20130425_us_boston

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Everything you need to look cool when the temperature rises. H H OT S S UMMER S S TYLE BOSTON • Thursday, April 25, 2013

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Transcript of 20130425_us_boston

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Everything you need to look cool when the temperature rises.

HHOTSSUMMERSSTYLE

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BOSTON • Thursday, April 25, 2013

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A HERO’S GOODBYE PAGE 02

BOSTON Thursday, April 25, 2013 www.metro.us | t: MetroBOS | f: MetroBoston

NFL DRAFT: PATRIOTS LOOKING AT RECEIVER? USC’S ROBERT WOODS WILL LIKELY BE AVAILABLE AT NO. 29. PAGE 22-23

Reports: Local mosque refusing to bury suspect Family speaks. An aunt of Tamerlan Tsarnaev, the 26-year-old killed last week in a shoot-out with police, tells NBC that a Boston mosque denied the family’s request for funeral services. Which one? It is unknown which mosque was approached, but one imam reportedly said there is no room for Tsarnaev as a Muslim. PAGE 04

Theater review: Now ’s not the time for ‘Beowulf’ PAGE 14

PAGE 16

Musselwhite destined to play the blues with Harper

Thousands of police offi cers from across the nation, as well as Vice President Joe Biden, attended a memorial service for slain MIT Police Offi cer Sean Collier yesterday. / NICOLAUS CZARNECKI, METRO

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2www.metro.usThursday, April 25, 2013

1NEWS

BOSTON

Marathon bombing

Anger expressed over suspect’s welfare claims

Republican state law-makers expressed anger yesterday after it was reported that one of the al-leged Marathon bombing suspects and his family re-ceived welfare payments.

The Executive Office of Health and Human Services confirmed that the family of Tamerlan Tsarnaev, 26 and now deceased, received public welfare assistance until 2012.

They were not receiv-ing the taxpayer-funded welfare assistance at the time of the attack, officials said. METRO/SHNS

Commuter rail

First new trains from Korea put into service

After more than a year of delays, the first three new commuter rail coaches that have arrived from Ko-rea were put into service yesterday on the Haverhill line out of North Station.

The double-decker trains with LED displays showing next station information and im-proved handicap acces-sibility were provided by Hyundai-Rotem and are the first of 75 ordered from the Korean manu-facturer at a cost of $190 million.

The agency expects 15 new trains to be in service by the fall of 2013. SHNS

Boston schools

Boston Public Schools Superintendent Johnson retiring The head of the Boston Public Schools system, Superintendent Carol Johnson, will retire this summer, the public schools said yesterday.

Johnson was appointed superintendent of the 57,000-student system in 2007. She will retire in July. METRO

Programs and badges reading “Collier Strong” were handed out to the thousands of attendees. / NICOLAUS CZARNECKI, METRO

MIT Officer Sean Collier was remembered by his brother as supportive, by his chief as car-ing and compassionate, and by the vice president as a “hero.”

Thousands of people, includ-ing MIT students and law en-forcement officers from around the nation and world, gathered

at the Cambridge school yester-day for a memorial service hon-oring the 26-year-old who was allegedly killed by the suspect-ed Boston Marathon bombers.

“Embrace the memories of those beautiful people we lost in the bombing … and honor this hero Sean for what he was.

Remember him not merely for the sacrifice he made, but for the man he was,” said Vice Pres-ident Joe Biden.

The service on MIT’s cam-pus included a performance by James Taylor, a helicopter fly-over and bagpipes.

“If there’s anything that

we can learn from this, it’s the morals and beliefs that Sean exemplified during his time in service: respect, support and caring,” said his brother Rob Rogers.

In the wake of tragedy that traumatized the region, Biden’s speech was partly a pep talk for Collier’s family and partly a pep talk for the greater community.

“We have suffered. We are grieving. But we are not bend-ing. We will not yield to fear. ... We will not be intimidated.”

MIT off icer Collier recalled as a hero

Quoted

“[The Tsarnaev brothers are] two twisted, perverted, cowardly, knock-off jihadis.”

Biden

Memorial service. Thousands, including

Vice President Joe

Biden, paid tribute to

MIT Offi cer Sean Collier.

DWTS. Boston Marathon bombing amputee asked to appear on hit series A woman whose foot was am-putated as a result of injuries sustained in the marathon bombing has been invited to appear on ABC’s hit series “Dancing with the Stars.”

Host Tom Bergeron said on Tuesday that professional

ballroom dancer Adrianne Haslet-Davis, 32, would appear on next week’s show.

“We were all very moved by her inspirational outlook. We’ll tell you how we hope to be part of her recovery,” Bergeron said. METRO/MR

Since the bombing, Adrianne Haslet-Davis has vowed to dance again. ARTHUR MURRAY BOSTON

Today’s tweet

“Walking down Boylston Street for the fi rst time since

it re-opened and my iPod immediately plays Dirty Water.

Awesome.”@KATECHARLOTTEL, WHO WAS

ONE OF THE MANY PEOPLE WHO

FLOCKED TO THE REOPENED

BOYLSTON STREET YESTERDAY

In the news

$6.8M Individuals have do-

nated nearly $7 million

to the One Fund Boston,

the charity set up to

support victims of the

marathon bombings.

As of yesterday, the

fund total had reached

$21.6 million. Corporate

donations have made

up the remainder of the

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MICHAEL [email protected]

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4www.metro.usThursday, April 25, 2013 BOSTON

The aunt of accused Boston Marathon bomber Tamer-lan Tsarnaev said a Boston mosque is refusing to hold a funeral for her nephew, who was killed Thursday in a shoot-out with police.

Patimat Suleimanova told NBC that authorities have told the family they can have the 26-year-old’s body. But when one of the suspect’s uncles asked the imam of a Boston mosque attended by the brothers for a funeral service, Suleimanova said he was flatly denied.

Suleimanova told the net-

work that she did not know the name of the mosque; however, Tamerlan and his 19-year-old brother Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, who is also sus-pected in the bombings, re-portedly attended services at the Islamic Society of Boston mosque in Cambridge.

Yusufi Vali, a spokesman for the mosque, did not re-turn a request for comment yesterday, but on Tuesday he

told MSNBC that the mosque had not heard from the fam-ily.

“There were some reports out there that we had reject-ed his burial, and — or the family had reached out to us, rather. And to our knowledge, you know, the family has not reached out to us,” he said. “That’s a decision that we’d leave up to a scholar. This one is complex because the things that this guy did were just ab-solutely disgraceful.”

Earlier this week, Imam Talal Eid of the Islamic Insti-tute of Boston told the Huff-ington Post: “I would not be willing to do a funeral for him. This is a person who deliberately killed people. There is no room for him as a Muslim.”

Suspect burial. Tamerlan Tsarnaev’s aunt said a local mosque turned down a request to bury him.

Reports: Mosque refusing to take suspect’s body

The Islamic Society of Boston says it has not heard from the family. NICOLAUS CZARNECKI, METRO

Blast site reopens

Boylston is bustling again Lauren Beesley stood on the outskirts of a curious crowd gathered in front of 673 Boylston St., the site of the first of two Boston Mara-thon blasts that killed three people and injured more than 200.

It was Beesley’s first visit to the block since before the attack, as Boylston Street reopened to the public early yesterday.

“It’s a mixed feeling. It’s very sad, but it’s also nice to see everybody come together,” she said, adding that she feels comfortable returning to the area.

Lifelong Southie Resident Anthony Rehm watched as bystanders paid their respects, laying flowers, candles and flags at the explosion site.

“I always feel safe,” he said. “It was definitely crazy, but it’s not going to stop me from going anywhere.” METRO/MR

Boylston Street came back to life yesterday after reopening to the publicnine days after the Boston Marathon bombings. / NICOLAUS CZARENCKI, METRO

MORGAN ROUSSEAU [email protected]

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Having just finished the mara-thon of a lifetime — a six-day ultra-marathon across the Mo-roccan Sahara desert — Allston teacher Liz Byron’s homecom-ing Saturday should have been an ecstatic experience. Instead, the 29-year-old returned to a battered city recovering from a devastating terror attack.

“I had no TV in Morocco. On Tuesday morning, I woke up to all these emails. I just broke down in the Internet cafe. I was devastated,” said Byron, who finished the race on April 18, then remained in Morocco for some sightseeing.

“It was frightening to be in Mo-rocco and hear about what was happening here in Boston.”

The race drew 1,027 runners ,and Byron placed

211th overall and 12th in the women’s category.

“My body got stronger as the days went on. I thought I’d be deteriorating,” said Byron, who suffered from a stomach parasite in the days leading up to the race. “I couldn’t stand up for 12 hours. I said, ‘You must fix your stomach.’”

She managed to raise $36,000 to buy her students laptops, falling short of her $50,000 goal. Byron said is con-fident the rest of the funding will come through.

“If I can run through the desert, I can raise $50,000,”

she said.Temperatures peaked at

130 degrees, but she managed to run between five and 12 hours each day with the help of her students.

“I felt it in the desert — the students’ energy, the moti-vation of being part of this faculty and this school.”

Although she hasn’t run in the Boston Marathon, Byron said the tragedy has inspired her to support next year’s race.

Quoted

“It became a lot more than I thought it would be. ... It became a mo-tivational and inspira-tional experience. The desert was so cathartic.”Byron

LIZ BYRON The Boston teacher who ran a 155-mile marathon across the Sahara desert earlier this month to buy laptops for her students recounts

what it was like to come back to the horrifi c news that her hometown had been attacked.

IN THE DESERT, AN OASIS OF MOTIVATION

Liz Byron ran 155 miles across the Sahara to raise money to buy her Allston students laptops. / SUBMITTED

MORGAN ROUSSEAU [email protected]

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6www.metro.usThursday, April 25, 2013 NEWS

One of the two men accused of an al Qaeda-backed plan to derail a passenger train in Canada questioned the authority of Canadian law to judge him, telling a court yesterday that the criminal

code is imperfect and is not a holy book.

Chiheb Esseghaier faces charges that include con-spiracy to murder and work-ing with a terrorist group. REUTERS

Train plot. Suspect dismisses Canadian law

World health

WHO says new bird strain is ‘one of most lethal’ fl u viruses A new bird flu strain that has killed 22 people in China is “one of the most lethal” of its kind and transmits more easily to humans than another strain that has killed hundreds since 2003, a World Health Organiza-tion expert said. REUTERS

Bangladeshi civilian volunteers assist in rescue operations after an eight-story building collapsed in Savar, on the outskirts of Dhaka yesterday. / GETTY IMAGES

Building collapse in Bangladesh kills 100

A block housing garment fac-tories and shops collapsed in Bangladesh yesterday, killing nearly 100 people and injuring more than a thousand, officials said.

Firefighters and troops dug frantically through the rubble at the eight-story Rana Plaza building in Savar, 20 miles out-side Dhaka.

Television showed young

female workers, some appar-ently semi-conscious, being pulled out.

One fireman told Reuters about 2,000 people were in the building when the upper floors slammed down onto those below.

Bangladesh’s booming garments industry has been plagued by fires and other acci-dents for years, despite a drive to improve safety standards.

In November, 112 workers died in a blaze at the Tazreen factory in a nearby suburb, putting a spotlight on global retailers which source clothes from Bangladesh.

“It looks like an earthquake

has struck here,” said one resi-dent as he looked on at the chaotic scene of smashed con-crete and ambulances making their way through the crowds of workers and wailing rela-tives.

“I was at work on the third floor, and then suddenly I heard a deafening sound — but couldn’t understand what was happening. I ran and was hit by something on my head,” said factory worker Zohra Be-gum.

An official at a control room set up to provide information said 96 people were confirmed dead and more than 1,000 were injured. REUTERS

Hospitals. Doctors said they were unable to cope with the number of victims brought in.

Quoted

“All of these conclusions was taken out based on [the] Criminal Code. ... The Criminal Code is not (a) holy book.” Chiheb Esseghaier

Page 9: 20130425_us_boston

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8www.metro.usThursday, April 25, 2013 NEWS

Obama threatens ‘family tattoo’ if daughters get one

If they were thinking about getting tattoos, the Obama daughters may want to recon-sider.

Speaking on NBC’s “Today” show in a segment originally filmed before the Boston Mar-athon bombings, President Barack Obama revealed the strategy he and first lady Mi-chelle Obama have been using to keep their daughters away from tattoos.

“What we’ve said to the girls is, ‘If you guys ever de-cide you’re going to get a tat-too, then Mommy and me will get the exact same tattoo, in the same place, and we’ll go on YouTube and show it off as a family tattoo,’” Obama said.

“Our thinking is that might dissuade them from thinking that somehow that’s a good way to rebel.”

During the segment, the president also said he under-stood his wife’s “slip of the tongue” when she called her-self a “single mother” in early

April, noting that they were of-ten apart for a week at a time when he was campaigning.

“I tend to cut my wife or anybody some slack when it comes to just slips of the tongue,” he said.

“But there’s no doubt that there have been times where

Michelle probably felt like a single mom. ... She definitely, I think, understands the bur-dens that women in particu-lar tend to feel if they’re both responsible for child rearing and they’re responsible for working at the same time,” he added. REUTERS

Ink. The fi rst family may get tattoos to show that it’s not a good way to rebel.

First lady Michelle Obama arrives with daughters Sasha and Malia for the 57th presidential inauguration. / GETTY IMAGES

Flight delays in the United States linked to the furlough of thousands of air-traffic controllers have not been as bad as expected so far, the head of the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration said yesterday.

FAA Administrator Mi-chael Huerta told lawmakers that the agency could not find the kind of “sizeable” non-payroll budget cuts

that would have avoided furloughs and the resulting flight delays, but added that passenger safety is not at risk.

“We are focused on main-taining our core operational and safety responsibilities,” Huerta told a House ap-propriations subcommittee hearing on the agency’s 2014 budget request. “We will not do anything to compromise safety.” REUTERS

FAA. Flight delays due to furloughs not as bad as some once feared

The FAA has said that it will furlough 47,000 employees for up to 11 days through the end of the fi scal year in September. Nearly 13,000 of those employees are air-traffi c controllers. / GETTY IMAGES

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Dear friends in our community:

The 117th Boston Marathon should have been a time to celebrate

the strength of the human spirit. Instead, an act of senseless violence

marred one of our city’s proudest traditions.

However, the human spirit triumphed anyway: our first responders leapt into action without regard for their own wellbeing. Marathon runners continued past the finish line to donate blood to our hospitals. Strangers were welcomed into our homes. In the end, the world truly saw Boston’s heart in action.

As the only statewide anti-hunger organization in Massachusetts, Project Bread has relied on that same heart for more than four decades. Your generosity enables us to develop and fund programs that provide children, families, and individuals in need with access to healthy food in their own communities, across our state.

On Sunday, May 5th, 2013, thousands of people will participate in Project Bread’s 45th Walk for Hunger. This one-day fundraising event is a meaningful symbol of neighbors working together to help neighbors, and provides critical support for over 430 local anti-hunger initiatives.

But this year, we want The Walk for Hunger to be a powerful time of healing for Boston, too. We will remember the words of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. “Darkness cannot drive out darkness: only light can do that.” We are going to walk these streets together with pride and joy and celebrate the strength of our spirit, and our deep commitment to one another.

If you ran in the Marathon, whether you were able to reach the finish line or not, we welcome you to wear your shirt or number and complete your journey with us—and bring your family and friends, too. If you served as a first responder or opened your home to those in need, we welcome you to walk with us so we can celebrate the selfless work you did that day.

And if you can’t attend on May 5th, we invite you to join in our Virtual Walk for Hunger: a simple way to make a difference in our community, no matter where you are.

For those who face hunger in our state, May 5th is the single most important day of the year. For Project Bread, it’s an important opportunity to continue providing for those in need. And for Boston, it’s a chance to take proudly to our streets again and show the world what we’ve known for 45 years: here, we take care of each other.

Sincerely,

Ellen ParkerExecutive Director, Project Bread www.projectbread.org/walk

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10www.metro.usThursday, April 25, 2013 NEWS

In one of Mexico’s most dangerous states, bravery is trending. Valor Por Tamaulipas (“Courage for Tamaulipas”) is a Facebook and Twitter account that reports on violence in Tamaulipas, the northeastern Mexican state that borders Texas stricken by violence car-ried out by rival drug cartels. Launched in January 2012, the crime watchdog posts citizen complaints and so-called “risk situations” related to the region’s organized crime.

Last month, the anonymous administrator of the watchdog project reportedly shut down its site after flyers offering a re-ward of 600,000 pesos ($46,000) for information on his identity were distributed in Ciudad Vic-toria, the capital of Tamaulipas. Undeterred, the blogger kept tweeting to his followers “to the very end,” he said.

How did you get the idea for this project?I am just continuing the work of a Facebook page called Un grito de ayuda por Tamaulipas (“A cry for help for Tamaulipas”), but that page decided to discontinue publishing ‘risk situations’ after the administrator of a similar site in Nuevo Laredo [in Tamaulipas state] was killed. I first decided to make a page reporting missing people, and then I started to publish risk situations and expose impunity and injustice.

Why did you create the ac-count?To be honest, I think that I made the account because I was powerless at not being able to help in another way, to see how organized crime chooses who will live and can inculcate fear in everybody.

Recently you announced that you would close your account. Why did you decide not to do it?Yes, I did announce it. I thought I could create a new account, a safer one with less focus on organized crime, but it was not possible. I had to keep it open to answer ques-tions from my followers on Twitter. I knew that if I stopped it completely, that would be a victory for the criminals.

Risk. Anonymous blogger for Valor Por Tamaulipas vows to keep exposing drug cartel violence despite death threats.

Blogger spites drug cartels : ‘I’ll be here to the very end’

Mexican soldiers and members of the Federal Police patrol the area of murders in Tizapan, Jalisco, Mexico on Sept. 16, 2012, in an apparent revenge killing between powerful drug gangs. / GETTY IMAGES

VxT blog

Organized crime with or without VxT keeps caus-ing violence, but at least with VxT it’s likely that some crimes are reported.

JOSÉ LEBEÑA [email protected]

Shooting

Five people murdered in Illinois town, suspect dead

Five people, including two small boys, were shot to death in their home early yesterday in Manchester, Ill., before the suspect was killed in a shoot-out with police, state police said.

Illinois State Police also said that a 6-year-old girl was critically injured in the shooting and taken to a hospital. State officials identified the suspect as Rick Smith, 43, who had a criminal history including reckless homicide.

State police did not discuss any motive but told reporters that the victims

were related and included an infant boy, another male child, two women and a man. Officials did not ex-pect to release names until today.

State Police Lt. Colonel Todd Kilby told a news con-ference broadcast on CLTV that Smith forced his way into the home through a back door, and used a shot-

gun “fired at close range” to commit the killings. He took the 6-year-old injured victim out of the home and handed her to a neighbor before fleeing by car, police said.

Two bodies were found in one bedroom, two in a second bedroom, and the man in the hallway, police said. REUTERS

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2CULTURE

Twitter feed

Checking in with some of

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THE WORDDorothy Robinson’s take on the world of gossip

DOROTHY ROBINSON@dorothyatmetro

[email protected]

1 Nothing makes me roll my eyes harder than the phrase “born-again virgin,” unless it’s a celebrity proclaiming, “We’re going to be married forever!” As it turns out, Sean Lowe, who was known as the Virgin Bachelor on this sea-son of “The Bachelor” for his insistence of not fornicating until marriage (again) won’t be offered up as sacrifice to the gods anytime soon.

Two sources confirm in the new issue of Life & Style that Sean did in fact sleep with his fiancee, Catherine Giudici, while the show was still airing. “Yes, they definitely had sex,” a “Bachelor insider” report-edly revealed to Life & Style. “The first time was the night he proposed in Thailand.” A second source close to

Catherine confirms the fling, saying, “Sean and Catherine have hooked up already. The whole born-again-virgin thing is a bunch of B.S. It’s just something he made up for the show.”

Wait. A network made up something on a reality TV show in order to get ratings? Stop blowing my mind, Life & Style!

The ‘Virgin Bachelor’ is a virgin no longer

Aguilera is lookin’ skinny Christina Aguilera showed off her slimmer shape (for the record, you looked just fi ne just the way you were, girl) at TIME’S 100 Most Infl uential People In The World gala at Jazz at Lincoln Center on Tuesday in New York City. The singer partied with such bold-faced names as Lena Dunham, Claire Danes, Arianna Huffi ngton, Jimmy Kimmel, Jimmy Fallon and Justin Timberlake at the annual event. PHOTO BY KEVIN MAZUR, WIREIMAGE FOR TIME

3

Will J.Lo be back

on ‘Idol’?

The folks behind “American Idol” have apparently been having second thoughts about this season’s judges, as producers were report-edly mulling over the idea of bringing back former judge Jennifer Lopez to replace Mariah Carey in a bid to stop the reality show’s ratings free fall, according to The Hollywood Reporter. Sources say producers had even be-gun negotiations with Lopez to return as soon as possible, but apparently Carey got wind of the talks and threat-ened to sue. The show’s producers are reportedly still hoping for a Lopez guest spot for the show’s finale and are considering replacing the entire judging panel for next season. Last week’s perfor-mance episode brought in the show’s worst ratings in its 12-year history.

I just think “American Idol” should stop while it’s still slightly ahead. I mean, if Mariah Carey can’t bring in the ratings, who can? Betty White? 2

Bieber and Gomez’s make-out sessions

Do Justin Bieber and Selena Gomez’s make-out sessions during their reunion in Europe this week mean the couple are back together? Maybe, maybe not, according to Us Weekly. “They have a crazy connection,” a source close to Bieber says, but “they aren’t back together.” Another source says it’s anyone’s guess: “Who knows with them?” If they are back together, Bieber can take the credit, accord-ing to a Gomez pal: “Justin pursued Selena and she gave in,” the source says.

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14www.metro.usThursday, April 25, 2013 ENTERTAINMENT

‘Beowulf’ is in the wrong place at the wrong time

Had it opened before the Bos-ton Marathon bombing, “Be-owulf – A Thousand Years of Baggage” might be a different experience.

Unfortunately, it did not. It opened shortly after, mak-ing the image of a giant, dis-membered and bloodied arm — and the subsequent dia-logue about a mother hold-ing her wounded child — hit just a little too close to home.

One hopes that this prob-lem can be fixed with time. Because it’s a smartly irrev-erent show — and a delight-fully light reinterpretation of the weighty, epic poem — that would benefit from the full attention of a playful audience with a few glasses of mead under its collective belt. The cast is eager to en-gage, if only the crowd were in a state of mind to be en-gaged.

In the time-worn text, Be-owulf is “the ultimate mas-culine male,” but here, Jason Craig imbues him with the essence of a bumbling, star pro wrestler. Grendel (Rick Burkhardt), meanwhile, could easily do double duty as a demented, cartoon villain.

Ultimately, despite the most valiant efforts of all, this violent tale with dark, easy-to-reinterpret lines like “it is better to retaliate than to mourn” end up feeling misplaced. It’s the wrong place and the wrong time.

Bad vibes. The carnage in Oberon’s production hits a little too close to home.

Jessica Jelliff e and Rick Burkhardt give it their best shot. / EVGENIA ELISEEVA

Plot points

Monster mayhem

Beowulf travels to Denmark to help King Hrothgar, whose men are being killed by a menac-ing monster Grendel. He then does battle with Grendel’s mother, who also perishes. Later, he takes on a fire-breathing dragon and they both die, leaving his people with plenty of riches but no protection.

If you go

‘Beowulf – A Thousand Years of Baggage’

Through May 5Club Oberon2 Arrow St., Cambridge $25-$55, 617-547-8300www.AmericanRepertoryTheater.org

NICK [email protected]

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No More Drama

JONATHAN ALPERTWWW.JONATHANALPERT.COM

Jonathan Alpert is a licensed psychotherapist and executive coach. His book, “Be Fearless: Change Your Life in 28 Days,” is available now. Email him your questions at [email protected] and follow him on Twitter: @JonathanAlpert.

It’s not surprising that the person with whom you spent three years of your life is still on your mind a year later. He’s someone you likely confided in and shared a life with — some-one with whom you thought you had a future. I can only speculate that you moved from one relationship to the next far too quickly. When a relation-ship ends, time is needed to grieve, reflect and process so that issues don’t go unresolved and spill into the next one. Clearly, this is what’s happen-

ing with you.To get over your ex and find

closure, take responsibility for your actions. Ask yourself: “How has my behavior and attitude impacted us? If I could go back and do it again, what would I change about myself?”

Now is the time to own up to these things.

As long as you continue to view the relationship through an old lens, you’ll continue to be held hostage by the past. The issue here is one of con-trol: A grudge leads to anger and resentment that ener-gizes you, giving the illusion of control. The grudge may also be a way of holding your ex responsible for the downfall of the relationship. To shake this thinking, ask yourself: “Can I change the situation now? What do I gain by holding a grudge a year later? What will I gain by letting go?”

Finally, pretend you’re packing for a trip and you can only bring essential items. Would you take a healthy, positive attitude and a sense of humor or would you pack anger and resentment? The lat-ter will only weigh you down. Lighten the load by bringing only what’s beneficial to you and your new relationship.

— Metro does not endorse the opinions of the author, or any opinions

expressed on its pages.

THE LEFTOVER BLAME GAME

Keeping the toxic feelings from a previous relationship alive will only poison the current one. / WAVEBREAK MEDIA

The question

I broke up with my boy-friend last year and then got involved with my cur-rent boyfriend. I don’t have contact with my ex, but I hold a grudge against him and get angry when I think about him. It aff ects my current relationship because I blame my new guy for is-sues related to my ex. How can I move on for good?

Quoted

“As long as you continue to view the relationship through an old lens, you’ll continue to be held hostage by the past.”

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16www.metro.usThursday, April 25, 2013

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Tonight, 9 p.m.Great Scott1222 Comm. Ave., Allston$10, 18+, 800-745-3000www.ticketmaster.comThe ‘Nawlins duo’s electro twee/indie pop favors atmo-sphere over hooks. Songs just sort of chill on a groove, giving the sense you’re not supposed to listen to them so much as hang out in them. Generationals play Great Scott tonight. / PROVIDED

‘It was like the music was just waiting to happen’

The particulars of the first time that Ben Harper and Charlie Musselwhite played music to-gether are almost too perfect. During a session for John Lee Hooker, Harper played gui-tar and Musselwhite played harmonica on a song called “Burnin’ Hell,” which appeared on Hooker’s “Best of Friends.”

Playing with a blues legend like Hooker solidified their integrity, playing a song titled “Burnin’ Hell” solidified their badassness, and playing on an album titled “Best of Friends,” well, you get the picture.

The two musicians guested on each other’s albums over the years, but it wasn’t until this year’s “Get Up!” that they fully ignited the creative spark that began in the late 1990s.

“We’re both so busy, but we’ve both been wanting to get in the studio together for so long,” says Musselwhite. “Ben did one tune on an album of mine, and I did two or three on an album of his once, but we never had time to actually do a whole album together.”

And when they did finally get into the studio, it was exact-ly what Hooker had ordained it to be.

“It was like the music was just waiting to happen. It just came pouring out of us. It was real spontaneous and it hap-

pened real fast,” recalls Mus-selwhite.

“Get Up!” is a collection of 10 blues songs that feels so classic that it’s not immediately clear these are all brand-new re-cordings. “No overdubs except for the girls’ voices,” Mussel-white shares eagerly.

Musselwhite wails on the harmonica and Harper lyrically delivers hard old truths in new ways. Though there are more than 25 years between the two, the elder musician says Harper has an old soul.

“He’s got some mud on his shoes,” chuckles Musselwhite about Harper.

Ben Harper, left, and Charlie Musselwhite are at The Orpheum next week. / DANNY CLINCH

Blues. Charlie Musselwhite talks about how he was just destined to collaborate with Ben Harper.

Coincidental homage

‘Believe’ in Zeppelin When we point out to Musselwhite that a har-monica riff on the song “I Don’t Believe a Word You Say” is reminiscent of the Led Zeppelin ver-sion of “When the Levee Breaks,” he seems sur-prised that we’d mention that song.

“We do that tune,” he exclaims about his and Harper’s setlist, “and to tell you the truth, I didn’t know that tune until we started doing it! I knew the Memphis Minnie version, but not the Led Zeppelin version.”

If you go

An Evening of the Blues featuring Ben Harper and Charlie MusselwhiteMay 4The OrpheumOne Hamilton Place$38-$78, 800-745-3000www.livenation.com

IAMX / PROVIDED

PAT [email protected]

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Quoted

“We’re all about adapting to the diff erent environments that the guests create.”Cali Gold, manager of Spoke Wine Bar in Somerville

The opening of Spoke Wine Bar in Somerville late last month continued the increasingly fine food- and drink-centric neighborhood’s expansion. In other words, Davis Square just got a little Davis Squarier. It’s a welcome addition. The space, with 12 tables brushing up against a 10-seater bar that sweeps back toward a small open kitchen, is a little joint that thinks big in its sourcing of unique wines and its full, dynamic bar program.

“When we first started

training, and talking about spirits and cocktails, the first thing I said is that when you walk into a bar, it’s obvious right away when it doesn’t have a point of view, doesn’t know who it is,” bar manager Cali Gold explained.

It’s first and foremost a wine bar here, but it’s also a bar that’s committed to serving beers you can’t find elsewhere, along with well-crafted cocktails. There’s no doubt that Gold can back up her latter point. She comes to Spoke after a few years at

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Page 21: 20130425_us_boston

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What they’re pouring

Drink this

Bartender Sam Kara-chi proffered a pour of the Bourgogne Cote Chalonnaise Les Clous to pair with a crudo. The chardonnay, exposed to oxidation, takes on a funky brininess that makes it well-suited for oysters, he said. Gold is more into the

Frappato. “It can have a light body and be really summery, so it bridges the gap between white and red for those who don’t like rose,” she said. “It’s one my favorite characteristics of wine, when it smells one way and tastes another.’ I joke that I have a crush on it. I want to introduce it to everybody I know.”

Drink in South Boston, the city’s preeminent cocktail bar for those who know that whiskey slopped into a glass of coke is not a cocktail. She, along with the rest of the staff, is extraordinarily knowl-edgeable on the wine list as well. Ultimately, though, ac-cording to Gold, the bar here is what you make of it.

“We’re all about adapting to the different environments that the guests create,” she said. “Whether they want to taste through all the white wines and decide what’s best — or tell me what they’ve had in the past and I can whip out a craft cocktail that I know.”

This being a wine bar, however, I stuck to an ar-ray of well-chosen glasses — although the very rare Mezcalero #4 was hard to resist. Many of the glass pours are Italian, complementing the kitchen’s steady output of charcuterie and cheeses. The Vigneto Saetti Lambrusco was a highlight — tart, crisp, cold and effervescent — as was Valle dell’Acate Frap-pato, a complex wine with a nose of hibiscus and notes of both black pepper and black cherry. The bar is your oyster at Spoke. / ERIN BALDASSARI

Page 22: 20130425_us_boston

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20www.metro.usThursday, April 25, 2013 GOING OUT

Five. Reasons to go seea movie this weekend

1‘Pain & Gain’ We wanted another Michael Bay film.

And for our sins we got one.

2‘The Big Wedding’ Robert De Niro and Diane Keaton

and Amanda Seyfried and Katherine Heigl and — why not? — Robin Williams and Susan Sarandon (plus Topher Grace) star in this movie about some big nuptials.

3‘Mud’ The latest from Jeff Nichols (“Take Shelter”)

sidelines Michael Shannon into a smaller role, favoring Matthew McConaughey as a wanted man hiding out on an island. Reese Witherspoon, when she is sober, puts in a few scenes.

4‘Angel’s Share’ The latest from English filmmaker

Ken Loach (“The Wind That Shakes the Barley”) finds him in one of his semi-comic moods, this time with Glasweigan working class-types trying to steal some rare malt whisky from

a Highland distillery.

5‘Renoir’ Like Mike Leigh’s Gilbert and Sullivan

picture “Topsy-Turvy,” this look at painter Pierre-August Renoir is a portrait of only a specific slither of the artist’s life. In this case it’s a portion of his last years, when he was breaking in a new (nude) model and hanging with future filmmaker son Jean. MATT PRIGGE

Mark Wahlberg has muscles in “Pain & Gain.” / PARAMOUNT PICTURES

Catering to the vegan crowd Boston has its share of award-winning chefs, and Kristen Thibeault, chef and owner of Lynn-based vegan catering company Kombu Kitchen, recently joined their ranks. Thibeault proved she could hold her own among chefs of all creeds when she won San Pellegrino’s Almost Famous chef competition in Napa — which is proof that it’s no longer weird to be vegan.

Thibeault, 46, became vegan following success-ful treatment for cancer. Indeed, the American Cancer Society recommends a plant-based diet.

The proof in the vegan pudding lies in savvy preparation and intoxicating flavor, as found in Kombu’s pumpkin polenta with apple compote. The sweetness comes from Thibeault’s custom blend of Stevia, raw agave and xylitol, with just a hint of maple and molasses. Spicing combines cinnamon, cardamom, clove and nut-meg, enhancing the sweeter

notes nicely.Napa’s winning dish

was porcini-crusted “sweet-breads” made of seitan, a protein mostly found in wheat. Kombu’s current protein menu items include sauteed-glazed tempeh made

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And if this all sounds a bit earthy, know this: You’ll be getting a dose of tasty vita-min oomph with each dish.

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Besides catering for events, Kombu also provides personal food service: boxes of gorgeous meals delivered to your doorstep or desk. Any dish that needs reheating is packed in BPA-free plastic. Deliveries are usually bulk-buy, like the spring sampler of three entrees paired with a 32-ounce fresh juice. Try the Spring Special ($69), a three-course menu paired with Unconditional Love juice (beet, red cabbage and blueberry). Kombu Kitchen 617-939-9138 www.kombukitchen.com

NOSH ONLINDA [email protected]

Page 23: 20130425_us_boston

21LETTERS AND GAMES

As the world’s largest global newspaper, Metro has more than 18 million readers in over 100 major cities in 23 countries • Metro Boston 320 Congress Street 5th Fl., Boston, MA 02210 • main 617-210-7905 • to advertise 617-210-7905 • National and Executive Sales Director Ed Abrams • U.S. Circulation Director Joseph Lauletta • U.S. Marketing Director Wilf Maunoir • e-mail sales [email protected] • e-mail distribution [email protected] • Advertisements appearing in Metro are published in good faith. Metro does not endorse and makes no representations about any of the advertising content appearing in its pages. Metro is not responsible for any loss or damage whatsoever resulting from readers using the services of its advertisers. Readers should exercise caution when replying

to advertisements, especially those which require any form of payment, and, where necessary, should seek independent legal advice. Editor in Chief Tony Metcalf, [email protected] @edinchief metro • Managing Editor Dorothy Robinson, [email protected] • City Editor Jill Gadsby, [email protected] • Sports Editor Matt Burke, [email protected] • Books/Parenting/Gossip/Travel Editor Dorothy Robinson, [email protected] • Home/Style/Food Editor Tina Chadha, [email protected] • Film/Tech Editor Matt Prigge, [email protected] • Wellbeing/Going Out Editor Meredith Engel, [email protected] • Music Editor Pat Healy, [email protected] • Careers/Education/Dating Editor Julia Furlan, [email protected] • Copy Chief/Theater Editor Tracie Michelle Murphy, [email protected]

Sudoku: Easy and hard

How to playFill in the grid, so that every row, every column and every 3x3 box contains the digits 1-9. There is no math involved. You solve the puzzle with rea-soning and logic.

HoroscopeLetters

The future is nowRe: “Let the future be a surprise” (Metro, April 23) Here’s to the future! To letter writer Ralph Brescia, who believes no one can predict the future: Apparently you have never read any of the works of Jules Verne, H. G. Wells, Edward Bellamy, Ar-thur C. Clarke, Ray Bradbury, James Maxwell Alvin Toffler, Theodore Sturgeon and the granddaddy of them all, Leon-ardo Da Vinci, who left a book of drawings behind for future

scientist to build starting with the ball bearing that made his marvelous inventions work. ALAN JACOBS, VIA E-MAIL

Editor’s note: On the other hand, we’ve all been waiting patiently for our hoverboards, warp drives, alien paramours and positronic androids. Come on, science!

Butter trumps everythingRe: “Sugar does not make a healthy snack” (Metro,

April 24) Come on, lighten up Sara Kayeum! Nutritional yeast on dry popcorn is not my idea of a fun snack. Why not add some fish oil while we’re at it? Is there no room left in this world for a few sug-ary, buttery treats?STEPHEN GRAHAM, VIA E-MAIL

Speak out about GosnellThe press remains fairly silent on the Kermit Gosnell case. It has ignored the utterly gruesome story of

this man’s acts of infanti-cide because that story is politically inconvenient. The press’s support for abortion over the years, despite the fact that it is morally and scientifically equivalent to murder, is clearly the reason. Newspapers have no problem running gruesome stories when it suits their ideology.JEFF ESTANO, VIA E-MAIL

[email protected] them a brief as possible, preferably under 100 words. Metro reserves the right to edit all letters. Please include your name and contact info.

Crossword

Across1 “Innerspace” lead

6 Drops

11 Gamy

14 Jiff y

15 Basketball move

16 Opposite of “post-”

17 Gulf nation

18 Prince Arn’s mom

19 -- kwon do

20 Markets

22 Like some alleys

24 Is sympathetic

28 Unisex attire

29 Vein opposite

30 Whips up

32 Olympian -- Devers

33 Video game pioneer

35 Monorail

39 French I verb

40 Corroded, as acid

41 Verne captain

42 Take it easy

43 Cover with crumbs

45 Thickening agent

46 Seesaws (hyph.)

48 Neglectful

50 Trinket collector

53 Diplomacy

54 Merlin of the NFL

55 Baby chick sounds

57 Carbondale sch.

58 Paid homage

60 Dubuque native

65 Biol. or astron.

66 Delete a fi le

67 Year in school

68 To date

69 Was adventurous

70 Vikings

Down1 Amt.

2 Ending for “depart”

3 Objective

4 Decorate cupcakes

5 More compressed

6 Fiery gems

7 Pepper grinder

8 Composer Charles --

9 Booster seat user

10 Fixed

11 Of the eyes

12 Blunt

13 Looks after the hens

21 New Age singer

23 Abbott or Costello

(2 wds.)

24 Tavern brew

25 Fit to be tied

26 Wakes up

27 Old communication

system

28 Do a slalom

30 Sorts socks

31 Survey fi nding

34 Poi base

36 “Final answer?” asker

37 Pile up

38 “Tru” Tony winner

43 Top seed’s reward

44 Roof problem

47 Acted like a pig

49 Naval offi cer

50 Like fallen logs

51 Tea-party crasher

52 NASA outfi t (hyph.)

53 Honored in style

55 Fall fruit

56 Ultimatum word

59 D.C. gun lobby

61 Galleon cargo

62 Series of battles

63 Come-ons

64 Born as

7 1 5

8 1 2 6

9 7 4

8 6 3 9

5 7

1 2 8 4

1 4 7

3 5 6 7

7 3 1

1 3

6 3 8 5 1

7 2 3 8

2 6

3 4 7 2

4 1

5 8 1 6

4 5 9 2 7

6 2

Taurus | April 21 - May 21.Strive to be cooperative when you fi nd yourself dealing with a group of friends. If you’re self-serving, others will follow suit and no one will benefi t.

Gemini | May 22 - June 20. You have the ability to achieve some important objectives, as long as you don’t spread yourself too thin. Trying to juggle several projects may not be the best idea.

Cancer | June 21 - July 22. When talking with friends about something political, you should be extra careful. If you fi nd that you’re endorsing a position that diff ers from theirs, walk away fast.

Leo | July 23 - Aug. 22. Getting along with people from all walks of life is one of your better assets. Be careful, however, because this ability might not apply when dealing with authority fi gures.

Virgo | Aug. 23 - Sept. 22. Methods that work well for you might not do so for others. Don’t try to force your way of doing things.

Libra | Sept. 23 - Oct. 22. There is nothing wrong with your earning potential, but you might not be too adept at keeping what you make. Don’t allow what you worked so hard for to slip through your fi ngers.

Scorpio | Oct. 23 - Nov. 21. Although taking charge comes naturally to you, don’t ruffle the feathers of those who want to express themselves differently.

Sagittarius | Nov. 22 - Dec. 21. Friends will help you to a limited degree, but don’t ask them to take care of things that you should be handling yourself.

Capricorn | Dec. 22 - Jan 20. You won’t be disappointed if you build your hopes on a realistic basis. The opposite will be true, however, if your expectations are predicated upon receiving a free ride.

Aquarius | Jan. 21 - Feb 18. Certain conditions that have an influence on your finances and/or career could become quite complex. Handle your affairs with extreme care and delicate attention to detail.

Pisces | Feb. 19 - March 20. Provided no one challenges you, you will be a most delightful companion. Those who dare to do so, however, could see a totally diff erent side of your personality.

Aries | March 21 - April 20.Walk away from any kind of joint venture the moment you see that not everyone has anted up equally, especially if you’re one of those asked to pony up. BERNICE BEDE OSOL

Yesterday’s answer

Crossword

You can use your smartphone to discover today’s crossword

answers — right now! Download and open the Blippar app

on your smartphone and hold the screen over the puzzle.

It’s that easy!

Page 24: 20130425_us_boston

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22www.metro.usThursday, April 25, 2013 SPORTS

3SPORTS

No. 1

Chiefs (2-14)Eric Fisher, OT, Central Michigan — You could literally fl ip a coin when choosing between Fisher and Texas A&M tackle Luke Joeckel, who may be the safer choice coming from a big-name college program. New head coach Andy Reid never really likes to do things the easy way, however.

2013 NFL MOCK DRAFT | by Mike Greger

No. 2

Jaguars(2-14)Dion Jordan, OLB, Oregon — Speed is an intriguing selling point on draft day, and Jordan has plenty of it. Combine that with the Jags’ nonexistent pass rush and this pick could be gone in 60 seconds.

Quick picks

• No. 14 — Panthers: Kenny

Vaccaro, S, Texas

• No. 15 — Saints: Ziggy

Ansah, DE, BYU

• No. 16 — Rams: Sheldon

Richardson, DT, Mizzou

• No. 17 — Steelers:

Jarvis Jones, LB, UGA

• No. 18 — Cowboys: Alec

Ogletree, LB, UGA

• No. 19 — Giants: Xavier

Rhodes, CB, FSU

• No. 20 — Bears:

Des Trufant, DE, WU

• No. 21 — Bengals: Tavon

Austin, WR, WVU

• No. 22 — Rams: Eddie Lacy,

RB, Alabama

• No. 23 — Vikings:

Sylvester Williams, T, UNC

• No. 24 — Colts: Eric Reid,

S, LSU

• No. 25 — Vikings: Keenan

Allen, WR, California

• No. 26 — Packers: Matt

Elam, S, Florida

• No. 27 — Texans: Cordarelle

Patterson, WR, Tennessee

• No. 28 — Broncos: Bjoern

Werner, DE, Florida State

• No. 29 — Patriots: Jamar

Taylor, CB, Boise State

• No. 30 — Falcons: Menelik

Watson, OT, Florida State

• No. 31 — 49ers: Zach Ertz,

TE, Stanford

• No. 32 — Ravens: Manti

Te’o, LB, Notre Dame

No. 3

Raiders(4-12)Luke Joeckel, OT, Texas A&M — Rumor has it that Oakland is high on Sharrif Floyd, but if the most fundamentally sound tackle in the draft slips to them, it would be way too good to pass up.

No. 4

Eagles(4-12)Lane Johnson, OT, Okla-homa — This guy has Chip Kelly written all over him. He’s a fast, hybrid lineman who wouldn’t get gassed in an up-tempo off ense. The Eagles could even put him in tight-end packages.

No. 5

Lions(4-12)Sharrif Floyd, DT, Florida — The Lions would be drooling if Floyd is still here at the No. 5 pick. If he lives up to the hype, the combination of him and Ndamukong Suh could go down in NFL history as an all-time combo.

No. 7

Cardinals(5-11)Jonathan Cooper, OG, North Carolina — Arizona is hop-ing the addition of Carson Palmer is enough to bolster the off ense. Old school coach Bruce Arians will be cautious and select the best off ensive lineman left.

No. 6

Browns(5-11)Star Lotulelei, DT, Utah — When you’re the Browns and haven’t won anything — ever — you have to go with best player available. Lotulelei would’ve gone No. 1 overall before the discov-ery of health concerns.

No. 8

Bills(6-10)Ryan Nassib, QB, Syracuse— He’s supplanted West Virginia’s Geno Smith as the top quarterback in a weak quarterback class. Plus, he played under new Bills head coach Doug Marrone while at Syracuse.

No. 9

Jets(6-10)Dee Milliner, CB, Alabama— We all know the injury his-tory and resulting concerns. We also know how talented he is. The Jets are desperate for corner help after trading Darrelle Revis and pull the trigger here.

No. 10

Titans(6-10)D.J. Fluker, OT, Alabama — His Alabama teammate Chance Warmack may be the better NFL prospect on the line, but Fluker plays tackle and, as “The Blind Side” taught us, that’s the most important position in football.

No. 12

Dolphins(7-9)Tyler Eifert, TE, Notre Dame— It’s rare to take a tight end this high, but Eifert is a beast — and we all know how much head coach Joe Philbin relied on beastly tight end Jermichael Finley in Green Bay.

No. 11

Chargers(7-9)Chance Warmack, OG, Alabama — This would be a home run for the Chargers who have gone on record say-ing they need better protec-tion for Philip Rivers. Warmack is known for his dominating strength.

No. 13

Jets(6-10)Barkevious Mingo, OLB, LSU— Head coach Rex Ryan is reportedly in love with Mingo, who possesses great speed off the edge and is a pass swatter, a la J.J. Watt. The Jets might take him at No. 9 if they decide to reach.

MLB

Sox dump A’s 6-5 in matinee The Red Sox held off the hard-charging A’s yester-day afternoon at Fenway Park, beating Oakland, 6-5.

Jon Lester (4-0) picked up the win for Boston while Andrew Bailey picked up his fifth save of the season. Stephen Drew had a two-run triple. METRO

NFL

Shanahan to be more cautious with RG III

Redskins coach Mike Sha-nahan said yesterday that QB Robert Griffin III will “never play if he’s not 100 percent.” The coach was criticized this past January for not removing an injured Griffin from a playoff game. METRO

NBA

Garnett ready to go for Game 3 Kevin Garnett is expected to be in the Celtics’ starting lineup for Game 3 of the team’s playoff matchup against the Knicks tomor-row at TD Garden despite suffering a mild hip pointer in Game 2.

“It was affecting him,” Celtics head coach Doc Riv-ers said. METRO

Feeling a draft

Draft moves to Brooklyn

The NBA Draft is heading

back to New York City for

the fi rst time since 2010

— but not to Manhattan.

The NBA announced that

the Barclays Center in

Brooklyn will host this

June’s draft.

Kevin Garnett / GETTY IMAGES

Page 25: 20130425_us_boston

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23SPORTS

Voice of the Patriots

The Patriots and 98.5 The

Sports Hub yesterday an-

nounced that Milton, Mass.,

resident Bob Socci will replace

the legendary Gil Santos as the

team’s play-by-play announcer.

Santos stepped down from his

position earlier this year after

36 seasons of calling Patriots

games on the radio.

• Socci had been the radio

play-by-play man for Navy

football for the past 16 years

and was the lead announcer

for Patriot League college

basketball on CBS Sports

Network. Familiar names like

Comcast’s Gary Tanguay, Bos-

ton College play-by-play man

and former WEEI personality

Jon Meterparel and former

Red Sox and current ESPN

announcer Sean McDonough

were rumored to have been

in the running for the job.

Home-grown receivers have never been a Pats strong suit NFL Draft. For the fi rst time since 2006, Tom Brady and the Patriots enter a season without Wes Welker.

It would be nice if Tom Brady had a few new toys to play with this season.

The Patriots lost his favor-ite target, Wes Welker, to the rival Broncos. They also cut Brandon Lloyd.

Nobody seems to be sure what the extent of Rob Gronkowski’s arm injury is, and fellow tight end Aaron Hernandez has an injury his-tory himself.

The Patriots did sign Danny Amendola and Don-ald Jones, but it’s hard to get too excited over that.

With the NFL Draft set for to-night, some Pats fans hope a wide receiver is taken in the first round.

Bad news for those folks: The Patriots haven’t drafted a wide receiver in the first round since Terry Glenn in 1997.

And here’s a list of the wide receivers New England has taken in the second or third rounds since 2002: De-ion Branch, Bethel Johnson, Chad Jackson, Brandon Tate and Taylor Price. Aside from Branch, it’s an ugly list.

Nonetheless here are three wide receivers New England could be interested in:

Justin Hunter, TennesseeIf you want one reason that the Patriots could be interested in Hunter, look no further than his frame.

Standing at 6-foot-4 and 196 pounds, Hunter has the pro-totypical build of an outside threat that the Patriots have lacked since Randy Moss was traded away. Hunter tore his ACL in 2011 but returned in 2012 to make 73 receptions for 1,083 yards and nine TDs for the Volunteers. His height and speed combina-tion make him a worthy candidate for the Pats in the first round. We can already picture Brady telling him to go up and get it.

Robert Woods, USCAt an even 6 feet, Woods is smaller then Hunter and less of a deep threat, which might not be what the Patri-ots are looking for. But his skills aren’t debatable. In his junior season, he racked up 76 receptions for 846 yards and 11 touchdowns with an

ankle issue. His sophomore season was even better: 111 receptions, 1,292 yards and 15 touchdowns. Woods is a late first-round candidate.

Quinton Patton, Louisiana TechIf New England skips out on a wide receiver in the first round — very pos-sible — they could take less of a gamble on Patton, who put together a strong career at Louisiana Tech, in the second or third. Patton seems to have the skills that enable him to be a threat inside and out, and experts say he’s a hard worker who does his job well even with-out the ball.

JAMESTOSCANO [email protected]

Danny Amendola alone won’t likely replace Wes Welker. / GETTY IMAGES

Page 26: 20130425_us_boston

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Thursday, April 25, 2013

Page 27: 20130425_us_boston

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