274square-foot lot. $1,630,000
79 Pine St. One-family Old
Style, built in 1910, 1,402
square feet, 8 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 8,973square-foot lot. $810,000
2 Olde Berry Road One-family
Split Entry, built in 1974,
1,554 square feet, 6 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, on 31,233-
square-foot lot. $550,000
50 Washington Park Drive #8
Condo/Apt, built in 1965, 825
square feet, 4 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 1 baths. $315,000
ARLINGTON
101 Irving St. One-family Old
Style, built in 1929, 1,668
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 3,816square-foot lot. $1,001,000
3 Mary St. #3 Condo.
$999,000
3 Clyde Ter One-family Ranch,
built in 1963, 2,061 square
feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 3
baths, on 6,996-square-foot
lot. $940,000
23 Elwern Road One-family
Cape Cod, built in 1960, 1,714
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 5,441square-foot lot. $905,000
101 N Union St. One-family
Ranch, built in 1953, 1,944
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 6,059-
square-foot lot. $784,600
ASHLAND
40 Tudor Lane One-family Colonial, built in 1993, 2,384
square feet, 8 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 64,033square-foot lot. $805,000
BELLINGHAM
59 Susan Lane One-family Colonial, built in 2003, 4,256
square feet, 8 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 40,020square-foot lot. $700,000
125 Plymouth Road One-family Split Entry, built in 1969,
1,512 square feet, 5 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 1 bath, on 12,000square-foot lot. $540,000
63 Newland Ave. One-family
Split Entry, built in 1965,
2,050 square feet, 6 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 1 bath, on 21,406square-foot lot. $465,000
219 Caroline Drive One-family
Ranch, built in 1962, 1,484
square feet, 7 rooms, 3 bed-
10. Down payments
Nation The median down
payment was 14 percent of the
purchase price. In their 2021 report, NAR said the payments
have shrunk since 1989, when
the average was 20 percent.
Here Shant Banosian, executive vice president of sales at
Guaranteed Rate, said Greater
Boston buyers are putting down
less, but he offered a ray of hope
for home shoppers.
“Buyers who are staying in
the market are actually starting
to win because there’s less competition,” Banosian said.
“Homes are priced better than
they were six months ago.
Things like mortgage contingencies and home inspections are
back. It’s a bit less overwhelming because things are moving
slower and buyers have more
protection.”
Reach Jim Morrison at
JamesAndrewMorrison@gmail.
com. Subscribe to the Globe’s
free real estate newsletter at
Boston.com/realestate.
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RECENT HOME SALES
ABINGTON
that two point seven five percent
rate, and the new rate will be
closer to seven percent.”
rooms, 1 bath, on 12,750square-foot lot. $357,500
BERLIN
51 Wheeler Hill Road #26
Condo. $668,280
BEVERLY
9 Porter Ter RES DEV LAND, on
5,300-square-foot lot.
$780,000
107 Dodge St. #D Condo.
$685,000
13 Prospect St. Two-family
Two Family, built in 1797,
2,240 square feet, 11 rooms,
5 bedrooms, 2 baths, on
4,989-square-foot lot.
$640,000
8 Cherry Road One-family
Ranch, built in 1965, 1,296
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, on 18,700square-foot lot. $500,000
22 Butman St. #1 Condo/Apt,
built in 1900, 868 square feet,
4 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 1 baths.
$480,000
4 Duck Pond Road #213 Condo Town House, built in 1985,
1,043 square feet, 4 rooms, 2
bedrooms, 2 baths. $376,000
5 Beckford St. #1 Condo/Apt,
built in 1900, 849 square feet,
5 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 1 baths.
$228,000
BILLERICA
880 Technology Park Drive
GEN OFFICE, built in 1999,
151,564 square feet, 0 bedrooms, on 158,122-squarefoot lot. $18,188,000
27 Blackwood Ave. One-family
Ranch, built in 1960, 1,983
square feet, 5 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 10,000square-foot lot. $420,000
3 Karen Circle #1 Condo/Apt,
built in 1979, 756 square feet,
4 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 1 baths.
$315,000
BOLTON
62 Bolton Woods Way OneContinued on next page
H10
Address
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
G l o b e
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boston.com/realestate.
RECENT HOME SALES
Continued from preceding page
family Cape Cod, built in 1992,
1,541 square feet, 7 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, on 9,583square-foot lot. $525,000
BOSTON
100 Beacon St. #3A Condo
Mid-Rise, built in 1920, 1,975
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 1,975square-foot lot. $3,100,000
3 Winter Place #1-4 Condo
Row-Middle, built in 1899,
3,323 square feet, 7 rooms, 2
bedrooms, 3 baths, on 3,323square-foot lot. $2,680,000
61 Dartmouth St. #2 Condo
Row-End, built in 1910, 1,894
square feet, 5 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 1,894square-foot lot. $2,600,000
226 Commonwealth Ave. #1
Condo Row-Middle, built in
1880, 1,569 square feet, 6
rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
on 1,569-square-foot lot.
$2,199,000
16 Bond St. One-family RowEnd, built in 1890, 2,691
square feet, 9 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, on 1,260square-foot lot. $2,000,000
3-5 Walnut St. #3 Condo FreeStandng, built in 1899, 1,706
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 1,706square-foot lot. $1,950,000
80 Broad St. #1007 Condo
High-Rise, built in 2006, 1,156
square feet, 4 rooms, 1 bedroom, 2 baths, on 1,156square-foot lot. $1,210,000
21 Beacon St. #7E Condo MidRise, built in 1899, 514 square
feet, 2 rooms, 1 bedroom, 1
bath, on 514-square-foot lot.
$725,000
15 River St. #803 Condo MidRise, built in 1900, 505 square
feet, 3 rooms, 1 bedroom, 1
bath, on 505-square-foot lot.
$700,000
61 Prince St. #4F Condo LowRise, built in 2002, 601 square
feet, 3 rooms, 1 bedroom, 1
bath, on 601-square-foot lot.
$610,000
300 Commercial St. #501
Condo Mid-Rise, built in 1900,
599 square feet, 2 rooms, 1
bedroom, 1 bath, on 599square-foot lot. $560,000
3 Avery St. #903 Condo MidRise, built in 2004, 964 square
feet, 4 rooms, 1 bedroom, 2
baths, on 964-square-foot lot.
$545,000
6 Whittier Place #12C Condo
High-Rise, built in 1964, 742
square feet, 3 rooms, 1 bedroom, 1 bath, on 742-squarefoot lot. $415,000
12 Stoneholm St. #301 Condo Mid-Rise, built in 2006,
735 square feet, 4 rooms, 2
bedrooms, 2 baths, on 735square-foot lot. $345,000
511 Beacon St. #1 Condo
Row-Middle, built in 1910,
209 square feet, 2 rooms, 0
bedrooms, 1 bath, on 209square-foot lot. $323,750
BOXBOROUGH
60 Wheeler Drive #43 Condo.
$978,317
BOXFORD
33-E Andrews Farm Road
One-family Cape Cod, built in
1993, 1,159 square feet, 5
rooms, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths,
on 11,072-square-foot lot.
$425,000
BRAINTREE
12 Ellsworth St. One-family
Colonial, built in 1947, 1,632
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 6,534square-foot lot. $750,000
11 Sampson Ave. One-family
Cape Cod, built in 1952, 1,260
square feet, 5 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 5,184square-foot lot. $629,000
32 Hoover Ave. One-family Old
Style, built in 1927, 1,684
square feet, 8 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 15,594square-foot lot. $550,000
BRIGHTON
1650 Commonwealth Ave.
#506 Condo Free-Standng,
built in 2018, 1,794 square
feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 3
baths. $1,700,000
74 Wallingford Road Twofamily Conventional, built in
1900, 4,626 square feet, 12
rooms, 6 bedrooms, 2 baths,
on 7,943-square-foot lot.
$1,600,000
106 Evans Road #3 Condo
Low-Rise, built in 1950, 640
square feet, 3 rooms, 1 bedroom, 1 bath, on 640-squarefoot lot. $490,000
BROCKTON
34 E Main St. 4-8 UNIT APT
Mlti-Unt Blg, built in 1900,
3,472 square feet, 14 rooms,
8 bedrooms, 4 baths, on
3,711-square-foot lot.
$925,000
96 W Chestnut St. Two-family
Two Family, built in 1902,
2,590 square feet, 9 rooms, 4
bedrooms, 2 baths, on 4,556square-foot lot. $740,000
14 Addison Ave. Three-family
Mlti-Unt Blg, built in 1900,
2,744 square feet, 11 rooms,
4 bedrooms, 3 baths, on
8,477-square-foot lot.
$720,000
16 Thayer St. One-family
Raised Ranch, built in 2014,
2,376 square feet, 8 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, on 30,004square-foot lot. $600,000
140 Myrtle St. Two-family Two
Family, built in 1925, 1,425
square feet, 8 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 6,286square-foot lot. $550,000
69 Kame St. One-family Colonial, built in 2006, 3,152
square feet, 7 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 4 baths, on 10,550square-foot lot. $525,000
12 Lorraine Ave. One-family
Colonial, built in 1925, 1,384
square feet, 5 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 5,136square-foot lot. $515,000
39 Hopkins Road One-family
Colonial, built in 1971, 2,324
square feet, 7 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 10,729square-foot lot. $515,000
33 Rosemary St. One-family
Colonial, built in 1956, 1,641
square feet, 7 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 11,273square-foot lot. $499,900
11 Fern St. One-family Colonial, built in 1925, 1,261
square feet, 5 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, on 7,440square-foot lot. $495,000
119 Gladstone St. One-family
Colonial, built in 1925, 2,103
square feet, 6 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 7,497square-foot lot. $450,000
136 Keswick Road One-family
Ranch, built in 1960, 1,194
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, on 10,799square-foot lot. $399,000
14 Hampton Ave. One-family
Colonial, built in 1925, 1,278
square feet, 7 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, on 7,301square-foot lot. $380,000
224 Bates Road One-family
Ranch, built in 1960, 1,008
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, on 10,001square-foot lot. $315,000
932 N Main St. #5 Condo
Town House, built in 2005,
1,064 square feet, 5 rooms, 2
bedrooms, 2 baths. $305,500
BROOKLINE
19 Craftsland Road One-family Colonial, built in 1942,
1,768 square feet, 7 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 3 baths, on 6,608square-foot lot. $1,470,000
2-14 Saint Paul St. #407 Condo Mid-Rise, built in 2003,
1,342 square feet, 4 rooms, 2
bedrooms, 2 baths.
$1,300,000
108 Tappan St. #108 Condo
Decker, built in 1925, 1,385
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 1 baths. $880,000
32 James St. #4 Condo LowRise, built in 1928, 1,120
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 1 baths. $833,000
15 Francis St. #38 Condo
Low-Rise, built in 1968, 815
square feet, 4 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 1 baths. $672,000
196 Evans Road #3 Condo.
$490,000
44 Washington St. #515 Condo High-Rise, built in 1970,
500 square feet, 2 rooms, 1
bedroom, 1 baths. $450,000
BURLINGTON
27 Cranberry Lane #27 Condo Town House, built in 1998,
1,812 square feet, 8 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 3 baths. $901,000
76 Lexington St. One-family
Ranch, built in 1960, 1,149
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, on 15,091square-foot lot. $582,500
CAMBRIDGE
11 Mellen St. EDUCATIONAL,
built in 1900, 3,476 square
feet, 0 bedrooms, on 6,912square-foot lot. $5,400,000
13 Mellen St. EDUCATIONAL,
built in 1890, 3,084 square
feet, 0 bedrooms, on 5,615square-foot lot. $5,400,000
75-83 Cambridge Pkwy
#306 Condo/Apt, built in
1989, 2,025 square feet, 6
rooms, 1 bedroom, 2 baths.
$2,900,000
27 Tremont St. #1 Condo.
$2,812,500
94 Berkshire St. Three-family
Decker, built in 1903, 4,557
square feet, 20 rooms, 8 bedrooms, 4 baths, on 3,732square-foot lot. $2,300,000
101 3rd St. #2 Condo, built in
1827, 1,969 square feet, 4
rooms, 3 bedrooms, 4 baths.
$1,850,000
19 Centre St. #6 Condo
Townhse-End, built in 1870,
1,798 square feet, 5 rooms, 2
bedrooms, 2 baths.
$1,730,000
35 Market St. Three-family
Family Flat, built in 1854,
2,627 square feet, 12 rooms,
6 bedrooms, 4 baths, on
3,579-square-foot lot.
$1,600,000
8-12 Museum Way #1506
Condo/Apt, built in 1998,
1,067 square feet, 5 rooms, 2
bedrooms, 1 baths.
$1,116,152
98-100 Erie St. #8 Condo/Apt,
built in 1956, 1,307 square
feet, 4 rooms, 1 bedroom, 3
baths. $1,075,000
19 Chauncy St. #5B Condo/
Apt, built in 1972, 1,180
square feet, 4 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths. $1,040,000
1580 Massachusetts Ave.
#3G Condo/Apt, built in 1978,
942 square feet, 4 rooms, 2
bedrooms, 2 baths. $900,000
60 6th St. One-family RowEnd, built in 1886, 1,207
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, on 989-squarefoot lot. $863,000
20-30 Winter St. #2 Condo.
$835,500
10 Rogers St. #1103 Condo/
Apt, built in 1989, 863 square
feet, 3 rooms, 1 bedroom, 1
baths. $829,000
24-30 Winter St. #1 Condo.
$815,000
21 Shepard St. #21 Condo/
Apt, built in 1900, 540 square
feet, 3 rooms, 1 bedroom, 1
baths. $620,000
36 Highland Ave. #58 Condo/
Apt, built in 1940, 615 square
feet, 3 rooms, 1 bedroom, 1
baths. $585,000
165 Pleasant St. #103 Condo/Apt, built in 2002, 635
square feet, 3 rooms, 1 bedroom, 1 baths. $501,650
CANTON
1027 Turnpike St. AUTO
SALES, built in 1964, 26,400
square feet, 0 bedrooms, on
104,544-square-foot lot.
$3,700,000
21 Lincoln St. AUTO REPAIR,
built in 1965, 5,956 square
feet, 0 bedrooms, 2 baths, on
82,764-square-foot lot.
$1,200,000
25 York Brook Road One-family Colonial, built in 1995,
2,596 square feet, 8 rooms, 4
bedrooms, 3 baths, on 44,867square-foot lot. $1,050,000
17 Hillcrest Road One-family
Colonial, built in 1946, 2,290
square feet, 9 rooms, 5 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 29,759square-foot lot. $819,900
11 Evergreen Circle #11 Condo/Apt, built in 1999, 1,249
square feet, 4 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths. $520,000
21 Pine St. #F Condo/Apt, built
in 1973, 815 square feet, 5
rooms, 2 bedrooms, 1 baths.
$314,500
348 Neponset St. #A Condo/
Apt, built in 1984, 860 square
feet, 5 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 1
baths. $305,000
CARVER
4 Meeting House Road Onefamily Cape Cod, built in 2009,
2,736 square feet, 8 rooms, 4
bedrooms, 3 baths, on 73,050square-foot lot. $725,000
38 Purchase St. One-family
Cape Cod, built in 1972, 2,308
square feet, 11 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 24,829square-foot lot. $505,000
39 Lakeview St. One-family
Old Style, built in 1850, 1,710
square feet, 7 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 59,982square-foot lot. $340,000
CHARLESTOWN
5 Monument Sq #1-2 Condo.
$2,650,000
69 High St. #2 Condo RowEnd, built in 1875, 1,994
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 3 baths. $1,600,000
CHELMSFORD
3 Butt Hinge Road One-family
Ranch, built in 1961, 1,422
square feet, 8 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 24,914square-foot lot. $750,000
11 Windemere Lane #11
Condo Town House, built in
2005, 2,206 square feet, 7
rooms, 3 bedrooms, 3 baths.
$610,000
12 Quigley Ave. One-family
Conventional, built in 1900,
1,338 square feet, 7 rooms, 4
bedrooms, 2 baths, on 5,858square-foot lot. $470,000
CHELSEA
114 Carter St. MANUFACTURNG Condo/Apt, built in
1900, 17,160 square feet, 0
bedrooms, on 21,054-squarefoot lot. $4,500,000
290 4th St. WAREHOUSE, built
in 1900, 7,360 square feet, 0
bedrooms, on 13,200-squarefoot lot. $4,500,000
28 Hawthorne St. #1 Condo/
Apt, built in 2020, 2,055
square feet, 7 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 3 baths. $580,000
25 2nd St. #201 Condo.
$565,000
60 Hooper St. One-family Conventional, built in 1920, 1,186
square feet, 7 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 5,000square-foot lot. $450,000
62 Beacon St. #1 Condo/Apt,
built in 1900, 970 square feet,
5 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 1 baths.
$450,000
104 Cook Ave. One-family
Ranch, built in 1970, 1,281
square feet, 7 rooms, 5 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 4,202square-foot lot. $370,000
70 Warren Ave. #2-4 Condo/
Apt, built in 1970, 710 square
feet, 3 rooms, 1 bedroom, 1
baths. $290,000
COHASSET
34 Flintlock Ridge Road Onefamily Cape Cod, built in 1981,
1,783 square feet, 5 rooms, 2
bedrooms, 4 baths, on 25,111square-foot lot. $820,000
CONCORD
661 Main St. One-family Colonial, built in 1931, 1,982
square feet, 8 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 11,911square-foot lot. $1,275,000
762 Barretts Mill Road #2
Condo/Apt, built in 1890,
1,672 square feet, 6 rooms, 2
bedrooms, 3 baths, on 84,942square-foot lot. $1,025,000
84 Baker Ave. One-family
Raised Ranch, built in 1973,
1,437 square feet, 7 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, on 20,436square-foot lot. $833,000
91 Virginia Road One-family
Ranch, built in 1961, 1,056
square feet, 2 bedrooms, 1
bath, on 86,098-square-foot
lot. $745,000
DANVERS
47 Green St. One-family Colonial, built in 1907, 1,500
square feet, 7 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, on 152,460square-foot lot. $775,000
8 Rowell Road One-family
Ranch, built in 1957, 2,482
square feet, 7 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 18,000square-foot lot. $742,000
85 Hobart St. One-family Colonial, built in 1953, 3,445
square feet, 12 rooms, 7 bedrooms, 4 baths, on 8,077square-foot lot. $723,000
100 Conifer Hill Drive #102
OFFICE CONDO Condo/Apt,
built in 1988, 942 square feet,
0 bedrooms, 1 baths.
$657,165
100 Conifer Hill Drive #105
OFFICE CONDO Condo/Apt,
built in 1988, 946 square feet,
0 bedrooms, 1 baths.
$657,165
100 Conifer Hill Drive #106
OFFICE CONDO Condo/Apt,
built in 1988, 926 square feet,
0 bedrooms, 1 baths.
$657,165
6 Cole Road One-family Cape
Cod, built in 1953, 1,917
square feet, 8 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 20,770square-foot lot. $615,000
5 Hardy St. One-family Old
Style, built in 1925, 1,284
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, on 8,250square-foot lot. $485,000
153 Maple St. Two-family
Conventional, built in 1900,
2,778 square feet, 12 rooms,
4 bedrooms, 2 baths, on
9,300-square-foot lot.
$436,100
DEDHAM
270 Washington St. Two-family Family Flat, built in 1868,
1,488 square feet, 9 rooms, 4
bedrooms, 2 baths, on 4,650square-foot lot. $570,000
6 Cedar St. #6 Condo/Apt,
built in 1870, 1,368 square
feet, 5 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, on 8,908-square-foot
lot. $564,500
DORCHESTER
34 Norton St. Three-family
Decker, built in 1905, 3,384
square feet, 18 rooms, 9 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 2,770square-foot lot. $950,000
31-33 Myrtlebank Ave. Twofamily Conventional, built in
1935, 2,527 square feet, 10
rooms, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths,
on 3,600-square-foot lot.
$949,000
22-24 Romsey St. Two-family
Two Family, built in 1915,
2,366 square feet, 8 rooms, 4
bedrooms, 2 baths, on 4,186square-foot lot. $935,000
17 Supple Road Two-family
Two Family, built in 1935,
3,400 square feet, 14 rooms,
6 bedrooms, 2 baths, on
6,551-square-foot lot.
$875,000
84 Lonsdale St. Two-family
Conventional, built in 1889,
3,521 square feet, 11 rooms,
5 bedrooms, 3 baths, on
3,534-square-foot lot.
$860,000
16 Vera St. Two-family Conventional, built in 1930, 2,793
square feet, 11 rooms, 5 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 4,427square-foot lot. $785,750
84 Everdean St. One-family
Colonial, built in 1895, 1,116
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, on 1,800square-foot lot. $660,000
19 Powellton Road Two-family
Conventional, built in 1903,
3,939 square feet, 16 rooms,
7 bedrooms, 2 baths, on
4,128-square-foot lot.
$610,000
42 Wentworth St. #1 Condo
Decker, built in 2017, 1,075
square feet, 5 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 1 baths. $470,000
84 Evans St. #3 Condo Town
House, built in 1992, 1,183
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 1,765square-foot lot. $425,000
DUXBURY
199 Depot St. One-family Conventional, built in 1900, 1,129
square feet, 5 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 15,469square-foot lot. $1,799,000
5 Surfside W One-family Gambrel, built in 1930, 973 square
feet, 5 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 1
bath, on 4,792-square-foot lot.
$750,000
EAST BOSTON
129 Orleans St. #301 Condo
Free-Standng, built in 1900,
1,232 square feet, 6 rooms, 2
bedrooms, 2 baths, on 1,232square-foot lot. $646,000
161 Cottage St. #6 Condo.
$567,500
205 Maverick St. #405 Condo. $221,700
EAST BRIDGEWATER
26 Fieldcrest Drive One-family
Contemporary, built in 1988,
2,625 square feet, 8 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, on 43,299square-foot lot. $775,000
15 Stagecoach Lane #15
Condo Duplex, built in 2010,
1,959 square feet, 5 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 3 baths. $525,000
107 Waterman St. One-family
Split Level, built in 1952,
1,368 square feet, 6 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, on 20,539square-foot lot. $465,000
1689 Central St. One-family
Conventional, built in 1920,
1,932 square feet, 7 rooms, 4
bedrooms, 3 baths, on 35,022square-foot lot. $460,000
34 Old Plymouth St. #34 Condo Town House, built in 2002,
1,296 square feet, 5 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths. $372,000
EASTON
8 Carriage House Lane Onefamily Colonial, built in 1991,
3,201 square feet, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 44,867square-foot lot. $970,000
123 Sheridan St. One-family
Colonial, built in 2012, 2,192
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 13,613square-foot lot. $800,000
1 Hollis Road One-family Colonial, built in 2012, 1,530
square feet, 8 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 8,315square-foot lot. $680,000
62 Highland St. One-family
Split Level, built in 1975,
1,649 square feet, 5 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 1 bath, on 47,916square-foot lot. $620,000
12 Gardner Road One-family
Colonial, built in 1972, 1,872
square feet, 4 bedrooms, 2
baths, on 25,700-square-foot
lot. $595,000
35 Prudence Crandall Lane
#35 Condo/Apt, built in 1987,
1,476 square feet, 4 rooms, 2
bedrooms, 3 baths. $355,000
5 Adam St. #4 Condo/Apt,
built in 1976, 1,052 square
feet, 4 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 2
baths. $325,000
15 Foundry St. #E57 Condo/
Apt, built in 1974, 945 square
feet, 2 bedrooms, 1 baths.
$200,000
ESSEX
67 Choate St. One-family Colonial, built in 2013, 4,041
square feet, 0 bedrooms, 4
baths, on 184,694-square-foot
lot. $1,400,000
8 Town Farm Road One-family
Ranch, built in 1960, 720
square feet, 2 bedrooms, 1
bath, on 13,964-square-foot
lot. $418,000
EVERETT
20 Wall St. Two-family Two
Family, built in 1920, 2,456
square feet, 13 rooms, 6 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 3,389square-foot lot. $892,500
28 Abbott Ave. One-family
Cape Cod, built in 1953, 1,808
square feet, 8 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 4,635square-foot lot. $605,000
FOXBOROUGH
3 Payn Road One-family Colonial, built in 1993, 1,363
square feet, 6 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 10,381square-foot lot. $600,000
7 Howard Ave. Two-family
Family Flat, built in 1898,
3,760 square feet, 12 rooms,
7 bedrooms, 4 baths, on
21,974-square-foot lot.
$250,000
FRAMINGHAM
391 Brook St. One-family Colonial, built in 1993, 2,276
square feet, 8 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 4 baths, on 20,020square-foot lot. $800,000
11 Carter Drive One-family
Split Level, built in 1967,
1,614 square feet, 9 rooms, 4
bedrooms, 3 baths, on 43,604square-foot lot. $796,000
15 Wayside Ave. One-family
Ranch, built in 1954, 1,678
square feet, 8 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 12,001square-foot lot. $665,000
7 Merriam Road One-family
Ranch, built in 1959, 1,196
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 19,998square-foot lot. $620,000
1 Fenton St. One-family Ranch,
built in 1952, 1,276 square
feet, 7 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 1
bath, on 10,437-square-foot
lot. $560,000
4 Little Tree Lane One-family
Ranch, built in 1957, 1,066
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 21,401square-foot lot. $525,000
39 Ruthellen Road One-family
Ranch, built in 1961, 1,208
square feet, 7 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 29,120square-foot lot. $520,000
14 Rosslare Road One-family
Ranch, built in 1957, 1,439
square feet, 7 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 8,085square-foot lot. $519,000
7 Kings Row Lane One-family
Colonial, built in 1984, 2,128
square feet, 8 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 21,087square-foot lot. $500,000
57 Sloane Drive One-family
Ranch, built in 1958, 1,736
square feet, 7 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 23,265square-foot lot. $460,000
26 Taralli Ter #26 Condo/Apt,
built in 1922, 1,157 square
feet, 5 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2
baths. $437,400
46 Crest Road One-family
Three Story, built in 1965,
1,930 square feet, 7 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, on 13,438square-foot lot. $410,000
199 Arlington St. One-family
Conventional, built in 1887,
1,527 square feet, 7 rooms, 4
bedrooms, 1 bath, on 5,811square-foot lot. $315,000
79 Nicholas Road #B Condo
Low-Rise, built in 1964, 629
square feet, 3 rooms, 1 bedroom, 2 baths. $199,900
FRANKLIN
366 Pond St. One-family Colonial, built in 1960, 1,936
square feet, 8 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 16,087square-foot lot. $620,000
200 Union St. Two-family Two
Family, built in 1900, 2,545
square feet, 12 rooms, 6 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 11,639square-foot lot. $565,000
812 Franklin Crossing Road
#812 Condo/Apt, built in
1985, 940 square feet, 4
rooms, 2 bedrooms, 1 baths.
$270,000
GLOUCESTER
18 Links Road RES UDV LAND,
on 27,527-square-foot lot.
$3,700,000
20 Links Road One-family Colonial, built in 1998, 5,186
square feet, 4 bedrooms, 4
baths, on 127,195-square-foot
lot. $3,700,000
44 Beach Road One-family
Bngl/Cottage, built in 1952,
1,461 square feet, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 8,870square-foot lot. $933,000
19 Hillside Court One-family
Colonial, built in 1935, 1,490
square feet, 2 bedrooms, 2
baths, on 109,336-square-foot
lot. $600,000
9 Sadler St. Two-family Two
Family, built in 1900, 1,444
square feet, 4 bedrooms, 2
baths, on 4,600-square-foot
lot. $500,000
116 Magnolia Ave. #B Condo.
$415,000
145 Essex Ave. #507 Condo/
Apt, built in 1970, 714 square
feet, 4 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 1
baths. $282,000
178 Magnolia Ave. RES DEV
LAND, on 326,700-square-foot
lot. $105,000
GRAFTON
21 Flint Pond Drive #21 Condo Town House, built in 2010,
1,687 square feet, 6 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 3 baths, on
943,945-square-foot lot.
$655,000
6 Deerfield Court #6 Condo
Town House, built in 1986,
1,208 square feet, 5 rooms, 2
bedrooms, 2 baths, on 95,832Continued on next page
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
Address
G l o b e
MORE
Get the full list at
boston.com/realestate.
RECENT HOME SALES
Continued from preceding page
square-foot lot. $380,000
GROVELAND
306 Main St. MXU COM+RES,
built in 1900, 10,780 square
feet, 12 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 6
baths, on 9,592-square-foot
lot. $1,200,000
180 Center St. MXU
RES+COM, built in 0, 0 square
feet, 0 bedrooms, on 67,954square-foot lot. $225,000
HANSON
51 Liberty Circle #51 Condo
Town House, built in 2018,
1,412 square feet, 5 rooms, 2
bedrooms, 3 baths. $660,000
HARVARD
132 Littleton Road One-family
Contemporary, built in 1980,
2,100 square feet, 8 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 3 baths, on 65,340square-foot lot. $1,000,000
HAVERHILL
640 Boxford Road MXU
RES+COM Old Style, built in
1860, 4,036 square feet, 8
rooms, 4 bedrooms, 5 baths,
on 98,010-square-foot lot.
$1,295,000
24 Park St. Three-family MltiUnt Blg, built in 1850, 3,525
square feet, 15 rooms, 5 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 6,839square-foot lot. $730,000
2 Kali Way One-family Colonial, built in 2000, 2,785
square feet, 8 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 17,511square-foot lot. $730,000
17-19 Taft Ave. Two-family
Mlti-Unt Blg, built in 1900,
2,528 square feet, 10 rooms,
4 bedrooms, 2 baths, on
4,600-square-foot lot.
$510,000
22 Fountain St. Two-family
Mlti-Unt Blg, built in 1890,
2,237 square feet, 8 rooms, 4
bedrooms, 2 baths, on 5,428square-foot lot. $495,000
5 Oleary Way #5 Condo.
$449,000
13 Marion St. #13 Condo.
$425,000
11 Marion St. #11 Condo.
$400,000
89 Farrwood Drive #89 Condo
Town House, built in 1980,
1,145 square feet, 4 rooms, 2
bedrooms, 2 baths. $305,000
48 Haverhill St. One-family
Old Style, built in 1900, 1,265
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 8,398square-foot lot. $175,000
HINGHAM
28 Carleton Road One-family
Cape Cod, built in 1961, 1,306
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 7,912square-foot lot. $625,000
3 Beals Cove Road #B Condo/
Apt, built in 1979, 735 square
feet, 4 rooms, 1 bedroom, 2
baths. $300,000
HOPKINTON
1 Cross St. One-family Split
Level, built in 1920, 2,037
square feet, 8 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 52,259square-foot lot. $525,000
177 Hayden Rowe St. Onefamily Old Style, built in 1860,
1,757 square feet, 9 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 3 baths, on 9,405square-foot lot. $312,507
HUDSON
3 Causeway St. One-family Colonial, built in 1937, 1,992
square feet, 6 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 40,436square-foot lot. $675,000
35 Pope St. #2 Condo/Apt,
built in 1861, 1,533 square
feet, 5 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 2
baths. $485,000
HULL
603 Nantasket Ave. One-family Cape Cod, built in 1942,
1,302 square feet, 5 rooms, 2
bedrooms, 1 bath, on 6,776square-foot lot. $470,000
26 School St. #1 Condo Town
House, built in 1988, 1,067
square feet, 4 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths. $290,000
HYDE PARK
39 Neponset Ave. Two-family
Conventional, built in 1920,
2,839 square feet, 11 rooms,
6 bedrooms, 3 baths, on
9,800-square-foot lot.
$865,000
45 Summit St. One-family
Ranch, built in 1951, 1,015
square feet, 5 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 7,181square-foot lot. $575,000
36 Ayles Road One-family
Cape Cod, built in 1950, 1,403
square feet, 7 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 7,300square-foot lot. $515,000
43 Windham Road One-family
Cape Cod, built in 1960, 1,224
square feet, 6 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 5,100square-foot lot. $495,000
1409 River St. #46 Condo
Low-Rise, built in 1960, 615
square feet, 3 rooms, 1 bed-
room, 1 bath, on 615-squarefoot lot. $250,000
IPSWICH
453 Linebrook Road One-family Colonial, built in 1973,
2,560 square feet, 7 rooms, 4
bedrooms, 2 baths, on 44,431square-foot lot. $750,000
JAMAICA PLAIN
305 Chestnut Ave. Two-family
Two Family, built in 1899,
4,042 square feet, 14 rooms,
4 bedrooms, 3 baths, on
9,614-square-foot lot.
$1,025,000
104 Child St. One-family
Ranch, built in 1920, 1,344
square feet, 5 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 3,224square-foot lot. $955,000
1 Achorn Circle #2 Condo
Free-Standng, built in 1890,
1,070 square feet, 4 rooms, 2
bedrooms, 2 baths, on 1,070square-foot lot. $746,000
9 Sheridan St. #3 Condo.
$700,000
LAWRENCE
303-305 Prospect St. RESMTL BLDG, built in 0, 0 square
feet, 0 bedrooms, on 6,311square-foot lot. $1,600,000
72 Woodland St. Three-family
Family Flat, built in 1900,
3,097 square feet, 18 rooms,
9 bedrooms, 3 baths, on
9,000-square-foot lot.
$750,000
12 Lasalle Ave. One-family Colonial, built in 1947, 1,468
square feet, 8 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 8,640square-foot lot. $425,000
26 Amherst St. One-family
Ranch, built in 1955, 864
square feet, 4 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, on 6,800square-foot lot. $425,000
29 Beaconsfield St. One-family Ranch, built in 1957, 948
square feet, 5 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, on 8,000square-foot lot. $280,000
LEXINGTON
25 Hartwell Ave. R&D FACILITY, built in 1966, 33,339
square feet, 0 bedrooms, on
182,080-square-foot lot.
$17,970,599
40 Hartwell Ave. GEN OFFICE,
built in 1969, 30,351 square
feet, 0 bedrooms, on 304,920square-foot lot. $16,386,401
443 Massachusetts Ave.
Three-family Family Flat, built
in 1750, 2,417 square feet,
12 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 3
baths, on 12,560-square-foot
lot. $1,000,000
82 Fottler Ave. One-family
Conventional, built in 1919,
1,368 square feet, 6 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, on 5,180square-foot lot. $805,000
LITTLETON
10 Lincoln Drive One-family
Cape Cod, built in 1950, 1,152
square feet, 5 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 7,200square-foot lot. $502,500
LOWELL
205 Appleton St. RETAIL
STORE, built in 1965, 4,777
square feet, 0 bedrooms, 2
baths, on 8,889-square-foot
lot. $920,000
700 Andover St. One-family
Colonial, built in 1919, 3,350
square feet, 11 rooms, 6 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 21,855square-foot lot. $835,000
32 Briar Ave. One-family Colonial, built in 1961, 1,716
square feet, 7 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 11,099square-foot lot. $640,000
137 Rogers St. #B Condo/Apt,
built in 2005, 2,018 square
feet, 7 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 3
baths. $499,000
518 Princeton Blvd One-family, built in 0, 0 square feet, 0
bedrooms, on 8,730-squarefoot lot. $480,000
410 Rogers St. One-family Colonial, built in 1985, 1,372
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 8,743square-foot lot. $470,000
11 Pemberton St. One-family
Colonial, built in 1994, 1,358
square feet, 5 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 6,911square-foot lot. $430,000
405 School St. 4-8 UNIT APT
Mlti-Unt Blg, built in 1900,
3,151 square feet, 16 rooms,
8 bedrooms, 4 baths, on
3,267-square-foot lot.
$420,000
41 West St. One-family Conventional, built in 1881, 916
square feet, 4 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 1,653square-foot lot. $339,000
1255 Middlesex St. #D Condo/Apt, built in 2004, 1,022
square feet, 4 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths. $315,000
1461 Pawtucket Blvd #3-2
Condo/Apt, built in 1977, 987
square feet, 5 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 1 baths. $230,000
12 Chase St. One-family Conventional, built in 1900, 1,032
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, on 2,010square-foot lot. $200,000
297 Pawtucket Blvd #12
Condo/Apt, built in 1969, 739
square feet, 3 rooms, 1 bedroom, 1 baths. $195,000
23-33 Middle St. #19 Condo/
Apt, built in 2003, 779 square
feet, 2 rooms, 1 bedroom, 1
baths. $165,000
LYNN
18-20 Astor St. Two-family
Two Family, built in 1986,
1,892 square feet, 8 rooms, 4
bedrooms, 3 baths, on 5,055square-foot lot. $625,000
24 Wentworth Place Onefamily Old Style, built in 1900,
1,293 square feet, 6 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, on 4,156square-foot lot. $550,000
24 Whiting St. Three-family
Mlti-Unt Blg, built in 1900,
3,900 square feet, 14 rooms,
6 bedrooms, 3 baths, on
3,820-square-foot lot.
$535,000
125 Pine Grove Ave. One-family Cape Cod, built in 1950,
1,376 square feet, 5 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, on 6,123square-foot lot. $525,000
92 Flint St. Two-family Two
Family, built in 1900, 1,620
square feet, 8 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 5,000square-foot lot. $520,000
129 Maple St. One-family Old
Style, built in 1900, 1,194
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 3,399square-foot lot. $500,000
54 W Sigourney St. One-family Cape Cod, built in 1949,
1,265 square feet, 6 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 1 bath, on 5,700square-foot lot. $430,000
78 Saunders Road One-family
Bngl/Cottage, built in 1921,
1,016 square feet, 5 rooms, 2
bedrooms, 1 bath, on 8,886square-foot lot. $410,000
19 Halford Place Three-family
Mlti-Unt Blg, built in 1890,
2,592 square feet, 12 rooms,
6 bedrooms, 3 baths, on
3,544-square-foot lot.
$400,000
56 Raddin Grove Ave. Onefamily Cape Cod, built in 1937,
1,532 square feet, 6 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 1 bath, on 5,975square-foot lot. $387,000
168 Eastern Ave. WAREHOUSE, built in 1910, 4,706
square feet, 0 bedrooms, on
6,586-square-foot lot.
$250,000
8 French St. Two-family Two
Family, built in 1920, 1,800
square feet, 8 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 4,075square-foot lot. $207,500
LYNNFIELD
414 Broadway One-family Colonial, built in 1984, 2,074
square feet, 8 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 27,630square-foot lot. $760,000
MALDEN
56-56A Gale St. Two-family
Mlti-Unt Blg, built in 1900,
2,402 square feet, 11 rooms,
5 bedrooms, 3 baths, on
3,402-square-foot lot.
$780,000
25 Monroe St. Two-family
Mlti-Unt Blg, built in 1900,
1,876 square feet, 9 rooms, 5
bedrooms, 3 baths, on 3,981square-foot lot. $765,000
113 Emerald St. One-family
Colonial, built in 1920, 1,762
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 3,345square-foot lot. $750,000
14 Cliff Ter One-family Old
Style, built in 1900, 1,302
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 5,001square-foot lot. $650,000
MARBLEHEAD
10 Goldthwait Road RES DEV
LAND, built in 0, 0 square feet,
0 bedrooms, on 12,737square-foot lot. $4,500,000
46-A Peach Highlands Onefamily Colonial, built in 1996,
2,668 square feet, 9 rooms, 4
bedrooms, 3 baths, on 15,750square-foot lot. $1,205,000
15 Guernsey St. One-family
Old Style, built in 1850, 1,626
square feet, 7 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 5,840square-foot lot. $930,000
33 Intrepid Circle #403 Condo/Apt, built in 2013, 2,030
square feet, 5 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 3 baths. $739,000
MARION
324 Front St. #2 Condo/Apt,
built in 2018, 1,716 square
feet, 3 bedrooms, 3 baths.
$812,500
324 Front St. #4 Condo/Apt,
built in 2018, 1,716 square
feet, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths.
$800,000
410 Front St. One-family Cape
Cod, built in 1948, 1,627
square feet, 7 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 23,046square-foot lot. $385,000
MARLBOROUGH
50 Houde St. One-family Contemporary, built in 1982,
2,011 square feet, 7 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, on 26,856square-foot lot. $660,000
54 Spoonhill Ave. One-family
Raised Ranch, built in 1980,
2,638 square feet, 9 rooms, 4
bedrooms, 3 baths, on 29,905square-foot lot. $650,000
10 Ames Place Two-family
Two Family, built in 1920,
1,261 square feet, 8 rooms, 4
bedrooms, 2 baths, on 2,725square-foot lot. $242,100
MARSHFIELD
13 Woodbine Road One-family
Colonial, built in 1968, 1,666
square feet, 8 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 20,013square-foot lot. $525,000
203 Standish St. One-family
Cottage, built in 1953, 840
square feet, 5 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, on 5,000square-foot lot. $510,000
797 S River St. One-family
Cape Cod, built in 1975, 1,309
square feet, 5 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 34,119square-foot lot. $285,000
13 Water St. One-family Old
Style, built in 1917, 1,007
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 8,160square-foot lot. $205,000
MAYNARD
1 Oak Ridge Drive #2 Condo
Town House, built in 1985,
1,930 square feet, 5 rooms, 2
bedrooms, 2 baths. $385,000
MEDFIELD
89 Pine St. One-family Raised
Ranch, built in 1963, 2,016
square feet, 8 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 37,666square-foot lot. $799,900
MEDFORD
51 Auburn St. #2 Condo/Apt,
built in 1855, 1,593 square
feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2
baths. $710,000
29 Harris Road #1 Condo/Apt,
built in 1910, 1,012 square
feet, 5 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 1
baths. $629,000
MEDWAY
4 Harmony Lane #5 Condo.
$674,900
MELROSE
65 Elm St. Two-family Conventional, built in 1865, 2,654
square feet, 11 rooms, 5 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 11,199square-foot lot. $754,000
71 Marvin Road #73 Condo.
$730,000
MERRIMAC
1 Sunset Ter One-family
Ranch, built in 1956, 1,472
square feet, 4 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, on 21,550square-foot lot. $410,000
METHUEN
70 Cambridge St. MXU
COM+RES, built in 1954,
7,926 square feet, 5 rooms, 2
bedrooms, 4 baths, on 26,676square-foot lot. $840,000
15 Farley St. One-family Cape
Cod, built in 1930, 2,096
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, on 12,001square-foot lot. $515,000
MIDDLEBOROUGH
204 Marion Road One-family
Colonial, built in 1984, 2,984
square feet, 12 rooms, 5 bedrooms, 5 baths, on 80,000square-foot lot. $660,000
62 School St. One-family Colonial, built in 1890, 1,749
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, on 17,487square-foot lot. $460,000
92 Old Center St. One-family
Ranch, built in 1952, 1,200
square feet, 5 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, on 11,761square-foot lot. $360,000
MILFORD
250 Congress St. One-family
Colonial, built in 1984, 2,268
square feet, 8 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 32,339square-foot lot. $610,000
186 Medway Road One-family
Cape Cod, built in 1958, 1,764
square feet, 6 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 21,000square-foot lot. $395,000
17 Salvia Drive One-family
Split Entry, built in 1978,
1,990 square feet, 6 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, on 15,002square-foot lot. $320,000
MILLIS
19 Helen Lane #154 Condo.
$834,963
1012-1014 Main St. Twofamily Family Flat, built in
1890, 2,288 square feet, 10
rooms, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths,
on 16,553-square-foot lot.
$580,000
199 Farm St. One-family Contemporary, built in 1971,
1,597 square feet, 7 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, on 27,443square-foot lot. $549,900
H11
14 Pine Vw #14 Condo/Apt,
built in 1984, 1,040 square
feet, 4 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 2
baths. $359,900
MILTON
114-116 Otis St. Two-family
Mlti-Unt Blg, built in 1900,
2,868 square feet, 12 rooms,
6 bedrooms, 3 baths, on
7,100-square-foot lot.
$1,225,000
252 Edge Hill Road One-family
Colonial, built in 1923, 1,791
square feet, 7 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 7,505square-foot lot. $950,000
14 Farmer Road #14 Condo
Town House, built in 1981,
2,112 square feet, 6 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 3 baths. $870,000
7 Breck St. One-family Old
Style, built in 1880, 1,160
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, on 5,998square-foot lot. $540,000
NATICK
12 Elwin Road One-family Colonial, built in 2005, 3,245
square feet, 9 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 4 baths, on 12,101square-foot lot. $1,380,000
9 Fisher St. One-family Ranch,
built in 1955, 2,220 square
feet, 7 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 3
baths, on 51,836-square-foot
lot. $1,075,000
11 Russell Circle One-family
Ranch, built in 1953, 1,994
square feet, 9 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 21,013square-foot lot. $730,000
40 Pond St. Two-family Old
Style, built in 1880, 2,606
square feet, 9 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 10,799square-foot lot. $710,000
8 Walden Drive #13 Condo/
Apt, built in 1983, 936 square
feet, 5 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 2
baths. $365,000
3 Village Rock Lane #3 Condo/Apt, built in 1987, 778
square feet, 4 rooms, 1 bedroom, 1 baths. $265,000
NEEDHAM
463 South St. One-family Old
Style, built in 1927, 2,969
square feet, 9 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 34,412square-foot lot. $4,329,075
71 Robinwood Ave. One-family Cape Cod, built in 1953,
1,554 square feet, 8 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, on 17,903square-foot lot. $1,010,000
246 Hunnewell St. One-family
Cape Cod, built in 1956, 2,168
square feet, 7 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 13,112square-foot lot. $1,000,000
1616 Great Plain Ave. Onefamily Garrison, built in 1968,
1,966 square feet, 8 rooms, 4
bedrooms, 2 baths, on 24,786square-foot lot. $880,000
NEWBURYPORT
11 Williamson Ave. One-family Cape Cod, built in 1900,
1,778 square feet, 7 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 3 baths, on 19,163square-foot lot. $742,000
18 Rawson Ave. One-family
Cape Cod, built in 1948, 1,510
square feet, 7 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 6,420square-foot lot. $575,000
57 Kent St. One-family Conventional, built in 1794, 1,506
square feet, 7 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, on 2,640square-foot lot. $465,000
13 Christie Drive #2 Condo/
Apt, built in 1984, 993 square
feet, 6 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 2
baths. $460,000
41 Boardman St. #41 Condo/
Apt, built in 1850, 1,024
square feet, 5 rooms, 1 bedroom, 2 baths. $435,000
NEWTON
1400 Commonwealth Ave.
One-family Colonial, built in
1934, 4,423 square feet, 13
rooms, 8 bedrooms, 5 baths,
on 37,557-square-foot lot.
$2,700,000
19-21 Parker St. HS AUTH
PROP Condo/Apt, built in
1968, 24,420 square feet, 99
rooms, 33 bedrooms, 33
baths, on 45,582-square-foot
lot. $1,626,000
14 Sterling St. One-family Victorian, built in 1880, 2,708
square feet, 10 rooms, 5 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 7,000square-foot lot. $1,170,000
40 Oakmont Road One-family
Cape Cod, built in 1942, 1,199
square feet, 6 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, on 9,580square-foot lot. $925,000
86 Webster St. #86 Condo
Two Family, built in 1930,
1,215 square feet, 7 rooms, 2
bedrooms, 2 baths, on 7,500square-foot lot. $680,000
NORFOLK
17 Sumner St. #21 Condo.
$740,363
11 Pennacook St. PS NEW
CONST, on 31,433-square-foot
lot. $225,000
NORTH ANDOVER
149 Pleasant St. Two-family
Duplex, built in 1980, 2,392
square feet, 9 rooms, 5 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 15,054square-foot lot. $780,000
89 Berkeley Road One-family
Colonial, built in 1984, 2,806
square feet, 7 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 12,502square-foot lot. $660,000
NORTH ATTLEBOROUGH
36 Jean Drive One-family Colonial, built in 1980, 1,944
square feet, 8 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 15,001square-foot lot. $661,500
11 Bonneau St. One-family
Raised Ranch, built in 1955,
1,040 square feet, 5 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 1 bath, on 8,086square-foot lot. $447,000
124 Division St. Two-family
Duplex, built in 1900, 3,038
square feet, 14 rooms, 5 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 11,840square-foot lot. $435,000
58 Reed Ave. #11 Condo/Apt,
built in 2018, 1,520 square
feet, 5 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 2
baths. $383,000
17 Stagecoach Road Onefamily Conventional, built in
1932, 1,440 square feet, 5
rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
on 25,000-square-foot lot.
$365,000
NORTHBOROUGH
2 Edge Way One-family Colonial, built in 1996, 1,916
square feet, 7 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 40,001square-foot lot. $625,000
348 Brigham St. One-family
Colonial, built in 1944, 2,078
square feet, 9 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 96,228square-foot lot. $620,000
NORTH READING
21 Cedar St. Two-family Conventional, built in 1929, 3,447
square feet, 12 rooms, 6 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 41,556square-foot lot. $835,000
35 Mid Iron Drive #35 Condo
Town House, built in 1983,
1,594 square feet, 6 rooms, 2
bedrooms, 3 baths. $619,000
NORTON
9 Ledge Road One-family
Ranch, built in 1977, 1,020
square feet, 5 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, on 5,000square-foot lot. $388,000
NORWELL
285 Prospect St. One-family
Cape Cod, built in 1960, 2,559
square feet, 8 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 4 baths, on 45,738square-foot lot. $785,000
36 Bowker St. One-family
Ranch, built in 1965, 1,294
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 52,272square-foot lot. $550,000
NORWOOD
36 Greenwich Road One-family Colonial, built in 1960,
3,284 square feet, 9 rooms, 5
bedrooms, 3 baths, on 22,740square-foot lot. $955,000
12 Westover Pkwy One-family
Raised Ranch, built in 1961,
1,341 square feet, 8 rooms, 4
bedrooms, 2 baths, on 16,250square-foot lot. $533,000
PEABODY
20 Patricia Road One-family
Colonial, built in 1957, 1,484
square feet, 8 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 16,370square-foot lot. $725,000
703 Foxwood Circle #703
Condo Townhse-End, built in
1987, 2,692 square feet, 5
rooms, 2 bedrooms, 3 baths.
$619,900
2 Yale St. One-family Split Entry, built in 1965, 2,048
square feet, 7 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 22,455square-foot lot. $615,000
10 Patricia Road One-family
Ranch, built in 1959, 1,199
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, on 17,489square-foot lot. $550,000
17 Charlotte St. One-family
Old Style, built in 1910, 1,713
square feet, 8 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 6,900square-foot lot. $368,000
PEPPERELL
13 Pleasant St. One-family Old
Style, built in 1902, 1,459
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 11,953square-foot lot. $400,000
PLYMOUTH
26 Wickertree One-family
Contemporary, built in 2004,
3,085 square feet, 9 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 4 baths, on 12,777square-foot lot. $900,000
16 Jamison Way #16 Condo
Town House, built in 2015,
2,173 square feet, 7 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 3 baths. $860,000
15 Hudson St. One-family Colonial, built in 2000, 2,304
square feet, 7 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 12,197square-foot lot. $550,000
Continued on next page
H12
Address
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
G l o b e
MORE
Get the full list at
boston.com/realestate.
RECENT HOME SALES
Continued from preceding page
15 Glen Road One-family
Ranch, built in 2007, 2,078
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 30,019square-foot lot. $549,900
14 Halifax Road One-family
Ranch, built in 1960, 947
square feet, 4 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, on 6,098square-foot lot. $415,000
QUINCY
186 Arlington St. Two-family
Two Family, built in 1900,
2,883 square feet, 10 rooms,
4 bedrooms, 3 baths, on
5,000-square-foot lot.
$1,120,000
44 Longwood Road One-family Colonial, built in 1925,
1,643 square feet, 7 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 1 bath, on 5,000square-foot lot. $750,000
365 Newport Ave. #301 Condo. $698,000
6 Waumbeck St. One-family
Conventional, built in 1920,
1,439 square feet, 7 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 3 baths, on 3,728square-foot lot. $660,000
99 Hamilton Ave. One-family
Cape Cod, built in 1928, 1,190
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, on 5,400square-foot lot. $623,000
27 Parker St. #27 Condo Town
House, built in 2005, 1,114
square feet, 5 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 3 baths. $599,900
34 Copley St. One-family Colonial, built in 1920, 1,115
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 5,000square-foot lot. $459,000
56 Bowes Ave. One-family
Ranch, built in 1955, 864
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, on 5,164square-foot lot. $425,000
179 Presidents Lane #3C
Condo/Apt, built in 1970, 490
square feet, 2 rooms, 0 bedrooms, 1 baths. $240,000
RANDOLPH
8 Marion St. One-family Conventional, built in 1930, 1,581
square feet, 5 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, on 7,680square-foot lot. $550,000
5 Sunset Drive One-family
Split Level, built in 1958,
1,756 square feet, 9 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 3 baths, on 13,555square-foot lot. $401,000
27 Rockefeller St. One-family
Cape Cod, built in 1920, 780
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, on 5,700square-foot lot. $272,500
RAYNHAM
767 South St. E One-family
Ranch, built in 2009, 2,118
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 55,334square-foot lot. $639,000
69 Orchard St. Two-family
Conventional, built in 1930,
2,115 square feet, 20 rooms,
0 bedrooms, 2 baths, on
17,163-square-foot lot.
$300,000
READING
86 Forest St. One-family Colonial, built in 2015, 5,160
square feet, 10 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 4 baths, on 39,280square-foot lot. $1,550,000
188 Van Norden Road Onefamily Colonial, built in 2008,
3,863 square feet, 10 rooms,
4 bedrooms, 4 baths, on
69,696-square-foot lot.
$1,450,000
46 Howard St. One-family
Ranch, built in 1996, 2,187
square feet, 7 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 15,626square-foot lot. $1,325,000
25 Pennsylvania Ave. Onefamily Colonial, built in 1926,
2,020 square feet, 8 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 3 baths, on 11,075square-foot lot. $950,000
17 Arlington St. One-family
Old Style, built in 1920, 1,942
square feet, 7 rooms, 3 bed-
rooms, 3 baths, on 6,930square-foot lot. $904,999
34 Springvale Road One-family Cape Cod, built in 1940,
2,038 square feet, 6 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, on 8,000square-foot lot. $783,000
16 Keith Road One-family Split
Level, built in 1972, 1,794
square feet, 9 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 13,848square-foot lot. $780,000
1446 Main St. One-family
Cape Cod, built in 1948, 2,016
square feet, 7 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 22,140square-foot lot. $630,000
340 Lowell St. One-family
Cape Cod, built in 1920, 2,293
square feet, 9 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 13,490square-foot lot. $580,000
84 Forest St. One-family Bngl/
Cottage, built in 1945, 1,058
square feet, 5 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, on 28,740square-foot lot. $550,000
REVERE
44 Rand St. Two-family Two
Family, built in 1910, 1,736
square feet, 6 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 3,999square-foot lot. $600,000
34 Sumner St. #6 Condo.
$315,000
ROCKPORT
19 Clark Ave. One-family Conventional, built in 1865, 1,796
square feet, 7 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 5,227square-foot lot. $1,403,000
30 Pigeon Hill St. One-family
Conventional, built in 1940,
1,094 square feet, 4 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 1 bath, on 9,583square-foot lot. $630,000
ROSLINDALE
4110 Washington St. Threefamily Decker, built in 1905,
3,078 square feet, 15 rooms,
6 bedrooms, 3 baths, on
3,400-square-foot lot.
$1,020,000
337 Cornell St. One-family Colonial, built in 1920, 2,004
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 4,800square-foot lot. $855,000
2 Delore Circle One-family Colonial, built in 1963, 1,274
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 3,528square-foot lot. $534,000
6 Iona St. #1 Condo Decker,
built in 1910, 1,088 square
feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 1
bath, on 1,088-square-foot lot.
$510,000
4061 Washington St. #3 Condo Decker, built in 1910, 960
square feet, 5 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, on 960-squarefoot lot. $427,000
139 Grew Ave. #B Condo
Town House, built in 1988,
1,050 square feet, 4 rooms, 2
bedrooms, 2 baths, on 1,050square-foot lot. $240,000
ROWLEY
30 Taylor Lane RES DEV LAND,
on 25,037-square-foot lot.
$1,000,000
43 Taylor Lane RES DEV LAND,
on 37,092-square-foot lot.
$715,000
45 Taylor Lane RES DEV LAND,
on 44,396-square-foot lot.
$715,000
ROXBURY
100 Shawmut Ave. #314
Condo. $1,024,900
145 Worcester St. #2 Condo.
$1,000,000
100 Shawmut Ave. #311
Condo. $810,000
24 Gayland St. #3 Condo
Decker, built in 1905, 1,250
square feet, 5 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, on 1,250square-foot lot. $450,000
SALEM
296 Highland Ave. MXU
COM+RES, built in 1950,
4,488 square feet, 0 bedrooms, 1 bath, on 524,654-
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square-foot lot. $2,100,000
18 Sutton Ave. One-family
Ranch, built in 1955, 2,110
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 9,439square-foot lot. $752,000
14 Monroe Road One-family
Cape Cod, built in 1954, 1,620
square feet, 7 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 5,471square-foot lot. $555,500
4 Rawlins St. One-family Old
Style, built in 1860, 1,103
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, on 3,101square-foot lot. $500,000
27 Hancock St. Two-family
Mlti-Unt Blg, built in 1900,
2,993 square feet, 13 rooms,
5 bedrooms, 3 baths, on
3,001-square-foot lot.
$470,000
93 Canal St. #3 Condo/Apt,
built in 1930, 1,020 square
feet, 5 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 1
bath, on 12,070-square-foot
lot. $465,000
82 Washington Sq #5 Condo/
Apt, built in 1900, 931 square
feet, 4 rooms, 1 bedroom, 1
baths. $415,000
1 Laurent Road #3 Condo/Apt,
built in 1978, 773 square feet,
5 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 1 baths.
$330,000
31 Symonds St. #20 Condo/
Apt, built in 1980, 707 square
feet, 4 rooms, 1 bedroom, 1
baths. $280,000
36 Willson St. One-family
Cape Cod, built in 1923, 1,637
square feet, 7 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 6,691square-foot lot. $250,000
SALISBURY
128 N End Blvd #3 Condo.
$1,100,000
SAUGUS
11 3rd St. One-family Ranch,
built in 1958, 1,307 square
feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, on 11,500-square-foot
lot. $603,000
8 Floyd St. One-family Ranch,
built in 1952, 1,128 square
feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 1
bath, on 8,015-square-foot lot.
$530,000
24 Riverside Court One-family
Old Style, built in 1930, 1,105
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 7,797square-foot lot. $500,000
SCITUATE
273 Country Way One-family
Conventional, built in 1849,
3,231 square feet, 6 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 3 baths, on 21,713square-foot lot. $1,535,000
9 Christopher Lane One-family
Colonial, built in 1969, 2,312
square feet, 9 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 4 baths, on 24,002square-foot lot. $1,350,000
8 Benjamin Lane #8 PS NEW
CONST. $1,169,995
6 Benjamin Lane #6 PS NEW
CONST. $999,995
21 Ladds Way #21 Condo/
Apt, built in 1987, 2,405
square feet, 8 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 3 baths. $989,000
334 Chief Justice Cushing
Hwy One-family Cape Cod,
built in 1960, 1,582 square
feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, on 134,600-square-foot
lot. $619,000
14 Manns Hill Cres One-family
Contemporary, built in 1988,
2,980 square feet, 8 rooms, 4
bedrooms, 3 baths, on 45,687square-foot lot. $1,200,000
6 Lakeview St. One-family
Ranch, built in 1950, 1,686
square feet, 8 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 41,680square-foot lot. $655,000
584 Mountain St. One-family
Colonial, built in 1996, 2,615
square feet, 8 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 80,000square-foot lot. $500,000
SHREWSBURY
15 Caroline Ave. One-family
Cape Cod, built in 1949, 1,230
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, on 23,676square-foot lot. $397,000
9 Redland St. RES DEV LAND,
on 16,303-square-foot lot.
$100,000
SOMERVILLE
14 White St. Place RES-MTL
BLDG, built in 0, 0 square feet,
0 bedrooms, on 7,270-squarefoot lot. $1,502,125
19 Harvard St. Two-family Two
Family, built in 1890, 3,733
square feet, 12 rooms, 6 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 3,570square-foot lot. $1,420,000
9 Monmouth St. #3 Condo
Victorian, built in 1870, 1,525
square feet, 7 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 4 baths, on 7,763square-foot lot. $1,300,000
34 Moore St. Two-family Two
Family, built in 1920, 2,383
square feet, 13 rooms, 5 bedrooms, 4 baths, on 4,000square-foot lot. $1,150,000
63 Prichard Ave. Two-family
Decker, built in 1920, 2,354
square feet, 10 rooms, 4 bed-
rooms, 2 baths, on 2,590square-foot lot. $930,000
10 Hillside Circle #3 Condo,
built in 1898, 1,156 square
feet, 5 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 1
baths. $810,000
270 Cedar St. #8 Condo LowRise, built in 2012, 1,111
square feet, 5 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths. $722,700
28 Highland Ave. #3 Condo,
built in 1893, 907 square feet,
4 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 1 baths.
$655,000
38 Otis St. #2 Condo Two
Family, built in 1890, 1,262
square feet, 6 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 1 baths. $572,000
SOUTHBOROUGH
50 Oregon Road One-family
Tudor, built in 1991, 2,712
square feet, 8 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 32,670square-foot lot. $742,500
SOUTH BOSTON
637 E 1st St. #206 Condo
Low-Rise, built in 2013, 1,265
square feet, 4 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 1,265square-foot lot. $915,000
115 B St. #2 Condo FreeStandng, built in 2013, 906
square feet, 4 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 906square-foot lot. $769,000
17 Vinton St. #2 Condo.
$720,000
112 N St. #2 Condo FreeStandng, built in 1924, 648
square feet, 4 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, on 648-squarefoot lot. $585,000
457-469A W Broadway #208
Condo. $314,000
STONEHAM
29 Upland Road One-family
Old Style, built in 1925, 1,810
square feet, 8 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 5,001square-foot lot. $550,000
77 Hancock St. One-family Old
Style, built in 1900, 1,008
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, on 4,251square-foot lot. $380,000
STOUGHTON
55 Alpine Way One-family
Cape Cod, built in 1987, 2,920
square feet, 8 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 4 baths, on 23,528square-foot lot. $715,000
25 Hepburn Circle One-family
Raised Ranch, built in 1973,
3,202 square feet, 7 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 4 baths, on 25,920square-foot lot. $575,000
57 Tea St. One-family Split
Level, built in 1983, 1,408
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 17,113square-foot lot. $500,000
83 Grove St. One-family Old
Style, built in 1900, 1,496
square feet, 3 bedrooms, 1
bath, on 10,800-square-foot
lot. $410,000
41 Oliva Court #41 Condo
Town House, built in 1973,
1,280 square feet, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths. $343,999
SUDBURY
215 Mossman Road One-family Conventional, built in 1905,
2,769 square feet, 7 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 4 baths, on 60,473square-foot lot. $1,110,000
319 Willis Road One-family
Colonial, built in 1963, 2,144
square feet, 8 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 5 baths, on 40,117square-foot lot. $950,000
17 Farmstead Lane #17 Condo Town House, built in 2018,
2,262 square feet, 2 bedrooms, 3 baths. $919,000
61 Moore Road One-family
Contemporary, built in 1951,
1,920 square feet, 6 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, on 58,295square-foot lot. $910,000
SWAMPSCOTT
3 Fisher Ave. One-family Old
Style, built in 1915, 1,417
square feet, 8 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 14,244square-foot lot. $600,000
TEWKSBURY
53 Patrick Road #53 Condo/
Apt, built in 1986, 1,240
square feet, 2 bedrooms, 2
baths, on 100-square-foot lot.
$465,000
TOPSFIELD
10 Dover Hill Road One-family
Cape Cod, built in 1991, 4,408
square feet, 10 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 118,483square-foot lot. $1,175,000
TOWNSEND
10 Hickory Drive One-family
Cape Cod, built in 1978, 1,996
square feet, 5 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 35,305square-foot lot. $560,000
UPTON
8 Stearns Road One-family Colonial, built in 1985, 2,317
square feet, 7 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 79,715square-foot lot. $715,000
125 Westborough Road Onefamily Cape Cod, built in 1975,
741 Main St. One-family Colonial, built in 1915, 1,708
square feet, 7 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 6,534square-foot lot. $649,900
12 Middle St. One-family Bngl/
Cottage, built in 1930, 1,490
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 11,021square-foot lot. $477,000
foot lot. $850,000
13 Chippewa Road One-family
Ranch, built in 1980, 1,582
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 57,935square-foot lot. $680,000
31 Depot St. One-family Cape
Cod, built in 1958, 1,344
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 36,503square-foot lot. $600,000
149 Groton Road One-family
Cape Cod, built in 1954, 1,763
square feet, 7 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, on 56,628square-foot lot. $460,000
3 Hillside Ave. One-family
Cape Cod, built in 1950, 1,750
square feet, 5 rooms, 1 bedroom, 1 bath, on 21,780square-foot lot. $260,000
WALPOLE
WESTON
2,513 square feet, 5 rooms, 2
bedrooms, 3 baths, on
316,228-square-foot lot.
$610,000
149 Westborough Road Onefamily Cottage, built in 1940,
896 square feet, 3 rooms, 1
bedroom, 1 bath, on 76,666square-foot lot. $360,000
WAKEFIELD
24 Hampton Court One-family
Colonial, built in 1993, 2,396
square feet, 9 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 20,016square-foot lot. $1,000,000
24 Short St. Two-family Family
Flat, built in 1910, 1,906
square feet, 10 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 14,550square-foot lot. $650,000
26 Merganser Way #26 Condo/Apt, built in 1992, 1,488
square feet, 5 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 3 baths. $515,000
383 Fisher St. One-family Colonial, built in 1961, 2,131
square feet, 10 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 40,281square-foot lot. $515,000
267 Washington St. One-family Conventional, built in 1900,
1,125 square feet, 6 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 1 bath, on 13,068square-foot lot. $350,000
WALTHAM
16 Dobbins St. One-family Colonial, built in 2002, 1,984
square feet, 7 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 7,200square-foot lot. $1,100,000
67-69 Lexington St. Two-family Two Family, built in 1900,
2,768 square feet, 10 rooms,
6 bedrooms, 2 baths, on
8,464-square-foot lot.
$867,500
87 Marivista Ave. One-family
Colonial, built in 1958, 1,440
square feet, 8 rooms, 5 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 3,202square-foot lot. $725,000
175 Lincoln St. One-family
Raised Ranch, built in 1978,
2,182 square feet, 6 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, on 15,011square-foot lot. $700,000
WATERTOWN
190 Summer St. #1 Condo.
$1,015,000
290 Pleasant St. #209 Condo/Apt, built in 2006, 961
square feet, 1 room, 1 baths.
$540,000
WAYLAND
10 Bennett Road One-family
Cape Cod, built in 1952, 2,330
square feet, 8 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 17,860square-foot lot. $950,000
97 Draper Road One-family
Raised Ranch, built in 1961,
2,646 square feet, 8 rooms, 4
bedrooms, 2 baths, on 60,548square-foot lot. $849,000
12 Oak Hill Road One-family
Colonial, built in 1966, 2,268
square feet, 8 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 29,185square-foot lot. $800,000
35 Rich Valley Road One-family Cape Cod, built in 1950,
2,207 square feet, 7 rooms, 4
bedrooms, 2 baths, on 54,014square-foot lot. $760,000
WELLESLEY
12 Tennyson Road One-family
Colonial, built in 1930, 4,063
square feet, 13 rooms, 6 bedrooms, 5 baths, on 14,020square-foot lot. $2,400,000
24 S Woodside Ave. One-family Colonial, built in 1992,
2,352 square feet, 7 rooms, 4
bedrooms, 4 baths, on 12,649square-foot lot. $1,400,000
52 Riverdale Road One-family
Old Style, built in 1927, 2,256
square feet, 8 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 5 baths, on 7,200square-foot lot. $1,200,000
11 Oak St. #6 Condo/Apt, built
in 1967, 1,171 square feet, 2
bedrooms, 2 baths. $759,900
WESTBOROUGH
25 Deerfield Way #25 Condo/
Apt, built in 2000, 2,090
square feet, 6 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths. $720,000
11 Cedar St. One-family Colonial, built in 1897, 1,745
square feet, 8 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 1 bath, on 10,890square-foot lot. $465,000
WEST BRIDGEWATER
536 N Elm St. One-family
Ranch, built in 1962, 1,604
square feet, 5 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 18,731square-foot lot. $395,000
WESTFORD
74 Beaverbrook Road RES
UDV LAND, on 50,094-square-
75 Scotch Pine Road Onefamily Contemporary, built in
2020, 5,076 square feet, 12
rooms, 5 bedrooms, 6 baths,
on 124,469-square-foot lot.
$8,000,000
55 Loring Road One-family Colonial, built in 1998, 4,741
square feet, 11 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 7 baths, on 43,996square-foot lot. $2,600,000
73 Corwood Drive RES DEV
LAND, on 148,427-square-foot
lot. $840,000
WEST ROXBURY
71 Joyce Kilmer Road Onefamily Colonial, built in 1910,
1,608 square feet, 6 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, on 7,210square-foot lot. $820,000
56 Morrell St. One-family
Ranch, built in 1960, 960
square feet, 5 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 7,800square-foot lot. $545,000
WEYMOUTH
16 Bleakney Drive One-family
Ranch, built in 1956, 1,740
square feet, 8 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 16,936square-foot lot. $650,000
8 Prospect Court One-family
Conventional, built in 1893,
1,628 square feet, 7 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, on 10,044square-foot lot. $602,900
104 Swan Ave. One-family Colonial, built in 1926, 1,388
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 10,605square-foot lot. $505,000
11 Ledge Hill Road One-family
Antique, built in 1728, 2,442
square feet, 10 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 1 bath, on 5,498square-foot lot. $500,000
463 Broad St. One-family
Ranch, built in 1955, 864
square feet, 5 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, on 16,796square-foot lot. $440,000
WHITMAN
238 Stetson St. One-family
Old Style, built in 1900, 1,480
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, on 15,551square-foot lot. $405,000
WILMINGTON
10 Blueberry Lane One-family
Colonial, built in 1993, 1,976
square feet, 8 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 31,799square-foot lot. $831,500
114 Nichols St. One-family
Colonial, built in 1960, 2,156
square feet, 8 rooms, 5 bedrooms, 2 baths, on 24,829square-foot lot. $775,000
35 Swain Road One-family Colonial, built in 2000, 1,632
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 10,019square-foot lot. $670,000
36 Middlesex Ave. #2 Condo/
Apt, built in 2008, 956 square
feet, 5 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 1
baths. $455,000
WINCHESTER
4 Horn Pond Brook Road Onefamily Ranch, built in 1941,
1,128 square feet, 5 rooms, 2
bedrooms, 1 bath, on 8,830square-foot lot. $680,000
WINTHROP
46 Jefferson St. #2 Condo/
Apt, built in 1900, 760 square
feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2
baths. $542,500
600 Shirley St. #3 Condo.
$523,000
WOBURN
1 Bay St. One-family Cape Cod,
built in 1967, 1,699 square
feet, 8 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, on 16,689-square-foot
lot. $805,000
94 Pearl St. One-family Conventional, built in 1914, 1,569
square feet, 8 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, on 25,010square-foot lot. $585,000
85 Winn St. One-family Conventional, built in 1830, 1,260
square feet, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, on 2,380square-foot lot. $565,000
These listings are provided by The
Warren Group and are subject to editing
due to spatial constraints. See the full
list on Boston.com/realestate. Send
comments to Address@globe.com or to
Customerservice@thewarrengroup.com.
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
B o s t o n
notices
& more
boston.com/classifieds
AUCTIONS
AUCTIONS
AUCTIONS
PUBLIC AUCTION
jobs
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 16TH AT 11:00 AM (ET)
±1,500 SEAT
• ±52,000 S/F BANQUET FACILITY •
• ±10 ACRES LAND •
• ALL ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE LICENSE •
3890 & 3892 Washington St., Roslindale, MA
Industrial Property & Adjacent Home on .55± Acres
Selling in the Entirety
Close to Forest Hills MBTA Station
Wednesday, November 16 at 11am On-site
Open House: Wednesday, November 9 (11am-1pm)
COMMERCIAL &
INDUSTRIAL
176 SHOEMAKER LANE LLC & OMS HOSPITALITY GROUP, INC
D/B/A
176 SHOEMAKER LANE
AGAWAM, MASSACHUSETTS
TO BE SOLD ON THE PREMISES & BY LIVE INTERNET BIDDING
LIVE ONSITE & LIVE ONLINE BIDDING
H AVAILABLE
AT WWW.BIDSPOTTER.COM H
WEST ROXBURY 8,000 sf
street level retail for lease
on Centre Street in West Roxbury 617-329-5090
boston.com/
monster
PROFESSIONAL
SEND FOR DESCRIPTIVE BROCHURE OR VISIT
OUR WEBSITE AT WWW.POSNIK.COM
SALE PER ORDER OF MORTGAGEE & SECURED PARTY
THOMAS J. HAMEL, ESQ.
OF THE FIRM OF COURTNEY, LEE & HAMEL, PC, 31 WENDELL AVENUE, PITTSFIELD, MA
ATTORNEY FOR MORTGAGEE & SECURED PARTY
Info, Full Terms, Broker Registration & More at:
www.JJManning.com
800.521.0111
Lic# 111 • Ref # 22-1980
Real Estate AUCTION
TERMS OF SALE
REAL ESTATE: $50,000.00 DEPOSIT CASH OR CERTIFIED CHECK
5% BUYERS PREMIUM APPLIES
DEPOSIT MUST BE INCREASED TO 10% OF PURCHASE PRICE WITHIN 5 BUSINESS DAYS
PERSONAL PROPERTY (ENTIRETY): $20,000.00 DEPOSIT CASH OR CERTIFIED CHECK
PERSONAL PROPERTY (INDIVIDUAL LOTS): 25% DEPOSIT CASH OR CERTIFIED CHECK
(ALL ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE LICENSE): $5,000.00 DEPOSIT CASH OR CERTIFIED CHECK
15% BUYERS PREMIUM APPLIES ON ALL ONSITE PURCHASES
18% BUYERS PREMIUM APPLIES ON ALL ONLINE PURCHASES
OTHER TERMS TO BE ANNOUNCED AT TIME OF SALE
INSPECTION: SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 5TH & NOVEMBER 12TH – 10:00 AM TO 3:00 PM
& MORNING OF SALE – 8:30 AM TO 11:00 AM OR UPON REQUEST
Aaron Posnik
West Springfield, MA • Philadelphia, PA
413-733-5238 • 610-853-6655
AUCTIONEERS APPRAISERS
MA Auc Lic #161 PA Auc Lic #AY000241L
TOLL FREE 1-877-POSNIK1 • (767-6451)
Web: www.posnik.com • Email: info@posnik.com
stuff
WANTED
CASH FOR RECORDS
33 LPS & 45’s wanted.
Call George 617-633-2682
FREON WANTED: Certified buyer looking to buy
R11, R12, R500 & more! Call
Clarissa at 312-535-8384.
6 Country Ln., Southborough, MA
3,542± sf, 4BR, 3.5BA Home on 1± Acre
2-Car Garage, Bonus Space, Office & More
Thursday, November 17 at 11am On-site
Open House: Thursday, November 10 (11am-1pm)
pets
boston.com/
classifieds
Info, Full Terms, Broker Registration & More at:
www.JJManning.com
800.521.0111
MA Co Lic# 111 • Ref # 22-1975
MORTGAGEES’
SALE OF REAL ESTATE
WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 9, 2022
2:00 PM - WAKEFIELD, MA
11 HARWICK ROAD - DEPOSIT $5,000
TUESDAY NOVEMBER 15, 2022
12:00 PM - SOUTH CHATHAM, MA
188 BAY VIEW ROAD - DEPOSIT $5,000
1:00 PM - OSTERVILLE, MA
230 STARBOARD LANE - DEPOSIT $5,000
TERMS OF SALE: Deposits in the amounts specified above are to be paid by the purchaser(s) at
the time and place of each sale by certified or bank check. All balances due are to be paid within
30 days of each indivdual sale. Other items, if any, to be announced at each sale. Call our AUCTION
SCHEDULE LINE at (617) 964-1282 for a list of the current day’s auctions and visit our website
www.commonwealthauction.com for continuously updated scheduling information.
(617) 964-0005 • MA Lic. 2235 • www.CommonwealthAuction.com
HOTELRESTAURANT
SUPPLY
MR. SMITH BUYS & SELLS
NEW & USED RESTAURANT
BAR-PIZZA-STORE EQUIPMENT
AT OUR WAREHOUSE
80 MYRTLE ST. NO. QUINCY MA
617-770-1600 - 617-436-8829
boston.com/
classifieds
RENTALS
All real estate advertising in
this newspaper is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing act
of 1968, the Massachusetts
Anti Discrimination Act & the
Boston & Cambridge Fair
Housing Ordinances which
makes it illegal to advertise
any preference, limitation or
discrimination ba sed on
race, color, religion, sex,
handicap, familial status,
national origin, ancestry, age,
children, marital status,
sexual orientation, veterans
status, or source of income
or any intention to make any
such preference, limitation
or discrimination.
This newspaper will not
knowingly accept any
advertising for real estate
which is in violation of the
law. Our readers are hereby
informed that all dwellings
advertised in this newspaper are available on an
equal opportunity basis. To
complain of discrimination
call HUD tollfree at
1-800-669 - 9777. For the
N.E. area call HUD at 617994 - 8335. The toll-free
number for the hearing
impaired is 1-800-927-9275.
Engagement Manager
Engagement Manager
(May telecommute from
any location in the U.S.): Develop econometric models
and prepare econometric
analyses of business data
to support expert reports
and present results to both
expert and non-expert audiences. Mail resume: Keystone Strategy, Job Code
ME022, 116 Huntington
Avenue, Suite 1200, Boston,
MA 02116
Executive Director, Sales
Executive Director, Sales
(Woburn, MA). Manage &
oversee the Sales division
by establishing plans to
ensure all sales targets are
met & ensure the continued
growth of key distribution
channels. Monitor market
penetration & establish a
target list of resellers to be
added to the Reseller/Major
Accounts division as well as
overseeing the major accounts team. Travel Reqmt:
Up to 25% of travel reqd to
visit dealers & salespeople
in the field. Telecommuting
approximately 2 days per
week permitted. Resumes
to RISO, Inc. HR at jobs@
riso.com.
Formlabs, Inc -
Patent Counsel
in Somerville, MA. Draft patent applications based on
invention disclosures relating to mechanical, electrical, software and materials
patents.
Telecommuting
permitted up to 2 days a
week. To apply, please send
resumes to Susan Coughlin
- 35 Medford St. Ste. 301
Somerville, MA 02143 or hrjob@formlabs.com. Reference #: 000017.
Staples, Inc.
DOGS
German
Shorthair
Pointers AKC, Champ,
puppy shots, dewormed,10
wks. $1500. 978-490-9461
APARTMENTS
NEWTON
MESSAGES
100TH B’Day Party
If served in the 407th
AAA Gunbn Battery C
Buzz Bomb Kings and
interested in participating
in Lenny Devanna’s milestone. Please contact son
978-764-8845
The Golda Meir House Expansion senior housing development in Auburndale is closing
its 30% & 50% waitlists due
to the length of wait time
exceeding one year. Qualified applications still being
accepted for 60% & 99% income categories, including
mobile voucher holders.
PROFESSIONAL
RPA, Business Process
Engineer
RPA, Business Process
Engineer
COMMERCIAL
• BANQUET ROOMS • BALLROOMS • BRIDAL ROOMS •
• LOUNGES • BARS • KITCHENS •
• RESTAURANT, KITCHEN, BAR & BANQUET •
• FURNISHINGS & EQUIPMENT •
H13
VERMONT RE
Live Onsite & Webcast
MORTGAGEE’S SALE OF REAL ESTATE & SECURED PARTY SALE OF PERSONAL PROPERTY
Business
G l o b e
OUT OF STATE
WOODSTOCK, Blake Hill TH,
Spectacular views, 4BR, 3BA,
partially furnished, $475,000.
MVP 802-457-3800
Real Estate AUCTION
Development Opportunity
AUCTIONS
S u n d a y
Senior Architect I
Framingham, MA. Design
& develp apps or systms
architecture. Pos. is fixed
loc. based in Framingham;
telecom. from a home office may also be allowed.
Submit resume to
https://staples.taleo.net/
careersection/6/jobdetail.
ftl?lang=en&job
=1233796&src
Nanny
Nanny
needed for Tanvi Nagdev
(Sharon, MA). Care for children in pvt. home. HS diploma or equiv. req. 3 mths
exp as nanny or childcare
worker req. Email: khuranat3717@gmail.com.
Rockland Trust Company,
Rockland, MA: Work within
the Banking & Digital Ops.
area
to
collaboratively
engage w/ colleagues to
systematically identify opportunities to transform
processes utilizing RPA.
Telecommuting from w/i
U.S. allowed. Min Reqs: BA/
BS degree in Comp. Sci.,
Comp. Eng., or closely rel.
field + 2 years’ of software
programming exp. Special
Reqs: Must have any level of
demonstrated knowledge
of: RPA tools, including Automation Anywhere & Blue
Prism; Agile/Scrum methodologies; & business &
technical acumen for applications. Qualified applicants
email resume to Colleen
Balboni, AVP, Employment
Officer, at colleen.balboni@
rocklandtrust.com w/ ref. to
Job Code: RTCBPE22
Specialist
PROFESSIONAL
PROFESSIONAL
Sr. Manager, CMC Project
Management
Patient Safety ICSR Senior
Specialist
Sr. Manager, CMC Project
Management
Sumitomo Pharma Oncology,
Marlborough,MA:
responsible for CMC compliance &CMC technical
operations.
Telecommuting from w/i U.S. allowed.
Min Reqs: BA/BS or foreign
equiv. in Pharmacology or
closely rel. field + 3 years’
exp. in project management
for pharmaceutical industry.
Special Reqs: Must have
any level of demonstrated
knowledge of: analytical Development in drug development; cross-functional drug
development
processes,
FDA/ICH/EMA
guidelines,
& cGMPs; & preparation &
submission of CMC documents in support of regulatory filings & CMC development strategies across
IND-BLA stages. Qualified
applicants email resume to
Kristen Quagliozzi, Sr. Director, HR & Admin. Ops., Sumitomo Pharma Oncology,
kristen.quagliozzi@
sdponcology.com w/ ref. to
Job Code: SPOSMCMC22
Specialist position
w/ MCKINSEY & COMPANY,
INC. US (Boston, MA). Develop data science products
& solutions. Collaborate w/
teams to create new strategies across a wide platform
of projects, from customer
life-cycle
mgmt,
MROI,
pricing & promotions, marketing mix modeling, customer exp, to analytic transformation. Telecommuting
permitted. Req’s Master’s
degree in Biz Analytics,
Stats, or rel field, or foreign
degree equiv & 1 yr of exp
using machine learning
frameworks & methods. Exp
must incl: performing statistical data analysis & using
data mining packages; using data mgmt tools: SQL/
RDBMS, Alteryx, NoSQL,
Hadoop; programming skills
in at least 1 of the following: Java, Python, R, C++,
or C#; linking multiple data
platforms; data visualization tools; digital analytics
in a Marketing & Sales context. Domestic travel typically required. Destination
& frequency impossible to
predict. Email your resume
to CO@mckinsey.com and
refer to Job # 5964404. No
phone calls please. An EOE
Sr. Production Business
Analyst
Sr. Production Business
Analyst
IQVIA Inc., Waltham, MA.
May telecommute w/in
commuting distance to
Waltham, MA office when
needed. Devel & implemnt
data anlysis, prep mgmt
report & other strategies
that optimze existing prod
efficiency, quality & alt
courses of action to determine which plan offers
best outcome. Supervise
1-3 subords. Reqs at least
Mast in Healthcare Admin/
Health
Informatics/rel/
equiv. Reqs 3 yrs healthcare
data analytics exp in mktg
space to incl: wrkg w/: data
anlysis tools incl SQL, Excel
& Alteryx; PM/Bus Anlysis
sw incl JIRA & Confluence;
Healthcare provider data
& dbs; & healthcare/med
coding incl ICD10, X12, HL7
V2.5, HL7 V3, FHIR, SNOMED
CT, LOINC & NDC. M-F, 37.5
hrs per wk. Apply: send resume to: sarah.beaman@
iqvia.com, ref #108939
Wellington Management
Company LLP – Boston,
MA.
Investment Treasury
Portfolio Analyst
As part of Investment Treasury team, manage currency exposures & excess cash
across var currencies, as
well as optimize collateral &
margin for prtfls across the
firm & across asset classes.
Pos is fixed loc based in
Boston office; however,
telecommuting
from
a
home office may also be allowed. Send resume to:
GMGlobalMobility@
wellington.com,
Req #R88213.
Public Relations
Public Relations Coordinator
for NASUFUN Corp. F/T in
Boston, MA. Use media,
advertising and public outreach to best promote company’s popularity; develop
communications and advertising plan to boost the company’s visibility and image.
Master’s degree in Corporate & Organizational Communication and 6 month’
experience req’d. Email
resume to hr@nasu.fun.
Sr Business Systems Dvlpr
Senior Business Systems
Developer
(Reports to Waltham, MA):
Provide subject matter expertise on all aspects of
sales, sales operations, deal
desk, service delivery business processes & knowl of
contract lifecycle mgmt,
lead, quote & opportunity
mgmt, product, pricing & order mgmt & renewal mgmt.
Telecommuting permissible
from home office anywhere
in U.S. Resumes to Dynatrace LLC HR at Recruiting@
dynatrace.com.
..
..
..
.. Experience Globe.com
..
.
Patient Safety ICSR Senior
Specialist
with Vertex Pharmaceuticals Incorporated located in
Boston, MA. Responsible for
performing Individual Case
Safety Report (ICSR) processing activities, including
narrative writing, event coding, and pursuit of follow-up
information. Telecommuting permitted 100%. Send
resume to Emily Jacobs at
Emily_Jacobs@vrtx.com.
Reference 12140.393. EOE.
EDUCATION
Education
Teacher Assistant
wanted. Duties incl.: Cleaning classrooms; observing
students’ performance and
recording relevant data to
assess progress; supervising students in classrooms,
halls, cafeterias, and school
yards; tutoring and assisting
children to complete assignments or follow classroom rules. Requirements:
1 yr. of relevant exp. & High
School Diploma or equivalent. Job Site: New Bedford,
MA. Mail resume and cover
letter to Children Paradise
Inc., 4 Waldo Street, New
Bedford, MA 02745. No
Calls/walk-ins.
TECHNOLOGY/
ENGINEERING
Aetna Resources LLC, a CVS
Health company, is hiring
for the following role in Burlington, MA:
Advanced Software
Development Engineer
(2264284BR)
to design and develop enterprise software applications and platforms; up to
50% telecommuting available.
Digital Development Engineer (2264214BR)
to design and develop
digital software applications and platforms; partial
telecommuting
available;
must reside w/in commuting distance of office & be
available to report to office
as req’d. Multiple openings.
Related degree &/or experience &/or skills required. To
apply, mail resume to Attn:
P. Messenger, 1 CVS Drive,
Mail Code HR695, Woonsocket, RI 02895. Must
reference job title, location
and Req ID.
Akamai Technologies, Inc.
has multiple openings
for the following role in
Cambridge, MA:
Principal Business Systems
Analyst and Senior
Software Engineer
Related education and/or
experience and/ or skills
required. For more information and to apply online,
please visit: https://www.
akamai.com/careers.
TECHNOLOGY/
ENGINEERING
AMAZON.COM SERVICES
LLC, an Amazon.com company - North Reading, MA:
Supply Chain Manager:
Develop demand planning strategies on new &
existing products as well
as product phase-outs.
(AMZ5863595). Multiple
job openings. Apply online:
www.amazon.jobs – search
by AMZ5863595. EOE.
Applications Developer
Applications Developer
(Bain Capital, LP; Boston,
MA): Min req: MS in CS or
rel. +2yrs prof. exp. dev’g
softw. apps +add’l reqs.
Apply by res: Audrey Milazzo, HR, Bain Capital, LP,
200 Clarendon St, Boston,
MA 02116. Ref: 00037175.
An EOE.
Assoc. DevOps Engr.
Assoc. DevOps Engr.
(Info.Tech. Group)
@Arrowstreet
Capital,
LP. Wrk in Boston, MA.
Implement
tech.
solutions; standardize shared
tech. platform; automate
deployments,
provision’g
and server configs; source
ctrl and track’g tasks from
dev. to QA to prod. installs;
id. causes +resolve issues.
Need Bach+ 5 yrs exper
w/software release eng.
using CM lang. + build’g
automated CICD pipelines
to provision resources and
deploy app’s; lead’g implementations; using formal
source code mng.; dev.
scripts for use in the deploy. process. Must live in/
near Boston, MA, RI, or NH.
Telecommut’g allowd 2 dys
per wk. Travel not req’d.
Resumes to applications@
arrowstreet capital.com w/
“Job Code R737” in subj.line.
Assoc. DevOps Engr.
Assoc. DevOps Engr.
(Info. Tech. Group) @Arrowstreet Capital, LP. Wrk
in Boston, MA. Implement
tech. solutions; standardize shared tech. platform;
automate
deployments,
provision’g and server configs; source ctrl and track’g
tasks from dev. to QA to
prod. installs; id. causes
+resolve
issues.
Need
Bach+ 3 yrs exper w/software release eng. using CM
lang. + 2 yrs(in 3) of build’g
automated CICD pipelines
to provision resources and
deploy app’s; (b) lead’g
implementations;
using
formal source code mng.;
dev. scripts for use in the
deploy. process. Must live
in/near Boston, MA, RI, or
NH. Telecommut’g allowd 2
dys per wk. Travel not req’d.
Resumes to applications@
arrowstreetcapital.com w/
“Job Code R736” in subj.line.
ENGINEERING–Juniper
Networks in Westford, MA
seeks
Technical Support Engineer
Support Secured Routing
products, working directly
with our customers & partners. Part-time telecommuting allowed. Email res
(must reference Job Code
#107760) to resumedrop
box@juniper.net.
Homes, Communities, Hope + You
Help build a world
where everyone has
a decent place to live.
Donate today
habitatboston.org
Discover our
in West Roxbury!
Your donations and purchases support
our mission and help build homes for families.
1580 VFW Pkwy, West Roxbury, MA
habitatbostonrestore.org
H14
Business
TECHNOLOGY/
ENGINEERING
AMAZON.COM SERVICES
LLC, an Amazon.com company - Hudson, MA:
Front-End Engineer III:
Create & modify the frontend experience & maintainability of team tools or applications. (AMZ5669134).
Multiple job openings. Apply
online: www.amazon.jobs
– search by AMZ5669134.
EOE.
Autodesk’s Boston, MA
office has multiple openings for
Software Engineer
(various
types/levels):
Analyze, design, develop,
program, debug & modify
computer applications software or specialized utility
programs. Some telecommuting is permitted. TO APPLY: Go to www.jobposting
today.com, search for job ID
16032 & submit resume.
TECHNOLOGY/
ENGINEERING
EMC Corporation (a Dell
Technologies company) is
seeking a
Consultant, Project/Program
Management
for our Hopkinton, MA facility with eligibility for Mobile
(Telework) to work with
business users to define
and analyze business development problems. Performs
user support. Design and
implement new functional
systems/processes.
Considers the implications of
business solutions to the
current and future environment. Req. 000661. To be
considered for the opening,
please send resume with
requisition number to:
jobs_dell@dell.com.
No
phone calls please. Workforce diversity is an essential part of Dell’s commitment to quality and to the
future. We encourage you to
apply, whatever your race,
gender, color, religion, national origin, age, disability,
marital status, sexual orientation or veteran status.
B o s t o n
TECHNOLOGY/
ENGINEERING
Fallon Community Health
Plan, Inc. seeking
Application Developer II
in Worcester, MA: Develop
interfaces, extracts, console applications, web services and web applications.
TO APPLY PLEASE MAIL
RESUME TO: Attn: HR, 10
Worcester Street, Worcester, MA, 01608; and please
refer to this specific Job
Title and this posting. EOE.
N-able Technologies, Inc.
has a
Principal Developer
opening in Burlington, MA.
Implement company-wide
initiatives that effect company products. Provide
guidance on design & best
practices to product teams.
Telecommuting permitted
anywhere in US. Mail resume to Attn: Dionne Green,
710 Slater Rd, Morrisville,
NC 27560 & reference job
#40175
TECHNOLOGY/
ENGINEERING
Sapient Corporation has
the following positions in
Boston, MA & various unanticipated sites throughout
the U.S.
Senior Engineer
(6630.5991.8):
Develop, create, & modify
general computer applications software.
Senior Product Manager
(6630.6164.6):
Develop, create, and modify
general computer applications software.
Architect (6630.6176.5)
Develop,
create,
and
modify general computer
applications
software.
To apply, send resume to:
NARecruitmentGPM@
sapient.com. Must reference job title & code to be
considered.
Azimuth Systems, Inc.
Intermediate Firmware Test
Engineer
(Acton, MA). Azimuth, a
subsidiary of Anritsu, req.s
an Int. Firmware Test Eng.
who will design, dev., impl.,
& test software for our
Firmware platform that
runs on our test equip. rel.
to mobile wireless deployment such as 5G & 6G. To
apply & receive complete
job desc. & req.s, email your
resume to
azimuthjobs@anritsu.com.
Bose Corporation seeks
Automation Engineer III,
SW QA
in Framingham, MA to develop automation frameworks & automated battery
test plans interfacing w/
battery subsystems. Reqs:
Master’s (or equiv foreign
edu) in Computer Science,
Computer
Engineering,
Electronic
Engineering
or related field & 3 yrs of
exp developing automation
frameworks
using
python & pytest for audio
quality testing & creating
automated software quality assurance solutions for
speakers, amplifiers & Bluetooth wearable devices or
alternatively, Bachelor’s (or
equiv foreign edu) & 5 yrs
same exp. To apply, submit
resume w/ Job Code BA22
to job_opp@bose.com.
CarGurus, Inc. is hiring
for the following roles in
Cambridge, MA:
Senior DevOps Engineer
to design, develop and/or
modify enterprise software
applications. Multiple positions. Related degree &/or
experience &/or skills required. To apply, either visit
www.careers.cargurus.com
or mail resume & cover letter to CarGurus – ATTN: Vy
Vo, 2 Canal Park, 4th Floor,
Cambridge, MA 02141, reference job title.
EMC Corporation (a Dell
Technologies company) is
seeking a
Software System Senior
Engineer
for our Hopkinton, MA facility with eligibility for Mobile
[Telework] to conduct full
stack software development for ELAB’s internal
web applications, and test
automation tools. Develop
and maintain compelling
Single-Page web applications. Req. 002501. To be
considered for the opening,
please send resume with
requisition number to:
jobs_dell@dell.com.
No
phone calls please. Workforce diversity is an essential part of Dell’s commitment to quality and to the
future. We encourage you to
apply, whatever your race,
gender, color, religion, national origin, age, disability,
marital status, sexual orientation or veteran status.
Engineering
F/T Prjct/Constrn
Management Specialist
Horizon Holding, LLC, Malden - min BS Civ. Eng, Constrn & Bldg Eng or rel field
or forgn equiv & 36m prjct/
constrn manag exp w/ devlp prjct strat. & finan mods,
Create yrly constrn activity
& bdgt.Mnge constrn sched,
activity,cost & proj budget.
CV
horizon.holding.llc@
gmail.com
Senior Applications
Engineer
Wellington Management
Company LLP – Boston,
MA.
Senior Software Engineer
Design & develop technical
solutions to solve complex
problems
in
regulatory
space & improve the abilities of regulatory technology strategic platform &
its integration abilities. Pos.
is based in Boston office;
telecommuting from home
office may be allowed. Send
resume to:
GMGlobalMobility@
wellington.com,
Req #R88001.
Roku, Inc. in Boston, MA
seeks
Senior Software Engineer
(multiple openings)
Dev, create & mod. comp.
apps. SW. Specif., dev & advise API engrs. on new servs.
to be used on the DMM
platform by customers &
third-party partner apps. Up
to 2 days/wk telecom’g may
be permitted. Reqs incl. BS
or fgn equiv in CS, CE, or rel
+ 5 yrs prog rel exp., or MS
+ 3 yrs rel exp. Must ref job
code 85199 in subj. line to
be considered.
F/T PRJCT/CONSTRN MANAGEMENT SPECIALIST
Horizon Holding, LLC, Malden - min BS Civ. Eng, Constrn & Bldg Eng or rel field
or forgn equiv & 36m prjct/
constrn manag exp w/ devlp prjct strat. & finan mods,
Create yrly constrn activity
& bdgt.Mnge constrn sched,
activity,cost & proj budget.
CV
horizon.holding.llc@
gmail.com
(Burlington, MA) for COMSOL, Inc. to support prospective & current customers & users in the use of
the COMSOL® software,
modeling their technical applications & the multiphysics couplings undergirding
them. Reqs PhD in Engg,
Physics, Applied
Mathematics, Physical Science
or related field of study, &
12 mos of exp in modeling based on numerical
methods, such as the finite
element method or similar. Reqs 3 peer reviewed
journals with a focus on
computational modeling /
numerical modeling in one
of the following areas: Applied Mathematics/Physics,
Heat Transfer, Structural
Mechanics, Computational
Fluid Dynamics, Low & High
Frequency
Electromagnetics, Optics, Acoustics,
MEMS, or Chemical & Electrochemical
Processes.
Reqs strong written & verbal communication skills.
Reqs 5% domestic & int’l
travel to client sites to run
COMSOL-sponsored events
& activities in North & South
America. To apply visit
https://www.comsol.com/
company/careers/job/6941/
Senior Full Stack Developer
Roku, Inc. in Boston, MA
seeks
Engineering
Senior Applications
Engineer
(Multiple Openings)
Senior Software Engineer
(multiple openings). Dev,
create & modif comp apps
SW. Design, dev & operate
components of customer
facing web apps. Up to 2
days/wk telecom’g may be
permitted. Reqs incl. MS or
fgn equiv in CS, CE, Electrical Engg, IT, Info. Sys, Math,
or rel + 2 yrs rel exp, or BS
+ 5 yrs prog rel exp. Email
resume to resumes@roku.
com. Must reference job
code 89290 in subject line.
Senior Full Stack Developer
with PTC Inc. in Boston, MA.
Responsible for providing
overall guidance, structure
and authority for the creation, development and
maintenance of software
solutions, software applications and web applications,
solving complex algorithm
driven problems and taking
a new perspective using
existing solutions. Telecommuting permitted up to
60%. Please send resume to
resumes@ptc.com including the job title and “Job
Code 20858.244” in the
subject line.
Alvaria, Inc. (Westford, MA)
seeks candidate for
Product Security Engineer:
Perform vulnerability assessment, report findings &
advise development team
on a fix to the vulnerabilities
found on Aspects premise
& cloud contact center solution systems with Qualys.
Telecommuting is permitted. TO APPLY, please mail
your resume with reference
to this posting to: Alvaria,
Inc., Attn.: Rhonda Dailey,
5 Technology Park Drive,
Westford, MA 01886. EOE
Engineering
F/T PROJECT/CONSTRN
MANAGEMENT SPECIALIST
Horizon Holding, LLC, Malden – min BS Civ. Eng, Constrn & Bldg Eng or rel field
or forgn equiv & 36m prjct/
constrn manag exp w/ devlp prjct strat. & finan mods,
Create yrly constrn activity & bdgt. Mnge constrn
sched, activity, cost & proj
budget. CV horizon.holding.
llc@gmail.com
Computer/IT
Senior Software Engineers II
in Cambridge, MA to write
micro-servs primarily with
Java 8 & above, provide
tech lead & dir for team
proj, & mentor jr. enggs.
Telecommuting is an option.
Req. deg in CS/Elect Engg
or closely rel field + exp.
Resumes to HubSpot, Inc.,
25 First St. Cambridge, MA
02141; email resumes to
hubspotjobs@hubspot.com
with Req # SSE062922 in
subject line
Computer/IT
SOFTWARE (SW)
ENGINEERING MANAGER:
Abbott in Burlington, MA
seeks qualified SW Eng. Mgr.
Resp for managing embedded SW dev process, incl design, dev & implementation
of SW solutions for Class III
implantable med device SW.
Masters or foreign equiv in
CompSci, CompEng, Apps
Eng, Electronics Eng, Eng
Mgmt or in closely rltd fld
of study (Will accept Bachelors + 5 yrs of progressive
pro exp in lieu of Masters)
each alt req w/ min. 7 yrs
of pro eng or SW dev exp.
In addition, position requires min. 2 yrs of exp in:
(i) design, dev & implementation of SW solutions w/
Agile SCRUM methodology
SDLC; (ii) embedded SW &
hardware; (iii) firmware &
SW projects; (iv) project
planning, people mgmt,
tech mgmt. & on-time delivery; (v) C, C++ & Python;
& (vi) multithread parallel
programming & distributed
computing. Emp will accept
any suitable combo of ed,
training, or exp. An EOE. 40
hrs/wk. Respond by mail:
Abbott Laboratories, Attn:
Kathleen Ellwanger, 100 Abbott Park Road, Bldg. AP6A,
Dept. 32RC, Abbott Park, IL
60064. Refer to Ad Code:
ABT-00733-KE.
Corus Systems and Consulting is seeking a
Senior Consultant
in Somerville, MA. This position will lead business intelligence projects for banking
and finance clients. Coordinates project teams, focusing on meeting business
requirements and improving system performance.
Analyzes and understands
customer requirements and
business objectives and provides strategic advice on using technology, including big
data and data science tools,
to improve performance.
REQ: BS in Computer Science (will accept 2 yrs of experience in position offered
in lieu of degree), + addl 2
years of experience in the
position offered. Position
is for roving employee who
will work in various unanticipated locations throughout
the U.S. according to business need. Email resume to:
irene.vincent@
corusconsulting.com
Database Solutions
Engineer
Database Solutions
Engineer
sought by Grantham Mayo
Van Otterloo & Co LLC in
Boston, MA to automate
maintenance, monitoring,
alerting & mitigation of potential issues. Dsgn, deploy
& monitor Azure resources,
such as Azure SQL family,
Azure Synapse, Azure data
factory & Azure data lake.
May telecommute from
any US location. Apply at
h t t p s : / / w w w. g m o. c o m /
americas/careers/ & reference Req: Database Solutions Engineer
Design Assurance Manager
1
Design Assurance
Manager 1
Cambridge, MA. May require to travel/telecommute.
Provide
focused
quality engineering support
within product development, operational, or system/services support for
electrophysiology products.
Contact: Sarah Okusanya,
Boston Scientific Corporation, application@bsci.com.
Please include reference
H4872-00240. (EOE).
Directors
Directors, Financial Operations
in Cambridge, MA to lead
initiatives to des & build
reporting tools, info dashboards, data generators, &
other end-user info portals/
res. Telecommuting is an
option. Req deg in CS/Ind
Engg/rel quant field + exp.
Resumes to HubSpot, Inc.
25 First St., Cambridge, MA
02141; email resumes to
hubspotjobs@hubspot.com
with Req # DFO332022 in
subject line.
ENGINEERING/
TECHNOLOGY
NVIDIA Corp in Westborough, MA has an opening
at various levels. Please
ref code & title and send
resume to: NVIDIA, 2701
San Tomas Expressway,
Santa Clara, CA 95050,
Attn: KC HR or send to
NVIDIA-RecruitAd@nvidia.
com. These positions will
engage in and support the
design, development, and/
or marketing of NVIDIA’S
GPU (graphics processing
units), computer graphics,
AI and supercomputing
for gaming, professional
visualization, data centers,
and various industries
(automotive, transportation,
healthcare and manufacturing).
Sr. ASIC Engr (SRASIC06)
Lead all aspects of physical
design and implementation
of CPU cores and other ASIC
IP targeted at the networking markets.
ENGINEERING/
TECHNOLOGY
NVIDIA Corp in Westford,
MA has openings at various levels. Please ref code
& title and send resume to:
NVIDIA, 2701 San Tomas Expressway, Santa Clara, CA
95050, Attn: KC HR or send
to NVIDIA-RecruitAd@
nvidia.com. These positions
will engage in and support
the design, development,
and/or marketing of NVIDIA’S GPU (graphics processing units), computer graphics, AI and supercomputing
for gaming, professional
visualization, data centers,
and various industries (automotive,
transportation,
healthcare and manufacturing).
ASIC Engr (ASICDE583)
Implement logic for NVIDIA’s next generation GPU’s
which enables high-performance interconnect of
multi-GPU systems.
Sr.Verification Engr
(VERE107)
Build complex testbenches
using System Verilog UVM
methodology / C++ around
units in the CPU uncore
logic as well as for CCPLEX
Integration.
IT/Computer
Sr. Statistical Programmer:
Perform & provide oversight
& quality control of CRO activities in: SDTM & ADaM
Datasets development, TLF
development & validation
based on the Statistical
Analysis Plan, & TLF Mock
shells development. Min
reqs: MS in Comp Sci, IS or
IT, Stats, Clinical Research
or Pharm’l Sciences + 2 yrs
of SAS programming exp
for a biotech or pharma co
or CRO as a Statistical/SAS
Programmer or Analyst or
similar role. Full-time; located at 470 Atlantic Ave. Ste.
1401, Boston, MA. For full
job desc & reqs & to apply,
see https://www.
morphosys.com/en/
careers/job-opening.
No phone calls.
IT Engineering Senior
Manager/Chapter Lead Finance
IT Engineering Senior Manager/Chapter Lead - Finance
for The Boston Consulting
Group in Boston, MA to
deliver software solutions
supporting the firm’s Finance function. Req. Bachelor’s degree or foreign
equiv. in Computer Science,
Computer Engineering, Information Technology or
related field & 10 yrs. of exp.
Partial telecommute available. Up to 5% domestic/
international travel. Send
resume to BOSESMCL@bcg.
com.
Software Development
Engineer, Senior
Software Development
Engineer, Senior
with PTC Inc. in Boston, MA.
Develop apps and app toolkits that provide real-time
unified visibility into Industrial activities to reduce
downtime and improve
quality, productivity and
flexibility for our customers.
Telecommuting permitted
up to 60%. Please send resume to resumes@ptc.com
including the job title and
“Job Code 20858.122” in the
subject line.
Software Engineering
Manager
Software Engineering
Manager
(Accenture LLP; Boston,
MA): Analyze, design, build,
test, implement, and/or
maintain multiple system
components or applications
for Accenture or our clients.
Must have willingness and
ability to travel domestically
approximately 80% of the
time to meet client needs.
Multiple Positions Available.
For complete job description, list of requirements,
and to apply, go to: www.
accenture.com/us-en/
careers (Job# R00129259).
Equal Opportunity Employer
– Minorities/Women/Vets/
Disabled.
Solution Engineering
Manager
Product Manager
Product Manager
with PTC Inc. in Boston, MA.
Identify the customer needs
and the larger business objectives that a product or
feature will fulfill. Telecommuting permitted up to
60%. Please send resume to
resumes@ptc.com including the job title and “Job
Code 20858.404” in the
subject line.
Salesforce Inc. seeks
Software Engineering AMTS
in Cambridge, MA: Design,
architect, implement, test &
deliver highly scalable products. Analyze customers’
needs & build features to
meet those needs. Telecommuting an option. Some
travel to Salesforce offices
may be required. Req’s:
BS(or equiv.)+6 months exp.
Related technical degree
required. Submit resume via
Salesforce Career’s webpage: https://rb.gy/oy8jwr
at job Req. No. JR167204.
Salesforce is an Equal Opportunity & Affirmative Action Employer. Education,
experience and criminal
background checks will be
conducted.
Senior Software Engineer
Senior Software Engineer
(iSpecimen Inc., Lexington,
MA) Work closely w/ engineering team to bring innovative software to market
to accelerate bioresearch.
Design & develop secure
software solutions. For
full descript. & reqs. & to
apply go to https://www.
ispecimen.com/company/
careers/ under “Senior Software Engineer (105-2)”.
Solution Engineering
Manager
sought by National Grid USA
Service Co., Inc. in Waltham,
MA to define & implmt
performance test strategy
including roadmap, tools,
frameworks & approaches
across Products/Platforms
& Lead & coach 6+ teams
of engineers to build, enhance, & support multiple
applications/services
in
the delivery of engg solutions. Req: Bachelor’s deg
in Comp Sci, Comp Engg,
or a related field & 6 yrs of
related exp in providing end
to end support of automation performance testing &
engg from reqmt gathering
& root cause analysis to
product support & applications involving multiple ERP
systems, e.g. Oracle, SFDC,
Pega & SAP; Working on
complex IT projects using
Performance
Diagnostics
(CA APM, Dynatrace, VisualVM, Xymon, CA CEM,
New Relic); Performance
Tuning (IBM Workbench,
Eclipse MAT, SQL Developer,
TDA); Performance Testing
(LoadRunner, Worksoft, NeoLoad); Performance Architecture (Omniture); Storage
Domain (VCE, Isilon, Vxrail,
block storage, file storage,
object storage); Pega (IMS);
& Custom applications (AIC,
OLS, My Service 360); Servigistics; Big Data systems
& architecture. Exp must
include working in Selenium
Automation Platform &
writing test scripts in Java,
JavaScript, or C# & exp with
Agile Application Dvlpmt &
Scrum methodologies. Exp
as technical team lead to
provide mentoring & guidance to members, drive
efforts for building teams
& mentoring activities to
improve technology capabilities or skills. To apply go
to https://
c a r e e r s. n a t i o n a l g r i d u s.
com/ Req 37109.
S u n d a y
TECHNOLOGY/
ENGINEERING
Sophos, Inc –Burlington,
MA–
Data Scientist - Assist
the AI team in developing
machine learning models
to solve issues in cybersecurity. Collect and clean
data. Train machine learning
models. Assist with model
deployment and present
research to internal and
external audiences.. Req.
MS+2/BS+5. No Travel Requirements. Email Resume
referencing to: immigration
@sophos.com.
(SOP007)
Sophos Inc. is an Equal Opportunity Employer.
Sr. Qualitative Data Analyst
Sr. Qualitative Data Analyst
Jobcase, Inc, Cambridge,
MA: Sr. Qualitative Data
Analyst will develop & execute optimal methods
&
strategies based on math
modeling & data analytics to expand consumer
reach & increase member
base. Min. Reqs: Bachelor’s
degree in Math, Analytics,
Econ., Comp. Sci., Stats.,
Engineering, or a closely rel.
field. Special Reqs: Must
have dem. knowledge of:
1) Tableau, Python, &/or
R; 2) SQL; & 3) A/B testing.
Qualified applicants email
resumes to Farrell Ross,
Director, People and Culture, Jobcase, Inc at fross@
jobcase.com w/ ref. to Job
Code: QAFA22.
Sr. Software Developer
Sr. Software Developer
in Newbury, MA to build
vm sys using LINUX, dsgn
interface call center & voice
biomtrics, devlp cloud E911
reqmt, dsgn websites, devlp
mobile text messaging for
call ctr, integrate web chat
to call ctr. Must hv BS in CS,
engg, telecomm or rel fld
& 2 yrs exp in distributed
systems software dsgn using UNIX/Linux, Windows
Server OS; building PBX &
voicemail systm; develp
mobile, internet network
telecomm protocols. Will
accept 4 yr exp in same
instead of BS plus 2. Travel
nationally & internatl for installation/training. Send resumes to Ronald Contrado,
Homisco, Inc, rcontrado@
homisco.com.
Technology/Engineering
Principal Software Engineer/Developer
at Fidelity Investments in
Boston, MA to build quality
solutions that align w/ tech
blueprints & utilize standard sftwre dev methods.
to tackle bus probs by driving design, dev, & ongoing
support, using Oracle, AWS,
& Spring Framework. Req.
Bachelor’s and 5 yrs. exp.
or Master’s and 3 yrs. exp.
For full job details and to apply, search by Job Number
2057746 at
jobs.fidelity.com. EOE
Technology/Engineering
Sr Product Specialist
(Mult positions)(State Street
Bank & Trust Co; Boston,
MA): member of Scrum
team, lead quality planning
& execution of Co. financial
sftwr products. Full-time
telecommuting permitted
per Co. policy. Min req’s:
Bach deg or equiv deg in CS,
CE or rel field +6yrs exp sftwr testing in process driven
tech env +add’l reqs. State
Street Job ID: R-721550.
View full job descript &
apply: careers.statestreet.
com. Enter Job ID in KEYWORD search field. An EOE.
TECHNOLOGY
Philips North America LLC
is accepting resumes for
the position of
Presales Solution
Consultant
in Cambridge, MA (Ref.
#EIKB). Provide technical
and product expertise for
the Philips interoperability
solutions in support of our
sales team and our customers.
Telecommuting
permitted. Mail resume to
Philips North America LLC,
Legal Department, Barbara
Bickford, 222 Jacobs Street,
Third Floor, Cambridge, MA
02141. Resume must include Ref. #EIKB, full name,
email address & mailing address. No phone calls. Must
be legally authorized to
work in U.S. without sponsorship. EOE.
TECHNOLOGY
Philips North America LLC
is accepting resumes for
the position of
Risk & Portfolio Manager –
Americas
in Cambridge, MA (Ref.
#EISM). Manage the on-balance financing portfolio of
markets, executing analysis
on the performance of the
portfolio in terms of profitability/return, delinquency,
and balance sheet utilization, and anticipating potential changes within the
portfolio.
Telecommuting
permitted. Mail resume to
Philips North America LLC,
Legal Department, Barbara
Bickford, 222 Jacobs Street,
Third Floor, Cambridge, MA
02141. Resume must include Ref. #EISM, full name,
email address & mailing address. No phone calls. Must
be legally authorized to
work in U.S. without sponsorship. EOE.
Sr Software Engineer II
Sr Software Engineer II
sought by OnPoint Knee,
Inc (Bedford, MA) to define,
design, develop the Augmented Reality platform,
apps, workflows.
Reqs
MS in Comp Sci w/10 yrs
exp med device industry w/software development. Email resume/cvr
to jobs@onpointknee.com,
OnPoint Knee, 19 Crosby
Dr, Bedford, MA 01730.
TECHNOLOGY
Philips North America LLC
is accepting resumes for
the position of
Software Development
Engineer
in Cambridge, MA (Ref.
#SADA). Write clear software specifications, create
detailed technical designs,
and implement software
solutions. Telecommuting
permitted. Mail resume to
Philips North America LLC,
Legal Department, Barbara
Bickford, 222 Jacobs Street,
Third Floor, Cambridge, MA
02141. Resume must include Ref. #SADA, full name,
email address & mailing address. No phone calls. Must
be legally authorized to
work in U.S. without sponsorship. EOE.
Technology/Engineering
Team Lead, Eng
Senior Manager, IT Audit
Senior Manager, IT Audit
at Fidelity Investments in
Boston, MA to maintain &
improve digital asset tech
platforms & cybersecurity,
using AWS, Dev(sec)Ops, &
APIs & to dvlp code w/ a
focus on cybersecurity using Dev(sec)Ops best practices. Req. Bachelor’s and 5
yrs. exp. or Master’s and 3
yrs. exp. For full job details
and to apply, search by Job
Number 2064158 at
jobs.fidelity.com. EOE
(Mult Positions)(State Street
Bank & Trust Co; Boston,
MA): Lead 1 or more Eng
Scrum teams to build &
maintain Co. components/
prods. Travel to MA less
than 10%/yr. Telecommuting permitted per Co. policy.
Min. req’s: Bach deg or
equiv in CS, CE or rel tech
field +10yrs progressively
responsible exp in professional sw eng role +add’l
reqs. State Street Job ID:
R-721185. Full job descript
& apply at: careers.states
treet.com. Enter Job ID in
KEYWORD search. An EOE.
Technology
Principal Mobile Software
Engineer
sought by iRobot Corporation in Bedford, MA to contribute to iRobot’s Digital
products program & assist
in the development of iRobot Home mobile app. Telecommuting is permitted.
When not telecommuting,
must report to iRobot Corporation, 8 Crosby Drive,
Bedford, MA 01730. Please
email resume to: talentop
erations@irobot.com Must
specify Ad Code AAKK
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
G l o b e
TECHNOLOGY/
ENGINEERING
Technology
Senior Technology Solutions
Partner
for Cengage Learning, Inc.
in Boston, MA to help pioneer solutions to transform
the way people learn, incl
defining, owning & leading
cross-functional efforts to
analyze, identify, define &
execute on business system & infrastructure needs
to support evolution of
Higher Education business.
Req. Master’s (or foreign
ed equiv) in Comp Sci, Eng,
Info Sys, Info Tech or rel +
3 yrs exp designing, coding
& testing large-scale applications in the end-to-end
testing & quality assurance lifecycle for product
development or Bachelor’s
+ 5 yrs exp. Telecommute
benefit available. Qualified
applicants may work anywhere in the United States
from a home office and
report to headquarters in
Boston, MA. For complete
job description and to apply
visit https://www.cengage.
com/careers/ and reference
R2022-1463.
To apply, send resume to:
3423@google.com.
Must
reference job code # below:
Technical Account Specialist
(Cambridge, MA) Identify
and monitor key success
metrics for Google. Job
Code: 1615.60792 Exp Inc:
application and workload
migration to public cloud
providers; coordination of
technical projects or programs, including presentation of technical subject
matter to non-technical audiences; technical support,
escalation management, or
IT consulting; cloud operations, including launch and
capacity planning and product release management; IT
operations including storage, database systems, networking, and IT security; and
Technology
Architecture
roadmap for cloud-native
application
development.
Position reports to Google
CAM office & may allow
partial telecommuting.
Triverus seeks
Sr. Manager/Architect of
Business and Data Analytics
to provide implementation
& improvement of IT project management & data
analytics; ensure overall
BI architecture design &
reports in accounts, engagement management, &
operations as well as external dashboards & reporting;
participate in the design &
development of all Power
BI prototypes, reports and
dashboards; & other duties as assigned. BS Proj.
Mngmt. or Elec. & Tel. Engineering or rel. (or for. deg.
equiv.) + rel. exp. req. Reply:
P. Oakes, Triverus, 300 Trade
Ctr, Ste 3490, Woburn, MA
01801.
Wolters Kluwer United
States, Inc. seeks a
Product Software Engineer
III
in Waltham, MA to write
test plans for projects, cycles, and sprints. Telecommuting permitted. Apply at
https://
www.jobpostingtoday.com/
Ref# 96541.
TECHNOLOGY/
ENGINEERING
Wellington Management
Company LLP – Boston,
MA.
Senior Systems Analyst
Support the co.’s InvesTech
Client Services Group & IT
development teams with a
concentration in systems
analysis for development of
client materials & new tech.
Pos. is based in Boston office; telecom. from a home
office may be allowed. Send
resume to:
GMGlobalMobility@
wellington.com,
Req
#R88002.
Wellington Management
Company LLP – Marlborough, MA.
Senior Software Engineer
As a sr member of the Trdg
Apps Team, work w/ biz
analysts & traders to dsgn,
unit test, & deliver s/w solutions for the company’s trdg
order mgmt sys. Loc is fixed
loc based in Marlborough,
MA office; however, telecommuting from a home
office may also be allowed.
Send resume to:
GMGlobalMobility@
wellington.com,
Req #R88179.
BIOTECH/
PHARMA
Genzyme Corporation, at
450 Water Street, Cambridge, MA 02141 seeks a
Director, Global Medical Affairs,Atopic Dermatitis
who will support and execute on the Global Medical Affairs strategy and life
cycle plan for dupilumab
for Atopic Dermatitis and
future dermatology indications. Send CV/resume
and salary requirements
to recruiting@sanofi.com.
Refer to code “1732”. EOE,
no agencies please. Genzyme Corporation and its
U.S. affiliates are Equal Opportunity and Affirmative
Action employers committed to a culturally diverse
workforce. All qualified
applicants will receive consideration for employment
without regard to race;
color; creed; religion; national origin; age; ancestry;
nationality; marital, domestic partnership or civil union
status; sex, gender, gender
identity or expression; sexual orientation; disability;
veteran or military status or
liability for military status;
domestic violence victim
status; atypical cellular or
blood trait; genetic information (including the refusal to
submit to genetic testing)
or any other characteristic
protected by law.
Sr Research Associate,
Analytical Dev
Sr Research Associate,
Analytical Dev
(Cambridge, MA) sought by
CRISPR Therapeutics, Inc.
to develop and qualify analytical and optimize existing
assays. Req. Masters in Biotech, Pharm Sci, Biochem,
or related w/ 3 yrs of exp
in analytical dev. Apply to:
Lauren Shaughnessy, HR
Operations Specialist, (617)
514-2396,
Lauren.Shaughnessy@
crisprtx.com.
BIOTECH/
PHARMA
Takeda Development
Center Americas, Inc. is
seeking a
Sr Specialist GPV Quality
Ops
in Cambridge, MA to work
with stakeholders to implement quality standards, systems, and metrics for maintaining compliance.
Apply on-line at www.takedajobs.comand search for
Req # R0080254.
HEALTHCARE
Dentist
Dentist
Req. Doc in Dntl Srgry or
Dntl Med pls 1 yr exp as
dntst. Mail res. & slry req’t
to employer: Simply Dental
Management, attn: HR, 87
Elm Street, Hopkinton, MA
01748
Top local
employers are
looking for people
just
like
you.
HOTELS
RESTAURANTS
Cook:
Cook:
Prepare, season, and cook
dishes such as soups,
meats, vegetables, or desserts in restaurant. Order
supplies, keep records and
accounts, price items on
menu, or plan menu. FT.
mult. openings. Mail resume
to job location: Ferelle LLC,
34 Church Street, Unit 1A,
Lenox, MA 01240
MEDICAL DENTAL
Staff Psychiatrist
Staff Psychiatrist
sought by Children’s Hospital Corporation (Waltham,
MA) to work in BCH Dept of
Psych diagnosing & treating
Child/Adolescent patients
(both in- & out-patient). Will
also work @ BCH in Boston
for call coverage. Req MD/
eligible for MA med lic/DEA
cert/MA controlled subst
cert/BE/BC in Child & Adolescent Psych. Send resume
& cvr ltr to cleo.hereford@
childrens.harvard.edu. Ref
15521W on cvr ltr.
GENERAL
Sr. Fish Cutter
Sr. Fish Cutter
(loc. Boston, MA). Supervising a team of Fish Cutters.
Req: 3 yrs exp as a Fish
Cutter. Apply to Nick Francescucci, Human Resource
Manager, Boston Sword and
Tuna, 10 Codfish Way, Boston, MA 02210
Check out great
opportunities in
The Boston
Sunday Globe’s
Careers Section.
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
G l o b e
Address
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NOVEMBER 6, 2022
G l o b e
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This new construction home offers 4,500 sq. ft. of living space over three levels offering six
bedrooms, five full and one half baths and unparalleled luxury. www.8Moody.com
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Beautifully updated spacious five-bedroom colonial sits on a picturesque 0.35-acre lot. Featuring 2,642 sq. ft.
of living space and a renovated open concept kitchen with a huge island.
Todd Glaskin 617.843.5685 | Gregg Leppo 781.330.0592 | O. 617.969.2447
Alina Wang 617.678.2405 | O. 781.862.2600 | alina.wang@cbrealty.com
CARLISLE, MA | $1,495,000
This luxurious home features hardwood floors, custom built-ins, a wine-cellar, a stone fireplace, a chef’s kitchen,
three-season porch, in-ground pool and much more all on 2 acres.
BOSTON, MA | $1,285,000
Show-stopping, sun-drenched one bedroom, one and a half bathroom home offering over 1,100 square feet
at the Internationally renowned W Residences in the heart of Boston!
Seema Peterson 508.397.4663 | O. 978.369.1000 | seema.peterson@cbrealty.com
Tracy Shea 617.697.4570 | O. 617.242.0025 | tracy.shea@cbrealty.com
BOSTON, MA | $1,275,000
Spacious 3 bedroom, 2 bath residence with an A+ location in the shadow of the Monument featuring gleaming
hardwood fir floors, an open kitchen/dining area and a 4 window wide living room!
CHELMSFORD, MA | $1,099,000
4br/3.5ba custom contemporary Colonial with entertaining open floor plan, hardwood floors,
bay windows, primary bedroom, deck and walk out lower level.
Tracy Shea 617.697.4570 | O. 617.242.0025 | tracy.shea@cbrealty.com
Soula Spaziani 978.551.0169 | Pat Dearborn 978.764.5123 | O. 978.256.2560
DORCHESTER, MA | $1,089,000
This Victorian gem features a spacious entry foyer, high ceilings, 4br/2.5ba, an open layout, modern updates,
original charm and intimate outdoor spaces on one of the most beautiful blocks in the area!
NORTH ANDOVER, MA | $985,000
The open floorplan of this inviting home offers comfortable living and indoor/outdoor entertaining. The home
is light and bright with ample space for daily activities and work-from-home.
Kerry Dowlin 617.817.6602 | O. 617.696.4430 | kerry.dowlin@cbrealty.com
Gena Hatch 978.764.0064 | O. 978.475.2201 | gena.hatch@nemoves.com
ColdwellBankerHomes.com
guiding you home since 1906
The property information herein is derived from various sources that may include, but not be limited to, county records and the Multiple Listing Service, and it may include approximations. Although the information is believed to be accurate, it is not warranted and you should not rely upon it without personal verification. Affiliated real estate agents are independent contractor sales
associates, not employees. ©2022 Coldwell Banker. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker and the Coldwell Banker logos are trademarks of Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. The Coldwell Banker® System is comprised of company owned offices which are owned by a subsidiary of Anywhere Advisors LLC and franchised offices which are independently owned and operated. The
Coldwell Banker System fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act.
19NFDN_3/20
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
Address
G l o b e
H17
NEWTON, MA | Price Upon Request
Five+ bedrooms, four and one half baths, in ground pool, fenced yard and a two car garage.
Crystal Paolini 857.231.0349 | O. 617.969.2447
crystal.paolini@cbrealty.com
AMHERST, NH | $687,000
4br/3ba pristine home on approximately 3.64 acres with a 2-car garage, seasonal screened
porch, renovated kitchen, primary suite, open concept floor plan and finished basement.
Siobhan Dalton 603.582.6932 | Thea Knust 603.759.5453 | O. 603.673.4000
WELLESLEY, MA | $1,295,000
CAMBRIDGE, MA | $1,695,000
Sunny and spacious multi-level contemporary townhouse with 3 bedrooms and 2 bathrooms!
Dura Winder 617.285.8566 | O. 617.864.4430
Dura.Winder@NEMoves.com
Five-bedroom Colonial in fantastic neighborhood with gorgeous updated kitchen.
Melissa Dailey 617.699.3922 | O. 781.237.9090
melissa.dailey@nemoves.com
MEDWAY, MA | $1,289,000
5br/3.5ba Applegate home with custom in law suite and large open kitchen on over an acre.
Bea Cockrell 617.835.7559 | O. 617.696.4430
bea.cockrell@nemoves.com
NEEDHAM, MA | $1,050,000
Spacious, energy efficient, 4BR/3BA split level home featuring a new kitchen and new bathrooms!
Leigh Doukas 617.966.1245 | O. 781.444.7400
Leigh.Doukas@Nemoves.com
LINCOLN, MA | $795,000
Renovated open-concept end unit with attached sunroom and private yard at Farrar Pond Village.
Maureen Harmonay 978.502.5800 | O. 978.369.1000
maureen.harmonay@nemoves.com
ARLINGTON, MA | $659,000
STOW, MA | Price Upon Request
Wonderfully updated 2-bedroom/1-bathroom condo on a lovely side street in East Arlington!
Gian-Paul Sanseverino 617.816.1163 | O. 781.862.2600
gianpaul.sanseverino@cbrealty.com
Beautiful 2BR/2BA end unit townhouse in an exceptional 55 and over community!
Sandie Cremmen 978.621.5277 | O. 978.443.9933
sandie.cremmen@cbrealty.com
LONDONDERRY, NH | $544,900
WESTFIELD, MA | $259,900
Beautiful 4BR/2BA home that has been completely updated inside and out!
Siobhan Dalton 603.582.6932 | O. 603.673.4000
siobhan.dalton@nemoves.com
Charming 3 bedroom, 1 bathroom Ranch with many updates and a fenced in backyard!
Tara Stackow 413.378.4333 | O. 413.567.8931
tara.stackow@nemoves.com
BOSTON, MA | $979,000 | CBR Hammond
3br/1.5ba Moss Hill neighborhood Colonial w/solar panels.
Michael Rothstein 617.470.3165
Zachary Christman 617.821.0222
O. 617.731.4644
BOSTON, MA | $979,000
Beautiful & renovated 6BR/3BA 2 family in central location!
Anne Galvin 617.839.6571
O. 617.696.4430
anne.galvin@cbrealty.com
DORCHESTER, MA | $950,000
Move-in ready 2 family w/2-car garage & off-street parking.
Kerry Dowlin 617.817.6602
O. 617.696.4430
kerry.dowlin@cbrealty.com
GILFORD, NH | $875,000
Gorgeous 4 Bedroom, 4 Bath Cape on 5.38 Acres!
Shelly Brewer 603.677.2535
O. 603.524.2255
shelly.brewer@nemoves.com
DANVERS, MA | $875,000
4br St. John's Prep Colonial w/pergola & 3 season sunroom.
Pam Spiros 978.808.6022
O. 978.927.1111
pam@pamspiros.com
BOSTON, MA | $849,000
2BR/2BA Circa 1845 worker’s cottage on a private court!
Tracy Shea 617.697.4570
O. 617.242.0025
tracy.shea@cbrealty.com
LOWELL, MA | $819,900
4br/2.5ba Dutch-Colonial home w/in-ground heated gunite pool.
Dan Donoghue 978.618.4273
Kathleen Donoghue 978.502.6233
O. 978.256.2560
WEST GREENWICH, RI | Price Upon Request
Colonial 4br/2.5ba in West Greenwich features 3,000+ SQFT.
Dave Serpa 401.639.2351
O. 401.333.0010
dave.serpa@nemoves.com
ColdwellBankerHomes.com
guiding you home since 1906
The property information herein is derived from various sources that may include, but not be limited to, county records and the Multiple Listing Service, and it may include approximations. Although the information is believed to be accurate, it is not warranted and you should not rely upon it without personal verification. Affiliated real estate agents are independent contractor sales
associates, not employees. ©2022 Coldwell Banker. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker and the Coldwell Banker logos are trademarks of Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. The Coldwell Banker® System is comprised of company owned offices which are owned by a subsidiary of Anywhere Advisors LLC and franchised offices which are independently owned and operated. The
Coldwell Banker System fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act.
19NFDN_3/20
H18
Address
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
G l o b e
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
WALTHAM, MA | $699,900
Multi-Family property for sale.
Cheryle West 781.883.8536
O. 781.893.0808
cherylewestrealestate@gmail.com
HAMPTON, NH | $674,999
Beautifully updated 3br/3ba w/sunset views of Hampton Harbor.
Sharon Havens 603.769.1774
O. 603.673.4000
sharon.havens@nemoves.com
BOSTON, MA | $630,000
1br/1ba Back Bay corner unit at The Charlesview.
Roberta Orlandino 617.312.1511
Tyrone Sayers 978.239.0580
O. 617.266.4430
DRACUT, MA | $599,900
Meticulous 4br/2.5ba colonial w/a front-to-back kitchen.
Donna Murray 978.490.9488
O. 978.692.2121
donna.murray@nemoves.com
FOXBORO, MA | $559,000
2br/2.5ba well maintained colonial in Summerfield Estates.
Edward Cunniff 781.248.9547
O. 781.821.2664
EdCunniff.CBR@gmail.com
WEST TOWNSEND, MA | $550,000
4br/1.5ba updated Colonial abutting the Squannacook River.
Janet Veino 978.853.5749
Laura Baliestiero 508.864.6011
O. 978.369.1000
PLYMOUTH, MA | $549,900
4br/1.5ba well-maintained 1 owner Colonial w/slider to deck.
Ellen Johnson 508.958.6193
O. 508.746.0051
ellen.johnson@nemoves.com
GLOUCESTER, MA | $539,000
Charming 2BR/1.5BA Ranch one block from Good Harbor Beach.
Michelle Mineo 978.471.9178
O. 978.927.1111
michelle.mineo@cbrealty.com
LITTLETON, MA | Price Upon Request
Wonderful 2br/1ba home w/fully updated kitchen in Littleton!
Reliable Results Team 978.496.8695
O. 978.692.2121
info@reliablerr.com
EAST LONGMEADOW, MA | $495,000
4+ bedrooms w/expanded living spaces & private yard w/pool.
Angela M. Costello 413.374.2023
O. 413.567.8931
angela.costello@nemoves.com
DORCHESTER, MA | $450,000
3br well-maintained condo w/spacious living & dining area.
La Toya Douglas 857.719.2597
O. 781.631.9511
latoya.douglas@cbrealty.com
WORCESTER, MA | $450,000
3br/2ba well maintained open concept Colonial/Gambrel home.
Tammy Berthiaume 774.200.8541
O. 508.795.7500
tammy.berthiaume@cbrealty.com
POCASSET, MA | $449,900
Adorable Open Concept Home Built 2021~Stroll To Beach!
Sharon Doonan 508.789.9144
O. 508.746.0051
sharon.doonan@nemoves.com
BIDDEFORD, ME | $449,000
2br/1ba, 3.72 acres w/pond, near beach & town, two-car garage.
Julie Barros 207.251.0205
O. 207.967.9900
julie.barros@nemoves.com
STOUGHTON, MA | $434,900
2br/2.5ba updated Knollsbrook Complex end unit townhome.
Janine Wilson 508.654.0276
O. 781.320.0550
janine.wilson@nemoves.com
LONGMEADOW, MA | $409,000
4br/1.5ba Colonial w/wood floors & 3 season front porch.
Mike Behaylo 413.530.0374
O. 413.567.8931
mike.behaylo@nemoves.com
TAUNTON, MA | $399,999
3br/1.5ba home w/large open floor plan, HW & private yard!
Melissa Deutsch 781.535.9945
O. 617.266.4430
melissa.deutsch@cbrealty.com
BRISTOL, RI | Price Upon Request
3BR/1BA Cape on a large corner lot in quiet neighborhood!
Joanna Reynoso 401.714.4296
O. 401.333.0010
Joanna.Reynoso@nemoves.com
EAST LONGMEADOW, MA | $375,900
Spacious 4BR/2BA home with a long list of updates!
Lori Cotter 413.348.9259
O. 413.567.8931
lori@loricotter.com
NORTH ANDOVER, MA | $369,000
Cute 2 bed, 1 bath condex near downtown North Andover!
Michael Joy 978.457.4236
O. 978.372.8577
michael.joy@nemoves.com
NORTH GRAFTON, MA | $365,000
Affordable 3 bedroom, 1 bath Ranch in North Grafton!
Erin Zamarro 508.847.7100
O. 508.795.7500
erin.zamarro@cbrealty.com
WORCESTER, MA | $365,000
WEST SIDE: 2BR/1BA single-level, ranch style property!
Erin Zamarro 508.847.7100
O. 508.795.7500
erin.zamarro@cbrealty.com
WAREHAM, MA | $349,900
2BR/1BA Ranch style home near private Indian Mound Beach!
Shana Lundell 508.221.5124
O. 508.746.0051
shana.lundell@nemoves.com
SPRINGFIELD, MA | $339,900
Beautiful Cape-style 4br/2ba w/Family Room & Eat-in Kitchen.
Cate Shea 413.427.6985
O. 413.567.8931
cateshea@realtor.com
WEYMOUTH, MA | $329,000
Top floor, 2BR/2BA waterfront unit at Weymouthport!
Mary Heinrichs 781.760.9954
O. 781.749.4300
mary.heinrichs@nemoves.com
WORCESTER, MA | $324,000
4br/1ba newly renovated & move in ready cape-style home.
Melissa Clark 508.735.1267
O. 508.393.5500
melissa.clark@cbrealty.com
LYNN, MA | $299,900
1BR/1BA unit in a historical home 1 block from the beach!
Cheryl Lovett 781.608.2814
Peter A. Cote 617.388.1629
O. 617.864.4430
SPRINGFIELD, MA | $276,800
Craftsman Style 3br/1.5ba w/sun-filled rooms & gas fireplace.
Cate Shea 413.427.6985
O. 413.567.8931
cateshea@realtor.com
CUMBERLAND, RI | Price Upon Request
2br/2ba Rosewood Estates condo w/in-unit laundry & patio.
Kim Correia 401.447.4874
O. 401.333.0010
kim.correia@nemoves.com
SPRINGFIELD, MA | $247,900
Turn-key ranch w/open floor plan, 3BRs & a manicured yard!
Angela M. Costello 413.374.2023
O. 413.567.8931
angela.costello@nemoves.com
HAVERHILL, MA | $230,000
Approved two acre lot located close to 495 and NH line!
Christine Schwartz 508.633.3840
O. 978.256.2560
christine.schwartz@cbrealty.com
BEDFORD, NH | Price Upon Request
Impressive and spacious 3BR/2.5BA condo in a great location!
Liz Purnell 603.714.4845
O. 603.471.0777
liz.purnell@cbrealty.com
ColdwellBankerHomes.com
guiding you home since 1906
The property information herein is derived from various sources that may include, but not be limited to, county records and the Multiple Listing Service, and it may include approximations. Although the information is believed to be accurate, it is not warranted and you should not rely upon it without personal verification. Affiliated real estate agents are independent contractor sales
associates, not employees. ©2022 Coldwell Banker. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker and the Coldwell Banker logos are trademarks of Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. The Coldwell Banker® System is comprised of company owned offices which are owned by a subsidiary of Anywhere Advisors LLC and franchised offices which are independently owned and operated. The
Coldwell Banker System fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act.
19NFDN_3/20
K
B O S T O N S U N DAY G L O B E N O V E M B E R 6 , 2 0 2 2
N.H. voters reckon with a
charismatic election denier
B y A b d a l l a h Fa y y a d
K
EENE, N.H. — On the surface, the Senate
race in New Hampshire looks like a typical American election. Don Bolduc, a 60year-old retired Army general, has spent
the better part of the last three years
crisscrossing the Granite State trying to convince voters
to help him unseat one of their two Democratic senators.
His first attempt was a failure: He lost the 2020 Republican primary to a candidate endorsed by then-president
Donald Trump, and the Democrat, Jeanne Shaheen, went
on to win the general election by double digits. Now Bolduc
has his eyes on defeating the other Democratic senator,
Maggie Hassan — a goal that, to some Democrats’ surprise,
seems well within his reach.
Bolduc’s rise has all the markings of a tried-and-tested
campaign strategy. He riled up his base for the primary and
swiftly pivoted toward the middle on a range of issues for the
general election. He’s hosted countless town halls and made
himself available to answer questions from his would-be conNEW HAMPSHIRE, K3
CAN THE
CENTER
HOLD?
In Rhode Island, a bid to revive
moderate Republicanism
B y D av i d S c h a r f e n b e r g
C
RANSTON, R.I. — It’s election season and the
television hanging over the bar at Twin Oaks
Restaurant is overrun with attack ads.
Most of them, on this Thursday afternoon,
are aimed at Allan Fung, the Republican candidate for Rhode Island’s Second Congressional District.
“Too dangerous, too extreme,” one announcer warns.
Fung, another says, remained “extremely loyal to
Trump” even after the president put “kids in cages” at
the border and incited the violence of Jan. 6, 2021.
But the spots, however strident, seem to bounce off
the wood-paneled walls and settle into the plates of
veal parmesan and breaded chicken cutlets without
much effect.
The patrons of Twin Oaks Restaurant, an oldschool Rhode Island icon, don’t recognize the extremist depicted on the television screen. They’ve
RHODE ISLAND, K8
Inside
Bon Appetit, again
A new word for eating more
food after dinner K2
By Barbara Wallraff
two-inch tributes
Who left the toy soldiers at
veterans’ graves? K2
By Tom Sheehan
That’s Batty
A real-life Halloween
weekend tale of horror K7
By Sage Stossel
what’s at stake
The perils of a GOP majority
in Congress K6
By the Editorial Board
PHOTOS BY AP/GETTY; PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY ASHLEY BORG/GLOBE STAFF
A 6,000-mile trek to limbo
By Marcela García
H
ow desperate would you have to be to embark on
a 6,000-mile journey, primarily by foot and
through treacherous terrain, to seek refuge in
the United States?
Most of us are lucky and privileged enough that we’ll never
have to find out. But when two planeloads of Venezuelan migrants were flown without notice into Martha’s Vineyard by
Florida Governor Ron DeSantis in mid-September, the exploitative political stunt exposed a humanitarian crisis that
has been unfolding at the border, where thousands of Venezuelans had been arriving after a months-long trek through the
dense Panamanian jungle, Central America, and Mexico.
The Vineyard 49, as I’ve been referring to the group of Venezuelans who were caught in DeSantis’s cruel gambit, are
among the roughly 180,000 Venezuelan migrants, along with
a smaller but still significant number of Cuban, Nicaraguan,
and Haitian migrants, who reached the US-Mexico border between October 2021 and September 2022. That’s more than
three times the number of Venezuelans apprehended at the
border over the same period in the previous year. Between
2015 and 2018, border officials caught an annual average of
100 Venezuelans.
The US government doesn’t recognize the authoritarian regime of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, whose repressive, illegitimate, and corrupt government violates human
MIGRANTS, K4
OSCAR B. CASTILLO FOR THE BOSTON GLOBE
Edilberto Miranda, last in line to the right, from Zulia state in Venezuela,
queues alongside other passengers for a bus to Newark Airport in New
Jersey. Miranda, having more than once been denied shelter in New York,
planned to try his luck in Houston, where a friend lives.
K2
Ideas
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
G l o b e
MAY I HAVE A WORD | BARBARA WALLRAFF
Like appetizers, but after dinner
ADOBE
L
ast time, reader Toni Doherty requested a
“term for snacks served with drinks, after
dinner. Hors d’oeuvres and appetizers sound
like something you have before dinner.”
Not everyone who replied took Toni’s request seriously.
Susan Ranney, of Hopkinton, declared: “In our
house, we call the snacks served after dinner dessert.”
Josh Simons, of Sharon, had questions: “Why in the
world would someone serve more food and drinks after
dinner? Because Americans don’t eat enough already?”
Jayne Iafrate, of Falmouth, and Deb Stone, of Old
Greenwich, Conn., both felt that tapas was fit for purpose, but I’m afraid I can’t agree.
Modern-day tapas were originally free snacks that
bars in Spain served before dinner — or, among the frugal, instead of dinner — to encourage patrons to drink
more.
The original original tapas may have been the brainchild of Alfonso the Wise, a 13th-century Spanish king
— or King Alfonso XIII, or King Fernando VII, or XVII.
An early tapa was most likely a slice of bread, or
cheese, or ham — here too accounts vary — that a barkeep set atop a glass of wine or sherry before serving.
(Tapa is Spanish for “cover” or “lid.”)
Its purpose was either to deter patrons from drinking
on an empty stomach and thereby cut down on drunkenness or to keep dust or sand or fruit flies from landing
in the booze.
Much is unclear, but none of the yarns spin tapas as
postprandial snacks.
“We have used the word shnibblies,” Gail Wild and
Frank Wiggins, of Newport, N.H., reported, “ever since
the property manager of a house we rented in Spain said
she’d leave coffee, milk, and some shnibblies for our arrival. We assumed it was Yiddish since she was Israeli,
but it turned out to be just her family’s invention.”
John Hochstadt, of Twin Butte, Alberta, wrote in to
announce proudly that the source of this challenge is his
daughter. But, he noted, “Out here on the eastern slopes
of the Rockies, the entertaining tends to end before her
problem comes up, as we all go to bed at 9.”
Peggy Farren, of Quincy; Rosalie Kaufman, of
Swampscott; and the aforementioned Deb Stone offered
aftertizers.
I like that both parts of this portmanteau come from
English words — but is it sophisticated, as I requested?
Other responses that came in are surely more so.
Wade Smith, of Cambridge, supplied the French-in-
flected après d’oeuvre, adding, “Almost sounds to me
like that should have already been in place.”
Scott A. Helmer and Helen Regan, of Brunswick,
Maine, submitted the same coinage, après (after) Wade
did.
I, however, not being fluent in French, have to rack
my brain to pronounce d’oeuvre if it isn’t preceded by
hors, so there’s always a long, ruminative pause before I
try to say it. Surely I’m not the only person who would
get tripped up by this recombination.
Français was also on Larry Butler’s mind. The Wayland resident wrote: “I offer this hybrid in the spirit of
après-ski as the postprandial equivalent of hors
d’oeuvres and appetizer: après-tizer.”
Elaine Dionesotes, of Hudson, N.H.; Karen Gallas;
Jack Glassman, of Charlestown; Tom Hayden, of
Chelmsford; and Geoffrey Patton all had the same suggestion, with minor variations. So let’s go with it. The six
of you earn bragging rights, and congrats!
As for the new challenge, Willa Bluebird writes: “Is
there a word for something that sounds like a euphemism but isn’t? For instance, the other day I was salting
cucumbers for a Middle Eastern salad I like to make.
Guests were present, so I said, ‘Excuse me, I have to go
turn over my cucumbers.’ You should have seen the expressions on their faces.”
Send your ideas — and relevant anecdotes, of course
— to me at Barbara.Wallraff@globe.com by noon on Friday, Nov. 11, and kindly include where you live. Responses may be edited.
Barbara Wallraff is a writer and editor in Cambridge.
Salutes of a special kind
B y To m S h e e h a n
I
saw them some 30 years ago at Riverside
Cemetery in Saugus, almost invisible in
their khaki colors, atop gravestones in the
various veterans sections, war remnants
atop war remnants: 100 or more small plastic or
metal soldiers not much more than 2 inches tall,
decorating many sites, most likely glued in place,
for none of them had fallen or been blown down.
Small enough that my eye had to search them out
in the midst of fallen leaves and brown grass.
Small enough to catch at my heart. And numerous
enough to say a great big thank you for what had
transpired and transpires daily on foreign soils.
Salutes of a special kind, it was as though they
stood at attention in the ranks, row upon row to
the keen eye.
I like to think it was some youngster, perhaps 9
or 10 years old, who accompanied his father or
mother or a grandparent, locked up by memories,
into the veterans’ section, where each gravesite
was also decorated with a small star-spangled banner. A youngster who had a most remarkable
sense of where he was and what this flag-waving
that surrounded him was all about.
I like to think it was that youngster who, in his
own way and of his own choice, decided to add his
specific decoration to each stone, a youngster who
had apprehended a sense of devotion and duty
that calls for obligation and thanks, and who, with
a special grace, had donated his collection of toy
soldiers to a greater cause.
I picture him at recess in one of our schoolyards, or in one of his classes, or thinking of people he had never met but knew all about. I picture
him growing strong and brave and never having to
know the weight of a rifle on his shoulder, a trigger at his finger, a deadly craft in his hands, but
someday ready if he is called.
As the veterans’ names were being read at the
ADOBE
memorial in front of the old high school site on
Veterans Day that year, I thought of that youngster
as comrades and teammates and classmates by
the dozens were announced to those who had
come to pay their respects. I projected this youngster onto Stackpole Field, World Series Park, the
Kasabuski Brothers Memorial Rink, in a few years’
time, getting stronger, becoming proficient in his
efforts, being ever a part of this town, and still remembering what had impelled him to graveside
decoration.
Again today, I thought of him, and then, in a
still moment, wondered if it had been some old
man, older than me, who in his special way was
saying hello again to old friends, old teammates,
old comrades.
Either way, he was a winner.
Tom Sheehan is in his 95th year and is the author
of 53 or 54 books. He lives in Saugus, where he was
named Man of the Year in September.
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
B o s t o n
NEW HAMPSHIRE
Continued from Page K1
stituents. And when his supporters have
pressed him to explain his positions on issues
where New Hampshire tends to fall to the left
of the national Republican Party — abortion,
Medicare, and Social Security often come up
at his events — he’s tried to take the least controversial stances, regardless of how contradictory they may be to his past statements.
But dig a little deeper and this veneer of
normalcy begins to crack. While Bolduc has
been out on the campaign trail trying to earn
people’s votes, he has also spread the pernicious lie that Trump won in 2020. If Bolduc
wins, New Hampshire will be sending an election denier to the Senate, where he will be
tasked with certifying the results of the next
presidential election.
Make no mistake: Bolduc is a far-right politician who’s more than dabbled in a conspiracy theory or two, and he’s running in a very
purple state. But that hasn’t stopped him
from closing in on the moderate Hassan. A recent poll had the two candidates tied, and
S u n d a y
switching horses, baby. This is it.”
It may well be that this conspiracy-laden
fervor pushed him just over the edge to narrowly win the Republican primary this time
around. But Bolduc knows if he wants to win
a general election in a swing state, it would
probably be wise to hang up his tin foil hat. So
he’s tried to walk back his election lies. “I’ve
done a lot of research on this,” Bolduc said in
an interview on Fox News shortly after the
primary. “And I have come to the conclusion
— and I want to be definitive on this — the
election was not stolen.”
But just a few weeks later, he again cast
doubt on the 2020 election. “I can’t say that it
was stolen or not,” he told a crowd of supporters. “I don’t have enough information.”
The following week, I asked him to clarify
his position and give me a point-blank answer. Was the election stolen? “No,” he said.
He still managed to slip in false claims about
voting irregularities but concluded that there
simply wasn’t enough fraud to change the
outcome.
No matter how Bolduc tries to explain his
election denial, the damage has already been
done: The public’s faith in America’s elections
cided to play with fire and spent millions of
dollars trying to prop Bolduc up by attacking
his main opponent, and Bolduc went on to
win by less than two points. They clearly
thought that he was the easiest Republican
candidate for Hassan to beat. But if you go to
his events, you can see that the Democrats
made a mistake.
Simply put: Bolduc is approachable and
he’s good at working crowds. He’s been open
about having post-traumatic stress disorder,
and his service dog, a 6-year-old black German shepherd named Victor, can always be
spotted at campaign events — oftentimes
sniffing his way around the room off-leash before returning to Bolduc’s side. The former
Green Beret tries to come off as a reasonable
person, and if someone’s not paying close attention to the race, Bolduc could very well
convince them that he is one.
Meanwhile, Hassan’s campaign is mostly
playing defense, as incumbents often do, trying to run the most boring and inoffensive
campaign possible so as to minimize the risk
of gaffes or controversy. While Bolduc’s town
halls are open to the public — with the time
and address of each of his stops clearly listed
BONNIE JO MOUNT/WASHINGTON POST
Don Bolduc at a town hall at Tempesta’s Restaurant in Keene on Oct. 4.
Bolduc hasn’t had any trouble packing taverns, campaign offices, and ballrooms across
the state with enthusiastic supporters.
These events are filled with people sporting right-wing apparel, from red MAGA hats
to “Sons of Trump” T-shirts to the conservative clothing brand “Lions Not Sheep,” which
was recently fined for its phony “Made in the
USA” labels. At a town hall in Keene last
month, as the crowd erupted in a “USA!”
chant, an older man laughed and turned to
the guy next to him. “Sounds like a Trump rally,” he said.
Bolduc has gotten this far because after
losing the GOP primary in 2020, he doubled
down on appealing to far-right voters. He
called New Hampshire’s Republican governor
a “Chinese Communist sympathizer”; peddled
lies about COVID vaccines having microchips
in them despite being vaccinated himself; and
had Trump’s former national security adviser
Michael Flynn, who is steeped in the far-right
QAnon conspiracy theory, headline one of his
campaign events.
But what’s perhaps most dangerous is
Bolduc’s lies about the 2020 election results.
“I signed a letter with 120 other generals and
admirals saying that Trump won the election,
and, damn it, I stand by my letter,” he said
during one of the primary debates. “I’m not
is quickly eroding. At the town hall in Keene,
after Bolduc walked back his lies, a supporter
yelled, “What are we going to do about the
damn machines that rig the vote?”
You can’t put toothpaste back in the tube.
A general from central casting
Bolduc is not the most polished speaker,
but he’s a skilled politician. When he arrives
at his events, he tries to shake everyone’s
hand and hugs anyone with a familiar face.
When he sees other veterans, he thanks them
for their service; they thank him for his. He
tries to find out if there are any kids in the
room so that when he later quotes the preamble to the Constitution in his stump speech,
he has someone to point his finger to when he
says the word “posterity.”
Put aside his litany of lies and Bolduc is
undeniably charming. He has the look of a
general out of a made-for-TV war movie, and
he has cheesy lines to go with it: “I have a mission statement that I believe if I follow will allow me to do the right thing for you every single day, and it goes like this,” he told a crowd
at a bar in Hooksett. “We the people, in order
to form a more perfect union . . . ” And on he
goes with the preamble, pointing to a little
girl at the end.
In the Republican primary, Democrats de-
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on his website — Hassan’s events tend to be
smaller affairs, mostly focused on rallying her
organizers and campaign volunteers. (If journalists want to attend a Hassan event, for example, we typically have to RSVP in order to
find out where it’s going to be.)
That’s not necessarily surprising. Challengers often campaign harder than incumbents.
But Hassan’s more sedate approach has
opened the door for a charismatic candidate
with a spirited campaign to capture the attention of independents. And that’s exactly what
Bolduc has done. It’s a risky strategy on Hassan’s part given that she only won the last
election by 1,017 votes, and it’s an especially
irresponsible way to campaign after her party
helped finance Bolduc’s rise.
What’s alarming is how normal this all
seems. Here we are, in the first national election since the Republican plot to overthrow
the government, and Bolduc’s election denial
is merely in the background. He’s done all
that he can to make sure it stays there, finding other things to talk about on the campaign trail.
“I believe we have three big problems here
in this state right now,” he recently said to a
small room of mostly older voters in a campaign office in Salem. “Inflation, inflation,
and inflation.”
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Freudian slip?
Election denial may be the most dangerous conspiracy theory getting ginned up
across America today. Public faith in elections
— a broad belief that they are free and fair —
is the foundation of any democracy. And if
enough people stop believing in the legitimacy of votes, then elections begin to lose their
meaning. That could manifest by dissuading
people from voting or by encouraging them to
take charge of the government by force, as
some Americans tried to do on Jan. 6, 2021.
The Hassan campaign’s attempts to hammer Bolduc for his lies about the 2020 election don’t seem to be sticking with her voters.
As Erin Hubbard, a 52-year-old home
health care worker who’s been knocking on
doors for Hassan, told me, “What I hear from
people is that they’re worried about the economy and that they’re worried about taxes.” For
Hubbard, public health and abortion rights
are among her top concerns this election.
When I asked her what she thinks of Bolduc,
she said, “I have to say I don’t know much
about his platform.”
That’s not to say those voters don’t care
about election lies; Hubbard and others I
spoke with expressed their anxieties about the
direction of American democracy, but only after I asked about that issue specifically.
What has made Bolduc’s campaign so successful is that though he was labeled the extremist in the Republican primary, it turns
out that he’s quite adept at engaging with the
broader electorate. Since hitting the campaign trail as the Republican nominee, he has
struck just the right balance of energizing his
base while winning over his skeptics, deftly
weaving national right-wing talking points
with reassurances that, unlike most members
of his own party, he supports protecting, or
even expanding, safety-net programs. It
doesn’t matter that he has advocated for
privatizing Medicare and Social Security in
the past; as Bolduc clearly knows, what matters is what he’s saying now, and he’s telling
people what they want to hear.
When he’s with crowds that get energized
by so-called culture war issues, he’s willing to
wade into disturbing territory.
He’s gone after trans rights, for example,
often making some iteration of this joke on
the trail: “The pronoun is ‘We the people!’”
He’s drummed up fears of drug cartels penetrating the border, saying that he’s told his
grandchildren “not to take any colored candy
from anybody other than their mom and dad
because they’re smuggling in opioids that
look like candy.” And his supporters are quick
to engage with that kind of alarmism. One
told me that protecting the United States’ sovereignty is one of the most important issues to
her. When I asked her what she meant by
that, she said, “Without borders, we are not a
nation.”
But Republicans have always dumped fuel
on those kinds of issues — and not without
consequence. What’s newly prevalent, and
foreboding, is the election denial. There are
nearly 300 election deniers on ballots across
the country. And a handful of candidates for
governor and the Senate haven’t even committed to accepting the results of the current
election.
When I asked Bolduc if he would accept
Tuesday’s results, he said, “Absolutely.” And
when I asked him whether he would certify
the 2024 presidential election results if he became a senator, he said he would “accept the
results of the Electoral College by the different
states as I am supposed to do according to the
Constitution.”
But earlier that evening, in a room filled
with his supporters, he was accusing Democrats of being dishonest and said, “You know
it’s easier to tell a lie in this country than it is
the truth?”
The more I thought about it, the more I realized: That wasn’t an accusation; it was an
admission.
Abdallah Fayyad is a Globe columnist. He can
be reached at abdallah.fayyad@globe.com.
Follow him on Twitter @abdallah_fayyad.
The most important election of our lifetime, part 4
By Renée Graham
I
n an ill-fated attempt to sway
women voters who had supported Hillary Clinton’s failed presidential bid in 2008, Senator
John McCain of Arizona, the Republican presidential nominee, chose Sarah
Palin as his running mate.
That was the first time I heard the
warning, “This is the most important
election of our lifetime.”
It wasn’t simply that a lot of people
wanted to see Barack Obama become
this nation’s first Black president. Many
found it alarming that Palin, then Alaska’s governor, was manifestly unprepared to be a heartbeat away from the
presidency, especially given concerns
about McCain’s age and health. That
was enough to help propel Obama into
the White House and history, disaster
narrowly avoided.
That every election with national
implications since 2008 has carried the
mantle of being “the most important”
ever says a lot about this perilous time
in this country. Midterm elections are
usually low-participation affairs, but
that wasn’t the case in 2018, halfway
through Donald Trump’s calamitous
term. Turnout was the highest in a century, flipping control of the House to
Democrats.
Expect that record to fall.
This year, more than 20 million people have already cast their ballots in
early voting. Because of Trump’s lies
about the fair and overwhelmingly
fraud-free 2020 presidential election,
the deadly Jan. 6 insurrection those lies
inflamed, and the spreading stain of
election denialism among Republican
nominees, what happens on Tuesday
feels deeply consequential.
In a televised speech last week, President Biden made that point again. He
offered not an endorsement but a plea
for voters to save a democracy being
battered from within its borders by political extremists.
After referencing last week’s vicious
assault on Paul Pelosi, husband of
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, by a farright ideology-driven intruder who
broke into their San Francisco home,
Biden said Americans are “facing a defining moment, an inflection point.”
Denouncing political violence, voter
intimidation, and the nearly 300 Republican election deniers on the ballot,
Biden said, “Too many people have sacrificed too much for too many years for
us to walk away from the American
project and democracy. Because we’ve
enjoyed our freedoms for so long, it’s
easy to think they’ll always be with us
no matter what. But that isn’t true today. In our bones, we know democracy
is at risk. But we also know this. It’s
within our power, each and every one of
us, to preserve our democracy.”
Like no other president in modern
times, Biden has spent a considerable
chunk of his White House tenure defending democracy from white domestic extremism. Certainly, it’s always existed — it’s embedded in this nation’s
DNA — but never before has a former
president been its most open and ardent proponent. Never before have so
many nominees, all Republican, refused to say whether they will accept a
losing result when all the votes are
counted.
Predictably, voters say the economy
is their biggest concern, but democracy
is also heavy on their minds. And while
Republican nominees have offered no
plans to fight inflation, some are busy
crafting strategies to undercut elections
and damage democracy.
At a recent campaign event, Tim Michels, Wisconsin’s Trump-endorsed Republican gubernatorial nominee, said,
“Republicans will never lose another
election in Wisconsin after I’m elected
governor.” A 2020 election denier, Michels has dodged questions about
whether, if he is elected governor, he
would certify the presidential election
results for a Democrat.
That any nominee has to be asked
such a question — and then opts not to
answer — proves that democracy’s
guardrails are already in an advanced
state of decay.
In 2020, when Biden was officially
declared the winner after days of uncertainty, cities and towns across the country erupted into spontaneous celebrations. If the election’s outcome wasn’t a
cure for all ills, it at least felt like breezes were blowing us in the right direction.
After the insurrection and fears of
more violence, any relief has curdled into panic. If every election carries a certain weight, these midterms are like an
anchor tethered to cinder blocks. Biden
does not want to be the president who
saw democracy, as imperfect and incomplete as it is, die on his watch.
In his speech, the president asked all
Americans “to meet this moment of national and generational importance. We
must vote knowing what’s at stake and
not just the policy of the moment, but
institutions that have held us together
as we’ve sought a more perfect union
are also at stake. We must vote knowing
who we have been, what we’re at risk of
becoming.”
This is an important election. Time
will tell whether it’s the most important
we’ll probably see. But this much is already true — depending on what happens Tuesday, it could be the last time
this nation ever gets close to a fair election in our lifetime.
Renée Graham is a Globe columnist.
She can be reached at
renee.graham@globe.com. Follow her
on Twitter @reneeygraham.
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OSCAR B. CASTILLO
Above, recently arrived Venezuelan migrants at
the Port Authority Bus Terminal in New York.
Right, Francys Suinaga, seated second from the
right in the colorful top, visits another Venezuelan
migrant family outside a hotel shelter.
Lower right, Venezuelan migrant children play
with Styrofoam outside a hotel in Queens that
serves as a shelter for migrants.
Bottom right, upon arriving in New York, this man
and some 30 other Venezuelan migrants were
taken to a shelter for registration and a bed.
MIGRANTS
Continued from Page K1
rights and mismanages economic policy to the point of
impoverishing most of the nation’s citizens and pushing
them to flee. About 95 percent of the population in Venezuela doesn’t have enough income to pay for basic necessities such as food, health care, and education, according to HUMVenezuela, a nongovernmental group
that tracks the country’s humanitarian crisis.
Because the United States lacks diplomatic relations
with Venezuela, US border officials cannot deport migrants back there. Until earlier this year, the Biden administration was quietly deporting Venezuelan asylumseekers to third countries, such as Colombia and the Dominican Republic. But at some point, the government
shifted course and started releasing Venezuelans caught
at the border, giving them summonses to appear in immigration court or putting them on humanitarian parole, apparently because of overcrowded detention facilities. Social media helped spread the word quickly
among people in Venezuela that current US policy was
to allow them into the country. Videos posted on TikTok
detailed preferred routes, fees, and tips about how to
make the journey.
The politicization of this year’s extraordinary influx
of Venezuelans, typically through points of entry in Texas, has often obscured the migrants’ harrowing and utterly miserable journey to get here. But their challenges
don’t end at the border. Here in America, thousands of
Venezuelans remain stuck. It will be months before their
asylum applications get processed and before they are issued work permits.
That’s a harsh consequence of releasing Venezuelan
migrants inside the country: Although they are desperate to find jobs, they cannot work legally.
Unwittingly or not, the Biden administration has created a pool of thousands of Venezuelan migrants —
young adult men and young families with children, for
the most part — who are living here but can’t support
themselves by participating in the workforce. This at a
time of acute labor shortages in the US economy.
To better understand why Venezuelans are risking everything to come north and what happens when they arrive, I reported for several days in Boston and New York
— where I worked with photographer Oscar Castillo —
listening to stories about the trauma they endured to
make it to America. José's and Francys’s stories, just two
of dozens, follow.
José’s story
Most Venezuelans who try to reach America start by
making their way to the Colombian coastal town of
Necoclí, where they have to take a boat to cross the Gulf
of Urabá to reach Capurganá, another Colombian coastal town, which borders Panama. It is the last town before the Darién Gap, 66 miles of mountainous and dense
jungle between Central and South America.
José, a 28-year-old Venezuelan migrant who was one
of the Vineyard 49, left his hometown of Barquisimeto,
Venezuela, in mid-June. He was carrying just $50. After
hearing from acquaintances and watching videos on social media of others who had migrated and entered the
United States, he decided to go for it, even though he has
no family here.
In Venezuela, José worked as a security officer for the
government, earning about $160 a month, which is
barely enough to survive on a daily diet of rice with eggs.
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COUNTERCLOCKWISE FROM TOP: FEDERICO RIOS/NYT | FERNANDO VERGARA/AP | LUIS ACOSTA/AFP
The perilous journey through the Darién Gap typically takes five or six days and puts migrants at the mercy of many hazards: bad weather, venomous snakes,
treacherous swamps, and drug traffickers who use the same routes to move cocaine into Central America. Top, a woman and a girl cling to a guide rope while
making their way down a muddy hill in the Darién Gap. Bottom left, a Venezuelan migrant hoping to reach the United States rests during the walk across the
Darién Gap. Bottom right, Venezuelan migrants arrive at Canaán Membrillo village, the first border control of the Darién Province in Panama.
But his job became too risky, because “he knew too
much,” he said.
José didn’t want me to use his last name or let us
photograph him, for fear of being identified in Venezuela, which might cause trouble for his family there.
When he reached Necoclí, José worked for two days
doing odd jobs, like cleaning boats and picking up trash,
to earn his fare for the boat ride to Capurganá. He next
entered the jungle with dozens of others. “And then you
walk and walk,” José told me. “There are monkeys, crocodiles, jungle scorpions, vipers, jaguars.” There are also
armed guerrillas, drug traffickers, and armed indigenous Panamanians who charge the migrants for safe
passage. The Darién Gap is, in short, one of the most inhospitable places on earth.
This year, more than 160,000 migrants — the vast
majority from Venezuela — have crossed the Darién jungle, according to Panamanian authorities. The record
figure includes more than 21,000 minors. Migrants often get together and walk in groups. At some point, José’s group of about 15 people had to cross a river with a
strong current. “The jungle makes some people very impatient and careless,” he said. A young man in his group
was so desperate to get to the other side that he jumped
into the river. The current swept him away, and he
drowned.
It took José seven days to make it through the jungle.
He then traveled through Panama, Costa Rica, and the
rest of Central America. He begged strangers for money
and got used to feeling hungry. He sometimes hitchhiked. Other times, he talked his way into odd jobs to
make enough money to pay a bus fare. But most of the
time, he walked. By the time he reached Mexico’s southern border, José had been on the move for a month and
eight days.
When all the Martha’s Vineyard migrants were relocated from Joint Base Cape Cod, he was placed in a
state-sponsored apartment in Brockton. Frustrated and
desperate to work, José wandered, without luck, around
Brockton searching for opportunities. He scoured local
Latino groups on Facebook looking for a job, any job, to
no avail. Then a Venezuelan friend who lives in Atlanta
persuaded him to move south. “There’s work here, and I
can help you get hired,” José's friend told him.
Two weeks ago, José left Massachusetts.
Francys and her family’s story
Francys Suinaga also knows about walking and hunger. The 34-year-old mother of three left Caracas, Venezuela, with her husband, their children, ages 16, 13, and
12, and the family’s puppy, Luna, on a journey much like
José's. I met them on a Saturday morning last month
outside a Days Inn in Queens, New York, which the city
is using to shelter migrants and other homeless families.
More than 21,000 asylum-seekers have arrived in
New York City, according to Mayor Eric Adams. Most
have come on buses sent by the city of El Paso, Texas, or
by Republican Governor Greg Abbott. In early October,
an average of eight buses full of asylum seekers were arriving almost daily at the Port Authority Bus Terminal in
New York City.
Francys was a geriatric nurse in Caracas but lost her
job and, with it, the ability to provide for her family. “We
left because, as a parent, I realized that I couldn’t meet
my kids’ basic needs: health care, education, food,” she
told me. “Life in Venezuela is just not normal.” All they
had to eat was eggs, butter, and masa de maiz (maize
dough), she told me. Then “los colectivos,” an umbrella
term for militant armed groups of civilians allowed to
operate by the government, seized her apartment. “I
said to myself, my kids deserve a better life.”
It took the family four months to reach the USMexico border. “I didn’t think the whole thing was going
to be so, so hard,” Francys told me. They walked for 10
days in the jungle because they got lost. They joined a
group and the guide charged extra for Francys’s two
young daughters — for protection, the guide alleged.
They ran out of food — Francys would lose 41 pounds by
the time she exited the Darién Gap.
“Once you leave the jungle, you’ve already spent all
your money,” Francys said. She and her family stayed for
a few weeks in Panama working odd jobs to save up to
continue the journey. Then, in Costa Rica, a wrenching
decision: Francys decided to leave Luna with a kind
woman who offered to take care of the puppy. Francys
hopes to bring Luna to America as soon as she is able to
pay for her trip.
After Costa Rica, the family traveled through Nicaragua, where, Francys said, federal agents targeting migrants at checkpoints demand bribes to allow them to
continue north. Next, the family traveled through Hon-
duras to reach Guatemala. Then came the hardest part
of their journey: Mexico. “That cement jungle was way
worse than the Darién,” Francys said. Mexican law enforcement officers constantly stop and harass Venezuelans. How can Mexican cops identify Venezuelans? I
wondered. Their accent gives them away.
Francys, though, is no victim. About that, she was adamant. “I came here to work, a guerrerear” (to hustle),
she said. “I didn’t come here to depend on the government or anybody. But it’s frustrating that we don’t even
have access to job training opportunities.”
A long road to nowhere
The Biden administration recently enacted two policies to stem the unprecedented influx of Venezuelans into this country. The first makes use of an emergency
public health statute, Title 42, a rarely used section of
the US Code that prohibits migrants from entering the
country in the name of preventing the spread of infectious diseases. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention invoked Title 42 at the start of the pandemic,
and now the Biden administration is doing so in tandem with a deal struck with Mexico that sends Venezuelan migrants to Mexico. Those expulsions began last
month. The expelled Venezuelans are setting up camps
in Ciudad Juárez, and they are overflowing shelters in
Tijuana.
The Biden administration also launched a one-time
program that allows up to 24,000 Venezuelans who have
a US-based financial sponsor to enter the country temporarily and apply for work permits.
Neither policy addresses the urgent need of the thousands of Venezuelans who are already here: work authorization. What was the point of granting roughly
180,000 Venezuelans entry only for the US government
to keep them powerless to help themselves?
Meanwhile, neither Biden administration policy will
deter those like José and Francys, whose desperation to
live lives of dignity and purpose and to keep their families free of hunger compels them to make a 6,000-mile
trek to limbo.
Marcela García is a Globe columnist. She can be reached
at marcela.garcia@globe.com. Follow her on Twitter
@marcela_elisa and on Instagram @marcela_elisa.
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Editorial
It will take time to unwind
inflation’s many tentacles
The GOP does not deserve
control of Congress
E
lection lies have fatal consequences. On Jan.
6, 2021, thousands of Americans stormed
the Capitol — egged on by Donald Trump
and his lie that he had defeated Joe Biden —
to stop the peaceful transfer of power. Their insurrection failed, but five people died. And yet, that still
hasn’t stopped Republicans from continuing to lie
about the integrity of US elections, despite the known
risk that rhetoric has of inspiring political violence.
Now Americans are in the midst of their first national election since that dreadful day, and there are
more election deniers on the ballot than ever before —
nearly 300 of them across the country, in 48 out of the
50 states, according to The Washington Post. A majority of Republican nominees for congressional seats
have challenged or not accepted the results of the
2020 election, and most of them are in a good position
to win. Kevin McCarthy, who is poised to become
speaker in the likely event that Republicans win the
House, voted along with two-thirds of his caucus to
overturn Biden’s 2020 victory.
The most fundamental pillar of democracy is, by
definition, ensuring that political parties respect the
will of the people, no matter what or whom the public
votes for. Any break from that is an assault on the
foundation of this republic — one that could yet again
lead to very real and violent consequences.
So as Americans head to the polls to choose their
next representatives in Congress, this fact should
weigh heavily on their decision: If Democrats lose,
they will accept the result of the election; if Republicans lose, their members, including some in the party’s upper ranks, will likely cast doubt on the legitimacy of the outcome or allege that the midterms were
stolen in some form or another.
That election denial represents the view of the majority of the GOP caucus is reason enough to believe
that the Republican Party does not deserve to control
either chamber of Congress at this time. Americans
should vote with that in mind and deny Republicans a
win on Tuesday. What better message can the electorate send than to show the GOP that extremism and
election denial will not be tolerated at the ballot box?
Of course, millions of voters support the GOP not
because of their election denial, but despite it. They
agree with the party’s stances on taxes or abortion,
can’t stomach the idea of voting for the Democrats’
legislative agenda, and are willing to look the other
way when it comes to the GOP’s antidemocratic turn.
Asking them to become single-issue voters in this election is a tall order.
But even beyond election denial, there are plenty of
other reasons why voters should reject the prospect of
a GOP majority in the House and Senate. Just take a
look at what Republicans have vowed to do if they
manage to flip Congress, starting with their threat to
start a range of what appear to be nothing more than
sham investigations.
Republican leaders have said they intend to dig into Hunter Biden, for example, who is already the subject of a Department of Justice investigation. But the
president’s son is not a government employee, and
wasting Congress’s time and money going after him
amounts to nothing more than a political attack
aimed at sullying the president’s reputation heading
into 2024. Just ask yourself: Would Hunter Biden be
subject to a congressional inquiry led by Republicans
if he wasn’t the Democratic president’s son?
The answer is of course not. But this is part of the
GOP’s attempt to distract from — and potentially
hamstring — the critical ongoing investigations into
Trump and the attempts to overturn the 2020 election
results. That’s why many Republicans are eager to
start impeachment inquiries against Biden, even
though they have not articulated what the president’s
impeachable offenses have been. They are hoping
their investigations of his son would pave the way for
impeachment proceedings, but the plain fact is that
there is no legitimate reason to open an impeachment
inquiry against Biden. As Republican Senator Ted
Cruz of Texas admitted, his party may well impeach
Biden “whether it’s justified or not.”
Republicans have also taken aim at the House’s
Jan. 6 committee, with some suggesting that they may
investigate the committee members themselves, as
well as Attorney General Merrick Garland and the
FBI. To be clear, congressional inquiries, whether led
by Democrats or Republicans, have often had political
motives. But the House’s investigation into Jan. 6 is an
actual fact-finding endeavor — one that is crucial to
understanding exactly what happened that day. The
committee’s findings would, in an ideal world, inform
legislation that could prevent that kind of assault on
American democracy from happening again. The Republicans’ proposed investigations, however, are purely political and serve no grander purpose other than
blunting yet another tool to reinforce the country’s
democratic guardrails.
Republicans are clearly planning to use Congress
like an opposition research firm for their campaigns
as they head into 2024, not to enact the kind of conservative agenda that some voters may sincerely support. And that’s precisely why the Republican Party today — with its conversion to Trumpism complete — is
simply unfit to govern: Because it doesn’t want to.
That reality doesn’t only impact the trajectory of
American democracy, but the health of other democracies around the world, the economy, and the entire
planet. Time and again, the GOP has shown that it’s
unwilling to respond to urgent crises. McCarthy, the
Republican leader, has, for example, threatened to
withdraw the United States’ financial support of
Ukraine as it fights back against the Russian invasion
of its territories.
And with a global recession in the forecast, the last
thing that the public needs is a Legislature that’s uninterested in working with the executive to quickly provide relief to those who need it most. A recession requires a responsive government — one that can be
quick to provide relief and adjust fiscal policy as needed. The longer it takes for Congress to act in the event
that a recession takes hold, the deeper the recession
will be. (And while Republicans have been fond of
talking about inflation on the campaign trail, most
economists say that they haven’t provided any plans
that would actually make it any better.)
What the public needs is a government that can
stave off the worst of a recession. But Republicans only have plans to make matters worse, proposing going
back to their ways of using the debt ceiling — putting
JOHN W. HENRY
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That plastic cup — minutes in your hand,
centuries in our world
Re “Plastic recycling a ‘myth,’ study says” (Metro, Oct. 30): As a
science teacher, I sometimes do a demonstration for my students where I drop a piece of chalk in vinegar, and it immediately produces a froth of carbon dioxide bubbles, or “dinosaur
breath.” We make the connection to the dinosaurs as we read
about where that carbon has been through geologic time, before
it became the calcium carbonate in chalk.
I could simplify this demonstration and just hold up an iced
coffee cup from the recycling bin. That’s dinosaur breath, too. It
was made from fossil fuels to form the plastic for a product that
is used for only a few minutes and now will be polluting our
land and waterways for several hundred years. As your story on
the Greenpeace USA report demonstrates, it’s increasingly clear
that these single-use products are not being recycled.
There has to be a better way to sip our coffee. The state of
Maine has the right idea with its “Extended Producer Responsibility Program for Packaging,” which provides financial incentives for more responsible packaging. Other states, such as Massachusetts, should take similar action.
Single-use plastic needs to go the way of the dinosaurs.
MARY MEMMOTT
Framingham
RUTH FREMSON/NEW YORK TIMES
A worker straightened ballots for scanning at the
Board of Elections office in Doylestown, Pa., on Oct. 28.
the faith and credit of the US government on the line
— as a negotiating chip to reduce spending.
None of this is to say that voters should ever consider Republican candidates as inherently disqualified
for office or that Democrats ought to go unchallenged.
To the contrary, as this editorial board has stated, democracy requires at least two healthy parties, and rebuilding a more moderate and anti-Trump Republican
Party is crucial to saving the republic. The GOP is in
desperate need of leaders who — no matter their views
on taxes or welfare — believe in the basic principles of
democracy. But unfortunately, even some of the more
moderate Republicans running for Congress seem to
lack the desire to loosen Trump’s grip on the leadership of the party.
The GOP has more than done its part to demonstrate that its loyalties lie with Trump and his movement, not the interests of the American public or even
the purported policy goals of the party. With each
passing day, Republicans work harder and harder to
align themselves with autocrats and far-right extremists. And it’s time to judge them by the company they
keep. Just this year, they’ve invited the likes of Viktor
Orbán, Hungary’s far-right and antidemocratic prime
minister, and Giorgia Meloni, Italy’s new prime minister and leader of a neofascist party, to their various
events and conferences.
This iteration of the Republican Party — with its
open disdain for American elections, allegiance with
far-right autocratic movements, and cavalier attitude
toward political violence — is one of the most dangerous political movements in the world today. That, of
course, does not mean that its members hold the most
abhorrent views or that they would establish the most
repressive government by any means. But it’s to say
that the Republican Party is actively fanning the
flames of the global war on democracy, and that will
only get worse if they do so while controlling the levers of the most powerful government in the world.
Voters should not elect a GOP majority in Congress
— and Americans should be especially wary of election deniers on the ballot. The only way to protect
American democracy is to prevent those attacking it
from controlling it. And the only people who have the
power to do that are the voters. It’s time for them to
use it.
fghijkl
Founded 1872
Lindsay Owens (“Who’s really to blame for inflation,” Ideas, Oct.
30), in attributing stubborn inflation to the actions of corporate
America, misses a critical factor that may explain why some
large companies are holding prices high even while their expenses go down. When the Fed saw that the Biden administration was unable to stem inflation and made several moves that
(in my opinion) made it worse, the central bank had no choice
but to start raising interest rates. For most companies, this increases borrowing costs across the supply chain and it is cumulative the bigger the company. Yes, financial institutions and our
401(k)s benefit, but for companies that depend on these institutions to fund their growth, returning prices to pre-inflation levels before the market fully settles could create losses that hurt
shareholders. Owens does make an interesting point in closing
where she adds that the government needs to crack down on
monopoly power and anticompetitive mergers so that small
businesses and others can compete. I feel that the best way to
keep large corporations honest is well-funded entrepreneurs developing creative ways to compete in larger markets and drive
better products at lower costs. But the cost of money, which in
turn disrupts the private equity and venture businesses, means
that startup and growth capital is hard to find and expensive.
Inflation has many tentacles, and it will take a while to unwind them. It appears that bad political decisions got inflation
rolling. Now we need some solid nonpolitical decisions to tame
it, such as stabilizing and strengthening supply chains and making sure the Inflation Reduction Act funds really are going to investments that have a measurable impact on inflation.
DAVID MAHONEY
Westford
Quality of heart surgery still a problem,
as is hospitals’ responses
I’ve been following the Globe Spotlight Team’s coverage of a
New Hampshire heart surgeon’s malpractice settlements and
the institutional failure to respond. Some Globe readers may recall a similar series of reports 46 years ago.
Those reports documented a Boston-area surgical team’s dismal mortality results — 52 percent in one hospital, 25 percent in
another, at a time when anything over 5 percent was deemed excessive. A whistle-blower called hospital leadership’s attention to
the situation without any response, and the state health department and state medical society swept it under the rug.
After the Globe broke the story, the head of the group was
forced to resign on the eve of his inauguration as president of
the American College of Cardiology. Eventually the surgeons
agreed with the state licensure board to cease open-heart surgery. As the author of those reports, I heard from heart surgeons
around the nation who told me — off the record — that this was
no isolated case. It’s discouraging that the quality of open-heart
surgery is still a problem and that so is the response of institutions when problems come to light.
RICHARD KNOX
Center Sandwich, N.H.
The writer covered medicine and health for the Globe from
1969 to 2000 and for NPR until 2015.
Orange Line update: still not satisfactory
My 25-minute Orange Line ride from Oak Grove to Back Bay last
Saturday morning was uneventful. The 65-minute return ride
that evening was full of mishaps, with long switching issue delays at Tufts Medical Center and North Station. At Wellington,
we were told the train would go south but were given no instructions for proceeding to Malden or Oak Grove. Several minutes
later, a conductor waved us back on to go north.
During this trip, one woman was in tears over paying the
baby sitter for another hour. A man called his angry date several
times. Another woman complained that she’d transferred to the
Orange Line because of Green Line delays.
We depend on, and expect, the T to get us places on time;
however, we are at the mercy of an unreliable public transit system. This is a disgrace in a city where public transportation is
essential, and especially after hundreds of thousands of riders
were inconvenienced during the monthlong closure that was
supposed to make the Orange Line better.
Massachusetts voters will elect a new governor Tuesday. I
urge whoever wins to make improving the MBTA a top priority.
CHRISTINA GAGLIANO
Melrose
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NOVEMBER 6, 2022
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
Ideas
G l o b e
What the Yes on Question 1 and No on
Question 4 campaigns have in common
B y J e f f Ja c o b y
W
hen I go to the polls this week,
I plan to vote No on Question
1, the proposed amendment to
the Massachusetts Constitution that would impose a permanent surtax of
4 percent on all income above $1 million. The
current income tax rate is 5 percent, so the
“millionaire tax,” if approved, would jump to
9 percent — an 80 percent increase in the
marginal tax rate.
On Question 4, I intend to vote Yes. That is
the referendum on the new state law authorizing undocumented immigrants to apply for
a Massachusetts driver’s license. The statute is
on the books but has not yet gone into effect;
the referendum asks voters whether to retain
the law or repeal it. My Yes is a vote to keep
the law intact.
On the face of it, these two ballot measures
have nothing to do with each other. I expect
that most left-leaning Massachusetts voters
will favor both the surtax and the driver’s license law, while most Bay State conservatives
who oppose the higher tax will also vote
against letting immigrants without legal status get licenses to drive.
Yet to my mind, both campaigns are fueled
by the same ignominious motivation: the desire to isolate and punish a disfavored minority.
Those clamoring for a steep surtax on anyone reporting more than $1 million in income
repeatedly trumpet the message that only the
tiniest sliver of Massachusetts residents
would have to pay it. The pro-tax forces camouflage their pitch behind clouds of rhetoric
about making Massachusetts “fairer” and
spending more on education and transportation. Underneath the PR, however, is a zealousness to scapegoat and penalize the “1 percent” — to provoke resentment against the
well-off for supposedly failing to bear a fair
share of the state’s fiscal needs. An old maxim
defines unbridled democracy as four wolves
and a sheep voting on what to have for lunch.
Question 1’s proponents keep reminding voters that the sheep can be targeted with impunity because there are so few of them.
PAT GREENHOUSE/GLOBE STAFF
A sign in favor of Question 1, which would raise taxes on incomes over $1 million.
Question 4 asks whether undocumented immigrants should have driver’s licenses.
Equally spiteful is the eagerness of Question 4’s promoters to bar undocumented immigrants from obtaining a driver’s license. On
occasion, they drape their motives in reasonable-sounding concerns about ballot security
and public safety. But it’s no secret that hostility to the license law is largely a function of
hostility toward foreigners who came to the
United States without proper immigration
papers.
The website of the repeal campaign
seethes with animus against migrants who
don’t have green cards. Under the heading
“Why vote No on Question 4?” it answers,
“We cannot reward people who broke our
laws to be here.” It warns that retaining the
law “will bring more illegal immigration to
Massachusetts,” along with “everything that
comes with illegal immigration: violent gangs,
criminals, and drugs.”
The same bile is reflected in the official
statement submitted by the No on 4 campaign
for the secretary of state’s official voter guide
to the 2022 ballot. “This bill,” it declares, “is
patently unfair to those who have taken the
time to immigrate to our great country via legal means.” During debates, on talk shows,
and in editorial columns, foes of the license
law consistently make it clear that what animates their opposition is resentment of the
migrants who crossed the border without an
immigration visa.
Both ballot campaigns rely on arguments
that are flimsy or false. Supporters of the surtax assert that it will generate an additional
$2 billion a year for public education and
transportation in Massachusetts. But there is
no requirement in the proposed amendment
that funding for education and transportation
be increased by a single penny. Even less defensible is the contention that the surtax will
affect only the superrich. Analysts from the
Pioneer Institute and Tufts University have
demonstrated that roughly half the house-
holds that would be vulnerable to the surtax
would be “millionaires” for one year only —
typically taxpayers selling a business or a
home in preparation for retirement.
As for driver’s licenses, the repeal advocates’ main attempt at a policy-based argument is that letting undocumented immigrants apply for a license could lead to voter
fraud, since the Registry of Motor Vehicles
can register eligible voters. But it’s a meritless
claim. No applicant can be registered to vote
without first providing the RMV with a US
birth certificate, an American passport, or
naturalization papers. Hundreds of thousands
of green card holders in Massachusetts —
noncitizens who are here lawfully — have always been permitted to get a regular driver’s
license. If they don’t pose a threat to ballot integrity, why would any other noncitizens?
Yet for the activists who lobbied or gathered signatures to get Question 1 and Question 4 on the ballot, my sense is that the policy
arguments are mere fig leaves. More meaningful by far is antipathy toward a segment of
the population they stigmatize, disrespect, or
feel justified in treating worse than they
would want to be treated themselves. They
are engaged in what ethicists call “othering”
— demonizing millionaires (in the case of
Question 1) or undocumented migrants (for
Question 4) and letting that aversion propel
their ballot campaign.
Millionaires and undocumented immigrants may not seem to have much in common. I don’t doubt that ballot activists in each
camp — pro-surtax and anti-driver’s license —
will scoff at the suggestion that the minority
they want to disadvantage is entitled to sympathy. That’s the logic of scapegoaters: Abuse
is OK, as long as it’s directed at those who deserve it. Some scapegoats have a large income.
Some lack immigration documents. Voters are
being asked which scapegoat they wish to
mistreat. My answer is: Neither.
Jeff Jacoby can be reached at
jeff.jacoby@globe.com. Follow him on Twitter
@jeff_jacoby. To subscribe to Arguable, his
weekly newsletter, visit bitly.com/Arguable.
SAGE STOSSEL
Sage Stossel is an Atlantic contributing writer and author of the children’s book “On the Loose in Boston.’’
K7
K8
Ideas
RHODE ISLAND
Continued from Page K1
been watching Fung since his days as
mayor of Cranston, the largest city in the
district. And he’s always seemed reasonable.
“I’ve known him for years,” says Scott
Nunes, a salesman who has crossed paths
with the former mayor at “I can’t tell you
how many” restaurants and community
events. “He’s a genuine person.”
Tony Rainone, a retiree who works as
a part-time driver for a dental lab, feels
the same way. He’s voting for the Democrat in the governor’s race, but it’s Fung
for Congress. “He comes to my gun club,”
Rainone says. “Always been good.”
Fung, the son of immigrants, has done
all he can to reinforce the image of the relatable Republican. He shot one of his
first campaign commercials right here at
Twin Oaks — an upbeat, slightly goofy ad
with a focus on bread-and-butter issues
like lowering gas prices and bringing
down home heating bills. The candidate
has staked out a moderate position on
abortion. And he has rejected former
president Trump’s claims of fraud in the
2020 presidential election.
Put it all together and he has a real
shot at winning a district Joe Biden carried by almost 14 points.
In a poll conducted for Rhode Island
television station WPRI in late September
and early October, Fung led his Democratic opponent, state treasurer Seth
Magaziner, by six points. A Boston Globe
poll released shortly thereafter had him
up by eight.
Democrats, citing internal surveys, insist the race has tightened since then. But
Fung’s strong showing has made the
campaign an object of national attention.
Super PACs aligned with House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi, a Democrat, and
Kevin McCarthy, the Republican in line
to take the speaker’s chair if the GOP
wins a majority, have poured millions into the race. And in the press, Fung has
become a symbol of what looks like a
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
Succeed and they keep a creaking
American democracy functional. Fail and
the breakdown only accelerates. And the
very purpose of moderate Republicanism
— tempering the extreme elements of our
politics — comes into question.
Powerful or invisible?
It’s a clever bit of politics. A practiced
aside. A way for Fung to signal that he’s
the sort of Republican who will break
with his party if it’s in Rhode Island’s interest.
If he’d been in Congress last year, he
likes to say in media interviews, he would
have voted for President Biden’s $1 trillion infrastructure law. Why does he
mention this legislation in particular?
The measure, aimed at fixing roads, improving ports, and replacing old lead
pipes, is popular. It plays into his broader
message of improving the economy.
And Fung can legitimately claim that
support for the infrastructure package
puts him in rare company: Only 13
Democrats, offers a lesson in the influence of a well-positioned centrist.
Threatening to break with the party if
he didn’t get his way, Senator Joe Manchin, a West Virginia Democrat and selfstyled deficit hawk, was able to dramatically pare down the infrastructure bill
and what became the Inflation Reduction
Act, the climate-and-health policy measure at the heart of the Biden agenda.
Manchin only had that kind of power,
though, because he was operating in a
narrowly divided Senate and Democratic
leadership needed his vote to get anything done.
A Congressman Fung and the small
group of Republican moderates he would
join won’t be able to have the same kind
of impact in the House next year unless
the GOP margin is similarly slight.
“If it’s a big, Republican red wave,
you’re just a lonely voice,” says former
senator Lincoln Chafee, the last Republican to represent Rhode Island in Congress. “Who cares how you vote?”
It’s unclear how effective someone like Fung could
be in Congress when the deal-making, democracyprotecting GOP contingent is so small.
House Republicans crossed party lines to
vote for it.
But this is where his argument for
electing a moderate Republican gets a little tricky.
It’s unclear how effective someone like
Fung could be in Congress when the dealmaking, democracy-protecting GOP contingent he promises to join is so small —
and getting smaller.
Of the 13 House Republicans who voted for the infrastructure legislation, at
least seven won’t be in Congress next
year.
One died. One announced he wouldn’t
seek office again amid allegations that he
groped a lobbyist. Another lost in a Republican primary to a Trump-backed can-
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
G l o b e
In this scenario, the moderate Republican — however familiar and likable — is
little more than an enabler for the conservative mainstream of the party.
That’s the argument Democrat Sheldon Whitehouse successfully used
against Chafee in the 2006 election. And
Magaziner, Fung’s Democratic rival in
this year’s House race, is reprising it.
In a recent televised debate at the
Providence Performing Arts Center, he
said Fung’s professed support for abortion rights rings hollow when he has
vowed to support a GOP leadership that
opposes those rights. And he made a similar argument about Fung’s pledges to
protect Social Security.
“He has committed himself, repeated-
crisis like the one that unfolded after the
2020 election.
If that happens, no one will be under
as much pressure as Republican moderates — conservatives urging them to toe
the party line and everyone else insisting
they protect democracy.
Model or unicorn?
GOP politicians who have broken with
the party on major issues haven’t fared
well of late. They’ve been battered in the
conservative press and chased off the job
by Trumpist challengers.
That would no doubt linger in the
back of a Congressman Fung’s mind as he
weighed how to vote and what to say in
Washington. But he might have a little
more leeway than some of his Republican
colleagues.
Until now, at least, the right in Rhode
Island hasn’t given him too much trouble.
A more conservative candidate for the
Second District seat, former state representative Robert Lancia, struggled to get
traction and was urged to drop out by
party officials. He ended his campaign in
June.
And the Trump network in Rhode Island, such as it is, doesn’t seem all that
perturbed by Fung’s digs at the former
president.
Both state cochairs of Trump’s 2020
presidential campaign, former state representative Doreen Costa and developer
Jerry Zarrella, have donated to the Fung
campaign. Both spoke highly of him in
interviews with Ideas.
“Allan is like an adopted son,” Zarrella
said. “I’ve known him since he got out of
college. He and my son Michael were the
best of friends, and they would always be
over the house.”
Rhode Island is small. That’s been
good for Fung. But it’s one of a number of
factors that could make him difficult for
New England Republicans to replicate.
He twice ran for Rhode Island governor; that boosted his name recognition
ahead of the congressional run. And most
important, he was the longtime mayor of
a blue city.
DAVID GOLDMAN/AP
Allan Fung greeted customers at the Brewed Awakenings coffee shop in Warwick, R.I., on Oct. 25.
cresting GOP wave in the House — Republicans are so strong this cycle, they’re
even winning in Rhode Island.
But the race isn’t just about a charismatic moderate who could nudge the
GOP into the majority. It’s about something bigger. It’s about the fate of the
moderate Republican project itself —
both as political force and as governing
philosophy.
Fung is pitching his campaign as a bid
to revive a temperate New England conservatism that has been reduced to near
insignificance by the GOP’s Trumpist
turn. And if he can win — and become a
model for the Republican Party in parts
of the country that seem to be slipping
out of its grasp — then his campaign
could have long-term implications for the
balance of power in Congress.
If he loses, or turns out to be a one-off
— a lonely success in a region that remains almost entirely shut off to Republicans seeking national office — then the
Fung electoral phenomenon doesn’t seem
nearly as consequential.
If his significance as campaigner
hangs in the balance, so does his significance as legislator. In Congress, he’s
pledged to stand with a small, besieged
band of GOP moderates. And these centrists will have outsize responsibility for
proving that a party increasingly bent on
sabotage can actually govern when handed a majority.
didate who blasted him for the infrastructure vote. And four of the lawmakers
— all of whom also voted to impeach
Trump — opted not to run for reelection
in a party with a vanishing tolerance for
dissent.
Representative John Katko of New
York is among them. He says that if Republicans win a House majority on Tuesday as expected, GOP moderates will immediately face off with a larger conservative wing of the party eager to establish
its dominance.
“There’s going to be titanic fights
within the party,” he says. “When to fund
the government, how to fund the government, the debt ceiling. . . . There’s going
to be tremendous pressure [on moderates] to do things they don’t believe in.”
Government shutdowns could be in
play. Cuts to bedrock programs. A further
splintering of a splintered country.
But if the handful of moderates who
carry over from the current Congress and
potential newcomers like Fung can stand
firm, Katko argues, they can develop real
sway.
“I think in the majority, the moderates
have more power than people can fathom, because the leadership will rely on
them to get things done — as opposed to
the most extreme elements of the party,
who will do nothing but tear things
down,” he says.
The current Congress, controlled by
ly, to voting for a Republican leadership
team that has said that cutting Social Security and Medicare is one of their top
priorities,” Magaziner said.
Whether the GOP would actually
move forward on such a politically risky
venture is unclear.
But the party may be forced to address
another weighty matter that some rankand-file Republican lawmakers wish
would just go away — the Trumpian assault on democracy.
Trump seems to be preparing for another presidential run in 2024. And he’s
doing all he can to keep bogus claims
about widespread election fraud at the
center of American politics.
Fung is clear about where he stands
on those claims. “I’m not an election denier,” he said in a recent interview with
the Globe editorial board.
But Trump is clearly an uncomfortable topic. Asked if he would have voted
to impeach the former president after the
Jan. 6 insurrection, Fung demurred. “I
wasn’t there, wasn’t part of the hearing,”
he said. “My focus isn’t on going backwards to relitigate what the former president did.”
Fung says he’d like to see a “fresh face”
for the party in the next presidential election.
But even a fresh face may have to play
to the base’s fears of voter fraud to win
the nomination. And that could lead to a
A moderate message is one thing, “but
having a record — a very long record — to
back up that approach is something entirely different,” says state House minority leader Michael Chippendale. “And
that’s where Allan, I think, is unique.”
If Fung manages to win, he may not
be the only New England Republican to
succeed on Tuesday. Former state senator
George Logan of Connecticut — like
Fung, the rare Republican of color to hold
office in a left-leaning patch of New England — is neck and neck with Democratic
Representative Jahana Hayes.
But other moderate Republican House
candidates in New England face longer
odds — including former naval officer
Mike France in Connecticut and former
congressman Bruce Poliquin in Maine.
If Fung winds up being the sole Republican from New England in the
House, or one of two, he will no doubt be
heralded by national Republicans as a
breakthrough.
But if the GOP can’t produce another
Fung in these parts in two or four or six
years, he may be seen, in time, as an
anomaly in a country hopelessly divided.
That would be disappointing coda to a
fascinating race. It would be a worrisome
sign for American democracy, too.
David Scharfenberg can be reached at
david.scharfenberg@globe.com. Follow
him on Twitter @dscharfGlobe.
N
Travel PAGE N13 WITH: NEW ENGLAND DESTINATIONS I BOSTONGLOBE.COM/TRAVEL
Christopher
Muther
WELCOME TO THE MOST
CHRISTMASSY TOWN IN
AMERICA
A PANDEMIC TREND THAT SEEMS
TO BE STICKING AROUND
N13
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Walking the world
SundayArts
B O S T O N S U N DAY G L O B E N O V E M B E R 6 , 2 0 2 2 | B O S T O N G L O B E .C O M /A RT S
Five closing thoughts on Globe readers’ TV favorites
By Matthew Gilbert
1.
GLOBE STAFF
I am delighted that
“All in the Family ”
w o n t h e G l o b e’s
bracket competition
for best show of the
past 50 years. The Norman Lear sitcom is as trail-blazing as any show
that’s ever been on the air, and yet
on all the best-ever lists it always
seems to fall lower than the big dramas of the so-called Second Golden
Age of TV, including “The Sopranos,” “The Wire,” “Mad Men,” and
“Breaking Bad.”
While I’m a great fan of those
dramas, and usually choose “The
Sopranos” as the best scripted show
I’ve ever seen, I find it refreshing to
see a comedy — and such a socially
relevant comedy — have its day.
SONY, GLOBE STAFF
L e a r, t o o . “A l l i n t h e Fa m i l y ”
changed TV by talking about American realities that previous scripted
shows had ignored. It ushered racism, sexism, and politics into the
daylight, and set those issues in an
ordinary family divided by them. It
made TV comedy into something
vital, something that accompanied
the news rather than ignored it.
Maybe that’s part of the reason
“All in the Family” prevailed in the
Globe: Those who continue to read
newspapers (thank you) may have a
taste for a series that is all about the
daily headlines and how they play
out in a domestic situation.
2. I’m also interested in the fact
that “All in the Family” is a relatively old show. Clearly, it has nonetheTV SHOWS, Page N6
Days with
less light
are meant
for noir
By Odie Henderson
N
GLOBE STAFF
New rooms are
drawing artists and
audiences
to Northampton,
Amherst, and beyond
PHOTOS BY CARLIN STIEHL FOR THE BOSTON GLOBE
A crowd turned out for a show by rapper Entellekt at the Drake in Amherst. The venue, with a capacity of 250, opened in May.
In Western Mass., a vibrant
music scene gets a makeover
By Eric R. Danton | Globe correspondent
B
efore the pandemic, the Northampton area had a thriving concert
scene. These days, well, same — but
with a very different look.
It’s been 2½ years since concert
halls nationwide closed their doors in the face of
a global health emergency that many feared
would permanently sink the live music business.
Even amid the upheaval, several new venues
have opened in Northampton and surrounding
towns, while new ownership revived a Holyoke
club that had gone bust in the first year of the
pandemic. The result is that fans of live music
have nearly as many options as they did before
the coronavirus, spanning indie-rock, jazz, folk,
world music, and more.
Yet the new venues are taking root in the
shadow of three venerable, scene-defining rooms
that have mostly gone dark. Though posters advertising bygone concerts still paper the windows, the Iron Horse Music Hall hasn’t hosted a
show since March 2020. Pearl Street Nightclub
nearby held a handful of concerts in the fall of
2021, but there’s been nothing this year, while
the sparse calendar at the Calvin Theatre leans
hard on tribute bands. All three are part of Iron
Horse Entertainment Group (IHEG), a company
that had dominated the Western Massachusetts
concert scene for nearly 25 years.
“There’s been such a shift in the market,” says
Jim Olsen, who opened the 100-capacity Parlor
Room 10 years ago in the same downtown
Northampton building that houses Signature
Sounds, the folk-oriented record label he started
NORTHAMPTON, Page N8
oirvember has
arrived in Boston! The eleventh month of
the year is devoted to the darkest, dankest
corners of cinema, where the
devious and the downtrodden reside. So strap in and
hold on as the Brattle and
Coolidge Corner theaters
present a month-long celebration of hard-headed men
and hard-hearted women. It’s
noir time, buster, where there
are no happy endings, and
the dialogue is as tough as
the luck of the often doomed
protagonists. As Joan Benn e tt s u c c i n c t l y p u t i t i n
1948’s “Hollow Triumph,”
“It’s a bitter little world,” and
Noirvember’s gonna bring it
to you.
Every week this month,
the Coolidge offers a screening of a classic noir or neonoir, with occasional pre-film
seminars by a series of local
experts. The series opened on
Nov. 1, and the choices of
sweet miser y include my
picks for the greatest film
noir and the greatest neonoir. For variety, the theater
is also hosting “Gilda,” the
m o v i e Mo r g a n Fr e e m a n
watches in “The Shawshank
Redemption,” plus Akira Kurosawa’s “Drunken Angel,” an
example of how film noir influenced international cinema.
Over at the Brattle, the offerings begin on Nov. 11 and
celebrate the 75th anniversary of one of the prime years of
noir, 1947. This series is for
the purists who like their noir
without the “neo” prefix, but
NOIRVEMBER, Page N9
Inside
THEATER
QUEENS IN
CONCERT AND
COMPETITION
In ‘Six,’ coming to the
Emerson Colonial Theatre,
the ill-fated wives of Henry
VIII become pop divas
N2
ART
ELEGIES TO A
DYING WORLD
The Pearl Street Nightclub, Iron Horse
Music Hall, and Calvin Theatre in
Northampton used to anchor the scene.
Rapper Entellekt performed at the Drake in
Amherst.
Marc Swanson’s exhibit
spanning a pair of large
galleries in two locations
delivers a response to the
climate apocalypse
N7
N2
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
G l o b e
Theater
In ‘Six,’ the ill-fated wives of Henry VIII become pop divas
SIX
Presented by Broadway in Boston.
At Emerson Colonial Theatre, Nov. 9Dec. 31. Tickets from $54.75. 888-6160272, https://boston.broadway.com
By Christopher Wallenberg
GLOBE CORRESPONDENT
In the musical “Six,” the wives of
King Henry VIII are no prim-and-proper royal bunch. Instead, they’re portrayed as sassy, girl-power pop divas
performing an exhilarating live concert. The brainchild of Toby Marlow
and Lucy Moss, who created the show
while students at Cambridge University
in England, “Six” evinces an acerbic
and cheekily anachronistic vibe reminiscent of Hulu’s Catherine the Great
TV series “The Great,” the 2018 Oscarwinning black comedy “The Favourite,”
and even “Hamilton.”
The sextet of ill-fated and discarded
queens in “Six” are decked out in glittering costumes and spout droll putdowns, defiant humble-brags, and
cocksure comebacks (“Sorry, not sorry,”
coos Anne Boleyn in her standout solo).
Meanwhile, the pastiche of musical
styles for each of the queens — Catherine of Aragon, Anne Boleyn, Jane Seymour, Anna of Cleves, Katherine Howard, and Catherine Parr — are drawn
from the sounds of contemporary pop
artists like Beyoncé, Adele, Rhianna,
Ariana Grande, Britney Spears, and Alicia Keys. Presented by Broadway in
Boston, the musical arrives at the Emerson Colonial Theatre on Wednesday
for a run through Dec. 31.
Storm Lever, who plays Anne Boleyn, says she sometimes spies older patrons, with puzzled expressions on their
faces, “fumbling through the Playbill”
and searching for a synopsis that explains some of the real history. “You can
see them going back like, ‘This isn’t
what I remember studying back in the
day about these queens. Am I in the
right show?’ ” she says with a laugh.
Indeed, the show benches Henry
and shifts his six blithely tossed-aside
wives into the foreground, reimagining
its 16th-century history as a story of female empowerment, solidarity, and resilience.
“The queens get to share their story
and history from their perspective,” Lever says. “You recognize that what these
women were going through, we’re still
dealing with today. We’re still fighting
against the patriarchy and fighting for
our rights, our bodies, our choices, all
these things are still relevant. So it’s a
modern spin on this historical story.”
While the fates of these six were notoriously reduced to the refrain, “Divorced, beheaded, died! Divorced, beheaded, survived,” the show wants to
dig deeper and give audiences a
glimpse into their lives. “Six” unfolds as
PHOTOS BY JOAN MARCUS
From left: Olivia Donalson as Anna of Cleves, Gabriela Carrillo as Catherine Parr, and Storm Lever as Anne
Boleyn in the touring production of “Six.”
a concert with the reunited royals and
then turns into a competition about
who had the most awful experience
with Henry (though beheading is hard
to beat). Boston-area audiences first got
to glimpse “Six” when it played the
American Repertory Theater in Cambridge in 2019 on its way to Broadway.
First wife Catherine of Aragon
(Khaila Wilcoxson), who sings “No
Way,” was furious about being cast
aside by Henry after putting up with his
affairs. Still, her marriage was annulled, and in sashays the cameraphone wielding Anne Boleyn (Lever),
who was accused of adultery and beheaded after Henry claimed she put a
spell on him.
In writing her song “Don’t Lose Ur
Head,” with its echoes of Miley Cyrus,
Avril Lavigne, and Taylor Swift, Marlow
and Moss sought to play against the
perception of Boleyn as devious and
manipulative and instead make her a
ditzy, self-absorbed sexpot.
“Anne Boleyn is this cheeky little
mischief-monster,” Lever says. “She’s
unapologetic and bold and fabulous. So
she’s making me click into this part of
my personality that has a right to be
outspoken and brash.”
In the show, the earnest Jane Seym o u r ( Ja s m i n e Fo r s b e r g ) , o f t e n
thought of as Henry’s favorite, claims
she’s “the one he truly loved,” which
prompts an irritated “Rude!” from her
fellow queens. She sings the aching
Adele-style power ballad “Heart of
Stone” about her unbreakable love for
Henry.
Olivia Donalson’s Anna of Cleves
was rejected after only six months
when Henry claimed she was not up to
his standards. So Marlow and Moss
wrote the booty-shaking, house-down
anthem “Get Down,” a riff on today’s
dating app culture, with Henry objecting that Anna doesn’t “look like [her]
profile picture.”
In the swaggering song, Donalson
says she channels Lizzo in her ebullient,
carefree attitude and embrace of female
power and body positivity. “I’m a super
bubbly and joyful person, and my song
is a celebration of independence,” she
says. “So my interpretation is more jolly
and buoyant. I’m just having a ball.”
The musical reframes the story of
Katherine Howard (Didi Romero),
plucked by Henry when she was 16, as
that of a fatally naive girl who’s been
taken advantage of by older men. Palace gossip about her cheating on Henry
eventually leads to her beheading. Her
Ariana Grande- and Britney Spears-inspired earworm “All You Wanna Do”
shifts from sultry come-hither seduction to an ominous tale of predatory behavior and abuse.
Catherine Parr, played by Berklee
College of Music grad Gabriela Carrillo,
is considered the “survivor” who saw
Henry “till the end of his life.” Her Alicia Keys-Mary J. Blige-style ballad, “I
Don’t Need Your Love,” has a dramatic
emotional and musical shift, Carrillo
says, about giving up her dreams of a
relationship with her beloved Thomas
Seymour (Jane’s brother) in order to
marry Henry and realizing she has no
choice. It starts out as a wistful piano
ballad and moves into a more upbeat
(and defiant) 11 o’clock number.
“It really is an emotional roller-
coaster,” Carrillo says. “She chose duty
over true love, and I think that says a lot
about her. It’s heartbreaking to have
someone you’re deeply in love with, but
you can’t be with them.”
As Parr watches the catty queens
mistreating and disparaging each other, Carrillo says the character realizes
“it’s not much better than we’ve been
treated by men, which is brutal and
without compassion.”
“She encourages the other queens to
embrace the full spectrum of who they
are aside from just being a wife, and
that’s a really powerful message. We
should be united instead of divided because we’ve all suffered at the hands of
men in this show,” Carrillo says.
Since the show opened in London in
2018 and then moved to Broadway last
fall to largely rave reviews, the fan base,
dubbed “the Queendom,” has been
growing rapidly. Young fans often arrive dressed in colorful costumes. In
Miami, Donalson greeted a group of six
young girls at the stage door, who
wound up singing for her. “It was wild.
They knew every single word,” she says.
In “Six,” exchanges with the audience are key to the show’s success, and
the actresses say the fans’ energy and
enthusiasm fuels them every night.
Donalson relishes when audience
members shoot her an ecstatic “who
me?” look after she zeroes in on them
during her performance. Carrillo says
those interactions make their night. “I
have a couple of my little best friends in
the audience, the people that really lock
eyes with me and laugh with me or are
cheering extra hard. I’m like, ‘I’m coming back to you.’ It gives me a lot of
adrenaline. Some nights I’m even shaking because the audience is so wild.”
In a Washington, D.C. performance,
at the moment in “Get Down” when
Donalson interacts with an audience
member, the fan, who’d been singing
along, “jumped up, did a little dance
and then buttoned it with a split in the
aisle of the theater!” Lever recalls with a
laugh. “Olivia was like, ‘Oh! You really
got down!’ And I was like, ‘We’ve been
dethroned!’ ”
Christopher Wallenberg can be reached
at chriswallenberg@gmail.com.
Dining
QUICK BITE | KARA BASKIN
Bom Dough
is a worthy
successor
to the East
Coast Grill
Where to: Bom Dough in Inman
Square’s old East Coast Grill space.
Once a neon-strobed mashup of fun
house and tropical hideaway, now it’s an
all-day bakery that looks like a Berkshires yoga studio, with lush horticulture and white-washed brick. Times
have changed.
Why: For doughy delights that are
truly the bomb.
The backstory: Owner Marcia
Chemim grew up in Somerville, walking
past the East Coast Grill and, later,
Highland Fried. She got her culinary
start peddling ice pops at farmers’ markets in Kendall Square.
“I never went to [cooking] school,
but it’s something I’ve always been passionate about with flavor, especially
from my culture,” she says.
Chemim is a mere 25, which may
seem young to own a restaurant — but
luck intervened. She and her fiancée
were considering a move to California
and traveled there to suss out the icepop business. Disillusioned, they returned to Massachusetts and resolved
to open a restaurant here. Chemim set
an alert on her phone for rental spaces,
and the Inman Square location popped
up not long after their return.
“I was able to talk to the landlord,
and I think they liked our story. They
liked how young I am. The landlord had
met Chris [Schlesinger] from East Coast
Grill, the famous chef. I think I inspired
him because Chris, when he started,
was really young. So I think it was
something that he felt good about. He
PHOTOS BY LANE TURNER/GLOBE STAFF
Top: Egg sandwich at Bom Dough.
Above: owner Marcia Chemim.
wanted to give me an opportunity,” she
says.
What to eat: “Bom” means “good” in
Portuguese, and this dough is extremely
good. Gluten-free cheese bread, pão de
queijo, is the signature item.
“It’s something I’ve always been passionate about making, and it’s one of
my favorite things to eat, but this isn’t
really a Brazilian bakery,” she says. “I’m
using Brazilian-inspired flavors from
my own culture and adding to it, doing
fusions, because Brazil is a melting pot.
We have a lot of Italians, Japanese, and
Germans in Brazil. [The menu] is a true
fusion of everything.”
Bakers arrive by 6 a.m. each morning; food is made to order, and most every breakfast and lunch item incorporates dough.
Cheese bread is nutty and fluffy,
made with cassava flour, Parmesan, and
mozzarella: Imagine an airer gougère.
Order it plain or with pesto, garlic, guava, bacon, or a side of soft scrambled
eggs whipped with cream and butter,
not milk. Miso soup is tart and bright,
full of scallions. A side of french fries
with a green-onion-scented garlic aioli
is shamelessly odiferous and divine.
Spinach and short rib pot pie is like eating spinach dip inside a crackly, steaming puff pastry; it is a ski lodge in crust
form. The sleeper hit is flatbread topped
with shredded chicken stewed in tomato sauce, green olives, and squiggly
tubes of catupiry, a soft, heavy Brazilian
cheese that’s kind of like sour cream’s
racier cousin. It’s as big as a canoe and
easily serves two.
“Unlike in America, it’s really a luxury to eat pizza in Brazil. You need to eat
it with a fork and knife,” Chemim says.
Get yours with a side of thin, hot (very
hot!) sauce. An homage to the ECG Hell
Nights of yore, perhaps?
Almost everything is $15 and under,
and most items come with sides: Caesar
salad, fries, bacon.
COMING SOON: Hue is poised to
open at the Copley Square Hotel (90
Exeter St.) later this year. It’s a prime
location, once home to Storyville
Jazz Club and Café Budapest.
Notable names are involved in the
project: Executive chef Barnett Harper comes from Marliave. He’ll serve
American comfort foods with Asian
accents, with shareable plates such
as spicy tamarind pork ribs, crispy
chicken wings in sweet chili sauce,
and tofu in chili garlic sauce, all in an
upstairs dining room. Downstairs,
there’s a lobby bar and a cocktail
menu with escargot, sweet-and-sour
fried fish, and noodles with beef in
oyster sauce. George Aboujaoude
(Cafeteria, Bijou Nightclub &
Lounge, Committee, Eva) and Maurice Rodriguez (Fat Hen, La Brasa)
are also in the mix.
Expect a party atmosphere at the
backroom speakeasy and champagne bar, complete with a DJ after
9 every night, and live music.
Donut Villa Diner opens in Arlington this winter, replacing the
Common Ground (319 Broadway).
Owner Erin Bashllari says the restaurant should open in December or
January, serving dinner, craft beer,
cocktails, and plenty of doughnut-focused brunch items. There are other
locations in Cambridge, Malden, and
Newton that serve delicacies such as
an eggs Benedict doughnut, a
doughnut cheeseburger, and a pizza
doughnut topped with marinara and
mozzarella.
The takeaway: Quirky and very satisfying, with a menu that’s impossible to
pigeonhole — sort of like the East Coast
Grill used to be.
Bom Dough, 1271 Cambridge St.,
Cambridge, 617-945-1179, www.bomdough.com
OPENINGS: Chicken & The Pig
opens at MarketStreet Lynnfield
(525 Market St.) on Thursday, Nov.
3. The business began as a COVIDera food truck, serving chicken cutlet
sandwiches and hot dogs. This is the
truck’s first brick-and-mortar location. Feast on a “czar dog” wrapped
in bacon, a sauerkraut-laced German
dog with mustard and cheddar
cheese, and 11 varieties of chicken
cutlet sandwiches with sides of pickle boats, bacon on sticks, and cheese
fries. For dessert: ice cream sandwiches and soft-serve. There’s also a
kids’ menu, beers on tap, and even a
few salads. Visit daily from 11 a.m.
Kara Baskin can be reached at
kara.baskin@globe.com.
REOPENINGS: Glam steakhouse
Boston Chops reopens its Down-
What to drink: Fazenda coffees,
Rhode Island-based Luluna Kombucha,
matcha lattes, hibiscus coolers.
TABLES
Openings, closings,
and chatter from
the restaurant scene
CRAIG F. WALKER/GLOBE STAFF/FILE
Onion rings at Boston Chops in
Downtown Crossing in 2018. It is
reopening in mid-November.
town Crossing location in mid-November (52 Temple Place). New culinary director Corey Carter comes
from Mastro’s. Visit Tuesday
through Sunday from 5 p.m.
ANNIVERSARIES: East Cambridge’s
Puritan & Company (1166 Cambridge St.) celebrates its 10th anniversary this month with a series of
special events. Stop in for dishes
from a “greatest hits” tasting menu
with throwback recipes (and the
chance to win a private dinner for
10), plus a celebration on Thursday,
Nov. 17, with former Puritan chefs
cooking favorite dishes, plus a punch
fountain and a raw bar.
KARA BASKIN
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
G l o b e
BOSTON’S
MUST-SEE
MESSIAH
FRIDAY, NOV 25, 2022 AT 7:30PM
SATURDAY, NOV 26, 2022 AT 3:00PM
SUNDAY, NOV 27, 2022 AT 3:00PM
“The Handel and Haydn
Society’s Messiah remains
unmatched.”
It shouldn’t matter that we gave the
U.S. premiere of Handel’s Messiah, or
that it’s our 169th year of consecutive
performances. What matters is that
you’ll take part in the live experience
with all the passion, drama, tragedy,
and joy Handel wrote into this epic
story. Without a doubt Boston, this
is your must-see Messiah.
— Yankee Magazine
Václav Luks, conductor
Deborah Cachet, soprano
Avery Amereau, contralto
Ben Bliss, tenor
Kevin Deas, bass-baritone
H+H Orchestra and Chorus
SAY YES TO
THE MARRIAGE
OF FIGARO
THURSDAY, NOV 17, 2022 AT 7:00PM
FRIDAY, NOV 18, 2022 AT 7:00PM
It’s the genius of Mozart at his very
best - the most heartfelt, delightfully
fun, gorgeous music of all time. You’ll
hear one of the greatest operas ever
imagined in a fresh, new way with the
energy and style H+H is known for.
Raphaël Pichon, conductor
James Darrah, stage director
Krzysztof Bączyk, Figaro
Ying Fang, Susanna
Scott Conner, Bartolo & Antonio
MaryAnn McCormick, Marcellina
Paula Murrihy, Cherubino
Cody Quattlebaum, Count Almaviva
Zachary Wilder, Don Basilio & Curzio
Jacquelyn Stucker, Countess Almaviva
Maya Kherani, Barbarina
handelandhaydn.org | 617.266.3605
YING FANG
Susanna
N3
N4
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
G l o b e
Arts
Boston’s first postcolonial mishoon burning is underway
See Indigenous
tradition at a
boat slip in
Charlestown
By Brittany Bowker
GLOBE STAFF
When the sun rose over the
To b i n Me m o r i a l B r i d g e i n
Charlestown on Oct. 31, it
marked more than a new day for
two local Indigenous tribes. It
marked the first day of a historic
undertaking: Boston’s first postcolonial mishoon burning.
A mishoon is a canoe made
from a tree that’s crafted by
means of a continuous, controlled burn. It’s an Indigenous
tradition that’s been passed
down through generations, and
dates back more than 10,000
years. Mishoons were traditionally a means of transportation
and intertribal exchange, and
the 24/7 burns, which last up to
two weeks, represent a sacred
part of the mishoon-making process.
Andre Strongbearheart
Gaines of the Nipmuc Tribe and
Thomas Green of the Massachusett Tribe at Ponkapoag are behind the Boston effort. The
mishoon that’s smoldering at
the Little Mystic Boat Slip in
Charlestown will be there until
Nov. 13, or until it’s ready —
whichever comes first. The site
is open to the public, and members of the Nipmuc and Massachusett tribes encourage everyone to visit. They’re there all day
every day tending the fire in
shifts. They sleep in tents and
cook meals over the burning
mishoon. They’re there to answer questions and educate.
“It’s cultural revitalization for
tribal youth and adults, and also
public education,” Strongbearheart said of the project.
“This was a standard way of
living for our ancestors. They
did this regularly,” Green added.
PHOTOS BY ERIN CLARK/GLOBE STAFF
Dylan Lach stood guard while burning a traditional mishoon (canoe) at the Charlestown Little Mystic Boat Slip. Below: Anoki Mann chopped firewood.
Strongbearheart, a cultural
steward and leader for the Nipmuc Tribe, has helped facilitate
mishoon burnings across the
state for the last four years. He’s
observed mishoon burnings
since he was 10 or 11, he said,
and credits his craftsmanship to
his ancestors and elders, Annaw o n We e d e n a n d D a r r i u s
Coombs of the Mashpee Tribe.
Strongbearheart also credits the
people who pioneered similar
cultural revitalization efforts
when it was still technically illegal for Native Americans to be in
Boston less than 20 years ago.
Though it hadn’t been enforced in centuries, it wasn’t until 2005 that former governor
Mitt Romney signed a bill repealing a 330-year-old state law
Zander delivered
a performance
that will linger in
memory for
its iridescence
and humanity.”
Boston
Classical
Review
Use code:
BGLOBE
To get 20%
off!
saturday, november 12, 2022
8pm at symphony hall
Guide to the music with Benjamin Zander, 6:45 pm
DVOŘÁK
cello concerto
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Competition for Cello
BRAHMS
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Student
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that said Native Americans were
not allowed to enter the City of
Boston unless they were chaperoned by a “musketeer.” The law
was enacted during King Philip’s
Wa r o f t h e 1 6 7 0 s a n d c o n demned Native Americans to
imprisonment and worse if they
violated it. The head of
Wampanoag chief Metacom, also known as King Philip, was
marched from Weymouth to
Plymouth and put on a spike in
front of the gates at Plymouth,
where it remained for more than
two decades, “to warn any other
Indians that try to go against the
colonists that this is what’s going to happen,” Green said. “And
he wasn’t by any measure the
last person this happened to.”
King Philip’s War pitted Indigenous communities against
New England colonists and is
considered one of the bloodiest
battles on US soil.
Considering all this history,
the mishoon burning is the perfect project for Boston, Strongbearheart and Green argue. And
that’s why they overcame so
many obstacles to make it happen.
“This was five months in the
making,” Strongbearheart said,
adding that the process of bringing the project to Boston was
more difficult, bureaucratic, and
pricey than it’s been in other
Massachusetts communities. He
had to find a location, secure
permits and licenses, and line
up insurance. But before all of
that, Strongbearheart went to
Green and the Massachusett
Tribe.
“I would never come here
and just burn out a mishoon in
his territory, because I’m in Nipmuc. My tribe is in Grafton and
Springfield and even into
Natick. But that’s why I reached
out. This is what we’ve always
done. We’ve always brushed
shoulders with our sister communities,” Strongbearheart said.
“It’s important we acknowledge
each other before we talk to any
bureaucracy because that’s what
we did here for thousands of
years.”
When Strongbearheart and
Green first pitched the mishoonburning project to the city, it was
denied. It’s illegal to burn an
open fire in Boston, let alone
continuously for more than a
week. But Indigenous communities have federal treaties that supersede state laws, and the
American Indian Religious Freedom Act of 1978 paved the way
for them to burn ceremonial
fires and honor other traditions.
Strongbearheart and Green also
initiated a lot of community support.
“We got a bunch of players
involved,” Strongbearheart said,
adding that they secured backing from the Emerald Conservancy, the Mount Grace Land
Conservation Trust, and mem-
bers of Boston’s Cultural Council. They were also awarded a
$20,000 grant through Olmsted
Now’s Parks Equity & Spacial
Justice Projects. After delays and
date changes, the project was finally approved.
The official project name is
Communal Waters: Highways of
Intertribal Exchange. Strongbearheart and Green’s aim is to
revitalize Indigenous culture
and teach the public as well as
continue to foster relationships
‘In another couple
of years, all the
tribes . . . in
Massachusetts and
hopefully outside
Massachusetts . . .
will have these.’
THOMAS GREEN of the Massachusett Tribe at Ponkapoag
among sister tribes throughout
New England. Members from
the Chappaquiddick, Mi’kmaq,
and Mashpee tribes have also
volunteered to assist with the
Nipmuc-Massachusett joint
burning.
At the site, Indigenous music
plays. People spray the smoldering fire with spritzes of water,
while others rest in tents. Visitors might notice a depiction of
a colonist’s bloody head mounted on a spike — “in memorial of
all North East Woodland Indigenous, who were murdered and
beheaded by the English for
public display,” a sign at the site
reads.
“ I t ’s n o t t o c r e a t e f e a r,”
Strongbearheart said. “Even
though that’s why [the colonists]
did it.”
So far, Strongbearheart and
Green said the Boston project
has been mostly met with curiosity and respect. But some people have been aggressive.
Strongbearheart shared a video
with the Globe of a man berating
him and raising his voice at him.
“Why don’t you do this where
you live?,” the man can be heard
saying in the video. And later:
“ He y, I d i d n’ t b e a t u p y o u r
grandfather. Don’t give me [expletive].”
“For us to have to deal with
that in this day and age in a
space where we created a
healthy environment to relearn
and just be who we are here? We
shouldn’t be dealing with that in
2022,” Strongbearheart said.
Strongbearheart and Green
encourage the community to
come down: They’re eager to answer questions and talk. They
hope this will be a first of many
mishoon burnings in Boston.
“In another couple of years,
all the tribes and bands in Massachusetts and hopefully outside
Massachusetts as well will have
these and can get on the water
and meet each other like we
used to, on the water,” Green
said, adding that local Indigenous people were once part of a
mishoon society, with vessels
that could hold up to 40. “This is
just the first one. We’re hoping
to have a fleet.”
“It’s a lot of balance between
water and fire,” Strongbearheart
said. “It teaches you so many lessons about patience and pain
and happiness.”
“This work is food for the
soul,” Green said.
Brittany Bowker can be reached
at brittany.bowker@globe.com.
Follow her on Twitter
@brittbowker and on
Instagram @brittbowker.
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
N5
G l o b e
Arts
Dancing to the good vibrations of Carol Kaye, trailblazer
By Karen Campbell
GLOBE CORRESPONDENT
Carol Kaye is hardly a household name. But while you might
not recognize the seminal studio
bassist and guitarist, you surely
will appreciate her artistry.
Think of the catchy bass lines in
Sonny and Cher ’s “ The Beat
Goes On” or The Beach Boys’
“Good Vibrations.” That’s Carol
Kaye. In a prolific recording career spanning 65 years, the 87year-old Kaye has played on
more than 10,000 tracks. Her
creative artistry included popular TV shows like “M*A*S*H,”
“Hawaii Five-O,” and “Mission
Impossible,” and she worked
with producers including Quincy Jones, Brian Wilson, and Phil
Spector, collaborating across
genres for artists ranging from
Frank Sinatra and Barbra Streisand to Stevie Wonder and
Frank Zappa.
She’s a revered icon in the recording industry, but Kaye’s
work has most often gone uncredited, like that of so many
studio musicians. Boston Dance
Theater just may help change
that a bit with its new “Carol
Kaye Project,” which will be given its full-evening premiere Nov.
11-12 at the Institute of Contemporary Art/Boston. Presented by
Global Arts Live, the program
features new works inspired by
Kaye from four notable female
choreographers, including BDT
founder and coartistic director
Jessie Jeanne Stinnett. “It was
important to me that all the choreographers are women, and
range in age and cultural perspective,” says Stinnett.
Maure Aronson, Global Arts
Live’s founder and director of artistic programs, adds, “Each choreographer has a very different
approach to the dance and to the
music, so you actually see four
distinctly original works.” Between each work are short interviews with musicians who know
Kaye.
Rena Butler’s “For the Re-
SARAH TAKASH
MAGNOLIA PICTURES
Olivia Coombs (top) of Boston Dance Theater in “Carol/
Karole,” choreographed by Karole Armitage. Above: Carol
Kaye and Bill Pitman in the documentary “The Wrecking
Crew.”
cord” was the first piece commissioned for the project. Set to
music by the trailblazing Kaye —
plus Frank and Nancy Sinatra,
and Kendrick Lamar — the work
has a social justice underpinning
as it examines the scale of Kaye’s
contributions and explores, as
the program notes explain, the
ways “a patriarchal society often
overlooks substantial voices by
othering them.” The choreographer integrates into the piece audio of Kaye speaking.
Choreographer Rosie Herrera created her “Ofrenda” in collaboration with the dancers.
Stinnett says, “A lot of [Herrera’s] work is interested in religious iconography, and this
work has to do with motherhood, offerings, and sacrifice,
[elevating] Carol as an unsung
hero and diva.”
Karole Armitage’s “Carol/
Karole” is a nod to the ’60s using
four of Kaye’s iconic songs and
tapping into the bassist’s innova-
tion and sophistication. “Carol
Kaye’s music is so marvelous, so
smart, so groovy, full of life and
deep in mathematical complexity,” says Armitage. “I grew up listening to ‘These Boots Are Made
for Walking’ and ‘Mission Impossible,’ and hundreds of others. I’m trying to convey the spirit of those times — American optimism and liveliness and the
sense of possibility embedded in
that music. I’ve tried to capture
that vitality and humanness and
driving, visceral fun and kinetic
energy, so it’s entertaining, but
also very serious … exploring
new dance vocabulary.”
Stinnett’s own “Legacy” is a
reflection of just that. Growing
up in a family of bass players,
she created the work in collaboration with her brother Grant
Stinnett, not only a double bassist but a composer and producer.
The only work with an original
score, “Legacy” explores Kaye’s
musical influence while also
honoring the memory of Stinnett’s late father, Jim Stinnett, a
distinguished bassist and educator. It was he who suggested
Kaye when the choreographer
was looking to explore underrecognized female musicians —
he knew Kaye personally and
used her methodology in his
teaching. “I didn’t know how far
reaching her artistic presence
was,” says the choreographer.
“So many of Carol’s songs are the
ones I listen to to feel happy. She
would innovate lines that would
pull disparate ideas together, set
everyone on course, making
songs feel funky or groovy, making songs hits.”
“I was always thinking about
different lines to make the tune
sparkle and the singer sound
good,” says Kaye, who is thrilled
with the celebration of her legacy through the choreographic
project. She adds, “That they
want to interpret my line in
movement — I’m blown away.
It’s beautiful what they’re doing.”
CAROL KAYE PROJECT
Boston Dance Theater
At Institute of Contemporary
Art/Boston, Nov. 11-12
Stinnett says Kaye’s bass lines
were the original impetus for
generating movement and music for her new “Legacy.” “I channeled her through my body and
was interested in how the bass
showed up in my dancing,” she
says. “I let my body respond to
create phrase material, then
took that music away and told
my brother to create bass lines
that he felt connected with Carol
and my dad.” The original electronic score features multilayered bass tracks.
The “Carol Kaye Project” is
the fourth time Global Arts Live
has presented Boston Dance
Theater, co-directed by Stinnett
and Itzik Galili, onstage at the
ICA. “The company is growing
in maturity as a top-notch national repertory company,” says
Aronson. “They’re technically
strong and a very cohesive ensemble, and you can see that onstage, and they commission
work from really good choreographers. This is part of their path
to success.”
“They’ve definitely championed us,” says Stinnett. “They’re
essential to our growth and development. We couldn’t have
done it without their partnership.”
And now Stinnett has the opportunity to pay it forward. She
says, “I hope this concert helps
people know a little bit more
about Carol and enjoy her music
in a slightly different way. Her
influence is so huge.”
On Monday, Nov. 7, at 8
p.m., Jessie Jeanne Stinnett,
founder and coartistic director of
Boston Dance Theater, and choreographer Karole Armitage will
host a free online conversation
about their creative process.
Watch live on the Global Arts
Live YouTube channel.
Karen Campbell can be reached
at karencampbell4@rcn.com.
Forget the fact that this is an
orchestra made up of kids aged
12 to 20; they’re one of the finest
ensembles in the country, period.”
Arts Fuse
Jemila
MacEwan’s
“The Wake,”
from 2019
(left) and
“Human
Meteorite,”
from 2017
(below).
BOSTON
Surveying a scarred planet PHILHARMONIC
YOUTH ORCHESTRA
BENJAMIN
ZANDER
By Cate McQuaid
GLOBE CORRESPONDENT
LAWRENCE — Jemila MacEwan’s show “Human Meteorite,” now up at Essex Art Center
is driven by emGALLERIES pathy for planet
Earth.
The artist, who was born in
Scotland and raised in Australia
by Sufi parents, approaches the
natural world with reverence,
care, and a mystical imagination. For “Maiden Grass Voyage,”
they took on the identity of an
invasive species and wandered
through New York. Other works
seem to speak directly to a beleaguered natural landscape: “Tell
me the stories of your losses,
and I will sit with you in your
grief.”
MacEwan’s work includes
land art (altering landscapes in
the manner of Robert Smithson
or Andy Goldsworthy), sculpture, and performance captured
on video and in photographs.
The performances, in which the
artist engages with nature, resonate like creation myths, or
world-ending ones. Or both: After all, once humans are gone,
restoration can truly begin
For the show’s title piece, a
2017 performance, MacEwan
dug a crater intended to evoke
the effect a meteorite the artist’s
own size would have hitting
Earth. It was laborious: They
used a pick ax and a shovel every
day over the period of one lunar
Use code:
BGLOBE
To get 20%
off!
PHOTOS BY MARIANA MARTINS/COURTESY JEMILA MACEWAN
JEMILA MacEWAN:
HUMAN METEORITE
At Essex Art Center,
56 Island St., Lawrence,
through Dec. 15. 978-685-2343,
www.essexartcenter.org
cycle. The crater came to about
70 feet across at its widest, 6 feet
at its deepest, displacing critters
and more. The impact of one human disrupts ecosystems and
leaves a scar.
“ Yo u k n o w y o u’r e i n t h e
realm of the sacred when your
work involves holding sensitive
vulnerable bodies in their own
home,” MacEwan writes in wall
text. Those bodies don’t all belong to plants and animals. For
“The Wake,” a performance video, the artist went to Vatnajökull, Iceland’s largest glacier,
which is quickly melting as Arctic temperatures rise.
In the video, they retrieve
huge, sculptural wisdom teeth
with bloody roots from the Arctic Sea. The sculptures resemble
unmoored chunks of ice, but also look vaguely human, suggesting that landscape and people
are both elements of nature.
MacEwan hauls several teeth
across the rugged landscape, as
if trying to get them home. In
the end, a single tooth speaks in
the voice of a child. “Nothing
lasts anymore,” the tooth says.
“We know we can never return.
But in a way, we are free.”
“The Wake” ends with the
white teeth strewn beside a
rushing brook, bodies coughed
up by snow melt, as sheep wander past on grazing land. MacEwan, too, is gone. Earth continues. It is we who mourn.
Cate McQuaid can be reached at
catemcquaid@gmail.com.
Follow her on Twitter @cmcq.
sunday, november 20, 2022
3pm at symphony hall
STRAUSS
ein heldenleben
BEETHOVEN
symphony no. 5
Student
tickets use
code:
STU-DIS
tickets from $20 / students $10
call 617.236.0999 visit bostonphil.org
N6
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
G l o b e
Television
Five closing
thoughts on
readers’ TV
favorites
uTV SHOWS
Continued from Page N1
less remained alive in voters’ minds
some 51 years after its premiere. That
says a lot about the power and endurance of the show, as it transcends any
sense of recency bias. Carroll O’Connor
and Jean Stapleton are gone now (he in
2001, she in 2013), but their Archie and
Edith have remained as culturally indelible as Tony and Carmela, or Lucy and
Ricky, or the Coach and Tami.
Perhaps the Globe readership is old
enough to remember the show from its
first run, when it not only changed TV
but turned the conversation we have
about TV into something more significant and pertinent.
Voters may have also recognized one
sad truth about “All in the Family,” and
that is its continued relevance. We still
go home for the holidays worried about
dealing with the political and social issues that continue to split our families.
Racism, sexism, intolerance, bigotry,
they’re still very much with us.
3. Generally speaking, I’ve learned a
few things about Globe readers who
watch TV, as each of the six rounds
brought with it a few surprises. The
most obvious one is that they take comedy seriously, and a show like “St. Elsewhere” was easily beaten by “Seinfeld”
(which got 82.9 percent of the vote in
that matchup), even though the former
was a groundbreaking medical drama
and even though (gasp!) it was set in
Boston. “The Simpsons” (with 74.7 percent of the vote) pounced on “Twin
Peaks,” a show whose fans speak of it in
hushed tones of reverence.
Likewise, “The Golden Girls,” with
its magical cast beat “The Americans”
(with 54.4 percent); “Friends” beat “Six
Feet Under” (with 63.9 percent); “Seinfeld” beat “Mad Men” (with 68.5 percent); and “The Mary Tyler Moore
SONY PICTURES/NBC/MTM ENTERTAINMENT/HBO
The Final Four were (clockwise from top left) “All in the Family,” “Seinfeld,” “The Mary Tyler Moore Show,” and “The Sopranos.”
Show” beat two heavies, “The Wire”
(with 57.5 percent) and “The West
Wing” (with 56 percent).
My assumptions about the value of
drama over comedy were challenged in
a good way, as I was reminded that comedy — especially when it’s as intelligent
and penetrating as that in “All in the
Family” — has a potency of its own. It
can reach viewers in a deep place.
4. I was plagued with e-mails and
comments from readers asking why
“Such and Such” and “This and That”
were not in contention. Those titles included some legitimate absences
(“Homeland,” “Rome”) and some that
were either outside of our 50-year eligi-
Sunday November 6, 2022
bility period (“The Andy Griffith Show”)
or just not realistic possibilities (sorry
“Happy Days”).
Tasked with selecting 64 shows that
could possibly be the best series of the
past 50 years, I had to make some tough
choices, and all of them were, of course,
subjective. While I am in awe of “Oz,”
for example, a show that gave us the
male psyche on steroids, I knew I was
one in a small group of diehard fans and
that it would never win. It didn’t stand a
chance, along with the likes of “The
Comeback” and “Shameless.”
Before I understood that I was limited to only 64 competitors because of
how the bracket is structured, I’d come
up with over 100, so the pruning pro-
Movies
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cess was excruciating. I’m sorry if your
all-time favorite series didn’t show up in
the first round, but ultimately I feel
good about the shows that got to compete.
5. Why did we mix comedy and drama? WHY DID WE MIX COMEDY AND
DRAMA? This was the question I was
asked the most by participating readers.
There were a few reasons we decided to
put shows like “Modern Family” up
against shows like “The West Wing.”
One has to do with the overall goal of
the competition. I am frequently asked
what my all-time best series is, and in
that moment of decision-making, I’m
not breaking down the options into
genres. I’m just coming up with a name,
one that can vary based on my mood at
the moment (but one that is usually
“The Sopranos”). The Globe bracket
contest was created to ask readers that
same question, to get them to single out
one show from that many options.
A l s o , c o m e d y a n d d ra m a h av e
merged, more or less, over the years.
Going back to “M*A*S*H,” some comedies include a dramatic theme or backdrop. And dramas like “Northern Exposure” and “Ally McBeal” regularly feature comic tones and subplots. They are
all, more or less, nonbinary.
Matthew Gilbert can be reached at
matthew.gilbert@globe.com.
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NOVEMBER 6, 2022
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
N7
G l o b e
Art
Elegies to a dying world
Marc Swanson’s sprawling exhibition spanning two locations delivers a response to the climate apocalypse
By Murray Whyte
GLOBE STAFF
N O R T H A D A M S , M a s s ., A N D
CATSKILL, N.Y. — Marc Swanson
works on a rural property nestled in the
Hudson River Valley that 200 years ago
inspired a school of painters who found
in its pristine waters and leafy glades
the presence of the divine. Lately, for
Swanson, it’s been as much a ringside
seat to a climate apocalypse as a bucolic
refuge. “A Memorial to Ice at the Dead
Deer Disco,” his sprawling exhibition
that spans a pair of large galleries at
Mass MoCA in North Adams and the
Thomas Cole National Historic Site in
Catskill, N.Y., is his response to it.
Dead deer are not a new medium for
Swanson, who in the past has made
sculpture of taxidermied trophy heads
studded with rhinestones intended as a
glam queering of the machismo symbol
of a hunting prize. The disco is something else. At Mass MoCA, a secondfloor gallery has the somber air of a
tomb, enveloped in shadow and broken
at intervals by floods of bright light.
Pale animal figures either stalk the
shadowy space or lie strewn throughout
it, broken in pieces.
A pair of bobcats glares in a spotlight, as though caught in the act of
something illicit. Their perch, on the
skeletal remains of a tree bleached dead
by who knows what, sets the tone: This
is a future elegy to a dying world. Swanson has seen its convulsions with his
own eyes in that valley, as summers
have grown hotter, winters shorter, and
where heavier and more violent storms
now bookend a season of unrelenting
drought. The scene projects a world
where ice is but a memory, and all that
remains of the vibrant life it once held
are pallid spectres left to haunt it.
At Mass MoCA, The whole scene is
austerely, agonizingly beautiful —
bright but stark, with an elegant formal
richness that belies and embraces its
homely materials. The animals, whole
and parts, are standard taxidermy
forms that are usually covered with real
pelts for display. Here, they’re left naked
and unadorned, with the sharp sinews
carved in their plastic hides on full view
— zombies, turned loose in a dead
world.
Swanson imbues his scenes with a
theatrical air. In one of them, a disembodied deer haunch lies on a platform
rimmed with stage lights; in another, a
pair of headless deer torsos lean into
one another on a makeshift stage in
what I imagine to be exhausted resignation. In a pool of light, a deer is cradled
in the arms of a faceless wraith, whose
body takes shape only in the extravagant drape of icy-white fabric; it sug-
ART REVIEW
MARC SWANSON: A MEMORIAL TO
ICE AT THE DEAD DEER DISCO
Through August 2023, Mass MoCA,
1040 Mass MoCA Way, North Adams,
413-662-2111, massmoca.org; and
through Nov. 27, Thomas Cole
National Historic Site, 218 Spring St.,
Catskill, N.Y., 518-943-7465, https://
thomascole.org
gested to me an invocation of last rites.
There are no individual pieces or titles; everything, all together, here and
across the state line in Catskill, is one
sprawling work. Its reference points
commingle in a pair of doomsday notions that evoke what the Victorian philosopher Edmund Burke described as
the shared terrain of terror and the sublime. Both are “productive of the strongest emotion the mind is capable of feeling,” Burke wrote. At their apex, the
sensations have a shared intensity that
make the two of them one.
For Swanson, the terror is twofold,
and the camp theatricality of the scene
is a conflation of the climate crisis with
a crisis of his youth, the AIDS epidemic
of the 1980s. As a gay man in New York,
Swanson recalls the competing forces
on every night out back then — the exhilaration of community found in the
city’s club scene, and the fear of death as
the virus proliferated. Climate anxiety
rekindled that familiar feeling of elation
and dread, with the salve of every walk
in the woods stalked by the fear of their
inevitable destruction. For all its broad
implication, the Dead Deer Disco is an
autobiographical space where the artist
paces alongside a pair of calamities with
joy and dread intertwined.
Camp elements are surely present,
but even so, feel like lament. Their presence is subtle and in the background,
subsumed by a sense of remembrance
and loss. A disjointed mirror throws
fractured pools of light on the floor, like
a disco ball.
The world Swanson imagines is very
much the one Cole, the founder of the
Hudson River School, fretted about
some two centuries ago. Cole was a vigorous opponent of industrial development along the river, where mills and
tanneries were springing up at an
alarming rate. He and his cohorts devoted themselves to painting an unspoiled wilderness as much to warn
about what stood to be lost as to celebrate what was.
The very epitome of painterly melodrama, Cole’s canvases, with their beatific shafts of golden light cascading
through thick forest canopies to rivers
and streams below, read now as a strident scold: A violation of nature is also
an affront to God’s plan. Swanson has
seen what Cole imagined, and directly:
His own property in the Catskills
bumps up against Catskill Creek, where
Cole himself often went to paint. With
several of Swanson’s pieces installed
throughout Cole’s house — bleak, undead creatures in residence amid the
tony antiques and block-printed wallpaper — the artists feel like bookends to
ecological disaster.
Swanson’s pieces have another reference: The diorama, a dusty old convention still very much in use at natural history museums all over the country. You
know the ones: The red fox, flash frozen
squirrel-hunting; a pair of moose forever stooping to drink from the pool of
shiny plastic resin at their feet, a mountain landscape painted in the background. Swanson’s dioramas are what
happens next, when the illusion crumbles and the dead skin turns to dust. It’s
not too late, if only just. And so the
words of Thomas Cole still mean something for a little longer: “We are still in
Eden,” he once wrote. “Shall we turn
from it?”
Murray Whyte can be reached at
murray.whyte@globe.com.
PHOTOS BY TONY LUONG/COURTESY OF MASSACHUSETTS MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY ART; SOFIA TAYLOR (TOP RIGHT)
Marc Swanson’s “A Memorial to Ice at the Dead Deer Disco” is one multipart work. There are no individual pieces or titles.
N8
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
G l o b e
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
Music
Western Mass. music scene gets makeover
uNORTHAMPTON
Continued from Page N1
in 1995. “When we opened, there was
nobody taking on IHEG in any meaningful way for national touring acts. Obviously, that’s shifted over the last few
years, but they had a stranglehold on
the market and now to see it just disappear, it’s just bizarre.”
It’s also significantly reshuffling the
Western Massachusetts concert scene
as new places to see live music spring
up to fill the holes in the market. One,
Bombyx Center for Arts & Equity in the
Florence section of Northampton,
about 2½ miles from downtown,
opened in October 2021 in a converted
1861 church. With a capacity of 330 in
the church sanctuary, Bombyx has focused on small international artists like
the Mexican folk singer Silvana Estrada, regional American roots music including Louisiana guitarist Sonny Landreth, and folk. To insulate itself from
the unpredictability of the live music
business, Bombyx also hosts workshops, rents rehearsal space to performance groups, has a professional kitchen for catering, and is home to two religious congregations and a day care.
“We’re not reliant on any one thing,
so this project can continue for the next
150 years,” Cassandra Holden, one of
the cofounders, said during a September meeting with state and local officials and community groups.
Another new place, the Drake,
opened in May in a shuttered restaurant in Amherst, about 8 miles from
Northampton. With a capacity of 250, a
high-end sound system and a Steinway
grand piano donated by Amherst College (along with a six-figure sum to help
pay for renovations), the Drake is the
town’s first-ever dedicated music venue.
Though the pulverizing Amherst-based
indie-rock trio Dinosaur Jr. opened the
Drake, the calendar runs more toward
smaller touring acts playing jazz, funk,
R&B, blues, and folk, as well as nights
dedicated to local musicians.
“At the moment, we’re trying to do
really new and original music and try
and stay away from becoming like a
cover band place,” says Gabrielle Gould,
executive director of the Amherst Business Improvement District, who set up
the nonprofit Downtown Amherst
Foundation to run the Drake. “We really want to have a lot of diversity in
genre. It’s a place where anybody can
feel like they’re meant to be there,
whether it’s Dinosaur Jr. or Regina
Carter, or you know, Suitcase Junket.”
Me a nw h i l e , 1 0 m i l e s s o u t h o f
Northampton in the center of Holyoke,
Race Street Live has been hosting indieoriented acts including Built to Spill,
Shakey Graves, Soccer Mommy, and
Guided by Voices under the guidance of
John Sanders. His company DSP Shows
leased the venue in Gateway City Arts, a
converted factory complex, in April
2021, four months after the 500-capacity music room closed. Sanders spent 15
years as a talent buyer for IHEG before
leaving in 2015 to become a partner in
DSP Shows. The Ithaca, N.Y.-based promoter was booking concerts at Gateway
City Arts before the pandemic, as well
as in Northampton’s 800-capacity Academy of Music Theatre, and across New
York state.
“It was not on my radar that anybody was going to open a room in Western Mass., let alone a bunch of rooms in
Western Mass.,” Sanders says. “It’s very
interesting to see how it’s all going to
play out with Race Street, with Bombyx, with the Drake, with Hawks and
Reed,” a 400-capacity venue in Greenfield, 20 miles north of Northampton.
There’s also the new Marigold Theatre
in Easthampton, a former cinema on
the main drag 5 miles southwest of
Northampton that now bills itself as a
cabaret and cocktail bar with a capacity
of 175.
Operating a music venue can be
complicated at the best of times. Opening a new one in a pandemic comes
with additional obstacles, including difficulty hiring enough staff and grappling with how COVID has changed the
concert habits of many music fans.
“People have learned to get really
comfortable on their couches over the
past three years, and risk calculations
about going out are really different than
they ever were,” says Kyle Homstead, a
cofounder of Bombyx who worked at
the Iron Horse in the ’80s and ’90s before starting an IT job. He resumed producing concerts in the area in 2016 as
Laudable Productions.
Though Bombyx, DSP Shows, the
Parlor Room, and the Drake have each
established their own niches, and have
collaborated on joint bookings, competition is another potentially tricky turn
they’ll have to navigate.
“It’s a lot of venues that are similar
sized, going after some of the same
stuff, which is going to be hard to sustain in Western Mass.,” says Sanders.
The new venues are all players in a
PHOTOS BY CARLIN STIEHL FOR THE BOSTON GLOBE; JULIAN PARKER-BURNS (TOP)
Top: Mexican fusion band Son Rompe Pera performed at Northampton’s
Bombyx Center for Arts & Equity. Above: DJ REC (Carlos McBride) at the
Drake in Amherst. Below: The Calvin Theatre in Northampton leans hard
on tribute bands; the facade of closed Iron Horse Music Hall.
live-music scene that was evolving even
before the pandemic. For a stretch in
the early 2000s, Northampton was
among the most vibrant secondary concert markets in the Northeast. The city
was a regular tour stop between Boston
and New York, in part because it boasted three venues of ascending size for
artists to grow into: the Iron Horse (170
‘It’s unfortunate that
there’s some great
venues that are dark.
But it’s created this
opportunity for a
whole bunch of other
things.’
KYLE HOMSTEAD, cofounder of
Bombyx Center for Arts & Equity in the
Florence section of Northampton
capacity), Pearl Street (700 capacity),
and the Calvin Theatre (1,355 capacity). Also, with five colleges nearby, including the flagship UMass campus,
there was a continually regenerating
audience of students and recent graduates. Since then, Northampton has
faced greater competition from other
small New England cities that have developed into desirable places for musicians to play.
“Since I started doing this in ‘99 or
2000, Burlington, Providence, Portland, New Haven have all grown into
these really strong secondary markets,”
Sanders says.
New venues have also opened in major markets, including Roadrunner and
MGM Music Hall in Boston, which dilutes the necessity for musicians to play
in smaller places between their big-city
dates — if they’re even allowed to. Contracts between promoters and musicians often include a “radius clause”
that prohibits artists from playing rival
concerts within a certain distance and
amount of time before or after a booking: 100 miles and three months, for example.
“There’s just more places to play in
cities these days, and I feel like that has
just made the secondary markets less
important,” says the Parlor Room’s Olsen. “You see touring artists just skipping over the secondary markets and
maybe playing two or three nights in a
row in Boston or New York.”
These days, if Northampton is less
likely to land gigs by the “hot new
thing,” in Olsen’s words, the region continues to attract developing artists,
such as the indie-rock band Wild Pink
or singer-songwriter Al Olender, established musicians whose local audiences
are the right size for the available venues, and veteran performers like Elvis
Costello, Ani DiFranco, or the Indigo
Girls, all of whom DSP Shows booked to
perform over the summer in the outdoor Pines Theatre in Northampton’s
Look Park.
“We still live in an amazing place for
live music, given the size of the market,”
Olsen says. “On any given night, there’s
a bunch of things going on, and it’s
great. However, you might have to drive
to Easthampton or Amherst or Brattleboro. It’s not like here in Northampton,
where everything was in walking distance, which is really what happened in
the early aughts.”
Iron Horse Entertainment Group
was the dominant live music promoter
in Northampton in those days. Now, the
future of IHEG is the big unanswered
question looming over the local concert
scene. At the moment, the company is
without a talent buyer following the departure in March of Brendan Leith,
who now books concerts for City Winery Boston. Leith says he doesn’t know
what IHEG owner Eric Suher has
planned for his venues.
“I can understand both how challenging it would be to reopen an operation of that scale after 2½ years of being closed, and also why there would be
an interest in taking on those challenges to try to reimagine the venues for
what is a very, very different landscape,”
Leith says.
Suher didn’t respond to phone calls,
text messages, and e-mails seeking
comment. He got his start in the music
business as a teenager in the ’80s selling
T-shirts for the band NRBQ , before
launching a screen-printing business in
his native Holyoke in 1984. He was 30
when he bought the Iron Horse in 1994,
25 years after it first opened as a coffeehouse with occasional music. He added
the Calvin Theatre in 1996 and Pearl
Street in 1998. Though the Iron Horse
leases space on Center Street, the Calvin and Pearl Street buildings are
among more than 40 commercial and
residential properties in Northampton
that Suher owns through an array of
LLCs. His holdings in town are valued
at nearly $32 million, according to state
and local records. He also owns property in Easthampton and Holyoke, including Mountain Park, a largely dormant
outdoor music venue that was most active for a stretch in the early 2010s.
Suher told Fortune Small Business
magazine in 2005 that he hates selling
properties he has bought. That outlook
has made him a controversial figure in
Northampton, where several prime
storefronts that he owns downtown
have sat vacant for years. IHEG has also
been the subject of labor complaints
from employees. In 2021, the state attorney general’s office fined Suher
$100,000 stemming from a 2019 complaint accusing him of failing to pay
workers on time and having no sick
leave policy. (He settled this year for
about $39,000 in penalties and restitution for 74 employees, without admitting wrongdoing.) In September, a
union representing stagehands at the
Calvin Theatre filed a complaint with
the National Labor Relations Board accusing Suher of unfair labor practices
after they say he abandoned contract
negotiations in July.
In an unrelated action in August, the
American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers, a performance
rights organization, sued the Calvin
Theatre in federal court in Springfield
for copyright infringement, claiming
that Suher has failed to pay royalty licensing fees since April for songs performed in the venue.
Reopening the IHEG venues would
affect the realignment of the local concert scene by adding more competition
for bookings, other promoters say. On
the other hand, IHEG wouldn’t necessarily sit atop the pinnacle of live music
in Western Massachusetts if it resumes
full operation.
“ The Valley has moved on from
him,” Olsen says, referring to Suher.
“There’s so much ill will around his
business practices and the way he’s let
things go that at this point, it’s kind of
unimaginable to see him coming back.”
Though it would be a shame to permanently lose the venues that helped
make Northampton a concert destination, maybe the time is right, says Homstead.
“It’s just part of a changing diet,” he
says. “It’s unfortunate that there’s some
great venues that are dark. But it’s created this opportunity for a whole bunch
of other things.”
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
N9
G l o b e
Movies
Jeremy Strong has always been ‘drawn
to fallible, vulnerable characters’
The Boston native and Emmy winner stars as a volatile father in ‘Armageddon Time’
ticity of self. You put yourself on airplane
mode, and you let yourself be filled up
with whatever the material is, and whatever the material demands of you.
You’re always in control; even when
you lose control, it’s within the boundaries of your artistry. The whole thing is
marrying a level of emotional veracity
with craft. It’s not just about, like, unleashing chaos on a set: You do it with
precision and control.
Q. You said earlier that you find “freedom” and a “cathartic” power in acting.
Do you find that certain characters or
certain roles are the most cathartic?
A. I should say, I don’t do this because
I’m looking for some kind of personal
catharsis; it’s not therapy for me.
What I really want to do is serve a
piece of writing, and great writing
touches on the extremities of human experience. And so through that you get
to participate in those extremities in a
way that is not really accessible, at least
to me, in my normal life.
‘What I really want to
do is serve a piece of
writing, and great
writing touches on the
extremities of human
experience.’
JEREMY STRONG
ANNE JOYCE/FOCUS FEATURES/ASSOCIATED PRESS
Anne Hathaway and Jeremy Strong in “Armageddon Time.”
By Joy Ashford
B
GLOBE CORRESPONDENT
oston native Jeremy
Strong is known for
playing characters
w h o s e i n s e c u r i ty
simmers beneath
their anger — most
famously, Kendall
Roy on HBO’s “Succession,” which won
him an Emmy in 2020.
In the new film “Armageddon Time,”
Strong plays Irving Graff, the sometimes explosive, sometimes gentle father of the film’s rambunctious young
lead.
Based on writer-director James
Gray ’s experiences, “Armageddon
Time“ traces the friendship between
two boys, Paul Graff (Banks Repeta)
who’s white, and Johnny Davis (Jaylin
Webb), the only Black student in their
class. Anne Hathaway and Anthony
Hopkins star as Paul’s mother and
grandfather in the film, which excavates themes of white privilege, racism,
and complicity in 1980s Queens, N.Y. “I
think there’s real shame in the subsoil
of this movie that everything is growing
out of,” Strong says.
The Globe chatted with Strong, 43,
about finding the humanity in a complicated character like Graff, his acting
method, and the teachers who helped
launch his career.
Q. What were your first experiences
with acting? Did you do any roles at local theaters?
A. When I was maybe 4 or 5, my mother
sent me down the street in Jamaica
Plain. There was a church off of Center
Street near where we lived that had a
theater group in its basement.
I immediately took to it and found
freedom in it. It was an experience of
levitation and escape. And then it became an obsession, I think like it does
for a lot of people.
I moved to Sudbury and when I got
to high school at Lincoln-Sudbury,
there were two teachers there named
Bill and Judy Plott. They kind of were
the first people to maybe see something
in me that I might have to offer in a serious way.
When I went to the Royal Academy
of Dramatic Art [in London], they paid
for my tuition. They were really important people in my early life.
Q. You’ve said in other interviews that
acting is a “pressure valve” for you or a
kind of “healing” thing. Do you remember the first role that felt like that for
you?
A. I think a lot of actors find that there’s
a certain freedom that they experience,
and a certain ability to express real
things and struggle through on camera
or on stage . . . like, Gordian knots.
There’s something very cathartic about
that.
I’ve always been drawn to fallible,
vulnerable characters. I guess maybe in
a way it’s because that’s an arena where
it’s OK to be fallible and vulnerable,
when it’s not really always OK to be that
way in our world.
Q. A New Yorker profile of you from last
year said that instead of method acting,
you practice “identity diffusion.” It
quoted you to say that means
“clear[ing] away anything — anything
— that is not the character and the circumstances of the scene.”
A. Well, first, I’ll say that was entirely a
sort of mischaracterization.
Identity diffusion, just conceptually,
is about how people are malleable and
have permeable boundaries, that the
self is malleable. That’s not a method —
that’s just like, I find that to be true.
I think identity is pretty plastic, and
acting is a sort of exploration of the plas-
Theaters
celebrate
‘bitter little
world’ of
film noir
uNOIRVEMBER
Continued from Page N1
it’s also a fine introduction to my favorite genre of film. The lineup includes
one of the earliest “first-person camera”
narratives and appearances by Humphrey Bogart, Glenn Ford, Orson Welles
and that terrifying, alliteratively named
rascal of the era, Robert Ryan.
Every film in both series is worth
checking out, but to narrow it down,
here’s my list of must-see movies:
At the Coolidge
“Out of the Past” (Nov. 15): The one
1947 film not showing at the Brattle.
Jacques Tourneur’s moody, very dark
noir is a battle of the sneers between
two of the great visages of noir, Kirk
Douglas and Robert Mitchum. Some
consider this the best noir ever made—
I’d put it at number three — and it influenced many films that came after it.
Jane Greer is utterly delectable as one of
the baddest femme fatales to grace the
silver screen. Fun trivia tidbit: 1984’s
“Against All Odds” is a remake with Jeff
Bridges and that godawful Phil Collins
title song. Stick with the original.
“Chinatown” (Nov. 22): The greatest
neo-noir ever made, and one of the
most complex and grotesque. Every-
PARAMOUNT
Left: Jack Nicholson and Faye
Dunaway in Roman Polanski’s 1974
film “Chinatown.” Right: Barbara
Stanwyck and Fred MacMurray in a
scene from the 1944 movie “Double
Indemnity.”
thing about it is perfect, from Jerry
Goldsmith’s score to John Alonzo’s cinematography. As the hero and villain, respectively, Jack Nicholson and John
Huston give brilliant performances.
Faye Dunaway is unforgettable. But be
warned: This is one nasty piece of work.
“Devil in a Blue Dress” (Nov. 28):
Had all things been equal in Hollywood,
film noir would have had a Black pri-
vate eye long before 1971’s “Shaft” and
this 1995 film, which director Carl
Franklin adapted from Walter Mosley’s
book. As Mouse, Don Cheadle gives one
of the most hilariously terrifying performances of the last 30 years. The real
draw, however, is an unbearably sexy
Denzel Washington as detective Easy
Rawlins. Prepare to swoon.
At the Brattle
“Born to Kill” (Nov. 12): When bad
boy (and “Reservoir Dogs” costar) Lawrence Tierney is in a noir, you go see it.
End of story. Claire Trevor is also in this,
as if you needed more incentive.
“Dark Passage” (Nov. 13): A fun,
nasty noir that was visually ahead of its
time. The first act is told from star
Humphrey Bogart’s perspective using
DONALDSON COLLECTION/GETTY IMAGES
first-person subjective camerawork by
director Delmer Daves. Bogie doesn’t
appear until about 25 minutes into the
picture. We hear him, see his hands and
even his silhouette. The effect is that
you are Bogie. So when Lauren Bacall
looks directly into the camera and talks
to you, it’s very sexy.
“Kiss of Death” (Nov. 16): Richard
Widmark cemented his reputation with
his performance as Tommy Udo, the
sneering psychopathic villain of Henry
Hathaway’s classic noir. One of Victor
Mature’s best performances can’t compete with Widmark’s Udo, a man who
commits the most famous — and most
ruthless — murder in film noir history.
“Crossfire” (Nov. 16): When the
Hays Code wouldn’t allow Richard
Brooks’s novel about murder and homophobia to be filmed, the reason for
With [Irving Graff ], he’s a boiler repairman whose life is a pressure cooker.
And he does blow a gasket and he does
lose control, and he is full of rage and
angst, but also is tender, kind-hearted,
goofy. He’s trying his best. And I think
often failing. But to try and inhabit a
character like that in all of his toughness and incomprehension and ineptitude, and then find within that person
moments of vulnerability and real heart
— there’s something very powerful to
me about that.
Q. Irving is a character whose choices
hurt Johnny Davis deeply. What does it
mean to you to show vulnerability and
heart in a role like that? Do you ever
worry you’re going to excuse him?
A. I don’t feel like I’m trying to do anything in some objective way. I don’t feel
separate from or outside of Irving. The
only thing you’re trying to do as an actor is, in a visceral way, and in an empathic way, try and see through their
eyes, sort of see feelingly.
I’m trying to puzzle through what
he’s trying to puzzle through, trying to
understand him as best as I can.
The choice, the dilemma that this
character is facing, is, I would say, an impossible choice and insoluble problem.
And good movies are about insoluble
problems that don’t give an easy answer.
Interview was edited and condensed.
Joy Ashford can be reached at
joy.ashford@globe.com. Follow them on
Twitter @joy_ashford.
the crime was changed to antisemitism.
This remains a powerful tale about intolerance featuring three Roberts
(Mitchum, Ryan, and Young) and one
Gloria Grahame. When Gloria Grahame
is in a film noir, you go see it!
“The Lady From Shanghai” (Nov.
17): Orson Welles directs and costars
with Rita Hayworth in this excessively
twisty (it makes NO sense) but compulsively watchable film noir. Hayworth’s
extreme, short blonde hairdo was a
shock to viewers weaned on her trademark long locks, but it’s perfect for her
character. Its climactic mirror-filled sequence is justifiably famous.
Alas, the best film noir was already
shown on Nov. 1 at the Coolidge — Billy
Wilder’s “Double Indemnity.” Before
watching Barbara Stanwyck and Fred
MacMurray steam up the screen (and
Edward G. Robinson give one of his
best performances), I attended one of
the four seminars the Coolidge is offering before certain screenings. It was a
lively discussion about the adaptation
of James M. Cain’s novel hosted by Sarah Keller, professor of art and art history and cinema studies at University of
Massachusetts Boston.
Keller provided useful information
for the noir novice and some tidbits
about how Wilder came to adapt the
screenplay with the greatest noir novelist, Raymond Chandler (and drove the
writer back to drinking). After that, my
fellow students and I attended a 35mm
screening of “Double Indemnity” with a
nearly packed house of appreciative
fans. A good time was had by all — well,
I mean as good a time as you can have at
a film noir. It’s safe to say we had a ball.
Odie Henderson is The Boston Globe's
film critic. He can be reached at
odie.henderson@globe.com. Follow him
on Twitter @odienator.
N10
Books
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
G l o b e
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
Books
The
PULL
of
family
Grieving siblings
struggle to stay
connected in Lynn
Steger Strong’s
new novel
F
BY JEFFREY ANN GOUDIE
GLOBE CORRESPONDENT
our years after the unexpected death of his wife,
Julian Barnes wrote an essay titled “The Loss of
Depth,” inverting the usual order of the phrase, “the
depth of loss.” The depth he missed with his deceased
spouse was their shared history: inside jokes, winks, shorthand conversation, layers now gone from his life.
The three siblings and their spouses at the heart of Lynn
Steger Strong’s psychologically astute, deeply affecting novel, “Flight,” are similarly lost eight months after the sudden
death of the family’s matriarch, Helen, of a stroke at age 72. The grown children
must now invent a new adhesive without their “whip-smart, well-read, loving”
mother figure.
Strong’s 2020 novel, the scorchingly good, critically praised “Want,” featured
a first-person narrator living on the economic fringes with her small family in
Brooklyn. Elizabeth, who is not named until the book’s very end, is always in
danger of crossing a line.
Many of the characters in “Flight” — another one-syllable, energetic title —
have crossed troubling lines before the novel begins. Martin, the steady older
brother, has breached a boundary with one of his university students — not sexual, but a slip in judgment, gossiping with one female student about another. Alice, married to younger brother Henry, has formed a too-close attachment with
one of her social work clients, giving a castoff phone to a child named Maddie
and texting her encouraging messages, a practice forbidden by her nonprofit em-
FLIGHT
By Lynn Steger
Strong
Mariner, 232
pages, $27.99
"FLIGHT", Page N11
ELLEN WEINSTEIN FOR THE BOSTON GLOBE
Inside the mind of
Haruki Murakami
Principles and personal anecdotes
By Priscilla Gilman
GLOBE CORRESPONDENT
Haruki Murakami’s “Novelist as a Vocation” is a collection of essays initially published in Japan in 2015, the first
six serialized in the Japanese magazine “Monkey,” the last
five “written especially for this book,” the author says. Its
rather sober title notwithstanding, the
NOVELIST AS
collection is eccentric, meandering,
A VOCATION
self-deprecating. This is no bombastic
tome or loftily impassioned defense of
By Haruki
Murakami
fiction; it’s a generally charming excurKnopf, 224
sion through the mind of one of the
world’s most beloved novelists.
pages, $28
With the first chapter, “Are Novelists Broad-minded?,” the collection gets
off to a shaky start. Murakami traffics
in rather weakly analyzed platitudes about writers and their
personalities. The titular question is almost immediately revealed to be rhetorical; “most novelists aren’t what one
would call amiable and fair-minded,” Murakami writes. The
next generalization may feel sounder, if no less familiar:
“their dispositions tend to be idiosyncratic and their lifeMURAKAMI, Page N11
BIBLIOPHILES
Finding comfort and humor in horror
‘I don’t
need
horror to
have a
happy
ending,
but I
need to
feel it is
trying to
do more
than just
be cruel.’
BY AMY SUTHERLAND | GLOBE CORRESPONDENT
I
n Chuck Wendig’s newest, “Wayward,” sleepwalking becomes the
means of surviving the end of the world. This is Wendig’s follow-up
to his best-selling “Wanderers.” Wendig is not only a prolific author
but a wide-ranging one who has written over a dozen books for
adults and children, including the Star Wars novels, as well as writing for video games, film and television, and comic books for Marvel. He
lives in Bucks County, Pa., with his family.
BOOKS: What are you reading?
WENDIG: Andy Davidson’s “The Hollow
Kind,” which is about a mother and
child who end up inheriting a house
that has a sinister history. It’s a gets-under-your-skin kind of book. I’m also
reading Ed Yong’s newest, “An Immense World.” I’m a huge fan of his
pandemic writing (in The Atlantic) and
of his book about the human microbiome, “I Contain Multitudes.” He
makes science writing fun to read.
BOOKS: Is that typical of what you read
WENDIG: Probably. I read a lot of horror
and thrillers, and I read a lot of nonfiction as well. When I read fiction I get
the novelist’s ideas, which is great.
When I read nonfiction, I’m generating
my own ideas. Nonfiction reading is
more methodical. You don’t have that
fishhook in your cheek pulling you
along like with thrillers. But I find that
methodical reading opens my brain up
more.
BOOKS: What nonfiction readers do you
read regularly?
WENDIG: Mary Roach, Carl Zimmer,
BIBLIOPHILES, Page N11
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
Books
G l o b e
N11
Samuel Adams out of the shadows
Exploring
various kinds
of inheritances
By Kate Tuttle
THE REVOLUTIONARY:
Samuel Adams
By Stacy Schiff
Little, Brown, 432 pages, $35
GLOBE CORRESPONDENT
u"FLIGHT"
Continued from Page N10
ployer. Josh, married to Kate,
the younger sister who feels the
loss of Helen most keenly, has
drained his own inheritance
with “botched investments.”
The family is gathered for
their first Christmas without
their beloved mother. Helen
knew the importance of connection: “Helen wasn’t religious.
But some years she dabbled in
Eastern religions of all kinds,
made everyone meditate. Other
years, she made them go to
church for the community. She
believed in parties, food, coming
together — naming ceremonies
instead of baptisms, Michaelmas some years, solstice parties .
. .”
The weighty elephant in the
room is property. Helen died
without leaving a will; the only
asset is her Florida home, the
site of so many family holidays.
Kate wants the house, yearns to
raise her three kids where she
grew up, reenacting cherished
rituals and recipes of her childhood. But in the way of grief and
loss, physical objects, especially
big ones like a childhood home,
take on added emotional freight.
Martin’s wife, Tess, an attorney,
sees the house in strictly economic terms. If Kate and her
husband, Josh, want it, they
should simply buy it. The family
is celebrating Christmas not in
Florida, but in upstate New
York, in the house artist-turnedsocial worker Alice inherited
from her grandmother.
There is much discussion in
“Flight” of the economic circumstances of the characters. All
face financial strains, whether
from bad investments, bad behavior, or outsized consumption. There are questions about
varieties of work: whether Kate’s
childrearing and domestic labor
constitute valued, legitimate
work (she mainly worries about
this). Whether Henry’s art — the
flock of exquisite clay birds he’s
crafting in the barn of the house
where the family is staying, inspired by the urgency of climate
change and the need for community — qualifies as bona fide
work.
All three couples are armored
at the family gathering’s outset,
surrounded by a membrane of
judgment, criticizing their inlaws, their spouses, displacing
their grief at the loss of their
mother, debating whether Kate
and her “useless” husband Josh
deserve the house. When a crisis
occurs — Alice’s client Maddie,
almost 7, goes missing — the
family galvanizes into action.
The membrane separating the
characters melts, as sure as the
winter snow will melt. They soften toward each other.
A s older brother Mar tin
looks at his family, he “sees them
as a small good gift. They aren’t
perfect: they fight, and maybe
none of them would have become friends if they’d not been
forced their whole lives to be together as a family. But they love
each other and they like each
other well enough.”
Lynn Steger Strong’s writing
is economical but packs a gut
punch. In “Flight” she explores
various kinds of inheritances:
the emotional solidity we inherit
— or don’t — from our parents;
whether we will inherit a future
as a planet if we don’t vastly
modify our habits of consumption. She also probes varieties of
caregiving: from daughter-inlaw Tess’s tight control, born of
childhood trauma, to daughter
Kate’s loving encouragement
modeled from Helen (she endearingly calls her children
“Ducks,” like the flock they are).
Henry hopes, as he doggedly
and daily works in the barn, that
his suspended clay birds will be
“close enough that they look
from certain angles like one fluid thing, far enough apart that
they seem separate, still themselves.”
Strong accomplishes the
same in her emotionally transcendent novel “Flight ,” in
which the individual characters,
over the course of a three-day
holiday, gather and become a
functioning aggregate, creating
a new depth in their loss.
Jeffrey Ann Goudie is a freelance
writer and book critic.
Finding comfort and
humor in horror
uBIBLIOPHILES
Continued from Page N10
Annalee Newitz, who also writes
science fiction. She wrote “Four
Lost Cities,” which is about early
settlements. You need look no
further for cool world-building
ideas for science fiction than actual history. Mallory O’Meara is
another one. She wrote a world
history of women’s impact on alcohol and cocktails, “Girly
Drinks,” which she won a James
Beard Award for.
BOOKS: When did you start
reading horror?
WENDIG: I think my sister put
Robert McCammon’s “Swan
Song” or “Stinger” in my hand
when I was 12.
BOOKS: Were your parents concerned about your reading?
WENDIG: I grew up in the era
when parents had no idea what
their children were doing. At the
video store, I would rent an Rrated movie and my parents
were like, “It says aliens. It must
be like ‘ET’ right?”
BOOKS: What draws you to horror?
WENDIG: I find horror quite
comforting, which is counterintuitive. I also find a cathartic
component to being scared in
this container. Writing and reading horror feels like that ancient
art of a sorcerer bringing forth
demons into the summoning circle as a safe place to fight them.
BOOKS: Have you ever met your
match in horror books?
WENDIG: There are some books
that are rough. “The Walking
Dead” comic books became too
nihilistic. It’s not that I mind
grim nihilism but when it goes
on for episode after episode, you
start to feel like it’s crushing
something inside of you. I don’t
need horror to have a happy
ending, but I need to feel it is trying to do more than just be cruel.
BOOKS: Do you look for humor
in your horror?
WENDIG: I love humor in my
horror. Someone like Joe Lansdale, who is such a gifted writer,
knows how to be drop dead funny. Some other authors really
lean into the humor of horror,
such as Christopher Moore. His
first book, “Practical Demonkeeping,” is horror at its core but
it’s very funny. Grady Hendrix
can write some funny stuff while
ripping your heart out of your
chest.
BOOKS: Which author would
you suggest to someone who
wants to try horror?
WENDIG: I would suggest Paul
Tremblay’s work. He’s not only a
beautiful writer but his books
hurt you hard. Stephen Graham
Jones for sure. There’s a weird
book by Scott Hawkins who
worked in computers before he
wrote his first book, “The Library at Mount Char.” I love that
book so hard.
BOOKS: How do you take care of
your books?
WENDIG: I’m one of those monsters who folds the corner of
pages to mark my spot. I know.
I’m terrible. When people come
to my book signings they sometimes will hand me a book that is
beat up and apologize for it.
They don’t need to apologize. I
love to see those books with war
damage from the reading
trenches.
This interview has been edited
and condensed.
Follow us on Facebook or Twitter
@GlobeBiblio. Amy Sutherland
is the author, most recently, of
“Rescuing Penny Jane” and she
can be reached at amysutherland@mac.com.
H
is name is arguably most famous now as a
brand of beer
— although he
never went by Sam in life — but
in his heyday Samuel Adams
was so lauded that one fellow
signer of the Declaration of Independence said, “All good
Americans should erect a statue
to him in their hearts.” In the
tumultuous, heady years leading
up to 1776, there was no more
influential voice for the rights of
Colonial Americans; his pamphlets on liberty animated a
generation of Massachusetts residents enough that they took up
arms against the crown they had
just decades earlier lived under
peacefully.
In “The Revolutionary,” Stacy
Schiff reintroduces Samuel Adams to readers who might be
forgiven if they can’t quite place
him in the pantheon of founding
Americans. Unlike his cousin
John, Samuel Adams was never
president, although he did serve
as governor of Massachusetts toward the end of his life, a shadow of the firebrand he had once
been: “he doddered a little and
knew as much,” Schiff writes.
But his brand of political genius,
his biographer suggests, wasn’t
really suited for the halls of power. “He operated by stealth,
melting into committees and
crowd actions, pseudonyms and
smoky back rooms,” she writes.
“Adams preferred to set the
stage for others to occupy. He
was rarely present even in his
own version of events.”
Born in 1722 into a prosperous and well-established family,
Adams was educated in the classics at Boston Latin and later at
Harvard, reading the poets and
philosophers whose work would
influence the prose style many
would grow to recognize even in
his anonymous revolutionary
Author
Stacy
Schiff
ELENA SIEBERT PHOTOGRAPHY
screeds. Students at Harvard
were then organized by their
class rank — based not on their
own grades, but on their father’s
occupation or fortune. Adams’s
father was a justice of the peace,
affording his son a relatively
high rank. It would not last.
Although the newly graduated Adams considered a career in
the church, “the traditional career for the gifted, book-loving
New England son,” instead he
drifted for a bit, trying his hand
at business before returning to
Harvard for a graduate degree,
where he pondered the rights of
men to resist being ruled by a
king. It would be years before he
applied his beliefs in that matter
to anything beyond the academic. Schiff writes that “he was a
perfect failure until middle age,”
performing poorly in his professional life, making bad financial
decisions, and generally “loitering his way toward his future.”
Adams’s time came in 1764,
when Britain passed the Sugar
Act, a taxation scheme that
seemed to light a fuse among
American colonists. James Otis,
Adams’s closest collaborator,
wrote that year that the new law
“has set people a thinking, in six
months, more than they had
done in their whole lives before.”
What they were thinking, and
meeting, and talking about was
the subject Samuel Adams had
made his study ever since he
first read Cicero and Locke: liberty.
Schiff masterfully chronicles
the myriad twists and turns of
Adams’s life in the decades that
followed, as protests against the
British grew and the streets of
Boston became choked with soldiers, spies, and whispers of
war. In the hands of a less skillful writer, this history could
overwhelm — the insults, tiffs,
and rifts among the revolutionaries alone make for a thick tangle at times — but Schiff, who
has previously written about intrigue in Salem (“The Witches”)
understands how to translate
even the most knotty history into quick-paced narrative.
Even though Adams left
home frequently, traveling to
Philadelphia and New York to
meet with other independenceminded colonists, this is very
much a book of Boston. “It was
not difficult for Boston, through-
out Adams’s youth the largest
town in the colonies, to flirt with
a superiority complex,” Schiff
writes (you can decide on your
own whether this is still true).
Readers can easily trace the
steps of Adams and his contemporaries (including his adversaries) as they traversed the bustling city. The details, geographic and otherwise, make vivid
these lives: we read of Adams’s
beloved first wife, dead at 32 after her sixth delivery (two of the
children survived). Unlike many
of his friends similarly widowed,
Adams would wait seven years
to remarry.
After the Declaration of Independence and the years of war,
Adams was an old man. A faithful believer notably lacking in
vanity, he didn’t care about his
reputation (“more than any other founder he believed he answered to a single judge alone,”
Schiff writes), and that is good
because his declined as he himself did. “He had outlived himself,” Schiff adds, and his final
years were quiet if not solitary.
When he died in 1803, he was
eulogized and then “promptly
forgotten.”
And still, there is something
about Samuel Adams that seems
especially compelling today. “He
set more store in ideas than institutions,” his biographer
writes, “he encouraged an allegiance to principles over individuals.” Boston readers can visit
his grave at the Granary Burying
Ground. We forget him and his
ideas, it seems to me, at our peril.
Kate Tuttle, a freelance writer
and critic, can be reached at
kate.tuttle@gmail.com.
Inside the mind of Haruki Murakami
uMURAKAMI
Continued from Page N10
styles and general behavior
frankly odd”. But soon, he stumbles back into stereotyping, pronouncing that a “truly intimate
friendship” between novelists
cannot “last very long” because
their egos will get in the way. My
experience as a literary agent
and editor who’s taught and
worked with countless novelists
suggests quite the opposite.
The strongest essays are
those that bring us into Murakami’s own idiosyncratic disposition, his unlikely career path,
and his odd routines and requirements as a writer. Murakami explains how his familiar obsessions with jazz, running, and
baseball have influenced and
been influenced by his writing
career. “How I Became a Novelist” is a delightful essay about
the improbable genesis of his career; “What Kind of Characters
Should I Include?” provides insight into how he chooses his
narrators and invents his
strange and intriguing characters that populate his novels
from “Nor wegian Wood” to
“Kafka on the Shore” to “Killing
Commendatore.”
In “A Completely Personal
and Physical Occupation,” Murakami lays out the principles
and practices by which he pursues his passion for writing novels and helpfully debunks the
myth that debauchery and decadence are requisite for wild and
inventive art. One imagines that
Murakami would heartily endorse Flaubert’s dictum: “Be
regular and orderly in your life,
so that you may be violent and
original in your work.” He hits a
set word count each day, structures his life around his writing,
stays home most nights, and
doesn’t attend literary festivals
or glitzy events. Physical stamina, he insists, is of the utmost
importance to his literary success.
Of course, a highly controlled
life and a single-minded focus
on creative work is much easier
to achieve for a literary superstar on the level of Murakami,
whose books sell well into the
millions of copies and whose
name regularly bubbles to the
top of Nobel Prize candidates.
He also is blessed with a stable
marriage to a supportive wife
who acts as his first reader, and
he has no children to divide his
attention. But if these privileges
and boons make him an unlikely
role model for most aspiring
writers, his keen awareness of
his own good fortune and his
humility about his own gifts endear him to us.
Murakami’s best quality on
view here is his utter lack of pretentiousness. He attributes
much of his success to luck,
chance, accident, the “exceptional stroke of good fortune” he
had in winning a major literary
prize for his first novel. He is
self-effacing, humble, and aware
of the impossibility of prescriptive, one-size-fits-all advice,
which makes the lack of subtlety
of the first chapter’s vaporous
assertions all the more bizarre.
Yet at the same time, his dedication to speaking plainly, as a
man rather than as a sage or
prophet, helps to explain the
sometimes undefended straightforwardness of these essays.
“Novelist As A Vocation”
doesn’t offer extensive practical
advice in the way of Stephen
King’s “On Writing” or Stephen
Pressfield’s “The War of Art,” nor
spiritual nourishment in the
vein of Anne Lamott’s “Bird By
Bird” or Dani Shapiro’s “Still
Writing.” It isn’t a book that I’d
assign to my writing students or
use myself as a source of tips
and tricks. It works best as a fascinating backstage pass to Murakami’s process and approach
to creating fiction.
Reproof, the imprecations
and epithets of his critics play a
major role in this collection.
Even as he insists that he
doesn’t “take criticisms . . . all
that seriously,” his resentment
about negative reactions to his
work, especially in his home
country, is palpable. But the collection’s ingenuous enthusiasm
about writing simultaneously
disarms reproof. Murakami emphasizes that he is not “a genius
in any way, shape, or form,” expresses how “grateful [he is] to
be able to make a living” writing
novels, gives much credit to his
US publishing team (agent, editor, publisher, designers, translators), and thanks his readers
profusely for their loyalty and
devotion.
An essay on the rigidity and
vicious competitiveness of the
Priscilla Gilman is a former
professor of English literature at
Yale University and Vassar College and the author of “The AntiRomantic Child: A Memoir of
Unexpected Joy.”
NOVEMBER 11-13
Back Bay Events Center
Hynes Convention Center
2 SHOWS
200 EXHIBITORS
4 BLOCKS APART
antique books maps prints
Japanese educational system,
whose “goal,” according to the
author, “appears to be to create
doglike people . . . and even
sometimes to create sheeplike
people,” illuminates Murakami’s
temperament and ethic in both
life and art. Murakami’s rejection of conformity and celebration of the individual, his elevating “imagination” over “efficienc y,” go a l o n g w ay t o w a r d s
explaining why young people
have flocked to his work in
droves.
Throughout these essays,
Murakami emphasizes spontaneity, freedom, and a feeling of
unbridled emotion. When writing, “I let things take their natural course,” he tells us, “following wherever my heart leads.” It
is the frank romanticism of that
“free and natural sensibility,”
that has won so many hearts in
return.
autographs manuscripts
photographs
phot
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Books
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NOVEMBER 6, 2022
The Fine Print
STORY BEHIND THE BOOK | KATE TUTTLE
BOOKINGS
How a Russian version
of ‘Sesame Street’ helped
raise a generation
from those years, it didn’t seem like a project that could sell
until the world changed again, with the rise of Putin’s power
and the invasion of Crimea in 2014. “I started thinking, ‘We
do not understand this country,’” Lance Rogoff said. Beyond
the politics, she knew, “there were deeper differences, related to our history, our culture, our values. We were talking at
cross purposes.”
In her book, Lance Rogoff recalls clashes over the color of
a muppet’s fur, or a skit about children running a lemonade
stand. “That’s an innocent idea for us, it teaches counting
and team building skills,” she said. “And for them, you’re
talking about their children standing on the street and selling goods, which was illegal under communism.”
The show was a huge hit, and it influenced a generation
of young Russians, now in their late 20s and 30s. Lance Rogoff knows it had an impact on the Russians now protesting
their nation’s war, and on the Ukrainians fighting back.
“They’re the ‘Ulitsa Sezam’ generation. They grew up on
the show,” she said. “It’s horrific what’s going on right
now both in Ukraine and inside Russia, more horrific for the Ukrainians, but at the same time hope is
still there. They’re human. I don’t think it’s possible for people to live without some hope.”
Natasha Lance Rogoff will read in person at 7
p.m. Monday at Harvard Book Store.
PAPERBACK NONFICTION
1. Braiding Sweetgrass Robin Wall Kimmerer MILKWEED
2. The 2023 Old Farmer’s Almanac OLD FARMER’S ALMANAC
3. The Body Keeps the Score: Brain, Mind, and Body in the
Healing of Trauma Bessel van der Kolk PENGUIN PRESS
4. Finding the Mother Tree: Discovering the Wisdom of the
Forest Suzanne Simard VINTAGE
5. Fuzz: When Nature Breaks the Law Mary Roach NORTON
6. Empire of Pain: The Secret History of the Sackler Dynasty
Patrick Radden Keefe DOUBLEDAY
7. Vanderbilt: The Rise and Fall of an American Dynasty Anderson Cooper, Katherine Howe HARPER PAPERBACKS
8. All About Love: New Visions bell hooks MORROW
9. The Book of Delights: Essays Ross Gay ALGONQUIN
10. How to Love Thich Nhat Hanh PARALLAX PRESS
All author appearances are
in person and free unless otherwise noted.
SUNDAY
Francine Mathews (“Death
on a Winter Stroll”) reads at
4 p.m. at An Unlikely Story
. . . Stacy Schiff (“The Revolutionary: Samuel Adams”) is
in conversation with Adam
Reilly at 6 p.m. at Boston
Atheneum (Tickets are $10
for nonmembers and free for
members).
MONDAY
Natasha Lance Rogoff
(“Muppets in Moscow: The
Unexpected Crazy True Story
of Making Sesame Street in
Russia”) is in conversation
with Gish Jen at 7 p.m. at
Harvard Book Store . . . Marissa Meyer (“Cursed”) reads
at 7 p.m. at An Unlikely Story (Tickets are $5, or $21.24
including a copy of the
book).
TUESDAY
Carrie Finison (“Lulu & Zoey:
A Sister Story”), Carol Gordon Ekster (“Some
Daddies”), and Kirsti Call
(“The Big Scream”) read at
10 a.m. at Wellesley Books
. . . Jon Vaughan (“Cape Cod
Dawn to Dusk”) reads at 2
p.m. at Titcomb’s Bookshop .
. . Lauren Thomas (“The
Modern Hippie Table: Recipes and Menus for Eating
Simply and Living Beautifully”) reads at 7 p.m. at Wellesley Books (Tickets are $10).
WEDNESDAY
Alice Hoffman (“The Book of
Magic”) is in conversation
with Laura Zigman at 6 p.m.
at Brattle Theatre at an event
hosted by Harvard Book
Store (Tickets are $15, or
$34.25 including a copy of
the book) . . . Janet Costa
Bates (“Rica Baptista: Llamas, Iguanas, and My Very
Best Friend”) reads at 6:30
p.m. at An Unlikely Story . . .
Gareth Higgins (“How Not to
Be Afraid: Seven Ways to
Live When Everything Seems
Terrifying”) reads at 7 p.m. at
Brookline Booksmith . . .
Leanna Renee Hieber and
Andrea Janes (“A Haunted
History of Invisible Women”)
read at 7:30 p.m. at All She
Wrote Books.
THURSDAY
Peter Pesic (“Sounding Bodies: Music and the Making of
Biomedical Science”) reads
at 6 p.m. virtually via Harvard Book Store . . . Sylvie
Kandé (“The Neverending
Quest for the Other Shore:
An Epic in Three Cantos”)
and Danielle Legros Georges
(“Island Heart”) read at 7
p.m. at Brookline Booksmith
. . . Diannely Antigua (“Ugly
Music”), Sara Deniz Akant
(“Hyperphantasia”), Adrienne Raphel (“Our Dark Academia”) and Jess Rizkallah
(“The Magic My Body Becomes”) read at 7 p.m. at
Grolier Poetry Book Shop . . .
Matthew Quick (“We Are the
Light”) reads at 7 p.m. at Titcomb’s Bookshop . . . Serena
Burdick (“The Stolen Book of
Evelyn Aubrey”) reads at 7
p.m. at An Unlikely Story.
FRIDAY
Emery Robin (“The Stars Undying”) reads at 7 p.m. at
Brookline Booksmith . . .
Claire Saffitz (“What’s for
Dessert: Simple Recipes for
Dessert People”) reads at 6
p.m. at Brattle Theatre at an
event hosted by Harvard
Book Store (Tickets are $6,
or $40 including a copy of
the book).
SATURDAY
Jenny Bhatt (“The Shehnai
Virtuoso and Other Stories”)
is in conversation with Aparna Kapadia at 10 a.m. virtually via Brookline Booksmith
. . . Jane Yolen (“Love Birds”)
and Heidi E.Y. Stemple
(“Whose Nest is Best?”) read
at 11 a.m. at The Silver Unicorn Bookstore . . . Debbi Michiko Florence (“Sweet and
Sour”), Susan Tan (“The Poodle of Doom”), and Janet
Costa Bates (“Rica Baptista:
Llamas, Iguanas, and My
Very Best Friend”) read at 1
p.m. at Blue Bunny Books . . .
Deborah Farmer Kris (”You
Are Growing All the Time”)
reads at 2 p.m. at Wellesley
Books.
The New England Indie Bestseller List, as brought to you by IndieBound and NEIBA, for the week ended Sunday, Oct. 30. Based on reporting from the independent booksellers
of the New England Independent Booksellers Association and IndieBound. For an independent bookstore near you, visit IndieBound.org.
For a complete listing, please visit bostonglobe.com/books
Natasha Lance Rogoff studied in Leningrad (now St. Petersburg) in college, and then worked in Russia as a journalist —
often covering the underground music and LGBTQ scene —
and then as a documentary filmmaker. But it was her attempt
to bring America’s most beloved children’s TV show to the former Soviet Union that perhaps brought her closest to the Russian people.
“When you talk to people about their children, it’s so emotional, so intimate,” said Lance Rogoff, who’s American. “I
thought, ‘This story really needs to be told.’ It revealed
things about the Russian people and Soviet society in a
way that I had not been able to capture while making
documentaries there for 10 years.”
In “Muppets in Moscow: The Crazy Unexpected
True Story of Making Sesame Street in Russia” (Rowan & Littlefield), Lance Rogoff chronicles her work
with Children’s Television Workshop in the 1990s to create “Ulitsa Sezam,” a program to help Russian children adjust to life in their new world.
Although she had kept memos, journals, and videotape
DAVID WILSON FOR THE BOSTON GLOBE
Kate Tuttle, a freelance writer and critic, can be reached at
kate.tuttle@gmail.com.
NEW ENGLAND LITERARY NEWS | NINA MACLAUGHLIN
Molly’s Bookstore in Melrose
“Flutter, Kick”
from Anna V.Q. Ross
Poet Anna V.Q. Ross
knows what to leave unsaid, knows the just
enough to send the reader’s blood and mind
alight. “One morning in
December,/ my friend
will go in to wake her
two-year-old son,/ and
find him.” What’s silent,
but known, and sensed
immediately, chills. Her
new collection, “Flutter,
Kick” (Red Hen), winner
of the Benjamin Saltman
Award, traffics in beauty
and threat, the “something unseen hungering
near,” and our deep urges, as well as our abilities
and inabilities, to protect
ourselves and the ones
we love from different
kinds of danger. The
book is especially interested in the certain strain
of maternal protection;
children are “perfect pink
mouths/ of unknowing”
and grow into storming
teens, and the speaker of
the poem recalls harms
and violations from her
own past, wondering
what her children will
enter into. Ross is especially good at the dismount; her last lines
stick the landing in a way
that launches the reader
into new understandings,
new truths, the ones that
can’t be spoken all the
way. And there are lines
of such beguiling beauty:
“You felt you should love
horses/ but preferred
trees — the way they
moved/ without leaving.”
A new, independent bookstore is scheduled to open later this month in downtown
Melrose. Molly’s Bookstore, owned by Andrea Iriarte Dent and Brett Reed, will be a
two-floor general interest bookstore, with
an event space and children’s books on the
lower level and books for adults on the second level. Iriarte Dent moved to the United
States from Guatemala over a decade ago,
and she and her family have been living in
Melrose for the past four years. It’s been a
dream of hers to own and run a bookstore,
and when the space on Main Street opened
up, she moved fast. Besides offering book
clubs and literary and community events at
the store, Iriarte Dent is also committed to
offering a diverse range of books, recalling a
Latino book club she was part of, and the
trouble they had finding titles they wanted
to read. The bookstore, named after a family dog, is scheduled to open on Nov. 19 at
667-669 Main St. in Melrose. For more information, visit mollysbookstore.com.
BOSTON BOOK COMPANY
Coming out
Antiquarian Book Fair
The Boston International Antiquarian Book Fair returns this
weekend for its 44th year, bringing over 100 exhibitors and sellers
from around the world presenting all manner of biblio-treasure
and ephemera. Delights on offer this year: rare first editions of
James Joyce’s riotous, rollicking, notoriously challenging
“Finnegans Wake,” as well as Charlotte Bronte’s “Jane Eyre”; Black
photographer Dan Bollings’s collection of photographs from the
1960s of some of the brightest stars of jazz — Miles Davis, Freddie
Hubbard, Pharoah Sanders — performing at Boston’s Jazz Workshop and Lennie’s on the Turnpike, in Peabody; a collection of color-printed woodblocks from 1909 by Kamisaka Sekka; and a collection of botanical paintings of the plants of the garden of King
Charles III signed by the king himself. And besides the books and
objects on offer, visitors can attend a number of lectures and discussions, including talks on “Women in the American Wilderness,” “The Architecture and Furnishing of the Private Library,” a
roundtable on artists’ books, “A Life of Dealing in the Exotic World
of Rare Books,” and “The Trials and Triumphs of Collecting Romance Novels.” And don’t forget to bring along that mysterious
old book you found in your grandparents’ attic — the book appraisals are free. The Boston International Antiquarian Book Fair
takes place Nov. 11-13 at the Hynes Convention Center. Tickets to
the opening preview event on Friday are $25; the rest of the fair is
free. For more information, visit bostonbookfair.com.
“Flight” by Lynn Steger Strong (Mariner)
“Pathetic Literature” edited by Eileen
Myles (Grove)
“Participation” by Anna Moschovakis (Coffee House)
Pick of the week
BRATTLE BOOK SHOP
Top: An image from
Kamisaka Sekka’s1909
“Momoyogusa.” Above:
The first edition of the
health and civil rights
landmark book “Our
Bodies, Ourselves.”
Both are part of the
Boston International
Antiquarian Book Fair.
Lucinda Hannington at Longfellow
Books in Portland, Maine, recommends
“The Ghost Variations: One Hundred Stories” by Kevin Brockmeier (Pantheon):
“These vignettes, none surpassing two pages in length, are ruminations on life, living,
and, to a lesser extent, dying. The book is
divided into thematic sections — memory,
time, nature, belief — yet each story is so
distinct from its neighbors that it stands
out; there is no sense of repetition or even
familiarity. The stories are about what humanity does with the knowledge offered by
an apparition.”
Nina MacLaughlin is the author of
“Wake, Siren.” She can be reached at nmaclaughlin@gmail.com
LOCAL BESTSELLERS
HARDCOVER FICTION
PAPERBACK FICTION
1. The Passenger Cormac McCarthy KNOPF
2. Demon Copperhead Barbara Kingsolver HARPER
3. Our Missing Hearts Celeste Ng PENGUIN PRESS
4. The Last Chairlift John Irving SIMON & SCHUSTER
5. The Boys from Biloxi John Grisham DOUBLEDAY
6. Lessons in Chemistry Bonnie Garmus DOUBLEDAY
7. Liberation Day: Stories George Saunders RANDOM HOUSE
8. Lucy by the Sea Elizabeth Strout RANDOM HOUSE
9. Horse Geraldine Brooks VIKING
10. Mad Honey Jodi Picoult, Jennifer Finney Boylan BALLANTINE
1. It Starts With Us Colleen Hoover ATRIA
2. Cloud Cuckoo Land Anthony Doerr SCRIBNER
3. It Ends With Us Colleen Hoover ATRIA
4. The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo Taylor Jenkins Reid WASH-
HARDCOVER NONFICTION
1. Go-To Dinners: A Barefoot Contessa Cookbook Ina Garten
CLARKSON POTTER
2. And There Was Light: Abraham Lincoln and the American
Struggle Jon Meacham RANDOM HOUSE
3. Confidence Man: The Making of Donald Trump and the
Breaking of America Maggie Haberman PENGUIN PRESS
4. I’m Glad My Mom Died Jennette McCurdy SIMON & SCHUSTER
5. The Song of the Cell: An Exploration of Medicine and the
New Human Siddhartha Mukherjee SCRIBNER
6. The Revolutionary: Samuel Adams Stacy Schiff LITTLE, BROWN
7. The Extraordinary Life of an Ordinary Man: A Memoir Paul
Newman KNOPF
8. Visual Thinking Temple Grandin RIVERHEAD
9. What If? 2 Randall Munroe RIVERHEAD
10. Starry Messenger Neil deGrasse Tyson HENRY HOLT AND CO.
INGTON SQUARE PRESS
5. Verity Colleen Hoover GRAND CENTRAL
6. The Sentence Louise Erdrich HARPER
7. The Thursday Murder Club Richard Osman PENGUIN
8. The Personal Librarian Marie Benedict, Victoria Christopher
Murray BERKLEY
9. Oh William! Elizabeth Strout RANDOM HOUSE
10. The Silent Patient Alex Michaelides CELADON BOOKS
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
Travel
G l o b e
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SundayTravel
WITH: NEW ENGLAND DESTINATIONS
B O S T O N S U N DAY G L O B E N O V E M B E R 6 , 2 0 2 2 | B O S T O N G L O B E .C O M / T R AV E L
Travelers stay
in step with
walking tours
Welcome to
the most
Christmassy
town in
America
By Jon Marcus
I
GLOBE CORRESPONDENT
ra Schor keeps two inspirational maxims on his desk at his home in Newton.
The first reads “solvitur ambulando” —
Latin for, “It is solved by walking.” The
second is a quote from the naturalist
John Muir.
“In every walk with nature,” it says, “one receives far more than he seeks.” Like many other
people, Schor, 71, did a lot of walking at the
start of the pandemic, which coincided with his
retirement from work.
“It’s really in many ways pulled me through
COVID,” he said. “I enjoy it, both with people
and alone. It’s a kind of meditative experience.”
Now Schor and his wife have taken his hobby on the road, with a walking vacation to Italy.
A lot of other people are doing that, too.
Companies that offer walking tours report big
spikes in business compared to before the pandemic. And some destinations are blazing ambitious new walking trails to attract travelers.
WALKING, Page N15
PHOTOS BY CHRISTOPHER MUTHER/GLOBE STAFF
ABOVE: Alpine architecture in the town
of Leavenworth, Wash.
LEFT: Nutcrackers on display
at the Nutcracker Museum in Leavenworth.
CARLIN STIEHL FOR THE BOSTON GLOBE
Two people walked through a tunnel in
Franklin Park in Roxbury last month.
Inside
THE VIP
LOUNGE
An accordion player at the Andreas Keller Restaurant plays a mix
of traditional Bavarian folk songs and familiar favorites.
Erika Bowie, general manager of the Leavenworth Reindeer
Farm, gives Elsa the reindeer a smooch.
In Central Washington state, there’s a
Bavarian village in the mountains that doesn’t
just embrace the holiday, it gives it a bear hug
Christopher Muther
LEAVENWORTH,
Wash. — “Edelweiss,
edelweiss, every morning you greeeeet
meeeee.” The dinner
crowd at Andreas Keller
Restaurant was getting
rowdy, singing along to
the “Sound of Music”
ditty as a lederhosen-clad accordionist
pumped out the melody on his squeezebox and waitresses in dirndls buzzed
about dropping off plates of crisp apple
strudel.
I feared that if I didn’t participate in
the Bavarian merriment, one of the wait-
A gingerbread
man (with
appropriate
lederhosen)
from the
Gingerbread
Factory.
resses would take away my schnitzel, refuse me apple strudel, and toss me out into the cold. So I smiled and sang as if possessed by all seven von Trapp children.
“Small and white, clean and bright,
you look happy to seeeeee meeeeee.”
Spending time in Leavenworth, a
town of 2,400 in the mountains of Central Washington state, requires commitment. You’re either going to arrive and
shake your head at the absurdity of an
entire municipality that looks like an
18th-century German village, or your
heart will melt and you’ll throw your
arms around the Alpine architecture and
LEAVENWORTH, Page N16
VEGAS AND
BEYOND
LIVING HER
DREAM
VACATION
TRUTHS
Berklee graduate
Gabriela Carrillo
returns to Boston
in the touring
production of ‘Six’
People dish on
their biggest
secrets and regrets
in a recent
travel survey
N14
N15
Seeking a chef
for a shark
expedition
I
By Lindsay Crudele
GLOBE CORRESPONDENT
think of being eaten by sharks more
than I think of eating with one. Here in
New England, where great white shark
sightings have increased in recent
years, fins are becoming commonplace
shoreline accessories. On a recent beach day in
Plum Island, I watched a fin emerge, slicing
down the waterline. Someone, straight from
Central Casting, shouted “shark!” A nervous
crowd gathered. A few minutes after the fin
submerged, beachgoers poured back into the
waves, toddlers and all. New Englanders are
salty like that.
But the team who helped film the live shark
sequences for “Jaws” had better ideas than just
walking into the drink with them. Andrew Fox
has spent more than three decades on board
the shark-diving vessel the MV Rodney Fox.
The craft is named for his father, who survived
CHEF, Page N16
Making friends
is a little different
Barbados
F LY N O N S T O P f r o m B o s t o n
in
Book now on jetblue.com/Barbados
N14
Travel
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
G l o b e
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
The Concierge
TIPS FOR TOURING HERE AND ABROAD
THE VIP LOUNGE
TRAVEL TROUBLESHOOTER
Lufthansa
canceled my
flight a year
ago. Where’s
the refund?
By Christopher Elliott
Q.
GLOBE CORRESPONDENT
I booked four Lufthansa tickets from
Brussels to San
Francisco through
Kiwi.com in 2021.
Lufthansa canceled the flight. Kiwi.com offered to request a refund. We have received two automated responses so far, but no refund.
I have not yet contacted Lufthansa
directly, since Kiwi.com is our online
travel agency. It’s been a year since Kiwi
promised to help us get a refund. Can
you help us get our $3,450 back, please?
NANCY PLASSCHAERT,
Antwerp, Belgium
A. You should have received a refund
almost immediately. Under Lufthansa’s
general conditions, the legal contract between you and the airline, “in the event
of a cancellation, rebooking or delay, a
reimbursement of the fare may be possible under certain conditions.” And you
met those conditions, which Kiwi.com
verified.
Lufthansa would not refund you directly. It would send it to Kiwi.com,
which would then pass the money along
to you. So, what happened?
I asked Kiwi if the holdup was on the
Lufthansa side or if the agency had experienced a delay. It did not respond.
Your case illustrates one of the drawbacks of using an online travel agency.
The intermediary can protect you when
things go wrong. But that third party
can also cause delays, which would have
happened to you even if Lufthansa had
refunded you immediately. Kiwi warned
you that you might have to wait months
for your money.
Your case illustrates
one of the drawbacks
of using an online
travel agency.
“Please be patient,” they said in an email. “We estimate that some refunds
will take approximately three months.
However, many carriers are now delaying their refund processes, and in some
cases, the wait time might be longer.”
Why so long? Well, part of it may be
related to the pandemic, although that
excuse is getting a little old. By then, Lufthansa was close to two years into the
pandemic and should have figured out a
way to streamline its refunds.
Here’s what I would have done: After
a month, I would have sent a brief, polite
e-mail to one of the executive contacts
for Lufthansa that I publish on my consumer advocacy site at www.elliott.org/
company-contacts/lufthansa-airlines/.
Failing that, I would have filed a dispute
with your credit card company (more information can be found at www.elliott.org/ultimate-consumer-guidessmart-travelers/the-complete-guide-tochargebacks-and-winning-a-credit-carddispute/). Your bank or credit card could
have taken the money back if you had
shown them the e-mail from Kiwi.com.
A dispute department would have seen
that promise as a credit memo and returned your money.
I contacted Kiwi on your behalf. A
representative responded immediately
and promised to look into your refund.
But two weeks later, there was no sign of
your money. So I reached out again. This
time, a representative got in touch with
you and refunded your $3,450. “The
process got delayed due to a still unprocessed refund from the airline’s side,” a
Kiwi representative told me.
So, should you have booked a trip
with Kiwi.com? We don’t get a lot of
complaints about the company — so few
that we don’t even list their company
contacts on our advocacy site. But I noted that the company advertises itself as
an agency that likes to “hack the system.”
Maybe next time, it can hack the system
and get you a faster refund.
Christopher Elliott is the chief advocacy
officer of Elliott Advocacy, a nonprofit
organization that helps consumers
resolve their problems. Elliott’s latest
book is “How to Be the World’s Smartest
Traveler” (National Geographic).
Contact him at elliott.org/help or
chris@elliott.org.
She loves Greece, her parents,
and coming back to Boston
W
hen she was a student at Berklee College of Music, Gabriela Carrillo had
dreams of becoming a pop star and going on tour. But
she also loved musical theater and felt
a tug in that direction as well. Fast forward to today, and the 28-year-old performer is able to combine both pursuits by playing Catherine Parr, the
sixth and last wife of King Henry VIII,
in the national tour of “Six,” coming to
the Emerson Colonial Theatre Nov. 9Dec. 31. “I feel like this is the perfect
job for me,” Carrillo said in a recent
phone call from Miami, where the musical, which reimagines the six wives of
Henry VIII as a pop group, was being
performed. “I love that there’s pop music in it, so I’m getting the touring pop
star experience — we even have handheld mics — and the theater experience.” The show, which is still on
Broadway, won a Tony Award earlier
this year for best original score. This is
Carrillo’s first national tour, and while
she is enjoying exploring other parts of
the country, she is especially excited to
come back to Boston. “There is nothing like New England in the fall,” said
Carrillo, who vlogs about everything
from the show to her travels on her
YouTube channel. “I was so focused
when I was at Berklee and was in a
‘Berklee bubble’ a little bit. I’m looking
forward to exploring … [and trying]
restaurants in the city that I couldn’t
afford to go to in college.” We caught
up with the Chicago native, who lives
in Los Angeles with her rescue pup,
Mochi, to talk about all things travel.
Favorite vacation destination? [It]
would probably be Naxos, one of the
Cycladic islands in Greece. Less widely
known than Mykonos or Santorini … it
seems to have maintained an authentically Cycladic, down-to-earth spirit. It’s
unbelievably rich agriculturally, which
makes the food on the island what I
consider to be the best I’ve ever had. I
couldn’t get enough of the local cuisine, not to mention the charm of each
and every unique village that makes up
the island. It’s got everything I look for
in a perfect vacation: history, culture,
fantastic eats, and places to escape
hustle and bustle; simply sit in the sun
and sip on a cold drink. My visit to
Naxos this past September was extra
special because my mom was along for
the trip with me. We spent two weeks
in Athens, Naxos, and Santorini. … I’ll
HERE
A BOOK LOVER’S EVENT
Poke around rare books, old maps,
and illuminated manuscripts during
the 44th annual Boston International
Antiquarian Book Fair at the Hynes
Convention Center, Nov. 11-13. The
event draws more than 100 exhibitors
from nine countries who will showcase original books, photos, autographs, historic documents, original
illustrations, fine and decorative
prints, and more. Highlights include
rare first editions of Charlotte Bronte’s
“Jane Eyre,” the first edition of the
health and civil rights landmark book
“Our Bodies, Ourselves,” and John F.
Kennedy’s book “Inaugural Addresses
of the Presidents of the United States,”
inscribed by Jacqueline Kennedy. Free
appraisals on Nov. 13, 1-3 p.m. Admission $25, Nov. 11, 4-8 p.m.; free, Nov.
12, noon-7 p.m. and Nov. 13, noon-5
p.m. www.bostonbookfair.com
SKI FILM TOUR VISITS NEW ENGLAND
Get stoked for ski season with a night
of in-person films that showcase a
women’s backcountry ski trip in Alaska to the adventures of Cody
Townsend, who’s attempting to climb
and ski North America’s top 50 lines.
Watch seven new films — suitable for
all ages — during Salomon’s Quality
Ski Time Film Tour, showing at the
Gabriela Carrillo in Greece.
cherish the memories of our . . . “Mamma Mia!” vacation forever.
Favorite food or drink while vacationing? While in Greece this past September, I absolutely fell in love with visinada, a Greek sour cherryade of
sorts. A syrup is made with fresh cherries and sugar, and then simply combined with water and ice and sometimes lemon juice. In my mind, it’s essentially a Greek Shirley Temple — but
unbelievably more delicious because it
tastes so fresh and real. I’m already
known among my friends as the grown
woman who orders Shirley Temples at
the bar, so it was only a matter of time
until the visinada and I found each
other and fell madly in love.
Where would you like to travel to
but haven’t? Two places I’ve felt incredibly drawn to visit have been Tahiti
and Japan. I am just such a xenophile,
and any place I can travel to where culture is very different than what I know
at home is a place I’ve got to go. In my
life, I’ve been an admirer — and brief
student — of Tahitian dance, and the
photos I’ve seen of the landscapes
there are almost too beautiful to believe. I guess I’ve got to see it for myself. When it comes to Japan … I was
always absolutely fascinated by Japanese culture, cuisine, and media starting from when I was about 7 or 8 years
old. I’m so grateful to my parents, who
always encouraged me to indulge my
love of other cultures — helping me
look for ways to study Tahitian dance,
taking me to every Japanese festival we
could find . . . paying for all my manga
comic books and Shojo Beat magazine
subscriptions. ... I just know a visit to
Japan would make me and my inner
child so unbelievably happy.
One item you can’t leave home
without when traveling? My vlog camera. I do try to stay in the moment and
be fully present as much as I can while
I travel, so recording content isn’t always something I’m thinking about
when I travel, but I always bring my
vlogging camera to capture extra-special travel moments I want to immortalize forever, both simply on my own
hard drive and for my subscribers on
my YouTube channel.
Aisle or window? I used to be a
window girl, hardcore, because I tend
to absolutely pass out in deep slumber
on planes. It’s nice to just be able to
prop a pillow against the window and
drift away, not worrying that my head
is going to snap forward and wake me
up, or end up on some stranger’s
shoulder. Now that I’m older, wiser,
and more responsible and therefore
actually try to drink enough water every day, I prefer an aisle seat so I don’t
disturb my neighbors — or have to
crawl over them pseudo-lap dancestyle while they’re knocked out asleep
– when I need to visit the [bathroom].
Somerville Theatre Nov. 15 and Main
Street Landing in Burlington, Vt., Nov.
16. Other films convey the challenge
— and fun — of being the sister of a
pro skier, what it’s like to be a sponsored teenage skier (skied, filmed, and
edited by under-18 members of Salomon’s junior ski team), and the pursuits of Josh Daiek as he seeks solitude
and challenging lines off the grid in
the Nevada mountains. Tickets $15
for general admission plus booking
fees; all proceeds benefit the nonprofit
Protect Our Winters. https://bit.ly/
QSTtour
Other headliners include Mo Amer,
Shane Gillis, Jo Koy, Nurse Blake, Ms.
Pat, JB Smoove, Jenny Slate, Jimmy O.
Yang, and Bassem Youssef. This year
also marks the 40th anniversary of
Carolines on Broadway, a New York
comedy venue owned by Caroline
Hirsch who founded the comedy festival. Tickets $10-$180. www.nycomedyfestival.com
PASSIM’S POWER OUTAGE PARTY
The heat will still be on, but there will
be no mics, no amps, and no lights
during Club Passim’s Power Outage
Party Nov. 15-18. The four-night event
features music, storytelling, and entertainment by Zachariah Hickman, a
bassist, producer, and bandleader
who’s worked with artists such as Josh
Ritter and Ray LaMontagne. The performance will feature the POP House
Band and include special guests each
night: Mike Block Nov. 15, Celia
Woodsmith Nov. 16, Rose Polenzani
and Kip Drozek Nov. 17, and Peter
Mulvey and Colin McGovern Nov. 18.
Tickets $30 each night ($28 for members). 617-492-7679, www.clubpassim.org
THERE
BRACE FOR BELLY LAUGHS IN NY
One of country’s largest comedy festivals returns to the Big Apple Nov. 7-13
with headliners Bill Maher, Tracy Morgan, Wanda Sykes, and Brookline-native Conan O’Brien. The New York
Comedy Festival features more than
200 comedians performing more than
100 shows at venues throughout the
five boroughs and — for the first time
ever — at UBS Arena at Belmont Park
on Long Island, with John Mulaney.
GO VISIT LOVELAND
See an art exhibit by singer-songwriter
John Mellencamp, a dazzling winter
lights festival, and a new IMAX theater in Loveland, a hip, up-and-coming city one hour north of Denver. The
award-winning musician, activist, and
artist has a new exhibit at the Loveland Museum called “John Mellencamp: Painting and Assemblages” that
runs through Feb. 12, 2023. Mellencamp’s “large-scale portraits and
mixed-media pieces document America’s heart and soul, revealing unsettling but beautiful truths with a kind
of anti-establishment frown,” according to the museum. Winter Wonderlights Downtown — a new season-long
light display — opens on Nov. 18, featuring live reindeer, ice sculpting, interactive art displays, and live music
(or see the original Winter Wonderlights at Chapungu Sculpture Park at
Centerra, opening Nov. 19). Stay
tuned for the opening of the new IMAX theater in the next month.
www.visitlovelandco.org
EVERYWHERE
NEW FIRE PITS FOR FALL
Solo Stove’s fire pits have become
wildly popular for good reason: They
are super sleek, lightweight, and portable; they light quickly; and they emit
very little smoke (no need to change
seats to avoid shifting smoke gusts).
The new 2.0 version of these smokeless fire pits have an added new fea-
Favorite childhood travel memory?
Although we traveled to quite a few of
the US states and a few countries
abroad, I think my parents and I went
on about 13 or 14 cruises throughout
my childhood, and honestly, those
were some of the best memories of my
younger years, and partially where I
fell in love with performing. We would
go to the shows every single night,
from the big theatrical productions to
the one-man-and-a-piano lounge
shows. I was absolutely dazzled. I remember being starstruck seeing some
of the singers and dancers around the
ship. I also remember eating in the
dining room for dinner every night
with my parents and finding so much
enjoyment trying new dishes. … It’s because of [my parents] that my love for
culture, cuisine, and travel came to be.
Guilty pleasure when traveling? I
don’t really feel guilty about anything
that brings me pleasure, but to some, I
might commit a bit of a traveling faux
pas. I’m a sucker for an unplanned and
completely laid-back day or two on a
trip abroad. . . . I know many would
see that as time wasted, and believe
your itinerary should be packed sunrise to sunset so as to make the most of
your time, but to me, scrambling
around while completely exhausted
and never having time to “stop and
smell the roses,” as it were, is a quick
way to ruin a day for me — and a quick
way to look back and feel like you were
never actually present on your trip.
Best travel tip? This may seem oldfashioned, but if you’re going somewhere that you have absolutely no experience visiting, use a travel company.
When planning my mother-daughter
trip to Greece, because it was a multilocation trip, I was worried about being able to effectively organize travel
between Athens and the islands.
Planes, shuttles, ferries. ... I ended up
on the website Zicasso, where you can
send in an information brief about
what kind of trip you’re looking to take
and where, activities you’re interested
in, and your budget, and you get
paired with two local travel agencies
who send you competing itineraries to
choose from. I went with Greece Insiders, an Athens-based travel group
[that] absolutely nailed our trip to
Greece. ... We stayed within our original budget and both my mom and I
ended the trip feeling like all money
spent was absolutely well worth it.
JULIET PENNINGTON
ture — a removable base plate and ash
pan unit that sits on the bottom of the
stove and makes emptying ash a cinch
(no more turning the fire pit over to
dump out debris). Try the ultra-portable Ranger 2.0 (just 15 pounds and 15
inches in diameter) or the Bonfire 2.0
(23 pounds and 19.5 inches in diameter); both come with a carrying case
and are currently 25 percent off.
$199-$239, www.solostove.com
NEW ENGLAND-MADE AXES
Chop up wood for your fire pit with an
ax hand-forged in South Portland by
Brant & Cochran Axes from Maine.
The company makes the Allagash
Cruiser and Dirigo Belt camp axes.
The 2.5-pound Allagash Cruiser has a
carbon steel blade embossed with the
maker’s initials and manufacture year
and a beautifully shaped and comfortable 28-inch Amish-turned-hickory
handle. The smaller Dirigo Belt axe
weighs 1.75 pounds and has an 18inch hickory handle. Use them in the
backyard to split wood for your
smokeless fire pit or bring them on
your canoe or camping trips. Both
come with a Maine-made leather
sheath. $239-$299. www.bnctools.com
KARI BODNARCHUK
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
Travel
G l o b e
N15
People dish on biggest secrets and regrets in travel survey
By Chelsea Henderson
GLOBE CORRESPONDENT
Making memories is an integral part of traveling, but it turns
out that regret is often attached
to these vacation memories.
This September, PlayUSA —
an online news organization focused on the legal gambling industry — surveyed just over a
thousand people between the
ages of 21 to 93 about their vacation experiences. The respondents, whose average age was
39, shared their regrets and secrets from their vacations, especially those spent in Las Vegas.
The survey yielded interesting results, showcasing some of
the craziest vacation experiences
people have had. Getting drunk,
pulling all-nighters, and losing
money are at the top of the list.
In fact, 52 percent of respondents said they have gotten
drunk on vacation, which may
have contributed to some other
experiences listed, including
breaking the law and sleeping
with strangers.
In Las Vegas, in particular,
wild experiences are aplenty —
and so are the subsequent regrets. People travel to Sin City
for a variety of reasons, including to see the shows and concerts, celebrate a birthday, or
have a girls’ or guys’ getaway. Fifteen percent of respondents,
however, said that their reason
to go to Vegas was to party and
get drunk.
Despite the popular phrase
“What happens in Vegas, stays
in Vegas” (which 70 percent of
the respondents said they have
used), 13 percent of people do
not keep their Vegas escapades
under wraps. Nearly half of
these secrets include sexual encounters, and a quarter include
instances of cheating or going to
a strip club.
Gambling is another big draw
JOHN LOCHER/AP/FILE
According to a recent travel survey, what happens in Vegas,
doesn’t necessarily stay in Vegas.
to the neon capital of the world,
with 22 percent of people citing
it as a reason to visit. Eighty-one
percent of people traveling to Vegas gamble, and half of the respondents reported winning
money. On average, people spent
$487 gambling, and, for those
who reported winning, gained
$1,140. A quarter of people lost
their winnings while continuing
to gamble, however.
Vegas is also known for its
weddings (which are sometimes
officiated by an Elvis impersonator). Thirty-seven percent of
people have reported going to a
wedding while in Vegas, though
approximately a third of these
once-married couples are no longer together.
Following these wild times
spent in Vegas, 20 percent of
people said they behaved worse
than they would have at home.
Ten percent were embarrassed
by their behavior, and 12 percent were embarrassed by their
friends or family members.
Anywhere you go, however, it
seems that the company you
keep can have a large impact on
the travel experience. Friends
and loved ones are often welcome travel partners, with nearly half and a third of respondents, respectively, enjoying
their company. But parents and
in-laws? Not so much. Nineteen
percent of people prefer to not
go on vacation with their in-laws
or with their mothers. Only 15
percent said they would prefer
to travel without their father.
With the ongoing effects of
the pandemic and inflation,
some people are pulling back on
their plans to travel. More than
half of the survey respondents
have limited their vacation plans
this year because of these financial concerns. Forty-eight percent have limited plans for 2023.
Nevertheless, more than a
third of respondents are still
planning on vacationing during
this year’s holiday season. Next
year, many Americans are planning for two vacations throughout the year. Despite the potential
financial toll, people’s desire and
willingness to travel is strong.
Chelsea Henderson can be
reached at chelsea.henderson@
globe.com.
The newly-launched Island
Walk, a 435-mile walking
trail that loops around
Prince Edward Island.
TOURISM PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND
Travelers stay in step with walking tours
uWALKING
Continued from Page N13
B e f o r e C O V I D, “ I d o n ’ t
think people took the time to be
outside and commune with nature, and now they’re thinking,
‘How can I incorporate that into
my vacation?’ ” said Linda
Lowther, project manager of the
Island Walk in the Canadian
province of Prince Edward Island.
The trend coincides with a
lingering resistance among travelers to being in crowded places,
the upswing in popularity of outdoor exercise, the explosive
growth of personalized fitness
trackers, and demand for travel
among newly retired baby
boomers like Schor who still
want to take active vacations.
Participation in outdoor individual activities since the start of
the pandemic is up 84 percent,
more than in-home exercise,
team sports, indoor sports, or
any other category, the consulting firm McKinsey & Co. reports.
During the same period, sales of
fitness apps climbed by 49 percent, according to Grand View
Research.
“People found walking to be
an excellent way to disconnect,
to get outside, to reconnect with
the world around them,” said
Matt Thompson, brand manager
at the Vermont-based tour company Country Walkers. “For
many people it’s become a break
in their day, so it makes a lot of
sense when you think about it as
a longer break in their routine.”
Country Walkers has seen a
40 percent increase in the number of first-time customers,
Thompson said. Every domestic
trip last year was full. “If you
wanted to create a tour anywhere in the country, I could sell
it out,” he said.
Walking tour bookings at the
international travel company
Explore, whose North American
headquarters is in Boston, are
up 82 percent since before the
pandemic, said Sam White, a
company director. Walking trips
now comprise 20 percent of its
business, up from a pre-pandemic 10 percent, White said.
“That’s a huge increase and
it’s growing as we see more business come back,” she said. “It is
definitely a trend.”
The walking and hiking category at the touring company
Backroads has increased 30 percent, said Tom Hale, founder
and president. “People have realized it’s a great way to travel.”
Destinations are recognizing
this, too. Prince Edward Island
has connected 435 miles of existing inland and coastal trails, dirt
roads, beaches, boardwalks, and
side streets into its new Island
Walk. The idea is based in part
on the Camino de Santiago, a
500-mile network of pilgrims’
walks in northwestern Spain
that attracts 100,000 visitors a
year.
Organizers see the Island
Walk as a sort of Appalachian
Trail for walkers who prefer level
terrain, bed-and-breakfast inns,
cafes, and microbreweries to
mountain hiking, campsites,
and cooking fires. At about 15
miles a day, it would take a
month to complete, but has 32
sections meant for people who
prefer to sample only parts of it.
“You get a better feel for a
place” on foot, said Lowther.
Walkers who tried out the trail
in its debut season last year “told
us how they connected to people,” she said. “They met farm-
ers, they met fishers, and saw
things you don’t see from a bus
or from a car.”
The number of visitors so far
is not in the hundreds of thousands but in the hundreds,
Lowther said. Still, she said,
“that’s big room money for a
small province like ours.”
Walkers also have fast-expanding choices in US destinations. There are now 24,905
miles of trails converted from
former rail lines nationwide,
with 9,197 more miles planned,
according to the Rails-to-Trails
Conservancy. Trail use tripled in
Coming this winter…
Globe Magazine’s
Winter Travel Preview
Publishes November 27
Reserve space by November 9
the first weeks of the pandemic,
and is still at levels 60 percent
higher than before COVID, the
conservancy reports.
The 3,700-mile Great American Rail Trail across 12 northern
states from coast to coast is half
finished. And the $1.2 trillion
federal infrastructure act included $200 million a year for walking and cycling connections in
and between communities.
T h a t ’s a s l o w w a y t o g e t
around. Which seems to be the
appeal of it.
“Just being outside and in the
environment makes all the dif-
ference in the world,” said Schor,
whose plan for an earlier walking trip to Portugal was canceled
by COVID. He’d never take a bus
tour, he said. “That’s just not my
idea of a vacation.”
Walking tours are “a different
type of travel, to some extent,”
said White, at Explore. “You get
to see more of the place where
you go. It’s being outdoors, not
being in a crowded city, not being on a bus.”
The popularity of walking,
Country Walkers’ Thompson
said, is in part because of shifts
in customers’ relationship with
time and how they use it. “The
idea of waiting around and getting on a bus has much less appeal to people.”
For those and other reasons,
travel industry insiders expect
the walking craze to stick
around.
“This surge in interest is going to definitely carry into the future,” said Hale, at Backroads.
“The interest among baby boomers in terms of staying active —
that is an absolute trend” that
has only been intensified by the
pandemic.
He compared the popularity
of walking to the relative decline
of Peloton, which reports a “significant decrease” in demand after turbocharged sales at the
start of the pandemic, and is
temporarily halting production
of some of its fitness products.
“What a surprise,” Hale said
sarcastically of consumers getting off the stationery bikes in
their basements. “Maybe they’re
all going out walking.”
Jon Marcus can be reached at
jonmarcusboston@gmail.com.
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www.DanlWebsterInn.com
N16
Travel
B o s t o n
S u n d a y
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
G l o b e
In Wash. village, it’s like Christmas in Bavaria
uLEAVENWORTH
Left: The Nutcracker Museum is a
star attraction in Leavenworth,
Wash.
Continued from Page N13
soak up the delicious corniness of it all.
It’s “The Twilight Zone” meets the
Grimm Brothers, sprinkled with sugar
and cinnamon.
I decided to drop all cynicism and
feel the love. Honestly, it was difficult to
resist a town committed to pulling off
the illusion of being located in the European Alps. Last year, a study from travel
company Next Vacay examined the
most Christmassy towns in America,
scoring them on criteria such as the
number of Christmas markets, snowfall
amounts, coziness, and Instagramable
winter scenes. Leavenworth took the
crown. The town looks like a small German village, it’s surrounded by snowcapped mountains, and has a reindeer
farm. There’s really no competition.
I was here in the fall, but Leavenworth seemed ready to roll out the holly.
The Christmas lights were being strung
up on the town common, and it was
snowing on the drive from Seattle
through the Cascade Mountains.
The town boasts 21 miles of holiday
lights through the winter, plus the requisite German Christmas markets and
Nordic sports. There are holiday events
every day in December. The town even
has its own Christmas song. Winter
Karneval promptly follows in January.
Before I made the rounds at the Biergartens and Nutcracker Museum, there
was one very serious question that required an answer: How did a tiny hamlet become a chalet-filled fantasy land?
The town may look as if it’s been around
for 200 years, but according to the vice
president of Leavenworth’s historical
museum, it began its Germanic-ish
transformation less than 60 years ago.
In its infancy, Leavenworth was a
prosperous place. In the 1860s, it was a
fur trading outpost, then a gold rush
boomtown, and finally an exporter of
timber. By the 1920s, the timber supply
had been depleted, the railroad had relocated, and Leavenworth was becoming a ghost town. But a pair of enterprising businessmen had a vision, and that
vision was ... Bavaria. Bob Rogers and
Ted Price, the aforementioned businessmen, began working with merchants,
Below: The view from Peshastin
Pinnacles State Park in Cashmere,
Wash.
PHOTOS BY CHRISTOPHER MUTHER/GLOBE STAFF
town officials, and the University of
Washington. In six years, the dead
downtown was well on its way to becoming what visitors marvel at today.
Everything in Leavenworth is Bavarian. Zoning laws are strict. Even chains
such as McDonald’s, Starbucks, and the
Hampton Inn sport Bavarian-style lettering and architecture. But the best
part of Leavenworth is that most of the
stores and restaurants are not chains.
Instead, Front Street (or Front Strasse,
as the street sign reads in a Germanic
font) is filled with independently owned
shops and restaurants.
It’s also where you’ll find the Nutcracker Museum. If you’re going to recreate an alpine town and make it the
most Christmasy locale in the country,
it should have a museum with a collection of more than 9,000 nutcrackers, beginning with prehistoric nutting stones
up to contemporary pop culture nutcrackers. It’s not all blocky wooden soldiers painted red. There’s at least two
Hillary Clinton nutcrackers, plus Yoda,
Elvis, elephants, squirrels, birds, every
Disney character imaginable, football
players, an entire nut-cracking brass
band, and, of course, soldiers in every
possible shade of uniform.
As you may have gathered, the word
“subtle” doesn’t really exist in Leavenworth, and that’s what makes it fun.
The pretzels are big, the bratwurst is
plentiful, and the gingerbread cookies
at the Gingerbread Factory are fresh
year-round. The cookies were so good
that you could eat them for breakfast.
Well, at least I did, and I’d do it again
despite the judgmental stares of passersby. The Christmas ornament shop,
Kris Kringl (no e, thank you), is not for
the faint of heart. I’d never seen so
many ornaments representing such a
wide variety of foods, sports, drinks, animals, and hobbies. You need an ornament that looks like a jar of almond butter? It’s here. How about a string of Bud
Light Christmas lights? Step right up.
I should mention that there’s a lot
more in Leavenworth than pretzels and
peppermint bark. Among the T-shirt
shops and souvenir stores, there’s the
Cheesemonger’s Shop, a European-style
chocolate shop called Schocolat, and
even a speakeasy called Pika Provisions.
For such a Lilliputian town, Leavenworth has a lot of dining options. Sulla
Vita is a shockingly good pizza restaurant with a very impressive patio.
There’s Mexican at Pavz Tacos, because
every faux Bavarian village deserves decent tacos, and a seafood restaurant
called Yodelin. Outside of downtown,
there’s fine dining at Wildflour, which
specializes in pasta.
But to be honest, I was here for the
kitsch and Christmas. I can find fine
Seeking a
chef for a
shark
expedition
uCHEF
Continued from Page N13
one of the world’s most severe shark attacks in 1963. Instead of heading to dry
land forever, Rodney invented the
world’s first subaquatic shark-diving
cage and founded a shark expedition
tour business. Today, Andrew Fox cooperates Rodney Fox Shark Expeditions, multiday cruises through the waters of Australia’s Neptune Islands,
where voracious appetites and expansive menus are top of mind. But the
feeding frenzies in question are human,
and this year, its crew is hoping to net a
new chef to fuel the staff and guests of
their voyages.
I reached out from one popular
shark hangout to another to learn more
about what Fox and the team are looking for in their next onboard chef, and
what’s different about cooking for cagedivers.
“As soon as the great white shark appears, everything stops,” said Fox. Everybody rushes to have that first look …
and quite often, they’re just all jumping
into their wet suits and trying to get into the cage, and that can be really frustrating for the chef actually, [who’s]
gone to a lot of trouble to make something.” But, he said, it’s something the
chefs come to understand about the
natural pace of expedition life.
Weather variations, shifting locations, and the unpredictable schedule of
the sharks themselves present additional challenges to navigate. Seasick sailors
may not tolerate food at all, and may
sleep for long periods of time.
“The chef needs to be ready to cook
at any time and wait till we get up into
calmer waters,” said Fox.
The onboard chef will have more
hassles to chart than sauce-on-siders, in
the parlance of the late Anthony Bourdain. The menu accommodates myriad
dietary requests. Cooks must cater to a
crew of up to 25, considering vegans
and vegetarians, Keto, and allergies to
lactose, gluten, alliums, and peppers, as
well as bake a mean birthday cake. But
that’s not all.
Though the guests may be green, the
chef shouldn’t be. Job requirements include experience working on vessels, so
that the chef is not surprised by motion
sickness and can maintain a long day
aboard, preparing breakfast and working into evenings. And, close quarters
PHOTOS BY ANDREW FOX
Mealtime on board a recent Rodney
Fox Shark Expedition (above) and
for sharks below the vessel (right).
means that the chef needs to be chummy with the existing crew.
“You’ve got to be able to work as a
team and get on with everybody, which
is hard for grumpy chefs sometimes,”
said Fox.
“It’s a real lifestyle choice,” he said.
The job is intense, but often served
through shorter terms, sometimes as
brief as weeks as opposed to entire seasons. The next chef will support an existing team, primarily a couple who are
readying their retirement plans and
would like some relief between dives.
As someone who gets seasick bobbing in Boston Harbor, it’s hard to imagine how adding apex predators to the
equation might further whet my appetite. It turns out that’s a common problem. While most experienced back-ofhouse teams know how to wrangle a
ravenous brunch crowd, shark tourists
are their own breed of diner. For one
thing, there’s an added ingredient: fear.
When seafaring challenges are overcome, Fox said that the nautical appetite becomes insatiable. Sharklike, you
could say.
“Once you get used to your sea legs,
nearly everybody admits to eating a lot
more than they normally do, and it
seems like the whole day revolves
around the mealtimes,” he said. Other
fare known to appear includes ovenroasted meats, piled with vegetables,
and shellfish sourced from nearby
coves. Fox recalls a wonderful chicken
curry dish special to one chef; another
excelled at tiramisu.
“After a dive, it’s wonderful to come
up and have a nice, hot cup of soup.”
The boat, Fox explained, is a former
pearling ship converted into a liveaboard-style vessel. In its previous life,
the boat traversed the remote waters of
the Northern Territories, seeding and
harvesting pearls. Now, the jewel of the
ship is its 25-person saloon, attached to
a galley which thrums with production
all day long. Tour-members can wander
in at any hour to find freshly-baked
muffins, scones, snacks, and gather
there at the end of a long day (unless beguiling weather inspires a sunset barbecue). Like the kitchens in most homes,
it is often a gathering place, redolent
with the scent of baking bread.
Shark season in New England peaks
in the fall, so I checked in with our local
shark-spotting boats to see if anyone is
dishing while fishing closer to home.
The Atlantic White Shark Conservancy,
research institute and source of the
Sharktivity tracking app, runs short
tours in search of sightings, and recommends packing a bag lunch.
“While guests are permitted to bring
food/snacks/drinks aboard the vessel
(no hard alcohol or glass allowed), we
operate on a ‘pack in pack out’ policy,”
said Captain Darren Saletta of Monomoy Sportfishing, who runs shark-spotting tours off Chatham.
“Shark tours are roughly two hours
long, and most clients opt not to eat on
dining anywhere, but reindeer farms
are entirely unique. I was under the assumption that the Leavenworth Reindeer Farm would be a sad petting zoo
with a few mangy reindeer and perhaps
an angry goat that gave visitors the
stink eye. Erika Bowie, the general manager of the family-run farm, set me
straight. The farm has a herd of 27 reindeer (also several cats) that look very robust. She’s like a walking encyclopedia
of reindeer facts. If you come here, you
will be schooled on all things reindeer,
like it or not.
“Reindeer have color changing eyes,
from brown to blue,” she excitedly explained. “They are the only mammal on
earth that can see in ultraviolet. They
can run 50 miles an hour and swim 6.2
miles per hour. That’s faster than Michael Phelps. The antler is the fastestgrowing tissue on the planet. It grows
up to an inch a day.”
After hearing all of that I opted
against sampling the reindeer sausage
at the snack bar, but according to Bowie, reindeer is a staple in her family’s native Norway. The farm has familyfriendly activities and tours, and is in
the process of erecting what will be the
West Coast’s largest geodesic projection
dome. Inside the dome, visitors will be
able to watch the northern lights and
reindeer herds from around the world
in 360 degrees.
On my flight from Boston to Washington state, a local told me to make
time for hiking around Leavenworth,
and after multiple bratwurst tastings, it
felt like it was time to heed his advice.
With my limited time — all that schnitzel wasn’t going to eat itself — I strategically chose Peshastin Pinnacles State
Park in nearby Cashmere. The 1½-mile
trail I took was steep, but the short hike
yielded dramatic views.
I’d like to say that watching the sunset and taking in the beauty of nature
truly filled me with the holiday spirit.
But who am I kidding? It was definitely
the gingerbread men that did the trick.
Christopher Muther can be reached at
christopher.muther@globe.com. Follow
him on Twitter @Chris_Muther and
Instagram @chris_muther.
these adventures. During trips, we are
often underway in the wind and sea at
speed, or hopefully viewing a shark …
which is an exhilarating experience for
most folks and not a choice time to partake in culinary delights.”
Chatham Fishing Charters operates
with a similar policy: Bagged lunches
are welcome, but please: no bananas —
they’re cursed. That’s an old nautical superstition often repeated on crafts, certainly apocryphal, but if you’re cruising
for great whites, you’ll need all the luck
you can get.
You don’t have to leave it to chance
with Down Cape Charters, which runs a
shark cruise through “Shark Alley,” a
stretch by Monomoy Island where
shark sightings are common, and which
features an “on the water menu.” Selections include picnic lunches: turkey
clubs, roast beef, and tuna, for example,
paired with kale salad or crudite. A kids’
menu features, brazenly, a banana burrito, and of course, Cape Cod potato
chips. T here is seafood cocktail:
poached shrimp, king crab, and lobster
rolls among that list, along with crisp
white wine to toast.
How, when faced with the prehistoric majesty of a 4,000-pound shark, can
anyone think about potato chips? But
like Rodney Fox, who saw that the only
way out of fear was through it, sharkwatchers find their own way: through
the kitchen.
“Even when great white sharks are
arriving, and there’s a lot of excitement,
sometimes the dinner bell gets everybody’s attention, and we’ll go in and
have a big feed.”
I asked Andrew Fox to describe the
scene on deck when the star arrives.
“When the fin first appears, they
hear the ‘Jaws’ music in their head —
they have that sort of fear of the unknown, that monster element — and
that sort of stops people from wanting
to snack.”
But that’s where the chef rises to the
challenge: She will emerge from the
kitchen, and, sharks circling, pass out
appetizers.
Fear owes so much to ignorance,
and, standing on the deck, maybe it’s
possible to get used to the sight of one of
nature’s most awesome predators. But
it’s hard not to imagine that a chef
knows something else: how to nourish
and comfort, despite circumstances.
And maybe that’s what’s different about
this job.
“That’s a wonderful thing, to be
served, you know, pies or quiches or
muffins and pizzas when people are up
watching sharks on the observation
decks,” said Fox. Adrenaline recedes
and appetites swell.
“Having great white sharks swim
around while you’re eating is a wonderful thing…” added Fox. “It’s like a very
exciting dinner party.”
November 6, 2022
DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau
GET FUZZY by Darby Conley
ZITS by Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman
CURTIS by Ray Billingsley
FOXTROT by Bill Amend
DILBERT ®
by Scott Adams
Boston Sunday Globe • November 6, 2022
ARLO & JANIS by Jimmy Johnson
CAPTION IT! by Steve Breen
Boston Sunday Globe • November 6, 2022
JUMP START by Robb Armstrong
PICKLES ®
by Brian Crane
THATABABY by Paul Trap
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE by Lynn Johnston
Boston Sunday Globe • November 6, 2022
ROSE IS ROSE by Pat Brady & Don Wimmer
POOCH CAFÉ by Paul Gilligan
BLISS by Harry Bliss
AFTER ROE, THE PERILS OF FAMILY PLANNING / MY REALTOR HATES MY FRONT DOOR / MAKE-AHEAD BREAKFAST TREATS
THE BOSTON GLOBE | NOVEMBER 6, 2022
YOUR HOME
Colorful Kitchens
&Baths
BY MARNI ELYSE KATZ
P H OTO G R A P H B Y T K / G LO B E S TA F F
FROM A
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NOVEMBER 6, 2022
8 Comments
14 Perspective I Froze My Eggs. Now I’m in the Middle
of the Abortion Debate.
16 Your Week Ahead Snowport at Seaport, artists’
showdown at the Mighty Squirrel, and more
17 Love Letters Cut Your Losses?
18 Style Watch Celtics-inspired Kids’ Bath
19 On the Block Hibernation Stations
20 Cooking Breakfast Baked Goods
22 Miss Conduct Better to Give?
23 Dinner With Cupid Funny Girl
45 The Puzzle Page
46 Connections My Realtor Hates My Front Door
On the Cover: Photograph by
Sean Litchfield for The Boston Globe
bostonglobe.com/magazine
Follow us on Instagram and Twitter
@bostonglobemag
Women & Power / October 30
In this annual special issue, we celebrate
women leaders and feature The Top 100
Women-led Businesses in Massachusetts,
a list from The Women’s Edge. Read about
post-Roe politics, FemTech, and more at
globe.com/magazine.
Kowloon, the Wongs, and the Remarkable
Perseverance of Chinese American
Cuisine / October 23
The legendary restaurant in Saugus is a
testament to a family’s hustle and ingenuity in
a country that has never truly given Chinese
food its due. Plus, an excerpt of an upcoming
novel about Samuel Adams.
5 Science-Based Secrets to Healthy Aging
October 16
How do we live longer and better? Find
practical, proven methods for getting the most
out of life. Plus, it’s never too late to learn a
new tune.
The Education Issue / October 2
During the pandemic, Boston’s Mary Lyon
High leaned on its community to soar at a
time when others floundered. Also, a school
handbook for parents and caregivers, and a
look at happiness and adolescents.
6
THE BOSTON GLOBE MAGAZINE
20
24
YOUR HOME: KITCHENS AND BATHS
BY MARNI ELYSE KATZ
24 Mellow Yellow
30 Rustic and Refined
Taking inspiration from the 1920s, a designer
refreshes a Fryeburg, Maine, home and makes
it family-ready.
A young family creates a soulful kitchen by
finding inspiration from their Charlestown
cottage’s antique elements.
28 Touch Points
34 Green Dreams
A designer weaves similar colors, materials,
and textures through three bathrooms in a
Freeport, Maine, home.
A couple in Winchester finds the perfect
shade of green for the kitchen of their
Victorian home.
EDITOR Francis Storrs ART DIRECTOR Greg Klee ARTICLES EDITORS Young-Jin Kim, Annalisa Quinn WEB PRODUCER Stacey Myers COPY EDITOR
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COMMENTS
Respectful Response
The question to Miss Conduct seemed to be a thinly
veiled, “Aren’t they doing
it wrong?” (“Final Say,”
September 18). It’s an invitation to a memorial with
a request for an RSVP from
a grieving family. Even if
it isn’t the “accepted way”
of doing things, it’s not an
affront to civilized society.
The letter writer could
have asked the same question [in a way] that would
have been fact finding, not
pointing out the perceived
wrongdoing of others.
astrodex
posted on bostonglobe.com
This is my favorite bit from
Robin Abrahams I’ve ever
read for two reasons. 1)
A huge pet peeve of mine
is when people do exactly
what this letter writer is
doing and obsess—“Well,
I’ve never seen it done this
way before!” and “Isn’t
this the wrong way to do
it?” The correct way to do
almost anything is however
those involved want to, so
long as it’s respectful and
doesn’t harm anybody. 2)
The response is written
in a way that really asks
the writer to delve deep
into their reaction, in a
way that could hopefully
provoke learning from it.
It’s brilliant.
kheebs27
posted on bostonglobe.com
Wow, that was nasty! (Well,
at least that was my first
thought; more politely, I
guess I’d say that “I was really surprised at the tone of
Miss Conduct’s response.”)
The letter writer, who
was probably born before
e-mail, is confronted with
what apparently is a newer
(to her) way of managing a
“celebration of life,” which
8
THE BOSTON GLOBE MAGAZINE
is also a newer way of approaching what used to be
called a “funeral.” Why not
treat her with the kindness
one treats the 4-year-old in
the “Why?” stage? Education is a powerful gift. “As
an experiment, try assuming everyone is doing their
best with what they’ve got
for a week. I bet it will feel
good.” I’d encourage Miss
Conduct to re-read this last
paragraph that she wrote,
and apply it to herself.
Ann Somers
Brookline, New Hampshire
I tend to ask why a lot as
well, and this question
from the reader certainly
helped me see my own
attributional style and is
encouraging me to have
more compassion.
12x99screenname
posted on bostonglobe.com
My husband and brother
both died recently, and we
had celebrations of life for
both. With my husband,
word was spread via Facebook and I asked people
to let me know if they
knew they were coming,
but made it clear anyone
should feel welcome to
show up at the last minute.
I knew how many chairs
to have, that I needed a
microphone, and most importantly, how much food
to get. I also knew what
size venue I needed. It was
very successful. With my
brother, we had no invitations, no way to gauge how
many to expect, and it was
a lot less smooth, and actually kind of stressful. The
last thing anyone needs
at this emotional time is
stress. Help the grieving
family out and do as they
request without criticism.
cellar door
posted on bostonglobe.com
This is a good example as
to why most should leave
Called to Serve
instructions upon their
passing. Then all that
needs to be said is, “This
was his/her wishes,” and it
takes the pressure off family members.
JAG49
posted on bostonglobe.com
Thank you, Mark Pothier,
for your candid account
of jury service in Perspective (“I Thought Jury Duty
Would be a Drag. Then I
Served,” September 25). It
captures well the frustrations, satisfaction, and
ultimate importance of
that experience. It also
matches my own on the
two occasions I have
served as a juror (the most
recent having been while I
was a sitting Appeals Court
justice). In 2011, I was part
of a delegation of Massachusetts judges and court
officials who participated
in a conference in Xiangtan, China, regarding the
American jury trial system.
Listening to the questions
End to Gridlock
I’ve tried and been frustrated for years by the
Brendan Emmett Quigley
puzzles in Sunday’s Globe.
I usually curse and give up
but I kept the September
18 puzzle (“Themeless
Challenger”) active for the
week and I’m delighted
to finally claim “success”—completed with 18
cheats!
Mary Cooney
Dorchester
Puzzles on Page 45
THE GLOBE PUZZLE SOLUTION
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and concerns of our Chinese counterparts,
I realized for the first time what a remarkably and fundamentally democratic right
our jury system provides. We entrust the
ultimate decision in both civil and criminal
trials to ordinary citizens, who are pulled
from random lists, and expected to listen
impartially to the evidence and to apply the
law. That faith in the wisdom of ordinary
citizens is unsurprising to us as Americans,
but seemed incomprehensible to adherents
of an autocratic, centrally controlled society. And, yet, some in our country take it
for granted. Commentary like this helps to
restore an awareness of the value of what
recently retired Supreme Court Justice
Stephen Breyer calls “active citizenship.”
Massachusetts Appeals Court
Chief Justice Mark V. Green
Brookline
Outstanding article on jury service! Should
be required reading for everyone called for
jury duty.
William J. Lundregan
Marblehead
As a retired attorney, I was captivated by
this article. It is my hope that prospective
jurors will read it and, if called, find the
patience to apply these suggestions. Most
important is the ability to stay “neutral”
and to listen intently to the witnesses and
judge. In my own experience, I have found
people to have a natural ability to sense
when a witness is sincere. The experience
can be life-changing.
Barbara F Gordon
Beverly
Juries are unlike voters in elections. First,
there is no advertising controlled by
wealth. Second, there is a greater effort to
avoid prejudice or pre-judgment. Third, a
judge decides what, by law, may be offered
to a jury, and what may not, unlike the lies
exchanged by candidates. Perhaps elections should be run the same way.
Richard D. Gilman
Lexington
As a retired judge, I am always interested
in hearing about jurors’ experiences. It’s
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COMMENTS
Continued from Page 11
to be interviewed by the
judge and attorneys.”
What I learned is that, as a
potential juror, you sit on
the stand and are questioned by the judge and
attorneys as if you are on
trial. This is done in front
of the defendant, if they
so choose. This includes
people charged with very
violent crimes. I’m sure it
was said in the briefing but
the full weight of that was
not clear until it happened.
I think this is a key component of jury duty selection
that cannot be repeated
enough.
Jen Millett
Worcester
I served on a jury on a
drunken-driving case many
years ago and was gratefully dismissed as a potential
juror on a murder case a
few years past that. In both
circumstances I certainly
felt the importance of this
service in our society. May
I suggest that the Globe
elaborates on this topic in
some journalistic manner,
in order to present the
challenge of jury service
while we all lead busy
lives, and its importance in
our society? For how else
should we decide cases?
See if defendants scream
while walking across hot
coals? Enable some King
Solomon to make these
decisions? This democratic
institution should be better
presented and celebrated.
Robert Rosofsky
Milton
Written Off
I chuckled at the comment
in Miss Conduct (“Pause
and Effect,” September
25) about interacting with
vendors in booths, where
she mentioned “the classic Boston maneuver of
avoiding eye contact and
pretending the other person isn’t there.” I moved
from Chicago to Boston
over 30 years ago and I
still remember on the first
day of my new job, a guy
who interviewed me and
helped hire me walked
right by me in the hall
without looking at me or
saying hi. What is going
on? I thought.
Gayle H. Edson
Wakefield
I have a very talented artist sister who used to do
craft fairs, and here are a
couple more tips: Beyond
not pretending the person
isn’t there, also don’t
proclaim loudly to your
companion, “I could make
this at home!” Maybe
you could, but you likely
couldn’t. Also, don’t complain (again usually loudly
to your companion, but
also to the artist) about
the price. You can buy it
or not—it’s not a necessity
like milk or diapers—but
most artists charge pennies on the hour for their
work and undervalue
their art simply so people
actually will buy it. As a
mystery writer, I’ve often
sat at booths at craft fairs
with other local writers. At almost every one
a man (never the same
guy, but always a man),
comes and loudly and
proudly proclaims that he
doesn’t read. My response
is always, “I feel bad for
you—you’re missing a lot!”
Maureen Milliken
Belgrade Lakes, Maine
CONTACT US
Write to magazine@globe.com or The Boston Globe Magazine/
Comments, 1 Exchange Place, Suite 201, Boston, MA 02109-2132.
Comments are subject to editing.
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
13
INSIDE
LOVE LETTERS: UNHAPPILY EVER AFTER? P. 17
COOKING: MAKE-AHEAD BAKED TREATS P. 20
MISS CONDUCT: ‘GIVING SEASON’ ANGST P. 22
“I WAS CALM BECAUSE I KNEW THE DATE WOULD BE WITH A WOMAN, SO AT LEAST THE CONVERSATION WOULD BE GOOD.” DINNER WITH CUPID, P. 23
PERSPECTIVE
BY DR. ADJOA ANYANE-YEBOA
was always the listener and never the freezer.
Chicago’s winter mornings are kind to no
one, but the cold is especially harsh while
waiting outside in a 2010 Honda Civic. I
watched as a nurse escorted my friend through
the glass doors of a fertility clinic and toward my
car. “I did it!” she exclaimed, as she lowered her
body into the passenger seat. Hours before, I had
pulled up to the entrance of the clinic to drop her
off for her egg freezing procedure.
As the seasons changed and the weather
I
14
THE BOSTON GLOBE MAGAZINE
turned warmer, the topic of freezing eggs came
up again while another friend grilled me about
my love life over a round of margaritas. I had to
admit I hadn’t been on any interesting dates or
found anyone who wanted to be in a serious relationship. I’d been too busy anyway, with on-call
stints of over 24 hours and at times even sleeping
at the hospital. My friend had scraped together
enough time to make a successful Tinder match,
but so far I hadn’t been that lucky. “You should
definitely consider freezing your eggs,” she said.
“It really seems to take the stress off of dating.”
I knew I could never settle for a relationship
just to have children before my biological timer
ran down, so I stopped just listening. Started
moving. And entered the reality that egg freezing
and in vitro fertilization are still taboo for a lot
of reasons, not the least of which is that they are
now under attack in the recently intensified abortion controversy.
The abortion bans enveloping more and more
states may also affect IVF decisions, mine included; I may not have complete control over the destiny of my future embryos when I decide to have
children—or not have children. If, during the IVF
process, I decided at some point that my family
I M A G E S F R O M A D O B E S TO C K ; G LO B E S TA F F P H OTO I L L U S T R AT I O N
I Froze My Eggs. Now I’m in the
Middle of the Abortion Fight.
was complete, I may not be able to discard
ed or chromosomally abnormal, and opmy unused embryos, if there were any.
tions for storage and use.
I may be forced to donate them to other
Approximately 12 percent of women
people or to keep having babies, which cre- who have abortions do so for medical reaates health risks and other complications
sons. A woman who becomes pregnant but
with each additional pregnancy.
has an ectopic pregnancy, miscarriage, or
As a physician, I’ve always known that
otherwise abnormal pregnancy, may need
the ability to access all types of birth conto terminate the pregnancy to protect her
trol is essential to providing good healthhealth. Even women not at high risk who
care, but that was the extent of my permiscarry for natural causes may need a
sonal connection to the abortion debate.
procedure that has become outlawed in
It never involved me—until the Supreme
some states. Because of these reasons,
Court’s recent Dobbs v. Jackson deciabortion has long been a normal extension
sion, which ruled that the US Constitution
of care for women. Not anymore.
Many patients from states that have
doesn’t grant a right to abortion, wrapped
me into it.
restricted abortion access are calling Dr.
Jackson-Bey’s office to ask if they can
Living in Chicago then and now in Bosfreeze embryos at her New
ton, I’ve had access to an
Many IVF patients
abortion if I wanted or
York City clinic. She advises
women who live in restrictneeded one; Illinois and
worry about
Massachusetts protect that
ed states and are undergowhat will happen
right. But every year, thouing IVF to take a proactive
to their future
approach — identify the
sands of medical providembryos and to
ers move to rural areas and
states nearest to them that
red states to provide care to
protect the right to aborthemselves if they
tion, understand the remarginalized patient popubecome pregnant.
lations. My job could take
sources available there, and
know what benefits their
me to a state that has effectively banned these proceemployers offer to support
dures — and in so doing, my future family.
those seeking abortion care.
A lot happens when you go from listenAnd if I land in such a place, the only
way these laws won’t affect me is if lawing to living. You realize that you probably
makers decide my embryos will count only weren’t listening closely enough. Intellecafter they are transferred to my uterus and tually, I knew what reproductive control
not before. Alabama Republican state Senwas before I pulled up outside the fertility clinic to help my friend, and before I
ator Clyde Chambliss once said, “The egg
in the lab doesn’t apply. It’s not in a wompulled out all the stops to ensure I could
an. She’s not pregnant.” In saying that, he
have the family I always envisioned. I’m
not pregnant and I don’t have a plan to
provided perhaps the boldest admission
that overturning Roe v. Wade is about con- conceive any time soon. I’m just an egg
trolling women, not protecting unborn
freezer now, yet I’m in the middle of the
abortion fight like so many other women,
babies.
I’m far from alone in having these construggling to find legal abortion care.
I can’t think of any woman I know who
cerns. Dr. Tia Jackson-Bey, a gynecologist and fertility specialist at Reproductive
hasn’t somehow felt caught in this political
Medicine Associates of New York, says
maelstrom. While I hope that my future
pregnancies are intentional and desired,
that many of her patients worry about
what will happen to their future emI’m still at a heightened risk of the governbryos and to themselves if they become
ment intruding on my womb, all because
I’m a freezer now.
pregnant. The big question for IVF in the
Dobbs debate is whether embryos have
Dr. Adjoa Anyane-Yeboa is a gastroentera right to personhood; this determines
options for these embryos in the future,
ologist at Massachusetts General Hospital.
whether they can be discarded if unwantSend comments to magazine@globe.com.
Homes,
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support our mission and
help build homes for families.
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
15
Upfront
OPENS WEDNESDAY
Shaking Up Shakespeare
YOUR WEEK AHEAD 11/7-11/13
MONDAY
Watch artists go head-tohead at Art Battle Boston, an all-ages event at
the Mighty Squirrel Brewing
Co., in Waltham. Competitors will participate in three
20-minute rounds to turn
blank canvases into art. The
finished products will be
available for purchase in a
silent auction. 6 p.m. Tickets:
$20. artbattle.com
Don’t lose your head — SIX: The Musical opens at the Emerson’s Colonial
Theatre in Boston. The Tony Awardwinning Broadway musical tells the
stories of the six wives of Henry VIII,
remixing their traditional historical
narratives. Runs through December 31.
Recommended for ages 10 and older.
Find tickets, starting at $44.75, at
emersoncolonialtheatre.com.
WEDNESDAY
Harrowing History
Learn about a tragic, transformative
moment in local history when Stephanie Schorow gives a talk from her new
book,The Great Boston Fire: The
Inferno That Nearly Incinerated
the City. In a free event at Central
Library in Copley Square, the local
author will retell the events that led to
the fire 150 years ago. 6 p.m. Registration required at bpl.bibliocommons.
com/events.
OPENS FRIDAY
Seaport’s winter experience, Snowport, opens for the season, featuring
a festive, open-air holiday market
with more than 120 vendors. There
will also be fun activities, such as
iceless curling and a tree market, and
a dining area. Free admission. Open
daily through December 31. Find hours,
more information at bostonseaport.
xyz/snowport.
Creative
Combat
SHARE YOUR EVENT NEWS.
Send information on Boston-area
happenings at least three weeks in
advance to week@globe.com.
16
16
T H E B O STO N G LO B E M AGA Z I N E
THE BOSTON GLOBE MAGAZINE
SATURDAY
Ocean’s Mysteries
Join underwater photographer Keith
Ellenbogen for Swimming with
Sharks: A Photographic Journey.
The lecture at the Harvard Museum of
Natural History will take the audience
on an adventure through his photographs and stories of his encounters
with sharks, whales, and other sea
creatures. Recommended for children
ages 10 and older. 2 p.m. Free with
museum admission, $10-15. Registration required at hmsc.harvard.edu.
I M A G E S F R O M A D O B E S TO C K ; G LO B E S TA F F P H OTO I L L U S T R AT I O N
Wintry Feeling
be unhappy, and yes we have tried marriage counseling multiple times with no
real improvement.) – Unhappily Ever After
Talk to a divorce lawyer or mediator about how this works in your
state. You’d probably be entitled
to retirement money. That’s kind of how it
works; usually things get split.
A divorce would change how you live,
even if you wind up with support. You’re
right to assume you’d be sacrificing
comfort, at least for a while. This might
require you to find more than part-time
work and live in a smaller place. Also, the
process of getting to an agreement with
your husband might be very difficult.
But based on your letter, it’s clear you’re
focused on what you’re missing —which
includes seeing friends and family as
a happier person on your own. Being
single — even if you’re not dating —might
be a lot of fun. It would bring new experiences and, perhaps, a lot of joy.
I’m imagining what letter you might
write in your 60s if you stay. Another 10
years with the same question on your
mind doesn’t sound appealing.
I hope you’re in counseling for yourself.
I also hope there are a few friends you can
talk to about this.
Many lawyers and mediators will do a
first consultation free. There’s also public
information from your state. Find out
more before you decide you’re stuck.
– Meredith
A.
LOVE LETTERS
At a Premium
“IN A PERFECT WORLD, I
WOULD LIKE TO DIVORCE.”
.
I am in my 50s and have been
married for 28 years with three
adult children. I have been deeply
unhappy in my marriage for a very, very
long time. My husband is not a bad
person — there’s no abuse — we’ve just
not grown together. There is no physical
or emotional intimacy, and, in a perfect
world, I would like a divorce. We no longer
have much of anything in common, sharing different views on most everything. We
essentially live as roommates.
The problem is that for a large part
of our marriage I was a stay-at-home
mom, and then only worked part time to
remain available as the primary caregiver
as the kids grew up. Therefore, I have no
retirement of my own built up. If we were
to divorce, my fear is being financially
unstable and unable to support myself. It
would be wonderful to have the chance to
meet someone to share my life with in a
healthy, happy, loving relationship, but it’s
not a given that would ever happen even
if we were to divorce. My question is: Do I
stay in an unsatisfying marriage where I’m
financially secure and really able to spend
my time with family and friends as I wish,
or do I divorce and start a new life with no
promise of financial stability?
If I were younger it would be a different
story, but at this age it’s really frightening
to make such a big change. (It should be
noted that my husband does not seem to
Q.
READERS RESPOND
You may feel badly for taking half of everything
but that’s the payment for a life’s worth of raising
JONRUNSGRAFTON
the family.
RELIABLE.
RESPONSIBLE.
REALTOR.®
For an ally who
reflects your
values, look for
the R.
To find a REALTOR®, visit
realtor.com/realestateagents
If you don’t go the divorce route then get counseling now and see if maybe you can infuse some
life back into your marriage. I would not keep the
status quo.
SUNALSORISES
Take that leap of faith. In the long run, this huge
step [could be] one of the best things you have
done for your self.
MHOUSTON1
Find the new season of the Love Letters
podcast at loveletters.show.
Meredith Goldstein wants your letters! Send your relationship quandaries and questions to loveletters@globe.com.
Columns and responses are edited and reprinted from boston.com/loveletters.
www.gbar.org | 617-423-8700
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
17
Upfront
6
STYLE WATCH
5
4
3
C
olor Theory’s clients, a Milton family of
five, love pop culture of all kinds. They’re
also die-hard Boston Celtics fans. So, when
it came to remaking the kids’ bath, designers
Brad Dufton and Kendra Amin-Dufton wanted to
speak their language. The jade green vanity and
sunny yellow-framed mirrors hint at the team’s
colors. They chose a rainbow of sorbet shades
for the other millwork, and set it all against a
graphic black and white tile background. “We
wanted the bath to be fresh and invigorating to
help get their day going,” Dufton says.
1 The vanity, made by Dorchester-based woodworker
Mark Brunke, is painted Benjamin Moore’s Medici Malachite. The pure white Caesarstone countertop is durable
and easy to maintain.
2 The designers used exterior house letters in matte black
metal as pulls for each child’s drawer. “It goes from oldest
to youngest, top to bottom,” Dufton says. “We thought it
might help prevent arguments in the morning.”
2
That’s
the Spirit
A PLAYFUL KIDS’ BATH
IN MILTON NODS EVER
SO SLIGHTLY TO THE
BOSTON CELTICS.
BY MARNI ELYSE KATZ
4 The mirrors with yellow powder-coated metal frames
came from Room & Board, and the small towel bar
makes perfect use of the space between them.
5 The floating shelves are painted Benjamin Moore’s
Myrtle Beach and Luscious. “These watered down hot
tones are complementary to the green,” Amin-Dufton
says. “They remind me of Sweet Tarts.” The tower cabinet
across from the sink (there’s a glimpse of it in the mirror)
is painted Benjamin Moore’s Feather Soft.
6 Eight-inch-square tiles from Tile Bar, each with a handdrawn geometric shape, cover the wall behind the sink
and the floor. “We told the contractor to lay them out randomly and not let them repeat,” Dufton says. “However
they land, they land.”
18
THE BOSTON GLOBE MAGAZINE
PHOTOGRAPH BY MICHAEL J. LEE
1
3 The duo stuck with simple white subway tiles for the
shower, stacked vertically (reflected in the mirror), so as
not to compete with the patterned tiles on the wall and
floor. Matte black plumbing fixtures from Vigo stand out
against them.
ON THE BLOCK
Hibernation Stations
THESE HOMES HAVE COZY SLEEPING ALCOVES IN WHICH
TO SAVOR AN EXTRA HOUR IN BED.
$639,000
Towel ring
Bright brass
6" diameter, brand new
Plus member price
$8.00
127 BEACON STREET #1 / BACK BAY
SQUARE FEET 509
CONDO FEE $207 a month
BEDROOMS 0 BATHS 1
LAST SOLD FOR $555,000 in 2017
PROS This pet-friendly studio with central air, hardwood
floors, and high ceilings is in an 1899 brownstone, and sits a
block from the Public Garden and the Arthur Fiedler Footbridge to the Esplanade. Enter into the galley kitchen, which
is remodeled with quartz counters, white Shaker-style cabinets, and stainless appliances. The newer bath at right has
beadboard wainscoting and tropical-motif wallpaper. A large
arched window, flanked by built-in shelves and cabinets, is
the focal point of the living and dining area. Folding French
doors open to a bedroom nook with built-in storage cubbies.
Shared laundry facilities are in the hallway, and there’s a garden space out front. CONS Unit is at basement level.
BARRIE STAVIS, KELLER WILLIAMS REALTY, 978-973-3229,
STEVENCOHENTEAM.COM
$799,000
145 MILTON STREET / QUINCY
SQUARE FEET 1,421
LOT SIZE 0.13 acre
BEDROOMS 3 BATHS 1 full, 1 half
LAST SOLD FOR Unknown price in 1969
found it at the
Reuse Center
If you are doing a renovation
or looking for the perfect home
fixture, look first at the Reuse
Center at Boston Building
Resources. We have thousands
of one-of-a-kind items for your
home. New items arrive every
day and can save you hundreds
or thousands of dollars off what
you could pay somewhere else.
You’ll find treasures, every day.
PROS This 1925 Colonial occupies a corner lot in a quiet
neighborhood between the Wollaston Red Line station and
the shops of East Milton Square. Step through a mudroom
with bay windows and into the living room with fireplace
and hardwood floors. Past the dining room, the older kitchen
boasts some vintage charm, including an arched alcove with
banquette seating, and a flip-down ironing board cabinet. A
nearby half bath rounds out the first floor. Upstairs, there’s a
built-in linen cabinet in the hall; three bedrooms, one with a
sleeping alcove, share a bath. There’s laundry in the partially
finished basement. Outside, there’s lots of yard space and a
one-car garage. CONS Could use some cosmetic updates.
AMY REES, COLDWELL BANKER, 508-250-4293,
AMYREESREALTOR.COM
— JON GOREY
BostonBuildingResources.com
617-442-2262
This item is an example only and has already been sold
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
19
Upfront
IN THE KITCHEN WITH
CHRISTOPHER KIMBALL
AND THE COOKS AT
MILK STREET
Savory Kale and
Two-Cheese
Scones
FRESH BREADS AND SCONES ARE PERFECT
CHOICES FOR BREAKFAST.
BY CHRISTOPHER KIMBALL
o serve a crowd for breakfast, a make-ahead
baked treat beats acting like a short order cook
any time. And that doesn’t have to mean sugarladen pastries. For our take on English scones,
we skew savory by lacing them with kale, cheddar, and
pecorino Romano, plus currants for contrasting pops of
sweet-tart flavor. From Morocco, harcha are semolina
flatbreads baked in a skillet, which pair well with either
sweet or savory accompaniments. And from Eastern
Europe, a swirled poppy seed loaf gets mild sweetness
from a quick powdered sugar glaze.
T
Savory Kale and
Two-Cheese Scones
MAKES 12 LARGE SCONES
This recipe is our adaptation of the hearty kale and
cheese scones created by
Briana Holt, of Tandem
Coffee + Bakery in Portland, Maine. Either lacinato
(also called dinosaur or
Tuscan kale) or curly kale
will work; you will need
an average-sized bunch
to obtain the amount of
chopped, stemmed leaves
for the recipe.
The buttermilk and butter should stay chilled before use; keeping them cold
helps ensure that the dough
will remain workable and
won’t become unmanageably soft during shaping.
And, when rotating
the baking sheets halfway
through the baking time,
work quickly so the oven
doesn’t lose too much heat.
½ cup (80 grams) dried currants
4 cups (87 grams) stemmed and
1
3½
¼
4
½
1¼
2
16
4
½
1½
1
¼
finely chopped lacinato or
curly kale (see headnote)
tablespoon lemon juice
cups (455 grams) all-purpose
flour, plus more for dusting
cup (50 grams) white sugar
teaspoons baking powder
teaspoon baking soda
teaspoons table salt
teaspoons ground black
pepper
tablespoons (2 sticks) salted
butter, cut into ½-inch pieces
and chilled
ounces (1 cup) sharp or extrasharp cheddar cheese, cut into
¼-inch cubes
ounce (¼ cup) finely grated
pecorino Romano cheese
cups cold buttermilk
large egg, beaten
cup raw, shelled sunflower
seeds
Heat the oven to 375 degrees with racks in the
upper- and lower-middle
positions. Line 2 rimmed
baking sheets with kitchen parchment. In a small
microwave-safe bowl, stir
together the currants and 2
tablespoons water. Micro-
wave uncovered on high until warm and plump, about
30 seconds; set aside. In a
medium bowl, toss the kale
and lemon juice; set aside.
In a large bowl, whisk together the flour, sugar, baking powder, baking soda,
salt, and pepper.
To a food processor, add
about half of the flour mixture and scatter all of the
butter over the top. Pulse
until the butter is in pieces
slightly larger than peas,
10 to 12 pulses. Transfer to
the bowl with the remaining flour mixture. Add the
currants and any remaining liquid, and the cheddar, pecorino, and kale.
Toss with your hands until
well combined. Add about
‚ of the buttermilk and
toss just a few times with
your hands, making sure to
scrape along the bottom of
the bowl, until the liquid is
absorbed. Add the remaining buttermilk in 2 more
additions, tossing after
each. After the final addition of buttermilk, toss until
no dry, floury bits remain.
The mixture will be quite
crumbly and will not form a
cohesive dough.
Lightly dust the counter
with flour, turn the mixture
out onto it, then give it a
final toss. Divide it into 2
even piles, gathering each
into a mound, then briefly
knead each mound; it’s fine
if the mixture is still somewhat crumbly. Gather each
mound into a ball, then
press firmly into a cohesive
5-inch disk about 1½-inches thick. Using a chef’s
knife, cut each disk into 6
wedges. Place 6 wedges on
each prepared baking sheet,
spaced evenly apart. Brush
the tops with the beaten
egg, then sprinkle with the
sunflower seeds, pressing
lightly to adhere.
Bake until the scones are
deep golden brown, 30 to
35 minutes, switching and
rotating the baking sheets
halfway through. Cool on
the baking sheets on wire
racks for 5 minutes, then
transfer directly to a rack
Globe readers get 12 weeks of Milk Street print magazine plus complete digital access for just $1. Go to 177milkstreet.com/globe
20
THE BOSTON GLOBE MAGAZINE
P H OTO G R A P H S B Y C O N N I E M I L L E R O F C B C R E AT I V E S
Rise and Shine
4
tablespoons (½ stick) salted
butter, cut into 8 pieces and
chilled
¼ cup whole-milk, plain yogurt
and cool for at least another
5 minutes. Serve warm or at
room temperature.
Moroccan Semolina
Flatbreads (Harcha)
MAKES 8 SMALL FLATBREADS
They can skew either sweet
(paired with jam or honey
butter) or savory (paired
with a beef stew). However
they are served, harcha are
best eaten warm, straight
from the skillet, though
they can be made a day in
advance and reheated on
a baking sheet in a warm
oven. To create more surface area for buttering, split
the rounds into two.
The soaked semolina
should not stand for longer
than 10 minutes, otherwise
the mixture will not be hot
enough to melt the butter.
1½ cups ( 256 grams) semolina
flour, divided
½ teaspoon baking powder
¼ teaspoon baking soda
2 teaspoons white sugar
1½ teaspoons kosher salt
In a small bowl, whisk ¼
cup (43 grams) of the semolina with the baking powder
and baking soda. Set aside.
In a large bowl, whisk together the remaining 1¼
cups (213 grams) semolina,
the sugar, and the salt. Add
¾ cup boiling water and
mix with a fork until evenly
moistened. Let stand for 10
minutes. Meanwhile, line a
baking sheet with kitchen
parchment and mist with
cooking spray.
To the moistened semolina, add the butter and mix
with the fork until smooth.
Add the yogurt and stir until combined, then stir in
the baking powder-semolina
mixture. Gather the dough
into a smooth mass in the
bowl.
Pinch off about 1 tablespoon of the dough and set
aside to test the skillet’s heat
before cooking. Divide the
remaining dough into 8 portions and space them evenly
on the prepared baking
sheet. Using your hand, gently flatten each into a round
about 3½ inches in diameter and ¼-inch thick. Refrigerate uncovered to slightly
firm, about 5 minutes.
Meanwhile, warm a 12inch nonstick skillet over
medium heat for about 3
minutes. To test if the pan
is sufficiently hot, add the
reserved bit of dough; it
should turn golden brown
in about 1 minute. Remove
and discard the test piece.
Using your hands, transfer 4 dough rounds to the
pan and cook until golden
brown and slightly puffed,
about 2 minutes. Flip and
cook until golden brown
on the second sides, about
another 2 minutes. Transfer
to a plate and cover with a
kitchen towel. Repeat with
the remaining 4 rounds.
Poppy Seed Bread
MAKES ONE 1¾-POUND LOAF
The bread can be baked
a day in advance. If that’s
your plan, hold off on making and applying the glaze.
Wrap the cooled, unglazed
loaf tightly in plastic and
store at room temperature.
About 30 minutes before
serving, make the glaze and
drizzle it on.
Be sure to use roomtemperature butter for this
recipe; if it’s cold and firm,
it won’t incorporate properly into the dough.
To process the seeds,
don’t use a food processor,
as they won’t break down;
an electric coffee grinder
dedicated to spice grinding
is the best tool for the task.
A sharp paring or carving
knife should be used to slash
the loaf before baking. Avoid
using a serrated knife, as the
blade will tug at the dough
and make ragged cuts.
1¼ cups whole milk
1/3 cup honey
2 tablespoons grated lemon
zest, plus 4 teaspoons
lemon juice
1 large egg
1½ teaspoons instant yeast
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
2½ cups (325 grams) all-purpose
flour, plus more as needed
1¼ teaspoons kosher salt, divided
6 tablespoons (¾ stick) salted
butter, cut into 6 pieces,
room temperature
1 cup poppy seeds
1/3 cup white sugar
2/3 cup powdered sugar
In a medium saucepan,
combine the milk, honey,
and lemon zest. Warm over
medium heat, whisking
frequently, until the honey
dissolves and the mixture
is just warm to the touch,
about 2 minutes; do not
simmer. Off heat, measure
¾ cup of the mixture into
the bowl of a stand mixer;
leave the remainder in the
saucepan and set aside. Mist
a large bowl with cooking
spray and set aside.
To the mixer bowl, whisk
in the egg, yeast, and vanilla. Add the flour and 1
teaspoon of salt. Mix with
the dough hook on low until
an evenly moistened dough
forms, about 2 minutes;
the dough should be sticky
to the touch but should
not cling to the sides of the
bowl. If the dough feels too
wet, knead in more flour
1 tablespoon at a time.
Increase to medium and
add the butter 1 piece at
a time, mixing until fully
incorporated after each;
if the butter clings to the
bowl, scrape down the
sides. After all the butter
has been added, continue
mixing until the dough is
smooth and silky, about 2
minutes. Transfer to the
prepared bowl, cover with
plastic wrap, and let rise in
a warm, draft-free spot until
the dough doubles in size,
1½ to 2 hours.
Meanwhile, using an
electric spice grinder, process the poppy seeds in 3
batches, grinding until fine
and powdery, about 15 seconds; add each batch to the
remaining milk mixture in
the saucepan. Add the white
sugar and the remaining
¼ teaspoon salt, then set
the pan over medium heat
and cook, stirring occasionally with a silicone spatula,
until simmering and thick
enough that the spatula
leaves a clear trail when
drawn through the center,
3 to 5 minutes. Transfer to
a medium bowl and let cool
to room temperature; the
mixture will continue to
thicken as it cools.
When the dough has
doubled in size, heat the
oven to 325 degrees with
the rack in the middle position. Line a baking sheet
with kitchen parchment.
On a counter dusted
generously with flour, use a
rolling pin to roll the dough
to a 12-inch square about
‹-inch thick. Spread the
poppy seed filling in an even
layer on the dough, leaving a ½-inch border along
all edges. Starting with the
side closest to you, roll the
dough into a tight cylinder; pinch the seam to seal.
Transfer seam side down to
the prepared baking sheet.
Pinch the open ends to
seal, then tuck the pinched
seams under. Loosely cover
with plastic wrap and let
rise in a draft-free spot until almost doubled in bulk,
about 30 minutes.
Using a sharp paring
knife, and starting in the
center of the loaf, make a
shallow diagonal cut, about
4 inches long; cut through
the outermost layer of
dough to reveal the filling
just underneath. Make 2
more evenly spaced cuts on
each side of the center one,
for a total of 5 cuts. Bake
until the bread is deep golden brown, 35 to 45 minutes; if you have an instant
thermometer, the center of
the loaf should reach 200
degrees. Let cool completely on the baking sheet on a
wire rack, at least 1 hour.
In a small bowl, whisk
together the powdered sugar and lemon juice. Drizzle
the glaze onto the loaf. Let
dry for about 30 minutes.
Christopher Kimball is the
founder of Milk Street, home
to a magazine, school, and
radio and television shows.
Send comments to magazine@globe.com.
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
21
Upfront
MISS CONDUCT
Better to Give?
A DECISION TO NOT EXCHANGE
CHRISTMAS PRESENTS
IS CREATING TENSION.
My sister-in-law has mandated that we not
exchange Christmas presents this year. Neither time nor money is an issue for her family. I enjoy shopping, wrapping, and sending
the gifts. Her decree has put me in a no-win
situation: Either I buy the gifts and create
tension, or I don’t and some of my own
enjoyment of the holiday is diminished, plus
I’ve let someone else dictate my behaviors.
I was taught that family matters, but her
dictum has created an impossible situation
for me. Please advise.
Anonymous / Boston
You don’t mean she’s trying to stop all
gift exchanges, right? Because that’s silly
and unenforceable. Person A can’t tell
Person B not to give a gift to Person C.
But if she and her family want to opt
out, that’s their prerogative. We are, in
fact, allowed to “dictate” the behaviors
of others toward ourselves, in terms of
what we do and do not want, will and
will not allow. That’s the very foundation
of consent. Person X may sincerely want
to interact with Person Y in a particular
way — just overwhelmingly wants to
scoop them up and tickle them, or share
a cheerful cup of wassail with them, or
engage in vigorous political debate, or
shower them with gifts — but the desire
to do that thing doesn’t confer the right
to do it. Only Person Y gets to decide
that.
And if Person Y doesn’t want to be
scooped or tickled or debated with or
treated or ... wassaulted with mulled
wine, then don’t. It doesn’t matter if
those activities are widely enjoyed by
many people, or a part of holiday tradition. It doesn’t matter if Person Y is
family, or not family, or young, or old.
It doesn’t matter if Person X knows or
agrees with Person Y’s reason, or feels
certain that Person Y actually would
enjoy the activity if they’d just loosen up.
What matters is that Person Y said
no. Because good people hear and abide
by the “no’s” of others — graciously, with
no passive-aggression or eye rolls or
huffs.
I thank you for giving me a chance
to address this topic as we move into
the holiday season, when this kind of
“benign” boundary-busting can become
a real issue! The holidays should be the
season of giving, not of foisting, which
people can forget sometimes. The extent
of your rage at your sister-in-law, though,
makes me wonder if something is going
on beyond the common aggressive holiday excess. Why are you experiencing
her boundary as some kind of aggression
against you? Why does slightly diminished enjoyment feel like an impossible
situation? If your greatest holiday joy
was making nut rolls, and your sister in
law had a severe nut allergy, would you
feel this level of anger? It might be worth
doing some work to, uh, unwrap what’s
going on.
Miss Conduct is Robin Abrahams, a
writer with a PhD in psychology.
WORRIED ABOUT THE HOLIDAYS?Miss Conduct can help! Write missconduct@globe.com.
22
THE BOSTON GLOBE MAGAZINE
DINNER WITH CUPID
Funny Girl
WILL THIS GRAD STUDENT AND IMPROV COMIC SAY YES TO ANOTHER DATE?
7 P.M. BURRO BAR, SOUTH END
SKETCH IT OUT
Sarah I was calm because I knew
SARAH DUBLIN
26 / social
work graduate
student
WHAT MAKES
HER A CATCH?
She is funny, has
cute curls, and is
a good listener.
WHEN SHE IS
HAPPIEST
Laughing with
friends
the date would be with a woman,
so at least the conversation would
be good.
Jillian After chatting with my
roommates, we concluded it’s hard
to go wrong with a black outfit
plus a piece of statement jewelry. I
stumbled off the T 20 minutes early
and strolled around, pausing to pet
a corgi puppy, which I took as a good
omen.
Sarah I was nervous when I saw
her! She was beautiful and stylish,
wearing a turtleneck under a denim
dress and super artsy earrings.
Jillian The first thing that caught my
eye was her killer mullet and a casual
yet composed style — dark, round
glasses and layered gold necklaces
framed by a black shirt.
HAPPY TALK
JILLIAN KING
Sarah I discovered that Jillian’s a
24 / design
strategist
talented artist! She makes miniature
zines that are cute and interactive.
She had a couple on her and I looked
through them. They were great; I was
attracted to her talent. We talked
about our artistic pursuits. She also
likes to run and bake.
Jillian We meandered from small talk
about work and hobbies to food and
religion and coming out late. She is
attending grad school for social work.
If she had to pursue something else,
it would be comedy — she’s a part of
three different improv groups.
Sarah As the conversation flowed, I
grew more attracted to my date.
Jillian I felt pretty comfortable on
the whole and slightly more so as the
date progressed. She was talkative
and brought her full self to the
HER HOBBIES
Printmaking,
illustration,
crochet
LAST THING
SHE READ
The Pun Also
Rises — on the
history of puns
conversation.
Sarah We ordered roasted duck,
charred octopus, and churros. I liked
that she was adventurous with food.
Jillian The only hiccup was the
utensils: In the absence of something
sharper, we attempted to wrangle
duck while wielding butter knives.
Sarah I think there were some points
where we were making eye contact
and there was definitely some
sapphic yearning behind that. Also,
she complimented my hair.
Jillian As the night went on, I enjoyed
learning more about her. She’s selfaware and cares about connecting
with people.
LAST LAUGH
Sarah After dinner, she walked me
Looking to
fall in love?
to my car.
Jillian On the walk back, we passed a
gorgeous husky that she stopped to
stroke. We exchanged numbers.
Sarah I went for a front-facing
hug, but she went for the side hug.
That could have meant she felt
platonically about me, or maybe
that’s just what she was comfortable
with at the moment. I tried not to
read too far into it.
Jillian We ended up having a semiawkward side hug (mostly just
because I’m an awkward human,
sorry Sarah)!
Apply now for a chance to go on a virtual
or in-person blind date and be featured
in the Globe’s Dinner with Cupid.
Scan the QR code or visit
Globe.com/Cupid
SECOND DATE?
Sarah I think I’d like to ask her
out again to see what we are like
together in another setting.
Jillian I’m interested in getting to
know her more.
POST-MORTEM
Sarah / B+
Jillian / A
— Melissa Schorr
GO ON AN IN-PERSON OR VIRTUAL BLIND DATE. WE’LL PICK UP THE TAB.
Fill out an application at bostonglobe.com/cupid. Follow us on Twitter or Instagram @dinnerwithcupid.
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
23
Designer Hannah Guilford
reinterpreted the kitchen’s color scheme, adding
touches of brass, copper,
and wood, and adjusted
the layout so it functions
smoothly for cooking, eating, and accessing the yard.
24
THE BOSTON GLOBE MAGAZINE
YOUR HOME
* KITCHENS AND BATHS
Mellow
Yellow
A designer remakes a Maine
kitchen in a 1920s-era palette
that’s fresh and family ready.
By Marni Elyse Katz
P H OTO G R A P H S B Y S E A N L I TC H F I E L D
C
rossing paths with people from your
past is a part of everyday life when
you run a business in the same
small town you grew up in. Still,
Hannah Guilford was tickled when
her former high school teachers
asked her to remodel their kitchen.
Even better, they didn’t want it to be white. “They really
enjoyed some of the things about their old kitchen,
like the yellow cabinets and black and white floor tile,”
says Guilford, co-owner of Heart and Hammer Homes.
“The combination felt historically-appropriate and
comfortable, so why mess with it?”
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
25
Right: Guilford arranged
a gallery wall around a
portrait of the homeowner at age 16. It was
painted by the homeowner’s aunt, who was
the high school adviser
of Guilford’s sister.
Bottom: Ledges in the
breakfast nook display
trays from Germany
painted by the homeowner’s grandmother.
Encaustic-inspired ceramic floor tile made in
Spain by Merola Tile has
an Art Deco meets vintage farmhouse feel.
26
THE BOSTON GLOBE MAGAZINE
When the couple bought the Fryeburg, Maine,
farmhouse, built in 1928, they knew the kitchen
would need updating. The appliances were
ancient, the paint was fading, and storage and
counter space were lacking. Plus, the layout
didn’t help. Guilford reworked the floor plan in
the existing footprint, bringing everything up to
code and increasing its efficiency.
Although she was preserving the color scheme,
Guilford had plenty to tackle. “The shade of
yellow was all wrong; it felt flat,” she says. After
testing lots of paint samples, she settled on
Sherwin-Williams’s Butter Up. The color proved
true to its name. “It gave the kitchen a buttery
warmth that feels really welcoming,” she says.
“This kitchen has the coziness of your grandma’s
kitchen, but with the function needed for the
modern family.”
As for what would replace the old peeland-stick vinyl flooring, Guilford’s first
instinct—black and
white marble tiles
“THIS
set in a checkerboard
KITCHEN HAS pattern—seemed
THE COZINESS precious. So, she
explored 1920s-era
OF YOUR
patterns. Bingo.
The designer hit
GRANDMA’S
upon reasonablyKITCHEN, BUT priced ceramic tiles
with a vintage star
WITH THE
design. The black
FUNCTION
and off-white tiles
are anything but
NEEDED FOR
pristine. “They have
THE MODERN random, rusty scuff
marks that look like
FAMILY.”
the room’s copper
accents,” she says.
Guilford knew she’d need to carry the black
from the floor up to the middle of the room
so that the yellow wouldn’t feel overly bright.
Black granite countertops did the trick. “Honed
black granite is a classic farmhouse material,”
Guilford says. “White counters would have
reflected too much light; the dark counters cut
the yellow.”
Wood elements at the sink establish it as the
focal point. “A large, farmhouse sink in a wood
base with fluted details on either side created
visual impact,” Guilford says. Open shelves in
the same material—cherry stained brown to
match the knots in the salvaged wood dining
table that the owner’s stepfather made a few
years ago—flank the window overlooking the
backyard. The backdrop, a full wall of zellige tile,
is the project’s splurge. “The imperfections of this
uneven, handmade tile make it perfect for the
space,” Guilford says.
Bringing the tile to the ceiling leads the eye
up to the sconces. The brass and copper fixtures,
which Guilford found on Etsy, help integrate the
homeowner’s collection of copper objects. “These
heirloom pieces from her grandmother were a
source of inspiration from the start,” Guilford
says. “Showing them off was important to her.”
Custom copper rails with brass hooks tucked
under the shelves offer another spot to display
them. The old-fashioned copper bridge faucet,
also from Etsy, completes the tableau.
Guilford also revitalized the adjacent
breakfast nook. Swapping the window for a
slider necessitated nudging the dining table
closer to the wall to ease circulation. To ensure
the setup would still be comfortable for family
meals, Guilford designed a built-in bench against
the wall, buying the homeowners a couple extra
feet of floor space.
Once everything was in place, including a
traditional brass lantern, Guilford couldn’t
shake the feeling that something was missing.
Scouring the Web for a black and white element
that would bring the breakfast nook to life,
she landed on a mural wallpaper picturing a
Victorian engraving of a mountain landscape, to
be hung above the wainscoting. “I asked them,
‘How would you feel about my gifting you a
surprise element?’” she says.
They loved it, as did their Facebook friends.
“When they posted the first day of school photos
of their kids sitting in front of it, all the other
teachers asked about it,” Guilford says. “It made
them feel really good about their new space.”
Marni Elyse Katz is a contributing editor to
the Globe Magazine. Follow her on Instagram
@StyleCarrot. Send comments to magazine@
globe.com.
Cherry wood accents and the Absolute Black
granite counter add richness to the organic, handmade Moroccan tile by Zia Tile, while
copper and brass accents add a little glimmer.
The articulating sconces are by New Wine Old
Bottles, an Etsy vendor in Columbus, Ohio. The
owner inherited the copper vessels and utensils
from her grandmother.
RESOURCES
Design/build: Heart
and Hammer Homes,
heartandhammerhomes.co
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
27
YOUR HOME
* KITCHENS AND BATHS
Touch
Points
A designer weaves similiar
colors, materials, and textures
through three bathrooms in
a Freeport, Maine, home.
By Marni Elyse Katz
P H OTO G R A P H S B Y
COURTNEY ELIZABETH MEDIA
28
THE BOSTON GLOBE MAGAZINE
S
amantha Pappas’s clients, who
moved from Washington, D.C.
to Freeport, Maine, bought
this house because they liked
the location. The interior,
however, was depressing.
“Everything was very beige
and brown and boring,” Pappas says. “They
wanted lighter and brighter and fun.”
The directive applied to the bathrooms, too,
which Pappas remade to echo the style she
brought in elsewhere in the house. “We made
sure that the baths flow with the other spaces
and each other by using related color and
material palettes,” she says.
Taking cues from the owners’ collection of
houseplants, Pappas kicked off the design scheme
for the primary bath with green zellige tiles from
Clé. Like Pappas, the clients appreciated the look
of the handmade tiles. “People either love it or
hate it,” Pappas says. She counterbalanced the
imperfect, 4-by-4 squares with a crisp walnut
vanity and mirrors with aluminum frames. The
stylized fish pattern of the Roman shade picks
up the blue undertones and uneven coloration of
the tiles.
Pappas lined the shower walls in matte
porcelain tiles that resemble maple slats.
“They totally look like wood, down to the tonal
variations,” Pappas says. The cylindrical sconces
made from upcycled pine tie the vanity to the
shower, and the hand-wrapped yarn pendant
over the soaking tub carries the pale wood tone
through to the adjacent area.
The kids also got a wood vanity, though theirs
is made from reclaimed teak. Pappas’s pairing of
teak with rough-hewn mirrors conveys the same
handmade feel that the zellige tiles achieve in
Left: In the kids’ bathroom, Cedar & Moss ceramic ceiling lights have
a ridged texture that
ties to similar profiles in
the other baths.
Below: In the powder
room, the Blu Dot mirror
is a contemporary contrast to the traditional
Tracey Boyd vanity from
Anthropologie.
Left: The shade fabric
in the primary bath is
by Kels Haley Textiles. A
HAY pendant hangs over
the tub and the wood
sconces are by Russian
lighting company Hvoya.
Above: Designer Samantha Pappas purchased the primary
bath’s matte porcelain,
wood-look shower tiles
online at TileBar.
the primary bath, but at a more budget-friendly
price. The designer continues playing with
wood, or the idea of wood, with the whimsical
wallpaper: a Hygge & West pattern picturing
navy-colored wood wedges. The effect is gender
neutral, and not too childish, just as the clients
requested.
Pappas created a third iteration of the palette
for the powder room. Here, she offset the vintage
flavor of the tamboured rosewood vanity with
another playful Hygge & West wallpaper, but
not before sliding two rows of teal tiles between
them. The smaller room sings with its mix of
slats, squares, and wavy shapes, and like the
others, doesn’t skimp on texture. “You want to
touch everything in these rooms,” she says. “It’s
really satisfying.”
RESOURCES
Interior design:
Samantha S.
Pappas Design,
samanthaspappas.com
Contractor:
McNaughton
Construction,
(207) 357-6743
Send comments to magazine@globe.com.
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
29
30
THE BOSTON GLOBE MAGAZINE
P H OTO G R A P H B Y T K / G LO B E S TA F F
Since wooden ceilings prevented the installation of
recessed lights, it was important to choose lights
that are as functional as they are beautiful. Designer
Desiree Burns found numerous options on Etsy, including the articulating sconces by Enchant Lighting
and disc pendants by Balance Lamp.
YOUR HOME
* KITCHENS AND BATHS
Rustic
and
Refined
A young family finds inspiration in the
antique elements of their Charlestown
cottage, creating a kitchen full of soul.
By Marni Elyse Katz
P H O T O G R A P H S B Y TA M A R A F L A N A G A N
T
he aha moment came over a cozy dinner.
Rachel Romanowsky and Colin Keogh
had invited Joshua Gothard, an architect
and longtime friend, to their Charlestown
home to toss around ideas for renovating
their garden-level kitchen. “Josh got really
quiet at one point, then said, ‘You should
flip everything,’” Romanowsky recalls. Cocktails and dessert
in hand, the trio traipsed upstairs to the living room, where
Gothard made his case.
The main floor’s adjacent sitting rooms, which are
separated by a central chimney, were perfect in size and
shape for a kitchen and a dining room, the architect
reasoned. Meanwhile, the layout of the lower level space was
better suited for lounging and entertaining. Plus, the spaces
down there would benefit from the fireplace and French
doors to the back garden, not to mention the new wet bar
they could slot into the old pantry.
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
31
Above, left: Actor Stanley Tucci’s home bar inspired this one. “I saw
him mixing a Negroni
on Instagram,” homeowner Colin Keogh explains. Burns helped
choose Farrow & Ball’s
De Nimes for the walls
and trim and budgetfriendly antique mirror
tiles from TileBar.
Above, right: Taking
cues from the couple’s
inspiration images,
Burns mixed brass and
matte black finishes.
Right: The couple loves
that Burns used Etsy to
find little known items,
such as the hand-hammered brass sink from
Santa Clara in Mexico
and the faucet from
Watermark Fixtures in
Louisiana. The Azulado
quartzite countertop
ties together the brass
and the blue finishes.
32
THE BOSTON GLOBE MAGAZINE
Romanowsky, who wasn’t a fan of lugging
grocery bags down the stairs with 2-year-old
twins in tow, was immediately convinced. Soon
Keogh was on board too, recognizing that they
needed to squeeze as much function as possible
out of their 19th-century worker’s cottage, which
clocks in at just over 1,200 square feet. (He was
also really excited about the opportunity to create
a wet bar.)
The couple worked with Gothard on the
layout and turned to Desiree Burns to guide
them on fixtures, furnishings, and finishes.
Burns describes the pair as having a clear vision
of what they liked and how the spaces should
feel—unsurprising given that Romanowsky
founded Cityhome, an online retailer offering
fashion and home goods from indie boutiques.
The finished aesthetic is European in flavor,
with minimalist elements set within a shell
that’s full of antique character. There’s the brick
chimney between the cooking and dining spaces,
the extra-wide floorboards, and the wood ceilings
that are the underside of the floor above. At
night, light from the bedrooms leaks through the
nearly 175-year-old, rough-hewn planks, which
the couple believe came from the Charlestown
Navy Yard. “Sometimes we see an eyeball
looking down at us,” Keogh laughs, referring
to mischief from the twins, who are now 4.
“And the occasional piece of dangling string!”
Romanowsky adds.
The couple encouraged the builders to
embrace the home’s quirks. For instance, they
counseled the crew not to fill the uneven gap
between the tall pantry cabinets and the exterior
back wall. And the newly exposed section of
ceiling that differs in color from the rest of the
ceiling as the result of taking down a small wall?
It remained as is. “We like how it adds to the
history and story of the house,” Keogh says.
The kitchen cabinetry, Ikea boxes upgraded
with white matte laminate fronts from Dunsmuir
Cabinets and brushed brass pulls from Lo & Co,
runs 23 feet along a
single wall, from the
THE FINISHED
front of the house to
the back. The first
AESTHETIC IS
11 feet—with the
EUROPEAN IN
stainless steel range,
a
sink with a black
FLAVOR, WITH
gooseneck faucet,
MINIMALIST
and Caesarstone’s
Fresh Concrete
ELEMENTS
countertop—anchor
SET WITHIN
the kitchen. The
balance of the
A SHELL
cabinetry, which
conceals the fridge
THAT’S FULL
and houses the
OF ANTIQUE
pantry, covers the
dining room wall.
CHARACTER.
Back in the
kitchen, glazed
ceramic tiles reach the ceiling, providing subtle
interest and reflecting sunlight. “A slab would
have felt too heavy and plain subway tile too
typical,” Burns says. “I love these glossy, textured
tiles against the smooth, matte cabinets.” The
homeowners like that the tiles’ inconsistent
colors go hand in hand with their home’s
imperfect nature. A spare, natural oak shelf
that aligns with the barely-there range hood is a
Scandinavian touch that is both functional and
fun to style.
Rather than commit to a built-in island, the
couple purchased a freestanding black-stained
ash island with a marble top and balloon feet
from Anthropologie. Romanowsky compares the
look of her one-wall kitchen with its moveable
island to the one she remembers from their time
living in London. “There’s something romantic
about those kitchens that are piecemealed
together,” she says. “This is a nod to that.”
Keogh’s practical (and similarly sentimental)
perspective: “The island fits the space and
function we need now, but likely, we’ll adapt
the house again,” he says. “This is just the first
chapter.”
Send comments to magazine@globe.com.
The minimalist cabinets, which conceal the
pantry and fridge, are a crisp backdrop for the
concrete-topped dining table and Wishbonestyle chairs where the couple entertains family
and friends with ease.
RESOURCES
Architect: Music Street Architects, 508-274-2905
Interior designer: Desiree Burns Interiors,
dburnsinteriors.com
Contractor: Boston Premier Remodeling,
bostonremodel.com
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
33
YOUR HOME
* KITCHENS AND BATHS
Green
Dreams
‘M
A Winchester couple decides
to go green, but puzzles over
the perfect shade.
By Marni Elyse Katz
P H OTO G R A P H S B Y A LO U I S J E A N M E D I A
34
THE BOSTON GLOBE MAGAZINE
y wife has been
trying to get me to
do a green kitchen
for five years,” admits
homeowner and
real estate developer
Richard Beliveau. “We did a black island in our
house in Southie, but truthfully I didn’t love
it.” So, when he and his wife, Amy Beliveau,
purchased an old Victorian in Winchester, he
agreed to try it. The most challenging part, he
says, was picking the right shade.
“I showed them about 20 different greens,”
says interior designer Anne Becker, hired by the
couple to help get the details of the remodel just
right. Once they narrowed the selection to three,
they had wood samples made in each. The winner? Benjamin Moore’s Caldwell Green, a hunter
green with blue undertones.
Knowing they wanted to combine green cabinets with white ones, the couple asked Becker
to help them figure out which color would go
where. Ultimately, they went with green on the
island as well as on the west wall of floor-to-ceiling cabinetry. The upper and lower cabinets on
the range and sink walls are white. “Bringing
green over to the other side felt too heavy,” Becker says. “This configuration feels balanced.”
Becker helped identify the right countertop,
too: Neolith’s Calacatta Luxe, a sintered stone
surface with charcoal and gold veining. “I was
nervous about doing real marble with kids; this
is a better fit for our lifestyle,” Amy says. The
stone, which Becker pulled up as the backsplash
to make the space feel cohesive, ties to the brass
accents Amy was drawn to.
For lighting over the nearly 10-foot-long center
island, Becker picked three burnished brass pendants with large globes by Kelly Wearstler. Richard loves how the style brings together a new and
Opposite page: A
large farmhouse sink,
centered on new oversized windows that
look out to the yard,
was the starting point
for the kitchen layout.
Left: Interior designer
Anne Becker pulled
the backsplash up to
the ceiling behind the
bar and the contractor
suggested using antique-style glass.
Below, right: The
green doors directly
adjacent to the exterior door lead to a walkin pantry. “My aunt
and uncle had a hidden pantry in Atlanta,
which we thought was
really fun,” homeowner Amy Beliveau says.
Below, left: The team
demolished the secondary stair to open
up the space and accommodate a breakfast area to the right
of the island.
old sensibility, but thought they should go with
two lights. “I typically go with two or four on our
projects, but Anne was adamant,” he says. Becker
also advocated for going big. “I like the drama of
larger scale lights,” the designer says. “Lights that
are too small look like a mistake.”
The finishing touch was a breeze. Becker was
all for reusing the midcentury modern Cherner
stools the homeowners had in Southie. “They’re
classic, comfortable, and funk up this fairly traditional kitchen so it doesn’t take itself too seriously,” she says.
Everyone loves the final result. “I can’t tell you
how many people ask me what the color is when
I post the kitchen on social media,” Richard says.
“It’s perfect.”
Send comments to magazine@globe.com.
RESOURCES
Interior designer:
Anne Becker Design,
annebeckerdesign.com
Contractor: Back
Bay Design Corp.,
backbaydesigncorp.com
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
35
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offers residents a lifestyle with exclusive partnerships, distinct amenities,
and hospitality-focused services. The property is now open, so interested
buyers can view four stunning model residences designed by Casa Design,
Andrew Terrat, and Related Beal Design.
Designed by Robert A.M. Stern Architects and Meyer Davis, The Quinn
draws inspiration from the neighborhood’s timeless aesthetic. A wide range
of floor plans boast floor-to-ceiling windows, oak flooring and cabinetry,
Quartz countertops, Bosch appliances, and more.
Beyond the residences, unparalleled services offer a Lifestyle Coordinator,
and exclusive partnerships, such as Boston’s first Dog City powered by
Red Dog, a pet-spa and daycare, shareable Tesla by Envoy, designer services
at Boconcept, and others.
Additionally, 20,000+ square feet of amenities include an indoor pool
and fitness center with squash court, co-working spaces, library,
Highland Green
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
37
ADVERTISING SUPPLEMENT
Cape Arundel Cottage Preserve
Cape Arundel Cottage Preserve
Award-Winning Community
Douglas Elliman Real Estate
Douglas Elliman Real Estate
Modern Luxury-by-the-Sea
A Manchester-by-the-Sea masterpiece, this majestic waterside estate has all
the style and modern sensibility its designer, Meichi Peng, is known for.
Perched above Lobster Cove and overlooking the Atlantic, 27 Smiths Point is
an ocean-lovers paradise, offering commanding views from Gloucester to the
South Shore.
This stunning property comes fully furnished with luxurious custom finishes
and detailing. The entry level is complete with custom-cut-for-the-home,
Italian-imported travertine flooring, and the second level is laid with livesawn white oak arranged in a brick layout. The kitchen offers state-of-the-art
appliances, oversized Imperial White Granite waterfall counters, and custombuilt contemporary lacquer and glass cabinetry. The home features heated
floors throughout. A Lutron system controls the lighting and the motorized
shades/drapes. Floor-to-ceiling windows in each room reveal breathtaking
views of the coast, mimicking the aura of Malibu, while the landscape hints
Aspen.
For more information, please contact George Sarkis, The Sarkis Team at
Douglas Elliman Real Estate, 781-603-8702.
Jim and Jeanette O’Donnel from Stoneham, MA, were looking for a retreat
where they could entertain their family. “When we took a look at the Preserve
we were just so impressed,” says Jim O’Donnel. “We chose the Birch model,
the largest cottage available. The place is big enough for our family and the
grandchildren. You don’t have to leave the grounds; it has everything you
would like right here. And the beaches are spectacular! We feel like we’re
always on vacation.”
Nestled among 300 wooded acres, including a 68-acre nature preserve, Cape
Arundel Cottage Preserve features several spacious cottage designs, ranging
from 866 to 1350 square feet, in beautiful neighborhoods surrounded by
walking and hiking trails.
Residents can enjoy southern Maine or take in the beauty of Cape Arundel
Cottage Preserve’s resort-style campus, including a 6,000 square foot
community center with two pools, waterfall, fire pits, a fire bar, and kitchen
facilities that make it easy to entertain groups large and small. An adjacent
fitness center and game room offer even more options.
If you prefer hiking and biking, there are groomed nature trails throughout
the resort. The Preserve sits adjacent to The Eastern Trail, a 65-mile path that
makes it easy for bikers to enjoy a safe journey from South Portland to Kittery.
This established community has recently opened Phase 5: two-story cottage
prices start at $486,900.
Visit capearundelcottages.com or see us in person at 1976 Portland Road,
Arundel, ME 04046. Call 207-467-7000 to arrange a tour.
Blu Haven
An Elegant, 55+ Community Beckons
Blu Haven is a community of newly designed, two-bedroom homes that caters
to buyers 55 and older. These homes provide the perfect balance of privacy and
neighborhood charm within a convenient Middleton location. With first floor
suites, private outdoor space, and an attached garage, it’s no surprise that this
national, award-winning project has sold at a record pace.
Positioned in an idyllic setting, each unit is expertly crafted by DiBiase Homes,
with maintenance-free lots that allow buyers to enjoy the changing of the
seasons without the cleanup. Just imagine strolling through the winding
streets of your new stress-free, fun-loving community. Fewer than 10 homes
remain and are ready for occupancy, so contact our team today to learn more,
and hear about our limited time incentives.
For more information, visit bluehaven.com, contact
bluehavensales@gmail.com, or call 617-605-8348.
38
THE BOSTON GLOBE MAGAZINE
Blu Haven
Turn What You Love
Into Where You Live
27 Smith’s Point Road | Manchester-by-the-Sea
$15,950,000 | 4 BR, 3.2 BA | Web# 73042839
500 Atlantic Avenue, PH20K/L | Waterfront | Boston
$10,595,000 | 6 BR, 6.1 BA | Web# 73012774
59 Walnut Road | Wenham
$4,399,000 | 5 BR, 5.1 BA | Web# 73014397
George Sarkis: M 781.603.8702 | O 617.267.3500
Sofia Bikos: M 617.240.8599 | O 617.267.3500
Karen J. Christie: M 617.840.9312 | O 617.267.3500
George Sarkis: M 781.603.8702 | O 617.267.3500
Sofia Bikos: M 617.240.8599 | O 617.267.3500
17 Kesseler Way | Chestnut Hill | Newton
$3,500,000 | 5 BR, 5.2 BA | Web# 72985301
55 Amanda Road | Sudbury
$2,879,000 | 5 BR, 5.1 BA | Web# 73049266
361 Linwood Avenue | Newton
$2,675,000 | 4 BR, 4.1 BA | Web# 73047287
Tania Wong: M 617.775.5895 | O 617.267.3500
Johnny Hatem Jr: M 508.524.3634 | O 617.267.3500
Manuel Sarkis: M 781.801.0610 | O 617.267.3500
Johnny Hatem Jr: M 508.524.3634 | O 617.267.3500
49-51 Verndale Street, 51 | Brookline
$2,650,000 | 4 BR, 3.1 BA | Web# 73049447
2 Battery Wharf, 2504 | Waterfront | Boston
$2,550,000 | 2 BR, 2.1 BA | Web# 73035711
110 Stuart Street, 22F | Back Bay | Boston
$1,295,000 | 1 BR, 1.1 BA | Web# 73039234
Emily Farrar: M 617.455.5339 | O 617.267.3500
George Jedlin: M 617.312.1997 | O 617.267.3500
Ruth Ann Bowers: M 857.472.3439 | O 617.267.3500
Manuel Sarkis: M 781.801.0610 | O 617.267.3500
elliman.com
20 PARK PLAZA, SUITE 820, BOSTON, MA 02116. 617.267.3500 © 2022 DOUGLAS ELLIMAN REAL ESTATE. ALL MATERIAL PRESENTED HEREIN IS INTENDED FOR INFORMATION PURPOSES ONLY. WHILE, THIS INFORMATION IS BELIEVED TO BE CORRECT, IT IS REPRESENTED SUBJECT TO ERRORS, OMISSIONS, CHANGES OR WITHDRAWAL WITHOUT NOTICE. ALL PROPERTY INFORMATION,
INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO SQUARE FOOTAGE, ROOM COUNT, NUMBER OF BEDROOMS AND THE SCHOOL DISTRICT IN PROPERTY LISTINGS SHOULD BE VERIFIED BY YOUR OWN ATTORNEY, ARCHITECT OR ZONING EXPERT. EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY.
ADVERTISING SUPPLEMENT
NE Spas
Hot Tubs and Saunas Help
You Heal and Relax
Everyone who has soaked in a hot tub or used a sauna knows
the relaxation and well-being benefits, but did you know that
using a hot tub or sauna regularly can have a tremendous
impact on your health? Here are some common physical
ailments that can
be alleviated with
regular hot tub and
sauna use:
Finnleo© is the market leader and has the most complete line of traditional and infrared saunas.
From entry level portable saunas, to deluxe custom saunas, Finnleo© has a sauna for every taste and budget.
Boost your immune system, enhance, energize, and rejuvenate. The body’s response to gentle, persistent heat
is well-documented and proven by people all over the world. This is why more and more doctors are
recommending its purifying benefits.
HOT TUBS
* SWIM SPAS * SAUNAS
Hot tubs
available
for speedy
delivery!
Stress reduction:
According to Andrew
Goliszek, Ph.D.,
in Psychology
Today, “Ongoing
stress makes us
susceptible to illness
NE Spas
and disease because
the brain sends defense signals to the endocrine system,
which then releases...hormones that severely depress our
immunity.” Anxiety is often associated with muscle tension,
and the warmth of your spa or sauna does wonders for
relaxing muscles.
Better sleep: Research has shown that a deeper, more relaxed
sleep can result from both hot tub and sauna use. Once
you get out of your hot tub or sauna your body temperature
decreases, which increases feelings of sleepiness.
Saunas help fight illness: Medical research has shown that
saunas significantly reduce the incidences of colds and flu
amongst participants. As the body is exposed to the heat of a
sauna, it produces white blood cells more rapidly. White blood
cells help to fight illnesses.
Overall health: Using your sauna or hot tub can reduce
everyday inflammation and tension, increase flexibility,
improve cardiovascular performance, lower blood pressure,
aid in recovery after exercise, loosen congestion, and help with
chronic conditions like arthritis and lower back pain.
There’s a lot that regular hot tub and sauna use does for your
body, but you won’t know how it will work for you until you try
it. Visit any of New England Spas’ three showrooms and enjoy
a free test soak or test sweat to try it for yourself.
Visit nespas.com or call 800-258-5300 to learn more.
Clarke
nespas.com
1 -80 0 - 2 5 8 - 5 3 00
Local Since 1978
40
THE BOSTON GLOBE MAGAZINE
Unveiling Even More
Kitchen Perfection
Homeowners and designers have long seen Sub-Zero
refrigerators and freezers as the benchmark of appliance
design, due to their extraordinary engineering and
performance. According to Forbes magazine and a survey
by online real estate leader Zillow, a listing touting Sub-Zero
appliances sells a home faster and for more money than other
Clarke, page 42
New England’s most beautifully
designed seasonal cottage community,
minutes from Kennebunkport and
the southern Maine coast.
300 wooded acres, including a
68-acre preserve
Swimming pools, fire pits,
waterfall, and a 6,000 sq. ft.
community center and clubhouse
Hiking and biking trails
(we’re right next to the 62-mile
Eastern Trail)
Bocce and horseshoes
Several spacious cottage designs
ranging from 950 to 1350 sq. ft.
Prices start at $374,900
to $485+
A poolside fire bar
GOLD
AWARD
CapeArundelCottages.com
1976 Portland Road, Arundel, ME 04046
ADVERTISING SUPPLEMENT
Can you guess?
Which appliance do homeowners most often add to their
kitchen design after visiting Clarke? Schedule your visit and find out!
Clarke, from page 40
kitchen appliances. The classic Sub-Zero with its iconic grille
has served as an irrefutable badge of quality for more than six
decades.
Now, with the look preserved, the new Sub-Zero Classic
Series will soon be unveiled at Clarke, New England’s Official
Sub-Zero, Wolf, and Cove Showroom and Test Kitchen. This
completely redesigned Classic Series offers new interior
LED lighting that illuminates every corner and a new “Night
Mode” that optimizes lighting and reduces the brightness in
dim environments. You’ll also find more shelf adjustability,
magnetic door sealing, and Wi-Fi connectivity. Even the
NASA-inspired air purification system has been enhanced to
Boston & Milford, MA • South Norwalk, CT
800-845-8247 • clarkeliving.com
New England’s Official Showroom and Test Kitchen
Clarke
N AT I O N A L AWA R D W I N N E R
FOR BEST 55+ COMMUNITY
LIVE
MAINTENANCE-FREE
ONLY 8 TOWNHOMES REMAIN
Enjoy the beauty of the New England seasons without the
maintenance! Blu Haven provides carefree living on private lots
'+-2 -2$/#2-&/9 9)1$/-(5 63(- .$$3 83+7)31 (/+-%(5 &/99 ")(%7%4-(5
and private entrances - creating the perfect balance of gracious
single family living without the stress.
Units starting in low $900,000s
TO U R TO DAY
207.252.6771 | bluhavensales@gmail.com
Compass is a licensed real estate broker and abides by Equal Housing Opportunity laws. All material presented herein is intended for informational purposes only. Information is
compiled from sources deemed reliable but is subject to errors, omissions, changes in price, condition, sale, or withdrawal without notice. This is not intended to solicit property already
9+(-%0, :2$-$( 7)1 "% *+3-/)991 (-)#%0 $3 0+#+-)991 %42)4!%0 )40 7)1 4$- 3%.%!- )!-/)9 83$8%3-1 !$40+-+$4(,
42
THE BOSTON GLOBE MAGAZINE
ADVERTISING SUPPLEMENT
offer easier accessibility. One hour with a Clarke consultant
allows you to explore these new models and have all your
questions answered.
Just when we think Sub-Zero can’t get any better, they surprise
us again. Schedule your visit to explore this new collection
today.
Visit Clarke-Sub-Zero, Wolf, Cove at Boston’s Seaport or in
Milford, MA, or visit clarkeliving.com/welcome.
N.E.T.R.
Heat with Clean Energy
This Winter
How do you heat your home? With winter just around the
corner and climate change a major concern, clean heating
with a ductless air source heat pump is important to consider.
These sleek units—often called mini-splits—are quick to install,
whisper-quiet, and remote-control operated. In addition to
heating your home in winter, they also cool it in summer.
Unlike traditional heating systems that rely on fossil fuels,
ductless air source heat pumps use electricity to transfer
existing heat from one place to another. This makes them one
of the most energy efficient HVAC systems you can buy in
today’s market. And if you upgrade from a traditional fossil
fuel heating systems to a ductless system, you can qualify for
zero percent financing on the new system.
There are many advantages to air source heat pumps. They can
cool a hot kitchen, heat a freezing bedroom, or keep a sunroom
or finished basement at just the right temperature all year
round. With new cold climate-capable technology, heat pumps
can heat your home down to -5 degrees Fahrenheit. Having
multiple ductless units means you can heat or cool each room
individually. If you’re not using a room, you can reduce the heat
or turn down the air conditioner in that space to keep electricity
costs low.
UPGRADE TO EFFICIENCY
QUALIFY FOR MASS SAVE REBATES UP TO $10,000
Are you comfortable with the existing heating and cooling system
in your home? N.E.T.R., Inc. provides clean, energy efficient, cooling
and heating systems that can lower your utilities by 40%. We offer low
and 0% financing for up to 84 months and can help you qualify for
Mass Save rebates up to $10,000!
SCHEDULE A FREE
CONSULTATION
85 Flagship Drive, Unit E, North Andover, MA 01845 | 978-237-0563 | netrinc.com/bg
N.E.T.R. Inc. has provided clean, energy efficient heating and
cooling systems since it was founded in 1989. With more than
10,000 residential installations, N.E.T.R. Inc. is truly New
England’s residential ductless expert. Come feel the difference.
For more information, see netrinc.com or call 978-237-0563.
N.E.T.R.
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
43
ADVERTISING SUPPLEMENT
Margarian Rug
Designer Remnants at Reasonable Prices
Magarian Rug is revolutionizing high-end wool rug sales. If you’re in the
market for an area rug, stair runner, or wall-towall carpet, don’t just order a carpet online
and plop it into your room. Instead, head
to Magarian’s Marblehead showroom and
choose from hundreds of brand-new, top-grade
wool remnants.
The company purchases quality carpet remnants
from leading manufacturers, including Stanton,
Kaleen, Couristan, and Prestige, and passes on
their deep discounts to its customers.
hearths or bay windows. This custom work makes a client’s home look bigger
and neater.
Magarian Rug is taking safety measures seriously,
following all guidelines and disinfecting regularly.
The CDC recommends thoroughly cleaning
and disinfecting homes, especially soft surfaces
like rugs. The company, with cleaning facilities
in Salisbury, Salem, and Marblehead, uses
professional grade, EPA approved disinfectant
solutions to kill bacteria, mold, and viruses with
a kill time of four minutes and a 99.9 percent
success rate.
Remnants are simply rolls of carpet that mills do
not have the ability to sell themselves because they
are a smaller length than a full roll. What does
that mean for customers? You get brand-name
carpet in custom sizes for 50 to 70 percent off retail prices.
Margarian prides itself on an effortless pick-up
and delivery service that suits customers’ safety
Margarian Rug
and busy schedules. Call to speak with their
experienced staff to help find exactly what you need.
Interior designers on the North Shore have caught on to the craze and love
Margarian Rug’s selection of traditional, coastal, yet modern patterns and
colors. They are particularly pleased to have carpets sized to fit around fireplace
To learn more, contact magarianrug.com, visit their showroom at 155 Atlantic
Avenue, Marblehead, MA, or call 781-631-3321. Rug cleaning and drop-off at
124 Lafayette Road, Salisbury, MA, 978-465-8928.
Kitchen Views/National Lumber
The Homes at Rowell Lane
A Client’s Needs Define Luxury
An Opportunity to Imagine
Your Forever Home
How do you define “luxury living?” Look at photographs of beautiful homes
and you will see rich furnishings, quality millwork, cabinetry, countertops,
and other finishes. Those elements are certainly part of creating a luxurious
lifestyle. However, the essence of luxury is feeling like your home reflects
your personality and is the place you feel most comfortable and happy.
One Newton mom teamed with our designers to create a beautiful familyfriendly kitchen that boasted a left-handed work layout to accommodate her
preferences. The design made tasks flow naturally for this busy mother of
four active children.
The design team of Kitchen Views at National Lumber delves deep to
discover what a homeowner needs to make the layout of their kitchen,
bathroom, or other area with cabinetry work best. Thoughtful planning
provides storage solutions that fit the family’s lifestyle. Special features
such as a prep sink or island that doubles as a workspace and casual meal
area can make life easier.
There are Kitchen Views showrooms across New England. For more
information, visit kitchenviews.com or call 508-DESIGNS [508-337-4467].
Kitchen Views/National Lumber
44
THE BOSTON GLOBE MAGAZINE
The three luxury, single homes now being built on Rowell Lane each
contains four bedrooms, three-and-a-half baths, and a two+ car garage.
These elegant homes are everything you didn’t know you needed and more.
Partner with us to envision your dream home and we will use our years
of experience and innovation to create something greater than you could
have ever imagined. You can select your own finishes, design the perfect
kitchen, and work with us to fashion your forever home.
The Homes at Rowell Lane offer 2,980 to 3,550 square feet of finished
living space. Crafted to inspire, they will boast modern conveniences,
thoughtful finishes, and high-end construction from DiBiase Companies,
a trusted, third generation development team. Located in Middleton,
the neighborhood is surrounded by a bustling and vibrant community
of restaurants, shops, and recreational activities.
To learn more about this opportunity and to contact DiBiase Companies
about reserving a home, visit rowelllane.com or call 781-334-9899.
The Homes at Rowell Lane
1
2
3
4
5
6
19
Fall Back / By Joon Pahk
ACROSS
1 Get clean
6 Also __
Zarathustra
12 Place for gloss
15 Common teen
malady
19 Tour de France
stage
20 Manger scene
21 Poké bowl
selection
22 Complain
23 Two games in a
day (don’t forget
to fall back! 6
letters)
25 Thorough study
(4 letters)
27 Fangorn Forest
creatures
28 Turns, as a ship
29 Author Cather
31 Turow memoir
32 Great service
that’s not tipped?
33 Changes, as
keyboard
bindings
35 Israel’s Golda
36 Canal boat
38 Cracks up
40 Disorderly brawl
(6 letters)
43 Like some
sunscreens
45 Aligning
46 Singer Ritchie
47 2022 AL champs,
informally
49 __-en-scène
50 Rider’s fistful,
perhaps
51 Place for dirty
dishes (4 letters)
55 Clog-clearing
brand
57 Scoreboard
units: Abbr.
60 Stacey of
Georgia politics
61 Surprise outcome
63 Switchback shape
64 University near
Newark
65 Rider’s fistful,
perhaps
66 Memo starter
67 Book after
Judges
69 A Marx brother
70 Wilander of
tennis
71 Pan for stir-fry
72 Frilly mat
74 Affirmative from
a mate
75 __ Zion Church
76 Belarus’s capital
78 In-tents journey?
(4 letters)
80 NHL
impossibilities
81 German auto
83 Mathematician
Paul
84 Fixate (on)
87 Prickly shrubs
89 Gives back
93 Weds (6 letters)
96 Do over
97 Travis of country
98 Coup d’__
99 Surprisingly
enough
101 Compete
102 Name that sounds
like a cheese
103 Girls, in
Guadalajara
105 Rooftop spinner
106 Microloan
nonprofit
107 Common
pendant shape
(4 letters)
109 Like energyinefficient bulbs
(7 letters)
112 72-Across
material
113 Bar or bakery
order
114 High school
assignment?
115 Set of classical
pieces
116 Signaled
117 Walgreens rival
118 Trendy surf/skate
wear brand of the
1980s and ’90s
119 Chose
DOWN
1 Gives out new
hands
2 Short-visored hat
3 Arrogance
4 Police alerts: Abbr.
5 __-Air (2022
reboot of The
Fresh Prince)
6 “Get outta here!”
7 Antebellum
8 “Great” Jupiter
feature
9 Landmark 2010
health law: Abbr.
10 Make easier to
swallow
24
27
28
32
9
10
11
12
29
39
40
44
47
52
50
55
62
72
77
80
81
86
94
97
98
102
56
63
68
90
91
92
79
82
83
88
89
95
99
104
96
100
101
105
106
108
109
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
50 Press
repeatedly, as a
button
51 Cosmic payback
52 Steel girder
53 Overused
54 Network with
Tiny Desk
Concerts
56 Confirm, as a
password
57 Soda with
“Crystal” and
“Nitro” variants
58 Herbivore with
a prehensile
snout
59 Sound of
incredulity
62 Product test
64 Doesn’t fall
behind
66 Electrolyte
particles
68 Einstein’s birth
city
69 Fertilized egg
cells
71 Actress Dianne
59
74
107
11 Common
pronoun trio
12 Scooping soup
13 “This is not
news to me”
14 Thanksgiving
dessert
15 Open, in a way
16 Dramatic words
before “I’m
going in”
17 Carpenter’s
power tool
18 Close
24 Visual blights
26 Ancho, before
drying
30 Had an
inclination
33 Beats
34 Conjectured
37 SAT
administrator
39 Fuel holders
41 Appearance
42 Chris of Lightyear
44 Nantes negative
48 Mephitic
mammals
58
69
78
103
57
64
73
87
93
37
42
67
76
18
46
66
75
36
49
71
17
31
35
61
85
30
54
70
16
26
45
53
60
15
22
41
48
65
14
25
34
43
13
21
33
38
84
8
20
23
51
7
110
73 Massachusetts :
Bay :: Rhode
Island : __
74 The Little
Mermaid author
76 Wrong move
77 Cuisine with
galbi
79 Sale rack abbr.
80 Was unbalanced
82 Hairstyle for
Dorothy Gale
84 MLB great Mel
85 The Fog actress
Adrienne
86 Super-G or slalom
87 Happens to,
poetically
88 Austrians’
neighbors
90 Come back to
91 Opposite of
worldliness
92 Availed
94 Prince Hal, later
95 High way
vehicles?
100 Dictionary listing
111
104 Impertinent sort
106 Single-serving
coffee pod
107 “No Scrubs”
group
108 Middle-earth
baddie
110 Hosp. area for
heart patients
111 That: Sp.
SUDOKU
6
2
1
5
8
1 7
4
3
1
9
2 6
8 9
2
3
4
1
9 4
7
7
6
6
8
Fill in the grid so every row, column, and 3x3 box
has the digits 1-9. Tips at sudoku.com.
Solutions on Page 9
NOVEMBER 6, 2022
45
CONNECTIONS
My Realtor Hates
My Front Door
I
’m not replacing the front door, I tell my
realtor, just because you think it’s dated.
If a buyer objects, tell her that the beveled
glass casts rainbows on the stairs. Explain
that her toddler will follow them as the sun rises
throughout the morning. Don’t get misty-eyed
as you describe this—that will make the buyer
uncomfortable.
Still, I need to put my grief somewhere.
Any buyer will love the high windows over the
staged king-size bed in the master suite. Wonderful light. Exquisite flooring and cathedral ceiling.
But can you also describe how the room fits two
sets of bunk beds flush against that wall, leaving
plenty of floor space for exactly one million, fiftytwo thousand, and one Legos? (The one being the
one you step on.) Let them picture the 5-foot tall
teddy bear in the top bunk, smiling at them, begging to be fought over at bedtime.
The second bedroom will make a cozy guest
room, plenty of space for visitors or an expanding family. Still, make sure buyers notice the
Japanese maple out the front window. That room
is like a treetop oasis. Never mind the college
kids across the street. A white noise machine will
do the trick. Otherwise, the room is fairly insulated from house noise, so it’s best if any future
children play Kidz Bop 40 on the living room TV
quite loudly at 6 a.m. so the buyer doesn’t miss
the joyful jumping.
The tiny office at the end of the hall fits a
twin bed with bedside table, if you can believe
it. If not that, it fits a crib and a changing table,
or a crib and a mini-crib for twins. All combinations have been tried. All combinations were my
favorite.
Tell them they must never enlarge the dining room. Keep it snug so that they have to
climb over each other to get around to the back
seats. Two high chairs fit if you set the table on
an angle. Feng shui, we called it. Very inviting.
When they have parties, we suggest they remove
the table and invite people to sit on the floor.
This works best for very small children in boxy
Halloween costumes.
Don’t refinish the floors. Those scratches?
They are the signature of the kindest golden retriever you will ever know. They are all that’s left
of her, aside from the photos.
Don’t worry that there’s not a backyard. It’s a
shared driveway, but notice the beautiful pavers.
Never mind the cracks in the vinyl fencing where
the Wiffle ball struck. It’s evidence of fun, and of
arguments about rules and outcomes.
Tell them this is a neighborhood with an open
back door policy. Expect friends to drop by after
the kids are in bed, to sip wine or discuss a book
or really let loose and test the limits of that white
noise machine you put in the kids’ room.
Buyers will appreciate the living room with
its built-in bookshelves and gas fireplace, but tell
them they’ll never really sit there. There will be
too much life to live to just hang around. The
days will be long, the years will be short, and
then it’ll be time to go.
I wanted four children, but I never wanted
to move. I want them to sleep soundly and have
space to do their homework, but I know we’ll all
miss their one shared bedroom, the “Peter Pan
nursery” as we called it. I want them to have a
basement to play in, and yet, I picture myself
upstairs in the living room, alone. I want them
to have a backyard and a neighborhood in which
to roam free—“I’ll be home for dinner!” But I’m
afraid I’ll never see them enough.
We are growing up, whether we stay in this
house or not.
Preserve these memories for us. Because we
can never go back.
Caroline Stowell is a writer in the Chicago area
who used to live in Cambridge. Send comments to
magazine@globe.com.
TELL YOUR STORY. Email your 650-word essay on a relationship to connections@globe.com. Please note: We do not respond to submissions we won’t pursue.
46
THE BOSTON GLOBE MAGAZINE
PHOTO FROM CAROLINE STOWELL
BY CAROLINE STOWELL
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