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Josh Hartnett: 'People genuinely thought I'd been thrust on them'
Ryan Gilbey
Twenty years ago he was one of the world’s hottest young actors, before he retreated – and ended up in Surrey. He explains why he had to leave Hollywood – and what he knew about Harvey Weinstein
Fri 23 Oct 2020 06.00 BST
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Josh Hartnett is sitting at home in Surrey, thinking about the time he was asked to play Superman. “I had this idea that because he lives in this world where he can’t touch anything without it flying across the room, he has become almost afraid of himself and his own power. He doesn’t know how to be Superman any more. He’s so afraid, he has become almost neutered by the experience of living on Earth, where he can blow things up just by looking at them.”
The studio demurred – “They didn’t really want a fear-based character at the centre of their movie,” he says wryly – and Hartnett walked away. But his Superman concept now feels like a metaphor for what was happening at the time in his own life, as he became increasingly overwhelmed, even horrified, by his status and the hysteria that surrounded it. Twenty years ago, the hottest young male actors in Hollywood were Leonardo DiCaprio, Will Smith, Matt Damon, Ben Affleck – and Hartnett. Michael Bay, who directed him in Pearl Harbor, put it bluntly: “He’s going to be fucking huge.” The actor grimaces at the mention of that. “Huge was never something I aspired to,” he says.
Back then, he seemed like a pretty kid who had got in over his head. Now 42, he has acquired the squinting, quizzical handsomeness of Richard Gere. He and his wife, the British actor Tamsin Egerton, moved to Surrey with their two young children to be closer to her parents, he explains. “And then, of course, coronavirus ...” In other words, they’re not going anywhere. So he has time to talk and a new film to talk about: the factually based thriller Target Number One, which is better than any of its plucked-from-a-hat titles (it has also been known as Gut Instinct and Most Wanted) might suggest.
This is partly due to the dazzling Antoine Olivier Pilon, star of Xavier Dolan’s psychodrama Mommy. He plays a real-life petty drug dealer who was sentenced to life in a Thai jail after being set up by Canadian police. Hartnett is solid in the less showy, meat-and-potatoes role of the journalist Victor Malarek, who fought to expose the truth. In this capacity, he gets to perform the time-honoured All the President’s Men routine of storming into his editor’s office, tossing a newspaper on the desk and demanding to know where the hell his story is.
Hartnett does his homework. On The Virgin Suicides, it wasn’t enough to play what the director Sofia Coppola had written; he also raked over his character, a dreamy high-school stud, with Jeffrey Eugenides, who wrote the original novel. On Brian De Palma’s film noir The Black Dahlia, Hartnett trained as a boxer for several months, simply because his character, a cop, used to be one. Naturally he met with the real Malarek before playing him. Why? “I wanted to see if he was full of shit.”
Malarek, he explains, has been accused by his critics of putting himself at the forefront of his own stories. “Ultimately, Victor is a humble man, but he does think of himself as someone who stands up for people in vulnerable positions. He likes to insert himself into a situation, though in my opinion what he’s really doing is putting himself in the line of fire. In a way, he almost downplays his own contribution.” Malarek has said that he had no idea who Hartnett was. As someone who has spent the last 15 years or so running from fame, this must have pleased him. “I didn’t assume he’d know me,” he says. “My interest in going to meet him was not to have flowers laid at my feet.” So he didn’t take along a signed Pearl Harbor poster? “I should have done. That would have been a great introduction. ‘Hi, I used to be somebody …’”
Quite. At the end of the 90s, Hartnett was everywhere. He starred in back-to-back horror hits – the aliens-in-high-school romp The Faculty and the sequel-cum-reboot Halloween H20 – and resembled a walking shampoo commercial in The Virgin Suicides, where he sashayed in slow-motion to the sound of Magic Man by Heart.
“It’s a little bit heartbreaking to see all that time has passed,” he says. “I was a child. I was 19. The Virgin Suicides felt like a group of friends all pulling together. I think I’m still looking for that experience whenever I make a film.”
The Faculty and Halloween H20 were produced by Dimension, the horror arm of Miramax, making Hartnett part of the Weinstein brothers’ stable of talent. “I was a kid who they felt they should invest in, but I didn’t spend a ton of time with them,” he says. “We had a sort of antagonistic relationship because the contract I signed for those first two films guaranteed me to be a part of, like, five more or something. They’re called contract extensions. I was told at the time that nobody ever uses them, but then I guess I became popular and they decided to, um, exercise that right. What they did a few times was to jump on other projects I was working on already and become co-producers.” These included O a modern-day Othello with Hartnett impressively coiled as the Iago figure, and the comic thriller Lucky Number Slevin, in which he seemed to be poking fun at his own image by spending the first half-hour scampering around in nothing but a towel.
He shifts uneasily when I ask whether he was surprised by the revelations about Harvey Weinstein. “There are all sorts of rumours about guys like that which permeate the business and you think, ‘That’s awful.’ The casting couch was a thing people joked about when I was first in the industry, so it was an open secret that this business is a little bit fucked up.”
When he was offered Pearl Harbor, his instinct was to turn it down. “I didn’t necessarily want things to change that much,” he says. “I was happy with the amount of fame I had and the types of roles I was getting. At the same time, I asked myself: ‘Am I just afraid that by doing Pearl Harbor, I’m going to enter a new category of film-making that I might not be ready for?’ I ultimately chose to do it because turning it down would’ve been based on fear. Then it defined me, which means I was right to fear it.”
His co-stars didn’t have it easy either. Kate Beckinsale was told to work out (“I just didn’t understand why a 1940s nurse would do that,” she said) while Affleck was ordered to get new teeth. “Well, they are great teeth,” Hartnett says. “I was asked to work out, too. But you know, I could have used it. I was 165lb wet. I was a really skinny kid.”
As well as his own misgivings about the project, there was the heightened press attention, including a splashy Vanity Fair interview with him from the set of Ridley Scott’s Black Hawk Down. “Oh, that was an awful piece,” he shudders. “Was there even a quote from me in it, or was it just everyone talking about how hot I was? People got a chip on their shoulder about me after that. They genuinely thought I’d been thrust on them. It was a very weird time.”
It was around then that he plotted his calculated retreat. After Superman, there were reports that he had also turned down Batman; in fact, he didn’t get any closer to that part than a conversation with Christopher Nolan. But the perception of him in Hollywood began to change. “They looked at me as someone who had bitten the hand that fed me. It wasn’t that. I wasn’t doing it to be recalcitrant or a rebel. People wanted to create a brand around me that was going to be accessible and well-liked, but I didn’t respond to the idea of playing the same character over and over, so I branched out. I tried to find smaller films I could be part of and, in the process, I burned my bridges at the studios because I wasn’t participating. Our goals weren’t the same.”
He has put his movies where his mouth is, working with idiosyncratic directors such as Tran Anh Hung on the thriller I Come With the Rain and Atsuko Hirayanagi on the comedy Oh, Lucy. Nor is he averse to the mainstream: he will next be seen alongside Jason Statham in Guy Ritchie’s Wrath of Man. But it’s a measure of how unusual it is for a star to withdraw so early in his career that by the time Hartnett made The Black Dahlia in 2006, GQ magazine was already referring to it as his comeback.
“I’m happy to be done with that era and to be making films that are more personal to me,” he says. “Directors are coming to me to play characters as opposed to versions of a hero I played in a movie once.”
He is nothing if not conscientious. A few days after our Zoom conversation, he phones me because something has been bothering him: he doesn’t feel he made his feelings about Weinstein clear. This time, he puts it as plainly as he can. “I wasn’t surprised he was a creep,” he says. “But I guess I was surprised at the extent of his creepiness.” He’s concerned, too, about what comes next. “The shameless seem to be finding it easy to make a comeback. Louis CK has been pretty shameless. Harvey Weinstein, if he had the tiniest bit of daylight in there, would find a way to get back in. Those are situations that freak me out.” But there are, he says, visible changes taking place. “Different things are expected of the way people act on set. There’s an open line of communication now for anyone who feels they’re being harassed. And there’s less of the so-called locker-room humour that people used to hide behind.”
Was he ever harassed as a young actor? “The last thing I want to do is come across like … You know, I’ve been in situations where I’ve been uncomfortable with my boss’s behaviour but I’m not gonna say …” He changes tack. “That’s not my experience and it’s not my place to claim that. It makes me feel icky to try to do so.”
He also tells me that he went back to that Vanity Fair article and realised it wasn’t so bad after all. “It’s just that it happened at a time when I wasn’t that famous, and it seemed to already be asking whether I should be or not. I felt like: ‘Oh my God! I’m not the tallest poppy yet – don’t cut me down!’ I was being compared to Tom Cruise and Julia Roberts and that’s insane. It was a set-up-to-fail moment.” He gives a sigh. “It was actually an interesting look at the nature of fame. If only it wasn’t about me.”
#josh hartnett#beautiful giant#the guardian#interview#quotes#the virgin suicides#the black dahlia#lucky number slevin#black hawk down#pearl harbor#Othello#the faculty#halloween h20#wrath of man#oh Lucy#i come with the rain#penny dreadful#target number one#superman
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2023-24 Belleville Senators Players By Nationality
American: 5 (Matthew Boucher, Tyler Boucher, Tyler Kleven, Graham McPhee & Garrett Pilon) Canadian: 18 (Kyle Betts, Matthew Boucher, Josh Currie, Philippe Daoust, Tarun Fizer, Max Guenette, Dillon Heatherington, Matthew Highmore, Boko Imama; Jr., Jarid Lukosevicius, Ryan MacKinnon, Kevin Mandolese, Graham McPhee, Zack Ostapchuk, Garrett Pilon, Cole Reinhardt, Brennan Saulnier & Donovan Sebrango) Finnish: 3 (Roby Järventie, Nikolas Matinpalo & Lassi Thomson) Danish: 1 (Mads Søgaard) Russian: 1 (Egor Sokolov)
#Sports#Hockey#Hockey Goalies#AHL#Belleville Senators#Celebrities#U.S.A.#U.S.#Canada#Finland#Denmark#Russia#Awesome
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The French Brexit Song by Sarah-Louise Young, Maxim Melton, and Amanda Palmer - Directed and edited by Dan Allen
#music#sarah louise young#maxim melton#amanda palmer#amanda mackinnon gaiman palmer#jherek bischoff#jb pilon#video#music video#dan allen#sal redpath#la poule plombeé#matt skully#james carver grenside#jacob aria#lily cotelo#brandon quan#ryan anderson#brexit#french language
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The Ebbing of Truth Hadley Arkes
TUESDAY, JUNE 16, 2020
St. John Paul II famously warned against the tendency to reduce “conscience” to the level of feelings passionately held. Conscience, rightly understood, took its guide from a body of objective moral truths. Detached from that understanding, he warned, “the inescapable claims of truth disappear, yielding their place to a criterion of sincerity, authenticity and ‘being at peace with oneself’, so much so that some have come to adopt a radically subjectivistic conception of moral judgment.”
Long before Benedict XVI spoke of the “dictatorship of relativism,” we were already aware of “dogmatic relativism.” Students who blithely say that “there is no truth” had not the slightest doubt of the truth of their own epiphany. But the incoherence never cast up any barriers to the swift surge of these convictions, and we find it, in our current crises, taking now an even more dramatic form. The people who insist that their sexual definition, as males or females, depends most decisively on their own feelings about themselves, have nevertheless turned with raging contempt against those who would not accept the truth of their claim.
Ms. J.K. Rowling made herself beloved in the world with her authorship of the Harry Potter stories, but suddenly she found herself the target of an orchestrated outrage because she dared to express reservations about transgenderism. She had commented archly on a document that referred to “people who menstruate.” She remarked that we used to have a familiar term for them (whisper: women). She had also written in support of a woman, Maya Forstater, who had lost her job because of what were called “transphobic tweets.”
But the tribunal hearing her case refused to agree that she had been fired wrongly for what Rowlings described as “a philosophical belief that sex is determined by biology.” First, of course, Ms. Forstater’s moral objection was reduced to a mental illness, a “phobia.” But then she herself, or the tribunal, reduced her claim to a mere “belief.” The dispute was detached even further from that anchoring, objective truth that should have supplied the ground of the judgment.
Ryan Anderson, drawing on the full range of texts in biology, has condensed the truth of the matter in this way:
Sex, in terms of male or female, is identified by the organization of the organism for sexually reproductive acts. . . .The fundamental conceptual distinction between a male and a female is the organism’s organization for sexual reproduction.
Those obvious anatomical differences mark the telos, the purpose, of why there are men and women: to beget more of our kind. The hard news, then, to some people is that the males who become females will still not be part of those “people who menstruate.” The news even harder to bear is that the conservative judges dealing with these cases seem quite reluctant to move beyond the mechanics of procedure and make that appeal to the objective truth of the matter. But a jurisprudence that cannot touch that ground will be condemned to be a morally incoherent jurisprudence.
Juliana Pilon reminds us in The Utopian Conceit, that totalitarian regimes rested upon lies, and every day they needed to enjoin their populace to affirm those lies anew. And now, even without a prodding coming from our own government, we are being scolded by the surging crowds – and by some of our leading corporations – to join the affirmation of the lies in Black Lives Matter.
The former governor of Maryland, Martin O’Malley, had the temerity to respond that “all lives matter,” and he was quickly brought to heel. He was made to abase himself in apologizing, along now with the professional athletes who have expressed their own reservations.
“Black Lives Matter” is inescapably right as a principle, but what is inescapably clear is that the principle is so deeply disrespected by the people who have reduced this principle to a slogan. As we have come to know by now, the number of unarmed black people killed by the police in shootings – nine in 2019 – was but one-tenth of a percent of the African Americans killed in homicides in 2019, mostly at the hands of young black males.
And those deaths at the hands of black people, are dwarfed by the numbers of black abortions exceeding live births at times in New York and Chicago. In New York, between 2012 and 2016 black mothers “terminated”136,426 pregnancies and gave birth to 118,127 babies. But these are not the Black Lives that count in the moral reckoning of Black Lives Matter.
That is the incoherence, the lie, that some of our most prestigious colleges and churches are willing to broadcast to the world as their own as they hoist the banner of Black Lives Matters over their buildings and websites. Amazon now affirms BLM, and Starbucks is willing to put the slogan on tee shirts worn by their employees. They are willing to stamp now these phrases as one of their own new orthodoxies, their own reigning half-truths.
I don’t think I’ve ever seen anything quite like this in our country in my own lifetime, approaching fourscore years. It is tempting to say that we are witnessing a “war on truth,” but the metaphor is overdone. It would be more accurate to say that, for a scarily large portion of our people, there has been a simple ebbing of that ancient conviction that truth matters.
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HERSHEY BEARS SWEEP THE HARTFORD WOLF PACK

By: Gerry Cantlon, Howlings HARTFORD, CT - Despite a two-to-one shots advantage, the Hartford Wolf Pack season ended before 4,596 at the XL Center Wednesday night when the Hershey Bears defeated them 3-1 and swept their Best of Five Atlantic Division Final series in three straight. Hershey moves on to play the Rochester Americans, who swept their series over the Toronto Marlies, setting up an AHL Original Two matchup in-a Best-of-Seven Eastern Conference Final. "Hershey's a very good team. They're the best team five-on-five in our conference this year," Wolf Pack Head Coach Kris Knoblach said. "The difference in the series was we weren't able to generate enough offense. "In the first game, we had three power play goals. If we had that tonight, it would have made a huge difference. Five-on-five we weren't able to capitalize, and they did. Two even-strength goals in three games are simply not enough." THE THIRD PERIOD The Bears put the game away in the third period scoring twice after a penalty shot at 3:28 by former Quinnipiac alum Sam Anas, who was stopped by starting netminder Louis Domingue. A penalty shot was awarded to Anas after breaking into the Pack zone off the right wing on a two-on-one. Pack Captain Jonny Brodzinski tugged him from behind, creating the penalty shot situation. After starting at center ice on the shot attempt, Anas weaved and zig-zagged to the net. Domingue slightly adjusted to stay in front of him, patiently waited him out, and made a glove save. It kept the score tied and gave the team hope they could still pull this out. "That was a huge moment for our team. Louie came up with a huge save. We had a lot of offensive zone time in the third period, but I don't know how many quality chances we had, but we just couldn't find the net. Not being able to capitalize early in the game, we could have been up two or three goals, especially on a chance (Tim) Gettinger had. It was the turning point in the game. We couldn't build off our lead," Knoblauch said. The Bears, on the other hand, had other ideas. Lucas Johansen broke the 1-1 tie at 4:22. Normally a defensive-oriented defenseman, Johansen took a Mark Vecchione pass from behind the goal line at the left point. The 6'2 2016 first-round pick (28th overall) ripped a laser of a shot past Domingue high to the glove side at 4:22. That made it 2-1. Then at 7:25, Garrett Pilon put the final nail in the Pack coffin. Pilon, who was a two-way physical menace in this series, was deep on the right-wing side and took a cross-ice feed from Connor Michaels and, from a bad angle, beat Domingue, who couldn't come across fast enough to get there. For Pilon, it was his second goal of the playoffs. The Bears' Hunter Shepard (33 saves) stopped the Pack's efforts to come back the rest of the third. SECOND PERIOD In the second period, the Pack had an early power play they could not capitalize on. At 9:14, Hershey's Riley Sutter, a righthanded shot on the left wing off a three-on-two, struck Domingue in the mask. Despite losing his protective gear, Domingue maintained his presence of mind and kept the puck in front of him. Beck Malenstyn, part of the Hershey fourth line, who was a thorn in the Pack's side throughout the entire series, leveled Bobby Trivigno at center after he released the puck for a penalty creating a brief scrum. The hitting at both ends of the ice by Hershey forced an offensive zone turnover by Tanner Fritz and led to a Hershey goal. Henrik Borgstrom fed Vecchione, who quickly found Vincent Iorio open on the right side. Iorio was two strides ahead of Gettinger and Ty Emberson and fired his first of the playoffs high to the blocker side past Domingue to tie the score at 1-1 with 4:55 remaining in the period. The Pack got a late power play on the roughing situation between Will Lockwood and Iorio. Ryan Carpenter, a team-best six shots, was stopped. "We had quality chances. It (was) that last ditch effort for the puck. It was throwing one wide, not bearing down. We played a really good game. In the third period it was those small breakdowns, and they played the opportunistic game. They didn't play their best game, but when you're off, they just sat back and took advantage of our mistakes. Two mistakes, (then) we found the puck in the back of our net," said Brodzinski. The Pack held the shot advantage throughout, but Shepard had his mojo going as he did in November and this entire series and kept his team in the contest. "We had a very resilient group this year," Brodzinski said. "A lot a credit to everyone in that locker room. There was no quit. I thought we had a good enough team to make a deep push, but we came up short. They were very opportunistic on their chances. He (Shepard) played a good game against us. All the credit to them, (they) played a sound defensive game once they got up one or two goals. They're a tough team to break down, get pucks through. But I'm proud of this team how they played this year." FIRST PERIOD The Wolf Pack started Domingue between the pipes over Dylan Garand, who had gotten them to this point when Domingue was called up to the Rangers for their playoff run. Desperate times call for desperate measures. Knoblauch also decided to shake up all of his lines and sat Karl Henriksson in favor of 6'6 Adam Edström to add some size to counter the Bears in that department. "They're big and physical, and we're a fast, gritty team. I thought we matched up well against them. It's the way the series goes. They beat us in overtime in that first game that we should have had. We were up in this game, and we let it slip away. Two of the (three) games could have been ours; that's how playoffs work. Next year we'll have to be better," Brodzinski said. He has another year left on his two-year $325K deal. Defensive combinations were also required to change because Adam Clendening's mother-in-law passed away unexpectedly, and he was understandably unavailable. The two teams traded chances. At 17:40, the Wolf Pack broke through as Anton Blidh won a one-on-one battle keeping the puck in the Hershey zone. The puck found Carpenter was behind the net all alone, came out of the left wing, and tried to stuff it in the net on the short side, but Shepard made the save. The puck came back on his stick. He waited patiently, and in came Turner Elson and stuffed in his second postseason goal. Blidh and ex-Pack Dylan McIlrath were battling for position in front, leaving it open for Elson. Each player was penalized, but Mac escaped a cross-checking minor. LINES: Carpenter-Cullye- Elson Fritz-Pajuniemi-Blidh Leschyshyn-Brodzinski-Lockwood Gettinger- Adam Edström-Trivigno Jones-Emberson Hájek-Scanlin Kalynuk-Hillman Domingue Garand SCRATCHES: Karl Henrikksson (healthy) Talyn Boyko #40 Matt Rempe (healthy) Louie Roehl #4 (healthy) Brett Berard #27 (healthy) Matt Robertson (upper body) Patrick Khordorenko (season-ending shoulder surgery). C.J. Smith (hip area surgery done for the season) NOTES: Condolences to Clendening on the passing of his mother-in-law. The last win by the Pack against Hershey was on November 20th. Tanner Fritz finished the Pack playoffs with a team-best nine assists and ten points. The Pack lost back-to-back games for the first time since early March. They ended the year with a three-game losing streak (0-3) in a five-game stretch and lost four of their last five. The previous streak of that kind was in early March 5th-11th. The last series win by the Pack over Hershey was eight years ago in six games. Just over nine years ago, they last lost to the Manchester Monarchs. McIlrath was at both. He was on the losing side of a sweep by Manchester, the eventual Calder Cup champs, and in the game against the Bears. The Calgary Wranglers will play the Coachella Valley Firebirds in a decisive Game 5 Friday. The winner goes to the Western Conference final. The Milwaukee Admirals lead the Central Division final. They are up two games to one over the Texas Stars and play in the Lone Star state capital on Friday. Brennan Othman, who will likely be with the Wolf Pack next season, had an assist as he and his Peterborough Petes teammates beat the London Knights 5-3, going up three games to one. They're one step closer to an OHL title with the chance for a trip to the Memorial Cup in Kamloops, BC. They would join the host Kamloops Blazers. The game will air on the NHL Network. The Halifax Mooseheads are up three games to one on the Quebec Remparts in the QMJHL Gilles Courteau Trophy Championship. The Seattle Thunderbirds are up by the exact count in their series with the Winnipeg Ice. Propositions 301, 302, and 303 on creating a Tempe Entertainment District, which would primarily house a new 16,000-plus seat arena for the Arizona Coyotes, were soundly defeated by the voters 56 % to 44%. The defeat now sets the stage for the eventual relocation of the long-troubled franchise. The NHL was unhappy with the outcome and will meet with the Coyotes' ownership in the next few days to discuss the options now available to them. Staying at Mullet Arena beyond the contracted three years is not likely one of them. What could throw a monkey wrench into this are the quiet negotiations that have already been taking place. The NHL Players' Association's new head, Marty Walsh, when asked what his first order of business was when taking over last month, replied that he was getting NHL players not to play regularly in a college arena. That signaled how he felt the Coyotes' situation playing in the 5,000-seat Mullett Arena at ASU (Arizona State University) had to be remedied immediately. The agreed and signed escrow scheme (a part of the CBA revenue) to meet desired levels by finding them a new home and closing that gaping hole. The most likely scenario will see the team relocate to Houston, the fourth largest US TV market. It also won't disturb Commissioner Gary Bettman's 16 East and 16 West scheduling balance. By extension, the AHL Tucson Roadrunners would likely need to be moved. A lease arrangement would need to be agreed to first. Then, a regional TV deal would need to be secured, and several large sponsorships, especially for food and concessions with a soft drink company and a beer company, will be required, staffing, and so on. The NBA's Houston Rockets have been very open to adding an NHL team to the building's portfolio. It will take time to put in an ice system and to deal with making their building, the Toyota Center, dual-use compliant for hoops and hockey. Regarding naming the team in Houston, what's most likely is a new name and color scheme to maximize branding and merchandise sales. In the past, Houston has seen the Aeros in the old WHA, IHL, and AHL. Then there was the Apollos, for four years in the Central Hockey League (1965-1969) as an affiliate of the Montreal Canadiens. Then a second edition in the CHL (1979-1981). The Houston Blast played in the Gulf Coast Hockey League. They and the league never got off the ground. A USHL team, then a semi-pro league, had a team that called Houston home just after WWII that lasted for just two years. As for options other than Houston? Quebec City already has an NHL-level building, The Videotron Centre, but it won't get a team for four reasons. 1. French language requirements 2. Canadian currency exchange rate 3. The Montreal Canadiens 4. It busts Gary Bettman's mentioned 16/16 conference formula. Hartford? Not a chance. Kansas City? Despite Patrick Mahomes lobbying, remember the Kansas City Scouts, the mid-'70's NHL expansion disaster? The clock has started ticking. Tucson relocation options would be... in order... 1. Beaumont, at the Ford Center east on I-10 on the Texas/Louisiana border, 2. San Antonio, the AT&T Center, was an old AHL city south of Austin (Texas Stars) on I-10 southwest of Houston. 3. Waco 4. Amarillo 5. San Angelo 6. Allen. Ex-Sound Tigers goalie Kristers Gudlevskis, heads from MODO (Sweden-Allsvenskan) to Fischtown (Germany-DEL). C.J. Stretch leaves SC Bietigheim-Bissen (Germany-DEL 2) and heads down a level to Rosenheim (Germany Division-3). The AHL to Euro list has grown to 25 as the semi-Swedish name of Axel Andersson going from San Diego to Djurgårdens IF (Sweden-Allsvenskan). Expect more in the coming days. HARTFORD WOLF PACK HOME Read the full article
#AdamClendening#AHL#AmericanHockeyLeague#ArizonaCoyotes#ArizonaStateUniversity#BeckMalenstyn#CalderCup#DylanGarand#EHL#GaryBettman#HartfordWolfPack#HersheyBears#HunterShepard#KrisKnoblauch#LauriPajuniemi#LouisDomingue#ManchesterMonarchs#NHL#PeterboroughPetes#QMJHL#RochesterAmericans#TorontoMarlies#XLCenter
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Các giao dịch bất động sản ở Massachusetts cho các quận Hampshire và Franklin, ngày 12 tháng 4 năm 2020 (Biên tập viên Lưu ý: Các hành động của Hạt Hampden không có sẵn vì việc đóng cửa tạm thời Tòa án Roderick L. Ireland ở Springfield vì lo ngại về coronavirus.)AgawamCig4 Llc đến Derek Parolo, 57 Harding St., $ 225.000.Kenneth D. Blews cho Robert Sopet, 57 Overlook Drive, 256.000 đô la.Nicholas D. Griffin và Ashlee A. Griffin đến Tracie Liquori, 732 Mill St., $ 211.000.AmherstFiordaliza Suarez đến Raymond J. Pedrick, 181 Strong St., 375.000 USD.Paul Boudreau và Gerard N. Aubrey đến Daisy Mae Realty LLC, 171 Grey St., 300.000 đô la.Robert Stebbins và Susan Stebbins cho Stephen Brevik và Jillian Brevik, 464 Market Hill Road, 450.000 đô la.Sân vận độngBeverly A. Labelle đến Ryan Pease, đường 370 Buckland, $ 210.000.BelchertownKEEM LLC, đến Robert N. Dougherty và Katie M. Dougherty, 57 Warren Wright St., $ 345.000.Michael E. Sroka đến Russell S. Annis và Jacqueline C. Annis, 23 Mill Valley Road, $ 245.000.Suzanne M. Meehan đến Teresa J. Halperin và Andrew Halperin, 108 Sabin St., 350.000 đô la.Norman B. Veroneau và Denise K. Veroneau đến Niloufar Shoushtari, 25 Lexington Drive, 512.000 đô la.BernardstonMaria E. Carey đến Ricky L. Mùa hè và Suzanne J. Sumner, 68 Cross St., $ 225.000.BlandfordJean-Pierre Barrette, bất động sản, và Mary A. Wright, đại diện, đến Adam Gonska, 84 đường Curtis Hall, 14.000 đô la.Cánh đồngCynthia M. Niemchot-Hodges và Wayne B. Hodges cho James M. Korman, 294 Warren Road, $ 580.000.BucklandDoris L. Howes Estate, Ian Howes, giám đốc điều hành và cá nhân, đến Stephen E. Smith, 277 Ashfield Road / Route 112, $ 120.000.Ricky L. Summer và Suzanne J. Sumner đến Kurtis A. Williams và Nichole B.Williams, 86 Buckland Road, 255.000 đô la.Lynn Anderson, Polly Anderson, Sidney C. Anderson, Nina A. Coler, Lynn A. Hoeppner và Malah H.Miller đến Ann A. Lofquist, 33 Bray Road, 301.000 USD.ChesterNathan J. Bolduc cho Molly Irene Larkham và Cain Larkham, 292 Tuyến 20, $ 159.900.ChicopeeAnthony D. Maloni và Cynthia J. Maloni đến Blackrock BNG Group LLC, 62-66 Dwight St., $ 712.000.Janosik Realty LLC, đến Milton Torres Jr., và Christina A. Reardon, 8 Andover Road, $ 221.000.Marla J. Hanc, Virginia H. Schmitt, Greta R. Sienkiewicz và Frances A. S. Milano đến Lana J. Guz, 30 đường Lanelark, Đơn vị 6108B, 103.000 USD.Liên đoàn cho vay mua nhà liên bang Corp, đến Sonia Velazquez, 38 Maple St., $ 109.000.Premier Home Builders Inc., đến Michael D. Berardelli và Bethany L. Berardelli, 542 Sheridan St., $ 314,000.Samantha Britt đến Jean Carlos Santiago-Reyes, Triển vọng 741 St., $ 182,000.Tyler S. Austin và Priscilla Marie Austin đến Travis J. Haley và Kylie J. Miller, 33 William St., 161.000 đô la.DeerfieldPhylis Dzenis, bởi luật sư, hay còn gọi là Phyllis K. Dzenis, bởi luật sư, Paula D. Healey, luật sư, đến Corrine Sysun, 51 Sugarloaf St., $ 299.000.Peter M. Kuchieski, người hay còn gọi là Peter M. Kuchieski Jr., đến Jessica Howard và David Markland, 20 Thayer St., $ 134.500.Đông LongmeadowMohammad J. Bhuyan và Nigarultana cho Elizabeth Ruth Zahradnik và Jack T. Trainor, 3 Converse Circle, 220.000 USD.Đông thànhLynzi Wildlove đến Heather McLean, 19 Chapin St., 12.000 đô la.Traci Bartlett và Tracie E. Bartlett đến Hiệp hội thế chấp quốc gia liên bang, 21-23 Clinton St., 146,903,93 đô la.XóaBruce A. Cromack động sản, Brenda Gallagher, đại diện cá nhân, đến Kathy M. Halvorsen, 8 Nice St., $ 119,700.ChungHBM Properties LLC, đến Donald Gould, Đường Ben Hale, $ 50.000.Cánh đồng xanhCarl Silver Estate, Laurie Benjamin, đại diện cá nhân, cho Jeremy R.Gaudette và Brianna M. Aubrey-Gaudette, 20 Albert Ave., $ 197,925.John M. Blood Estate, Barbara A. Barsalou, đại diện cá nhân, đến với NicoleAd J. Bukolsky Revocable Trust, Elizabeth J. Bukolsky, ủy thác, 17 Fairview Terrace, $ 132.500.Wilmington Savings Fund Society FSB, ủy thác, bởi luật sư và Christiana Trust, bởi luật sư, Rushmore Loan Management Services LLC, luật sư, cho Milo O. Childs Campolo, 120 Poplar St., $ 53,550.HadleyCông ty bất động sản Plumtree LLC, đến Michael J. Colwell-LaFluer, 148 Russell St., $ 410.000.HampdenĐánh dấu Michalski đến Kailey Golebiowski, 433 Main St., $ 276.000.Hà LanGeorge Motyka đến Robert V. Summers Jr., 30 Lakeshore Drive, $ 330.000.Timothy Buck, đại diện, và Francis J Buck, bất động sản, đến Cody Langlitz, Old Acre Road, 80.000 đô la.HolyokeCarmen S. Rosa đến Jahjan LLC, 342 Maple St., $ 60.000.Diane V. Scheinost, đại diện, và Kris S. Scheinost, bất động sản, cho Brian Michaud và Irene Michaud, 241 Oak St., 240.000 đô la.Phát triển nhà ở & đô thị cho Frank Salas, 248 Lyman St., 55.000 đô la.Posiadlosc LLC, đến Deena Perdue, 31 Alderman St., 200.000 USD.Hội tiết kiệm quỹ Wilmington, Christiana Trust, ủy thác và ủy thác mua lại thế chấp Pretium, ủy thác của Công ty Equity Trust, người giám sát, Amani Boutros Ira và Amani Boutros, 1446 Dwight St., 80.000 USD.HuntingtonJames Tidwell và Alanna A. Tidwell cho Rachel Laurie, 2 Goss Hill Road, 166.000 đô la.LeverettGeoffrey I. Hitzig và Nancy W. Hitzig đến Village of Light Inc., 83 đường Shutesbury, $ 590.000.LudlowArthur P. Godin, đại diện, Jane H. Godin, bất động sản, và Jane Howes Godin, bất động sản, đến Russell A. Orcutt Jr., 1087 Center St., $ 262.000.Christopher M. Neronha đến William J. Doherty, 517 Làn đường lý tưởng, Đơn vị 507, $ 265.900.Joseph Queiroga, đại diện, Joseph L. Queiroga, đại diện, Charles Joaquim Queiroga, bất động sản, Charles J. Queiroga, bất động sản, Mary C. Condon, đại diện, và Mary Condon, đại diện, cho Branco Construction LLC, 38 Motyka St., 150.000 đô la.Kenneth Dias đến Dawn Chenevert, 517 Làn đường lý tưởng, Đơn vị 402, $ 275,000.Ralph E. Connelly và Ralph Connelly cho Joaquim P. Borges và Ana H. Borges, Jerad Drive, 125.000 đô la.Trường trungBảo tồn LLC, đến James J. Burns, Đường hình nón, $ 40.000.Elm Street Land Properties LLC, đến Christian Haws Villasenor, Town Hill Road, $ 22.500.Đức ôngHelene M. Pilon đến Thomas Russo, 10 Margaret St., 100.000 đô la.Lucia A. Blanchette cho Eric K. Markham và Suzanne E. Markham, Waid Road, 20.000 đô la.Timothy E. Wells và Cathleen S. Wells đến Noelle Renee Venne, 227 Main St., 164.900 USD.MontagueCorrine E. Sysun đến Jill M. Innes, Đường 48 Millers, $ 245.000.Michael J. Whiteman đến Brent Walton Griffin, 106 Đường Turnpike, $ 157,800.Giáo dụcRobert Farr Bayliss đến Clare Doyle và Emma Koramshahi, 15 đường Ryan, 255.000 đô la.Mary Kinda Klippel cho Michael J. Levine và Marilyn Levine, 20 Bridge Road, $ 649.000.Giám mục Công giáo La Mã của Springfield đến Thành phố Northampton, Haydenville Road Off, $ 80.000.Robert D. Raymond đến Hội nghị Đầu tư bất động sản 600 LLC, 547 Easthampton Road, 595.000 đô la.trái camJohn Andrew Marsh động sản, Brianna R. Marsh, đại diện cá nhân, đến Crystal A. Mallet và Stanley C. Pearson, đường 366 Mayo, $ 305.000.Susan R. Gainley đến Charles J. Wright và Elaine M. Wright, 50 đường Mattawa, $ 144,900.Catherine M. McCarthy và John M. McCarthy đến Judy Ann Vantrece, 58 Stone Valley Road, 243.500 đô la.PalmerAaron C. Patterson và Michelle M. Patterson đến John Mercier, 3122 Main St., 98.000 đô la.Martin H. Greany, Barbara J. Greany và Helen Hermanson đến A to Z Quản lý & Đổi mới tài sản LLC, 1654-1658 North Main St., $ 144.000.Martin H. Greany, Martin Greany, Barbara J. Greany và Barbara Greany to A to Z Quản lý & Đổi mới tài sản LLC, 1644-1646 North Main St., $ 144.000.Bồ nôngChelsea Reiff Gwyther, Ryan Reiff Gwyther, John D. Reiff và Marianne M. Reiff cho John J. Kulsick và Kinda B. Brandt, 9 Jones Road, $ 370.000.Donald F. Archer và Tina L. Archer đến Noah A. Wartenberg và Kathryn A. Colavito, 17 Jones Road, $ 246.000.RussellGiám mục Công giáo La Mã của Springfield đến Kevin Kennedy Sr., Đường Hill Hill, 70.000 đô la.Nam HadleyDominic Kirchner II, người được ủy thác và Cliste Realty tin tưởng vào Tamara Rita Thompson, 366 Granby Road, 240.000 đô la.James A. Haber và Jay A. Haber cho Lynn A. Carboneau và Brian William McKinnon, 41 West Summit St., 138.000 đô la.Kyle E. Hajec, Renee L. Hajec và Renee L. Reith cho Cassandra Rose Aotta và Jeremiah Edward Aotta IV, 141 Lyman St., 227.500 đô la.Revampit LLC, đến Scott Family Properties LLC, 12 Vòng tròn trẻ, $ 155.000.Michelle A. Liberto và Anthony Liberto cho Anthony G. Schiappa và Michelle A. Mirti, 12 Hickory Place, $ 249.000.SouthamptonHaley E. Pearl và Kaitlyn E. Dorman đến Susan M. Wilson, 113 Đại lộ, $ 276.000.Louis P. Migliozzi đến Miranda Jade Jacobus và Sean Thomas Wilkins, 8 Strong Road, 238.500 đô la.NamwickJohn Devine cho Joshua Andrew Kawa và Sarah Michelle Herbert, 12 đường Matthews, 243.500 đô la.Springfield716 Spring Valley LLC, đến Angeljoy Co. LLC, 120 Orchard St., $ 281.000.Amat Victoria Curam LLC, đến Laceyann R. Nelson, 323 Bay St., $ 155.000.ANHS Inc., đến Green Apple Manor Properties LLC, 33-35 Quincy St., $ 150.000.Antonio Pereira đến Antonio Pereira, ủy thác, và 2020 Pereira Realty Trust, ủy thác của, 398 Main St., 100 đô la.B9 Industries Inc., đến Nolava LLC, 42 Sunapee, $ 111,025.Emerald City Cho thuê LLC, đến Tyshawn Gorham và Yesenia Gorham, 110 Gardens Drive, 178.500 đô la.Đưa cho họ Sanctuary Inc., cho Gregory P. Rice, 123 Buckingham St., 150.000 đô la.Heather D. McN Khoa, Heather D. Ingraham và Catherine Crank đến Carrasquillo Fix Up LLC, 70 Haskin St., 85.000 USD.Jerry E. True và David C. Melrose cho David Jack Maradyn và Lisa Ann Maradyn, 137 Bellevue Ave., 229.000 đô la.Jose R. Abreu và Clenys Aybar cho Suleinny N. Abreu Garcia và Alex Roque, 140 Pendleton Ave., 125.000 đô la.K & S Holdings LLC, đến Sarah Stoddard, 58 Johnson St., $ 285.000.Kathy T. Truong đến Ruben Santos, 52 Acushnet Ave., $ 167.000.Kevin Nguyễn và Tovan Nguyễn đến Tanisha Arena, 122 Carver St., $ 160.000.Liam P. Hayes đến Martina Adames, 64-66 Scott St., $ 169.000.Thuộc tính R Us & Investments LLC, đến Leticia Vazquez, 21 Old Point St., $ 198.500.Manuel F. Pereira, Antonio Pereira, Emilia Fonseca và Maria Fatima Fernandes đến Antonio Pereira, 398 Main St., 100 đô la.Maribel Reynoso Antigua và Florencio Reynoso đến Carlos Vazquez Diaz và Glory I. Diaz, 132 Wait St., 160.000 USD.Mark G. Soja, đại diện, và Kinda C. Soja, bất động sản, đến Juan Santana, 7 Littleton St., 110.000 đô la.Nhà đầu tư MTGLQ LP, đến Humboldt Realty LLC, 24 Vincent St., $ 120.000.Không giới hạn đầu tư Inc., đến Monnay Miller, 120 Yale St., 50.000 đô la.Oden M. Gomez và Cesar A. Pina cho Adam G. Schlesinger và Brandy A. Schlesinger, 36 Forest St., 169.000 đô la.Patrick M. Pepe, đại diện, và Patrick J. Pepe, bất động sản, đến Olivia A. Pepe, 88 Duggan Circle, $ 124.000.Pedro J. Cruz đến Emtay Inc., 90-92 Grover St., 125.000 đô la.Tài sản Khóa LLC, đến Peter Adonis Mateo và Elvira Hernandez, 23 Frontenac St., $ 195.000.Rosa M. Torres đến Gelson D. Laguerre, 29 Eddy St., 135.000 đô la.Tony M. Tai và Yen Tran đến Ndayiragije Simon, 90 Pinecrest Drive, 285.000 USD.Walid Fathi Ahmed, Theresa Bailey Fathi Ahmed, Walid Fathi Amhed và Theresa Bailey Fathi Amhed cho Ian Gabbidon, 110 Margerie St., 179.900 USD.Chủ nhậtKuzmeski Realty Trust và N. Laurence Miller, ủy thác, cho Robert Howard Adair, 523 Hadley Road, 195.000 đô la.đồHenry J. LaMenez Sr., người được ủy thác, và Cơ quan liên kết cơ khí liên kết với Scott Tkatz và Lynne Tkatz, Tòa án 19 Gilbert, 130.000 đô la.Mary Cooper, người được ủy thác và Cooper Sống tin tưởng vào Christine Hadley, 406 Palmer Road, $ 145.000.Jeffrey Van Dauber đến J. R. Real Real LLC, 9-17 Canal St., $ 165.500.Gary F. Goodreau, bất động sản, và Pamela M. Hayes, đại diện cá nhân, cho Joseph E. Metcalfe và Carol M. Metcalfe, 198 đường Fisherdick, 205.000 đô la.WendellCharles H. Connor Nominee Trust, và Jeanne Colleen Connor, ủy thác, cho Peter Gallant Revocable Trust, Peter Gallant và Pamela A. Richardson, ủy thác, 17 Bullard Road / Bullard Road, 75.000 đô la.Tây Springfield1844 Riverdale LLC, đến Nancy V. Fox, 1844 Riverdale St., Đơn vị 1, $ 138.000.Barbara A. Thomas đến Cil Realty của Massachusetts Inc., 537 Rogers Ave., $ 520.000.Carolyn Charette cho Carolyn Charette và Matthew E. Peck, 165 Almon Ave., 130.000 đô la.David P. Bonci đến Mathew D. Gaspari và Sharon Boardway, 25 Grand View Ave., $ 220.000.Lyubov Kamyshina và Gennadiy Kamyshin cho Olga G. Archakova và Victor V. Archakov, 410 Elm St., 186.000 USD.WestfieldBenjamin D. Granholm, Benjamin P. Granholm và Rebecca L. Granholm đến Rebecca L. Granholm, 59 Zephyr Drive, 100 đô la.Cornerstone Homebuying LLC, đến Perry L. Phillips và Jennifer L. Escarpita, 130 Đại lộ Lindbergh, $ 215.000.G & F Custom Build Homes Inc., đến Genevieve M. Broderick, 51 Furrowtown Road, $ 380.000.Heather A. Longley và Jared M. Longley cho Jason G. Paquette và Elizabeth A. Paquette, đường 315 Buck Pond, $ 320.000.James A. Angelos II, Elizabeth M. Angelos và Elizabeth M. Curran đến Pedro L. Colon, 481 North Road, $ 436.500.James Montemayor đến Jessica A. Sullivan, 139 Union St., Đơn vị 25, $ 160.000.Jeremy P. Morton đến Diane M. Jefferis, 166 Hillside Road, Đơn vị 6, $ 100.Mark J. Giorgfeld và Evelyn R. Giorgfeld đến Marcus Rhatigan, 403 West Road, 600.000 đô la.WilbrahamArria N. Coburn và Leslie Coburn cho Arthur H. Walsh và Tricia N. Love-Walsh, 17 Weston St., 179.500 đô la.Philip H. Gosselin Jr., đến Arria N. Coburn và Leslie R. Coburn, 36 Glenn Drive, $ 322,450.Ricardo Romano Garrido và Tayde Lizette Pumarino Toduez đến Lindsay Russo và Lindsay N. Russo, 5 Seneca St., 187.000 USD.Sushilaben Patel, Hasmukhbhai Patel và Harry Patel cho Erik R. Snyder và Grace S. Miranda, 19 Grove St., $ 330.000.WilliamsburgCharonne Masters và Tom Masters cho Alexander Feinstein và Martha Feinstein, Deer Haven Drive Off và Fort Hill Road Off, $ 8,750.[ad_2] Nguồn
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https://smallbiztrends.com/2020/02/10-insights-to-help-you-become-a-better-small-business-leader.html 10 Insights to Help You Become a Better Small Business Leader 37 Small Business Trends / by Annie Pilon / 7 hours ago Entrepreneurs need to have strong leadership qualities in order to manage employees, communicate with customers, and outline a clear vision for their company. There are plenty of different styles and aspects that go into being a good leader. So here are some various insights from members of the online small business community to help you hone your skills. Learn What Makes a Good Leader In order to run a successful small business, you need to be a good leader. You also need to be able to identify potential leaders within your business so you can make the right personnel decisions. In this Small Biz Daily post, Hilary Thompson discusseswhat makes a good leader and why that knowledge matters to small business owners. Take Back Control of Your Work With so many different platforms and outlets fighting for your attention on a daily basis, it can be easy to get sucked in and forget about your initial goals. Instead of working based on other people’s demands, digital minimalism allows you to take back control. Learn more about this concept in this post by Thom James Carter of Process Street. Do Diversity and Inclusive Content Marketing That Matters Part of being a leader is making sure that all different kinds of voices are included and represented when it comes to your content. This requires more than simply searching for stock images with diversity, as Ann Gynn dives into in this Content Marketing Institute post. Manage Writers the Way They Want to Be Managed When you’re managing a team, it’s important to take their needs and preferences into account. If you have writers working on your content marketing team, providing the structure they crave can be very valuable. Ryan Brock of Marketing Land elaborates here. Get Started in Video Marketing If you’re interested in . . . #startup #startups #leader #leadership #inenglish #entrepreneurlifestyle #talentmatters #entrepreneurs #entrepreneur #motivation #business #career #businesslike #Forbes https://www.instagram.com/p/B8U2JWfnzrd/?igshid=16i2tdfke8577
#startup#startups#leader#leadership#inenglish#entrepreneurlifestyle#talentmatters#entrepreneurs#entrepreneur#motivation#business#career#businesslike#forbes
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RUBBERBAND
The fall season at the Joyce Theater opens with Victor Quijada’s company, RUBBERBAND, September 12-22, performing his evening-length dance “Ever So Slightly,” created in collaboration with the company’s ten fearless dancers. The 2018 dance, in Quijada’s words, seeks to find “calm and resilience in the face of the ceaseless irritants that bombard us in our daily lives.”
Accompanied by an original score by onstage multi-instrumentalists Jasper Gahunia and William Lamoureux, playing, the five men and five women dancers, clad in coveralls, emerge from a darkened floor to do a long opening passage that illustrates Quijada’s hybrid style that combines languid postmodern energies with the urban bombast of break dancing. He has trained the company well in his vocabulary in an impressive display of unisons, canons and cascades that blanket the stage.

RUBBERBAND in EVER SO SLIGHTLY
Unison and close-order canons give way to chaos as dancers catapult through speedy encounters that range from brusque to aggressive. The dancers hurl Paco Ziel high into midair flips and catch him as they run. Several others also get flung somewhat less riskily, flipped, and released by the mob. We start to notice individuals like Sturdy Amara Barner, who embodies the power and agility of a martial artist and elfin Brontë Poiré-Prest, who flies like a wind-blown leaf amongst her partners. Aggression is the default in this fast-paced opening section.

RUBBERBAND in EVER SO SLIGHTLY (center) Paco Ziel being lofted by the company
Then, an organ replaces percussion, as the jumpsuits start to come off; dancers shrug off the tops and tie the arms around their waists. Getting them completely off becomes a clever puzzle of mutual stripping and dragging each other around, using the jumpsuits as ropes and hammocks. The dancers end in a pile, and a hip-hop cipher ensues, where dancers individually do their specialty tricks in a circle of the others.

RUBBERBAND in EVER SO SLIGHTLY (pictured): Amara Barner, Jean Bui, Daniela Jezerinac,Sydney McManus, Bronte Poire-Prest, Zack Tang, Ryan Tyalor, Paco Ziel, (musicians) JasperGahunia, William Lamoureux
A musical interlude by composer/musicians Gahunia and Lamoureux separates this from the next section. They play bass, drum machine, keyboard, turntable, and violin. Throughout the 70-minute work, their music supports the changing moods and dynamic textures of the dancing, sometimes swelling to the complexity of a whole orchestra, with the help of electronic looping.

RUBBERBAND in EVER SO SLIGHTLY
The dancers return, stripped to briefs and tank tops, as Quijada gradually introduces more theatrics and lyricism into the dancing – finger-pointing, grunting, laughing, and less combative, more harmonious physical relationships. The choreography refocuses our attention on humanity and harmony in the action. All the dancers have moments to emerge from their strenuous physical tasks to personalize themselves in spectacular solos that highlight their particular breaking or other physical skills.

RUBBERBAND in EVER SO SLIGHTLY (l-r): Daniela Jezerinac, Jerimy Rivera, Zack Tang
In one striking passage, the dancers move each other’s limbs through space without touching, like remote-control puppeteers. It’s a poetic analogy to the earlier, rough-and-tumble partnering where the vehement, manhandling manipulations requires uncanny timing – hurtling between partners, blindly diving into space and being caught by a close-by person – of whatever gender.

RUBBERBAND in EVER SO SLIGHTLY Amara Barner, Jean Bui, Daniela Jezerinac, Sydney McManus, Dana, Bronte Poire-Prest, Jerimy Rivera, Zack Tang, Ryan Taylor, Paco Ziel
As the dance reaches climax, tall, muscular Zack Tang dances himself into a coma with body-wracking, flailing spasms. Then, Lavinia Vago carefully knots a jumpsuit around his head to swaddle it like an origami cocoon, and in a solemn ritual, all don similar headdresses and blindly try to connect with each other with touch only.
As Ziel carries to the musicians the pile of headdresses the others have laden him with, the remaining nine engage in simultaneous trios, spread across the space. With lyrical grace, they achieve consonance, personal connection, and harmony. They end in five couples, the men spinning their partners overhead in transcendent ecstasy, bathed in Yan Lee Chan’s artfully modulated and kinetic lighting. “Ever So Slightly” proclaims Quijada’s powerulf expressive voice, ever so forcefully.
photos by Marie-Nöele Pilon
Gus Solomons jr, © 2019
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2023-24 Belleville Senators Famous Relations
#19 Matthew Boucher: Son of former Drummondville Voltiguers GM Philippe Boucher. #46 Ryan MacKinnon: Brother of Orlando Solar Bears LW Carson MacKinnon. #27 Graham McPhee: Son of Vegas Golden Knights president of hockey operations George McPhee. #26 Brennan Saulnier: Cousin of former Sherbrooke Saint-François C Justin Saulnier. #6 Donovan Sebrango: Son of former F.C. L'Assomption-Lanaudière F Eduardo Sebrango. #16 Tyler Boucher: Son of NHL On TNT/NBC Sports Philadelphia flyers analyst Brian Boucher. #22 Garrett Pilon: Son of former Weyburn Red Wings head coach Rich Pilon.
#Sports#Hockey#AHL#Belleville Senators#Celebrities#Canada#Quebec#Prince Edward Island#Florida#Maryland#NHL#Ontario#Nova Scotia#Soccer#Cuba#Arizona#TV Shows#U.S.A.#U.S.#Pennsylvania#Rhode Island#New York#Saskatchewan
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The night has officially come! Our 2017 Empty Bowls fundraiser at First Friday Scranton on May 5th, 2017 has finally came and gone after months of preparation and planning! A huge shoutout to former blogger Emma Pilon, who has made this event possible! We had just about 250 completed bowls, and they ranged in shape, color and size. These amazing handmade bowls ranged in price from $10-$20, and with each purchase of a bowl, purchasers received a complementary scoop of ice-cream.
The Zeta Omicron Art Honor Society members did a wonderful job of not only making beautiful, hand crafted bowls, but running the event as well. It’s a great experience for all of the members, and there are always so many customers interested in the process of the event, especially when it comes to how to make the bowls! The hosts of the event at Electric City Escape, Amy and Ryan Hnat, were kind enough to let us use their venue, and also for the remainder of this week they are selling the remaining bowls! We didn’t have many left, but we are set on selling out!
This night came together perfectly thanks to many helping hands. Be sure to head over to Electric City Escape if you missed the sale on First Friday, and pick up one of the left over beauties! All of the money made goes to Meals on Wheels NEPA, and we know they are so thankful!
Ashley, ceramics, celebrates the joy of giving with her fellow Zeta Omicron members in "An Evening of Empty Bowls" The night has officially come! Our 2017 Empty Bowls fundraiser at First Friday Scranton on May 5th, 2017 has finally came and gone after months of preparation and planning!
#Amy Hnat#art honor society#bowls#Ceramics#Electric City#Electric City Escape#Emma Pilon#Empty Bowl Project#empty bowls#fundraiser#Ice Cream#Kappa Pi#Marywood University#Meals on Wheels#Meals on Wheels NEPA#Ryan Hnat#Where Creativity Works#Zeta Omicron
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October 31 roundup
Attempts to ban digital contraband are often fated to be both intrusive and futile [J.D. Tuccille]
“The Gender Pay Gap: Why We Fight The Narrative” [Ryan Bourne, Cato]
“He’s Back! Steven Wise’s Nonhuman Rights Project Seeks Habeas Corpus For An Elephant” [Ted Folkman, Letters Blogatory, Wise’s previous go and generally]
Regulatory battles between hotel industry and AirBnB spread across U.S. [Robert McCartney, Washington Post]
Concept of international human rights “has been swept into a broad river of campaigns for social justice, global economic development, environmental protection, multiculturalism, tolerance, access to water and sanitation, and more” and diluted in the process [James Kirchick, Commentary on new Aaron Rhodes book The Debasement of Human Rights: How Politics Sabotage the Ideal of Freedom; Cato forum from May with Rhodes, Kirchick, Roger Pilon, and Ian Vasquez; Rhodes interview with John Couretas and Caroline Roberts, Acton Institute]
“Pro-tip from the Third Circuit for attorneys requesting fees: Don’t have a single-spaced, 6- to 8-point font, 44-page fee petition including ‘hundreds of inappropriate, unethical entries that would likely be illegal if billed to a client.’ You might find yourself facing no fees, a sanction, and a referral to the attorney disciplinary board.” [John K. Ross, IJ Short Circuit, on Young v. Smith]
Tags: animal rights, feeing frenzy, hotels, international human rights, sex discrimination
from Law http://www.overlawyered.com/2018/10/october-31-roundup-4/ via http://www.rssmix.com/
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October 31 roundup
Attempts to ban digital contraband are often fated to be both intrusive and futile [J.D. Tuccille]
“The Gender Pay Gap: Why We Fight The Narrative” [Ryan Bourne, Cato]
“He’s Back! Steven Wise’s Nonhuman Rights Project Seeks Habeas Corpus For An Elephant” [Ted Folkman, Letters Blogatory, Wise’s previous go and generally]
Regulatory battles between hotel industry and AirBnB spread across U.S. [Robert McCartney, Washington Post]
Concept of international human rights “has been swept into a broad river of campaigns for social justice, global economic development, environmental protection, multiculturalism, tolerance, access to water and sanitation, and more” and diluted in the process [James Kirchick, Commentary on new Aaron Rhodes book The Debasement of Human Rights: How Politics Sabotage the Ideal of Freedom; Cato forum from May with Rhodes, Kirchick, Roger Pilon, and Ian Vasquez; Rhodes interview with John Couretas and Caroline Roberts, Acton Institute]
“Pro-tip from the Third Circuit for attorneys requesting fees: Don’t have a single-spaced, 6- to 8-point font, 44-page fee petition including ‘hundreds of inappropriate, unethical entries that would likely be illegal if billed to a client.’ You might find yourself facing no fees, a sanction, and a referral to the attorney disciplinary board.” [John K. Ross, IJ Short Circuit, on Young v. Smith]
Tags: animal rights, feeing frenzy, hotels, international human rights, sex discrimination
October 31 roundup republished via Overlawyered
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Unspeakable (TV Miniseries)
Prison Break star Sarah Wayne Callies can’t get enough of filming in Vancouver. She just wrapped up season 3 of Colony in February, but her latest project, an 8-part miniseries called Unspeakable starts filming this week. The series is being created for CBC in Canada and SundanceTV in the US. Sarah will not only star in the series, she’s also set to direct at least one of the episodes according to CBC.
Unspeakable is centred around the tainted blood crisis here in Canada, which caused a tremendous amount of people to be infected with HIV and Hepatitis C dring the 1980s. Among those who were affected by the outbreak was Toronto-born filmmaker Robert C. Cooper, who is the creator and showrunner for the Unspeakable miniseries. Robert is known for producing Stargate: Atlantis, Stargate SG-1, SGU Stargate Universe, but most recently he was the showrunner for the Vancouver-filmed series Dirk Gently’s Holistic Detective Agency.
In addition to his own personal experience going through this disaster, Robert leveraged material from the books Bad Blood by Vic Parsons and Andre Picard’s The Gift while penning the script for Unspeakable. A quote from Robert included in the press release from CBC:
“First and foremost, the series is about the emotional impact this terrible tragedy had. I couldn’t be more thrilled to have such incredibly talented people committed to bringing our lead characters to life.”
Sarah shared a first look at her in character for the role on Unspeakable via Instagram:
new job, new 'do. #backtowork #unspeakable
A post shared by Sarah Wayne Callies (@sarahwaynecallies) on Apr 4, 2018 at 6:48pm PDT
Starring alongside Sarah Wayne Callies is Michael Shanks (Stargate SG-1), Shawn Doyle (The Expanse) and Camille Sullivan (The Man in the High Castle).
The Unspeakable miniseries will continue filming in Vancouver and British Columbia until June 29th.
Truly, Madly, Sweetly (TV Movie)
Hallmark’s Truly, Madly, Sweetly was written by Gourmet Detective/Cedar Cove star Dylan Neal. The story is centred Emily, the owner of a cupcake food truck who has spent her whole life dreaming of having her own bakery.
The stars align and she meets Ryan, who has similarly always wanted to own his own business. Although the pair is from two completely different worlds, they form an unlikely partnership, and neither one of them could have ever imagined it would turn out the way it did.
Thanks to pictures shared by @TheHeidiReport, it looks like Emily’s cupcake food truck is called “Frisco Sweet Treats”.
Pics from Marine Crescent. Related? pic.twitter.com/12Ero3zem8
— Heidi (@TheHeidiReport) April 9, 2018
The image also suggests that Nikki Deloach (Awkward) is playing the role of Emily.
In addition to writing and executive producing the movie, Dylan is expected to appear in some capacity as well.
Truly, Madly Sweetly will continue filming in Vancouver and British Columbia until April 27th.
Also Starting This Week
Wings Over Everest (Feature) Cast: Koji Yakusho, Zhang Jingchu, Victor Webster Filming until April 15th
Garage Sale Mystery: A Picture of Murder (TV Movie) Cast: Lori Loughlin Filming until April 26th
Pup Star Christmas (aka Pup Star 4) (TV Movie) Filming in Victoria and area until May 4th
The Perfect Bride 2 (TV Movie) Filming until April 27th
A Wife’s Revenge (TV Movie) Filming until April 24th
For a full list of what’s filming in Vancouver and British Columbia right now, check out our In Production page.
Wrapping Up This Week
The Body Remembers When the World Broke Open (Feature) with Elle-Máijá Tailfeathers and Violet Nelson wraps up April 9th
Daughter of the Wolf (Feature) with Gina Carano, Richard Dreyfuss and Brendan Fehr wraps up April 13th
Wings Over Everest (Feature) with Koji Yakusho and Zhang Jingchu wraps up April 15th
Gut Instinct (Feature) with Josh Hartnett, Jim Gaffigan, Stephen McHattie, Antoine Oliver Pilon, Mark Camacho, Sahajak Boonthanakit and Robert Crooks wraps up April 15th and will continue filming in the Montreal area starting May 21st
If you see any of these productions, including Unspeakable or Truly, Madly, Sweetly filming in Vancouver and British Columbia, be sure to let us know by tweeting us (@WhatsFilming) or via our Submit a Location page.
The post Unspeakable Miniseries & Hallmark’s Truly Madly Sweetly Start Filming This Week appeared first on What's Filming?.
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HARTFORD WOLF PACK SEASON ENDS WITH 3-1 LOSS TO HERSHEY BEARS
By: Alex Thomas, Hartford Wolf Pack HARTFORD, CT – The Hartford Wolf Pack returned to the XL Center on Wednesday night, looking to stay alive in the 2023 Calder Cup Playoffs. However, the clock struck midnight on the Wolf Pack’s Cinderella run, as three unanswered goals led the Hershey Bears to a 3-1 decision and eliminated the Wolf Pack from the playoffs. Lucas Johansen potted the eventual game-winner 4:22 into the final stanza. A four-on-four sequence began after Beck Malenstyn and Will Cuylle were called for hooking penalties at 3:51 and 4:07, respectively. Mike Vecchione corralled the puck behind the Hartford net and snapped a pass to Johansen, powering into the slot. Johansen blasted the puck over the glove of Louis Domingue to give the Bears their first lead of the game and eventually send Hershey to the Eastern Conference Finals. The Wolf Pack opened the scoring late in the opening period. Ryan Carpenter collected the puck behind the Hershey net and attempted a wraparound that Hunter Shepard denied. The puck popped right back to Carpenter, who snuck a pass through the blue paint to Turner Elson streaking towards the goal. Elson unleashed a shot over a diving Shepard to give the Wolf Pack the game’s first lead. It was the second time Elson has found the twine in the playoffs. Hershey answered back just over the 15-minute mark of the second period. A delayed penalty was called against Hartford, and Vecchione collected the puck before the Pack could touch it up. Vecchione snapped a pass to Vincent Iorio, who sped into the offensive zone and ripped a shot that found the back of the Hartford net to even the contest at one. The goal was Iorio’s first career playoff marker. Hershey had an opportunity to take the lead when Sam Anas was awarded a penalty shot at 3:28 of the final stanza. However, Domingue made an excellent glove save to keep the score even and keep Hartford’s hopes alive. Johansen scored his first career Calder Cup Playoff goal at 4:22 of the third period, however, putting the Bears ahead for good in the deciding game of this series. Garrett Pilon tacked on an insurance marker at 7:25 of the third frame, burying the rebound from a Connor McMichael shot to put the Bears up by two. The Wolf Pack pushed for an answer late in the third period, with Domingue lifted in favor of the extra skater. However, Shepard held strong, preventing the Wolf Pack from working their way back into the tilt and sending the Bears to the Eastern Conference Finals. Make sure to follow the Wolf Pack on all their social media pages for information on the 2023-24 season. The Wolf Pack thank you for all of your support throughout the 2022-23 campaign, and we hope to see you in the fall! ABOUT THE HARTFORD WOLF PACK: The Hartford Wolf Pack has been a premier franchise in the American Hockey League since the team’s inception in 1997. The Wolf Pack is the top player-development affiliate of the NHL's New York Rangers and plays at the XL Center. The Wolf Pack has been home to some of the Rangers' newest faces, including Igor Shesterkin, Filip Chytil, and Ryan Lindgren. Follow the Wolf Pack on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and TikTok. HARTFORD WOLF PACK HOME Read the full article
#AmericanHockeyLeague#BeckMalenstyn#CalderCupplayoffs#ConnorMcMichael#GarrettPilon#HartfordWolfPack#HunterShepard#LouisDomingue#MadisonSquareGardenCompany#NewYorkRangers#RyanCarpenter#WillCuylle#XLCenter
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Analysis Marlene Bird, dead at 50, survived vicious assault that led to loss of her legs Strong Cree woman refused to be an anonymous victim after man was charged with brutal attack By Duncan McCue, CBC News Posted: Nov 27, 2017 1:34 PM ET Last Updated: Nov 27, 2017 1:34 PM ET Marlene Bird was admitted this week to hospital in Prince Albert, Sask., suffering from failing liver and kidneys. (Ryan Pilon/CBC) About The Author Duncan McCue CBC reporter Duncan McCue has been a reporter for CBC News for over 15 years. His news and current affairs pieces are featured on CBC's The National. McCue was awarded a Knight Fellowship at Stanford University in 2011, where he created an online guide for journalists called Reporting in Indigenous Communities. Duncan is Anishinaabe, a member of the Ch..
Great article! ‘She’s a person who wouldn’t give up’: Assault victim Marlene Bird wanted to tell her story | Read more at Edmonton Real Estate News.
| More articles at Edmonton Real Estate News
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Các giao dịch bất động sản ở Massachusetts cho các quận Hampshire và Franklin, ngày 12 tháng 4 năm 2020 (Biên tập viên Lưu ý: Các hành động của Hạt Hampden không có sẵn vì việc đóng cửa tạm thời Tòa án Roderick L. Ireland ở Springfield vì lo ngại về coronavirus.)AgawamCig4 Llc đến Derek Parolo, 57 Harding St., $ 225.000.Kenneth D. Blews cho Robert Sopet, 57 Overlook Drive, 256.000 đô la.Nicholas D. Griffin và Ashlee A. Griffin đến Tracie Liquori, 732 Mill St., $ 211.000.AmherstFiordaliza Suarez đến Raymond J. Pedrick, 181 Strong St., 375.000 USD.Paul Boudreau và Gerard N. Aubrey đến Daisy Mae Realty LLC, 171 Grey St., 300.000 đô la.Robert Stebbins và Susan Stebbins cho Stephen Brevik và Jillian Brevik, 464 Market Hill Road, 450.000 đô la.Sân vận độngBeverly A. Labelle đến Ryan Pease, đường 370 Buckland, $ 210.000.BelchertownKEEM LLC, đến Robert N. Dougherty và Katie M. Dougherty, 57 Warren Wright St., $ 345.000.Michael E. Sroka đến Russell S. Annis và Jacqueline C. Annis, 23 Mill Valley Road, $ 245.000.Suzanne M. Meehan đến Teresa J. Halperin v�� Andrew Halperin, 108 Sabin St., 350.000 đô la.Norman B. Veroneau và Denise K. Veroneau đến Niloufar Shoushtari, 25 Lexington Drive, 512.000 đô la.BernardstonMaria E. Carey đến Ricky L. Mùa hè và Suzanne J. Sumner, 68 Cross St., $ 225.000.BlandfordJean-Pierre Barrette, bất động sản, và Mary A. Wright, đại diện, đến Adam Gonska, 84 đường Curtis Hall, 14.000 đô la.Cánh đồngCynthia M. Niemchot-Hodges và Wayne B. Hodges cho James M. Korman, 294 Warren Road, $ 580.000.BucklandDoris L. Howes Estate, Ian Howes, giám đốc điều hành và cá nhân, đến Stephen E. Smith, 277 Ashfield Road / Route 112, $ 120.000.Ricky L. Summer và Suzanne J. Sumner đến Kurtis A. Williams và Nichole B.Williams, 86 Buckland Road, 255.000 đô la.Lynn Anderson, Polly Anderson, Sidney C. Anderson, Nina A. Coler, Lynn A. Hoeppner và Malah H.Miller đến Ann A. Lofquist, 33 Bray Road, 301.000 USD.ChesterNathan J. Bolduc cho Molly Irene Larkham và Cain Larkham, 292 Tuyến 20, $ 159.900.ChicopeeAnthony D. Maloni và Cynthia J. Maloni đến Blackrock BNG Group LLC, 62-66 Dwight St., $ 712.000.Janosik Realty LLC, đến Milton Torres Jr., và Christina A. Reardon, 8 Andover Road, $ 221.000.Marla J. Hanc, Virginia H. Schmitt, Greta R. Sienkiewicz và Frances A. S. Milano đến Lana J. Guz, 30 đường Lanelark, Đơn vị 6108B, 103.000 USD.Liên đoàn cho vay mua nhà liên bang Corp, đến Sonia Velazquez, 38 Maple St., $ 109.000.Premier Home Builders Inc., đến Michael D. Berardelli và Bethany L. Berardelli, 542 Sheridan St., $ 314,000.Samantha Britt đến Jean Carlos Santiago-Reyes, Triển vọng 741 St., $ 182,000.Tyler S. Austin và Priscilla Marie Austin đến Travis J. Haley và Kylie J. Miller, 33 William St., 161.000 đô la.DeerfieldPhylis Dzenis, bởi luật sư, hay còn gọi là Phyllis K. Dzenis, bởi luật sư, Paula D. Healey, luật sư, đến Corrine Sysun, 51 Sugarloaf St., $ 299.000.Peter M. Kuchieski, người hay còn gọi là Peter M. Kuchieski Jr., đến Jessica Howard và David Markland, 20 Thayer St., $ 134.500.Đông LongmeadowMohammad J. Bhuyan và Nigarultana cho Elizabeth Ruth Zahradnik và Jack T. Trainor, 3 Converse Circle, 220.000 USD.Đông thànhLynzi Wildlove đến Heather McLean, 19 Chapin St., 12.000 đô la.Traci Bartlett và Tracie E. Bartlett đến Hiệp hội thế chấp quốc gia liên bang, 21-23 Clinton St., 146,903,93 đô la.XóaBruce A. Cromack động sản, Brenda Gallagher, đại diện cá nhân, đến Kathy M. Halvorsen, 8 Nice St., $ 119,700.ChungHBM Properties LLC, đến Donald Gould, Đường Ben Hale, $ 50.000.Cánh đồng xanhCarl Silver Estate, Laurie Benjamin, đại diện cá nhân, cho Jeremy R.Gaudette và Brianna M. Aubrey-Gaudette, 20 Albert Ave., $ 197,925.John M. Blood Estate, Barbara A. Barsalou, đại diện cá nhân, đến với NicoleAd J. Bukolsky Revocable Trust, Elizabeth J. Bukolsky, ủy thác, 17 Fairview Terrace, $ 132.500.Wilmington Savings Fund Society FSB, ủy thác, bởi luật sư và Christiana Trust, bởi luật sư, Rushmore Loan Management Services LLC, luật sư, cho Milo O. Childs Campolo, 120 Poplar St., $ 53,550.HadleyCông ty bất động sản Plumtree LLC, đến Michael J. Colwell-LaFluer, 148 Russell St., $ 410.000.HampdenĐánh dấu Michalski đến Kailey Golebiowski, 433 Main St., $ 276.000.Hà LanGeorge Motyka đến Robert V. Summers Jr., 30 Lakeshore Drive, $ 330.000.Timothy Buck, đại diện, và Francis J Buck, bất động sản, đến Cody Langlitz, Old Acre Road, 80.000 đô la.HolyokeCarmen S. Rosa đến Jahjan LLC, 342 Maple St., $ 60.000.Diane V. Scheinost, đại diện, và Kris S. Scheinost, bất động sản, cho Brian Michaud và Irene Michaud, 241 Oak St., 240.000 đô la.Phát triển nhà ở & đô thị cho Frank Salas, 248 Lyman St., 55.000 đô la.Posiadlosc LLC, đến Deena Perdue, 31 Alderman St., 200.000 USD.Hội tiết kiệm quỹ Wilmington, Christiana Trust, ủy thác và ủy thác mua lại thế chấp Pretium, ủy thác của Công ty Equity Trust, người giám sát, Amani Boutros Ira và Amani Boutros, 1446 Dwight St., 80.000 USD.HuntingtonJames Tidwell và Alanna A. Tidwell cho Rachel Laurie, 2 Goss Hill Road, 166.000 đô la.LeverettGeoffrey I. Hitzig và Nancy W. Hitzig đến Village of Light Inc., 83 đường Shutesbury, $ 590.000.LudlowArthur P. Godin, đại diện, Jane H. Godin, bất động sản, và Jane Howes Godin, bất động sản, đến Russell A. Orcutt Jr., 1087 Center St., $ 262.000.Christopher M. Neronha đến William J. Doherty, 517 Làn đường lý tưởng, Đơn vị 507, $ 265.900.Joseph Queiroga, đại diện, Joseph L. Queiroga, đại diện, Charles Joaquim Queiroga, bất động sản, Charles J. Queiroga, bất động sản, Mary C. Condon, đại diện, và Mary Condon, đại diện, cho Branco Construction LLC, 38 Motyka St., 150.000 đô la.Kenneth Dias đến Dawn Chenevert, 517 Làn đường lý tưởng, Đơn vị 402, $ 275,000.Ralph E. Connelly và Ralph Connelly cho Joaquim P. Borges và Ana H. Borges, Jerad Drive, 125.000 đô la.Trường trungBảo tồn LLC, đến James J. Burns, Đường hình nón, $ 40.000.Elm Street Land Properties LLC, đến Christian Haws Villasenor, Town Hill Road, $ 22.500.Đức ôngHelene M. Pilon đến Thomas Russo, 10 Margaret St., 100.000 đô la.Lucia A. Blanchette cho Eric K. Markham và Suzanne E. Markham, Waid Road, 20.000 đô la.Timothy E. Wells và Cathleen S. Wells đến Noelle Renee Venne, 227 Main St., 164.900 USD.MontagueCorrine E. Sysun đến Jill M. Innes, Đường 48 Millers, $ 245.000.Michael J. Whiteman đến Brent Walton Griffin, 106 Đường Turnpike, $ 157,800.Giáo dụcRobert Farr Bayliss đến Clare Doyle và Emma Koramshahi, 15 đường Ryan, 255.000 đô la.Mary Kinda Klippel cho Michael J. Levine và Marilyn Levine, 20 Bridge Road, $ 649.000.Giám mục Công giáo La Mã của Springfield đến Thành phố Northampton, Haydenville Road Off, $ 80.000.Robert D. Raymond đến Hội nghị Đầu tư bất động sản 600 LLC, 547 Easthampton Road, 595.000 đô la.trái camJohn Andrew Marsh động sản, Brianna R. Marsh, đại diện cá nhân, đến Crystal A. Mallet và Stanley C. Pearson, đường 366 Mayo, $ 305.000.Susan R. Gainley đến Charles J. Wright và Elaine M. Wright, 50 đường Mattawa, $ 144,900.Catherine M. McCarthy và John M. McCarthy đến Judy Ann Vantrece, 58 Stone Valley Road, 243.500 đô la.PalmerAaron C. Patterson và Michelle M. Patterson đến John Mercier, 3122 Main St., 98.000 đô la.Martin H. Greany, Barbara J. Greany và Helen Hermanson đến A to Z Quản lý & Đổi mới tài sản LLC, 1654-1658 North Main St., $ 144.000.Martin H. Greany, Martin Greany, Barbara J. Greany và Barbara Greany to A to Z Quản lý & Đổi mới tài sản LLC, 1644-1646 North Main St., $ 144.000.Bồ nôngChelsea Reiff Gwyther, Ryan Reiff Gwyther, John D. Reiff và Marianne M. Reiff cho John J. Kulsick và Kinda B. Brandt, 9 Jones Road, $ 370.000.Donald F. Archer và Tina L. Archer đến Noah A. Wartenberg và Kathryn A. Colavito, 17 Jones Road, $ 246.000.RussellGiám mục Công giáo La Mã của Springfield đến Kevin Kennedy Sr., Đường Hill Hill, 70.000 đô la.Nam HadleyDominic Kirchner II, người được ủy thác và Cliste Realty tin tưởng vào Tamara Rita Thompson, 366 Granby Road, 240.000 đô la.James A. Haber và Jay A. Haber cho Lynn A. Carboneau và Brian William McKinnon, 41 West Summit St., 138.000 đô la.Kyle E. Hajec, Renee L. Hajec và Renee L. Reith cho Cassandra Rose Aotta và Jeremiah Edward Aotta IV, 141 Lyman St., 227.500 đô la.Revampit LLC, đến Scott Family Properties LLC, 12 Vòng tròn trẻ, $ 155.000.Michelle A. Liberto và Anthony Liberto cho Anthony G. Schiappa và Michelle A. Mirti, 12 Hickory Place, $ 249.000.SouthamptonHaley E. Pearl và Kaitlyn E. Dorman đến Susan M. Wilson, 113 Đại lộ, $ 276.000.Louis P. Migliozzi đến Miranda Jade Jacobus và Sean Thomas Wilkins, 8 Strong Road, 238.500 đô la.NamwickJohn Devine cho Joshua Andrew Kawa và Sarah Michelle Herbert, 12 đường Matthews, 243.500 đô la.Springfield716 Spring Valley LLC, đến Angeljoy Co. LLC, 120 Orchard St., $ 281.000.Amat Victoria Curam LLC, đến Laceyann R. Nelson, 323 Bay St., $ 155.000.ANHS Inc., đến Green Apple Manor Properties LLC, 33-35 Quincy St., $ 150.000.Antonio Pereira đến Antonio Pereira, ủy thác, và 2020 Pereira Realty Trust, ủy thác của, 398 Main St., 100 đô la.B9 Industries Inc., đến Nolava LLC, 42 Sunapee, $ 111,025.Emerald City Cho thuê LLC, đến Tyshawn Gorham và Yesenia Gorham, 110 Gardens Drive, 178.500 đô la.Đưa cho họ Sanctuary Inc., cho Gregory P. Rice, 123 Buckingham St., 150.000 đô la.Heather D. McN Khoa, Heather D. Ingraham và Catherine Crank đến Carrasquillo Fix Up LLC, 70 Haskin St., 85.000 USD.Jerry E. True và David C. Melrose cho David Jack Maradyn và Lisa Ann Maradyn, 137 Bellevue Ave., 229.000 đô la.Jose R. Abreu và Clenys Aybar cho Suleinny N. Abreu Garcia và Alex Roque, 140 Pendleton Ave., 125.000 đô la.K & S Holdings LLC, đến Sarah Stoddard, 58 Johnson St., $ 285.000.Kathy T. Truong đến Ruben Santos, 52 Acushnet Ave., $ 167.000.Kevin Nguyễn và Tovan Nguyễn đến Tanisha Arena, 122 Carver St., $ 160.000.Liam P. Hayes đến Martina Adames, 64-66 Scott St., $ 169.000.Thuộc tính R Us & Investments LLC, đến Leticia Vazquez, 21 Old Point St., $ 198.500.Manuel F. Pereira, Antonio Pereira, Emilia Fonseca và Maria Fatima Fernandes đến Antonio Pereira, 398 Main St., 100 đô la.Maribel Reynoso Antigua và Florencio Reynoso đến Carlos Vazquez Diaz và Glory I. Diaz, 132 Wait St., 160.000 USD.Mark G. Soja, đại diện, và Kinda C. Soja, bất động sản, đến Juan Santana, 7 Littleton St., 110.000 đô la.Nhà đầu tư MTGLQ LP, đến Humboldt Realty LLC, 24 Vincent St., $ 120.000.Không giới hạn đầu tư Inc., đến Monnay Miller, 120 Yale St., 50.000 đô la.Oden M. Gomez và Cesar A. Pina cho Adam G. Schlesinger và Brandy A. Schlesinger, 36 Forest St., 169.000 đô la.Patrick M. Pepe, đại diện, và Patrick J. Pepe, bất động sản, đến Olivia A. Pepe, 88 Duggan Circle, $ 124.000.Pedro J. Cruz đến Emtay Inc., 90-92 Grover St., 125.000 đô la.Tài sản Khóa LLC, đến Peter Adonis Mateo và Elvira Hernandez, 23 Frontenac St., $ 195.000.Rosa M. Torres đến Gelson D. Laguerre, 29 Eddy St., 135.000 đô la.Tony M. Tai và Yen Tran đến Ndayiragije Simon, 90 Pinecrest Drive, 285.000 USD.Walid Fathi Ahmed, Theresa Bailey Fathi Ahmed, Walid Fathi Amhed và Theresa Bailey Fathi Amhed cho Ian Gabbidon, 110 Margerie St., 179.900 USD.Chủ nhậtKuzmeski Realty Trust và N. Laurence Miller, ủy thác, cho Robert Howard Adair, 523 Hadley Road, 195.000 đô la.đồHenry J. LaMenez Sr., người được ủy thác, và Cơ quan liên kết cơ khí liên kết với Scott Tkatz và Lynne Tkatz, Tòa án 19 Gilbert, 130.000 đô la.Mary Cooper, người được ủy thác và Cooper Sống tin tưởng vào Christine Hadley, 406 Palmer Road, $ 145.000.Jeffrey Van Dauber đến J. R. Real Real LLC, 9-17 Canal St., $ 165.500.Gary F. Goodreau, bất động sản, và Pamela M. Hayes, đại diện cá nhân, cho Joseph E. Metcalfe và Carol M. Metcalfe, 198 đường Fisherdick, 205.000 đô la.WendellCharles H. Connor Nominee Trust, và Jeanne Colleen Connor, ủy thác, cho Peter Gallant Revocable Trust, Peter Gallant và Pamela A. Richardson, ủy thác, 17 Bullard Road / Bullard Road, 75.000 đô la.Tây Springfield1844 Riverdale LLC, đến Nancy V. Fox, 1844 Riverdale St., Đơn vị 1, $ 138.000.Barbara A. Thomas đến Cil Realty của Massachusetts Inc., 537 Rogers Ave., $ 520.000.Carolyn Charette cho Carolyn Charette và Matthew E. Peck, 165 Almon Ave., 130.000 đô la.David P. Bonci đến Mathew D. Gaspari và Sharon Boardway, 25 Grand View Ave., $ 220.000.Lyubov Kamyshina và Gennadiy Kamyshin cho Olga G. Archakova và Victor V. Archakov, 410 Elm St., 186.000 USD.WestfieldBenjamin D. Granholm, Benjamin P. Granholm và Rebecca L. Granholm đến Rebecca L. Granholm, 59 Zephyr Drive, 100 đô la.Cornerstone Homebuying LLC, đến Perry L. Phillips và Jennifer L. Escarpita, 130 Đại lộ Lindbergh, $ 215.000.G & F Custom Build Homes Inc., đến Genevieve M. Broderick, 51 Furrowtown Road, $ 380.000.Heather A. Longley và Jared M. Longley cho Jason G. Paquette và Elizabeth A. Paquette, đường 315 Buck Pond, $ 320.000.James A. Angelos II, Elizabeth M. Angelos và Elizabeth M. Curran đến Pedro L. Colon, 481 North Road, $ 436.500.James Montemayor đến Jessica A. Sullivan, 139 Union St., Đơn vị 25, $ 160.000.Jeremy P. Morton đến Diane M. Jefferis, 166 Hillside Road, Đơn vị 6, $ 100.Mark J. Giorgfeld và Evelyn R. Giorgfeld đến Marcus Rhatigan, 403 West Road, 600.000 đô la.WilbrahamArria N. Coburn và Leslie Coburn cho Arthur H. Walsh và Tricia N. Love-Walsh, 17 Weston St., 179.500 đô la.Philip H. Gosselin Jr., đến Arria N. Coburn và Leslie R. Coburn, 36 Glenn Drive, $ 322,450.Ricardo Romano Garrido và Tayde Lizette Pumarino Toduez đến Lindsay Russo và Lindsay N. Russo, 5 Seneca St., 187.000 USD.Sushilaben Patel, Hasmukhbhai Patel và Harry Patel cho Erik R. Snyder và Grace S. Miranda, 19 Grove St., $ 330.000.WilliamsburgCharonne Masters và Tom Masters cho Alexander Feinstein và Martha Feinstein, Deer Haven Drive Off và Fort Hill Road Off, $ 8,750.[ad_2] Nguồn
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