PORTLAND, Ore. – The Portland Timbers have signed T2 attacker Kyle Linhares to a short-term agreement ahead of tonight’s home match against Austin FC, the club announced today. Kickoff for the Saturday, March 1 match is set for 7:30pm PT at Providence Park with a broadcast available on MLS Season Pass on the Apple TV app in English and Spanish as well as local radio broadcasts 750 The Game (English) and La GranD 1150 AM/93.5 FM (Spanish) Timbers and Austin kickoff at 7:30pm PT on Mar Linhares joined the Timbers for the 2025 Coachella Valley Invitational preseason tournament and notably started in their first exhibition match against the San Jose Earthquakes notching an assist on Portland’s first goal the 22-year-old attacker tallied five goals and four assists in 28 appearances (21 starts) in MLS NEXT Pro play for T2 Linhares was drafted 40th overall by the Timbers in the MLS SuperDraft 2024 out of Georgetown where he scored seven goals and contributed 18 assists in his 76 appearances (53 starts) for the Hoyas a club may sign a player from its affiliate (MLS NEXT Pro) to a maximum of four Short-Term Agreements (up to four-day contracts) each season (maximum of 16 days) An individual player may be included on up to four MLS league season match rosters each season that player may appear in no more than two MLS league season matches An individual player may appear in any number of non-league games during the terms of his four Short-Term Agreements A capsule collection made to keep the spirit of Soccer City USA Alive Available for a limited time online and in-stadium   has granted legal rights to the waves at the mouth of the Dolce River the first instance in which a government has conferred rights upon part of the ocean The city is aiming to better protect its coastal waters in the wake of the 2015 collapse of the Fundão dam. The dam held back more than 10 billion gallons of waste at an iron mine upstream, and when it failed, a wave of sludge poured into the Doce River. Over time, the sludge built up at the mouth of the waterway weakening the waves that had long drawn surfers to Linhares The waves were only restored in 2022 after a flood cleared out the buildup In June of this year, the city approved a bill declaring that its waves have the right to continue breaking perfectly at the mouth of the Doce River, and in August it codified the measure, Hakai reports The new law requires Linhares to protect the natural flow of the river and to guard it from pollution 80 percent of national initiatives recognizing the rights of nature can be found in the Americas Jared Kushner Has Big Plans for Delta of Europe’s Last Wild River Douglas and David Linhares grew up in the tropical The young brothers came of age surrounded by family among the rolling rich Colonial history and the vibrant family-and-food-centric culture of Latin America Mom and dad worked in the seasonal hospitality industry ping-ponging between summers in the Catskills and winters in Southern Florida however the Linhares decided to settle in one place welcoming environment – a place with a strong school system that was family-oriented and offered opportunities to small businesses We caught up with Douglas and David at the stunning and newly-renovated Ipanema Grille And while they dished poetically about their roots their family and their undying love for Scranton we were able to slip in a few questions like Why NEPA we’ve been here for twenty-five wonderful years David: I stepped away for about two and a half years when I was working out in Dallas, Texas. And I loved Dallas. It’s a beautiful city and, man, there’s a lot to do there, but the feeling I always got there was that it’s very commercial. Lots of industry, lots of opportunity, but from my perspective, I love the small town feel of Scranton. If you know The Office “Things move a little bit slower in Scranton And that’s the way we like it.” And that’s what I missed while I was in Dallas I missed just going into a mom-n-pop shop where I know I’m going to get good food and that comforting atmosphere and friendly people… That’s what I really missed – the warmth of the people here Douglas: I have to go with that as well – that family-oriented quality of life that you can still find here All these places right here – we like to call them our neighbors These are the places we love and frequent quite a bit I’m going to go with all the same places as Dave I think we have some of the best Italian restaurants in the area and We have some heavy hitters here that do really phenomenal Italian food You want the things you miss the most when you’re away and Douglas: I have a house right on the river in Falls, and usually when I’m not around the restaurant, I’m there fishing with my kids. I have a nephew who comes up from Florida to spend the whole summer with us. I take them all out fishing and kayaking. We just make the most of being outside. Again, I’m not a cold weather guy. I don’t like the cold at all, but when summer comes, we spend a lot of time on the river our time was spent primarily on the renovation a dream eighteen years in the making – to build what you see here today if you knew the struggle and the effort and the family relationship and how much this means for my family my brother and our mom and dad – what’s next for me I just can’t wait for Ipanema to continue to succeed It’s so rewarding to have gone through what we went through and then to have the opportunity to do this whole renovation and this redesign project and to put together a beautiful we essentially refreshed our entire concept Doug and I practically designed the whole thing together proud of my parents for putting in so much work for the last eighteen years and now here we are ready to build this place up and cement ourselves in Scranton and NEPA and it would make me so proud as an uncle to hear them say one day Keep building this empire and make sure my kids are proud of it And that they can enjoy it more than we did growing up as far as it not being as stressful and not being so tight as far as the budget is concerned We’re just going to focus on building it up There are developers investing in the city and it’s so encouraging to see that Whether it’s new apartment complexes or new restaurants Look at what you guys are doing at DiscoverNEPA – shining a spotlight on all the businesses and the beautiful things in the area And I think the future is bright for Scranton Douglas: I think there’s a lot of great new things coming in and opening up every day and if the people can keep their minds open I think in terms of the future and the financial success of Scranton As long as we can keep an open mind for new concepts and new businesses and keep reinvesting in our community I think Scranton will continue to do really well if we dissect it from a business perspective No one is doing authentic Brazilian food in the area there weren’t even that many Latin restaurants we found a formula that worked in the way that we trust each other’s unique skill sets probably being one of the best front-of-house managers in the area There’s not a better people person like my brother they know Doug and they’re going to have great things to say about him and that makes me very proud My mom is probably one of the top chefs for Brazilian cuisine in the area I mean the old man can still sling a steak like no other And that formula along with the passion we all have for this is what helped us succeed We were kind of in the right place at the right time When I come in and see we have a full house… man Even when you’re having a bad day and you see that and you see all our customers It makes it all worth it – everything we put into this place Featured image (top): David Linhares (left) and Douglas Linhares (right) pose in the newly renovated dining room at Ipanema grille in Scranton The Brazilian city of Linhares has legally recognized its waves as living beings marking the first known time part of the ocean has been granted legal personhood the coastal municipality passed a new law that gives the waves at the mouth of the Doce River This means the waves should continue to form naturally and their water must be clean The new law requires the city to protect the physical shape of the river the ecological cycles that make the waves unique and the water’s finely balanced chemical makeup through public policies and funding It also codifies respect for the waves’ cultural and economic role in the community an environmental lawyer and executive director of the Brazilian NGO Mapas which advocates for the country’s nascent rights-of-nature movement Linhares has also appointed guardians to watch over the waves and act as their representatives in public decision-making City officials selected Hauley Silva Valim a surfer and cofounder of the Doce River Alliance and two others with special relationships with the waves: a representative from the local Indigenous community and a member of the city council’s environment committee The prized waves are long and tubular—qualities sought out by surfers—and famous worldwide the tight-knit local surf community began noticing changes and two of the waves eventually stopped breaking altogether Valim explains that the waves at the Doce River mouth were damaged when the Mariana dam collapsed which devastated the region—killing 19 people The dam held back waste from an iron ore mine near the inland city of Mariana it sent a rush of mud and mining waste down the Doce River and eventually weakening the waves at its mouth It was only after a major flood in 2022 that these waves returned selected three people who have special relationships with the waves to act as their human representatives in public decision-making The toxic brown sludge that spilled from the dam contaminated fishes and microscopic aquatic life for several kilometers from the river’s mouth “every way of life has been impacted,” says Flavia Freitas Ramos who cofounded Doce River Alliance with Valim A group of about 720,000 affected residents is pursuing a class action lawsuit against the owners of the mine and Valim worked with local Indigenous representatives and other stakeholders to meet with residents of Linhares over several years and build the fight for the rights of the beloved waves Hasson says the new law’s main goal is to change mindsets and shift public policies relating to matters such as water quality and resource extraction It builds on a previous rights-of-nature rule passed in 2017 by Bonito which led to the development of an agroecological plan that Hasson says has improved the soil quality Around the world, governments are increasingly recognizing that the natural world has an intrinsic right to exist and be defended in court. In 2008, Ecuador became the first nation to adopt a so-called rights-of-nature law into its national constitution. Bangladesh granted legal personhood to the Turāg river while New Zealand has safeguarded a forest a salt lagoon on the Spanish coast called Mar Menor became the first European ecosystem to be granted legal rights Valim notes that while the dam disaster prompted the local government to protect the waves at the mouth of the Doce River Linhares’s new law was written in a way that safeguards against other threats as well “We are continually under pressure from port developments and the drastic presence of plastic and glass pollution dumped into the [river] by the cities and industries,” he says In addition to changing policies, rights-of-nature legislation can have legal teeth. In July 2024, Ecuador’s law resulted in a court ruling that concluded that the rights of a river running through the capital city had been violated by pollution The new Linhares law could also theoretically be used to prosecute anyone involved in breaching the waves’ rights And since Linhares’s law states that the protections pertain to the entire system the waves belong to it could even be applied to destruction that occurs upstream This language protecting connected waterbodies means the law also safeguards the ocean, making this the first step toward recognizing rights for the world’s oceans. A global campaign is building to do just that “When you recognize a little bit of space of the ocean you are reaching the whole ocean,” Hasson says Part of the Tula Foundation and Hakai Institute family This story was updated because of an inaccuracy which was introduced to the department and tasked with patrol work in 2015 “He was going to be 13 in May,” Linhares said Viepo and his handler Linhares were first partnered when Viepo The pair spent eight years working together on the department Linhares said that Viepo was the first K-9 unit to join the police department in over 30 years Linhares and Viepo completed 14 weeks of drug and patrol training together with the Boston Police Department training unit in July 2015 He joined the department in August that year Ruff job: Somerset's new comfort dog Raider already a big hit around town Linhares said Viepo — whose “intelligence,” “strength” and “unmatched courage” are lauded in a Somerset Police Department post on Facebook — was “actually a very social dog.”   Viepo was trained to track suspects and missing persons he was “1,000 miles per hour,” Linhares said “Once I hit the remote start in the driveway for the cruiser,” Viepo knew they were heading to work Though Viepo resided with Linhares, he was considered by former Somerset Police Chief George McNeil as not only a good resource to fight crime, but also a “town celebrity,” and a tool for community outreach expected to star in school demonstrations in Somerset “I could walk around the station with him,” Linhares said During their time together, Linhares and Viepo’s bond led them to serve several agencies, including the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the U.S. Marshals Service and “assisted some fugitive units [when it came to] apprehending wanted persons,” Linhares said By virtue of belonging to the Southeastern Massachusetts Law Enforcement Council as a K-9 unit Viepo served numerous Bristol County agencies throughout his career Linhares “took pride in us always being available when the phone rang,” and recounted late-night calls that he and Viepo responded to Honey: This pit bull lost a leg after being shot by Fall River police. The owners are suing. A well-attended memorial for Viepo took place on Feb. 14 inside Bay Mass-RI Veterinary Services on Milford Road in Swansea with officers lining up to pay their respects to Viepo for his dedicated years of “service and sacrifice,” the Somerset Police Department Facebook post reads The department thanked Auclair’s Market for donating food for Viepo from the day he entered the line of duty to even after Viepo retired from the force a couple of years ago. Linhares thanked those who called and sent messages of sympathy for their “heartwarming” gesture. “He was definitely deserving,” he said, “And not just because he was mine.” According to Cornell Law School, a legal person (a.k.a a fictitious person or an artificial person) is “a human or a non-human legal entity that is treated as a person for legal purposes.” Such bodies are granted rights normally reserved for residents such as the ability to sue and enter into contracts In the case of Linhares’ coast, the new law protects the river’s physical shape and the ecological conditions that govern it The city must now recognize the water’s cultural and economic value and it has even appointed “guardians” to safeguard and represent the entity in the public decision-making process According to Hakai Magazine the law’s primary purpose is to “change mindsets and shift public policies” regarding water quality and resource extraction © 2025 Minute Media - All Rights Reserved According to Cornell Law School, a legal person (a.k.a In the case of Linhares’ coast, the new law protects the river’s physical shape According to Hakai Magazine The waves at the mouth of the Doce River in Linhares Spot Guide: Rincon Queen, of the Coast 6 of the Heaviest Waves in the World Five Decades of Surfing, Travel and Narrative Collide in Sam George’s New Book NewsAll NewsEventsBig Wave NewsWorld Surf LeagueEnvironmentalIndustryWave PoolsPosts List Boat Get Totally Wrecked by Wave in Indonesia (Video) How To Surf Till You're 100, Brainwork: Mickey Munoz just became the world’s first administration to acknowledge the ocean as a living being subject to intrinsic rights to existence LLC and respective content providers to this website may receive compensation for some links to products and services on this website Based upon the UN legal modality recognized by the United Nations and promoted locally by a handful of advocacy groups a municipality in the state of Espírito Santo a few hundred miles north of Rio de Janeiro just became the world’s first administration to recognize and protect the rights of waves—or the seas in which they break The proposal was spurred by a November 2015 dam failure and subsequent spillage of wastewater from a Vale and BHP Billiton iron-ore mine upstream in Mariana Minas Gerais—an all-too-familiar story out of Brazil—which inundated a town The Linhares coastline was devastated as well as a smattering of hollow freight-training peaks in Regência along the Doce River’s mouth–a tragedy in its own right (not to diminish the former) toxic mud was seen billowing out of the Doce River Mouth and into the South Atlantic 17 days later choking out and wreaking havoc on anything in its path and effectively shutting down the surf break Surfers and ecologists got together and decided something had to be done following in the footsteps of the Save the Waves Coalition’s World Surfing Reserves initiative and rallying to get a bill proposed in 2018 While the subject of inanimate personhood (see: corporations) dates at least back to the Roman Republic and the early Catholic Church and this right here is a good case in point municipality Councilor Antônio Cesar signed and submitted the bill under his mandate which includes “Comprehensive protection” that “acknowledges the ocean as a living being subject to intrinsic rights to existence and restoration,” as environmental lawyer Mauro Figueiredo summarized and celebrated on LinkedIn last week The specifics of the protections involve protecting the ecosystem from human interference and touristically significant areas linked to the waves integration of traditional knowledge and conservation practices sweeping conditions that don’t necessarily seem enforceable This might be a small win—we’ll jump for joy when entire nations’ breaks get these rights—it is no doubt a feat Friedman is a senior staff writer with Healio's hematology/oncology team Friedman received his bachelor’s degree in newspaper and political science from Syracuse University Friedman spent 16 years covering high school and professional sports for Gannett newspapers in Southern New Jersey He won multiple New Jersey Press Association awards during his tenure Friedman is a passionate New England Patriots fan enjoys golfing and spending time with his family Chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapy can be administered at community centers and on an outpatient basis with proper preparation Adults with relapsed or refractory large B-cell lymphoma (LBCL) treated with lisocabtagene maraleucel (Breyanzi Bristol Myers Squibb) at community sites had similar outcomes and adverse events as those who participated in the TRANSCEND-NHL-001 trial which led to the drug’s FDA approval in 2021 The findings may allow more individuals to access CAR-T the safety and the [efficacy of the] trial were excellent and both outpatients and inpatients did well,” study author Yuliya P.L chief of lymphoma services at Miami Cancer Institute “There’s probably going to be motion toward administration in more community centers but I don’t think that most centers will be equipped to take care of these patients in the near future.” Lisocabtagene maraleucel is a CD19-directed CAR-T that has been approved for second-line treatment of LBCL CAR-T administration requires a multidisciplinary team that can manage adverse events unique to immunotherapy such as cytokine release syndrome and neurotoxicity administration historically has been limited to university-affiliated medical centers approximately 70% of patients with relapsed or refractory LBCL are treated at local medical sites “Greater availability of CAR T cells would potentially decrease health care costs and improve outcomes,” Linhares said Researchers conducted the multicenter phase 2 OUTREACH trial to evaluate the capability of community medical centers to administer CAR-T They defined community sites as “nontertiary care centers not associated with a university” that may or may not have Foundation for the Accreditation of Cellular Therapy (FACT) accreditation In order to monitor CAR-T recipients on the outpatient basis community centers were required to have hematopoietic stem cell transplantation or phase 1 study capabilities standard operating procedures for outpatient monitoring and admission and a dedicated multidisciplinary medical team The analysis included 18 sites that treated 82 patients (median age, 66 years; range 28-86; 66% men; 84% white) with relapsed or refractory LBCL who had received at least two prior lines of therapy. Patients received leukapheresis, lymphodepleting chemotherapy and liso-cel The majority (70%) of patients received CAR-T as outpatients Incidence of grade 3 or higher adverse events served as the primary endpoint 44% did not have FACT accreditation and 56% were oncology clinics with separate associated hospitals (dual entity) About one-third (32%) of participants received treatment at CAR-T naive sites 37% underwent treatment at non-FACT centers and 48% received treatment at dual entity locations Grade 3 or worse adverse events occurred at similar rates among adults who had outpatient vs About half (49%) of participants developed CRS Patients in OUTREACH had similar rates as those in the TRANSCEND trial of grade 3 or worse CRS (0% vs Adults treated on an outpatient basis had slightly lower rates of CRS as those treated on an inpatient basis (37% vs Neurotoxicity rates appeared comparable (overall One-quarter (25%) of patients treated as outpatients never required hospitalization median time to hospitalization was 5 days (range 2-310) and the median duration of hospital stay was 6 days (range 1-28) Results showed similar objective response rates (80% vs Improved access to CAR-T already has had a dramatic impact on LBCL treatment and we’re struggling to accrue [participants] because we have fewer patients who even would need third-line or fourth-line therapy,” Linhares said “That’s a very good indicator that higher CAR T cell availability and faster access is saving more lives.” further expansion into community medical centers is not imminent “Less than 50% of centers are ready for CAR-T,” Linhares said Participating sites require extensive training and access to tocilizumab (Actemra “The hematology team had to be trained on the protocol,” Linhares said “Then I had to do training for our advanced practice provider team and separate training for the CAR T cell side effects We had these materials easily available for our on-call team day and night and I was available at all times as a principal investigator on this trial Community sites need a variety of resources to administer CAR-T, Linhares said. These include an infusion center with trained nurses, a readily available advanced practice provider team, a 24/7 answering service, experienced pharmacists, access to tocilizumab, infectious disease consultants and strong social work. “In general, we have staff shortages in community centers,” Linhares added. “You may have a lot of nurses who are temporary nurses or nurses with minimal experience. Physician expertise is important, but this cannot be done without experience and expertise of a physician assistant team and nursing.” It also takes time for medical centers to establish contracts and reimbursements for CAR-T, she said. Yuliya P.L. Linhares, MD, can be reached at yuliyal@baptisthealth.net. Get the latest news and education delivered to your inbox The email address associated with your Healio account is: If you would like to edit or change the email address that your subscriptions and alerts are sent to, use the "Update email address" link. Activity saved! 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Please include what you were doing when this page came up and the Cloudflare Ray ID found at the bottom of this page. 2024","birthPlace":"Hartford"}Share a memoryAdd to your memoryPhotos/VideoCandleMementosPost NowPostObituary Joaquim was born on July 23,1940 in Sao Joao de Loure son of the late Manuel Pires Linhares and Emilia Dias Melo Joaquim immigrated to the United States in 1973 and resided in West Hartford for over 40 years He was a communicant of Our Lady of Fatima Church a member of the Hartford Portuguese Club and the Hartford Portuguese Soccer Team Joaquim will be remembered for his love of wine making playing the card game of sueca and watching his favorite soccer team S.L Benfica Maria Conceicao Ribeiro da Silva; and his brothers Jose Linhares and Manuel (Isilda) Linhares of Portugal He also leaves numerous family members in Connecticut and Portugal Joaquim was predeceased by his brothers and sisters-in-law: Antonio Linhares A Mass of Christian Burial will be at Our Lady of Fatima Church in Hartford on Saturday A Christian Burial will be held in Portugal Memorial contributions can be made to the Portuguese Club of Hartford - Elevator Project, 730 N Mountain Rd, Newington, CT 06111. Online condolences may be made at www.SheehanHilbornBreen.com Tribute Archive This year has been extra hard for farmers who work on the Central Coast “I just took a heck of a loss this year,” Dan Linhares Linhares worked on a 10-acre property on Sunday He’s been in the farming industry for over 30 years and says this year has been exceptionally hard The cost of farming supplies has doubled and tripled on the Central Coast “We’re reaching a point where you can't afford to farm anymore,” Linhares said If you're dumping it all into the gas prices and fertilizer prices and then all of a sudden you come up snake eyes and your family doesn’t eat,” said Linhares net farm income will decrease by 27.1% in 2024 from 2023; the largest year-to-year drop in history Some reasons for this are lower commodity prices Linhares also adds that part of the reason is because of unusual weather changes “If something does go wrong like a bad winter or two and you're already in debt from the high prices and then all of a sudden along comes mother nature Valentina Cottini owns property in Morro Bay and is experiencing this firsthand The weather made it hard for her to harvest this year it's swampy and will bog down the tractor,” Cottini said Linhares normally helps Cottini harvest her five acres of hay They normally both profit from harvesting the hay but this year didn't go as expected “He used to be able to plant and harvest 200 bales on these five acres and he can't do it," said Cottini With unpredictable weather and prices of products skyrocketing farmers on the Central Coast are struggling “The economy is killing us is what it's doing and it's killing the farmer,” Linhares concludes Local farmers say this also affects those who buy their products as prices are also going up 2019 — Medical oncologist and clinical researcher Yuliya Linhares has been named Chief of the Lymphoma Service at Miami Cancer Institute at Baptist Health South Florida the state’s only member of the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Alliance Linhares specializes in the comprehensive treatment of lymphoma including expertise in both autologous and allogeneic stem cell transplantation She also has unique experience with chemotherapy and stem cell transplantation using bloodless techniques important for patients whose religious beliefs do not allow the use of blood transfusions Linhares is triple board certified by the American Board of Internal Medicine in internal medicine She earned her medical degree at the University of North Carolina School of Medicine in Chapel Hill She completed a residency in internal medicine and a fellowship in hematology-oncology at the University of California – Los Angeles Linhares treated patients in the Blood and Marrow Transplant Program at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles Linhares is bringing her tremendous talents to Miami Cancer Institute,” said Michael J CEO and executive medical director of Miami Cancer Institute “She will lead our highly skilled multidisciplinary team to deliver the most advanced personalized cancer care to patients with all subtypes of lymphoma.” Linhares has extensive teaching experience training medical students residents and oncology fellows at UCLA School of Medicine She serves as an editorial reviewer for prestigious peer-reviewed scientific publications is widely published in numerous medical journals for and delivers at invited lectures at academic symposia Linhares is a member of American Society of Hematology and the American Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation About Miami Cancer InstituteMiami Cancer Institute is Florida’s only next-generation cancer treatment destination known for its personalized clinical care and research compassionate patient experience and state-of-the-art technology – including the first proton therapy center in South Florida and the only radiation oncology program in the world with each of the latest radiation therapies in one place The Institute offers an impressive roster of established community oncologists and renowned cancer-fighting experts clinical researchers and genomic scientists recruited from the nation’s top cancer centers As Florida’s only member of the Memorial Sloan Kettering (MSK) Cancer Alliance Miami Cancer Institute is part of a deep and functional collaboration that affords patients access to innovative treatments right here at home and ensures that the standards of care developed by our multidisciplinary disease management teams match those at MSK If you’d like to complete this appointment request form later we can save your responses for 48 hours so you can come back and finish your submission Prefer to talk to a member of our team? 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Woolbright is an MFA graduate from the Rhode Island School of Design in painting and is the director of the Lower East Side Gallery Below Grand. He currently teaches at Pratt and School of Visual Arts in New York. Home E-edition PLUS unlimited articles & videos Personalized news alerts with our mobile app *Refers to the latest 2 years of stltoday.com stories Billy Joel and Sting performed together for thousands of fans on Sunday Billy Joel and Sting shake hands after performing “Every Little Thing She Does is Magic” together on Sunday Sting plays his bass guitar while performing the song "Message in a Bottle" on Sunday Sting fans are illuminated by light while he performs on Sunday Sting performs his song "Message in a Bottle" to thousands of fans on Sunday Sting and his band perform together on Sunday Sting plays the final notes of his song "Message in a Bottle" on Sunday Billy Joel and Sting embrace each other before performing Sting's opening song together on Sunday Sting sings and plays the bass guitar while performing his song "Message in a Bottle" on Sunday Billy Joel and Sting perform the song "Every Little Thing She Does is Magic" together on Sunday Sting performs during his opening song on Sunday Billy Joel takes a moment in between songs to interact with the crowd on Sunday Billy Joel fans are illuminated by stage lights while he performs on Sunday Billy Joel performs his song "Moving Out (Anthony's Song)" on Sunday Billy Joel turns to the crowd after performing his song "The Entertainer" on Sunday Billy Joel peaks over at the crowd with a grin while performing his song "Pressure" on Sunday Email notifications are only sent once a day Rock ’n’ roll excellence was on full display at Busch Stadium on Sept 29 when Billy Joel and Sting hit the stage Get up-to-the-minute news sent straight to your device the hometown of a significant number of Portuguese immigrants living in Massachusetts and Rhode Island received some exciting news this week: Portugal’s cultural heritage authority has initiated the procedure to reclassify this ancient village in the northeastern municipality of Celorico da Beira as a site of national interest/national monument This move can potentially open doors for new opportunities for the village founded in the 12th century by the first king of Portugal including the possibility of applying to become a World Heritage of the United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) announced the opening of the procedure to change the status of Linhares da Beira from a place of public interest to a place of national interest/national monument and to be referred to as “Historic Town of Linhares da Beira classified as CIP [a place of public interest] and the buildings located in the general protection zone (50 meters from its external limits) are still covered by the legal provisions in force,” according to the document Celorico da Beira Mayor Carlos Ascensão told Lusa news agency that the process of classifying Linhares da Beira is part of the network of 12 Historical Villages of Portugal the process will allow all villages to blur “some inconsistencies” that still exist and may be candidates for World Heritage of the United Nations Educational “It is so that the network of 12 [Historical Villages] is covered and that’s the process that is underway,” he said Ascensão said the reclassification of the town as a national monument “gives a different status because it already allows some kind of activities “This opens other doors and another dimension but it also brings us other responsibilities in terms of demanding the preservation of standards and not allowing certain things to happen by default,” he stated because in the various Historic Villages there are “inconsistencies” that need to be overcome “There is a whole standard that must be respected and this statute that is now underway will increase the degree of demand and rigor and the criteria has to be tighter,” he said which will allow the 12 historic villages to be national monuments there will also be “another type of potential enhancement” of localities in terms of tourism product a pride that we have the 12 villages [classified] as national monuments because then follows an application for UNESCO heritage which is what we have on the horizon,” said the mayor who also chairs the Historical Villages of Portugal - Association for Tourism Development The network of the Historical Villages of Portugal includes Almeida Linhares is one of the 13 artists in the Adult Contemporary exhibit Futurephilia I was lucky to be able to include a painting by New York-based artist Judith Linhares in the Scene-presented exhibit I curated, Futurephilia: Sex and Science Fiction in Contemporary Art “Star-Light” is a small jewel of a painting that shows three women I was even luckier to spend an afternoon chatting with Linhares We were both in New York during 9/11 — she was a teacher at NYU where I was a student — and although our paths had never crossed before this discussion our conversation was bookended with references to that shared I was considering the galaxy and the vastness of space as this thing we return to in times of crisis and it’s silly but I remember getting really into Star Trek right after it happened and I noticed it was like a phenomenon among my friends — looking toward the future Futurephilia: Sex and Science Fiction in Contemporary Art adultcontemporaryart.com and that’s where your imagination starts to work Reconstructing a new world right after a trauma — I can see little indications of it all over the place I’ve never really been interested in science fiction I think of her as being so relevant to the present But I will say — I’m totally in love with the Frankenstein story That has been a constant in my whole life — there’s something in that narrative for us We’re asked to be sympathetic with the monster Frankenstein could — with no projection into the future of what his life would be like So there are all these moral implications that are still with us who was of course the daughter of Mary Wollstonecraft — these are all very strong feminist voices I think it’s really crucial and interesting and germane that it was a woman that invented that story Can you tell me a little about the influence of the Funk movement in your work the story of the Bay Area artists has never fully been told I grew up in an era when the civil rights [movement] was all around me nobody went to school because everybody was in the streets all the time There were a lot of incredible women artists that are just coming to light now And Linda Montana is a performance artist who was all around doing performances and came to my class and did performances with the class I had not much to do with the Funk generation And anybody that’s from the Bay Area gets labeled as Funk because that’s the only available label and it’s very interesting now that there’s a show at Paula Cooper I feel like it’s maybe the beginning of a fleshing out of that moment I feel like being from the West and the West Coast certainly formed my identity in a way that’s really different from the people who are my friends in New York and much more realized ideas about World War II and the aftermath Those dialogues are not as present on the West Coast about the attachment to World War II as an East Coast thing The attachment to Abstract Expressionism and those sort of aesthetic values is much stronger in New York then they are in California I left California because I wanted more connection with history and with those languages and those thoughts but I still acknowledge that I was really formed by the West Coast In my experience with being from the South location really does form your identity early on And I’ve noticed of course that you never feel more Southern than when you’re not in the South Your artwork in Futurephilia involves a situation It’s surprising to me that you’re not interested in science fiction So I’d like to talk about the formal qualities of the work You can use contrasting colors with a really light touch and it’s almost like you’re setting a stage for these people to act on It’s important for me that the painting happens in the process And often I work on the studies and the big paintings simultaneously because the size of the brush in relation to the format is much bigger There’s more sort of trust and spontaneity in the paint in these smaller studies a seaside — archetypal kinds of environments And I think of this as the desert at night And this is a band of wild women that are looking at the moon I grew up walking to school with tumbleweeds scraping my legs And it has this certain kind of beauty in sparseness but it’s that moment before it’s really dark And the experience of looking at the night sky in the desert — it’s a place to project your imagination So I’m really telling a story about these wild women who’ve gotten together in the desert and they’re kind of lost in the hypnotic experience of looking at the sky I love how their different colors show the different qualities of light your skin looks blue regardless of what color it is when it’s light out I have tended toward making images that are atmospheric rather than graphic I’m thinking about the atmosphere — I’m not thinking particularly about a marine figure I think that’s very clear — the colors are about the light they’re so uninhibited with the use of color And I find the serape a good kind of magic carpet for me because it offers all the colors as a launching pad and your use of different types of textiles is something you’ve always played with that I’ve been interested in It’s a very nice way of putting a little reference to something that’s familiar to people Have you been to the MoMA exhibit Surrealist Women every time I would go to MoMA I would be mad because all my favorite artists were always in the hallway and because California used to be part of Mexico it was so natural that people were going back and forth and Mexican culture was so much a part of California culture So you would see Mexican artists a lot in L.A And I knew the story of Pollock studying with Mexican artists and I presumed that they were all going to Mexico There was a lot of experimentation with materials there was a lot of interest in indigenous cultures and ways of approaching making an image that was trying to break away from the Western tradition It was so important to the development of modernism — and all of a sudden But I’m sorry that it took the Museum of Modern Art Have you stayed in New York this whole time And I remember one of my students saying that she’d heard the bang — she was living at the dormitory near the site and she heard the bang and she touched her window like there was debris in the air and she couldn’t see the low point was the statistic of maybe three or four months into [the pandemic] and it was reported that in the past 10 days that’s the same number of fatalities as 9/11 So I don’t know what the repercussions are we’re going to have to learn to work together Exploring sustainability efforts at Neuhoff District Germantown’s adaptive reuse project puts the river front and center Your browser is out of date and potentially vulnerable to security risks.We recommend switching to one of the following browsers: « Back – Timbers2 have signed five players ahead of the 2024 MLS NEXT Pro season Braxton Najib and Kaveh Rad will all join T2 for the 2024 campaign joins T2 from MLS NEXT Pro side Columbus Crew 2 where he tallied four goals and three assists in 22 appearances (14 starts) in the 2023 campaign The forward played for Sporting KC II in the inaugural 2022 MLS NEXT Pro season making his debut at 16 years old and recording four goals and an assist in 10 appearances (6 starts) Bunbury has one cap for the Canadian U-20 National Team played for Whitecaps FC 2 during the 2023 MLS NEXT Pro campaign registering two goals in 17 appearances (12 starts) the midfielder was selected 26th overall by New York City FC in the 2023 MLS SuperDraft Johnston finished his NCAA career at the University of Maryland with 61 appearances (58 starts) the team captain was named to the First Team All-Big Ten and Big Ten All-Tournament teams was drafted by the Timbers 40th overall in the 2024 MLS SuperDraft The winger joined the first team roster in preseason making one appearance in the Coachella Valley Invitational against the San Jose Earthquakes on Feb Linhares made 76 appearances (53 starts) in his four-year career at Georgetown University (2020-2023) tallying seven goals and 18 assists for the Hoyas joins T2 after spending three seasons with Inter Miami II Najib recorded 53 appearances for Miami II across USL League One and MLS NEXT Pro competitions the midfielder debuted for Birmingham Legion FC of the USL Championship played for Hartford Athletic of the USL Championship in 2023 the defender signed with MLS-side Sporting Kansas City as a Homegrown player in April of 2021 and went on to play in seven matches across all competitions for the first team Rad logged 36 matches played from 2019-2020 in USL Championship play Affirm spinoff Resolve raised $60m from investors including its parent company.. corporate venture capital manager at Faber-Castell is one of our top 50 Emerging Leaders in corporate venturing in 2023 corporate venture capital manager of Faber-Castell has been instrumental in making Faber-Castell’s ventures investments artificial intelligence-powered educational mobile platform Jovens Gênios and digital education platform Layers education.  She’s collaborating to bring a fresh mindset to a traditional company that strives to innovate and change its process She is always collaborating with visionary insights and new projects ideas aligned with the market,” says Alessandra Marcondes She’s collaborating to bring a fresh mindset to a traditional company that strives to innovate and change its process.” Horta is credited with bringing an innovation mindset to a traditional company “Ilana is an essential part of FC Ventures leading with a strong pulse and provocative statements that force one of the most traditional companies in the world to create a brighter future for the educational field,” says Faber-Castell colleague Leonardo Ferreira.  Before joining Faber-Castell in March 2021 including being an advisor for luxury aircraft chartering company Flapper She spent a year-and-a-half as chief executive of gym app TotalPass and held roles as finance and tax manager at companies such as Uber says: “Ilana is an exceptional professional always looking forward but helping and pushing colleagues and peers She is always ahead in what is going on in her field.   she makes such great questions in meetings or even when we talk about any subject – she makes us think more deeply about things She is humble and has a great sense of humour Faber-Castell Ventures backed Essia – its third deal – in June last year with an investment of undisclosed size It also invested in Layers with a seed investment earlier in the year and in Jovens Gênios in November 2021.  See the rest of our Top 50 Emerging Leaders here Fernando Moncada Rivera is a reporter at Global Corporate Venturing and also host of the CVC Unplugged podcast. Which corporates are backing which startups? Search our corporate deal database. Find details about global CVC units in the CVC Directory Comprehensive data on the current trends in corporate investment GCV provides the global corporate venturing community and their ecosystem partners with the information, insights and access needed to drive impactful open innovation. Across our three services - News & Analysis, Community & Events, and the GCV Institute - we create a network-rich environment for global innovation and capital to meet and thrive. At the heart of our community sits the GCV Leadership Society, providing privileged access to all our services and resources. PortugalChevron LisboaChevron LisbonChevron ChevronChevronPhotosSave this storySaveSave this storySavecuisine Give us the big picture: What’s the vibe of the place, what’s it like?Mystery and romance linger on every inch of this storied fado restaurant, located in a Renaissance-era mansion in Alfama that nearly fell to dust in the great Lisbon earthquake of 1755. But thanks to the enduring tradition of Fado, this house continues to be an elegant and refined expression of Portuguese culture. Wow—sounds wonderful. Who's taking the stage?The best of the best perform regularly here, including some of the art's most glamorous singers (Fábia Rebordão, Vânia Duarte, Silvana Peres) as well as charming young guitarists (Bruno Chaveiro, André Dias). Nice. And, what's the seating situation? Do only a handful of tables get the good views?Candles diffuse warm light throughout the original brick archways and exposed wooden beams, and sound travels so beautifully that every table feels like a front-row seat. Perfect. So, at the end of the day, why are we coming here?This is probably the most elegant and refined place to see fado in town—and it's definitely worth dressing up for. up-to-the-minute voice in all things travel Condé Nast Traveler is the global citizen’s bible and muse We understand that time is the greatest luxury which is why Condé Nast Traveler mines its network of experts and influencers so that you never waste a meal or a hotel stay wherever you are in the world Linhares was the catalyst in Georgetown’s 4-1 win over a very good Pittsburgh team He sent a one-timer into the net to get the Hoyas on the board and made a nice move to create the space he needed to place a shot inside the far post to net their third goal of the evening He also contributed the assist on junior midfielder Joe Bucks goal The Hoyas show a lot of grit and determination as they bounce back from a loss on the road to Stanford to improve to 2-1-0 Georgetown hosts Fordham on Monday at 11 a.m and travels to College Park to face Maryland on Friday College Soccer News was established in 2000 as a premier source of men’s college soccer information awards and more for college soccer teams across America For information about advertising or other general questions please contact us Powered by Capital Data Studio Dylan Haglund Linhares was born in Modesto CA to David and Sheri Linhares on January 24 Turlock Youth Football and Turlock Little League Dylan then went on to Turlock High School where he graduated in 2010 and was very active in the Turlock FFA Program and on the Golf Team He attended Oklahoma State University and graduated with an Animal Science Degree in 2015 Growing up Dylan was always working side by side with his dad grandfather and uncle on their family dairy farm He then went on to become a 4th generation auctioneer at Farmers Livestock Market he married his high school sweetheart Ashton (Bordenave) Linhares Hudson in 2017 and twins Audrey and Axel in 2021 Dylan loved pulling antique tractors with his dad and belonged to the Valley Tractor Pullers Assoc Dylan was an active Chatom 4-H Beef leader and current member of Stanislaus Cattlemen Beef Supporters Dylan was preceded in death by his grandfather Joe & Irma Linhares; Uncles Michael Linhares and Steve Haglund Audrey (23 mo.) and Axel (23 mo.); Ashton Linhares; his parents Livia and Isla Torrano; Uncle Gary (Arlene) Linhares Uncle Jim (Mary) Linhares and Aunt Jennifer Haglund A mass will be held on April 1st at 11 a.m memorial donations can be made to The Children of Dylan Haglund Linhares Trust Fund Miami Palmetto High School senior Rafael Linhares is Palmetto’s Silver Knight nominee in the Art category I have a more free style that consists of lines and circles organized in a million unique ways.” He has always gravitated toward the type of art he’s doing today “I started taking it more seriously since quarantine,” he says Linhares does not take art classes at school He learned a lot about art from his father “I’d say a lot of my influences come from him I’ve grown up in a house that’s always been covered in paintings.” “I’d like to learn a lot more about the world than art,” he says He also loves to write and hopes to one day publish children’s books He hasn’t taken art classes in high school but he plans to take some in college “I’ve been watching YouTube videos on how to draw realistically,” he says students need to do strong community service projects “I published a coloring book called A Thousand Things to See I shared it with retirement homes,” he says “Once a week they gather around and color.” He says he wanted to publish a coloring book because it’s a therapeutic activity it helps people relax and reflect,” he says “It gives them a sense of peace and a sense of pride.” He’s hoping to expand and add more retirement homes to the list of those using his coloring book the sixth floor of the Hope building at Baptist Hospital “I hand out my drawing and coloring supplies,” he says he’s the communications officer for the Creative Writing Club As a junior he won a Scholastic Gold Key for a short story He’s a member of the Science National Honor Society and Robotics club He designed a banner for the robotics club for their 2023 SECME competition Linhares attended a summer program at the University of California at San Diego for the Capital Debate program where he participated in Lincoln Douglas debates Outside of school he tutors jazz and classical piano and a 12-year-old in Classical Piano,” he says He still plays classical music and was nominated for the Honors Performance Series Linhares has been accepted to Florida State University On some applications he was undecided with an interest in majoring in government He’s applied to the University of North Carolina George Washington University and Georgetown He recently participated in a three week environmental community service program called Go Beyond in the British Virgin Islands where he tagged sea turtles worked on a local farm and conducted data collection for coral reefs and work on beach clean-ups Miami Community Newspaper is an online newspaper that provides up-to-date local news and information about the Miami community This daily newspaper provides local news coverage and keeps its readers up to date on the latest developments in the area Their website also includes a Miami community podcast where listeners can get the latest news and updates on the Miami community Miami Community Newspapers is the perfect source for all your local Miami news needs Promote your business to the localized audience you want to reach with Miami's Community Newspapers. Call 305.669.7355 or view our Media Kit. Global Lead Partner Print “Joy” in its entirety 2017) If joy can be expressed in painting then Judith Linhares has captured it in a small bottle of Joy dishwashing liquid The bright yellow bottle is sunny and happy and solid flanked by equally plump and self-satisfied fruit The only potential cloud is a small gray drawing of a skeleton The painting fairly shines with the confidence of a woman who has been painting for five decades but her exhibition at Various Small Fires largely spans the last decade The show is dominated by fantastical tableaux of nude women a languid ease with the female body in a landscape without men The most resonant reference is Edouard Manet’s 1862 painting “Luncheon on the Grass.” It’s famous for its purposeful awkwardness the painting poked fun at popular mythological and historical paintings in which nude women frolicked unselfconsciously in the woods Judith Linhares, “Lunch,” 2012 (Gil Gentile / Judith Linhares and Various Small Fires) SIGN UP for the free Essential Arts & Culture newsletter » Linhares’ picnics imagine what happens when the men are removed from the picture The nude is joined by friends who are also awkward posing upside down with their legs against a tree these poses suggest sexual availability but aren’t really sexy they invoke a tradition only to shut it down pale-skinned women are surrounded by food and drink and live in landscapes that pulse with color or are perhaps even extraterrestrial there might be two or three suns above the rocky outcropping on which the figures recline or an alternative myth from a time before (or after) men The aforementioned images of women interacting with wild cats are from 2016 It is perhaps another meditation on mortality See all of our latest arts news and reviews at latimes.com/arts Ed Moses dies at 91 Michael Queenland spins trash into clever canvases of the living 'Plunder Me, Baby': One artist's wild, defiant stand against the oppression of indigenous people World & Nation Entertainment & Arts Hollywood Inc. Television Subscribe for unlimited accessSite Map Where does San Mateo City Council Candidate Rod Linhares stand on abortion but his answers to questions about the issue including whether he supports Proposition 1 is drawing criticism from pro-choice advocates Proposition 1 would codify reproductive rights in the California State Constitution in the wake of the Supreme Court decision overturning all federal abortion rights and remanding the decision to the states Councilwoman Amourence Lee emailed each of the candidates asking them to declare their stances on abortion and Proposition 1 Of the seven candidates running for Council Linhares was the only candidate to offer no response Their responses were subsequently published to the Councilmember’s Facebook page In a written response to Climate Magazine’s request for clarification on his position on Proposition 1 “I support our City Council’s decision to establish a 100-foot buffer zone around our Planned Parenthood Clinic to help ensure access I support enforcement of all the laws of the state of California He declined to answer whether he would support Proposition 1 The lack of a clear response has drawn criticism from pro-choice advocates who hope to strengthen women’s reproductive rights in the wake of the Supreme Court decision to strike down federal protection for abortions Dr. Jenn Conti, an Ob/Gyn at Stanford Medicine Children’s Health and a pro-choice advocate Tweeted, “Sorry, Rod Linhares, voters in the Bay Area require this crucial information. You can’t sit this one out.” In a separate Tweet she called on Linhares’s endorsers to withdraw their support for “refusing to protect abortion rights.” As a doctor who provides all reproductive healthcare to my community, I’m calling on @DianePapan @SenJoshBecker & others to pull their endorsements for Rod Linhares- a candidate who refuses to protect abortion rights in CA. pic.twitter.com/l2iVDOQ67R — Dr. Jenn Conti (@doctorjenn) September 7, 2022 Lee also pushed back on Linhares’ response in an interview with Climate Magazine Linhares would not respond to a simple yes or no if he supports Proposition 1 Can voters entrust the protection of our basic rights to someone who doesn’t have a position on the legal right to abortion How about gay marriage and LGBTQ+ adoption?” Critics further question whether his position as Director of Development for the San Francisco Archdiocese would affect his abortion stance. Linhares has been employed at the San Francisco Archdiocese for the past five years, according to his LinkedIn profile Led by the controversial Archbishop Salvatore Cordileone the Archdiocese has been a leading regional voice for restricting access to abortions “The California bishops have made defeating Prop 1 our number one priority for this year.” Cordileone also sparked outrage when he denied House Speaker Nancy Pelosi the sacrament of Holy Communion over her vow to protect reproductive rights Linhares said his service on council would not be affected by his day job “My work for the Archdiocese is separate from my community service “How can voters believe that he doesn’t have a position on Prop 1 when the employer he is tasked with financing has made it their number one goal to defeat Prop 1?,” asked Lee Have something newsworthy you want to share or a story we should cover? Send to tips@climaterwc.com Activity already attracts authorities police Top This website is using a security service to protect itself from online attacks The action you just performed triggered the security solution There are several actions that could trigger this block including submitting a certain word or phrase You can email the site owner to let them know you were blocked Please include what you were doing when this page came up and the Cloudflare Ray ID found at the bottom of this page ShareSaveLifestyleArtsJudith Linhares, "Hearts on Fire," At P.P.O.W., New YorkByClayton Press Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights 08:18am ESTShareSaveThis article is more than 6 years old.“I feel like my unconscious was colonized really early by Disney.” Judith Linhares Fairy tales—conte de fées—were a fashionable noble women launched more than half of the one hundred and twelve tales published between 1690 to 1709 Enchanted Eloquence: Fairy Tales by Seventeenth-Century French Women Writers introduces the fairy tales of the most prominent women authors Many of her works were classical fairy tales suggesting the ideals of behavior in a fictionalized world Nature—forests and idyllic gardens—served as the backdrop for the characters including princes and princesses metamorphosed into animals She draws from mythology and fairy tales—especially fairy tales—but she rarely uses themes that It’s really important for me to make everything up.” For Linhares “Fairy tales describe a psychological anatomy and have a universal quality.” Her paintings are bold individualistic concoctions inhabited primarily by women and animals in nature refers to a complexly cut commercial diamond which per P.P.O.W.’s press release “describes a fantastical universe in which men are [nearly] all removed from the pictorial landscape.” Men have not exactly been expelled from “the garden,” but the matriarchy clearly reigns infused with radiant Southern California color sometimes mixed with the gloom of Northern California fog Linhares “manages to merge abstraction and figuration the conventional and the avant-garde.” Linhares’ ability to mix and match strains of art history is expert Her expressive painting is never derivative Her color palette is a beautiful-ugly blend that requires exceptional talent to pull off She challenges all the expectations and norms of modern painting The works in this exhibition are luminous paintings of animals With the sun rising or setting on the horizon lighting up the sky with a myriad of colors These paintings of table top flower arrangements—each measuring about 2-foot square—have an immediate fresh paint (straight from the tube) vibrancy Linhares’ landscapes with figures are visually compact and rich Her reclining or seated nude women—nearly life size—are not 21st century odalisques while two empty bottles and a plate of food lie at her feet her legs outstretched on a near-geodesic log cabin The background of sky in High Desert (2018) is like a deconstructed Sol LeWitt wall drawing a lion watches over a nude who gazes at the crepuscular sky Linhares’ confesses to a penchant for kitsch and tchotchkes if not a nightmare—a near genderless Pinocchio-esque figure with a fully erect (!) nose Linhares has always been about the feminine and feminism These topics have been at the core of her works—always representational—since the 1970s gestural brushstrokes reveal a struggle between painterliness and heroic modeling,” Egan opined Linhares seems to come from a far distant planet: California in the 1960s and 70s Latin culture was as present there as North American before migrating north to experience the Beat Generation era of San Francisco There the underground comix culture easily coexisted with “high” art She also spent three or four months in Guanajuato even contemplating relocation to central Mexico she brought “into play her familiarity with Outsider Art and the tradition of strong women Surrealist artists in Mexico (such as Remedios Varo and Leonora Carrington).” Linhares’ work was included in Marcia Tucker’s 1978 ‘Bad’ Painting exhibition at the then new New Museum Tucker’s definition of “bad” was “that which opposes conventions [emphasis added] of the avant-garde.” It was not that the work was bad but rather that the artists were (and remain) iconoclasts and her deep-seated and persistent interest in the fantastic Each of these interests could be associated with the work of Judith Linhares Judith Linhares, “Hearts on Fire,” at P•P•O•W The Wanderer 2021 peacefully at home after a brief illness             She was the wife of Leonard Fleurent and the late Milton Nichols             Born in New Bedford she was raised in Mattapoisett and lived in Fairhaven most of her life             She enjoyed knitting             Survivors include her 2 sons Christopher Jaskolka and his wife Cheryl McGuire of Mattapoisett and Karl Jaskolka; a daughter Kerri-Lynn Nichols of Fairhaven; 2 brothers Dennis and Frank Linhares of Mattapoisett; 3 sisters Carlene Linhares of Fall River and Maureen Linhares of Wareham; 7 grandchildren Kara Jaskolka and Jason Jaskolka; and numerous nieces and nephews             She was the sister of the late Eleanor Lopez             Her Funeral Service will be held on Friday May 28th at 10 AM in the Saunders-Dwyer Mattapoisett Home For Funerals Her family will receive guests from 9 – 10 AM prior to her service Categories: Obituaries Δdocument.getElementById( "ak_js_1" ).setAttribute( "value"