Boston Globe 3008
Boston Globe 3008
price talks
emergency overnight shelters for cies,” said Andrea Grossman, a DCF all of the more than 7,000 children been driven around for hours by so-
youths in need. spokesperson. The apartments, she in foster care. cial workers in search of a bed. Last
The Department of Children and said, “give children and youth who “This is symptomatic of the way fall, the Globe reported children
Families described the apartments, often have highly specialized needs in which DCF has failed to appropri- sleeping in DCF offices because of
located in Boston, New Bedford, and a comfortable place to stay.” ately develop and manage their the lack of beds. The disparity be-
Advocates for seniors hail Springfield, as emergency resources
used for youths with complex behav-
The policy, though, has prompt-
ed safety concerns from social work-
placement resources,” said Michael
Dsida, deputy chief counsel of the
tween foster children and available
DCF, Page A8
savings, while Mass.
biopharmas fear effects
By Robert Weisman ‘Everyone always realizes that it takes more time, more thought.’
GLOBE STAFF
White House officials Tuesday named the first SHANNON ROBERTS, New England University Transportation Center, speaking about self-driving cars
10 high-cost drugs that will be subject to price ne-
gotiations between Medicare and their manufac-
turers, stepping up a campaign to rein in prescrip-
tion medicine costs in the face of industry push-
back.
The initial group of drugs targeted for the high-
stakes haggling, allowed under last year’s land-
mark Inflation Reduction Act, treat illnesses and
medical conditions, such as diabetes, blood clot-
Boston drops
gender need JOSH EDELSON/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES
on marriage In San Francisco, it’s a common sight — a passenger in the back with no one up front. Seven companies are testing in California.
certificates
By Samantha J. Gross
LITTLE DRIVE HERE FOR
AUTONOMOUS VEHICLES
and Travis Andersen
GLOBE STAFF
J
al division over so-called culture war issues, and an SAN FRANCISCO
environment in which the Supreme Court has de- ess McCuan walked out her door one recent morning
cided businesses can discriminate against to take her dog, Doc, for a walk. Suddenly, a white car
LGBTQ+ customers, and Republicans running for zipped through the crosswalk, seemingly oblivious to
president have made restricting transgender rights human and canine alike.
a centerpiece of the race. But what really bothered McCuan was the driver.
Tuesday’s announcement in Boston is only the Or the lack thereof. The car belonged to one of the seven com-
latest signal of the increasingly divergent ap- panies testing fully autonomous vehicles, or AVs, in Califor-
proaches red and blue states are taking to address nia.
the LGBTQ+ community. In conservative places, “They’re flooding the streets now,” McCuan said. She fig-
leaders have doubled down on anti-LGBTQ+ rhet- ures every fifth car she sees in San Francisco lately is self-driv-
oric and leaned into old tropes. In more liberal ing.
places, leaders are signaling an openness to It’s quite different here in Boston.
change. There are far fewer complaints about self-driving cars be-
“A marriage certificate is a symbol of love and cause you barely see them. Only one company is permitted to
commitment. But unfortunately, for people like test autonomous vehicles here — Boston-based Motional —
JUSTIN SULLIVAN/GETTY IMAGES
me, their certificate’s outdated and narrow gender and it confines its occasional experiments to a corner of the
markers were a glaring reminder that our city still Some San Francisco residents have pushed back, disabling Waymo Seaport and a closed track at Suffolk Downs in East Boston.
MARRIAGE LICENSES, Page A8 vehicles by placing cones on their hoods to block sensors. SELF-DRIVING CARS, Page A7
The Nation
Idalia forces evacuations on Gulf Coast Major
The hurricane The National Weather Ser-
vice in Tallahassee called Idalia
including at Clearwater Beach.
Workers at beachside bars and
malware
threatens storm
surge in Florida
“an unprecedented event” since
no major hurricanes on record
have ever passed through the
T-shirt shops boarded up win-
dows, children skim-surfed the
waves, and hundreds of people
network
By Daniel Kozin
ASSOCIATED PRESS
bay abutting the Big Bend.
On the island of Cedar Key,
Co mmissioner Sue Colson
watched the increasingly chop-
py waters from the safety of the
sand.
seized
CEDAR KEY, Fla. — Florida
residents living in vulnerable
joined other city officials in
packing up documents and elec-
Af ter landing in the Big
Bend region, Idalia is forecast to
FBI teams with
coastal areas were ordered to tronics at City Hall. She had a cross the Florida peninsula and European allies
pack up and leave Tuesday as message for the almost 900 resi- then drench southern Georgia
Hurricane Idalia gained steam dents who were under manda- and the Carolinas on Thursday. By Frank Bajak and
in the warm waters of the Gulf tory orders to evacuate. More Both Georgia Governor Brian Stefanie Dazio
of Mexico and threatened to un- than a dozen state troopers Kemp and South Carolina Gov- ASSOCIATED PRESS
leash life-threatening storm went door to door warning resi- ernor Henr y McMaster an- LOS ANGELES — The FBI
surges and rainfall. dents that storm surge could nounced states of emergency, and its European partners infil-
Idalia also pummeled Cuba rise as high as 15 feet. freeing up state resources and trated and seized control of a
STEPHEN M. DOWELL /ORLANDO SENTINEL VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS
with heavy rains on Monday “One word: Leave,” Colson personnel, including hundreds major global malware network
and Tuesday, leaving the tobac- said. “It’s not something to dis- Electrical line technicians walked among hundreds of of National Guard troops. used for more than 15 years to
co-growing province of Pinar cuss.” electrical line trucks in Sumterville, Fla., on Tuesday. “We’ ll be prepared to the commit a gamut of online
del Rio underwater and many of Governor Ron DeSantis re- best of our abilities,” said Rus- crimes including crippling ran-
its residents without power. peated the warning at an after- Civil War. The building has not prepared to take in evacuees. sell Guess, who was topping off somware attacks, US officials
Idalia had strengthened to a noon news conference. flooded in the almost 20 years More than 30,000 utility work- the gas tank on his truck in Val- said Tuesday.
Category 2 system on Tuesday “ You really gotta go now. he has owned it, not even when ers were gathering to make re- dosta, Ga. His co-workers at They then remotely removed
afternoon, with winds strength- Now is the time,” he said. Earli- Hurricane Hermine flooded the pairs as quickly as possible in Cunningham Tree Service were the malicious software agent —
ening to 105 miles per hour by er, the governor stressed that city in 2016. the hurricane’s wake. About doing the same. “There will be known as Qakbot — from thou-
Tuesday evening. The hurricane residents didn’t necessarily “Being a caretaker of the old- 5,500 National Guard troops trees on people’s houses, trees sands of infected computers.
was projected to come ashore need to leave the state, but est building in Cedar Key, I just were activated. across power lines.” “Nearly ever sector of the
early Wednesday as a Category should “get to higher ground in feel kind of like I need to be In Tarpon Springs, a coastal At 8 p.m. EDT Tuesday, Ida- economy has been victimized by
3 system with sustained winds a safe structure.” here,” Bair said. “We've proven community northwest of Tam- lia was about 155 miles west- Qakbot,” Martin Estrada, the US
of up to 120 miles per hour in "You can ride the storm out time and again that we’re not pa, 60 patients were evacuated southwest of Tampa, the Na- attorney in Los Angeles, said
the lightly populated Big Bend there, then go back to your going to wash away. We may be from a hospital out of concern tional Hurricane Center said. It Tuesday in announcing the take-
region, where the Florida Pan- home,” he said. a little uncomfortable for a cou- that the system could bring a 7- was moving north at 16 miles down. He said the criminal net-
handle curves into the peninsu- Not everyone was heeding ple of days, but we’ ll be OK foot storm surge. per hour. work had facilitated about 40
la. The result could be a big the warning. Andy Bair, owner eventually.” Idalia’s initial squalls were In Cuba, meanwhile, Idalia ransomware attacks alone over
blow to a state still dealing with of the Island Hotel, said he in- Tolls were waived on high- being felt in the Florida Keys left more than 60 percent of Pi- 18 months that investigators
lingering damage from last tended to “babysit” his bed-and- ways out of the danger area, and the southwestern coast of nar del Rio’s residents in the said netted Qakbot administra-
year’s Hurricane Ian. breakfast, which predates the shelters were open, and hotels Florida on Tuesday afternoon, dark, state media reported. tors about $58 million.
Qakbot’s ransomware victims
included an Illinois-based engi-
neering firm, financial services
Daily Briefing organizations in Alabama and
Kansas, a Maryland defense
manufacturer, and a Southern
US fighting California food distribution
company, Estrada said.
plan to recover Officials said $8.6 million in
cybercurrency was seized or fro-
Titanic artifacts zen but no arrests were an-
nounced.
NORFOLK, Va. — The US Estrada said the investigation
government is trying to stop is ongoing. He would not say
a planned expedition to re- where administrators of the mal-
cover items of historical in- ware, which marshaled infected
terest from the sunken Titan- machines into a botnet of zom-
ic, citing a federal law and an bie computers, were located. Cy-
international agreement that bersecurity researchers say they
treat the shipwreck as a hal- are believed to be in Russia and/
lowed gravesite. or other former Soviet states.
The expedition is being Officials estimated the so-
organized by RMS Titanic called malware loader, a digital
Inc., the Georgia-based firm Swiss knife for cybercrooks also
that owns the salvage rights known as Pinkslipbot and Qbot,
to the world’s most famous was leveraged to cause hundreds
shipwreck. The company ex- of millions of dollars in damage
hibits artifacts that have since first appearing in 2008 as
been recovered from the an information-stealing bank
wreck site at the bottom of trojan. They said millions of peo-
the North Atlantic, from ple in nearly every country in the
silverware to a piece of the world have been affected.
ship’s hull. Typically delivered via phish-
The government’s chal- ing email infections, Qakbot
lenge comes more than two gave criminal hackers initial ac-
months after the Titan sub- cess to violated computers. They
mersible imploded near the could then deploy additional
sunken ocean liner, killing payloads including ransomware,
five people. But the current steal sensitive information, or
legal fight has nothing to do gather intelligence on victims to
with the June tragedy, which facilitate financial fraud and
MARC A. HERMANN/MTA, VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS
involved a different company crimes such as tech support and
and an unconventionally de- Water from a water main break in New York’s Times Square flooded midtown streets and the city’s busiest subway station. romance scams.
signed vessel. The Qakbot network was “lit-
The battle in the US Dis-
trict Court in Norfolk, Va.,
Water main gives way under NYC’s Times Square, flooding streets, subways erally feeding the global cyber-
crime supply chain,” said Donald
which oversees Titanic sal- NEW YORK — A 127-year- The rushing water was only Environmental Protection. New York City has about Alway, assistant director in
vage matters, hinges instead old water main under New a few inches deep on the street, The excavation left a big 6,800 miles worth of water charge of the FBI’s Los Angeles
on federal law and a pact York City’s Times Square gave but videos posted on social me- hole and a muddy mess in one mains and has spent $1.9 bil- office, calling it “one of the most
with Great Britain to treat way early Tuesday, flooding one dia showed the flood cascading intersection, where workers lion in the past three years up- devastating cybercriminal tools
the sunken Titanic as a me- of America’s most iconic into the Times Square subway dug with heavy equipment to grading outdated water and in history.” The most commonly
morial to the more than squares and the city’s busiest station and through ventilation get to the broken pipe. sewer lines. Breaks happen detected malware in the first
1,500 people who died. The subway station. grates. Surrounding streets were somewhere in the city almost half of 2023, Qakbot impacted
ship sank in 1912. The 20-inch pipe gave way It took DEP crews about an open by rush hour, but subway every day, though the city said one in 10 corporate networks
The United States argues under 40th Street and Seventh hour to find the source of the service was suspended through the 402 water main breaks last and accounted for about 30 per-
that entering the Titanic’s Avenue at 3 a.m. and quickly leak and shut the water off, said much of Manhattan on the 1, 2, year were the second lowest cent of attacks globally, a pair of
severed hull, or physically al- delivered a wet reminder of the Rohit Aggarwala, commission- and 3 lines. Service was re- number on record. cybersecurity firms found. Such
tering or disturbing the perils of aging infrastructure. er of the city’s Department of stored with delays by midday. ASSOCIATED PRESS “initial access” tools allow extor-
wreck, is regulated by federal tionist ransomware gangs to
law and an agreement with skip the initial step of penetrat-
Britain. Among the govern- West Point time capsule disappoints N.C. student charged in professor’s slaying ing computer networks, making
ment’s concerns is the possi- them major facilitators for the
ble disturbance of artifacts Ever since a box from near- But when the cloth was re- A graduate student at the court appearance on Sept. 18. far-flung, mostly Russian-speak-
and any human remains that ly 200 years ago was found un- moved and an archeologist University of North Carolina He did not enter a plea. ing criminals who have wreaked
may still exist. der a monument at the US carefully lifted off the box’s Chapel Hill was charged in the Although first-degree mur- havoc by stealing data and dis-
“RMST is not free to dis- Military Academy in May, ca- cover, spectators laughed. fatal shooting Monday of one der is a capital crime in North rupting schools, hospitals, local
regard this validly enacted dets have wondered what was There was only silt inside. of his professors, a slaying that Carolina, Orange County pros- governments, and businesses
federal law, yet that is its inside. Their predictions in- ‘‘The box didn’t quite meet spread fear across ecutor Jeffrey Nie- worldwide.
stated intent,” US lawyers ar- cluded a flag, a bayonet, a expectations,’’ Paul Hudson, the campus and man said he would Beginning Friday in an opera-
gued Friday. They said that class ring, and a diary. an archeologist at the acade- forced an hourslong not seek a death sen- tion officials dubbed “Duck
allowing the recovery effort This week, academy lead- my, told the crowd. lockdown, according tence. The charge Hunt,” the FBI along with Eu-
would deprive the shipwreck ers said they would ‘‘unlock se- The box was found in the to court documents. carries a minimum ropol and law enforcement and
the protections Congress crets from the past’’ when they base of a monument con- The student, sentence of life with- justice partners in France, the
granted it. opened the time capsule. ‘‘Ex- structed in the late 1820s in Tailei Qi, 34, was out parole, Nieman United Kingdom, Germany, the
RMST’s expedition is ten- citing Reminder!’’ the acade- honor of Polish military engi- charged with first- said. Netherlands, Romania, and Lat-
tatively planned for May my tweeted on Sunday, urging neer Tadeusz Kosciuszko, who degree murder and Brian James, via seized more than 50 Qakbot
2024. The company said it viewers to set their alarms for aided America during the Rev- possession of a fire- UNC chief of police, servers and identified more than
plans to take images of the the Monday unveiling. olutionary War. arm on educational Graduate said Tuesday that Qi 700,000 infected computers,
entire wreck. That includes The roughly one-square- Hudson said it’s possible property in the death student Tailei and Yan “knew each more than 200,000 of them in
“inside the wreck, where de- foot box — hidden under a that an item inside the box of associate professor Qi appeared in other, and the sus- the United States — effectively
terioration has opened black cloth — took center had broken down over time. Zijie Yan inside a court Tuesday. pect went directly to cutting off criminals from their
chasms sufficient to permit a stage during the ceremony in ‘‘We don’t want to think campus lab, accord- the victim and then quarry.
remotely operated vehicle to West Point, N.Y. Military his- that they went through all the ing to documents filed in Or- left Caudill Labs.” After the The FBI then used the seized
penetrate the hull without torian Jennifer Voigtschild trouble to put this box in the ange County Court. professor was shot, the cam- Qakbot infrastructure to remote-
interfering with the current opened the event by asking: monument,’’ Hudson said, Qi appeared in court Tues- pus went into lockdown and ly dispatch updates that deleted
structure.” ‘‘Are we ready to see what is in ‘‘and not put anything in it.’’ day and was ordered held officers swarmed the area. the malware from thousands of
ASSOCIATED PRESS that box?’’ WASHINGTON POST without bond until his next NEW YORK TIMES infected computers.
W E D N E S D A Y, A U G U S T 3 0 , 2 0 2 3 T h e B o s t o n G l o b e The Nation A3
PP-RES-USA-0191 August 2023 ©2023 Pfizer Inc. All rights reserved. August 2023.
The World
Daily Briefing
Pakistan’s Khan
wins his appeal
of prison term
An appeals court in Pakistan
suspended former prime minis-
ter Imran Khan’s three-year
prison sentence Tuesday, the lat-
est twist in a political showdown
between Khan and leaders of
the powerful military establish-
ment who appear intent on side-
lining him from politics.
Khan had been arrested this
month after a trial court gave
him the three-year term in a cor-
ruption case, a sentence Khan’s
legal team appealed. It was not
clear on what grounds the Is-
lamabad High Court had sus-
pended the sentence Tuesday.
The decision offered a legal
victory for Khan, a former crick-
et star turned populist politician
who has been fighting to make a
political comeback since he was
forced from power last year.
But the victory was a narrow
one: Khan remained in prison ,
held in custody on charges in a
GARETH FULLER VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS
separate case against him.
AMID THE ENGLISH CHANNEL — A group of people thought to be migrants crossed the English Channel in a small boat traveling “There are powerful forces in
from the coast of France heading toward the direction of Dover, Kent, England, on Tuesday. Last week, the UK reported that more than the country that are not letting
the grudge go against Imran
2,000 migrants in 41 different boats arrived in Britain to seek asylum, a record high and 44 percent increase from this time last year.
Khan — even if it’s at the cost of
the country itself,” said Sayed
Zulfiqar Abbas Bukhari, a senior
leader of Khan’s political party,
days of clashing Vatican clarifies pope’s remarks on Russia throng of supporters expected to
attend never materialized.
Outgoing president
“It seems that the authori- of Guatemala calls
information By Gaia Pianigiani At the conclusion of his Those comments were im- ties, as expected, want to avoid for smooth transfer
NEW YORK TIMES speech, in which Francis en- mediately criticized in Ukraine a spontaneous rally in memory
By Valerie Hopkins Pope Francis did not intend couraged young Catholic Rus- and in other former Soviet of the top leadership of Wagner
NEW YORK TIMES to “glorify imperialistic logic” sians to build bridges between countries. Putin, who com- and to do so, have imposed a fog GUATEMALA CITY — Presi-
ST. PETERSBURG, Russia — in off-the-cuff remarks last generations and spread seeds pared himself to Peter the around the burial place,” Farida dent Alejandro Giammattei of
Even in death, the movements week about expansionist 18th- of reconciliation, he Great in a speech last Rustamova, an independent Guatemala called Tuesday for a
of Yevgeny Prigozhin, the Rus- century Russian rulers, the invoked the legacy of year, has mentioned journalist, wrote on Telegram. democratic transition of power
sian mercenary boss, were the Vatican said Tuesday, seeking the “great Russia of the idea of rebuilding Russian state television to anticorruption campaigner
subject of intense interest, con- to calm an outcry over com- saints, rulers, great the Russian empire barely mentioned the burial. and president-elect Bernardo
tradictory reporting, and culti- ments that some critics said R u s s i a o f Pe t e r I , in connection with Wagner’s logistics boss, Val- Arévalo and his Seed Movement
vated confusion. were too close to President Catherine II, that em- the war in Ukraine, ery Chekalov, who perished party, which have faced waves of
Speculation about where Vladimir Putin’s justifications pire — great, enlight- which was part of the with Prigozhin, was buried legal attacks in attempts to block
Prigozhin would be buried for invading Ukraine. ened, of great culture Soviet Union until its Tuesday at a ceremony that had his rise to power.
Tuesday ricocheted around In a video speech to young and great humanity.” collapse in three de- not been publicized in advance, The president’s statement
news media and channels on Russian Catholics on Friday, Those comments Pope Francis cades ago. but was attended by several came after a night of chaos in
the Telegram messaging app, “The pope intended to encour- appeared to deviate mentioned The leader of the hundred people. The group’s the Central American nation fol-
including those considered age the youth to preserve and from his prepared re- former Ukrainian Greek top field commander, Dmitry lowing one of its most tumultu-
close to the Russian security promote all that is positive in marks, which were Russian czars. Catholic Church, Svi- Utkin, was also killed. ous elections in recent history.
services. There were reports the great Russian cultural and released in a Vatican atoslav Shevchuk, al- In the days before Prigozhin’s Hours before the country’s
(true) of increased security pres- spiritual legacy,” the Vatican bulletin that did not mention so expressed “pain” and “disap- burial, any information released Supreme Electoral Tribunal cer-
ence and barriers erected at sev- spokesperson, Matteo Bruni, the extemporaneous referenc- pointment” over the pope’s re- was vague, conflicting, and un- tifiedthat Arévalo had won the
eral cemeteries around his said in a statement. “Surely not es to the two former Russian m a r k s , w h i c h h e s a i d confirmed by the government or presidential election, another
hometown, St. Petersburg, and to glorify imperialistic logic czars, who invaded parts of contradicted Francis’s doctrine Wagner. The Kremlin said it had agency — the electoral registry
other reports (false) of hearses and government personalities.” Ukraine in the 18th century. of peace. no information — except that — suspended his party from all
and a funeral cortege. Putin would not attend. activities. The Seed Movement
The fog of misinformation The murk was fitting for asked the country’s top electoral
was so dense that a joke spread least some police contingents over the cemetery were a large following. Then in June, he led a Prigozhin, whose life and death authority to lift the suspension.
on social media calling it a “spe- and rumors appeared to have Russian flag, a Wagner flag, and brief mutiny against the Russian have been shrouded in mystery. Arévalo called the suspension
cial funeral operation,” a pun on been decoys — Porokhovskoye the top of a wooden cross. A military leadership, leading to For years, he denied any con- illegal Monday and said that
the Kremlin’s term for the war had not been mentioned in the Times reporter saw police offi- widespread speculation that his nection to Wagner or to internet now that the vote has been certi-
in Ukraine, “special military op- swirl of speculation. cers sweeping the funeral plot days were numbered. campaigns to interfere in Amer- fied, “no one can impede me
eration.” Information about the burial with a dog trained to detect ex- On Aug. 23, a business jet ican elections, before later from taking office on Jan. 14.”
Then, about 5 p.m. Tuesday, could not confirmed indepen- plosives. carrying Prigozhin fell, smok- boasting about both. Wagner’s Arévalo and his party, posing
came the announcement from dently, because by the time it Prigozhin was once seen as ing, from the sky northwest of work for authoritarian regimes a threat to those in power, have
his company’s press service that was released, hundreds of po- being close to President Vladi- Moscow. All 10 people aboard came with lucrative oil and min- faced a slew of legal challenges,
Prigozhin had been buried lice officers and national guard mir Putin, and for years, he and were killed, including the three eral concessions, but the extent and assassination plots, accord-
around 1 p.m., with a small troops ringed the entire ceme- his Wagner military company top figures in Wagner, leaving of his wealth was concealed. He ing to international observers.
group of people in attendance, at tery and sealed it off to all but a were lethal tools of Kremlin poli- the group’s future in doubt. often disguised his locations ASSOCIATED PRESS
Porokhovskoye Cemetery in the few people. All that could be cy in Ukraine, the Middle East, The confusion about his buri- and movements, using different
eastern part of St. Petersburg. At seen of the grave from a bridge and Africa, and gained a popular al and heavy security presence at aircraft.
Israeli airliner
makes uplanned
US doesn’t want to sever China ties, secretary says stop in Saudi Arabia
TEL AVIV — A plane carry-
Raimondo shares variety of challenges facing US “This isn’t about decoupling,” ing Israelis home from the Indi-
businesses operating in China. she said. “This is about main- an Ocean island nation of Sey-
trade concerns Companies have expressed con- taining our very consequential chelles made an emergency
cerns about long-running issues trade relationship, which is landing in Saudi Arabia before
with Beijing like intellectual property theft good for America, good for Chi- flying back to Tel Aviv on Tues-
as well as a raft of newer devel- na and good for the world. An day, in what Israel praised as a
By Ana Swanson opments, like raids on business- unstable economic relationship sign of goodwill as Washington
and Keith Bradsher es, a new counterespionage law, between China and the United works to establish formal rela-
NEW YORK TIMES and exorbitant fines that come States is bad for the world.” tions between the two countries.
BEIJING — Secretar y of without explanations, she said The official Xinhua News The Air Seychelles flight car-
Commerce Gina Raimondo told during an extended interview Agency said late Tuesday that Li rying 128 passengers was forced
Chinese officials Tuesday that with reporters on a high-speed had told Raimondo that eco- to land Monday because of an
the United States was not seek- train from Beijing to Shanghai nomic relations between China electrical malfunction. Israel’s
ing to sever economic ties with on Tuesday evening. and the United States were Foreign Ministry said the pas-
China, but she expressed a litany “Increasingly, I hear from “mutually beneficial.” But he al- sengers spent the night at an air-
ANDY WONG/ASSOCIATED PRESS
of concerns that were prompting businesses China is uninvest- so warned that “politicizing eco- port hotel in Jeddah and were
the business community to de- able because it has become too US Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo met with Premier nomic and trade issues and flown back by the airline on an
scribe China as “uninvestable.” risky,” she said. Li Qiang of China in Beijing on Tuesday. overstretching the concept of alternate plane.
Raimondo, who oversees Raimondo said after the security will not only seriously Passengers described a
both trade promotion and US meetings that she had raised the mainly choosing Airbus aircraft ecutive order that bans new in- affect bilateral relations and frightening stretch of time as an
limits on China’s access to ad- various concerns of US compa- from Europe instead. vestments in certain advanced mutual trust, but also under- acrid smell filled the cabin and
vanced technology, spoke with nies like Intel, Micron, and Boe- “I was very firm in our ex- technologies, Raimondo said. mine the interests of enterprises the pilot announced that the
several of China’s top officials ing, but that she “didn’t receive pectations. I think I was heard,” The commerce secretary said and people of the two countries, plane would make an emergen-
Tuesday. That included meeting any commitments.” Beijing scut- she added. “We’ll have to see if she had refused those requests. and will have a disastrous im- cy stop in Saudi Arabia, a king-
with Premier Li Qiang, China’s tled Intel’s acquisition of anoth- they take any action.” “We don’t negotiate on matters pact on the global economy.” dom with which Israel has no
second-highest official, and Vice er semiconductor company this Raimondo also asked for of national security,” she said. Raimondo’s visit is part of an air links or diplomatic ties.
Premier He Lifeng, who over- month by not giving the deal an- China’s cooperation on broader Still, Raimondo tried to as- effort by the Biden administra- A normalization of relations
sees many economic issues, at titrust approval. It has also se- threats like climate change, fen- sure the Chinese that export tion to stop a long deterioration between Israel and Saudi Ara-
the Great Hall of the People, verely restricted some of Mi- tanyl, and artificial intelligence. controls applied only to a small in the US relationship with Chi- bia, the most powerful Arab
next to Tiananmen Square in cron’s semiconductor sales in The Chinese, in turn, asked for proportion of US-China trade, na and restore communica- state, has the potential to re-
the heart of Beijing. China since May and has halted the United States to reduce ex- and that other economic oppor- tions. She is the fourth senior shape the region and boost Isra-
Raimondo said she had almost all purchases of Boeing port controls on advanced tech- tunities between the countries Biden administration official to el’s standing in historic ways.
pressed Chinese officials on a jets over the last several years, nology and retract a recent ex- should be embraced. travel to China in three months. ASSOCIATED PRESS
W E D N E S D A Y, A U G U S T 3 0 , 2 0 2 3 T h e B o s t o n G l o b e The World A5
69
of the new academic year, saying on the left have accused the gov- government for clarity on what
public schools have a duty to up- ernment of policing what wom- they should do about abayas in $
hold "the most elementary prin- en can wear or of trying to ap- schools, declaring themselves
ciples of our Republic." He lik- peal to right-wing voters. Some unprepared to handle the in- Compare at $99
ened abayas, as well as khamis, critics have argued that it would creased prevalence of the loose-
robes worn by some Muslim be impractical to ask schools to fitting, full-body robes among
men, to other banned markers of decide what is an abaya, and their student bodies and unwill-
an individual's religion. what is simply a long dress. ing to decide for themselves if
The move has been wel- Abayas are not worn by all abayas constituted an "ostenta-
comed by conservative politi- Muslim women, but some, par- tious" religious symbol.
Reminiscent of sprawling sunflower fields in
the Tuscan sun, our delightful bracelet from Italy
wraps the wrist in a lovely floral design.
New charges for Canadian in suicide cases BOSTON GLOBE MEDIA
1 Exchange Place, Suite 201
TORONTO — Canadian po- suspected of sending at least Boston, MA 02109-2132 Available in 7" $69 and 8" $79
lice said Tuesday they are charg- 1,200 packages to more than 40
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A6 The Nation T h e B o s t o n G l o b e W E D N E S D A Y, A U G U S T 3 0 , 2 0 2 3
Calif. in experiment to pay drug users to avoid stimulants it regulatory power beyond what
Congress had authorized.
Writing for five justices of the
By Soumya Karlamangla profit California Health Care the medical director for sub- court, Justice Samuel A. Alito
NEW YORK TIMES Foundation, noting that stimu- stance abuse prevention and ruled that the Clean Water Act
California began a bold ex- lant use is a particularly severe control in the Los Angeles Coun- extends only to “those wetlands
periment this year: paying peo- problem among the state’s grow- ty Department of Public Health. with a continuous surface con-
ple to stay sober. ing homeless population. “This Los Angeles County, which nection to bodies that are ‘wa-
With overdose deaths on the isn’t going to solve it, but I think has about 20 outpatient treat- ters of the United States’ in their
rise, the state’s Medicaid pro- it’s well worth trying.” ment centers enrolling patients own right, so that they are ‘indis-
gram recently became the first in There aren’t any targeted in the 24-week program, is one tinguishable’ from those waters.”
the nation to begin offering fi- medications to combat addic- of two dozen counties participat- He was joined by Chief Justice
nancial rewards to drug users tion to stimulants, as there are ing. According to state officials, John G. Roberts Jr. and Justices
who abstain from using stimu- for opioids and alcohol, so stim- 88 percent of California’s Medi- Clarence Thomas, Neil M. Gor-
lants like cocaine and metham- ulant addictions are among the Cal population lives in the par- such, and Amy Coney Barrett.
phetamine. The program is an hardest to treat. That’s why state ticipating counties. The program The EPA said the amend-
FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES
innovative, science-backed effort officials are banking on this pilot is expected to cost roughly $50 ments announced Tuesday are
with many supporters, but it has program to fight cocaine and Methamphetamine abuse has been cited as one factor million, most of it paid with fed- limited and only change the
raised some eyebrows. methamphetamine abuse. contributing to California’s homelessness crisis. eral funding. parts of the previous rule that
“It’s really a brave choice of Deaths from these kind of Participants are also offered are invalid under the court's de-
California to try this against po- stimulants in California quadru- Emergency department visits re- found. therapy, counseling, medication cision.
tential backlash and misunder- pled from 2011 to 2019, accord- lated to amphetamines rose “The public health burden of to help manage the use of other
standing,” said Catherine Teare, ing to an analysis by the Califor- nearly 50 percent in two years, methamphetamine use disorder drugs, and connections to com- Material from the Associated
an associate director at the non- nia Health Care Foundation. from 2018 to 2020, the analysis is enormous,” said Brian Hurley, munity resources. Press was used in this report.
W E D N E S D A Y, A U G U S T 3 0 , 2 0 2 3 T h e B o s t o n G l o b e The Region A7
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A10 Editorial T h e B o s t o n G l o b e W E D N E S D A Y, A U G U S T 3 0 , 2 0 2 3
Opinion
Inbox
O
noon viewing of “Oppenheimer,” those exiting the theater
were escorted out by several n Sept. 12, voters in the newly re- with the folks who may need it, who don’t know it
AMC employees holding open drawn City Council district that en- exists.”
Outside, I saw the doors. That was unusual. compasses much of Dorchester and On matters of city policy, Walsh has distin-
several parked Outside, I saw several parked
police cars and scores of teens
part of the South End have a tough guished herself with a more sophisticated and real-
choice to make. Their city councilor, istic vision than her competitors for dealing with
police cars and milling about. I sensed a dan-
Frank Baker, is retiring after a decade in office, and the city’s skyrocketing costs. Boston needs more
gerous situation brewing. Crisis
scores of teens mode kicked in, and we left fast
an unusually large and impressive field of seven housing, of all kinds. Walsh calls for overhauling
candidates is jockeying to replace him. Although zoning to make it easier to build. She’s also re-
milling about. instead of going to get a bite at
there are several contenders in this race who could frained from jumping on some of the more politi-
Panera.
Crisis mode My husband and I gingerly ably represent the district, the Globe enthusiastical- cally popular bandwagons, such as Boston Mayor
ly endorses Ann Walsh of Lower Michelle Wu’s proposal to require more of each new
kicked in, and crossed the street to the park-
ing garage, passing in front of a Mills, a 51-year-old former City development to be set aside for income-restricted,
we left fast. police car, not in the crosswalk, Hall aide and education nonprof- subsidized housing — a requirement that risks scar-
to avoid the young people near- it leader who promises to break ing off new housing development altogether or rais-
by. In the garage elevator, a down barriers to city services for ing costs for the unsubsidized units. Walsh’s stance
mother with her two children her constituents while pushing a shows a willingness to break with the mayor, too —
said they were told to evacuate forward-looking agenda on the always an important trait for city councilors.
the theater before their movie started. Two men reported council. On education, the city’s other great challenge,
that we should exit the garage through the rear and turn
Walsh already knows the Walsh’s own personal experiences give her strong
right to avoid the scene.
ropes at City Hall, having worked insight into the struggles of families in the city. In
I was aware that there had been an attack on a teen ear-
lier in the week at the South Bay shopping center. I made a Walsh
in various capacities, including 2010, right after her second child enrolled at the
mental note to change the venue for my tickets to see the chief of staff, for former city Lee School, it was announced that it was going to
Metropolitan Opera “Live in HD” in the fall to the AMC councilor-at-large John Connolly. She has also been close — a “complete blindside,” as she put it. While
downtown. As we sped past Mass. and Cass (oddly, feeling a program manager at the Boys & Girls Club, soft- the council doesn’t directly control BPS, Walsh says
less threatened there), little did I realize that the downtown
AMC theater would experience another brawl a few hours
later. On matters of city policy, Walsh has distinguished herself with a
Growing up in New York City in the 1970s, I learned al-
ways to be aware of my surroundings. Sad to say, that’s the
more sophisticated and realistic vision than her competitors for
case here and now. dealing with the city’s skyrocketing costs. Boston needs more
PAT STANTON
South End housing, of all kinds. Walsh calls for overhauling zoning to make it
easier to build.
Young people erupting in melees
need guidance before it’s too late ball coach, and board member of the Lee Academy she would use the lessons from her own experience
Pilot School, which her children attended. as a parent and from working for Connolly to
This past weekend, there were several cases of violence in The basic theme of her candidacy, Walsh says, is “shine a light” on the district.
Boston that should concern all of us, but especially the par- ending what she terms the “secret knock” that too Walsh also promises to be an ally on the mayor’s
ents of young people. often seems to define who receives — or even climate and transit efforts, pushing for free and
As the Globe reported, a crowd of about 400 young peo-
knows about — city services in Boston. faster buses and more options to get people out of
ple outside the movie theater at the South Bay shopping
“The secret knock is that sort of phenomenon of, cars.
center engaged in multiple melees, resulting in the closure
of stores and requiring a large response by police, several of if you know a guy, or you walk past the right place The field in the nonpartisan preliminary also in-
whom were said to have been assaulted. Later that evening at the right time, or you’re friends with the right cludes Matthew Patton, a workers’ rights lawyer;
at the AMC Boston, about 150 young people were again act- people, all of a sudden things work for you. You get John FitzGerald, a city official in the Boston Plan-
ing violently. Boston Police Commissioner Michael Cox into the housing lottery, or you know which schools ning & Development Agency; Joel Richards, a pas-
said, “This behavior is not kid behavior — it’s criminal be- to put on your list, or your kid gets the after-school tor and BPS teacher; Barry Lawton, a former BPS
havior.” program, or your building permit finds its way teacher with a long history of community activism;
The current activity of the city’s youth is troubling, not through the system. And it’s a matter of networks Jennifer Johnson, a member of local civic groups;
just as a matter of personal safety but for the impact it just working the way they’ve always worked. But and Rosalind Wornum, a member of the Boston
could have on the Boston economy if residents avoid shop- folks who are not in those networks are constantly Neighborhood Trauma Team and the founder of
ping centers, theaters, or any area where young people may on the outside,” she told the Globe editorial board. Women On the Rise New England Inc. The top two
gather. The uproar these incidents create could be harmful Instead, she wants to push out information in a finishers will advance to a final election in Novem-
to the young people themselves, the police, and to innocent
“more equitable and transparent way ... multiple ber.
people who find themselves in the vicinity.
languages, multiple platforms, different spaces in The council has not exactly distinguished itself
I would remind parents and guardians that it is their re-
sponsibility, not that of schools, police, or society, to be a
the community where different folks are” as well as over the last years, often riven with infighting and
good example to their children and teach them to respect using “trusted brokers” who can serve as govern- seemingly petty squabbles. But Walsh has shown
others, especially authority. ment partners and help disseminate information. that she’s a thoughtful, engaged, and independent
MICHAEL W. KELLEHER III “Whether that’s faith organizations, barbershops, leader who will not only represent her district well
Charlestown grocery stores, pediatricians, all of those folks need — but will also help the council as a whole turn the
to have the information and be ready to share it page.
O
out in cities such as San Francisco and Portland, Ore.? when no emergency shelter space exists,” the sance laws designed to protect “public safety,
Where is that money for more services? Let’s face it: The nly in Boston and only under police and Inspectional Services are “autho- health, comfort, convenience.” Ask the folks
answer is a return to enforcement of the law so that police Mayor Michelle Wu’s admin- rized to promulgate any additional restric- who have businesses in the Newmarket
can be effective at stopping crime. istration would it take a new tions relative to the time, place, and manner Square area or even the health care workers
PAUL SULLIVAN city ordinance to remove the for camping and density of Campsites.” Oh, attempting to deliver services to those in the
Eastham tents at Mass. and Cass that that should come as a relief to those already encampment whether the tents have become
have provided a shield for drug dealing and concerned about the gatherings of the un- a public safety and public health menace.
sex trafficking. And it’s an ordinance that is housed in front of the main branch of the Those with long memories may also re-
simply too precious in the way it proposes to Boston Public Library or at the Government call the tent city set up in Dewey Square by
deal with the encampment. Center T stop. Occupy Boston. When what started as a po-
Taiwan will not bow The city has a boatload of legal remedies The ordinance also details the City Stor- litical movement turned into a public health
to China’s intimidation already on the books that could be used to age Program for the tents and other proper- and safety hazard, a superior court judge
force the removal of the tents in the open-air ty removed with them. The program in- found no First Amendment right to occupy a
China launched large-scale naval and air exercises Aug. 19 drug market area of Massachusetts Avenue cludes a “feedback system,” including a form public park for months. The Menino admin-
to threaten Taiwan in response to Vice President Lai Ching- and Melnea Cass Boulevard. After all, Wu for filing a claim for “reimbursement for lost istration served the protesters with an evic-
te’s stopovers in the United States en route to one of our managed to have them cleared before — property.” tion notice and razed the tent city two days
South American diplomatic allies, Paraguay (“Chinese mili- back in January 2022. But city officials now In fact, the ordinance is less about giving later.
tary launches drills around Taiwan as a ‘warning’ after a insist current city law isn’t “robust” enough. police and public officials authority they al- There was no “let us store your tent and
top island official went to US,” BostonGlobe.com, Aug. 19). Or is this more about politics than poli- ready have than offering up a feel-good bill here’s a claim check.”
China’s irrational and provocative actions not only pose a cy? of rights for tent dwellers. To its credit, the Wu administration is
risk to the peace and stability in the region but also threat- Of course, City Council buy-in for Wu’s “The Ordinance will establish a prohibi- moving heaven and earth to find alterna-
en democratic values and the rules-based international or- broader plan would be nice — especially tion against unsanctioned use of tents, tives — short- and long-term — for those
der. from this council, which can’t seem to agree tarps, and similar temporary structures on who can be coaxed into accepting some kind
Since last year, China has sent warplanes and naval ves- on much of anything. But at what cost? Pas- public property and in the public way which of shelter and services en route to treatment.
sels near Taiwan’s airspace and territorial waters almost sage of an ordinance that at best seeks to mi- have been shielding much of the dangerous However, as Wu’s ordinance states, those
daily to threaten and intimidate Taiwan. Recently, China cromanage dissolution of the encampment activity in the area and undermining the campsites “shield drug trafficking, human
has stepped up its economic coercion and gray zone activi- and at worst has the potential to extend it ability of providers to safely and effectively trafficking, weapons, fire hazards, violence
ties toward Taiwan, aiming to interfere in Taiwan’s January indefinitely and perhaps even push it to oth- deliver services,” Wu said in her letter con- and criminal activity.”
2024 presidential election. er neighborhoods? veying the bill to the council. And that begs the question: Why have
China should hold its own democratic elections instead The proposed ordinance submitted to the Of course, as one real estate lawyer point- the encampments been allowed to grow and
of meddling in Taiwan’s democracy. The Taiwanese people council Monday states: “It is unlawful for ed out, the city zoning code already does to fester? If the city isn’t going to enforce ex-
are proud of our democratic way of life and will not bow to any person to camp or maintain a Campsite that. “You can’t live on the sidewalk because isting laws that could have been used to raze
any pressure from across the Taiwan Strait. As Taiwan’s for- or Camp Materials in or on any public prop- you don’t own it,” he explained. “It’s that them long ago, what good is one more ordi-
eign minister, Joseph Wu, tweeted recently, “It’s up to our erty or in the public right-of-way, including fundamental. It’s the occupation of a public nance?
citizens to decide, not the bully next door.” but not limited to any street, sidewalk, way.”
CHARLES LIAO school or public park, unless specifically au- Just ask the owners of those North End Rachelle G. Cohen is a Globe opinion writer.
Director General thorized or during a Period when Shelter is restaurants that couldn’t set up an outdoor She can be reached at
Taipei Economic and Cultural Office in Boston Unavailable.” patio this summer how fundamental that is. [email protected].
W E D N E S D A Y, A U G U S T 3 0 , 2 0 2 3 T h e B o s t o n G l o b e Opinion A11
JAMES MACDONALD/BLOOMBERG
A helicopter dropped water onto the Cameron Bluffs wildfire near Port Alberni, British Columbia, on June 6.
SCOT LEHIGH
SPOTLIGHT EDITOR
Patricia Wen
A12 T h e B o s t o n G l o b e W E D N E S D A Y, A U G U S T 3 0 , 2 0 2 3
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Business PAGE B5 bostonGLOBE.com/business Ginkgo Bioworks partnering with Google for AI-based drug discovery
Metro
T H E B O S T O N G L O B E W E D N E S DAY, AU G US T 3 0 , 2 0 2 3 | B O S T O N G L O B E .C O M / M E T R O
B
complex
president Donald Trump ineligible vided aid or comfort to the insurrec- efforts to subvert democracy. sued a particular course of action
for the 2024 ballot in New Hamp- tionists” who attacked the Capitol as After urging by conservative talk- with regard to Trump’s eligibility is
shire on account of his involvement Congress was certifying the 2020 show host Charlie Kirk during his “misinformation.” Scanlan’s office
in the events that culminated in vio- presidential election results. podcast on Monday, supporters of has asked for legal advice, and For-
lence at the US Capitol on Jan. 6, Castro’s argument is based on a the former president inundated mella’s office is “carefully reviewing
system
2021. much-discussed but still unproven New Hampshire Secretary of State the legal issues involved,” but nei-
The suit, which was filed by ex- legal theory that claims state and David Scanlan’s office with phone ther has taken a position on this
treme long shot Republican presi- federal officials have authority un- calls to pressure Scanlan to keep the matter, they said.
dential candidate John Anthony der Section 3 of the 14th Amend- GOP front-runner’s name on the They did not respond to ques-
Castro of Texas, argues that Trump ment of the US Constitution to dis- ballot for New Hampshire’s first-in- tions about Castro’s newly filed law-
is constitutionally ineligible to hold
public office again because he “pro-
qualify Trump for the ballot based
on what’s already known about his
the-nation presidential primary,
which is less than five months away.
suit.
TRUMP, Page B4
Juvenile justice seeks to
find the right balance
By Sean Cotter
GLOBE STAFF
Top state
Dr. Rochelle Walensky (right)
and Dr. Robbie Goldstein
(above foreground) donated
blood Tuesday at the Red
Cross Donation Center in
Dedham to mark the recent
official talks
implementation of new rules
that open the donation system
to millions of gay and bisexual
transportation
men. In 2015, the two began
an eight-year mission to help
change the nation’s blood
secretary’s exit
donation rules. Driscoll says Fiandaca
chose to leave on her own
By Matt Stout
GLOBE STAFF
Answers on the push to negotiate drug prices day, though why — or where Fiandaca may be go-
ing — remains unclear.
Lieutenant Governor Kim Driscoll told report-
ers Tuesday that Fiandaca is “ready for her next
By Jessica Bartlett generated fierce pushback. challenge” and praised her short time in the ad-
GLOBE STAFF “What the pharma companies will say is you ministration. Fiandaca said Monday that she will
President Biden’s administration has an- don’t negotiate with the federal government,” resign effective Sept. 11.
nounced the first 10 drugs to target for price ne- Roosevelt said. “It’s not even take it or leave it. “She’s ready to move on. We’re ready to sup-
gotiation, an effort to reduce drug costs for mil- It’s just take it.” port her in that,” Driscoll said in a brief interview
lions and help more Americans afford their pre- Pharmaceutical companies are still protest- following an unrelated event in Dorchester. “[We]
scriptions. ing the changes, created by the Inflation Reduc- know that we’re going to have a solid team in
The change has sparked protests from drug tion Act, that allow the federal government to place. It will be a really smooth transition. So I
manufacturers but also questions from consum- negotiate drug prices for the first time. In such a think that’s really good for all of us.”
ers, who wonder whether the change will result negotiation, if the federal government proposes Fiandaca’s abrupt announcement that she will
in real savings. a price drug companies cannot stomach, manu- leave her post atop the state Department of Trans-
Here are some of the questions the Boston facturers have the choice to walk away from the portation surprised board members and transpor-
Globe has received from readers. Medicare market altogether. tation advocates alike. It also marked the latest
But the market is so large that manufacturers bout of turbulence to hit MassDOT, an agency
Why wasn’t the federal government aren’t likely to do that. that — with the MBTA, Registry of Motor Vehi-
already negotiating drug prices? cles, and highway division, among other offices —
When the Medicare Part D program was cre- Who will benefit from this drug pricing directly touches as many, if not more, Massachu-
ated in 2003 to cover most prescription drugs, change? setts residents than any other secretariat under
the program had explicit language prohibiting The drug pricing change affects those who are Healey.
the federal program from negotiating on the covered through Medicare, a federal insurance Her tenure will be one of the shortest for a
price, largely due to effective lobbying by drug program that generally insures older adults, and Cabinet secretary in recent memory and will force
manufacturers. those who are taking these specific drugs. Healey to reshuffle her leadership team just
Jim Roosevelt, a health law consultant at Ver- To start, the Biden administration chose to months after finalizing her expanded Cabinet.
rill, said the clout and degree of the federal gov- begin price negotiation for the 10 drugs that Undersecretary of Transportation Monica Tib-
JULIO CORTEZ/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO
ernment’s ability to negotiate prices has long DRUG PRICES, Page B4 FIANDACA, Page B3
B2 Metro T h e B o s t o n G l o b e W E D N E S D A Y, A U G U S T 3 0 , 2 0 2 3
Customer service
This day in history
City Retail Other
PRINT AND DIGITAL 7-day home delivery $45.00 45.00 45.00
AIR TIME
Kids went airborne as they jumped on the large bounce pillow at Ward’s Berry Farm in Sharon Tuesday.
Business
Ginkgo
partners
with
Google
Plans to develop
AI model for drug
discovery with deal
By Aaron Pressman
GLOBE STAFF
An urgent need
provide Ginkgo with up to $56 million
in funding over the next three years, de-
Turning the 24-acre parcel pendent on Ginkgo meeting undis-
A
in the South
lot of plans have been float- End an enticing By Hiawatha Bray
ed about the future of Widett spot for a GLOBE STAFF
Androscoggin
Food Co-op
volunteers Pam
Researchers aim to help farmers
Laflamme (left)
and Sally
Manikian
markets broaden their reach
signed up By Amanda Gokee Jess Carson, an assistant research professor at
Peter Brandon GLOBE STAFF UNH, and Analena Bruce, a scientist at the New
of Gorham, CONCORD, N.H. — Farmers markets and com- Hampshire Agricultural Experiment Station,
N.H., as the munity-supported agriculture isn’t for everyone. found that farmers markets have a relatively nar-
co-op’s newest But new research indicates that there are ways that row customer base, limiting how much local farm-
member-owner marketing could help these local food vendors ex- ers and vendors can grow their businesses.
at the Gorham pand and reach new customers, be- Their goal was to figure out how farmers mar-
farmers market yond the loyal but niche following kets and other alternative food networks (non-gro-
in June. they currently enjoy in New cery store food sellers) can market their products
Hampshire and the region. to attract new customers.
Polling from UNH’s Carsey One key finding was that more than 70 percent
School of Public Policy looked at of respondents considered taste, quality, healthi-
food shopping behaviors, values, ness, and affordability to be important factors
and perceptions across New England. The re- when buying food.
search from the New Hampshire Agricultural Ex- People were less interested in food being local
periment Station found that alternative food net- or the size of vendors than researchers previously
works have struggled to grow beyond their niche believed.
MEAGHAN POIRIER
market. FARMERS MARKETS, Page B8
B6 Business T h e B o s t o n G l o b e W E D N E S D A Y, A U G U S T 3 0 , 2 0 2 3
The archdiocese has not ruled million. establishment that “really can ria, the gymnasium, the ball- her @danagerber6. The number of job openings con-
tinued to drop in July, the Labor De-
partment reported Tuesday, another
sign that the US labor market is los-
student
the Job Openings and Labor Turn-
over Survey. The amount of people
quitting their jobs, a measure of
loan help
workers’ confidence in the job mar-
ket, continued nudge down in July
as well.
Labor market data is closely
By Jo Constantz watched by policymakers at the Fed-
BLOOMBERG NEWS eral Reserve as they combat stub-
The share of employers offer- born inflation.
ing student loan repayment bene- “For workers, this looks like few-
fits is climbing as companies hope er opportunities — if you leave your
to gain a competitive advantage in job now, you’re less likely to land a
recruiting younger workers in a better one than you were last year at
still-tight labor market. this time,” Elizabeth Renter, a data
The share of full-time job list- analyst at the personal finance site
ings mentioning student debt re- NerdWallet, said in an email state-
payment programs has more than ment. “For the Fed, this likely looks
doubled since 2019, according to according to plan.”
an analysis by job site Handshake. Fed policymakers lifted interest
The benefit, though, is still rela- rates to a range of 5.25 percent to
tively rare: It shows up in only 3 5.5 percent in their last meeting in
percent of job posts. July, the highest since 2001. Only
Christine Cruzvergara, Hand- one Fed meeting has passed since
shake’s chief education strategy March 2022 where the central bank
officer, expects to see more em- has not raised rates. Some investors
ployers start offering the benefit hope that signs the labor market is
in the next year or two as student continuing to cool will push the Fed
loan payments worth about $1.5 to end its campaign of rate increases
trillion resume for some 28 mil- sooner.
DEE DWYER/BLOOMBERG
lion US borrowers. The monthly Fed Chair Jerome Powell sig-
payments are starting up follow- naled Friday that the central bank
ing a three-year pandemic hiatus. week can now access up to Handshake of over 1,100 students One big selling point, she says: an Students was not ruling out more rate in-
The debate over student debt $15,000 over seven years’ worth pursuing bachelor’s degrees at offer for a job that provides bene- walked on creases.
relief dominated headlines earlier of monthly payments. The perk 440 institutions. Of those, almost fits to help her pay down her stu- campus at the “We are prepared to raise rates
this year when President Biden’s helps with higher retention of 70 percent say their debt will in- dent debt. American further if appropriate, and intend to
plan to slash balances for more younger career employees, ac- fluence which jobs they apply for. The industries that account for University in hold policy at a restrictive level until
than 40 million Americans was re- cording to Megan Bourque, head That’s true for Olivia Bianic, an the most listings that advertise Washington, we are confident that inflation is
jected by the US Supreme Court. of benefits at the firm. art major at Saint Mary’s College student loan help on Handshake D.C. The moving sustainably down toward
Last week the administration With a cohort of workers in- of California. Bianic expects to include health care and services, number of our objective,” Powell said at the
launched a fresh effort, opening creasingly burdened by student owe around $20,000 upon gradu- nonprofits, and government, law, employers and Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas
applications for a new income- debt, help paying it down is likely ation, just under the national av- and politics. industries City’s annual Jackson Hole confer-
driven repayment plan meant to to have wide appeal, Cruzvergara erage. Making a living as a free- It may be an especially smart offering student ence in Wyoming.
shore up low-income borrowers. said. “Student loans impact their lance artist by creating work she tactic for companies in less-flashy loan repayment The new data is likely to be wel-
Some company-sponsored stu- ability to settle down, their ability cares about on commission is her industries, like insurance or ac- benefits is c o m e d b y t h e Fe d , s a i d L a y l a
dent loan repayment assistance to buy a home and their ability to, ultimate dream job. counting, to adopt. “Because if increasing as O’Kane, a senior economist at Light-
has been around for years, but a quite frankly, kickstart their en- While Bianic always knew a ca- you’re not going to be able to nec- companies cast, a labor market analytics firm. It
few have since stepped up their tire life,” she said. “It’s such a large reer as an artist would never be essarily appeal to the fun, energet- attempt to shows that what the Fed has been
commitment. Financial services swath of our graduating class now easy or a sure thing, her level of ic, sexy sort of vibe of your indus- succeed at doing is working, but policymakers
firm Fidelity Investments, which that it’s undeniably an issue for an student debt is making that path try, you might as well appeal to recruiting are not likely to declare their mis-
began providing assistance in entire generation.” even more arduous. For now, that the practicalness of what it is,” younger sion accomplished just yet, she said.
2016, raised the program maxi- Over half of the class of 2024 means finding a stable, full-time Cruzvergara said. “I think we’re workers in a “This is a really good sign for a
mum in the fall of 2021. Eligible expects to graduate with student job with a steady paycheck that al- going to start to see it come into tight labor cooling labor market, but it’s not a
staff working at least 30 hours a debt, according to a survey by lows her to make art on the side. play in more industries.” market. cool labor market yet,” O’Kane said.
“There’s some way to go before we
think we solved some of the labor
market tightness.”
3M to pay $6b to settle lawsuits over military earplugs The US labor market has defied
expectations by remaining strong
despite the Fed’s mission to slow
By Aaron Gregg and Eli Tan In 2018, 3M agreed to pay $9.1 Tuesday on news of the settle- down the economy by raising inter-
WASHINGTON POST million to the US government to ment. Some analysts had expected est rates.
Manufacturing giant 3M will resolve allegations by Moldex- the litigation to cost the company Consistently strong labor data
pay $6 billion to settle hundreds of Metric that the earplugs were de- between $10 billion and $15 bil- initially fueled predictions that the
thousands of claims brought by fective, but it did not admit liabili- lion, according to the Wall Street Fed would continue rate increases
military veterans who said its ear- ty. Journal. until the economy fell into a reces-
plugs caused hearing loss during Tuesday’s agreement resolves Carl Tobias, a University of sion. Many have taken a more opti-
their service. another major legal case for 3M, a Richmond law professor who has mistic view recently as inflation has
The deal announced Tuesday sprawling conglomerate that been following the case, says the begun to moderate alongside a
resolves one of the largest mass makes hundreds of products span- award is smaller than expected. strong labor market.
torts in US history. More than ning dozens of industries. Its coat- The typical plaintiff would get Employers are starting to feel the
300,000 claims were submitted on ings and sealants figure in numer- $12,500 unless they can prove effects of high interest rates, said Ju-
behalf of veterans who said ear- ous industrial supply chains, while they suffered serious injuries, To- l i a Po l l a k , c h i e f e c o n o m i s t a t
plugs damaged their hearing or its medical and orthodontic divi- bias said, compared to some indi- ZipRecruiter. Companies are being
caused tinnitus, which is a contin- sions make devices such as stetho- vidual verdicts in the case that more judicious in their hiring even if
uous ringing or buzzing sound in scopes, as well as the preformed have already reached millions of they need more people, in part be-
the ears. The plaintiffs alleged the crowns that dentists use in root ca- dollars. cause of the high cost of labor, she
earplugs could loosen in the ear, nals. Its N95 and KN95 masks be- Tobias said the settlement re- said.
reducing their effectiveness and came ubiquitous during the coro- quires the endorsement of 98 per- “With interest rates this high,
KAREN BLEIER/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES
leaving the user vulnerable. navirus pandemic. cent of claimants, or it could fall some investments don’t pencil out,”
“This historic agreement repre- In June, 3M agreed to pay apart. Pollak said. “Businesses that would
sents a tremendous victory for the of the settlement agreement are 3M said the $10.4 billion over 13 years to fund “As a number of veterans look have opened another location or in-
thousands of men and women not fulfilled.’’ settlement was public water suppliers that have at those bellwethers where the vested in another truck or another
who bravely served our country The case emerged from a 2016 made without detected perfluoroalkyl and poly- awards are as high as $200 mil- warehouse are taking it slow.”
and returned home with life-alter- whistle-blower lawsuit filed by an admission of fluoroalkyl substances, known as lion, they may look at the $12,500 The August employment report
ing hearing injuries,’’ attorneys for Moldex-Metric, a rival earplug liability. The PFAS and called forever chemicals figure and decide it’s too low,’’ To- will be released by the Labor Depart-
the plaintiffs said in a joint state- maker, on behalf of the US govern- Minnesota because they don’t break down in bias said. ment on Friday.
ment. ment. It alleged the earplugs, manufacturing the environment. Plaintiffs num- The settlement is to be paid out The unemployment rate dropped
The settlement was made with- called the CAEv2, had a known de- giant also said bering in the thousands alleged over six years. It includes $5 bil- to 3.5 percent in July, a sign that al-
out an admission of liability, the fect that made them unsafe. its earplugs that chemicals in the company’s lion in cash and $1 billion in stock, though the labor market is cooling,
company said in its Tuesday an- The earplugs were originally “are safe and consumer products could cause which is to be paid to plaintiffs workers are generally still able to
nouncement. 3M contends its ear- manufactured by Aearo Technolo- effective when cancer and birth defects, lower based on a 10-day moving average find opportunities. The unemploy-
plugs “are safe and effective when gies, which 3M acquired in 2008. used properly.” fertility, and other health prob- price at the time it is issued, at ment data for August will be one of
used properly’’ and that it is pre- The US military purchased the lems. The company did not admit which time it can be sold immedi- the last labor market pulses Fed poli-
pared to continue to defend itself earplugs from 2003 to 2015, ac- liability in that settlement. ately, according to people close to cymakers will get before their next
through litigation “if certain terms cording to court filings. 3M stock jumped 1.39 percent the settlement discussions. meeting on Sept. 19-20.
W E D N E S D A Y, A U G U S T 3 0 , 2 0 2 3 T h e B o s t o n G l o b e Business B7
TALKING POINTS
ECONOMY US consumer confidence fell by the most in two years as souring views on the labor
market, higher borrowing costs and lingering inflation curbed optimism. The Conference
Consumer
confidence
Board’s index fell to 106.1 this month from 114 in July, data out Tuesday showed. The
number was below all estimates in a Bloomberg survey, and the decline reversed most of
the advance over the previous two months. The group’s measure of current conditions fell
States targeting gaps
takes a plunge to 144.8, the lowest since November. A gauge of expectations — which reflects consumers’
six-month outlook — dropped to 80.2, leaving it slightly above June’s level. in pay by insisting
on transparency
— BLOOMBERG NEWS
RETAIL Best Buy sales and profits slid in the second quar-
By Jeff Green parency law requires compa-
ter as the nation’s largest consumer electronics
and Chris Marr nies to give current employees
Best Buy profits chain continues to wrestle with a pullback in BLOOMBERG NEWS notice of openings that could
down as spending on gadgets after Americans splurged
during the pandemic. The decline in sales was
As a growing share of US
companies are forced to tell job
advance their careers. The state
can order fines of up to $10,000
electronics smaller than what Wall Street had anticipated, applicants and employees up- per violation and changes in
spending however, and profits were better than expected. front how much they’ll pay for
work, lawmakers are beginning
business practices.
This mandate has created
stagnates Comparable sales — sales from physical stores
open at least a year, and digital channels — fell 6.3
to ask them to be equally trans- compliance challenges for Colo-
parent about opportunities to rado businesses, said Roger G.
percent, dragged down by declines in computing and appliances. — ASSOCIATED PRESS get a promotion. Trim, labor and employment
Illinois legislators included lawyer at Jackson Lewis P.C. in
so-called opportunity transpar- Denver. The current law re-
ency when enacting this year’s quires that businesses with a
REAL ESTATE Home prices in the United States climbed for a fifth month as buyers competed for deals
pay equity law, which takes ef- Colorado presence make a rea-
in the least affordable market in decades. A national gauge of prices rose 0.7 percent in
fect in 2025, and Colorado’s leg- sonable effort to notify all em-
Home prices up June from May, according to seasonally adjusted data from S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller. islature beefed up require- ployees of promotion opportu-
again on meager While rising mortgage rates have pushed some would-be homebuyers to the sidelines,
there’s still plenty of demand from determined shoppers, who are left to battle over a
ments for next year to insist
employers be more forthcom-
nities in writing when the job
becomes available, giving them
offerings severely limited inventory of listings. Elevated prices spurred by the supply crunch and ing on information about pro- sufficient time to apply before
higher borrowing costs have combined to make this the most-unaffordable housing motions. New Jersey has a simi- the company decides whom to
lar provision in pending legisla- hire.
market since 1984, according to Black Knight Inc. — BLOOMBERG NEWS
tion. Amendments to the law tak-
“If people are not aware of ing effect in January will re-
opportunities then they would quire businesses to notify Colo-
INTERNATIONAL London’s traffic cameras are under attack. Police say hundreds of license plate-reading be less likely to know how to rado employees about all job
cameras have been damaged, disconnected, or stolen by opponents of an anti-pollution move up in their careers,” said openings, not just promotions,
Pushback charge on older vehicles that came into force across the metropolis on Tuesday.
Christine Hendrickson, vice
president of strategic initiatives
with an exception for roles that
are part of a worker’s routine
as London’s The vandalism by vigilantes calling themselves the Blade Runners shows that
emotions are running high over the city’s UltraLow Emission Zone. London’s
at Syndio, which provides soft- career progression.
car mayor says the measure will cut air pollution that is linked to about 4,000 deaths
war e th at h el p s e mp lo yer s
identify pay disparities. “That
Colorado companies also
will have to aler t each new
emission a year in the British capital. Critics say it’s a cash grab that will penalize suburban has a much bigger impact on hire’s prospective colleagues of
fees expand residents who depend on their cars for work and essential travel. London’s plan,
known as the ULEZ, levies a 12.50 pound (about $16) daily charge on most gas
how much you’re paid.”
Opportunity transparency is
the person’s name, job title, and
how other employees can pur-
meant to build on the pay dis- sue a similar position, accord-
cars and vans built before 2006 and on pre-2015 diesel vehicles. Introduced in
closure laws that started in Col- ing to a guidance memo from
central London in 2019, it was expanded in 2021 to the city’s inner suburbs.
orado in 2021 and have since the Colorado Department of
Beginning Tuesday it covers all of Greater London, including the sprawling outer suburbs spread to states including Mas- Labor and Employment.
where more than half the city’s 9 million people live. — ASSOCIATED PRESS sachusetts, Washington, New The new Illinois law, effec-
York, California, and Hawaii. tive in 2025, will require busi-
Those laws aim to make sure nesses to announce all poten-
people know how much they tial promotions to their current
INTERNATIONAL The UK government confirmed a three-month delay to post-Brexit border checks on
should be paid for their current employees within 14 days of
European food imports that were due to begin in January 2024. The checks on “medium- job or an open position, espe- posting a position externally, in
Border checks risk animal products, plants, plant products, and high-risk food,” which the UK cially women and people of col- addition to requiring salary
prompted by committed to imposing as part of its 2020 Brexit agreement with the European Union,
will now be implemented in April 2024, the Cabinet Office said in a statement published
or who lag behind white men in
pay. Most of those laws don’t
ranges and a summary of bene-
fits in job ads.
Brexit delayed on its website on Tuesday. Bloomberg reported in June that ministers were weighing address equal access to promo- A New Jersey proposal simi-
tions. larly would mandate that com-
options to blunt the cost of the checks over fears they could worsen the country’s inflation
The new rules aim to dis- panies alert workers of chances
problem. The measures have already been postponed several times, after the government
courage what’s known as the to move up, specifying they
concluded that they would add at least £1 billion ($1.3 billion) in annual costs to British “shoulder tap,” Hendrickson should make a reasonable ef-
importers. — BLOOMBERG NEWS said. It’s the practice of quietly fort to notify all employees.
selecting employees for ad- That legislation hasn’t yet got-
vancement to executive roles, ten committee approval in the
often without co-workers even state Assembly or Senate.
AUTOMOTIVE All 28 vehicle assembly lines at Toyota’s 14 auto plants
being aware that the job open- State lawmakers have used
in Japan shut down Tuesday over a problem in its ing existed. It’s likely other a variety of more direct tactics
Toyota’s computer system that deals with incoming auto parts. states such as California will to narrow pay gaps. Some
Japanese The automaker doesn’t believe the problem was
caused by a cyberattack but the cause is still under
follow Colorado and Illinois as
they seek to close pay gaps that
have tried to require compa-
nies to report pay data by de-
assembly lines investigation, said spokeswoman Sawako Takeda. disadvantage women and mi- mographic group, like Califor-
halted by Toyota said later that production will restart on
norities, she said.
Disparate levels of promo-
nia, and a slew have banned
employers from forcing appli-
computer Wednesday. The shutdown comes after a shortage of
computer chips and other auto parts stalled production in Asian nations affected by
tion are seen as one of the key cants to disclose their prior
WORKPLACE Amazon employees have been pushing back against the company’s return-to-office policy
for months — and it seems CEO Andy Jassy has had enough. During a pre-recorded
Amazon gets internal Q&A session earlier this month, Jassy told employees it was “past the time to
tough on return- disagree and commit” with the policy, which requires corporate employees to be in the
office three days a week. The phrase “disagree and commit” is one of Amazon’s leadership
to-the-office principles, and was used often by the company’s founder and current executive chairman,
Jeff Bezos. “If you can’t disagree and commit, it’s probably not going work out for you at
Amazon,” Jassy said, adding it wasn’t right for some employees to be in the office three
days a week while others refuse to do so. His comments were first reported by Business
Insider, and later shared by Amazon. — ASSOCIATED PRESS
RAILROADS Norfolk Southern railroad is recovering from a “hardware-related technology outage” that
impacted its rail systems Monday, but there may be lingering effects for at least a couple
Norfolk of weeks. The railroad said there is no indication that the outage was related to any
Southern hit cybersecurity incident. All system functionality was restored by 7 p.m. Eastern on
Monday, the company said, and it is bringing the rail network back online. Norfolk
STEFAN WERMUTH/BLOOMBERG
by outage Southern, based in Atlanta, is in the crosshairs of federal regulators after a derailment in
Disparate levels of promotion are seen as one of the key
factors explaining why women still earn only about 80 cents
Ohio earlier this year led to a fiery, toxic chemical spill. — ASSOCIATED PRESS on the dollar compared with men.
B8 Business T h e B o s t o n G l o b e W E D N E S D A Y, A U G U S T 3 0 , 2 0 2 3
25
Sue Sullivan
and Michael
Rothschild lead
the New Market
Business
Improvement
District.
Index of publicly traded companies in Massachusetts Their group
partnered with
the South End
Globe 25 index Forum, an
umbrella group
of residents
that has felt the
brunt of Mass.
and Cass. They
estimate the
Widett Circle
recovery
campus could
cost about $25
million.
T H E B O S T O N G L O B E W E D N E S DAY, AU G US T 3 0 , 2 0 2 3 | B O S T O N G L O B E .C O M / S P O RT S
Clear signal
Ben Volin
ON FOOTBALL
Zappe among
Jones’s team, cuts as Patriots
and they don’t trim roster to 53
want controversy
By Nicole Yang
GLOBE STAFF
Dan Shaughnessy
Turns out
Trump
is built like
an athlete
According to booking re-
cords released by Georgia
authorities, former presi-
dent Donald Trump is 6 feet
3 inches and weighs a self-
reported 215 pounds.
This makes Trump the
physical twin of Patriots
wide receiver DeVante Park-
er, also listed at 6-3, 215. Turns out Trump
also could be a body double for San Diego Pa-
dres sluggers Manny Machado (6-3, 218) and
Fernando Tatis Jr. (6-3, 217).
Truly amazing. The 77-year-old Trump at
this hour is the exact same height and weight
BARRY CHIN/GLOBE STAFF
as Muhammad Ali was when he boxed Joe
Frazier as a 29-year-old in the Fight of the Rafael Devers reacts after striking out in the seventh inning. He also committed his 17th error of the season, the most among third basemen.
Century at Madison Square Garden in 1971.
What a specimen!
There are Trump body bookends all over
the sports world. Tom Brady (6-4, 225) is only
an inch taller and 10 pounds heavier than
The Donald but clearly could wear anything
Astros put big dent in Sox’ playoff hopes
from Trump’s closet. Same goes for Bryce By Julian McWilliams climb, following Tuesday’s 6-2 loss at the postseason dropped to 6 percent, (seemingly) inevitable fate was their
Harper (6-3, 210), Charlie Coyle (6-3, 223), GLOBE STAFF the hands of the Houston Astros. according to FanGraphs. continued run of putrid defense.
Joe Burrow (6-4, 215), Justin Fields (6-3, Astros 6 You can probably cut It was the Sox’ third straight loss “We got tomorrow,” said Red Sox With one out in the fifth and Sox
228), and NBA star Eric Gordon (6-3, 215). the lights out at Fen- and second consecutive series defeat. manager Alex Cora after the loss. trailing, 2-1, starter Brayan Bello was
Yankees first baseman Anthony Rizzo (6-3, Red Sox 2 way in October. After the third out in the bottom of “We play tomorrow. You got to find a still on the hill in an attempt to make
240) would have to suck in his gut a little, but The Red Sox are now 6½ games the ninth — an Alex Verdugo slow way to win.” it four consecutive scoreless frames.
maybe he could squeeze into Trump’s trou- out of the third wild-card spot with tapper back to Houston reliever Bry- Bleak. The righthander drew a Mauricio
sers. 29 games remaining, a steep hill to an Abreu — the Sox’ odds of making Pa r t o f w h at s ea l e d t h e S ox ’ RED SOX, Page C2
Oh, and Mac Jones (6-3, 220) needs to lose
only 5 pounds to be as fit as the former Prez.
This is where I must ask everybody to
calm down for a second and take a deep INSIDE
breath. This is not a political statement, nor is
it about body shaming. In pro sports, being in More time needed Warming to thought Captain America One and done
top shape is part of the job. This has nothing On cutdown day, Bills forced to put Executives excited as new women’s Thomas, Koepka among six picks to Humidity takes toll on Williams, 43,
SHAUGHNESSY, Page C5 Miller on PUP list. NFL notebook, C5 ice hockey league takes shape. C5 fill out US Ryder Cup team. C6 in first-round match at US Open. C6
C2 Sports T h e B o s t o n G l o b e W E D N E S D A Y, A U G U S T 3 0 , 2 0 2 3
Baseball
RED SOX NOTEBOOK
Baseball
AL
NOTEBOOK RAYS 11, MARLINS 2 GIANTS 6, REDS 1 BRAVES 3, ROCKIES 1
Giants’ Cobb
TAMPA BAY AB R H BI BB SO Avg. CINCINNATI AB R H BI BB SO Avg. ATLANTA AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Díaz 1b 5 1 2 0 0 0 .327 Friedl cf 4 0 0 0 0 0 .271 Acuña rf 5 0 2 0 0 0 .335
BLowe 2b 3 1 1 0 0 1 .230 Steer 2b 4 0 1 1 0 1 .268 Albies 2b 5 0 2 0 0 2 .265
HRamírez dh 1 1 1 1 0 0 .300 De La Cruz ss 4 0 0 0 0 2 .241 Riley 3b 5 1 2 0 0 0 .275
Bethancourt c 1 0 0 0 0 0 .228 Martini dh 3 0 0 0 0 0 .300 Olson 1b 5 0 1 0 0 0 .271
Arozarena lf 3 2 1 2 2 1 .261 Stephenson c 3 0 0 0 0 2 .246 Ozuna dh 4 1 2 2 1 1 .267
Paredes 3b 5 2 2 4 0 1 .259 Encarnacion 1b 3 0 0 0 0 2 .230 Rosario lf 5 1 1 0 0 0 .262
EAST W L Pct. GB WCGB Last 10 Streak
inches away
JLowe dh 5 2 3 1 0 0 .284 Benson lf 3 0 0 0 0 0 .267 Murphy c 4 0 1 1 0 0 .273
Baltimore 83 49 .629 — — 8-2 W2 Bruján ss-2b 3 1 1 0 1 1 .194 Marte 3b 3 0 0 0 0 1 .188 Arcia ss 3 0 1 0 0 0 .281
Siri cf 5 0 1 2 0 2 .220 Senzel rf 2 1 0 0 1 0 .218 Harris cf 4 0 3 0 0 1 .290
Tampa Bay 81 52 .609 2½ — 8-2 W3 Raley rf 3 0 1 1 1 1 .256 Totals 29 1 1 1 1 8 Totals 40 3 15 3 1 4
Toronto 72 61 .541 11½ 3½ 5-5 L1 Pinto c 3 0 2 0 0 0 .268
COLORADO AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Basabe pr-ss 1 1 0 0 0 0 .273 SAN FRAN. AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Boston 69 64 .519 14½ 6½ 4-6 L3 Totals 38 11 15 11 4 7 Slater cf 3 2 2 0 1 1 .267 Blackmon dh 3 0 1 0 1 0 .291
from getting
Tovar ss 4 0 0 0 0 2 .256
New York 64 68 .485 19 11 4-6 W2 MIAMI AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Estrada 2b 4 0 1 1 0 1 .273
McMahon 3b 4 0 0 0 0 1 .251
Flores dh 4 0 0 0 0 0 .292
Arraez 2b 4 1 1 0 0 0 .350 Díaz c 4 0 1 0 0 1 .271
CENTRAL W L Pct. GB WCGB Last 10 Streak Hampson ph 0 0 0 0 1 0 .273
Haniger lf 4 1 0 0 0 1 .224
Jones lf 3 0 0 0 0 3 .271
Bailey c 4 2 2 2 0 2 .260
Minnesota 69 64 .519 — — 5-5 L1 Soler rf 3 0 1 0 0 1 .241 Davis 1b 3 1 1 0 0 0 .249 Goodman 1b 3 1 1 0 1 1 .455
Sánchez ph-rf 2 0 0 0 0 0 .260 DeJong ss 3 0 0 0 0 1 .225 Castro 2b 3 0 0 1 0 1 .259
Cleveland 63 70 .474 6 12½ 4-6 W1 Bell dh 4 0 1 0 0 0 .275 Matos rf 3 0 1 1 0 0 .250 Toglia rf 3 0 0 0 0 2 .168
a no-hitter
Detroit 59 73 .447 9½ 16 4-6 L4 Chisholm cf 4 1 2 2 0 2 .248 Schmitt 3b 3 0 0 0 0 1 .195 BrDoyle cf 3 0 0 0 0 1 .188
Burger 3b 4 0 1 0 0 1 .330 Totals 31 6 7 4 1 7 Totals 30 1 3 1 2 12
Chicago 52 81 .391 17 23½ 4-6 L2 De La Cruz lf 4 0 1 0 0 1 .256 Atlanta....................... 020 010 000 — 3 15 0
Cincinnati.................. 000 000 001 — 1 1 1
Kansas City 41 93 .306 28½ 35 1-9 L5 Gurriel 1b 4 0 0 0 0 1 .253
San Francisco...........023 000 01x — 6 7 1
Colorado....................010 000 000 — 1 3 1
Stallings c 4 0 1 0 0 0 .194 E—Castro (3). LOB—Atlanta 12, Colorado 5.
WEST W L Pct. GB WCGB Last 10 Streak Berti ss 4 0 2 0 0 1 .282 E—Marte (2), Schmitt (6). LOB—Cin. 2, SF 2. 2B—Riley (25), Harris (22). 3B—Rosario (3),
Totals 37 2 10 2 1 7 2B—Steer (31), Slater (5), Estrada (24), Matos Goodman (1). HR—Ozuna (30), off Lambert.
*Seattle 75 56 .573 — — 9-1 W4 Tampa Bay................010 003 403 — 11 15 0 (11). HR—Bailey (7), off Williamson. DP—Cin- SB—Harris (20). DP—Colorado 1.
Miami.........................101 000 000 — 2 10 1 cinnati 1. Atlanta IP H R ER BB SO ERA
Texas 75 57 .568 ½ — 3-7 W2 E—Chisholm (3). LOB—TB 6, Miami 9. 2B— Cincinnati IP H R ER BB SO ERA
ASSOCIATED PRESS Morton W 14-10 6 3 1 1 2 8 3.29
Houston 76 58 .567 ½ — 6-4 W4 BLowe (12), Siri (11), Pinto (1), Burger (7), Williamsn L 4-4 6 6 5 3 0 5 4.20 Johnson 1 0 0 0 0 2 4.58
Los Angeles 63 70 .474 13 12½ 3-7 L3 Alex Cobb was one out away from the San Stallings (10). HR—Arozarena (21), off Soria- Moll 1 0 0 0 0 0 1.42 Minter 1 0 0 0 0 1 4.05
NL
no, Paredes (27), off López, JLowe (18), off Law 1 1 1 1 1 2 2.93 Iglesias S 26 1 0 0 0 0 1 2.74
*Oakland 38 94 .288 37½ 37 4-6 L3 Francisco Giants’ first no-hitter in eight years, but Soriano, Chisholm (13), off Civale. CS—Aro-
zarena (10). SF—Raley. DP—Miami 2. San Francisco IP H R ER BB SO ERA Colorado IP H R ER BB SO ERA
Lambert L 3-5 5 9 3 3 0 2 4.95
he then had to watch his dreams be dashed Tues- Tampa Bay IP H R ER BB SO ERA Cobb W 7-5 9 1 1 1 1 8 3.57
Suter 1 3 0 0 0 1 3.00
Civale W 7-3 5 7 2 2 0 5 2.64 Balk—Williamson. WP—Williamson. NP—
day. Stephenson 1 1 0 0 0 1 2.83 Williamson 105, Moll 10, Law 23, Cobb 131. Hollowell
Koch
2 2 0 0 1 0 5.71
1 1 0 0 0 1 3.58
ERamírez 2 1 0 0 0 1 6.20 Umpires—Home, Rob Drake; First, Bill Miller;
Reds second baseman Spencer Steer sliced an Diekman 1 1 0 0 1 0 4.17 Second, Chad Whitson; Third, Roberto Ortiz. HBP—by Morton (Jones), by Lambert (Ar-
T—2:15. A—26,078 (41,331). cia). WP—Lambert. NP—Morton 97, Johnson
opposite-field double, just over the outstretched Miami IP H R ER BB SO ERA
Alcntara L 6-12 5„ 7 4 4 2 4 4.23
12, Minter 12, Iglesias 14, Lambert 87, Suter
19, Hollowell 27, Koch 10. Umpires—Home,
EAST W L Pct. GB WCGB Last 10 Streak
glove of right fielder Luis Matos, with two outs in Okert „ 2 2 2 0 1 3.72 ORIOLES 9, WHITE SOX 3 Ryan Blakney; First, Ryan Wills; Second,
Soriano „ 2 2 2 0 0 2.63 Doug Eddings; Third, Lance Barrett. T—2:36.
Atlanta 86 45 .656 — — 7-3 W2 the ninth inning for Cincinnati’s first hit. The lone López 2 4 3 3 2 2 9.26
WHITE SOX AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
A—25,244 (46,897).
Inherited runners-scored—Okert 1-0, Soria-
Philadelphia 74 58 .561 12½ — 8-2 W5 hit also scored Nick Senzel, who walked, from sec- no 1-1. HBP—by Alcantara (Bruján). WP—Ló- Anderson ss 4 0 0 0 0 1 .241
Miami 66 66 .500 20½ 3 3-7 L1 pez. NP—Civale 96, Stephenson 18, ERamírez Benintendi lf 4 0 0 0 0 0 .272 PIRATES 6, ROYALS 3
ond base. Cobb then struck out Elly De La Cruz 29, Diekman 32, Alcantara 110, Okert 12, Sori- Robert cf 4 0 2 0 0 0 .270
Washington 62 71 .466 25 7½ 6-4 W1 ano 15, López 43. Umpires—Home, Will Little; Jiménez dh 4 1 1 0 0 0 .273 PITTSBURGH AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
New York 60 73 .451 27 9½ 3-7 L2
looking to give the host Giants a 6-1 win. First, Ryan Additon; Second, Lance Barks- Moncada 3b 4 1 2 0 0 1 .248 Hayes 3b 4 1 1 2 1 1 .269
Vaughn 1b 4 0 2 1 0 1 .255 Reynolds lf 5 0 1 0 0 2 .263
Cobb tossed 131 pitches, 83 of them strikes, dale; Third, Ramon De Jesus. T—3:12.
Colás rf 4 0 0 1 0 1 .221 McCutchen dh 4 0 0 0 1 0 .249
CENTRAL W L Pct. GB WCGB Last 10 Streak A—10,338 (37,446).
Sosa 2b 3 1 3 1 0 0 .196
Milwaukee 74 58 .561 — — 9-1 L1
strikingout eight and walking one. Patrick Bailey Lee c 4 0 0 0 0 1 .063
Joe 1b
Rivas 1b
4
0
0
0
0 0 1 2
0 0 0 0
.250
.206
was 2 for 4 with a two-run homer for the Giants. YANKEES 4, TIGERS 2 Totals 35 3 10 3 0 5 Rodríguez c 4 1 2 0 0 0 .245
Chicago 70 62 .530 4 — 7-3 W1 Palacios rf 3 1 0 0 1 3 .210
BALTIMORE AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Cincinnati 68 66 .507 7 2 4-6 L3 In the third inning, Senzel was credited with a NY YANKEES
LeMahieu 1b
AB
4
R
0
H BI BB SO
0 0 0 2
Avg.
.242
Rutschman c 4 2 2 1 1 0 .275 Peguero ss
Suwinski cf
4
4
2
1
3 3 0 1
1 0 0 1
.248
.204
Pittsburgh 60 73 .451 14½ 9½ 5-5 W2 single on a two-hopper that third baseman Casey Judge rf 4 1 1 0 0 1 .266
Henderson ss 4 1 1 0 1 1 .251
Bae 2b 4 0 1 1 0 2 .240
Santander dh 5 0 2 4 0 0 .258
St. Louis 57 76 .429 17½ 12½ 3-7 W1 Torres 2b 2 1 2 1 1 0 .271 Mountcastle 1b 5 0 2 0 0 0 .277 Totals 36 6 9 6 4 12
Schmitt snagged with a backhand grab. The rook- Stanton dh 4 0 1 0 0 1 .203 O'Hearn rf 2 0 0 0 0 0 .298 KANSAS CITY AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
WEST W L Pct. GB WCGB Last 10 Streak Volpe ss 4 1 1 1 0 3 .216
ie's throw from foul territory was high and pulled Bader cf 4 0 0 0 0 0 .239
Westburg ph-2b 1 1 0 0 1 0 .258
Hays lf 4 1 2 0 0 0 .281
Garcia 3b
Witt ss
4 0 0 0 0 0 .276
4 1 1 0 0 0 .276
*Los Angeles 81 49 .623 — — 7-3 W2 Pereira lf 2 0 0 0 2 2 .107
*Arizona 69 63 .523 13 — 7-3 L1 a leaping J.D. Davis off the first-base bag. Official Higashioka c 4 1 1 1 0 2 .228
Mullins cf
Urías 3b
4 1 0 1 0 0 .247
4 1 2 0 0 1 .253
Perez 1b
Melendez dh
4 0 1 0 0 2 .246
4 1 1 0 0 2 .233
Peraza 3b 3 0 0 0 0 0 .147
San Francisco 69 63 .523 13 — 5-5 W3 scorer Chris Thoms originally called the play a hit, Totals 31 4 6 3 3 11
AFrazier 2b-rf
McKenna ph-rf
2 0 1 1 0 0 .239
2 2 2 2 0 0 .263
Velázquez rf 3 1 1 0 1 1 .229
Waters cf 4 0 0 1 0 2 .228
San Diego 62 71 .466 20½ 7½ 3-7 L1 then changed it to an error. DETROIT AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Totals 37 9 14 9 3 2 Fermin c 4 0 2 2 0 1 .282
Colorado 49 83 .371 33 20 2-8 L2 Baddoo lf 3 0 0 0 1 2 .224 Chi. White Sox..........001 000 002 — 3 10 0 Massey 2b 4 0 0 0 0 0 .220
Greene rf 4 0 0 0 0 0 .286 Blanco lf 2 0 0 0 1 0 .245
* — Not including late game
Bad night for Blue Jays Torkelson 1b
Carpenter dh
3 1 0 0 1 2 .229
4 0 0 0 0 2 .286
Baltimore...................000 010 35x — 9 14 0
LOB—Chi. 6, Baltimore 7. 2B—Santander Totals 33 3 6 3 2 8
Pittsburgh..................000 000 024 — 6 9 0
RESULTS Vierling 3b 4 0 1 0 0 1 .259
(31), McKenna (7). HR—Sosa (5), off Kremer.
Kansas City...............000 100 002 — 3 6 1
Keibert Ruiz hit a three-run home run, Carter McKinstry 2b 3 1 1 0 1 0 .243
SB—Robert (17), McKenna 2 (5). S—Sosa.
E—Witt (10). LOB—Pittsburgh 7, KC 5. 2B—
TUESDAY PMeadows cf 4 0 3 2 0 1 .333
DP—Chi. 1; Baltimore 1.
Kieboom had a two-run drive, and the host Wash- Báez ss 4 0 0 0 0 2 .219 Chi. White Sox IP H R ER BB SO ERA
Rodríguez (5), Velázquez (1), Fermin (10).
3B—Reynolds (5), Suwinski (1). HR—Hayes
Houston 6 at Boston 2 At St. Louis 6 (10 inn.) San Diego 5 Scholtens 5‚ 6 1 1 0 1 3.97
ington Nationals beat the Toronto Blue Jays, 5-4, Kelly c
Totals
3 0 2 0 0 0 .214
32 2 7 2 3 10 Banks 1 0 0 0 0 0 5.29
(11), off Hernández, Peguero (6), off SCruz.
SB—Blanco (17). DP—KC 1.
At Philadelphia 12 LA Angels 7 At Chi. Cubs 1 Milwaukee 0 Bummer L 4-3 ‚ 2 3 3 2 1 6.70
dropping the Blue Jays 3½ games behind Hous- NY Yankees...............100 011 001 — 4 6 1
Shaw „ 6 5 5 1 0 6.58
Pittsburgh IP H R ER BB SO ERA
NY Yankees 4 at Detroit 2 Pittsburgh 6 at Kansas City 3 Detroit........................000 000 002 — 2 7 1
Ramsey „ 0 0 0 0 0 4.09
Selby 2 0 0 0 0 1 4.97
ton for the final AL wild card. E—Bader (6), Vierling (2). LOB—NY 4, De- Ortiz W 3-4 5 3 1 1 2 5 5.08
Tampa Bay 11 at Miami 2 Atlanta 3 at Colorado 1 troit 6. 2B—McKinstry (18). HR—Torres (22), Baltimore IP H R ER BB SO ERA Holderman 1 0 0 0 0 0 3.13
At Baltimore 9 Chi. White Sox 3 At San Francisco 6 Cincinnati 1
Rookie Davis Schneider homered for Toronto, off Skubal, Volpe (19), off Hill, Higashioka Kremer 6 6 1 1 0 5 4.20 Bolton 1 3 2 2 0 2 8.16
(10), off Skubal. DP—NY 2; Detroit 2. Coulmbe W 4-1 1„ 0 0 0 0 0 2.59
Washington 5 at Toronto 4 Oakland at Seattle
his sixth in 13 big league games, and added an NY Yankees IP H R ER BB SO ERA Cano ‚ 0 0 0 0 0 1.56
Kansas City
Ragans
IP H R ER BB SO ERA
7 3 0 0 1 9 3.27
King 4 3 0 0 0 5 2.96 Fujinami 1 4 2 2 0 0 7.64
Texas 2 at NY Mets 1 Arizona at LA Dodgers RBI double. The Blue Jays have lost five of seven. Brito W 5-6 3‚ 2 0 0 2 3 5.12
Cox „ 1 1 1 0 1 4.28
NP—Scholtens 91, Banks 19, Bummer 25, Hernándz L 1-9 ‚ 2 1 1 0 0 4.33
Peralta „ 0 0 0 0 0 3.21
Cleveland 4 at Minnesota 2 Before the game, the Jays put All-Star short- Holmes 1 2 2 2 1 2 3.42
Shaw 30, Ramsey 2, Kremer 93, Coulombe 14, SCruz „ 3 4 4 3 1 54.00
Cano 5, Fujinami 19. Umpires—Home, Cory Davidson ‚ 0 0 0 0 1 6.26
MONDAY stop Bo Bichette on the 10-day injured list be- Detroit IP H R ER BB SO ERA Blaser; First, Carlos Torres; Second, Jansen Inherited runners-scored—Hernández 1-1,
Skubal L 3-3 6 4 3 2 2 9 3.93 Visconti; Third, Ron Kulpa. T—3:05. A—14,903 Davidson 3-0. NP—Selby 18, Ortiz 81, Holder-
Houston 13 at Boston 5 San Diego 4 at St. Louis 1 cause of a strained right quadriceps. They made Vest 1 0 0 0 0 2 3.63 (45,971). man 9, Bolton 22, Ragans 108, Cox 6, Hernán-
Hill 2 2 1 1 1 0 9.19 dez 11, SCruz 36, Davidson 3. Umpires—
At Philadelphia 6 LA Angels 4 Milwaukee 6 at Chi. Cubs 2 the move retroactive to Monday and selected the Inherited runners-scored—Peralta 1-0. Home, Brian O'Nora; First, Pat Hoberg; Sec-
contract of infielder Mason McCoy from Triple A HBP—by Skubal (Torres). PB—Kelly. NP— NATIONALS 5, BLUE JAYS 4 ond, Tom Hanahan; Third, Nestor Ceja. T—
NY Yankees 4 at Detroit 1 Pittsburgh 5 at Kansas City 0 King 61, Brito 45, Peralta 2, Holmes 21, Skubal 2:40. A—11,233 (37,903).
At Baltimore 9 Chi. White Sox 0 Atlanta 14 at Colorado 4 Buffalo. Manager John Schneider called Bichette’s 97, Vest 10, Hill 29. Umpires—Home, Adam
Hamari; First, Nick Mahrley; Second, Jacob
WASHINGTON AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
At Toronto 6 Washington 3 At Seattle 7 Oakland 0 strain mild and said Bichette won’t participate in Metz; Third, Vic Carapazza. T—2:21.
Abrams ss
Thomas rf
5
3
0
1
1 0 0 1 .253
0 0 1 2 .280 CARDINALS 6, PADRES 5
A—17,236 (41,083). Meneses dh 4 1 1 0 0 0 .284
Texas 4 at NY Mets 3 At San Francisco 4 Cincinnati 1 baseball activities for a couple of days. Ruiz c 4 1 1 3 0 0 .259 SAN DIEGO
Kim 2b
AB
3
R H BI BB SO Avg.
1 2 1 1 0 .276
At Minnesota 10 Cleveland 6 At LA Dodgers 7 Arizona 4 RANGERS 2, METS 1 Smith 1b
Kieboom 3b
4
4
1
1
1 0 0 0 .258
2 2 0 1 .273 Soto lf 4 0 1 0 1 1 .260
Orioles, Rays stay smoking TEXAS AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Call lf
Alu lf-2b
0
4
0
0
0 0 0 0 .202
1 0 0 1 .250
Machado dh
Tatis rf
5
4
0 1 0 0 2 .249
0 1 1 0 1 .262
Semien 2b 3 0 0 0 1 0 .276 Bogaerts ss 5 0 0 0 0 0 .257
TAKE A NUMBER Anthony Santander hit a go-ahead three-run Seager ss
Lowe 1b
4
3
0
0
0 0 0 1 .342
1 0 1 1 .282
Vargas 2b-3b
Young cf
Totals
3
4
35
0
0
5
0 0 1 0 .239
1 0 0 1 .100
8 5 2 6
Cooper 1b
Campusano c
5
4
0 0 0 0 2 .262
2 1 1 1 1 .281
double in the seventh, and the AL-best Baltimore García rf 4 0 0 0 0 2 .248 Batten 3b 4 2 4 0 1 0 .367
Garver dh 2 2 1 1 2 1 .279 TORONTO AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Azocar cf 3 0 2 2 0 1 .259
Orioles defeated the Chicago White Sox, 9-3, to Grossman lf 2 0 1 0 1 0 .232 Springer rf 4 0 1 0 1 0 .258 Grisham cf 1 0 0 0 0 0 .201
Jankowski pr-lf 1 0 1 0 0 0 .277 Schneder 2b-3b 5 1 2 2 0 1 .422 Totals 38 5 12 5 4 8
match their victory total from last season. Balti- Duran 3b 4 0 1 1 0 0 .285 Guerrero 1b 5 0 1 1 0 0 .267
Jansen c 4 0 1 0 1 1 .226 ST. LOUIS AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
more (83-49), which has won nine of 11, stayed Hedges c
Heim ph-c
2
2
0
0
0 0 0 2 .100
0 0 0 1 .267 Merrifield lf-2b 4 1 1 0 0 1 .287 Palacios cf 4 0 0 0 0 1 .259
Goldschmidt 1b 3 1 2 0 2 1 .280
2½ games ahead of Tampa Bay in the AL East. Taveras cf
Totals
3
30
0
2
1 0 0 0 .259
6 2 5 8
Kirk dh
Clement ss
4 0 1 0 0 0 .247
3 0 0 0 0 1 .400 Gorman 2b 4 0 1 1 0 3 .235
Edman ph 1 0 1 1 0 0 .241
The Rays kept pace with the Orioles thanks to NY METS AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Varsho ph-lf
Espinal 3b
1 0 0 0 0 0 .221
2 0 2 0 0 0 .222 Arenado 3b 4 0 0 0 0 1 .274
Nimmo cf 4 0 1 0 0 0 .259 Contreras c 4 3 2 3 0 0 .253
an 11-2 win over the host Miami Marlins, as Ran- Lindor ss 4 0 0 0 0 1 .251
Biggio ph-3b-ss 1 2 1 0 1 0 .217
Burleson dh 4 0 1 0 0 2 .242
Kiermaier cf 3 0 1 0 1 1 .268
McNeil rf 4 0 2 0 0 1 .266 O'Neill lf 4 0 0 0 0 1 .231
dy Arozarena, Josh Lowe, and Isaac Paredes Alonso 1b 3 0 0 0 1 2 .219
Totals 36 4 11 3 4 5
Walker rf 3 0 1 1 0 0 .258
Washington...............020 030 000 — 5 8 0
homered to help the visitors rally from two early Álvarez c
Vientos dh
4 0 0 0 0 2 .213
4 1 2 1 0 2 .195 Toronto......................001 000 111 — 4 11 0
Winn ss
Totals
4 2 1 0 0 1 .162
35 6 9 6 2 10
deficits to post their ninth win in 11 games. Mendick 2b
Araúz 3b
4 0 1 0 0 0 .190
3 0 0 0 0 2 .127
LOB—Wash. 5, Toronto 9. 2B—Schneider
(4), Merrifield (24), Kirk (9), Espinal (9). HR—
San Diego..............100 201 010 0 — 5 12 1
St. Louis.................001 101 020 1 — 6 9 1
Locastro lf 3 0 1 0 0 1 .167 Ruiz (16), off Berríos, Kieboom (3), off Ber- E—Bogaerts (6), Contreras (8). LOB—SD 11,
Report: Big moves by Angels Totals 33 1 7 1 1 11
Texas..........................000 000 101 — 2 6 0
ríos, Schneider (6), off Gore. SB—Abrams
(38), Young (1), Biggio (5). DP—Wash. 2.
St. Louis 4. 2B—Batten 2 (2), Burleson (18).
HR—Campusano (5), off Lawrence, Contreras
NY Mets.....................000 000 001 — 1 7 0 Washington IP H R ER BB SO ERA 2 (15), off Lugo, off Suarez. S—Azocar, Pala-
According to an ESPN report, the Los Angeles LOB—Texas 6, NY 6. 2B—Lowe (37). HR— Gore W 7-10 5 6 1 1 2 2 4.28 cios. SF—Kim, Tatis, Walker. DP—St. Louis 1.
Garver (13), off DSmith, Vientos (3), off Chap- Thompson 1„ 1 1 1 1 2 5.40 San Diego IP H R ER BB SO ERA
Angels stunningly placed six players on waivers — man. SB—Jankowski (18). DP—Texas 1; NY 3. Harvey 1‚ 2 1 1 0 0 2.77 Lugo 6 6 3 2 1 6 3.67
Texas IP H R ER BB SO ERA Barlow 1 0 0 0 0 2 4.50
including trade-deadline pickups Lucas Giolito, Heaney 5‚ 5 0 0 1 7 4.16
Finnegan S 25 1 2 1 1 1 1 2.91
Suarez BS 2 1 2 2 2 0 2 5.51
Toronto IP H R ER BB SO ERA
Reynaldo Lopez, and Randal Grichuk, as well as Stratton W 1-0
Burke
„ 0 0 0 0 1 2.00
1 1 0 0 0 2 3.21 Berríos L 9-10 6 6 5 5 2 2 3.70
Martinez
Hader L 0-2
1 0 0 0 0 0 4.04
‚ 1 1 0 1 0 0.78
LINDSEY WASSON/ASSOCIATED PRESS Francis 3 2 0 0 0 4 1.74
Hunter Renfroe and Matt Moore. Players placed WSmith
Chapman S 4
1 0 0 0 0 0 4.15
1 1 1 1 0 1 2.50 NP—Gore 106, Thompson 23, Harvey 26,
St. Louis IP H R ER BB SO ERA
Thompson 4 5 3 2 4 3 3.92
on waivers can still play, and Renfroe and Grichuk NY Mets IP H R ER BB SO ERA
Finnegan 20, Berríos 92, Francis 49. Um-
Lawrence 3„ 5 2 2 0 2 4.97
pires—Home, Jeremie Rehak; First, Chad
28
Quintana 6 3 0 0 3 5 3.26 King ‚ 0 0 0 0 0 1.04
The number of hits Seattle’s Julio started for the Angels in Philadelphia. DSmith L 4-5 1 1 1 1 1 1 4.05
Fairchild; Second, Nic Lentz; Third, Paul
Romero W 4-1 2 2 0 0 0 3 3.34
Clemons. T—2:55. A—39,722 (49,286).
Rodríguez (above) has collected in Teams can put in claims for them, and the Bickford
Coonrod
1‚ 2 1 1 1 2 5.72
„ 0 0 0 0 0 1.69
Inherited runners-scored—King 1-0. IBB—
off Hader (Goldschmidt). NP—Lugo 88, Bar-
his past 10 games, heading into team with the worst record of the claimants will Inherited runners-scored—Stratton 2-0, GUARDIANS 4, TWINS 2 low 12, Suarez 25, Martinez 7, Hader 5,
Coonrod 2-0. WP—Bickford. NP—Heaney 81, Thompson 91, Lawrence 59, King 2, Romero
Tuesday night’s matchup against be awarded the player, and they will be eligible for Stratton 7, Burke 18, WSmith 7, Chapman 9,
CLEVELAND AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
24. Umpires—Home, Mark Ripperger; First,
Quintana 96, DSmith 20, Bickford 24, Coonrod Shane Livensparger; Second, Dan Bellino;
the Athletics. The 22-year-old out- postseason play. According to the report, the An- 5. Umpires—Home, Jim Wolf; First, Nate Tom- Kwan lf
Ramírez 3b
5
5
0 3 0 0 1 .270
1 2 0 0 0 .278
Third, Phil Cuzzi. T—2:51. A—36,851 (44,383).
linson; Second, Sean Barber; Third, Alan Por-
fielder has five games of at least gels may be trying to push their payroll below the ter. T—2:25. A—29,353 (41,922). Calhoun 1b 4 0 1 1 1 0 .274
Laureano cf 5 0 1 0 0 2 .225 DODGERS 7, D’BACKS 4
four hits in the span. Rodríguez went 4 for 5 Monday $233 million competitive-balance-tax threshold. Giménez 2b 5 1 0 0 0 1 .236
PHILLIES 12, ANGELS 7 Brennan rf 3 0 1 1 1 0 .256 Monday night game
night in a 7-0 win over Oakland, the Mariners’ 12th vic- Grichuk went 3 for 4 with two doubles and his Gonzalez dh 4 0 0 0 0 2 .213 ARIZONA AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
LA ANGELS AB R H BI BB SO Avg. BNaylor c 4 1 2 1 0 0 .213 Carroll rf 4 0 0 0 0 0 .279
tory in 13 games. Rodríguez extended his hitting streak 12th homer of the season, but the red-hot Phillies Schanuel 1b 5 1 2 0 0 0 .344 Arias ss 3 1 1 0 1 0 .209 Marte 2b 3 0 1 0 1 1 .274
Ohtani dh 5 0 3 2 0 0 .307 Totals 38 4 11 3 3 6 Pham dh 4 0 0 0 0 1 .260
to a career-best 13 games and homered for the third again turned on the power by blasting five hom- Drury 2b 4 0 0 0 1 2 .266 Walker 1b 4 1 1 0 0 0 .270
MINNESOTA AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Thomas cf 3 1 1 0 1 0 .247
straight game. During his streak, he is batting .516 (32 ers — giving them 57 in August — as they rallied Moustakas 3b
Rengifo ss-cf
5
4
0 0 0 0 3 .242
2 3 2 0 0 .258
Julien 2b 4 0 1 0 1 0 .285 Gurriel lf 4 1 1 1 0 1 .253
Polanco 3b 4 0 0 0 1 0 .252 Moreno c 4 1 2 3 0 1 .286
for 62) with 5 homers, 6 doubles, and 21 RBIs, while to take a 12-7 win. Bryce Harper hit his 299th ca- O'Hoppe c
Moniak cf
3
3
0 0 0 1 1 .214
0 0 0 0 1 .281
Kepler rf 4 0 2 0 0 0 .255 Peterson 3b 3 0 1 0 0 1 .188
Correa ss 4 0 0 0 0 2 .224
raising his season average to .286. reer blast, while Alec Bohm’s three-run shot high- Velazquez ss 1 0 0 0 0 0 .177
Wallner lf 3 0 1 0 0 0 .234
Ahmed ph
Perdomo ss
1
3
0
0
0 0 0 0 .223
1 0 0 1 .271
Renfroe rf 3 0 0 0 1 0 .237
Lewis dh 4 1 1 1 0 0 .315
lighted a six-run sixth that allowed the hosts to Grichuk lf 4 4 3 1 0 0 .165
Vázquez c 4 0 0 0 0 1 .220
Longoria ph
Totals
1
34
0
4
0 0 0 0 .235
8 4 2 6
Totals 37 7 11 5 3 7
WEDNESDAY’S GAMES coast to their fifth straight win. Gallo 1b 1 0 0 0 1 1 .176
PHILADELPHIA AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Solano ph-1b 2 0 0 0 0 1 .286 LA DODGERS AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
........2023........ Team ....... 2023 vs. opp ....... ....... Last 3 starts ....... Schwarber lf 4 1 1 1 1 1 .188 Taylor cf 4 1 2 1 0 1 .228 Betts 2b 4 0 0 0 1 2 .312
Odds
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SportsLog Scoreboard
Y Y Y
at World Cup
HOU KC KC KC TB TB
4:10 8:10 7:10 2:10 4:10 6:40
NESN NESN NESN NESN NESN NESN
victory over Angola. Italy (2-1) took sec- HIGH SCHOOL FIELD HOCKEY NOTEBOOK 1 p.m. Saratoga Live FS2
Friday
At Michigan St...14 ....... Central Mich.
At Miami.............17 ........Miami (Ohio)
ond place in Group A, defeating the
At Walpole, Birch
MEN'S SOCCER Louisville............. 7½...at Georgia Tech
Philippines, 90-83, in Manila, as Jazz 7:30 p.m. MLS: New York at New England AppleTV Stanford.............. 3½.............. at Hawaii
9:55 p.m. CONCACAF: Comunicaciones vs. Herediano FS2 Saturday
forward Simone Fontecchio had 18 At Oklahoma......35 .........Arkansas St.
points and six rebounds. Defending TENNIS At Kentucky........26½.............. Ball State
At Liberty............ 9½..... Bowling Green
catch the Colombian and earn his sec- ability to read each play and thread Corner hits Gwinnett at Memphis.......................7:45
Columbus at St. Paul........................8:07 N. Reading 155.............Georgetown 130
HOCKOMOCK
nated for assignment.
Colorado: P Karl Kauffmann sent to
minors. P Gavin Hollowell called up
ond career Vuelta stage win. Evenepoel on-the-mark passes has played a big R Braintree ended last season in a Norfolk, 8-6 King Philip 161....................Taunton 206
MID-WACH
from minors.
Detroit: P Bennett Sousa sent to mi-
will begin Wednesday’s fifth stage with part in Walpole’s success. 3-2 overtime loss to a strong Lexing- NORFOLK
At Polar Park, Worcester
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Nashoba 195.......Groton-Dunstable 233
NORTHEASTERN
nors. P Garrett Hill called up from mi-
nors. P Bennett Sousa acquired off
a five-second lead over Enric Mas of “Kerin is fantastic and has been ton squad in the first round. Despite Cowser cf 4 1 1 0 1 2 .316 Danvers 43......................Swampscott 29
waivers. P Andrew Vasquez placed on
Norby 2b 5 0 1 1 0 1 .283 Marblehead 44..................... Peabody 28 15-day IL.
Spain. Frenchman Lenny Martinez is 11 since the beginning,” said Walpole the tough finish, the enthusiasm has Kjerstad rf 3 1 1 1 2 1 .302 SOUTH COAST
Houston: LF Corey Julks sent to mi-
Ortiz ss 5 1 1 0 0 0 .327 Fairhaven 239........................Bourne 245
seconds back, and two-time Tour de coach Jen Quinn, whose team enters not waned. Stowers lf 2 1 1 2 0 1 .235 SOUTH SHORE
nors. P Jake Cousins designated for
assignment. LF Michael Brantley re-
Camron pr-lf 2 2 2 0 0 0 .274 E. Bridgewater 113............. Rockland 95
France champion Jonas Vingegaard is the season ranked No. 1 in the “We had 52 girls come out this Mayo 3b 2 1 1 2 3 0 .238 Sandwich 132.................. Middleboro 44
moved from 60-day IL. LF Michael
Brantley recalled from minors rehab.
Lester dh 5 0 0 1 0 2 .261 SWCL
31 seconds off the lead in fourth place. Globe’s preseason Top 20 poll. “She’s season for our varsity, JV, and fresh- Diaz 1b 3 1 1 0 1 0 .256 Auburn 165...........................Millbury 191
Kansas City: P Steven Cruz purchased
from minors.
super-skilled, sees the field very well, man teams,” coach CeCi Hodgkins Handley c
Totals
3 0 0 0 0 1 .236
34 8 9 7 7 8
TRI-VALLEY
Dover-Sherborn 215.................Millis 250 LA Angels: P Kenny Rosenberg called
SOCCER she’s got great vision . . . She’s just the said last week. WORCESTER AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Westwood 233...............Bellingham 297 up from minors. P Chase Silseth
placed on 7-day IL.
NONLEAGUE
key to that whole [center] unit.” The Wamps (12-5-2) graduated 10 Chang ss 5 1 1 3 0 3 .353 NY Yankees: 3B Josh Donaldson re-
Pauw won’t return
Grafton 166........................Hopedale 171
Valdez 2b 5 0 1 0 0 0 .246 leased. 3B Josh Donaldson removed
Joseph Case 325....W. Bridgewater 329
Between twice-weekly practices seniors, but return a very strong Scott dh
Dalbec 1b
3 1 0 0 1 1 .258
3 0 0 0 1 2 .272
Weymouth 261...................... Quincy 286 from 60-day IL.
Winchester 51........................Melrose 21 Toronto: SS Mason McCoy purchased
Vera Pauw’s four-year tenure as with her teammates, a coaching role group, including goal-scoring seniors Hernandez c 4 1 1 1 0 1 .247 from minors. SS Bo Bichette placed
Fitzgerald rf 4 1 0 0 0 0 .278 on 10-day IL.
coach of Ireland’s women’s team will at the Porker Camp she once attend- Callie Burchill and Margaret Carey. Arroyo 3b 2 1 0 0 2 1 .140 R For updated scores and highlights,
go to bostonglobe.com/sports/high- NHL
Zimmer cf 4 1 2 2 0 1 .224
end when her current deal expires this ed, workouts with her club team, and In net, they have one of the best goal- Crook lf 2 0 0 0 2 1 .221
schools. Carolina: C Nick Shore invited to
training camp.
Totals 32 6 5 6 6 10
week. The Football Association of Ire- a job at a training facility in Nor- tenders in the region in Bella Corc- Norfolk............003 100 202 — 8 9 1
land board announced that Pauw won’t wood, Birch dedicated her summer oran, a multi-sport standout who
Tennis
Worcester...... 032 010 000 — 6 5 1
LOB—Norfolk 8, Worcester 5. 3B—
be retained despite leading the country to field hockey. posted eight shutouts last season. Kjerstad. HR—Mayo, Stowers, Hernan-
dez, Chang. DP—Norfolk 1; Worces- Soccer
to its first Women’s World Cup. Pauw “I realized it’s my last chance to Preseason practices have focused ter 1.
was also in the headlines this year when play before college,” Birch said. “So as on detail-oriented work so the team
Norfolk IP H R ER BB SO ERA US OPEN
Povich
Dowdy
2„ 4 5 3 4 4 7.61
1‚ 0 0 0 1 1 4.99 At USTA Billie Jean King National Ten-
MLS
she denied allegations of “abusive and an individual, every day, I’ve done can “level up our play every game,” McSweeney 2 1 1 1 0 2 5.89 nis Center, New York, USA
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Men’s singles
inappropriate” methods during her something to get at least a little bet- said Hodgkins. Baker
Vespi
1 0 0 0 0 1 3.38
1 0 0 0 0 1 2.20 First Round
GP W D L Pts.
Cincinnati ................ 25 16 6 3 54
time as coach of the NWSL’s Houston ter so I can put my best foot forward “Our season came to a close Charles 1 0 0 0 1 1 6.10 Arthur Rinderknech, def. Diego
Schwartzman, 6-3, 6-4, 6-2; Arthur Fils,
Philadelphia ............ 24 13 4 7 43
Worcester IP H R ER BB SO ERA New England .......... 24 12 7 5 43
Dash. Ireland was eliminated in the this season and play my part in get- quickly in the playoffs last year, and Van Belle 4 5 4 4 5 4 7.19
def. Tallon Griekspoor (24), 4-6, 6-3,
5-7, 6-4, 7-5; Matteo Arnaldi, def. Jason
Orlando.................... 25 12 7 6 43
Columbus ................ 25 12 6 7 42
group stage of the tournament after ting us that state championship.” we have been waiting for fall to get Mosqueda
Garza
2‚ 0 0 0 0 3 4.30
„ 2 2 2 1 0 5.89
Kubler, 6-3, 1-0; Matteo Berrettini, def. Atlanta ..................... 26 11 8 7 41
Ugo Humbert (29), 6-4, 6-2, 6-2; Nicolas Nashville.................. 25 11 5 9 38
losses to co-host Australia and Canada The last two seasons ended with back on the field and use it as fuel.” Booser 2 2 2 2 1 1 5.47 Jarry (23), def. Luca Van Assche, 6-3, Montreal.................. 25 11 2 12 35
HBP—by Mosqueda. Balk—Garza. 3-6, 6-2, 7-6 (3); Felipe Meligeni Rodri-
and a draw with Nigeria . . . Having one-goal losses to Andover in the R It’s been a summer full of coach- T—2:56. A—7,213. gues Alves, def. James Duckworth, 6-4,
Chicago.................... 25 8 8 9 32
D.C. United .............. 26 8 6 12 30
7-6 (11), 6-3; Christopher O'Connell,
helped France win trophies as a prolific state final. Undeterred, Birch and her ing changes. def. Max Purcell, 6-4, 6-3, 3-6, 7-6 (5);
NY Red Bulls ........... 25 7 8 10 29
forward, Thierry Henry wants to lead teammates are hungry for another Three longtime fixtures bid adieu DOUBLE-A EASTERN Alexander Zverev (12), def. Aleksandar
Charlotte ................. 24 7 8 9 29
NYCFC ...................... 26 5 11 10 26
Vukic, 6-4, 6-4, 6-4; Daniil Medvedev Miami ....................... 23 6 3 14 21
(3), def. Attila Balazs, 6-1, 6-1, 6-0; Mi-
Les Bleus to a long-awaited Olympic chance at the crown. this offseason, most notably And- NORTHEAST
W L Pct. GB chael Mmoh, def. Karen Khachanov
Toronto .................... 26 3 10 13 19
WESTERN CONFERENCE
gold medal in his new role as coach. For Birch, this fall will mark her over’s Maureen Noone, who exits Somerset ................... 30 21 .588 — (11), 6-2, 6-4, 6-2; Alex Michelsen, def.
Albert Ramos-Vinolas, 6-4, 6-3, 6-4;
GP W D L Pts.
Binghamton............... 26 23 .531 3 St. Louis................... 25 14 2 9 44
Henry was hired as coach of the nation- last bid to win a state field hockey having won the last two Division 1 Portland..................... 26 25 .510 4 Daniel Altmaier, def. Constant Lesti-
enne, 6-7 (5), 6-3, 6-1, 6-2; Cameron
LAFC ......................... 25 11 7 7 40
Reading...................... 25 26 .490 5 Seattle...................... 26 10 7 9 37
al under-21 men’s team last week on a title; it will also conclude a lifelong state titles. Bridget Morris, a key Hartford ..................... 22 28 .440 7½ Norrie (16), def. Alexander Shevchen-
ko, 6-3, 6-2, 6-2; Yu Hsiou Hsu, def.
Real Salt Lake......... 25 10 7 8 37
New Hampshire ....... 19 29 .396 9½ Houston ................... 25 10 5 10 35
two-year contact, and he will also lead on-field relationship with fellow se- piece on Noone’s 2010 and 2011 state SOUTHWEST Thanasi Kokkinakis, 6-3, 6-4, 3-6, 6-3; San Jose................... 25 9 8 8 35
W L Pct. GB Andy Murray, def. Corentin Moutet, Vancouver............... 24 9 7 8 34
the France team at the 2024 Paris Olym- niors Katie Colleran and Abby John- champion squads, steps in for the Erie.............................. 29 22 .569 — 6-2, 7-5, 6-3; Sebastian Baez, def. Borna Dallas ....................... 24 9 6 9 33
Bowie ......................... 28 23 .549 1 Coric (27), 7-5, 7-5, 6-1; Andrey Rublev
pics. The French Olympic team last won son. Golden Warriors. Richmond .................. 28 23 .549 1 (8), def. Arthur Cazaux, 6-4, 7-6 (5), 6-1;
Austin....................... 25 9 5 11 32
Minnesota ............... 24 8 8 8 32
Botic Van De Zandschulp, def. Jordan
gold at the 1984 Games in Los Angeles. Colleran, a senior defender and At Marblehead, Linda Rice-Collins Harrisburg................. 24 27 .471 5
Akron.......................... 23 28 .451 6 Thompson, 6-3.
Sporting KC............. 26 7 8 11 29
Portland................... 25 6 8 11 26
Women’s singles
“It’s been a long time since we’ve won. co-captain, has played soccer, hockey, retired after 45 years. Mia Maccario Altoona ...................... 22 27 .449 6
TUESDAY’S RESULTS First Round
LA Galaxy ................ 23 6 7 10 25
Colorado.................. 24 3 10 11 19
There’s a problem somewhere. We’re and field hockey alongside Birch steps in to lead one of the oldest pro- Somerset 3.........................at Portland 1 Marie Bouzkova (31), def. Ashlyn
Krueger, 7-5, 6-4; Katie Boulter, def. Di-
WEDNESDAY’S GAMES
Altoona 7.....................................at Erie 5 NY Red Bulls at New England.........7:30
going to have to try and solve it,” Henry since they were in second grade. grams on the North Shore. At Binghamton 1................Harrisburg 0 ane Parry, 6-4, 6-0; Ekaterina Alexan-
drova (22), def. Leylah Fernandez, 7-6 Philadelphia at Toronto....................7:30
At Akron 7....................................Bowie 5
said at his first news conference. Henry Though Johnson, a senior goalie, In Western Massachusetts, Long- New Hampshire 6..............at Reading 3
(4), 5-7, 6-4; Linda Noskova, def. Madi-
son Brengle, 6-2, 6-1; Ons Jabeur (5),
Montreal at NYCFC........................... 7:30
Cincinnati at Atlanta.........................7:30
helped France win the 1998 World Cup meadow’s Ann Simons stepped down At Hartford 4........................Richmond 3
WEDNESDAY’S GAMES
def. Camila Osorio, 7-5, 7-6 (4); Liudmi- Nashville at Miami............................ 7:30
la Samsonova (14), def. Claire Liu, 7-6 Orlando at Charlotte.........................7:30
and the European Championship two after winning the Division 2 title in Somerset at Portland.............................6 (3), 6-3; Tamara Korpatsch, def. Irina-
Globe Top 20 Altoona at Erie...................................6:05 Camelia Begu, 6-3, 6-2; Martina Tre- Vancouver at Chicago......................8:30
years later, scoring 51 goals in his career her 42nd and final season. Kelly Gal- Harrisburg at Binghamton...............6:35 visan, def. Yulia Putintseva, 0-6, 7-6 (0), Columbus at Houston.......................8:30
Bowie at Akron..................................6:35 7-6 (8); Madison Keys (17), def. Colorado at Minnesota.....................8:30
with the national team. But the transi- lo was named Simons’s successor. New Hampshire at Reading............ 6:45 Arantxa Rus, 6-2, 6-4; Petra Martic, def. Seattle at Austin................................8:30
Tatjana Maria, 6-2, 6-1; Marketa Von-
tion to coaching has not always been No. On the North Shore, Emma Mc- Richmond at Hartford.......................7:10
drousova (9), def. Han Na-Lae, 6-3, 6-0;
Dallas at St. Louis..............................8:30
LA Galaxy at San Jose....................10:30
smooth. Henry had two spells as Bel- 1. Walpole Gonagle, a well-known club coach in Somerset, 3-1 Wang Yafan, def. Caroline Garcia (7),
6-4, 6-1; Jessica Pegula (3), def. Camila Real Salt Lake at Portland.............10:30
Remembered
SHARE YOUR MEMORIES ON OUR GUEST BOOK AT BOSTON.COM/OBITUARIES
BY CITY AND TOWN CISSELL, Mildred “Millie” CONNAUGHTON, Sara E. CRANSKA, Elizabeth Hope DeCELLES, Joseph Francis
(O’Halloran)
AMESBURY NEEDHAM
LOMONTE, Ann (Curran) DeCELLES, Joseph Francis
ASHLAND LANK, Althea B. (KAPLAN)
WALSH, William A.
NEWTON
AUBURNDALE BYERS, Jeffery A.
WALSH, William A.
CISSELL, Mildred (O’Halloran)
BOSTON LANK, Althea B. (KAPLAN)
DeCELLES, Joseph Francis
WALSH, William A.
LANK, Althea B. (KAPLAN)
STACK, Thomas F. Jr. NORWOOD
BRAINTREE HANNEY, Margaret E. (Teehan)
McGINN, Stephen Coleman OSTERVILLE
BRIDGEWATER MACKINNON, John Harold
BURKE, William E. III Of Quincy, formerly of Dorchester, Age 78, of Wellesley, formerly of
PITTSFIELD Of Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts,
HANNEY, Margaret E. (Teehan) passed away peacefully, surrounded Cambridge, died, August 24, 2023,
DeCELLES, Joseph Francis Age 91, passed away peacefully, passed away peacefully, on August 20,
BROOKLINE by her family, on August 28, 2023. with his family by his side, following a
at Alden Court Nursing Home in 2023, with family and friends near her.
LANK, Althea B. (KAPLAN) PLYMOUTH Loving mother and best friend of Eric decline from cancer.
Fairhaven, MA, on August 27, 2023. Hope is the daughter of Lucius Briggs
DiCARLO, Leo J. Peterson. Devoted daughter of Bridie Born in Pittsfield, February 28,
CAMBRIDGE She was the daughter of Leo and Cranska and Mary Hope Cranska,
DeCELLES, Joseph Francis HANNEY, Margaret E. (Teehan) (Flanagan) Connaughton and the 1945, Joe was a proud graduate of
Mildred O’Halloran; and loving wife growing up in Moosup, Connecticut,
late Thomas “Vincent” Connaughton. UMass Amherst. He earned his MS
CANTON QUINCY of the late Marion (Bud) Cissell. Born a village in the Town of Plainfield.
Cherished sister Sean Connaughton in Economics from Northeastern. Joe
GREEN, Jason Donald CONNAUGHTON, Sara E. in Watertown, MA, she was a graduate Just up Main Street lived her beloved
of Dorchester and Neil Connaughton was passionate about education and
STACK, Thomas F. Jr. McGINN, Stephen Coleman of Watertown H.S. After high school, Seaton family and her four cousins.
of Dorchester. Visiting Hours in the exploring the world, serving in the
CHESTNUT HILL Millie attended and graduated from Hope leaves her sister, Helen Cranska
REVERE John J. O’Connor & Son Funeral Peace Corps in Micronesia and teaching
CRANSKA, Elizabeth Hope Flight Attendant school in Boston, Hegblom (Richard) of Wellesley; and
DiCARLO, Leo J. Home, 740 Adams St. (near Gallivan most of his career at The English High
DANVERS MA. She later married Bud Cissell, a two nephews, Eric Hegblom (Yuliya)
Blvd.), DORCHESTER, Thursday from School. After retiring from Boston
DiCARLO, Leo J. SOUTH BOSTON career military man in the U.S. Air of California and Robert Hegblom
4-8 pm. Funeral Mass in St. Ann’s Public Schools, he taught business
COFFEY, Dolores Elizabeth Force. Millie had the opportunity (Mona) of Virginia. Hope was so proud
DEDHAM Church, Neponset, Friday morning at English at EF. His family learned
BURKE, William E. III McGINN, Stephen Coleman to experience life in different states, of her nephews and loved being part
10 o’clock. Relatives and friends are valuable lessons and skills from him,
HANNEY, Margaret E. (Teehan) including Greenville, South Carolina of their growing up. Visits from and to
TOPSFIELD respectfully invited. In lieu of flowers, including how to drive a stick shift. Joe
STACK, Thomas F. Jr. and Dover, New Hampshire. Millie them over the last several years became
JASSE, Andre C. Jr. please consider making a donation in was a skier, fly fisherman and swimmer
and her family lived many happy years highlights of her life, particularly when
DORCHESTER memory of Sara to the Dana-Farber throughout his life. He was an avid
CONNAUGHTON, Sara E.
WALES in New Hampshire. Following Bud’s all the girls came too, Eric’s Katherine
Cancer Institute. Interment in Cedar reader, keen intellect and kind soul.
GREEN, Jason Donald McGINN, Stephen Coleman passing, Millie moved to Newtonville, and Natalie and Rob’s Lyla and Molly. Joe is survived by his wife of
MA, where she reconnected with family Grove Cemetery. For directions and
FAIRHAVEN WELLESLEY Hope graduated from Pembroke College 34 years, Margaret Ann Williams;
and friends. Millie was preceded in expressions of sympathy, please visit
CISSELL, Mildred (O’Halloran) DeCELLES, Joseph Francis (Brown University), where she formed daughter, Caroline DeCelles and her
death by her husband; parents; and www.oconnorandson.com
LANK, Althea B. (KAPLAN) friendships lasting a lifetime. “The husband, Daniel Schnell of Arlington,
FALMOUTH brother, Leo (Sonny) O’Halloran. She is
STACK, Thomas F. Jr. Group” met regularly in the summer/ VA; and sister, Jeanne Walsh of
WEST ROXBURY survived by daughter, Karen and son- fall for many years and frequently Salisbury, MD. Joe was preceded in
FOXBOROUGH HANNEY, Margaret E. (Teehan) in-law, Larry Paquette of Mattapoisett, for a long weekend or more. During death by his parents, Francis and
BURKE, William E. III STACK, Thomas F. Jr. MA; her son, Wayne Cissell and COVID, zoom kept them together Margaret (Coffey); and his brother,
FRAMINGHAM daughter-in-law, Mary of Sharon, MA;
COURVILLE, Timothy James
WINTHROP
and son, Steve (Marti Keifer) Cissell; COURVILLE, Timothy James until Hope became too weak to join Richard.
DiCARLO, Leo J. earlier this spring. After receiving Funeral Service will be held at
HINGHAM and beloved granddaughter, Jennifer Trinity Church, Boston on Thursday,
her BA diploma from Pembroke, she
MACKINNON, John Harold Paquette. Millie leaves behind many September 7, at 10AM. Relatives
continued her education in Boston
HOLDEN OUT OF STATE nieces and nephews.
at Simmons School of Social Work, and friends kindly invited. In lieu of
BURKE, William E. III Millie’s family would like to thank flowers, please consider a donation to
FLORIDA earning a Master’s Degree and then
the staff at Alden Court and Beacon Breakthrough Greater Boston, Trout
HYDE PARK JASSE, Andre C. Jr. becoming a certified licensed social
GREEN, Jason Donald Hospice for their care. Relatives and Unlimited or a charity of your choice.
VIRGINIA worker in Massachusetts. Hope was
friends are invited to gather at the For online guestbook, gfdoherty.com
JAMAICA PLAIN affiliated with Boston Hospitals, area
HANDY, Alice (Warner) Eaton & Mackay Funeral Home, 465
REEN, Maureen H. clinics and nursing homes in social George F. Doherty & Sons
Center St., NEWTON, MA Friday,
MIDDLETON work, as well as psychotherapy. She
September 1, at 11 am, followed Wellesley 781 235 4100
JASSE, Andre C. Jr. OUT OF COUNTRY was devoted to her work and brought
by Burial at Calvary Cemetery,
MILFORD IRELAND help and love to so many. Hope was
Waltham, MA. To share a memory
WALSH, William A. CONNAUGHTON, Sara E. a beautiful dresser and always very
or to send a note of condolence, visit
stylish, attending Symphony, plays and
www.eatonandmackay.com
many cultural events. She was also DiCARLO, Leo J.
involved in state and local politics. She
It is with great sadness that we
Age 64, of Framingham, passed away helped in many Democratic campaigns
announce the passing of Leo J.
BURKE, William E. “Ed” III BYERS, Jeffery A. COFFEY, Dolores Elizabeth at home, surrounded by his family, on and was an avid member of Americans
DiCarlo, on August 28. Leo was born
Sunday, August 27, 2023. He is survived for Democratic Action and Common
(Santoro) by his wife, Sharon of Framingham; Cause. Her interest in politics began
and raised in Revere and for many
in her teenage years when the Army- years served as the first assistant
his son, Jared and his wife, Nichia of clerk of the Boston Juvenile Court,
McCarthy hearings were televised
Wiscasset, ME; his daughter, Aubrey where he was held in high esteem by
in the 1950s. Also in the 1950s, the
and her husband, Brian of Yorktown, his colleagues and the judges he so
Red Sox became a town fascination.
VA; and his son, Nate of East Boston, capably served. Leo retired early to
Moosup’s home town hero, Walt Dropo
MA. Relatives and friends are kindly care for his mother, Amalia “Molly”
played first base for the Red Sox. Hope
invited to attend Calling Hours on DiCarlo, after the sudden passing of
became an enthusiastic fan, particularly
Friday, September 1, 2023, from his father. He spent many happy years
for Ted Williams. He was always her
4:00pm to 7:00pm, at Norton Funeral living in Hallandale Beach, FL until
hero. Many of her passwords involved
Home, 53 Beech St., (corner of Union he returned to Massachusetts in 2021
his high average 406 and number 9.
Ave.) FRAMINGHAM, MA. In lieu of to be closer to family. Leo is survived
In the late 50s, Hope traveled on the
flowers, donations may be made to by his brother, Peter C. DiCarlo, Jr. of
Canadian Pacific Railroad with cousin,
the Dana Farber Cancer Institute to Revere, William R. DiCarlo and his
Isabel and son, Tommy to British
support pancreatic cancer research. wife, Donna of Plymouth; his sister-in-
Columbia. Cousin Jean and family
Of Bridgewater, August 27. Beloved It is with profound grief that we The family extends heartfelt thanks law, Joanne M. DiCarlo of Winthrop;
lived in Kitimat. In coming years, Hope
husband of Sandra M. (Thornton); announce the passing of Jeffery Allen to the many wonderful physicians, and by his beloved nieces and nephews.
visited her Seaton cousins in England,
and father of William E., IV of WV Byers, on August 18, 2023, in Boston, nurses and healthcare workers for He was predeceased by his parents,
Passed away peacefully, at home sur- British Guiana and joined them on
and Shannon H. D’Oliverio. Stepfather Massachusetts. Jeff was born on June their compassionate care. For complete Peter C. and Amalia DiCarlo; his
rounded by her children, on August 25, several trips aboard, particularly the
of Kevin E. Thornton and his wife, 10, 1978. Growing up in Las Cruces, obituary information or to leave a
2023, at the age of 94. She was devoted canals in France. In later years, friends brothers, Matthew C. DiCarlo and
Elizabeth of Foxboro and Sean J. New Mexico, Jeff loved the outdoors. message of condolence, please visit
to her Catholic faith, her large family, took her to the Southern United States Joseph C. DiCarlo; and sister-in-law,
Thornton and his wife, Danielle of He was an active member of the Boy www.nortonfuneralhome.com
Gate of Heaven Church, Mount Saint and she loved the hikes and the beauty Leona E. DiCarlo. Relatives & friends
Holden. Brother of James Burke and Scouts of America and achieved the Joseph Academy, her chums from the of the National Parks. Hope became are invited to attend Visiting Hours
his wife, Ellen, Roland Burke and rank of Eagle Scout. Upon graduating church choir and Boston Athletic Club an avid traveler to the Western U.S. in the Bisbee-Porcella Funeral Home,
the late Amy Waddell. Also survived
high school at the top of his class, Jeff and South Boston, her home town. and Canada, enjoying hiking and the 549 Lincoln Ave., SAUGUS, on Friday,
by two grandchildren. Member of
deepened his love for chemistry in the Dolores was preceded in death by her spectacular vistas. Much appreciation 8:30 to 10:15 a.m., followed by a
Aleppo Temple Shrine in Wilmington,
Celestial Lodge of Westwood, Union
Lodge in Norwood, the Scottish Rite of
labs of Karen Wooley at Washington
University at St. Louis, where he
beloved husband, Walter; parents,
Lewis and Agnes Santoro; her children,
Funeral Services has to be given to wonderful care givers
notably, Jean Kaiser from Mature
Funeral Mass in St. Anthony’s Church,
250 Revere St., Revere, at 11 a.m.
graduated Summa Cum Laude in 2000. Agnes Ethel and Geri Coffey; and her Caregivers, friends, Sandra Wixted, Interment in Woodlawn Cemetery,
Lexington, the Cape Cod Salties Fishing
He obtained his PhD in chemistry at brother, Lewis (Elizabeth) Santoro of Suzanne Dworsky and cousin Deb Hill. Everett. Donations may be made in
Club and the Engineers’ Blue Room
the California Institute of Technology Anchorage, AK. She leaves behind her Gifts in her memory can be given to Leo’s memory to Care Dimensions, 75
Club. Visiting Hours on Thursday,
in 2007 under the direction of John seven children and 12 grandchildren, Brown University Annual fund online
from 3 to 6 pm, at the Folsom Funeral Sylvan St., Ste. B-102, Danvers, MA
Bercaw. He then conducted post- Dolores (Paul) Gruszka; children, Laura or by mail to Brown University, P.O.
Home, 649 High St., WESTWOOD. 01923, who provided compassionate
doctoral research in the labs of Timothy & Natalie of Valparaiso, IN; Teresa Box 1822, Providence, RI 02912 or
Relatives and friends are invited to
Jamison at the Massachusetts Institute (Paul) Coffey-Gordon; children, Claire &
Affordable Cremation call 1 (401) 863-1000 or give to the
and immeasurable care in Leo’s last
attend his Funeral, on Friday, at 10 1310 complete
$ days. For directions & condolences
of Technology. Paul of South Boston; Kathleen (David) Simmons School of Social Work, 300
am, at the funeral home, followed by 617 782 1000 www.BisbeePorcella.com
Jeff built his life in Boston with Heger of Manomet; Dennis (Brandi) Fenway, Boston, MA 02115. Service and
interment in Mount Prospect Cemetery
in Bridgewater. In lieu of flowers,
his beloved wife, Crystal, where Coffey, children: Kylie, Faith, and Chloe Lehman Reen & McNamara Burial will be private and arranged by
donations to the Shriner’s Hospital
he worked as a tenured chemistry of Peabody; Walter (Barbara) Coffey; Funeral Home Tillinghast Funeral Home, 433 Main
professor at Boston College. He was children, Aidan, Maeve, and Gavin of www.lehmanreen.com Street, DANIELSON, Connecticut. ..
for Children, 51 Blossom St., Boston, ..
MA 02114 would be appreciated For committed to scholarship, advancing Norwell; Christine (John) Kane; chil- Serving Greater Boston
..
.. Experience Globe.com
tillinghastfh.com ..
directions, obituary and guestbook, scientific knowledge and encouraging dren, Jack and Tess of South Boston;
.
please visit funeral home website. new generations of diverse students and Stephen Coffey of Boston. She is
and scientists to think critically and also survived by many beloved nieces,
Folsom Funeral Home conscientiously. Jeff’s work was his nephews, extended family and friends.
www.folsomfuneral.com passion; he combined his love of A Funeral Mass will be held on Satur-
nature and chemistry focusing his day, September 2, at 10:00 a.m., at Gate
research on ecofriendly plastics, of Heaven Church, 615 East Fourth St.,
alternative fuels and sustainable South Boston. Relatives and friends are
processes. His research spanned kindly invited. Visiting Hours will be
Talk
fundamental studies of chemical held on Friday, September 1, from 4:00
reactions of transition metal elements
Have the of a to applications in pharmaceutical
to 8:00 p.m., in the lower level of Gate
of Heaven Church, 615 East Fourth St.,
Lifetime
SM building blocks and synthetic materials. South Boston. In lieu of flowers, those
His work exemplified creativity in wishing to honor Dolores’ life can make
designing molecular catalysts and a memorial gift to Gate of Heaven/
You talk about many fastidious attention to detail as his
team endeavored to understand how
St. Brigid Parish, 841 East Broadway,
South Boston, MA 02127. Arrange-
things with your loved ones:
worth sharing
triggers.
isn’t just important today; Jeff brought together the
it will be especially significant communities and causes he cared Funeral Services
when it’s time to honor and about. His research group at BC
commemorate your lives. was like family and he often hosted
camping trips and cooked holiday
Meaningful memorialization meals for them. Jeff loved good food,
great wines and authors, Cardinals
Share theirs in The Boston Globe
starts when loved ones talk
about what matters most:
baseball, the symphony, ballet and CANNIFF MONUMENT
memories made, lessons
movies. He was a deeply loving, loyal
friend and partner, always offering
(617) 323-3690 The Boston Globe’s new Featured Life offering
learned and how they hope smiles and comfort, wry witticisms, a 800-439-3690 • 617-876-9110
to be remembered. strong honest voice, a can-do outlook 531 Cummings Highway, Roslindale lets you honor your loved one with a professionally
and a challenge for growth. Those left 583 Mt. Auburn Street, Cambridge
Download a free brochure to mourn his passing include his wife, MON-FRI 9-9; SAT 9-5, SUNDAY 12-5 written narrative about their life and achievements.
Crystal Shih Byers; mother, Eleanor
and Have the Talk of a
Byers; sisters, Vickie Byers and Jennifer
Lifetime today. It can make Master; nieces, nephews and his entire
the difference of a lifetime. community. A gathering to remember
Jeff will be held on September 10, For more details, contact Boston
talkofali fetime.org from 3 to 5 pm, at Boston College
in Gasson Hall. In lieu of flowers, Globe Classifieds at 617-929-1500
donations may be sent to Empowering
Women of Organic Chemistry and
500 Canterbury St.
Boston, MA 02131 617-524-1036
or [email protected].
Research Corporation for Scientific
Advancement. www.stmichaelcemetery.com
C10 T h e B o s t o n G l o b e W E D N E S D A Y, A U G U S T 3 0 , 2 0 2 3
Remembered
SHARE YOUR MEMORIES ON OUR GUEST BOOK AT BOSTON.COM/OBITUARIES
GREEN, Jason Donald LANK , Althea B. (KAPLAN) MACKINNON, John “Jack” REEN, Maureen H.
Harold Of Jamaica Plain, passed August 26,
2023. Beloved daughter of the late
Lawrence & Katherine (Murphy)
Have the
Griffin. Loving mother of Paul and
his wife, Nancy Reen, Cindy M. Reen
and the late Jay J. Reen. Sister of Paul,
David and Kathleen Griffin and the late
Lawrence Griffin, Catherine O’Donnell
& Patricia Shea. Also survived by her
grandchildren, Siobhan and Morgan
talk of a
Reen.
Visiting Hours will be on Thursday,
August 31, from 4 to 8 pm, at Mann
Rodgers Funeral Home, 44 Perkins
Street, JAMAICA PLAIN. Relatives
Late of Canton, formerly of Of Ft Lauderdale, FL and Weston, MA, and friends invited. A Funeral Mass
lifetime
Hyde Park and Dorchester, 96 yrs, August 29, 2023. Beloved wife will be celebrated Friday, at 10 o’clock,
MA, entered into rest Of Hingham and Osterville, passed September 1, at Our Lady of Lourdes
for 73 years of the late Buddy Lank.
on August 28, 2023 at the age of 92. away peacefully, surrounded by family, Church in Jamaica Plain. Interment
Daughter of the late Hilal and Blanche
Beloved husband of the late Adele on August 27, 2023. Jack was reunited will be private.
Kaplan. Loving mother of Sunny Gustin
(Mathews) Green for 55 years. Devoted in Heaven with the love of his life, his [email protected]
(Sam), Linda Chanowski (Fred), Johnny
father of Cheryl & Jonathan Pozner of wife of 54 years, Rosemary Thomas
Lank (Patty). Adoring grandmother
Canton, Robin & Robert Gorham of MacKinnon. He will be greatly missed
of Harley Lank (Audra), Nikki Bialow
Canton and Michael & Jennifer Green by his six children, John MacKinnon
(Corey), Jeremy Gustin (Rebecca),
of Needham. Loving grandfather of and his wife, Karen of Duxbury, Kevin
Blake Chanowski, David Lank (Laura),
(Teehan)
XXIII National Seminary. He was also
an active member of the Order of Malta
daughter, Emily Stack of Pittsburgh,
PA and his son, Sam Stack of Boston.
ization starts when
and served as President of the Boston He was the former husband of the late
College Alumni Association. In 2012,
he received the Saint Ignatius of Loyola
Mary Crosby Stack of Dedham. He was
a loving brother to Barbara Gaynor of loved ones talk about
Medal from BC High for his lifelong Halifax, MA and her husband, Bert
service to others. Jack lived life to the
what matters most:
Of Amesbury, MA, passed away Gaynor, William Stack of Canton MA
fullest, a lesson that will continue to be and his wife, Lisa Stack, Theresa Stack
peacefully, August 22,2023, in Austin
shared by all that love him. of Scottsdale, AZ, Carolyn Phillips of
Texas, at age 75 of ALS. She was born
Relatives and friends are respectfully Phoenix, AZ and her husban Chandler
memories made,
in Boston to Robert and Ann Curran
invited to attend the Visiting Hours Phillips and the late Nancy Eastman of
on April 30, 1948 and grew up in
on Thursday, August 31, from 3 to 7 Medford, MA.
Roslindale. She graduated from St.
PM, at the Church of the Resurrection, Visitation at the George F. Doherty
Clare High School, then Chandler
School for Women. Before retirement,
Ann had been employed for many
1057 Main Street, Hingham. The
Funeral Mass will be celebrated at the
& Sons Wilson-Cannon Funeral Home,
456 High St., DEDHAM, on Thursday, lessons learned and
Church of the Resurrection on Friday, August 31, from 4 to 7pm. Funeral
years at Copyright Clearance Center
Obituaries
aged his vast estate for more Gagosian Quarterly, an art- As a teenager growing up in
than 30 years, died Thursday in world magazine published by Rio de Janeiro, Léa Garcia pored
Switzerland. He was 76. global gallery owner Larry Gago- over books by the French exis-
His death was confirmed by sian. “When I was about 17,” he tentialists Simone de Beauvoir
his lawyer, Jean-Jacques Neuer, added, “he very kindly gave me a and Jean-Paul Sartre, dreaming
who did not give a cause or say professional camera.” It was a of becoming a writer. Her father
where in Switzerland he died. Nikon. was a plumber, and her late
Claude and Paloma were the Claude Ruiz-Picasso was mother had been a seamstress.
children of Picasso and Fran- born May 14, 1947, in Neuilly- Ms. Garcia wanted something
çoise Gilot, a French painter 40 sur-Seine, France. (Ruiz was the more from life and seemed to
years his junior, who, after a name of Picasso’s paternal find it one day in 1950 at a tram
long and stormy relationship, grandfather.) Paloma was born station near the beach.
left him in 1953. Picasso did not two years later. His half-siblings ‘‘I was on my way to pick up
deny that he was Claude and Pal- were Paulo, the son of Picasso’s my grandmother to take her to
oma’s father, but he was so angry marriage to ballet dancer Olga the movies,’’ she recalled decades
when Gilot published a memoir, Khokhlova, and Maya Ruiz-Pica- later, ‘‘when someone came up
EDWIN REICHERT/ASSOCIATED PRESS
“Life With Picasso,” in 1964, that sso, whose mother was model to me and asked, ‘Would you like
he cut off contact with her and Marie-Thérèse Walter. Paulo Pi- Above, Mr. Ruiz-Picasso to work in theater?’’’
their children. Gilot died in casso died at 54 in 1975. Maya (center), son of world- The man introduced himself
June. Ruiz-Picasso died last year at 87. famous Spanish artist Pablo as Abdias do Nascimento, a Bra-
In 1970, Mr. Ruiz-Picasso In 1989, after six years of Picasso, at a Picasso exhibit zilian writer, artist, and political
and Paloma Picasso sued in a squabbling among all Picasso’s in Berlin, Germany, in 1983. activist, who had recognized Ms.
French court to be recognized as heirs, including his widow, Jac- At right, Mr. Ruiz-Picasso in Garcia from a mutual friend’s
Picasso’s legitimate children. queline Roque, over the distribu- 2015 in a French court description. He explained that
French law changed in 1972 to tion of the thousands of art- during a case involving he wanted her to work with his
give children born out of wed- works he left behind and the Picasso items. theater troupe, the Black Experi-
lock rights of inheritance; the communal right to exploit his mental Theater — known by its
siblings won a court ruling in name commercially, a French was extremely strict about how Portuguese acronym, TEN —
March 1974, almost a year after court appointed Mr. Ruiz-Picas- the Picasso image was handled.” which promoted Afro-Brazilian
their father’s death, to further so the estate’s administrator. One of Mr. Ruiz-Picasso’s li- culture at a time when Black
establish their legitimacy. The “I never expected or desired censing deals involved selling his Brazilian actors were limited to
court said Picasso had con- to have any kind of role like this, father’s name and signature in stereotypical roles or were dis-
firmed his paternity by dedicat- or have any influence over my fa- 1998 to PSA Peugeot-Citroen, a pensed with altogether in lieu of
ing paintings to them. ther’s legacy,” he told Richard- French automaker. Marina Pica- white actors in blackface.
By then, Mr. Ruiz-Picasso had son. “So because of the Picasso sso, Paulo’s daughter, challenged Ms. Garcia had never per-
been living in New York City Administration, little by little, I the deal in court. She told a formed onstage. But within two
since 1967. Over the next seven had to quit photography. Not all French newspaper, “I can’t toler- years, at age 19, she was dancing
years, he studied at the Actors of a sudden but little by little.” ate that the name of my grandfa- and reciting poetry in a TEN
Studio; worked as an assistant to As the administrator, Mr. ther and of my father be used to production called ‘‘Rapsódia Ne-
LIONEL CIRONNEAU/ASSOCIATED PRESS
fashion and portrait photogra- Ruiz-Picasso dealt with copy- sell something as banal as a car.” gra,’’ or ‘‘Black Rhapsody.’’ By the
pher Richard Avedon; and be- right and trademark issues, According to a 2016 Vanity He leaves his wife, Sylvie Vau- shouldn’t be used to bulk up the end of the decade, she would
gan a career as a photojournal- made licensing deals, battled Fair article about the Picasso art tier Picasso, and his sons, Solal shows. gain wider recognition through
ist. with forgers, and produced re- empire, Citroen paid a reported and Jasmin. “Many people expect to make her first screen role, in the Os-
Mr. Ruiz-Picasso’s work even- productions. $20 million, plus royalties, for In 2018, Mr. Ruiz-Picasso discoveries that, at the end of the car-winning 1959 film ‘‘Black
tually appeared in Vogue, Satur- “I think he did an incredible the deal, and had sold about 3.5 criticized the Musée Picasso in day, they do not make, and they Orpheus,’’ which set the Greek
day Review, Time, and Life mag- job as a steward of his father’s million Picasso cars at the time. Paris for lending out too many of are not satisfied with what is on myth of Orpheus and Eurydice
azines. He said he had been in- legacy,” Gagosian, whose galler- In July, Mr. Ruiz-Picasso was its Picasso works to the many ex- offer,” he told The Times of Lon- in the favelas of Rio de Janeiro.
spired by photojournalist David ies have presented numerous Pi- replaced as estate administrator hibitions scheduled in France don. “Among the exhibitions The film propelled her on an
Douglas Duncan, who spent casso shows, said in a phone in- by Paloma Picasso, a renowned that year. He said that some of held, there is a load that are not acting career that spanned more
years creating a pictorial record terview. “He took it seriously and jewelry designer. those works were fragile and necessary.” than six decades and 100 film,
television, and theater credits,
including in popular telenovelas
Nicholas Hitchon, 65; aged 7 years at a time in the ‘Up’ documentaries that aired around the world.
‘‘She placed Brazil on an artistic
level never seen before, at a time
By Neil Genzlinger life. You feel like you’re just a country in pursuit of money. when black Brazilian women
NEW YORK TIMES specimen pinned on the board. “ H e t o o k u s o u t t o We s t were known in a pejorative way,’’
Nicholas Hitchon, whose life It’s totally dehumanizing.” Towne” — a Madison mall — Afonso Borges, a Brazilian au-
was chronicled in the acclaimed He also thought the filmmak- “and had us walk around over thor and journalist, wrote in a
“Up” series of British documenta- ers had a tendency to play up and over again,” Dr. Hitchon told tribute on X, the platform for-
ries, beginning when he was a stereotypes of British society, The Capital Times of Madison in merly known as Twitter.
boy in the English countryside in something he said he felt even as 1987, speaking of Apted. “Then Ms. Garcia, who was credited
1964 and continuing through the a boy in the early installments, he did a voice-over where he with helping to expand the op-
decades as became a researcher when crew members would talked about that I’d come to portunities available to Black
and professor at the University of chase sheep into the camera’s America for a salary of $30,000.” Brazilian actors on the stage and
Wisconsin, died July 23 in Madi- view while filming him. Dr. Hitchon pursued research screen, died Aug. 15 at 90 in the
son, Wis. He was 65. “These people thought that I on nuclear fusion, then switched resort city of Gramado, Brazil.
A posting on the university’s was all about sheep,” he told The to computational plasma phys- Her family said she had a heart
website announced his death, Chronicle of Higher Education ics. Once in a whi le, Apt ed attack there shortly before she
from throat cancer. In the most i n 2 0 0 5 . “ I ’m q u i t e f o n d o f would ask him about his work. was scheduled to accept a life-
recent installment of the series, sheep, but I was more interested “When I try to explain,” Dr. time achievement honor at the
“63 Up,” in 2019, he described in other things.” Hitchon told Physics Today in city’s annual film festival.
his struggles with the disease. If the series seemed too in- 2000, “his eyes glaze over.” Along with Black actors in-
MICHAEL FORSTER ROTHBART/UW-MADISON VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES
Dr. Hitchon was a student in tent on demonstrating that eco- He published more than 100 cluding Ruth de Souza and Zezé
a one-room primary school in A native of England, Dr. Hitchon was a longtime professor at nomic class was a determining journal articles and three books, Motta, Ms. Garcia leveraged her
Littondale, north of Manchester, the University of Wisconsin Madison. f a c t o r t hr o ug ho ut lif e , D r. the university’s posting said. He success in Brazil to highlight the
when a researcher working on a Hitchon — who went from a one- retired in 2022. discrimination faced by dark-
Granada Television project came a s k e d , “ D o y o u h av e a g i r l - growing up, changing and re- room rural schoolhouse to a doc- His first marriage, to Jacque- skinned people in a country that
looking for a 7-year-old willing friend?” flecting on their lives. torate and a life of academic ac- line Bush, ended in divorce. He had relied on the labor of mil-
to participate in what was origi- Nick responded, “I don’t an- “What I had seen as a signifi- complishment — proved to be an married C. Cryss Brunner in lions of enslaved Africans before
nally viewed as a one-shot TV swer those kind of questions.” cant statement about the Eng- exception. 2001. She survives him, along abolishing slavery in 1888. ‘‘It’s
special. Young Nick was only 6, The 1964 film, a simple effort lish class system was in fact a hu- “He’s one of the success sto- with a son from his first mar- not shameful to be a slave, but to
but he was talkative and unin- titled “Seven Up!,” directed by manistic document about the ries,” Apted said. riage, Adam; and two brothers, be a colonizer,’’ she told the
timidated by cameras, so he was Paul Almond, began to trans- real issues of life,” Apted wrote William Nicholas Guy Hi- Andrew and Chris. newspaper O Globo last year.
signed up as one of 14 young- form into documentary great- in 2000. tchon was born Oct. 22, 1957, to If Dr. Hitchon was sometimes Léa Lucas Garcia de Aguiar
sters to be profiled. ness when one of his research- Over the years, Dr. Hitchon Guy and Iona (Hall) Hitchon, uncomfortable with the “Up” was born in Rio de Janeiro on
The idea was to get a cross- ers, Michael Apted, picked up expressed both admiration for who had a farm in Littondale. project, he stuck with it, while a March 11, 1933. Her mother,
section of children from Britain’s the thread at the end of the de- what the series was accomplish- He studied physics at Oxford few of the other original partici- who made clothes for wealthy
economic classes, look at their cade and made a follow-up, “7 ing and discomfort with being a University, earning a bachelor’s pants dropped out. In “42 Up” women in the city’s Laranjeiras
schooling and other experiences Plus Seven,” interviewing the part of it and with the way it was degree there in 1978, a master’s (1998), he even joked about its neighborhood, died when Ms.
and capture their perspectives same children. edited. in 1979, and a doctorate in engi- role in his life. Garcia was 11. She was later
on the adult world. Nick repre- Apted, who died in 2019 at “I’ve learnt that the stupider neering science in 1981. Soon af- “My ambition as a scientist is raised by her grandmother.
sented the rural child. He en- 79, directed that and all the sub- the thing I say, the more likely it ter, he left for the United States to be more famous for doing sci- In addition to her three sons,
deared himself to that original sequent installments, which is to get in,” he told The Indepen- to teach at the University of Wis- ence than for being in this film,” she leaves a half-sister; three
television audience with his re- were made at seven-year inter- dent in 2012, when “56 Up” was consin, a move that he thought he told Apted on camera. “Un- grandchildren; two great-grand-
sponse to an interviewer who, vals. They became a fascinating released. “You’re asked to dis- “28 Up” (1984) had wrongly por- fortunately, Michael, it’s not go- children; and a great-great-
clearly fishing for cuteness, portrait of ordinar y people cuss every intimate part of your trayed as abandoning his home ing to happen.” granddaughter.
LivingArts
coladeira and Caribbean zouk — and
learned of kizomba later, online.
But for Paulo Ribeiro, an Angola-
born kizomba DJ in Boston, the
dance style is much more than an in-
ternet fad.
“It’s embedded in Angolan cul-
ture. It’s part of your DNA,” he said.
“Go to Angola and say, ‘Oh, I know
how to dance kizomba,’ and every-
one’s gonna look at you and say, ‘Oh,
so you know how to breathe.’”
‘We’re trying to
create an experience
for new people
to try it and fall
in love with it.’
CEIJAY PAUL, founder
of the Boston Kizomba Festival
Embracing closeness at the annual Boston Kizomba Festival morning, open to experts and begin-
ners alike. As much as he wants to
provide a space for local kizomba reg-
By Emma Glassman-Hughes war, which took place from 1975 to ulars, Paul, who teaches classes of all
I
GLOBE STAFF 2002. The word refers both to a musi- levels at the Multicultural Arts Center
n a video from Montreal’s Ki- cal genre and to styles of dance, in Cambridge, said this festival is an
zo Fest this past June, Massa- which include the slow, sultry kizom- opportunity to expand the communi-
chusetts native and dance in- ba semba and the quicker, more ath- ty and welcome newcomers. “We’re
structor Charlayne Delgado letic urban kiz. trying to create an experience for new
leaned her body weight onto Kizomba semba is distinguished people to try it and fall in love with
partner Phillyp Chanlatte. The two by its celebration of closeness, prox- it,” he said.
were attuned to the subtle cues of imity, and connection. It’s very visual For a taste of the Boston Kizomba
each other’s limbs as they floated — YouTube videos capture gyrating Festival energy year-round, local in-
across the dance floor to the two-one hips and glued-together thighs — but structors organize semi-regular so-
beat of kizomba, an intensely sensual much of the dance is guided by small, cials and dance parties, like a pop-up
ballroom style born from a mix of An- barely visible signals, communicated kizomba social on the Providence
golan, Cape Verdean, Brazilian, and through fingertips and palms, fore- Bridge this week and Paul’s upcom-
pan-Caribbean influences. arms and biceps, thighs and knees. ing Kiz’ Thursday event at Moves &
This Thursday, a growing popula- Dancers are cocooned in their close- Vibes Dancing Academy on Sept. 7.
tion of New England’s kizomba danc- ness, almost Velcro-ed together as Delgado, who is currently running
ers will gather in Danvers for the an- they prick their feet to the rhythm a Boston-based eight-week kizomba
PHOTOS BY EMMA GLASSMAN-HUGHES/GLOBE STAFF
nual Boston Kizomba Festival. The and glide around the floor. intensive and will be teaching two
event first premiered in 2019; now, Kizomba dancers lean into the beats at the Conexao Social inside Several instructors, including Del- classes at the festival, says kizomba is
with four days of workshops, late- Rumba Y Timbal in Cambridge. gado, said kizomba first infiltrated her “mental sanity.” “It’s your break
night socials, and competitions at the New England within the last decade, from everything in your world. There
DoubleTree by Hilton Hotel running tions in the country — has become an even better energy than last year,” he when international YouTube videos are times where you literally feel like
through Labor Day. unofficial hub for the style. Last said. that had racked up millions of views you and your partner are one per-
Though kizomba has been a main- year’s festival brought in record num- Without many official records of drummed up demand for classes, a son,” she said. “Like, ‘Wow, we’re just
stay in Angola and parts of Europe bers with an estimated 600 attend- kizomba’s origins, Abel Djassi Ama- festival, and regular events. Despite so in sync, we’re one human right
for decades, it’s only recently found ees, founder Ceijay Paul told the do, associate professor at Simmons kizomba’s strong association with now. This is amazing.’”
more of a foothold in the United Globe over the phone. This year, Paul, University and a researcher of Afri- Angola, the Boston community is
States. And, for some, New England who moved to Boston from Haiti in can Lusophone history, said that the mostly supported by dancers of Hai- Emma Glassman-Hughes can be
— home to one of the largest Luso- 2000, hopes they’ll be able to top it. term “kizomba” first emerged at tian and Cape Verdean origin who reached at emma.glassmanhughes
phone (Portuguese-speaking) popula- “I feel a good, good, good energy, some point during Angola’s civil grew up dancing similar styles — like @globe.com.
I
NEW YORK TIMES iar, like an old friend you haven’t seen By Steve Morse
t was a beach day, by Maine since preschool. This sense of abiding GLOBE CORRESPONDENT
standards — slightly overcast affection was a powerful reminder that There’s good news for the local
and moderately balmy, with a certain characters imprint on our DNA music scene. The Cambridge-based
hint of balsam in the air. But on — and that the writers and artists who club Toad, which was up for sale and
a peak-summer morning in Ju- conjure them have a bit of magic in thought to be closing, will survive
ly, 225 people steered clear of state their fingertips. under a sale agreement that its own-
parks and went to Curtis Memorial Li- At the beginning of her introductory ers just reached.
GIN MAJKA/NEW YORK TIMES
brary in Brunswick instead. remarks, Joyce Fehl, the library’s devel- Toad and the adjacent Christo-
They were young and old, in stroll- opment and marketing manager, asked Sarah McCloskey read classics by her father, Robert, last month during a pher’s restaurant in Porter Square
ers and on walkers and strutting the the crowd, “Who has goose bumps?” children’s book event at Curtis Memorial Library in Brunswick, Maine. have collectively been sold for
latest technical sandals. They wore pig- Taking in the packed room, where “roughly” $3 million, according to
tails, baby slings, ironic T-shirts, a every chair was full, as were many laps, Parcheesi board are shaded just so. “We had a woman who had not been current co-owner Holly Heslop.
headscarf, a lobster hat, a crown, a tiara McCloskey answered, “I have tears.” Even if you’ve never harvested fruit or in the library since she was a kid,” Christopher’s closed at the begin-
and halos of white hair. Many carried Then she picked up “Time of Won- given a hoot about ornithology, you can Doucett said. “She loved it so much, she ning of the pandemic and never re-
colorful hardcovers and paperbacks der” (1957) and started to read. hear the “kuplink, kuplank, kuplunk” of got a library card, and then . . . her opened. Toad will close on Sept. 16,
that appeared to have served multiple In the pecking order of picture berries hitting the bottom of a tin pail mother got a library card.” she said, but she expects it to reopen
generations of readers. books, Robert McCloskey’s have been at or the plaintive cry of a loon: “Luh-hoo- Sprawling elegantly over two floors, soon after because the new owner is
The crowd wasn’t at Curtis to meet a the top of the heap for almost 80 years. hoo-hoohoo-hoooh.” the exhibit contains sketches, drawings, eager to see that happen.
celebrity memoirist or best-selling nov- They celebrate little milestones — loose “There is such broad appeal to these watercolors, and brush and ink images She said the incoming owner
elist. They were there for a children’s books,” said Liz Doucett, the library’s from five picture books, including Mc- wants to be remain anonymous at
book event: Sarah McCloskey, the real- executive director. “‘Make Way for Closkey’s slightly psychedelic final one, this point (“I’ve never met him,” she
life inspiration for “Blueberries for Sal” ‘There is such broad Ducklings’ is about finding a safe home. “Burt Dow, Deep-Water Man” (1963). added), but he is someone who has
(1948), was at the library to read a ‘Blueberries for Sal’ is about going out “This is impeccable brushwork,” said been to Toad “a million times” and
handful of classics by her father, Rob- appeal to these books. and adventuring with your mom. Scott Nash, executive director of the Il- loves the room, which has been a
ert, who also wrote “Make Way for
Ducklings” (1941) and “One Morning
. . . They’re books that They’re books that resonate — it doesn’t
matter how old you are.”
lustration Institute, which curated the
show. “Bob has a confidence to his line
launching pad for such acts as Lake
Street Dive and David Wax Museum.
in Maine” (1952), among others. The resonate.’ Planning for “The Art of Wonder” that is rarely seen these days.” She said he is a restaurant investor
event was one of several celebratory oc- was underway before the pandemic; The world Robert McCloskey wrote but wishes to keep Toad and the res-
LIZ DOUCETT, Curtis Memorial
casions planned around “The Art of when Doucett and her team picked it about has changed drastically. Scott Is- taurant separate, rather than having
Library, on Robert McCloskey’s stories
Wonder,” an exhibit of 68 original illus- up again, they hoped McCloskey’s art land now has Wi-Fi, although his the smaller Toad be absorbed by it,
trations by the two-time Caldecott would lure readers back to the building. daughter still relies on a radio for infor- as many fans of the venue had
Award-winning author, which will be teeth, outings that lead to unexpected In the first month of the exhibit, the li- mation. (She spends three seasons on feared.
on display until Oct. 15. adventure — and the beauty of New brary hosted more than 25,000 guests the island and returns to Ellsworth, Heslop and current co-owner
As “Sal” McCloskey, now 78, settled England. Without moralizing or finger (up 22 percent from July 2019), includ- Maine, for the winter.) Charlie Christopher are ecstatic that
into an armchair at the front of Morrell wagging, they also highlight the hard ing visitors from 45 states, 11 countries, “Take a farewell look at the waves Toad will survive the transition
Reading Room, a hush fell over the un- work of parents, fishermen, and nature. and five continents. The number of res- and the sky,” Robert McCloskey wrote (though it may be renamed). “This is
dulating sea of children at her feet. It Kids love McCloskey’s stories be- idents signing up for new library cards in “Time of Wonder,” which chronicles very good news for us,” she said,
was as if an adult version of Matilda, cause they’re long — the better to pro- reached 281, almost double the number a summer in Maine and ends with the adding there had been three differ-
Pippi, or Eloise had just strolled into long lights-out — and minutely illus- from July 2022. Judging from an infor- arrival of fall. “Take a farewell sniff of ent offers — one spearheaded by lo-
the room in a yellow T-shirt and khakis. trated down to the finest blade of grass. mal show of hands, one-third of the the salty sea. A little bit sad about the cal musician Jake Bush — and that
McCloskey’s hair is salt and pepper — A drawing of a seal includes whiskers people gathered for Sal McCloskey’s vis- place you are leaving, a little bit glad all three “had the same goal” of
gone is the tousled mop her father drew and eyebrows. Circles on a watercolor it were first-time guests at Curtis. about the place you are going.” keeping the rooms separate.
INSIDE
G
WednesdayFood
Comics G6
Weather G7
TV Listings G8
T H E B O S T O N GL OB E WE DN E S DAY, AU G US T 3 0 , 2 0 2 3 | B O S T O N G L O B E .C O M / F O O D
SALLY PASLEY VARGAS FOR THE BOSTON GLOBE KAROLINE BOEHM GOODNICK FOR THE BOSTON GLOBE
I
By Sheryl Julian
GLOBE CORRESPONDENT
Every family who’s been With that in mind, here are a handful of reci-
n the same way a change in season eating on the fly all summer pes you might decide are just right for you: a sim-
ple crunchy-top mac and cheese with frozen peas
might prompt you to replace an
old sweater or finally toss a favorite
is ready for a do-over as (every kid’s favorite veggie), an updated arroz con
but threadbare pair of socks, the soon as school starts. Here pollo simmered with brown rice, homemade piz-
za Margherita that begins with store-bought
nightly family table is due for a re- are some recipes to help. dough and perked-up canned tomatoes, chicken
fresh. You may decide a dish has to
fingers browned in a skillet and accompanied by
go because everyone’s just had
liever in sensible shortcuts. This means making celery in ranch dressing, and rich cakey brownies
enough of it or a key vegetable is
use of prepared and partially prepared foods and for dessert, a bake sale, or neighborhood potluck.
no longer in season. Nothing radical here. Just a
supermarket rotisserie chickens, takeout (though You can find all the recipes on Page G5.
few new recipes in place of others while you see
not as a steady diet), pizza night (of course), and Successful family cooks rely on their own per-
how it works. If you’re determined to leave the
whatever else gets you through the week sanely sonal cycle of proven, familiar dishes. As you set
helter-skelter of summer behind when the school
and keeps the troops happy. Beyond this, you yours up for the season, weave in a few new
year begins and sit around the kitchen table more
need to have a couple of things you can prepare things. Your crew might just give you some likes.
often, it’s time to have a good look at how you do
easily that you like to make and pass muster with
things and streamline where you can. Sheryl Julian can be reached at
the crowd around the table.
When it comes to family meals, I’m a big be- [email protected].
W
GLOBE CORRESPONDENT While we might call these fruits “ex- By Kara Baskin
I
ander around an otic,” they’re clearly not to people who GLOBE CORRESPONDENT
Asian grocery store grew up with them. Most are native to n Worcester, local sandwich he-
and you’ll see fruits Southeast Asian countries with hot and ro Mike Devish, 39, is known
you’ve likely never moist climates. As demand for the fruits as Ziggy — a short-order cook
seen before. Magen- from immigrant communities in the with a reputation for putting
ta-colored dragon fruit with little green United States grew, production in- steak-and-cheese specials on
leaves sprouting from its skin; rough- creased in other warm spots, such as the menu at the many diners he worked
skinned balls of lychee; huge, bumpy Mexico, Central and South America, at over the years. Now, he has his own
jackfruit; red, hairy rambutan; purple Florida, and California. “The fruits are place in Worcester, Ziggy Bombs, spe-
mangosteen; and little tan balls of lon- expensive to transport,” says Arnold cializing in unusual toppings: mozza-
gan. There are also mangoes, papaya, Amidon, whose company Arnold’s Pro- rella sticks, poutine, and even a pupu
star fruit, Korean melon, and more. duce Inc. is a fruit broker. He’s been platter crowned with chicken fingers,
Many have harvest seasons during sum- buying Asian fruits for wholesale cus- spareribs, crab Rangoon, and duck
mer and early fall so it’s a good time to FRUIT, Page G4 sauce. Much to the delight of many a
BU student, he’ll open a location near
campus at 173 Amory St., ideally next
month.
Inside
BY THE GLASS WHATSHE’S HAVING
SHAPE SHIFTING DOG DAYS
A curvaceous bottle Enjoying Colombian and
of German silvaner wine Cubano hot dogs at the
jogs a memory that Charles River Speedway’s
ADOBE STOCK
deserves a second look Super Bien
Many Asian fruits have harvest seasons during summer and early fall, so
G2 G3
it’s a good time to try some of the locally available ones.
G2 T h e B o s t o n G l o b e W E D N E S D A Y, A U G U S T 3 0 , 2 0 2 3
Insider
These tomato sauces are made from With a sturdy
too-big or too-small tomatoes. brioche pretzel
But they’re perfectly tasty. roll, you can load
up your hot dog
with condiments
and confidence
A
lthough you might be loyal to your brand of hot
dogs, it’s worth trying different buns. The
French company St. Pierre Bakery, which ships
fluffy brioche breads to the East Coast, recent-
ly intro-
duced
brioche pretzel rolls.
With a golden pretzel
top sprinkled with
sesame seeds, rather
than salt, soft and
lightly sweet, it’s a
tasty contrast to a
dog or brat off the
grill or deli meats.
The rolls are sturdy
T
he staggering volume of food waste, a significant contributor to glass jars, and the company holds a carbon-neutral certification. The and sizeable enough
greenhouse gases as it decomposes in landfills, propelled Anna trio includes Gentle Marinara, a smooth puree with a slightly roasted to hold a pile of con-
Hammond and Joyce Huang to launch Matriark Foods. Ham- garlic flavor; Tomato Basil, which has a pronounced taste of the herb; diments. You can up-
mond had long worked with social mission-driven enterprises and the Spicy Arrabbiata, with a slight red peppery kick. The carton (18 grade any plain sand-
and Huang on developing business strategies. The New Yorkers forged ounces, $10) tells you that each diverts four-tenths of a pound of toma- wich with these,
relationships with Virginia farmers and various processing plants to toes from landfills, saves 50 gallons of water, and reduces one pound of whether it’s a tuna or
turn discarded tomatoes — nearly 1.5 million a year — into three deli- greenhouse gases. Soups and stews are also in the works made from re- egg salad or a simple
cious tomato sauces. The tomatoes they salvage have no blemishes, jected nearly perfect vegetables. The company claims roughly 33 mil- garden tomato. Each
bruises, scrapes, or scars. However, they fall short and are too large or lion tons never make it to your plate. Available at Roche Bros. and Sud- is side split; they
small for manufacturing equipment or shipping cartons. “They come bury Farms locations; Windfall Market, 77 Scranton Ave., Falmouth, come in packs of 6 for $5.49-$6.49. Available at Roche Bros.,
to the factory ripe and sorted. If they don’t fit the size, they end up in 508-548-0099; or go to matriarkfoods.com, where a three-pack is $27. Brothers Marketplace, Shaw’s, and Star Market locations.
landfills,” says Hammond. The sauces are packed in cartons rather than ANN TRIEGER KURLAND ANN TRIEGER KURLAND
C
ollaborating with chefs, plant breeders, and organic farmers, Dan Barber, the award-winning
chef at Blue Hill in Manhattan and Blue Hill at Stone Barns in Pocantico Hills, N.Y., cofounded
Row 7 Seed Company several years ago. Their aim was to create seeds that would enhance the
taste and nutritional value of vegetables. For instance, the team collaborated with Cornell Uni-
versity plant breeder Michael Mazourek to develop a novel seed for butternut squash — the veg-
etable hit the produce aisle last year. The squash’s natural sweetness and deliciousness make
maple syrup, brown sugar, and spices unnecessary. The team also introduced exceptionally creamy small
potatoes and sweet golden beets. The veggies made it onto menus of local chefs like Ana Sortun and Ken
Oringer. Row 7 s lineup recently expanded to include tomato seeds and now Northeast-grown and -har-
vested organic tomatoes — Sweet Prince and Midnight Roma — are available at Whole Foods Market
stores. The Princes, a cherry tomato, are so sweet that you’ll want to pop them in your mouth one after
another. The Romas have a bold flavor, meaty flesh, and striking red and purple skin. They cook down
fast and are suited for sauces and pastes. The skin’s pigments add antioxidants and a deeper color to a
sauce. Both are worth trying while you can. Each pint is about $6. Seeds for home gardeners are also
available at row7seeds.com.
ANN TRIEGER KURLAND
BY THE GLASS
WINES WORTH A POUR BETWEEN $12 AND $35
I
GLOBE CORRESPONDENT ceous bottles under screw cap than mentations — one in stainless steel, an- vineyard name, which translates to
f you came of age in the Nixon
era, you no doubt remember
cork. But the full-figured format (con-
taining 750 ml, just like its taller, more
bottle jogs a other spontaneously prompted in barrel
— lend character to the captivatingly
“cat’s head,” refers to the feline on the
coat of arms of the von Katz family, a
Mateus, the sweetly sparkling, svelte counterparts) remains unmistak- memory that energetic finished product. noble lineage of landowners.) On the
vividly pink Portuguese export able. Also impossible to miss is the art- From Weingut Leipold, travel south- front label of a village-level silvaner
housed in a bulbous glass bot- istry of the accomplished makers fea- deserves west to Franken’s oldest wine coopera- called “Sommeracher,” you can spy an
tle. Who can forget the ’70s television
commercial featuring an American cou-
tured in this month’s tasting.
Since 2018, Peter Leipold has been a second look tive, Winzer Sommerach, established in
1901 in the village of the same name.
image of a tabby, peering out from be-
hind miniscule font detailing the names
ple cavorting through the streets of Lis- crafting stellar wines from 15 acres of Today, 90 families, several of whom live of the co-op’s members.
bon, flirting over glasses of the iconic his family’s estate vineyards in the mu- full-time on the estate, farm nearly 500 Bocksbeutel in hand? Your end-of-
rosé? Those images — not to mention nicipality of Obervolkach. tive feel for winemaking. The next-gen- acres of vines. They craft summer sipping is shaping up to be ab-
the commercial’s earworm of a jingle — Hi s f o r m e r e m p l o y e r, eration maker’s acumen is on display in their wines in a newly reno- solutely brilliant.
are lodged deep in memory; so much so Rheinhessen heavyweight a Prädikatswein Kabinett silvaner vated cellar, showing them
that when you encounter a similarly Klaus Peter Keller, speaks called “Muschelkalk,” named for a fos- off in a sleek adjoining vino- Weingut Leipold “Muschelkalk” Sil-
shaped vessel on a shop shelf, you might g l owi n g l y o f L ei p o l d , sil-rich limestone on which the grape theque situated at the foot vaner Trocken 2021 Crystalline in clari-
assume its contents are akin to the sug- praising him for his intui- variety thrives. Eighteen hours of skin of the flagship Katzenkopf ty, this regal-looking silvaner is mineral-
ary potation of decades prior. But if you ly fresh, with scents of wet river stones
look closer at the label, and spy trocken taking precedence over of yellow tree
— “dry” in German — don’t bypass this fruit. Its dry palate, offering bright acid-
bottle, especially if your tastes no longer ity, conveys precisely polished mineral
lean soda-pop sweet. tension, along with lemon, saline, and
In Franken, the winelands east of lime flower notes. 12 percent ABV. Dis-
Frankfurt hugging the course of the tributed by Vineyard Road. Around
ELLEN BHANG
Main River, producers have been coax- FOR THE $30. Retailers include: Momma’s Gro-
BOSTON GLOBE
ing dry, minerally excellence from the cery + Wine, North Cambridge; Craft
Silvaner grape for more than 350 years. and Cru, Milton.
Occasionally, you’ll see the grape’s full
name, Grüner Silvaner, to distinguish it Winzer Sommerach “Sommerach-
from a rare red-skinned variety. In the er” Silvaner Trocken 2020 This day-
early 18 th century, the traditional bright silvaner offers aromas of ripe yel-
Bocksbeutel — a sturdy vessel shaped low orchard fruit, lime leaves, and wa-
like a flattened ellipsoid — was deemed terfall freshness, leading to a dry,
the container of choice for wine from minerally palate saturated with green
the region’s most famous vineyard. Lat- apple and lemon tanginess, all con-
er, the shape came to signify pours hail- veyed by straightforward acidity. 12.5
ing from Franken generally. These days, percent ABV. Distributed by AP Wine
Imports. Around $20. Retailers include:
Ball Square Fine Wines, Somerville;
Wasik’s Cheese Shop, Wellesley.
Dry German silvaner wines, each
housed in a traditional Ellen Bhang can be reached at
Bocksbeutel. [email protected]
W E D N E S D A Y, A U G U S T 3 0 , 2 0 2 3 T h e B o s t o n G l o b e G3
rose-colored sunglasses
a Montessori school framing a court- omelet-like charred Swiss cheese, yel-
yard. There’s Notch Brewing, Koji Club low mustard, and three proper dill pick-
sake, Birds of Paradise cocktail bar, and, les all in a row. It, too, requires a fork.
fittingly, the Boston Women’s Market, Super Bien is mainly an empanada
an incubator shop spotlighting female- shop, but both dogs are nods to Stefani-
By Kara Baskin storefront for juices, wines, sauces, em- owned businesses: sustainable swim- ni’s childhood in Miami.
GLOBE CORRESPONDENT panadas, tajin watermelon, tomato sal- wear, pet snacks, soaps. In this land of The buns are nothing special
On Sunday afternoon, energized af- ad, and those aforementioned dogs. It enchantment, there are no DIY salad (they’re from Costco), but that doesn’t
ter watching “Barbie,” I decided to take has the megawatt brightness of an Ap- mega-chains or blowout bars. matter. What does matter is the sublime
lunch into my own hands. Instead of re- ple store, but with indie warmth. At Super Bien, the Colombian dog is pleasure of lingering over a toppings-
turning to my slightly The Charles River Speedway re- the most interesting: a snappy, boiled laden hot dog while a loop of techno-
WHAT SHE’S t a r n i s h e d d r e a m minds me of something you’d find in all-beef Nathan’s dog rolled in crushed pop warbles in the distance on a Sunday
HAVING house for a peanut- Colorado, a beer-and-food oasis with Lay’s potato chips, pineapple, and moz- afternoon, the aroma of homemade
butter-and-jelly sand- long picnic tables and an anesthetic zarella, topped with a bodega-bought soaps wafting through the air — a fleet-
wich (my dreary usual), I zipped to the soundtrack; a little sanctuary of mellow petite quail egg and squiggles of salsa ing glimpse of suspended reality in the
Charles River Speedway to sample Su- off the highway and a portal to another rosada. The sauce, a blend of ketchup, hot summer sun.
per Bien’s hot dogs and sit for a spell in place. Location isn’t ideal: It’s where mayonnaise, and cumin, is bright pink Super Bien, Charles River Speedway,
the August sun. Soldiers Field Road, the Leo M. Bir- and plentiful. As such, this is a messy 525 Western Ave., Brighton, www.thesu-
KARA BASKIN FOR THE BOSTON GLOBE
Super Bien is owned by Melissa Ste- mingham Parkway, and Arsenal Street dog. You’ll need lots of napkins and, perbien.site
fanini, best known for the Buenas Em- converge to cause traffic jams. And better yet, a fork. Potato chip dust will Colombian (top left) and Cubano
panadas stall at Somerville’s Bow Mar- there’s minimal on-street parking. I get crumble onto the picnic table, and rivu- Kara Baskin can be reached at (above) hot dogs at Super Bien, a
ket. Super Bien is Stefanini’s version of it, not everyone drives, but I am not one lets of rosy sauce will run down your [email protected]. Follow her grocery bar at the Charles River
a grocery bar: a happy, neon-haloed of those people. chin. @kcbaskin. Speedway in Brighton.
50% OFF
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LANE TURNER/GLOBE STAFF/FILE *Limit one offer per household. Must purchase 5+ Classic/Designer Glide-Out Shelves. EXP 10/31/23. Independently owned and operated franchise.
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Frank McClelland in the dining room of his Beverly restaurant called Frank.
G4 T h e B o s t o n G l o b e W E D N E S D A Y, A U G U S T 3 0 , 2 0 2 3
buy fruit
good luck. “It’s part of the ritual
to serve the best fruits to wel-
come the new year,” he says.
from Asia
Star fruit (or carambola),
about the length of a short cu-
cumber with lengthwise ribs, is
so-named because when you cut
uFRUIT it crosswise the slices are star-
Continued from Page G1 shaped. Green star fruits are un-
tomers since 2001. “Some can ripe and sour, but make attrac-
be put in cold storage on a ship, tive stars for garnishing salads
but others, like mangosteens, and cocktails. Truly flavorful star
need to be shipped by air.” Add fruits are yellow, ripe, and have a
to the cost the amount that ar- juicy, sweet-tart flavor like green
AMANDA MUSTARD/THE NEW YORK TIMES SAKCHAI LALIT/ASSOCIATED PRESS
rives rotten and it’s become pro- grapes. Use the tip of a knife to
hibitive to import fruit from remove the seeds in the center.
Asia, he says. Star fruit can also be pickled or
Look for Asian fruits at Viet- cooked into jam or relish.
namese markets in Dorchester, Pa p ay a i s n o t t h e c r o w d
Korean stores in Allston and H pleaser in the United States that
Mart in Quincy, numerous shops mangoes are. The pinkish-or-
in Chinatown, and Cambodian ange flesh is mushy-soft and the
stores in Lowell, Lynn, and Re- flavor is sweet without the vi-
vere. What you’ll want to know brant flavor of, say, a mango or
is how to prepare and eat them, peach. As well, the multitude of
what’s edible and not. These are hard, round black seeds can be
not your familiar stone fruits, off-putting. Yellow papayas are
like peaches, plums, and cher- ripe and sweet, while green pa-
ries, or apples and pears that you payas are picked early and have
simply rinse and take a bite, eat- white flesh, firm and bland, typi-
ing an edible skin and all the cally added to salads or pickled.
flesh surrounding a center pit If you spot a pile of Korean
CHRIS TRINH/GETTY IMAGES AMANDA MUSTARD/THE NEW YORK TIMES
(or core with pits). melons at a grocery store, pretty
Most tropical fruits have hard orange-yellow ovals with yellow-
or leathery inedible skins, which white grooves, grab a few. Cut
protect the tender flesh inside them open like any other melon,
from intense heat, heavy rains, scoop out the seeds, and enjoy
high humidity, and pests. Some the crisp-juicy texture and hon-
skins peel off easily (eg. lychee eydew-like taste.
and longan), while those with Come fall and winter, the
hard, thick rinds (eg. jackfruit most popular fruits at Asian
and durian) must be cut with a stores are citrus, including navel
sharp knife. oranges, pomelos (like a sweet
Here are some locally avail- grapefruit), and honey tanger-
able Asian fruits to start you on ines. There are also persim-
your tasting journey: mons: the Fuyu is crunchy and
Jackfruit is the largest tree sweet, from California, Mexico,
fruit in the world, a huge oval and Spain; and Hachiya, which
with hard bumpy skin that can needs to be very ripe and soft be-
range from 15 pounds to 60 fore becoming palatable. “Hachi-
JOSH REYNOLDS FOR THE BOSTON GLOBE (LEFT); WENDY MAEDA/GLOBE STAFF/FILE
pounds or more. Most stores do ya persimmon are very astrin-
the laborious work preparing Clockwise from top left: A worker cuts a mangosteen in Bangkok. Durian, the so-called king of fruits, has an offensive smell gent and not popular with
the fruit for you. Occasionally, a when ripe and spiky, cactus-like skin. A dragon fruit is sliced open. Korean melons displayed at H Mart in Cambridge. Harry Asians,” says Amidon. Asian
shopper will walk out with a Bassmajian cuts a Furu persimmon at Arax Market in Watertown. A lychee tree laden with ripe fruit in Vietnam. pears, native to East Asia, are
whole one, says David Nguyen, grown in the northwestern Unit-
who works for wholesaler Kirin lovely mangosteen. Not related and eat it within a few days about one week. mangoes (Tommy Atkins vari- ed States and New England. The
Produce and grew up learning to mango, the mangosteen has a while fresh and ripe. Mangoes are among the top- ety) are best cut into chunks fruit is round like an apple, rip-
the business at his family’s gro- leathery purple shell, which Make sure to try the three selling fruits in the world and when ripe and tender. Some ens on the tree, has a golden
cery store AC Farm Market in should yield slightly when tropical cousins: lychee, longan, there are hundreds of varieties. mangoes are picked green and greenish-brown skin, and is
Dorchester. Once jackfruit is cut pressed, and dark green leaves and rambutan. Lychees have a India, China, and Thailand are firm so the flesh is crunchy. Keep crisp and sweet. It tastes like a
open, you’ll see what looks like and stem on top. To open a man- firm, bumpy reddish skin. Lon- big producers, but most of what unripe mangoes at room tem- Bosc pear.
yellow or orange corn kernels on gosteen, either cut off the top gans are smaller rounds with we eat comes from Mexico and perature for a few days to soften, “If you want an education in
steroids. These lobes have a stem area or make a shallow cut thin tan skin that peels off like South and Central America. then they should be refrigerated. Asian fruits, go to an Asian mar-
sweet, pineapple-banana flavor. around the top half of the fruit the shell of a hard-boiled egg. Holding a mango upright, slice Dragon fruit is most recog- ket,” says Amidon. “There will be
Amidon says it tastes like Juicy and remove the skin and inner Rambutan looks like an ap- off the round lobes from both nizable in its brilliant magenta a good selection and you can
Fruit gum. Unripe jackfruit is of- rind. Inside are tender white proachable sea urchin, with sides, cutting around the large color with small leaves spiking learn from people who know the
ten used as a meat substitute. cloves or segments that are soft, leathery red skin and red and flat pit in the center, and then out from its skin. Cut the fruit in fruits, buy them correctly, take
You may have heard of duri- juicy, tropical and floral, hinting green soft hairy spines. Under- cut the fruit from the skin in half lengthwise or in wedges and care of them better, and sell
an, the so-called king of fruits. It of mango, peach, and plum. Pop neath their skins are translucent chunks. Add chopped mango to scoop up the white (or reddish them when they’re ripe.”
has such an offensive smell the segments in your mouth and whitish rounds, grape-like in salads and salsas, and puree it purple) flesh with its tiny, deli- Nguyen, who grew up eating
when ripe, as well as dangerous- suck the flesh from the (inedi- texture. Nibble the flesh from for smoothies, ice cream, and cately crunchy black (edible) these fruits, says, “We could be
ly spiky, cactus-like skin (a warn- ble) seeds. around the (inedible) center pit. sauces. (Frozen mango chunks seeds. Most dragon fruit, native happier if we knew more about
ing?), that it’s not something Mangosteens are expensive The flavor is sweet, a tad tropical are available in most supermar- to Southeast Asia, now come each other and our cultures and
most people are eager to try. The because they’re difficult to grow and melon-y, a little musky, and kets.) from Florida, California, and foods.” And when we’re more ad-
fruit is available fresh and frozen and in high demand. Imported not as brightly sweet-tart as Amidon recommends the Mexico. A yellow-skinned vari- venturous, these interesting
and is described as custardy- mangosteens from Asia must be green grapes. The fruits can dry golden-yellow Ataulfo mangoes ety with white flesh comes from fruits will no longer seem so ex-
sweet if you can get past its (sew- irradiated to eliminate any pos- out quickly so eat them soon af- from Mexico. They are reliably Ecuador. Dragon fruit tastes otic.
er-gas-rotting flesh) stink. “It’s sible pests. Nguyen says most ter purchase for the best quality delicious with a tropical sweet- sweet, somewhat one-dimen-
an acquired taste,” says Nguyen. now arrive from Mexico. Store and flavor. You can refrigerate tart flavor and silky-soft flesh. sional like watermelon. Accord- Lisa Zwirn can be reached at
But please try the queen, the the fruit at room temperature them in a loose plastic bag for The more common red-green ing to Nguyen, Chinese and Viet- [email protected].
pretty much been cooking ever making different just opens up a pizza shop and Does he help?
since.
I’ve done a lot of local diners,
varieties. . . . then wonders why it fails. When he’s in a good mood!
and then delis. I was at Bushel ’N Employees test What is your earliest food Quick fun questions: What’s
Peck in Worcester for many memory? What did you grow up your favorite snack?
years, and then I started doing them out. My son eating? Gummy bears.
the pop-ups for this. And that’s
what blew up the whole busi-
helps me, too.’ A lot of pizza and burgers. I’ll
always remember Friendly’s, just What’s your favorite thing
ness. MIKE DEVISH because it was my first restau- on the menu?
THEATER rant. The pupu platter.
What’s the food scene like in
Worcester? own little restaurant in Leices- What’s the secret of being a What do you do when you’re
There’s a lot of support in the ter, the Grille at Crossroads. I good diner worker? That seems not working?
city. And I’m so different than ev- ran steak and cheese as a special like a high-pressure job. I watch cooking shows: “Din-
erybody else. There’s not many one time, and it just blew up, Working in the diners, you’ve ers, Drive-Ins, and Dives.”
THE FULL MONTY
SEPTEMBER 26 – OCTOBER 8 people doing steak and cheeses and then people always knew got to be fast on the grill. That’s
Move over Chippendales! See what happens like I do. So it really blew up very me as the steak-and-cheese guy. one thing. People expect diners Maybe you could be on it.
when six down-on-their-luck, unemployed steel fast, and that’s why we’ve been to be a lot faster. And I’ve always Has anybody ever asked for a
workers hatch a plan to make some quick cash able to expand. What is it about steak and done my best. completely bizarre sandwich?
by putting on a strip show. This heartwarming Experience Globe.com cheese that people love so I’d ask people to stop asking
comedy is one of the funniest musicals ever - What’s the difference be- much? Would people ever order for veggie sandwiches at a steak-
filled with great music, hilarious characters, and tween Boston and Worcester? I personally just always loved stuff that you hated to make? and-cheese place! I get requests
the most highly anticipated closing number of any That’s a big expansion. running them because my steaks Did you have a pet peeve? all the time asking if we have any
musical ever. A perfect night out with friends! I’m very happy to be moving are so different. I do all the top- Actually, especially in diners, vegetarian options when we’re a
to Boston. I love Worcester. I’ve pings; I like making different va- I absolutely hated making steak-and-cheese spot.
NORTH SHORE MUSIC THEATRE always been here, but it’s defi- rieties. We have one that’s like a poached eggs. I just hated when
54 Dunham Road | Beverly | MA nitely a different vibe. I really Big Mac. I have one called the customers asked for them. Eggs Kara Baskin can be reached at
TICKETS: NSMT.ORG or 978.232.7200
can’t say anything bad about Boom Boom that has onion rings cooked in water don’t appeal to [email protected].
W E D N E S D A Y, A U G U S T 3 0 , 2 0 2 3 T h e B o s t o n G l o b e G5
FAMILY DINNER
RECIPES FOR WEEKNIGHTS IN THE KITCHEN
Pan-Grilled Chicken Fingers with Celery Ranch Salad 1. Dry the celery well all over. Cut the
Serves 4 wide bottom pieces of celery so they’re
the same size at the smaller pieces from
Instead of deep-frying chicken fingers, DRESSING the top. Each piece should be a bite.
these are charred in a skillet. The idea 2. In a bowl, use a slotted spoon to toss
1 cup sour cream
behind this pan-grilling method is to the celery and oil with a generous pinch
2 tablespoons chopped fresh dill
mimic cooking on an outdoor grill. Keep each of salt and pepper.
1 tablespoon chopped fresh parsley
the marinade dry enough so that it 3. Heat a large, heavy skillet until it is
1 tablespoon chopped fresh chives
doesn't drip from the chicken, and keep hot. Add the celery and cook, uncovered,
1 clove garlic, finely chopped
it spaced out in the pan so that moisture for 5 minutes, or until you can see some
¼ teaspoon cayenne pepper or chile
can evaporate immediately. The chicken of the edges are softening. Toss well and
powder
is never simmering in liquid. If the cook 3 minutes more. The celery should
Salt, to taste
breast includes the tender, cut the rest of hold its shape and still be a little crunchy
2 tablespoons cider vinegar, or more
the breast meat into pieces the same size in the middle. Return it to the bowl and
to taste
as the tender. If using thighs, cut each leave to cool.
one into two or three pieces, so that all 1. In a bowl, whisk the sour cream, dill, 4. Toss the celery with half the dressing.
the pieces cook in about the same parsley, chives, garlic, cayenne or chile Add more dressing, a spoonful at a time,
KAROLINE BOEHM GOODNICK FOR THE BOSTON GLOBE
amount of time. You may need to cook powder, a generous pinch of salt, and 2 until it is all coated.
the chicken in two rounds, depending on tablespoons of the vinegar.
Homemade Pizza Margherita inches) with cornmeal. the size of your skillet. The celery is 2. If the mixture seems thick, add more CHICKEN
Serves 4 2. In a bowl, combine the tomatoes, orega- cooked quickly to help break down the vinegar, 1 teaspoon at a time. Taste for
1½ pounds skinless, boneless chicken
no, and a generous pinch each of salt and tough fibers, but it's still crunchy; this seasoning and add more salt, if you like.
breasts or thighs, cut into 1-inch
A basic Neapolitan-style pizza Margherita pepper. Taste for seasoning and add more helps absorb the flavors in the ranch
thick fingers
combines tomato sauce, mozzarella cheese, salt and pepper, if you like. dressing. Use whole stalks of celery so CELERY
1 tablespoon vegetable oil, mayon-
and fresh basil, the colors of the Italian flag. 3. Sprinkle the counter lightly with flour. you have a mix of the less sweet dark
10 stalks celery, cut into 1-inch piec- naise, or plain yogurt
Make your own dough or simplify things Place the dough on it and flour the dough. green parts and the sweeter light-green
es, 1 teaspoon honey or maple syrup
with commercial dough from the supermar- With a rolling pin, flatten the dough, rolling tops. If your celery has good looking
1 tablespoon vegetable oil Salt and pepper, to taste
ket or from your neighborhood pizzeria out from the center and toward the edges. leaves, chop them to use as a garnish on
Salt and pepper, to taste
(most will sell you their dough). Then perk Lift up the dough and hold onto an edge, the finished salad. 1. In a large bowl, combine the chicken
up a can of crushed tomatoes to use as the then rotate it like you're turning a steering fingers, oil or mayonnaise or yogurt,
sauce. The shape is a large rectangle that wheel to let gravity stretch it more. Lay the honey or maple syrup, and a generous
fills a rimless baking sheet dusted with corn- dough flat and keep gently stretching it until pinch each of salt and pepper. Mix well
meal. Bake it on the lowest rack of the oven it's a large rectangle shape (with a slightly so all the surfaces on the chicken are
so the underside browns and turns crusty. thicker edge) about 15-by-12 inches. If any evenly coated. There should not be a
You don’t need to transfer it onto a pizza holes develop, pinch the dough to seal them. pool of liquid in the bowl; it should all be
stone; bake the pizza in the pan. If you have Lift up the dough and quickly center it on on the chicken.
a stone, heat it in the oven for 30 to 40 min- the baking sheet. Stretch out any rumpled 2. Leave to marinate for 15 minutes, or
utes and set the baking sheet on the stone. areas. The dough should almost completely cover and refrigerate overnight.
Make two of these for a hungry crowd. fill the pan. 3. Clean the skillet from the celery. Set it
4. Spoon the tomato mixture on the dough over medium heat until it is hot. Add the
Cornmeal (for sprinkling)
and use the back of the spoon to spread it, chicken with a little space between the
¾ cup crushed tomatoes
leaving a 1-inch border around the edge. Top pieces (do this in batches, if necessary).
¼ teaspoon dried oregano
with mozzarella and sprinkle with Parme- When the skillet is full, use a wide metal
Salt and pepper, to taste
san. Scatter the torn basil leaves on top. spatula to make sure nothing is sticking
Flour (for sprinkling)
5. Transfer to the lowest rack of the oven. to the pan. Turn the heat to high. Cook,
1 pound commercial pizza dough, at
Bake for 10 to 15 minutes, or until the crust uncovered, for 8 minutes, occasionally
room temperature
is golden and the cheese is bubbling. poking the bottom of the chicken to keep
6 ounces fresh mozzarella, sliced
6. Remove the pan from the oven. Loosen it from sticking. Once all the pieces are
¼ cup freshly grated Parmesan cheese
the pizza from the pan using a flat metal browned on the undersides, turn and
1 sprig fresh basil leaves, 8 torn, 8 left
spatula. Slide the pizza onto a large cutting cook 3 minutes more, or until a meat
whole for garnish
board. Scatter the remaining basil on top. thermometer inserted into the thickest
1. Position a rack at the lowest level of the With a pizza wheel or large chef 's knife, cut part of the chicken registers 165 degrees.
oven. Set the oven at 475 degrees. Sprinkle a the pizza in half lengthwise. Make 3 cuts 4. Serve the chicken with the celery sal-
large rimless baking sheet (about 15-by-13- crosswise to yield 8 squares. Lisa Zwirn ad. Caleb Barber
SALLY PASLEY VARGAS FOR THE BOSTON GLOBE
Rich Cakey Brownies bake-sale brownie, or the ones to bring to a rack into the lower middle position. Butter a 6. Stir in the flour mixture, scraping down
Makes 16 neighborhood pot luck. You'll be the most 9-inch square baking pan. the sides of the bowl until the batter is
popular person there. 2. Set a heatproof bowl large enough to hold smooth and thick.
Lots of butter, unsweetened chocolate, cocoa all the ingredients over hot, but not boiling, 7. Transfer the batter to the pan. Smooth the
powder, and not much flour in this brownie water. Add the unsweetened chocolate and top with the rubber spatula or an offset met-
Butter (for the pan)
batter produces rich cakey squares. The mix- butter to the bowl. Stir occasionally until al spatula. Tap the pan once hard on the
4 ounces unsweetened chocolate,
ture is made in a bowl by hand. You only they melt. Remove the bowl from the water, counter to settle any air pockets.
chopped
need a whisk and a bit of elbow grease. wipe the bottom dry, and set aside to cool to 8. Set the pan on the middle oven rack. Bake
1 cup (2 sticks) unsalted butter, cut into
They're easy enough for a child to help tepid. for 40 to 45 minutes, or until the block of
thin slices
make, then serve with pride. To cut perfect 3. In another bowl, whisk the flour, cocoa brownies is just set and the edges just begin
1‚ cups flour
squares, chill the block of brownies after powder, baking powder, and salt to blend to pull away from the pan.
¼ cup unsweetened cocoa powder
they cool, then cut the large square into them. 9. Transfer the pan to a wire rack to cool for
¼ teaspoon baking powder
quarters to lift them from the pan. Cut each 4. Slowly whisk the eggs into the chocolate 1 hour. Refrigerate for several hours, or until
¼ teaspoon salt
quarter into four squares. A foolproof way to mixture. Whisk in the sugar 1 cup at a time. the brownies are cold. Cut the block into 4
4 eggs
lift the block from the pan is to line the pan Whisk in the vanilla. Scrape down the sides squares. Use an offset spatula to remove the
2 cups sugar
first with foil, then butter it; when the block of the bowl several times as you whisk. squares from the pan. Cut each one into 4
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
cools, lift it from the pan using the foil as a 5. Slowly whisk in the chocolate mixture un- squares to make 16 pieces.
SHERYL JULIAN FOR THE BOSTON GLOBE
sling. Then chill and cut. They're the perfect 1. Set the oven at 325 degrees. Slide an oven til thoroughly blended. Lisa Yockelson
G6 T h e B o s t o n G l o b e W E D N E S D A Y, A U G U S T 3 0 , 2 0 2 3
RHYMES WITH ORANGE by Hilary Price ARLO & JANIS by Jimmy Johnson
4 2 1 3
6 A.M. NOON 6 P.M. 6 A.M. NOON 6 P.M. 6 A.M. NOON 6 P.M. 6 A.M. NOON 6 P.M. 6 A.M. NOON 6 P.M.
HIGH Periods of rain and a Nice with plenty of Nice with plenty of Mostly sunny and Nice with clouds and
8 5 2
HIGH HIGH HIGH HIGH
77-82 thunderstorm. Winds 71-76 sunshine; a nice end to 73-78 sunshine. Winds S 74-79 nice. Winds SSW 7-14 80-85 sunshine. Winds SSW
LOW WSW 7-14 mph. LOW August. Winds NNW LOW 6-12 mph. Clear at LOW mph. Partly cloudy at LOW 8-16 mph. Partly
7 4 1 6
61-66 Mainly clear tonight; 56-61 8-16 mph. Clear at 61-66 night. Winds SW 6-12 61-66 night with a couple 65-70 cloudy at night. Winds
breezy late. Winds WNW night. Winds NNW 6-12 mph. mph. of showers late. Winds SSW SSW 7-14 mph.
10-20 mph. 8-16 mph.
4 3 9 7 1 6 8 2 5
5 7 8 2 9 4 3 6 1
MOTHER GOOSE & GRIMM by Mike Peters
1 6 2 5 3 8 4 7 9
Today’s Crossword Solution
8 9 3 4 5 7 6 1 2
7 1 6 9 2 3 5 8 4
2 4 5 8 6 1 7 9 3
6 8 1 3 4 2 9 5 7
9 2 4 6 7 5 1 3 8
3 5 7 1 8 9 2 4 6
G8 T h e B o s t o n G l o b e W E D N E S D A Y, A U G U S T 3 0 , 2 0 2 3
7 pm 7:30 8 pm 8:30 9 pm 9:30 10 pm 10:30 11 pm 11:30 7 pm 7:30 8 pm 8:30 9 pm 9:30 10 pm 10:30 11 pm 11:30
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Disney Big City Big City Hailey's Hailey's Marvel's Ladybug Ladybug Ladybug Raven's Raven's TV One CosbySh.. CosbySh.. ATL Homicide ATL Homicide ATL Homicide ATL Homicide
Greens Greens on It! on It! Moon Girl Home Home USA Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: Law & Order:
(6:20) Whale Rider ++ The Great Gilly Hopkins (:40) A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood Flipper "True Believers" "Lessons Learned" "Comic Perversion" Special Victims Unit Special Victims Unit
Encore Family
Nickelodeon Dylan Slimetime SpongeB.. SpongeB.. Friends Friends Friends Friends Friends Friends VH-1 (6:30) +++ The Italian Job ('03) +++ Straight Outta Compton ('15) O'Shea Jackson Jr..
Nick Jr. Rubble Rubble Peppa Pig Peppa Pig Peppa Pig Peppa Pig Bubble Bubble Bubble Bubble WE NCIS NCIS "Vanished" NCIS "Lt. Jane Doe" NCIS NCIS
Content Ratings: TV-Y Appropriate for all children; TV-Y7 For children age 7 and older; TV-G General audience; TV-PG Parental guidance suggested; TV-14 May be unsuitable for children under 14;
TV-MA Mature audience only Additional symbols: D Suggestive dialogue; FV Fantasy violence; L Strong language; S Sexual activity; V Violence; HD High-Definition; (CC) Close-Captioned