Major sports complex in Windsor nearly finished

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 04:28:56 GMT

Major sports complex in Windsor nearly finished WINDSOR, Colo. (KDVR) — A major sports complex in Northern Colorado continues to inch toward completion. The Future Legends complex in Windsor is a 118-acre facility that will eventually include a professional baseball field, 12 multi-use fields, two hotels and nearly a dozen restaurants. This is the most common activity in lightning deaths Thursday night, the Northern Colorado Owlz, a minor league baseball team, took the field against the Rocky Mountain Vibes out of Colorado Springs. The Northern Colorado Hailstorm will play soccer here on Saturday. The complex was supposed to open a year earlier but was delayed to weather and construction complications. The Future Legends Complex is located east of downtown Windsor.

Editorial: Congress takes a break while debt default looms

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 04:28:56 GMT

Editorial: Congress takes a break while debt default looms Note to Congress: get back to work.Though they’ve yet to reach a deal on the debt ceiling, House lawmakers are leaving Washington for the long Memorial Day weekend.Sorry, but this isn’t the time to kick back and watch a parade.The deadline to avoid a debt default is a week away, and as The Hill reported, negotiators say they’re getting closer to making a deal.Close is not good enough – certainly not good enough to warrant a break.“Still working through thorny issues, but there’s goodwill on all sides,” Rep. Patrick McHenry (R-N.C.), a key ally of Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) and negotiator in spending talks with the White House, told The Hill on Thursday.“It’s just tougher issues that remain,” he added.All the more reason to work through the weekend. Because resolving those  “tougher issues that remain” are what’s keeping Americans anxious, wondering if their Social Security check, military paycheck, veterans benefits and/or funding for...

Connaughton: Follow the money for key to Beacon Hill payroll blackout

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 04:28:56 GMT

Connaughton: Follow the money for key to Beacon Hill payroll blackout Article V of the Massachusetts Constitution requires that the branches of government “at all times” be accountable to the people.But few state governments are less accountable to the people than Massachusetts. The latest evidence came when state senators rejected a proposed amendment to the Senate’s budget plan that would have required the state’s quasi-public agencies to post their payrolls on the state comptroller’s website.From DCR summer lifeguards to corrections officers, salaries are available online. Why shouldn’t that be the case for employees of the Massachusetts Development Finance Agency? Perhaps the answer can be found in the words of Senate Minority Leader Bruce Tarr (R-Gloucester), who sponsored the amendment.“The quasi-public entities have, in many cases, very highly compensated individuals and many of them … do not share that information with the comptroller’s office,” Tarr told the Boston Herald.He might have been referring to the fact that quasi-public agencies are...

‘The Eight Mountains’ soars as tale of friendship, discovery

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 04:28:56 GMT

‘The Eight Mountains’ soars as tale of friendship, discovery MOVIE REVIEW“The Eight Mountains”Not Rated. In Italian and Nepali with subtitles. At the Coolidge Corner.Grade: AEngrossing and joyously rustic, “The Eight Mountains” comes from married Belgian filmmakers Felix van Groeningen (“Beautiful Boy”) and first-timer Charlotte Vandermeersch, who co-wrote the screenplay based on the best-selling novel by Paolo Cognetti. It begins when shy 12 year-old Pietro (Lupo Barbieri) from the city of Turino goes on a modest vacation with his mother (Elena Lietti) at the foot of the Italian Alps in a tiny (and getting smaller by the minute) Alpine village named Grana.The boy meets another boy his age, a rustic semi-brute named Bruno (Cristiano Sassella), whose father works as a bricklayer down among the flatlanders and is mostly absent. Pietro’s father Giovanni (Filippo Timi) is a science-minded company executive, who drives an Alpha Romeo, loves the mountains and takes the boys on climbs. Giovanni keeps track of their journeys on a map he has tac...

Local, small acts also shine on Boston Calling stage

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 04:28:56 GMT

Local, small acts also shine on Boston Calling stage It’s Boston Calling time again, which means that Harvard Stadium will be overrun with big names like Alanis Morissette and the Foo Fighters. But as usual, you’re not getting the full experience unless you show up early, roam the grounds and catch the best of the local and second-tier bands.The Philadelphia band Mt. Joy is a local favorite; they were one of the first to headline the new MGM Music Hall at the Fenway and will be back there in the fall. Their Boston Calling set promises to be shorter but punchier. “You’re playing in a place where the energy is different,” said frontman Matt Quinn. “You know that people still have a full day of music, so you don’t get too introspective on them. So we put together something that’s high energy, at least for us. When you condense it down to an hour, you can pick out the greatest hits and let it rip.”A Mt. Joy set can still go anywhere, with their originals flowing into cover tunes. Last year at the Fenway they played a tune by Phish —...

‘Little Mermaid” remake flounders

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 04:28:56 GMT

‘Little Mermaid” remake flounders MOVIE REVIEW“The Little Mermaid”Rated PG. At the AMC Boston Common, AMC South Bay and suburban theaters.Grade: CThis new, live-action “The Little Mermaid” from Disney works on almost no level. It hardly has enough music to be a musical (and some of the songs are sung by off-camera voices), the underwater scenes are murky and look fake, and the lead actors have no emotional connection. Outside of exploiting nostalgia for the 1989 animated version, this new “Mermaid” directed by Rob Marshall of “Chicago,” is just another Disney live-action remake of an animated hit. The fact that it also comes across like a water-logged remake of “Cinderella” only makes it more dull.Ariel, the film’s fish-tailed protagonist, is played by the Grammy-nominated singer Halle Bailey, whose casting caused a racist backlash. Ariel is a mermaid, who once again sports a big, reddish mane of (CG?) billowing hair and for reasons I did not understand in either film, longs to become a part of the world...

Gallery: Celtics win Game 5 of the Eastern Conference Finals 110-97

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 04:28:56 GMT

Gallery:  Celtics win Game 5 of the Eastern Conference Finals 110-97 The Boston Celtics beat the Miami Heat during Game 5 of the Eastern Conference Finals at the TD Garden

Franks: Wishing a happy 100th birthday to Henry Kissinger

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 04:28:56 GMT

Franks: Wishing a happy 100th birthday to Henry Kissinger It would be difficult to find any living American who has had a greater impact on world events over an ever-growing period – stretching decades – than former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, who turns 100 on Saturday.In my Forrest Gump-like life, I had the high honor of getting to know Dr. Kissinger during the 1990s. After my successful campaign for Congress, I was left with a sizeable campaign debt. Then-Vice President Dan Quayle and Kissinger were the first to call to offer help with retiring that debt. They were each featured speakers at fundraising events. Kissinger and I became friends.Kissinger repeated his support for my other campaigns as well, including when I ran for the Senate eight years later.Besides always being able to draw a paying crowd, I learned a great deal from this statesman. As a lover of history, I could sit and listen to Kissinger for hours. Where do you start? The Vietnam War, opening doors to China, former President Richard Nixon’s resignation, I could ...

Carroll: Medicaid rates standing between addicts and recovery

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 04:28:56 GMT

Carroll: Medicaid rates standing between addicts and recovery My recovery journey began on March 3, 2014 after hundreds of failed attempts over the course of nearly two decades. From the outside looking in I was at the height of my career as an actor and musician but my personal life and health began to deteriorate rapidly. Emergency room visits became routine and I learned how little success meant if you could not show up as a sober husband or father. I was losing the things that really meant something.To be brought to the light after being in the darkness for so long is an amazing experience. To rebuild one’s life from a place of disrepair to one that is full of purpose and gratitude is about the most beautiful thing I can think of. This is the great promise that recovery can deliver. Life can be filled with hope, connection and meaning. Mine is today.But for too many in Massachusetts, recovery is out of reach and hope is dim, if not gone altogether, because of a lack of resources. We are in the middle of an epidemic – a humanitarian c...

Formulaic ‘Kandahar’ misfires as spy action thriller

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 04:28:56 GMT

Formulaic ‘Kandahar’ misfires as spy action thriller MOVIE REVIEW“Kandahar”Rated R. At the AMC Boston Common, AMC South Bay and suburban theaters.Grade: C “Kandahar” is the latest action film from actor-producer Gerard Butler and his G-BASE company (“Plane,” “Den of Thieves”). It’s also the second recent film about a Western fighter in the Middle East and his bond with his local translator (the other one is Guy Ritchie’s overrated dud “The Covenant” with Jake Gyllenhaal).Directed by Ric Roman Waugh, the director of Butler’s previous efforts “Angel Has Fallen” and “Greenland,” and written by former Defense Intelligence officer Mitchel LaFortune (instant winner of best spy-name contest), “Kandahar” features Butler as Tom Harris, some kind of Middle East CIA operative whose specialty is – oy, that again? – doing jobs no one else can pull off in between visits to his beloved 17-year-old daughter Ida, who lives with his estranged wife back home in the UK.“Kandahar” stretches credulity from the get go. In openin...