he grew up enjoying the simple things in life like fishing
antique sports cars and cheering for his beloved New England sports teams
Rich worked as a Utilities Operator for Anheuser-Busch
Rich also loved spending time with his loyal dog
who always kept him entertained in her own special way
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Boston Early Music Festival’s much anticipated Centerpiece Opera
Henri Desmarest’s five-act Circé (to a libretto of Louise-Geneviève Gillot de born Gillot de Beaucourt)
kept an enthusiastic full house alert for three- and one-half hours at the Cutler Majestic Theater yesterday afternoon
The 15,000 words of essays on Circé in the $15 BEMF souvenir volume testify to the deep thinking that brought about the rebirth of this rarity. It falls within the category of tragedie musique a genre popularized in the Baroque era by Lully
Such operas served to edify the king and exemplify regality with stately rhythmic structures and consonant harmonies
composer Henri Desmarest (1661–1741) had at least three successes on the Palais Royal boards before succumbing to the consequences of unwelcome revelations of ghostwriter status and an elopement…and just maybe the arrival of his betters such as Rameau and Charpentier
Louise-Geneviève Gillot de born Gillot de Beaucourt
(1650 – 24 March 1718) also suffered from a career curtailing court cabal
but not before she became the first woman to have a work performed at the Royal Academy of Music in France
Yet one wonders whether BEMF chose her solely on the basis of her gender
projected on a whimsical proclamation scroll in a serif type
touted as being an important work of a woman
Does it sound more literary and/or more poetic in French
AD: It would be quite hard to render the special flavor of the French Baroque in English
Maybe English masques during Charles I’s and Charles II’s reigns… But French formalism is quite repugnant to the English
Part of the aesthetic of the French is that wild passions are forced into a highly formal
It’s hard to preserve that strange beauty in English translation
Think of the regular formality of the French landscape versus the wild irregularity of the English Garden
FLE: I think also how Dido’s lament in Purcell reached into the depths of human emotion whereas Circe’s lament appeared as formalistic artifice
It’s like a very low-grade version of Racine — so utterly different from Shakespeare
He was rediscovered by the Romantics in the early 19th
Delacroix painted himself as Hamlet all the time
je ne saurais vous engager ma foi,La chaîne de l’hymen me parait trop pesante: Si le nom d’amant m’épouvante,Le nom d’époux me fait trembler d’effroi
I cannot pledge you my troth,The chain of Hymen seems too heavy for me: If the name “lover” is appalling to me,The name “spouse” makes me shudder with horror
Sir.The iron chain of marriage seems unbearably heavy to me.And if the name of lover prompts me to a terrified flightThe name of husband makes me shudder with dread
the BEMF Orchestra played with impeccable tonal refinement
harpsichord; (music directors) Paul O’Dette
theorbo & Baroque guitar; could also produce a marvelous grittiness for certain dances and accompanied recitatives with thrumming glory
perhaps anticipating Purcell’s Dido and Aeneas
pretty much encapsulated all the subsequent predictable and relentless cadences that followed…aside from some few outlying surprises that deserved to be in the highlight disc
Desmarest’s benignly neglected score could scarcely have held our interest through the 3.5-hour span without significant stage business
Nor could Beaucourt’s libretto be considered a page turner
such as Ulisse’s nightmare sequence in which a mime impersonated the spirit of the dreamer
a scene of priestesses tripping fantastically with urns and bowls of fire
and the dance of vivifying potted plants and marble statutes
and costuming consistently maintained BEMF’s high standards
the compact stage (the foliar wing flats must have taken up half the floor space…could they have been retracted for indoor scenes?) was often densely peopled with as many as 40 individuals
though single characters could also deliver soliloquies without appearing lost
Stage director Gilbert Blin blocked the singers (There being essentially no props to interact with
they mainly parked and barked or simply crisscrossed except when sharing the stage with dancers) in highly stylized gestural language
giving us static attitudes and formal tableaux vivants—sometimes vexatious
but the arms and hands of the most adept sufficiently semaphored emotion; some exponents even seemed metrically attuned enough to be ghost conducting
Blin also designed the scenery based on his extensive collection of period art
drops and flats lent courtly gloire to the mise-en scène
transporting us to the confines of a Baroque jewel box
he provisioned a wave machine and imagined a marvelous pair of columns of crossing vertical clouds that concealed magical entrances and exits
He gave the stagehands much to do for the final conflagration
Jérôme Kaplan designed something like 100 astonishingly detailed
Sashaying by in a succession of textile fireworks
they provided endlessly varied visual delights…to the extent that they upstaged the inkjet-printed flats
The latter needed the impasto of the set-painter’s art
Kelly Martin’s lighting retained the basic qualities of candlelight
why his scallop-shell footlights didn’t seem to cast any period-correct rays
with Marie-Nathalie Lacoursière & Pierre-François Dollé
Choreographers & Dancers; Stéphanie Brochard
Sonam Tshedzom Tingkhye occupied almost as much stage time as the singers and received many show-stopping ovations
Borrowing elements from stately dances as well as ballet
these terpsichoreans triumphed with a variety of choreography
from lighter-than-air petite batteries to grotesqueries of daemonic horreurs
L’Amour: shot cupid’s darts with irresistible warmth and great liveliness of toneNola Richardson
Une Nymphe & Une Prêtresse & Une Néréide: a fine vocal temptress with excellent projectionMindy Ella Chu
Une Prêtresse: we enjoyed her play with flames and vocal fire Mireille Lebel
Un Amant fortuné & Une Euménide: shining haute contre with great gestural commandJason McStoots
Phantase & Une Euménide: a distinctively focused memorable voiceJames Reese
Un Amant fortuné & Mercure: clarity of expression…a wily MercureKyle Stegall
Une Songe & Aquilon: his command of the North Winds made us shudderDaniel Fridley
Une Euménide: enjoyed tormenting guilty wenchesMichael Galvin
Phaebétor: combined resonance with facilityJonathan Woody
Le Grand Prêtre du Temple de l’Amour: outstanding presence and command Ashley Mulcahy
Circé (continuing through June 11th at the Cutler Majestic)
Music by Henry Desmarest (1661–1741) Libretto by Louise-Geneviève Gillot de Saintonge (1650–1718) Livret of 1694 edited by Gilbert Blin English Translation by Ellen Hargis First Performance: Paris
Marie-Nathalie Lacoursière & Pierre-François Dollé
Assistant Stage DirectorAlexander McCargar
haute-contreMiloš Valent & Dagmar Valentová
oboe & recorderDominic Teresi & Allen Hamrick
Assistant to the Musical DirectorsLydia Becker
Assistant to the Orchestra DirectorRyan Cheng
Assistant to the Opera DirectorLuke Blackburn
Assistant to the Costume SupervisorShannon Clarke
2nd Assistant Stage ManagerElizabeth Tippens
French Baroque Music from Rameau to Beaujoyeulx
2 Comments »
Categories Reviews 2 Comments A good review
Comment by Bettina A Norton — June 5
Readers may wonder at the abundance of detail about this opera production by BEMF
it is an accurate reflection of the production itself
visually stunning and imaginative costumes that should make the Met jealous
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a drug user has been convicted of manslaughter for the killing of a drug dealer whose body he left in a wardrobe in his home for four days
The Central Criminal Court jury took more than 12 hours to reach their majority
acquitting Dean Caffrey of murder but holding him responsible for the unlawful killing of 28-year-old Sean McCarthy
Dublin 9 went on trial in October after he pleaded not guilty to McCarthy's murder at Beaucourt on August 2
The court heard that Caffrey was a cocaine and cannabis user who had amassed drug debts that were taken on by Sean McCarthy
Caffrey allowed McCarthy to use his apartment in Drumcondra to store drugs
McCarthy had his own drug debts and had been the subject of threats and at least one assault in the period leading up to August 2022
Caffrey told gardaí during interviews that on the day McCarthy died
the deceased came to his apartment in an agitated state and accused him of stealing heroin
demanded €5,000 and threatened him that he would "leave in a body bag.”
Caffrey said he lunged for the weapon when McCarthy was momentarily distracted by a noise and in a struggle
A pathologist's report confirmed that he died from a single gunshot wound to the head
Caffrey used money he took from the dead man's pocket to buy cocaine and later went to Dunnes Stores where he bought a suitcase
and attempted to put McCarthy into the suitcase but the body did not fit
he went to work and visited his ex-girlfriend's house while a number of neighbours recalled speaking to him but they didn't notice anything unusual
members of McCarthy's family became suspicious of Caffrey and called to his family home looking for him
Caffrey went to Ashbourne Garda Station and told gardaí where they would find the body
The jury had been asked to consider whether Caffrey acted in self-defence and whether he used reasonable force in doing so
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Jacob Summerville
Members of the Homecoming and Beau Courts were asked by The Lion’s Roar to provide input regarding the position on their respective court
Those who responded are pictured with their thoughts
The Lion’s Roar: Why do you want to be Homecoming Queen
Arceneaux: “If I were to become Homecoming Queen
becoming Homecoming Queen is typically for the ‘popular’ girl and mainly used just for another title to add to their name
someone memorable and someone worth talking to.”
TLR: What is your favorite aspect of Southeastern
Arceneaux: “It’s a place where an entire student body comes together to better themselves and grow
I love that Southeastern offers a welcoming and accepting university to help engage students
It’s not just about numbers or flashy items
it’s about a community of students supporting students.”
TLR: Share one of your favorite memories from your time at the university
Arceneaux: “One of my favorite memories from Southeastern was receiving my acceptance letter
I was so ready for college and knowing that I could attend my first choice of universities was exciting.”
TLR: Why do you want to be Homecoming Queen
Sampey: “I would love to represent Southeastern as the 2019 Homecoming Queen so that I may have the chance to give back to the Southeastern community just as much as it has given to me
I bleed green and gold and would be so proud to be recognized with the honor.”
Sampey: “My favorite aspect of Southeastern is the close-knit community
I have gained so many lifelong friendships through Lionettes
I have had the opportunity to personally know my professors and fellow students which has helped in my academic growth through my years at SLU.”
Sampey: “My favorite memory from my time here at SLU was definitely when the 2018 Lionettes won nationals in Orlando
We were able to bring our Lion pride to Florida and show everyone how amazing it is to represent Southeastern
There is no greater feeling than being rewarded for your hard work and dedication.”
Litolff: “I am so excited to be a part of Southeastern’s 2019 Homecoming
I want to thank everyone who voted It is such an honor to represent the university and the student body.”
Litolff: “My favorite aspect of Southeastern is the welcoming environment of campus
I love walking around and seeing friends and familiar faces.”
Litolff: “One of my favorite memories during my time at Southeastern is joining my sorority- Alpha Omicron Pi
These women are my best friends and biggest supporters
Being a member of AOII has pushed me to hold leadership positions
and try things outside of my comfort zone.”
Mckey: “I’m honestly just honored to be on court – never would I had ever thought I’d be on my university’s Homecoming Court
just being one of the seven women on court is an honor
Mckey: “My favorite aspect is our community and how close knit our student body is
Everyday in class and just walking around campus
I truly feel wanted here and like I fit in.”
Mckey: “Some of my favorite memories are seeing Mr
Faucheux’s contagious smile in Garrett Hall.”
Gunther: “It would be the most pleasant surprise and the greatest honor
I want to be Homecoming Queen to continue to represent this university with the greatest sense of love and pride
and I would be honored to let that shine through this title.”
Gunther: “My favorite aspect of Southeastern is the close-knit environment that has become my home away from home
going to a university where you don’t know many people can be scary
But now that I am beginning my junior year
it is evident that since SLU is the perfect fit for me.”
Gunther: “One of my favorite memories at Southeastern would have to be the first time I tailgated as a student
I tailgated for the first time at the Homecoming game in 2017
and I loved watching the floats go by during the parade and the atmosphere in Friendship Circle throughout the tailgate
I always hoped that I would have the honor of being on Homecoming Court
and I can’t believe that I am lucky enough to experience court this week.”
Monlyn: “From being heavily involved on campus
being one of the representing faces for campus by being an orientation leader
and now being on Homecoming Court is such an honor
I’d like to continue my legacy with becoming 2019 Homecoming Queen
It embodies me because it’s modest and centered around school spirit.”
Monlyn: “My favorite aspect of Southeastern is the countless opportunities to be successful
Southeastern has something for everyone: from understanding professors
more than 30 organizations to network through and more.”
Monlyn: “My experience as being an orientation leader is my favorite memory
It took a lot of dedication and creativity
but it was the best summer I’ve experienced while being in college
Being able to tell students about my experiences and about the university first hand was the best experience.”
TLR: Why do you want to be Homecoming King
Zeringue: “I aspire to be Homecoming King because it would be an honor to represent the university with such a respected title
Being Homecoming King would demonstrate my school spirit and my involvement
I would have a platform to show my love for the student body
Zeringue: “My favorite aspect of Southeastern has to be the close connection between faculty
I consider the university my home away from home because I feel well-connected with the entire campus staff and students
It also makes it easier to get involved with student or campus-wide organizations
and I am extremely proud to be a part of such a supportive community.”
Zeringue: “One of my favorite memories from Southeastern is when I had the chance to be a 2019 Orientation Leader
and I loved spending my entire summer helping incoming students adjust to their new home and developing my leadership abilities.”
White: “I want to be Homecoming King because I believe I embody what it means to be a campus and community leader
A few characteristics that I possess are that I am altruistic
In order to be a campus and community leader
you must first be passionate to learn what is and is not going on
Then you must be able to be genuinely willing to help those in need.”
White: “Every class that I have attended since freshman year
my teachers have known me by my first and last name and were always eager to help me
It is also beneficial because you can easily get to know your classmates and form study groups and I have even made life-long friendships.”
White: “One of my favorite memories here at Southeastern was my new member presentation into my fraternity
The Nu Omega Chapter of Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity
It was unique because it was the first presentation ever held in Strawberry Stadium
and I got to share such a historic moment with my new brothers that were on stage with me
as well as a large crowd of family and friends.”
Those not pictured here but also on the court:
Keenan Austin – biological sciences major; organizations: Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity
Cameron Duhon – marketing major; organizations: Delta Tau Delta
Matthew Matherne – occupational safety
health and environment major; organizations: Delta Tau Delta
Darius Woodfork – criminal justice major; organizations: Omega Psi Phi Fraternity
Peyton Licciardi – accounting major; organizations: Kappa Sigma
Aesha Magee – health systems management major; organizations: Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority
has worked at The Lion's Roar since September 2017
On Campus
The SLU Chamber Orchestra performed its spring concert on March 26 in Pottle Auditorium
led by conductor and associate professor of violin Victor Cor..
Using the 2005-2006 chikungunya virus epidemic that occurred in the Indian Ocean islands as a study model
researchers at the Pasteur Institute have succeeded in developing an approach that can predict the virus mutations most likely to emerge in the short-term
This work has strong implications for improving surveillance of ongoing epidemics and the potential to strengthen vaccine strategies against emerging viral diseases
The results were published in the journal Cell Host & Microbe
The molecular mechanisms of replication and multiplication of RNA viruses are burdened by error - mutations - in their genetic code
that lead to the production of new viruses
each one slightly different from each other
and so a viral population from a single strain is actually composed of a cloud of variants
some will confer a selective advantage to a given variant in the population: in the case of arboviruses (such as dengue
yellow fever) that cycle between insects and vertebrates
they improve a virus' ability to replicate in mosquitoes and transmit to mammals
rendering it more likely to spread than others
The new strain in question thus bears a stronger likelihood of causing a new epidemic
Reseachers in Marco Vignuzzi's unit (Institut Pasteur/CNRS) have succeeded for the first time in developing a method to predict the mutations most likely to emerge within an arbovirus population
Their method relies on monitoring the natural
evolution of a virus during a transmission cycle between mosquitoes and mammals
the researchers validated their approach in a proof-of-concept by addressing the emergence event that led to the chikungunya epidemic of 2005-2006 that occurred in the Indian Ocean
they naturally infected two species of mosquitoes
Aedes aegypti (the usual vector for chikungunya) and Aedes albopictus (the Asian tiger mosquito)
they let the infection develop in mosquitoes for a relatively long period (14 days)
corresponding to several replication cycles
and proceeded to deep sequence the virus in different anatomical sites of individual mosquitoes
The results revealed the emergence and rise to dominance
of the same mutation in the E1 glycoprotein (A226V) that was at the origin of the 2005 epidemic
they were able to identify in a single infection cycle
The scientists then asked whether this approach could simulate the natural evolution of the post-epidemic strain towards a future epidemic
They thus repeated experiments using the strain that emerged after the 2005 epidemic
in a natural transmission study between an infected mosquito and a mouse
and then from the mouse to yet another mosquito
By the time the infection of the first mosquito developed
also in the E1 glycoprotein) appeared in saliva and were transmitted to mice
remaining as a minority component of the virus population
in the second batch of mosquitoes that fed on infected mice
the virus strains carrying these two new mutations supplanted all other variants
including the currently circulating strain
revealing the strong potential for these mutated strains to emerge after a single transmission cycle
In vitro studies suggest that the selective advantage of these mutations is linked to an increase ability to fuse and enter cells during infection and a higher virus particle stability when the virus is outside the host cell (such as in mammalian blood or mosquito saliva)
In addition to identifying and characterizing these two new mutations in the context of the Indian Ocean strain of chikungunya
this work is an innovative tool to identify new variants with epidemic potential
well ahead of when they could be identified in nature
for any arbovirus as well as for other RNA viruses for which transmission samples can be collected
This discovery now offers the possibility of improving and better targeting surveillance between and during epidemics
such an approach could help better choose what strains to include in vaccine preparations
Picture: Chikungunya virus (orange) budding at the surface of infected Aedes albopictus cells
This study was funded by the Bill et Melinda Gates foundation
the French Government’s Investissement d’Avenir program
Laboratoire d’Excellence (grant ANR-10-LABX-62-IBEID)
and the Franco-Israëli high council for science and technology
Emergence and Transmission of Arbovirus Evolutionary Intermediates with Epidemic Potential
(1) Unité Populations virales et pathogénèse
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique UMR 3569
France (2) Center for Vectorborne Diseases
Israel (5) Laboratoire Arbovirus et insectes vecteurs
France (6) Department of Chemical Engineering and Polymer Research Center
Turkey (7) Ultrastructural Microscopy Platform
France (8) Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
Chosen to the Southeastern Louisiana University Queen's Homecoming court are
Members of Southeastern Louisiana University’s Homecoming beau court are
HAMMOND — Fourteen Southeastern Louisiana University students have been chosen as members of the 2019 Homecoming queen and beau courts
The seven women and seven men will reign over Homecoming festivities
Chosen as members of the queen court are seniors Alanna Arceneaux
Members of the beau court are seniors Keenan Austin
the top junior or senior vote-getters in the campus election
will be announced at halftime of the Homecoming football game when the Lions take on Incarnate Word at 4 p.m
Ducks Unlimited and the Kinesiology and Health Studies Club
Arceneaux has been named to the President’s List and was a member of the Kappa Sigma Crescent Court
is chief of staff for the Student Government Association
and vice president for public relations of the Collegiate Panhellenic Council
She is the recipient of the Green S Award and has been named to the President’s List each semester
She is a member of Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority
secretary of the NAACP and was a 2017 Orientation Leader
Magee has been named to the President’s List three consecutive semesters
and received the 2017 Spirit of Orientation Award
where she served as pledge class president
She is also a member of Ducks Unlimited and has been named to the President’s List
Monlyn is a communication sciences and disorders major
She is a member of Delta Sigma Theta sorority and Elite Women
where she served as vice-president and president
She was also accepted into the National Society of Leadership and Success
is a member of Alpha Omicron Pi sorority and the 2018 National Champion Lionette Dance Team
where she received the Lion Heart Award and the Coach’s Award
She has been named to the National Society of Leadership and Success and is a two-time recipient of the Green S award
She is a president of Alpha Omicron Pi sorority
National Society of Collegiate Scholars and National Society of Leadership and Success
She has been recognized with the Green S Award and has been named to the President’s List every semester
Delta Omega Alpha Pre-Professional Society
He has been named to the President’s and Dean’s lists and serves as a tutor in the Center for Student Excellence
where he was named the 2018-19 Tutor of the Year
He is president of Delta Tau Delta fraternity
and a member of College of Business Ambassadors and Southeastern Sales Association
He has been named to the President’s and Dean’s lists and is the recipient of the Tom Sharp Scholarship
Matherne is an occupational safety health and environment major
the American Society of Safety Professionals and was a 2019 Orientation Leader
He was named the 2018 Sigma Sigma Sigma sorority Man of the Year
has been named to the President’s List and is the recipient of the Spirit of Orientation Award
He is a member of Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity
He has been named to the President’s and Dean’s lists
is an SGA associate chief justice and has been named to the Dean’s List
He serves on the executive committee for Kappa Sigma
is the beau for Alpha Omicron Pi sorority and has been named to the President’s and Dean’s lists
He is a member of Alpha Psi Omega and the Campus Activities Board Executive Board
was the 2019 Homecoming Committee Chairman and has been named to the President’s List
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A group is hoping to complete a French aviator’s aborted flight from Paris to Tokyo 90 years later by restoring the same type of four-seat monoplane that crashed in Kyushu
Famed pilot Andre Japy (1904-1974) embarked on a 100-hour flight in a red aircraft in November 1936 but crashed into Mount Sefurisan in Kanzaki
A special exhibition to introduce the effort is being held at the Takashimaya department store in Tokyo’s Nihonbashi district through Sept
aims to restore a Caudron Simoun aircraft and fly the remaining 900 kilometers from Saga to Tokyo in 2026
Members of the organizing committee include Japanese and French nationals engaged in bilateral friendship and those involved in aviation
An aircraft is being restored in France and a test flight is planned in the country next year
Kanzaki has a sister-city relationship with the French city of Beaucourt
The special exhibition is part of an event to promote French cuisine and other products
Visitors can watch video footage of the rescue of Japy
The restored cockpit instrument panel is on display
The organizing committee is seeking financial support for the project
French pilot’s 1936 flight to Tokyo set to land after 90 years
Ministry: Coast Guard plane not given go-ahead before collision
Flying car has first test flight in aiming for use at ’25 Osaka Expo
At least 40 killed in Nepal’s worst air crash in nearly five years
Information on the latest cherry blossom conditions
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A series based on diplomatic documents declassified by Japan’s Foreign Ministry
Here is a collection of first-hand accounts by “hibakusha” atomic bomb survivors
chefs and others involved in the field of food introduce their special recipes intertwined with their paths in life
A series about Japanese-Americans and their memories of World War II
In-house News and Messages
No reproduction or republication without written permission
The jury in the trial of a murder accused who told gardaí he shot a man during a struggle over a firearm before concealing his body in a wardrobe has heard that the deceased was a drug dealer known to gardaí
Garda Brian Davis confirmed to defence counsel Lorcan Staines SC that Sean McCarthy (28) was part of a group of men who were searched by gardaí in June 2022 in an area where there had previously been reports of drug dealing
He said that the search of Mr McCarthy was negative
but he confirmed that Mr McCarthy was known to gardaí as a drug dealer in the Ballymun area
has pleaded not guilty to the murder of Mr McCarthy on a date between August 2 and 7 2022
Mr Caffrey told gardai that the deceased died during a struggle after he had accused the defendant of stealing heroin and threatened that he would "leave in a body bag" if he didn't give him €5,000
said the jury will hear that the accused travelled to Ashbourne Garda Station two days after Sean McCarthy had been reported missing and told officers that a man's body could be found in his wardrobe
Ms Noctor said Mr Caffrey was arrested and during interviews he said that Mr McCarthy had been holding a gun when he demanded the €5,000
Mr Caffrey said he secured the firearm and discharged it
When gardai searched Mr Caffrey's apartment
they found the deceased in a wardrobe covered by a suitcase and a black refuse sack secured with duct tape
State Pathologist Dr SallyAnne Collis said the cause of death was a gunshot wound to the head with no other contributing factors
The bullet damaged brain structures but would not have caused instant death because it did not damage the brain stem
The jury was also today shown CCTV footage of Mr McCarthy’s movements on the day of August 2
with Garda John Twyford outlining to Ms Noctor the deceased’s movements at various locations in Dublin
The trial continues tomorrow before Mr Justice Paul McDermott and the jury of seven men and five women
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MANCHESTER – For the third game in a row during its deep playoff run the Dover High School hockey team saved the best for last
The Green Wave turned in another strong third period Saturday that resulted in a 4-2 victory over Merrimack at Southern New Hampshire University Arena and the program’s second Division II championship in the last three years and eighth overall
With the score tied at 2 entering the third Dover scored twice with senior captain Jacob Lapierre notching the game-winner and Logan Spagna adding an empty-net goal in the final minute
“Finish the game,” senior forward Jackson Carroll said of the message between the second and third periods
Don’t pass up the opportunity we have to make history here.”
The second-seeded Green Wave (15-6) outscored the opposition 8-0 in the third period of three playoff games including four in a 7-3 semifinal win over Oyster River
Jackson Carroll and Brady McDonough also scored for Dover
which ended the season with an 11-game win streak
As fate would have it the Green Wave’s last loss came against Merrimack at midseason and provided the impetus for the title run
“We were talking about that the other night and how that loss was probably one of the worst lows of our season,” Carroll said
We felt they stole one from us and we wanted that one back.”
After spotting the Tomahawks a 3-0 lead in that contest Dover rallied to tie the game before dropping an eventual 4-3 decision
“It was one of our weaker games,” Lapierre said
“We were still trying to find our identity.”
The Green Wave weren’t about to make the same mistake in Saturday’s rematch
“This is what you envision,” said Dover coach Mike Young
“I don’t necessarily think I envisioned it when we were 4-6 but the way we finished the season and the way we were playing I knew this team was capable of anything.”
Merrimack rallied twice to tie the game and the slim lead seemed tenuous throughout especially with its dangerous top line of Eliot Medlock
Conor Dunn and Owen Miner which accounted for both goals
Dover appeared deeper than the Tomahawks up front
capped by Lapierre’s game-winner at 5:29 of the third period assisted by Owen Culcasi
“Owen gave it to me and I just put one on net and it ended up going in,” Lapierre said
“We knew we were going to pop one like that
Carroll scored the game’s first goal on a backhander from in close giving the Green Wave a 1-0 midway through the first period
“Marasca was in the corner and passed it out to me,” Carroll said
I took it across the net and backhanded it and it went in
Dover dominated territorially in the early going
outshooting Merrimack 11-2 in the first eight minutes of the game
“Sometimes if you can’t bury one you keep persevering to bury the next one,” Carroll said
The Green Wave outshot the Tomahawks in the first period 13-4 and 29-23 for the game. Dover senior goalie Brett Davis
who played every minute of every game this season
More:Dover first-year goalie helped Green Wave to a state championship while playing with a broken hand
Merrimack pulled even at 10:59 on a goal by Miner from the left circle with assists going to Medlock and Dunn
Dover went ahead for the second time early in the second period on a goal by McDonough
the Green Wave’s leading scorer who was assisted on the play by Carter Bell and Wyatt Bell at the 2:20 mark
Merrimack responded less than a minute later when Medlock capped a 3-on-1 rush with a blast from the right circle that made it 2-2 at 3:04
“He can stretch the ice and he’s an offensive threat every time he touches the puck
I thought our defensemen did a pretty good job.”
Although the Tomahawks scored twice on their first five shots
including a beauty on Merrimack’s Sam Giles who was left alone in the slot for a point-blank bid
Shortly after Lapierre had given Dover the lead they had to kill a penalty creating more angst for the Green Wave faithful
4 Merrimack (13-7-1) was a worthy opponent having won seven of the last eight games entering the final including a 4-3 overtime win over top seed and defending champion St
For the nine seniors it was their second title in three years but first at SNHU Arena
Because of COVID restrictions the Division II final was played at Dover Arena in 2021 with the Green Wave topping Somersworth/Coe-Brown in overtime
… This time it was so nice winning it and actually seeing our home city there to see us do it.”
1 goaltender on that squad and Jacob was a third-line forward
“I know for a fact that there’s really no team in the league that wanted to see us in the playoffs
"Cowries," a recent acquisition to the University of Alberta Museums Art Collection
presents a side profile of a young Black woman wearing a white headcover with a cowrie shell fringe
which reveals the complicated intersections of slavery
Garneau’s process for creating his paintings starts close to home; most of his subjects are his siblings and extended family
however there is a looseness in his brushstrokes and moments where the image looks unfinished
He draws inspiration from a variety of sources
and his approach is one that combines “traditional media/subject matter with raw and repurposed material serves to disrupt the historical notion of mastery and to democratize the privilege of viewership.” Garneau points out that he also “revisits traditional handicraft to explore the sociocultural history between humans and colonial goods.”4
During the eighteenth and nineteenth century
drawing profile silhouettes became a popular pastime in the United States and could be easily and cheaply made.5
Representing the Black Female Subject in Western Art
3 “Cowrie Shells and Trade Power.” National Museum of African American History and Culture
https://nmaahc.si.edu/cowrie-shells-and-trade-power
5 “Silhouettes.” Women and the American Story
https://wams.nyhistory.org/building-a-new-nation/American-woman/silhouettes/
This web story is part of the University of Alberta Museums Art Collection Spotlight Series, a collection of web stories aimed to share works of art from the University of Alberta Museums Art Collection with the world
these stories connect works of art in the Collection to important matters on our campus and in our world
museums@ualberta.ca
780-492-5834
labs and research stations are primarily located on the territory of the Néhiyaw (Cree)
Haudenosaunee (Iroquois) and Anishinaabe (Ojibway/Saulteaux)
lands that are now known as part of Treaties 6
The University of Alberta respects the sovereignty
knowledge systems and cultures of all First Nations
DURHAM – Skating on a line with two prolific scorers can be a daunting task for some
But sophomore forward Cam Miner embraces his role which has been vital to the success of the Oyster River High School boys hockey team this season
Miner scored the go-ahead goal Saturday in the second period that snapped a scoreless tie as the No.2 Bobcats blanked No
in a Division II playoff game at the Whittemore Center
“(Miner) might not be the flashiest but he’s one of the most important people on our team,” said senior co-captain Andy Carlson
I can’t remember the last time he messed up.”
Oyster River (16-3) advanced to the semifinals where the Bobcats will face No
3 Portsmouth/Newmarket on Wednesday night (7:30) at Concord’s Everett Ice Arena
“I feel like we played a really good team game and it was a great way to open up the playoffs,” Miner said
“We knew we were going to have to play a complete
(45-minute) game of hockey and I feel like we went out there and did that.”
Miner put the Bobcats ahead to stay when he tipped in Jack Caldicott’s blast for a power-play goal at the six-minute mark of the second period
“We were getting kind of frustrated because we felt like we had the momentum,” Miner said
And then on that one it kind of just boosted the morale of the team and the energy went right up after that and we kind of took over the game and shut them down.”
“Cam Miner is the glue that holds that first line together,” Oyster River head coach Peter Harwood
He doesn’t make many mistakes at all
… He’s one of the best back-checkers on the team and as far as angling someone into the boards
He’s probably the most unsung hero we have.”
Jack Poitras connected 19 seconds later on a feed from Carlson to make it 2-0 heading into the third period
“I think breaking the seal was huge and then we had a little bit of breathing room,” Carlson said
“It was great to break the ice.”
Miner said the Bobcats have tip drills in practice
“It’s important when you see a defenseman or whatever wind up for a shot you’ve got to get there because not all your goals are going to be pretty goals
like snipes and stuff like that,” Miner said
“The majority of them are going to be dirty
tap-in goals or rebounds so you’ve got to grind for it.”
Oyster River added a couple of insurance goals late in the third
Carlson finished with a goal and two assists
Joey Fogg capped the scoring on a breakaway with 1:48 remaining to secure the Bobcats’ 10th consecutive win
Claden Daubney made 27 saves to earn the shutout as Oyster River outshot the Tomahawks
The Bobcats carried the play in the first period but had nothing to show for it thanks to Merrimack goalie Matt Licata
“(Licata) made a lot of great saves,” Miner said
“After the first we came into the locker room and didn’t hang our heads
We knew that we had a good period and felt that we were a little snake-bit
But then we had a good hype-up in the locker room and came out in the second and took it to ’em.”
Oyster River finally solved Licata with Miner’s timely tip-in
He’s been skating on a line all season with Poitras and Carlson
“Honestly it’s an honor,” Miner said
“Last year I was fourth line and playing with them this year is a huge difference
They know where each other are the whole time they’re on the ice
I feel like I fit in pretty good with those guys.”
He found out he’d be playing with them before the first early morning practice at Jackson’s Landing
He’s also playing center for the first time and embraced the role and the defensive responsibilities that go with it
“I’m playing with two of the top players in the state
I’m just going to have to play my game and keep to what I know how to do on the ice
That’s basically what I’ve done and we mesh together really and the team chemistry on our line is really high right now.”
Shortly after Miner’s goal Poitras and Carlson collaborated on the second one as they gave so often this season and the Bobcats led 2-0 midway through the second period
Carlson scored an unassisted goal at 9:48 of the third period just a few seconds after missing an open net
“I don’t know what happened,” he said
“It was like I kind of rushed it and I one-timed it
Luckily I got a goal like 20 seconds later so I had something to come back to the bench with
I’m definitely going to get a little heckling for that one because I can’t remember the last time I missed one of those.”
DOVER — Brendan Chrisom had two goals when he joined the St
Thomas Aquinas boys hockey team as a freshman
The first was to win a Division II state championship
the second was to win Player of the Year honors
More:Portsmouth's Hopley is named Division I girls basketball Coach of the Year. Many Seacoast players honored.
The state championship came in his junior year
and Chrisom’s high school career ended with him being named Player of the Year
More:NH All-State boys basketball: Seacoast players, St. Thomas coach earn honors
“This was definitely a goal of mine since my freshman year, it’s definitely a big accomplishment,” said Chrisom, who eclipsed the 100-point career milestone this year
“I definitely thought I’d be in the conversation
There were definitely some others who could have won
My teammates and my coaches kept me working hard
Chrisom led the Saints in scoring this season with 30 goals and 16 assists
Thomas Aquinas head coach Dan Strabone said
“He can really hunt the puck and is an impact player
and has scored a lot of big goals for us every year
Chrisom is the first Saint to win the Division II Player of the Year since Paddy Vetter in 2019
Chrisom would certainly have traded his individual award for a second straight state championship
4 Merrimack in a semifinal game at Everett Ice Arena in Concord
who plans on playing junior hockey this coming season before playing at the college level in the 2024-25 season
proud of our team for sticking together and having a good season.”
State champion Dover places five on all-state teamsDover’s Jacob Lapierre (forward) and Brett Davis (goalie) were placed on the Division II all-state first team
Teammates Brady McDonough (forward) and Wyatt Bell (defenseman) were placed on the second team
and forward Logan Spagna was an honorable mention selection
“I think they all deserved it,” said Dover head coach Mike Young
who recevied his second Coach of the Year award in three years
Chrisom was also an all-state first-team pick
Thomas Aquinas’ Colin Chrisom and Finn Bussiere of Portsmouth/Newmarket and Winnacunnet goalie Hunter Marshall
Other honorable mention selections include Somersworth/Coe-Brown forward Jon Pelletier
and defensemen Curtis Leitz of Oyster River and Connor Strum of Somersworth/Coe-Brown
Exeter's Snee earns spot on Division I all-state first teamExeter forward Cam Snee was named to the Division I all-state first team
Snee had 16 goals and 20 assists this season for the Blue Hawks
“Very excited for Cam," Exeter head coach Paul DiMarino said
"He’s a hard-working kid who always gave his best effort
He was a captain for us this year and he did an a tremendous job leading our team this year
He played hard every single night and the way he played elevated the rest of our team
He’s a great kid and we’re going to miss having him lead our team."
A murder accused inquired about renting a storage unit while the body of a drug dealer who had been shot dead remained in his apartment
Dean Caffrey (38) denies murdering 28-year-old Sean McCarthy
whose body was found in a wardrobe of the accused's home four days after he had gone missing
Mr Caffrey would later tell gardaí that the deceased had accused him of stealing heroin
came to his apartment with a gun and threatened that he would "leave in a body bag" if he didn't pay €5,000
prosecution counsel Kathleen Noctor SC said Mr Caffrey told gardaí there was a scuffle and he
secured the firearm and discharged it in the direction of Mr McCarthy
The prosecution intends to prove that Mr Caffrey intended to kill or cause serious injury to the deceased and that he is guilty of murder
Dublin 9 has pleaded not guilty to the murder of Sean McCarthy on a date between August 2nd and 7th 2022
Emma Flynn on Tuesday told Ms Noctor that she works for U Store It in Dublin
a company providing short and long-term storage
one day after the accused said the fatal scuffle took place
a man calling himself Dean Caffrey filled out an online form requesting a unit
The request was for a 16-square-foot unit in the Charlestown depot
required within one week and for a period of one to three months to hold "household clutter"
Ms Flynn called the number attached to the online form and spoke with a male customer calling himself Dean
The man asked to reserve a 20-square-foot unit
Ms Flynn told the customer she would call again when one did come available
but she cancelled the booking on August 11th after repeated efforts to contact him failed
The witness agreed with defence counsel Kevin White BL that in filling out the online form
He had also confirmed his address over the phone the following day as Beaucourt Avenue in Drumcondra and gave debit card details
Ms Flynn agreed that background noise she noticed during the phone call would be consistent with Mr Caffrey having been working at Dublin Airport when she called
The trial continues in front of Mr Justice Paul McDermott and a jury of seven men and five women
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A young Dublin man whose body was discovered hidden in an apartment in Dublin last year suffered a fatal gunshot wound to the head
The decomposing remains of Seán McCarthy (28) were found hidden in a wardrobe in a bedroom of an apartment on Achill Road
Mr McCarthy had been reported missing from his home in Poppintree
Relatives said he had not been heard from since August 2nd
when he was known to be in the Drumcondra area
The opening of an inquest into Mr McCarthy’s death at Dublin District Coroner’s Court on Thursday heard that the deceased had to be formally identified by matching DNA profiles from a relative
Sergeant Peter Foley gave evidence of taking a DNA sample from the deceased’s mother
Sgt Foley described how he had been appointed as family liaison officer after Mr McCarthy had been reported missing before finding out a few hours later about the discovery of his body in an apartment in Drumcondra
Coroner Cróna Gallagher said an analysis of DNA samples provided strong support that the deceased was a biological child of Ms Duffy
The coroner also informed the hearing that post-mortem results showed Mr McCarthy had died as a result of a gunshot wound to the head
Dr Gallagher explained that the formal date of Mr McCarthy’s death was August 7th
which was when he was formally pronounced dead by a medical practitioner shortly after his body was found the previous night
gardaí believe he was killed on August 2nd last year
Inspector Jim McDermott applied for an open-ended adjournment of the inquest on the basis that criminal proceedings had been initiated in the case
Insp McDermott informed the coroner that the DPP had directed a prosecution in relation to Mr McCarthy’s death and that an individual was due to go on trial before the Central Criminal Court next year on the matter
Dr Gallagher granted the application and adjourned the hearing on a date to be fixed following the conclusion of any criminal proceedings in the case
was charged at Dublin District Court on August 9th last year with Mr McCarthy’s murder a week earlier
The court heard that Mr Caffrey “made no reply to charge after caution.”
A handgun believed to have been used in the fatal shooting of Mr McCarthy was subsequently recovered from the nearby Royal Canal following a major search by the Garda Sub-Aqua Unit
Media reports at the time of his death suggested gardaí believed that the deceased
may have gone to meet an individual who owed him money in order to settle his own drug debt
A 38-year-old man will go on trial on Thursday accused of murdering a man whose body was found in Drumcondra in Dublin two years ago
Drumcondra in Dublin 9 was arraigned before the Central Criminal Court this week
Mr Caffrey pleaded not guilty to murdering Sean McCarthy (28) on a date unknown between August 2 and 7 2022
Ms Justice Caroline Biggs swore in a jury of seven men and five women to hear the trial
which will begin on Thursday morning before Mr Justice Paul McDermott and is expected to last six weeks
A Dublin man has been convicted of killing another man in what he claimed was an act of self-defence in a struggle over some missing drugs
was found not guilty of Sean McCarthy’s murder
Sean McCarthy was last seen alive on the 2nd of August 2022
walking towards Achill Road in Drumcondra where Dean Caffrey was living at the time
Caffrey walked into Ashbourne Garda Station and told Gardaí where they'd find his body
McCarthy had called to his house with a gun in his pocket over what he claimed was a dispute over missing drugs
He claimed a struggle ensued during which he managed to disarm Mr McCarthy
claiming he was acting in self-defence when he killed Mr McCarthy
and after deliberating for just over twelve hours
the jury cleared him of murder but convicted him of the lesser charge of manslaughter
His sentence hearing will take place in March
who can't be named to protect her victim's identity
both nude and in her underwear and sent them to her new lover
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It started as an extramarital affair with a man she met on the dating app Plenty of Fish
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And it ended Wednesday with a Calgary woman admitting criminal charges of making child pornography and communicating for the purpose of facilitating a sexual offence when her new boyfriend turned his attention to her 11-year-old daughter
With the 43-year-old mother of two wiping away tears in the prisoner’s box
Crown prosecutor Aurelie Beland detailed the affair in which the woman was willing to give up her daughter for her own sexual gratification
the woman — who can’t be identified to protect her victim’s identity — took videos of her daughter either nude and in her underwear and sent them to her new lover
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their daughter told him she had seen her mom texting with other men and she didn’t want them to get a divorce
“I told (my husband) that ‘Alex’ demanded nude pictures of (our daughter) and I sent them,” Beland
“I also told (my husband) that ‘Alex’ wanted to have sex with (the girl) and when he was done
A physical altercation between the husband and wife brought police to the home and the apprehension of their children by family services
In a subsequent interview with a social services investigator
the woman said she and her new boyfriend would have sex where he would beat her and have her “act like his slave.”
He also asked for pictures of the girl and her four-year-old brother
and said when her daughter “was old enough he wanted to be her first,” Beland told deWit
deWit ordered a psychological and risk assessment be conducted on her client
A sentencing date will be set in September
KMartin@postmedia.com
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A MAN has been remanded in custody charged with murder after the body of Ballymun man Sean McCarthy was found in an apartment in Drumcondra in Dublin at the weekend
Dean Caffrey, 36, of Beau Court, Achill Road, Dublin 9, appeared before Judge Conal Gibbons at Dublin District Court this morning
He is charged with murdering Sean McCarthy on August 2 at Mr Caffrey’s home
The deceased was reported missing from his home in Poppintree, Ballymun, in north Dublin
was found dead with a gunshot wound at an apartment on Achill Road in Drumcondra four days later
His body was removed from the scene on Sunday afternoon
Gardai arrested and detained the accused on Saturday.
He was charged at Clontarf Garda station at 1.24 am today and held pending his appearance before Judge Gibbon.
Dressed in a grey top, blue jeans and runners, Mr Caffrey sat silently throughout the brief hearing.
Garda Niall Minnock told the court that Mr Caffrey “made no reply to charge after caution”
The district court cannot grant bail in murder cases which only the High Court can consider
Defence solicitor Anarine McAllister asked Judge Gibbons to adjourn the case until Wednesday
Judge Gibbons acceded and remanded him in custody to appear via video link at Cloverhill District Court on August 17 for directions from the Director of Public Prosecutions to be obtained
Garda Niall Minnock, of Santry Garda Station. Picture: Gerry Mooney
Conor FeehanThu 11 Aug 2022 at 13:00A man in his 30s has been charged with the murder of Poppintree man Sean McCarthy, whose body was discovered in a Dublin apartment this last weekend after he was reported missing by his family.
Dean Caffrey (36) of Beau Court, Achill Road, Drumcondra, appeared before judge Conal Gibbons at a sitting of Dublin District Court at the Criminal Courts of Justice this morning.
He was charged with the murder of Sean McCarthy (28) at Caffrey’s apartment in Beau Court on August 2, the date McCarthy was reported missing.
Gardaí discovered the body of Mr McCarthy on Saturday August 6 at the apartment. He had suffered a gunshot wound.
His body was removed from the scene on Sunday and taken to Dublin City Mortuary where a post-mortem examination was conducted by State Pathologist Sally Anne Collis.
Garda Niall Minnock, of Santry garda station, gave evidence of arresting and charging Caffrey at 1.04am this morning at Clontarf garda station and told Judge Gibbons that the accused made no reply when charged.
There was no application for bail because in a murder charge such an application can only be made through the High Court.
Solicitor Anarine McAlllister, representing Caffrey, applied for and was granted legal aid.
Judge Gibbons remanded Caffrey in custody to Cloverhill prison to appear in court again next Wednesday August 17.
Caffrey, wearing a grey top, blue jeans and runners, did not speak during the short hearing.
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I was inspired by Victorian book design to create a poster about the Herstory of Feminism
It features a rose tree timeline of the year women gained suffrage per country
important legislative victories in Europe and in the US
as well as milestones of key Feminist figures around the world
I wanted to create a beautiful piece of art that would synthesize key dates and facts and introduce some of the women that have shaped the movement or that embody feminist values
It took a while to determine the information I wanted to include and how to present it (a Jezebel journalist and women’s rights activist kindly proof read it for me) and countless hours of drawing and painting
I obviously didn’t aim for exhaustivity but tried to include information about all waves and as many nationalities and ethnicities as possible
I hope it will make people want to learn more about Feminism and it’s historic activists and thinkers
More info: mariedebeaucourt.com
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"I would rather be a rebel than a slave." So simple, but so powerful.
"I would rather be a rebel than a slave." So simple
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