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November 1, 2007

The night before Nixon left the stage is on stage tonight

What did Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger talk about on the night before Nixon announced he was resigning the presidency? A play tonight imagines what might have happened on Aug. 7, 1974.

"Nixon's Nixon" starts at 8 p.m at the Sandra Feinstein-Gamm Theatre, 172 Exchange St., Pawtucket. Tickets are $20-$34. Call (401) 723-4266 or visit arttixri.com. Some seats are still available for tonight's show.

Performances run through Nov. 18 at the theater.

Read the Journal's review of the play here.

Posted by Mike McKinney at 7:00 PM | Comment

Fire, police unions file ethics complaint against Cicilline

PROVIDENCE -- The Providence firefighter and police unions have filed a state Ethics Commission complaint charging that Mayor David N. Cicilline "used his office for private gain," according to a news release.

The complaint asserts that Cicilline used public resources -- city personnel, a city fax machine and city letterhead paid for with public money -- to send out a news release as co-chairman of the state campaign for presidential candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton.

The complaint cites the Sept. 19 news release from Cicilline that called the firefighters union's decision to picket a then-upcoming Rhode Island visit by Clinton an attempt to "extort unreasonable and unfair contract demands." Cicilline said in the release he was stepping down as the state's Clinton campaign co-chairman.

"The mayor's decision to quit is his business, but it is not the public's business," Paul A. Doughty, president of Firefighters Local 799, said in the statement today. "When the mayor chose to use public assets, human and material, for personal political gain, he jumped over the ethical line."

Doughty added that Cicilline's news release and a letter of resignation to Clinton "should have been written by Cicilline campaign staff, printed on Cicilline campaign stationary, and transmitted via Cicilline campaign methods."

-- projo.com staff writer Michael P. McKinney

Posted by Mike McKinney at 6:55 PM | Comment

Governor lists temporary positions to be cut

Governor Carcieri released detailed plans this afternoon to cut 136 temporary contract employees from the state’s workforce, the first step in a workforce reduction plan he says will save taxpayers $100 million and help close a budget deficit projected at more than $200 million for the coming year.

Carcieri’s office did not name any of the employees affected. Nor did he say exactly when the jobs would be eliminated.

“Some positions will be eliminated as early as this month," the governor’s spokesman Jeff Neal said. "Many more will be eliminated early in the new calendar year and a few not until the end of the fiscal year [June 30, 2008].”

But the governor’s office released a list of the specific positions to be eliminated.
All major departments under the governor’s control will be affected -- the Department of Health, the Department of Children, Youth and Families and the Department of Education, among others.

Jobs targeted include art instructors, long-term substitute teachers, a reader for the blind, a fire-safety inspector and several doctors. There were also several secretaries and computer-related staff listed.

The move comes two weeks after Governor Carcieri outlined a broad plan to eliminate more than 1,000 positions from the state’s workforce, which also includes laying off 414 regular state employees and wiping 487 empty jobs off the state’s books.

He plans to announce detailed plans to cut the number of state employees on Nov. 15. Asked whether there may be more than 414, Neal responded: "Right now we’re still targeting 414.”

-- Steve Peoples of the Journal State House Bureau

Posted by Steve Peoples at 6:10 PM | Comment

N.J. man indicted on money-laundering charge

PROVIDENCE -- A federal grand jury in Providence has indicted a New Jersey man for money laundering involving an alleged attempt to transfer $220,270 in cash from drug trafficking.

Charlie Vu, 45, of Jersey City is charged in an indictment returned on Oct. 24 in U.S. District Court, U.S. Attorney Robert Clark Corrente's office announced today.

He pleaded not guilty today at his arraignment before Magistrate Judge David L. Martin, who released him on $250,000 bail.

On May 11 in Rhode Island, Vu tried to "promote drug trafficking by transferring $220,270 in cash," according to the news release. The U.S. Attorney's office would not elaborate on the details.

Vu was arrested at his New Jersey home on Oct. 25.

The maximum penalty for a money-laundering conviction is 20 years imprisonment and a $500,000 fine.

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Rhode Island State Police jointly investigated.

-- projo.com staff writer Michael P. McKinney

Posted by Mike McKinney at 6:01 PM | Comment

Cranston man arrested for giving private driving lessons

A Cranston man has been charged with illegally giving private lessons in how to drive commercial trucks, the state police said today.

Emmett Childress, 60, of 23 Sherwood St. was arrested yesterday on three counts of giving instruction in the operation of a commercial vehicle without being properly licensed to do so, the state police news release said.

Childress, a former Life Long Learning Center employee, was licensed by the state to give state-sanctioned commercial driving instruction at the Community College of Rhode Island. Childress was not licensed for private instruction.

At District Court arraignment, Childress's bail was set at $10,000 personal recognizance. Childress was ordered held without bail as a probation violator, the state police said, adding that in 1992 Childress pleaded no contests to five counts of child molestation and received a 20 year suspended sentence and 20 years of probation.

The investigation started in November 2006 when a business owner told State Police about concerns. The business owner believed Childress was purposely failing people trying out for licenses so that he could give private instruction at a cost to help them pass the test. Over the next year, more complaints were received.

-- projo.com staff writer Michael P. McKinney

Posted by Mike McKinney at 4:16 PM | Comment

Tropical Storm Noel could deliver gusts and rain Saturday

The remains of tropical storm Noel are currently projected to lash Cape Cod and the Islands with the strongest wind gusts in Southern New England on Saturday, but Block Island and Narragansett Bay areas should brace for winds and rainfall too.

Block Island could potentially see gusts reaching speeds in the 40-miles-per-hour and even low-50-mph range while areas of Narragansett Bay could see gusts reach the 30 mph-plus range, National Weather Service meteorologist Bill Simpson said today.

Winds as of right now are forecast to pick up in southern New England starting at 8 a.m. Saturday and into the afternoon.

The Cape, Nantucket and Martha's Vineyard might see near-hurricane-force winds, with potential flooding in coastal areas. Rainfall of two to three inches in some of those areas is possible. In Narragansett Bay/Block Island, there could be an inch or possibly two inches of rain.

-- projo.com staff writer Michael P. McKinney

Posted by Mike McKinney at 3:43 PM | Comment

Judge holds Eifrig's daughter in contempt

PROVIDENCE -- The Virginia daughter of 91-year-old Laurette Borduas Eifrig was found in willful contempt today for repeatedly violating a judge’s order that barred her from removing money from the trust of her mother.

Now blind, Eifrig now lives in assisted-living in Providence and suffers from dementia.

At the request of Eifrig’s lawyer, Superior Court Judge Alice B. Gibney held Francine Eifrig Ardito in contempt of court and ordered her to reimburse her mother another $16,000 she took without permission from her mother’s trust accounts.

If the money isn’t repaid by Dec. 14 -- the deadline Gibney set today -- an arrest warrant could be issued for Ardito and the judge could order her to pay a daily fine until she turns over the $16,000.

But unless Ardito comes back to Rhode Island to try to visit her mother -- something she hasn’t done since May -- or to contest the contempt proceedings, the arrest warrant would not subject her to incarceration in Virginia.

Extra: Read Judge Gibney's order

-- Journal staff writer Tracy Breton

Eifrig’s lawyer, Richard A. Boren, asked for the contempt ruling based on new information he received a couple of days ago from Ardito’s Virginia lawyer. It was part of an accounting that Boren had demanded on behalf of his client from Ardito, the former co-trustee of her mother’s trust who also had power of attorney for her elderly mother. Gibney removed her from those roles in June -- after deciding that neither of Eifrig’s daughters should have control over her person and money. Eifrig’s affairs are now being managed by a court-appointed guardian, lawyer Paula M. Cuculo.

Over the past few months, Boren has submitted evidence to Gibney showing that Ardito had taken more than $300,000 of her mother’s money -- a large chunk of her life savings -- from her mother’s trust and deposited it in accounts in her own name, without ever disclosing to Boren or Cuculo that the money existed.

In September, Ardito returned $251,183.27 of the money and at that point agreed to repay another $5,000 more, which hasn’t been forthcoming.

In court today, Boren said that Ardito actually owes $16,000 more to her mother -- not merely $5,000. Copies of canceled checks he received on Monday show that on three separate dates, Ardito used her mother’s money -- in violation of Gibney’s orders -- to pay Virginia lawyer James Philip Head in her battle to wrest of her mother away from Cuculo and earlier, her older sister.

Head sued Eifrig and Cuculo as part of Ardito’s effort to regain control over her mother and her money but the lawsuit was dropped recently as part of an attempt to settle the ongoing litigation between Eifrig and her Virginia daughter.

Cuculo said in court today that Eifrig is very much “mentally aware” of what has been going on and is disgusted. Cuculo said that Eifrig has told her she wants to amend her will again to make Ardito a lesser beneficiary. Cuculo said the new will is to be drafted within the next week and that the bulk of Eifrig’s estate will now go to her older daughter, Suzette Gebhard, of Warren.

Gebhard, former president of the Rhode island League of Women Voters and a one-time democratic congressional candidate here, was charged with obstruction of justice (and later acquitted) after she moved her mother to Rhode Island from Virginia in 2006 and secreted her in her house, refusing to let anyone visit. The police had to break down Gebhard’s door to gain access to the retired schoolteacher. After a brief hospitalization, Eifrig was moved to Capitol Ridge, on Smith Street, where she currently resides. She has testified that she wishes to remain there.

Currently, Ardito is barred by the court from visiting her. Gebhard goes to visit her mother two or three times a week. Today, Cuculo asked Gibney to allow Gebhard to take her mother out for excursions in the community -- which the court has prohibited since Eifrig’s removal from Gebhard’s home. The judge said she would mull that over but before she made a decision, she wanted to have an off-the-record meeting with Gebhard.

Posted by Mike McKinney at 3:37 PM | Comment

MySpace page shows Michael Groff's love of life and car

Michael Groff’s MySpace page, which was set to "private" yesterday, has one photo album with pictures graphically documenting his double-lung transplant, performed to reverse damage caused by cystic fibrosis.

“Just after 4 months ago,” the West Warwick native with the screen name "newlungs" writes of the surgery, “I literally came back to life.”

There are pictures of his fiancee; tombstones with the caption "Not ready yet," and musings on how precious life is.

And there is another photo album with a dozen pictures of his new car: a 2008 black Nissan Altima 3.5 SE – six speed with Lexani Fire Wheels.

Groff, himself, is in only two of those pictures.

The rest are of the car; inside and outside. From the front and from the back. Polished enough to reflect a wooded background in the door panes.

Late yesterday morning, witnesses reported seeing a black 2008 Nissan and a 1998 Honda weaving in and out of traffic at high speeds northbound along Route 95.

The police also had reports that one of the cars may have rammed the other.

Both cars flew off the road and up an embankment near the exit for Interstate 295. Both cars crashed, bursting into flames and were flattened.

The Bristol County District Attorney today identified the victims as Michael Groff, 29, of West Warwick, and Melissa Gauthier, 32, of Cumberland.

-- projo.com staff writer Brandie M. Jefferson

Posted by Brandie Jefferson at 3:13 PM | Comment

N. Kingstown: Main St. pipe replacement under way

NORTH KINGSTOWN -- Construction workers today used a back hoe and a saw to dig a hole in Main Street, part of a two-month project to replace old water pipes with new ones.

The A. DiFazio Construction company in Cranston started the $600,000 job yesterday. Workers will replace 60-year-old steel water pipes with less corrosive ones and upgrade the drainage system.

The work is part of a $2 million project to make over Main Street, which boasts the oldest water lines in town, Public Works Director Phil Bergeron said.

“There’s still a lot of work to do,” he said. Once the water lines are in, crews must rebuild the old road and repair or replace broken and uneven sidewalks. “Hopefully, that work will start in the spring,” he said.

National Grid last month replaced old gas lines on the street, Bergeron said.

Main Street stretches only about 1,560 feet from the intersection of Brown Street to the town wharf.

But it’s a busy part of Wickford’s retail center.


-- Journal staff writer Paul Davis

Some shop owners lost sales when construction crews tore up Brown Street during the busy Christmas season several years ago.

Already, the town has erected signs notifying residents and visitors of a weekday parking ban on Main Street, from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m.

But the shops won’t close and there is parking elsewhere in the village, Bergeron said.

“There’s never a good time to do this kind of work,” said Bergeron, but only a handful of stores are located at the entry to Main Street. Work crews will tackle that area first, he added.

“I’ve been in touch with the shopkeepers and merchants,” Bergeron said. “Our goal is to open up the parking as soon as we can, clear out of the area on Fridays and not look like a construction zone.”

Posted by Mike McKinney at 3:00 PM | Comment

Drop outs put 5 R.I. high schools on a dubious list

Five Rhode Island high schools were labeled "dropout factories" by researchers at Johns Hopkins University.

In a national analysis of 13,748 high schools across the country, the researchers found that about 1,700 of them retain 60 percent or less of their students to senior.

Schools that fell below the 60 percent mark were called "dropout factories" by Johns Hopkins.

Just 45 percent of freshmen at Central High School in Providence made it to their senior year, based on data collected from 2004, 2005 and 2006, according to the analysis conducted for the Associated Press.

At Mt. Pleasant High School in Providence, 58 percent of freshmen made it to senior year, as did 54 percent at William E. Tolman Senior High School in Pawtucket, 54 percent at Johnston Senior High School and 60 percent at West Warwick Senior High School, according to the analysis, which averages enrollment data from the three years.

High schools with fewer than 100 students or that did not exist before 2001 were not included in the analysis.

The researchers counted transfer students and students who were held back as dropouts, a factor some education officials say presents an inaccurate picture of how many students successfully complete high school.

However, researchers Robert Balfanz and T. Chris West defend their methodology, saying that most missing students had dropped out and that students who transferred into a high school in their sophomore, junior or senior year were counted, helping to offset students who left. They also adjusted their findings for any big one-year dips that might be caused by the closure of a local business or plant, West said.

Recognizing the term “dropout factories” is controversial, the researchers said the term was used “to describe a harsh and unfair situation, under-resourced and over-challenged high schools which educate primarily low income and minority students and year after year are unable to graduate the majority or near majority of students.”

Rather than criticize dedicated teachers in urban schools, the researchers said they hoped their findings would “shine a spotlight on a silent epidemic,’ and force more resources to flow to such schools.


-- Journal staff writer Jennifer D. Jordan

Posted by Peter Phipps at 1:48 PM | Comment

Group offers advice for helping people out of poverty

More than a quarter of Providence residents live below the federal poverty line, but working with private institutions may provide a way out, according to a group charged with studying poverty in the city.

The Poverty Work and Opportunity Task Force, created by Mayor David N. Cicilline, suggested today that city officials could work with banks and other companies to help those residents raise their standards of living.

Results of the group’s report, Pathways to Opportunity, were presented this morning to Cicilline at Casey Family Services.

Specifically, the group recommended working with banks to provide lower fees and more services to people living below the poverty level – currently $20,650 for a family of four.

The group also recommended more oversight of payday lenders, businesses which, nationwide, have been criticized for high interest rates and predatory practices.

The group also had broad advice that touched on a number of other areas – like education -- where it thought reform could help provide economic improvements for families.

-- with reports from Journal staff writer Gregory Smith

Posted by Brandie Jefferson at 1:16 PM | Comment

Alert: R.I. drivers killed in Rte. 95 crash are identified

The drivers killed in yesterday's high-speed, two-car crash on Route 95 in Attleboro, Mass., were identified today as Michael L. Groff, 29, of West Warwick, and Melissa Gauthier, 32, of Cumberland, according to a state police report.

Groff was driving a black 2008 Nissan Altima and Gauthier was driving a 1998 Honda sedan. The crash happened near exit 4 on Route 95 north.

Reports suggested the drivers may have been racing when their cars collided at extreme speeds on northbound Route 295, going off the road and up an embankment. The cars crashed, exploding in flames. Both vehicles had Rhode Island license plates.

An Attleboro police detective said last night there was a possibility the pair knew one another and may have been involved in a road-rage style chase.

-- projo.com staff writer Michael P. McKinney, with archival reports

Posted by Mike McKinney at 12:22 PM | Comment

Program to reduce risky teen driving gets $2M grant

With a $2-million federal grant in hand, Rhode Island Hospital announced today it will continue a program that tries to discourage Rhode Island teen-agers from driving dangerously.

Police, judges, juvenile hearing boards, probation officers, and magistrates can refer Rhode Islanders who are 16 to 20 years old to the Reducing Youthful Dangerous Driving program if they have been charged with and/or convicted of a driving or traffic violation.

The three-week program focuses on "motivational intervention through group-counseling sessions, presentations, discussions and volunteer experiences in either the hospital setting or in the community," a hospital news release states.

The program tries to get young drivers to "evaluate their behavior and perception of risk in relation to alcohol, substance abuse, and driving, so they will want to make behavioral changes on their own," the release states.

When they finish the program, drivers' progress is monitored for at least a year.

The program began in 2001.

“The problem in Rhode Island is clear -- teens frequently engage in dangerous and risky driving, including driving under the influence of alcohol and other drugs,” Ted Nirenberg, a Brown University professor and director of the hospital's program, said in the statement. “However, our program has shown excellent promise in helping local teens identify their risky actions and make subsequent changes in their driving behavior.”

The $2-million grant from the National Institutes of Health is going to researchers at Rhode Island Hospital’s Injury Prevention Center.

-- projo.com staff writer Michael P. McKinney

Posted by Mike McKinney at 12:18 PM | Comment

Mass State Police may ID victims through vehicles

Massachusetts State Police said this morning they are interviewing witnesses and working with Rhode Island police to try to confirm the identities of two people killed in an explosive crash yesterday.

The Massachusetts medical examiner has not made a positive identification of the victims – one man and one woman – who were pronounced dead at the scene of the accident, on Route 95 north near exit 5.

Massachusetts Trooper Eric Benson says there’s no time frame. “It could take a couple days, really,” so authorities are working on other ways to identify the two.

When asked if they had determined who owned the vehicles – both of which were registered in Rhode Island – Benson said “that wont be released until the victims are identified.”

And until the two are identified, Benson said yesterday, the events leading up to the crash will remain a mystery.

Late yesterday morning, two cars that had been traveling at "extremely high speeds" collided, going off the road and up an embankment, and then exploding in flames.

Detective Timothy Cook Sr., one of the first officers on the scene, said some of the witness accounts he’s heard have lead him to believe the incident may have been between people who knew each other: “road rage,” rather than racing as was initially suggested.

-- projo.com staff writer Brandie M. Jefferson

Posted by Brandie Jefferson at 11:53 AM | Comment

Last month was second-warmest October on record

summerwarmth.JPG
Journal photo/ Mary Murphy
Amy Bolduc, a URI student and babysitter, pushes her charges, Charlie Mandeville, 2, and his brother Grant, 10 months, off the Narragansett Town Beach yesterday, the last day of an October that provided plenty of warm weather for Rhode Islanders.

The National Weather Service has been keeping track of temperatures in Rhode Island since 1904. And only once in the 103 years that have passed, has there been an October with a warmer average temperature than the month that just passed.

And for all the discussion of dry weather, this was only the 22nd driest since record-keeping began with less than 2 inches of precipitation across the state.

The month got off to a record-breaking start on Oct. 3, with a 29-year high minimum temperature of 64 degrees.

Over the past 31 days, the temperature has averaged 59.6 degrees – that’s more than 6 degrees higher than October average has been each year since 1904 with the exception of 1947.

That temperature is not immediately available because of a change in which daily temperature numbers are used to compute averages.

It all comes to a chilly end today, with a cold front moving in by early evening, maybe reaching freezing temperatures in some areas of the region.

-- projo.com staff writer Brandie M. Jefferson

Posted by Brandie Jefferson at 11:25 AM | Comment

State looking for its greenest hotels

PROVIDENCE -- The state Department of Environmental Management and organizations that promote the hospitality industry are unveiling a survey this morning that attempts to identify the state’s most environmentally responsible hotels.

The survey is part of a campaign to convince hoteliers to voluntarily go “green” to help the city attract tourists and conventioneers concerned about the environmental toll of their business and personal travel.

The initiative, organized in part by the Rhode Island Hospitality and Tourism Association, will be announced this morning at the annual meeting of the Providence Warwick Convention and Visitors Bureau. The meeting is being held at the IMAX Theatre at the Providence Place mall.

-- Journal staff writer Benjamin N. Gedan

Posted by Mike McKinney at 11:21 AM | Comment

Victims, cause of Route 95 fatal remain unknown

The Massachusetts state police say they don’t know when the victims in yesterday’s fatal car crash will be identified.

And until the Massachusetts medical examiner identifies the two victims, said State Trooper Eric Benson, the events leading up to the crash will remain a mystery.

“Is this road rage? Is this racing? We don’t know,” he said. “There are only two people who can tell us that and they’re both dead.”

Two cars that had been traveling at "extremely high speeds" collided, going off the road and up an embankment, exploding in flames yesterday at 11 a.m. The victims have only been described as a man and a woman. Both cars had Rhode Island license plates.

Detective Timothy Cook Sr., one of the first officers on the scene, said some of the witness accounts he’s heard have lead him to believe the incident may have been between people who knew each other -- “road rage,” rather than racing.

-- with archived reports from Journal staff writer Cynthia Needham

Posted by Brandie Jefferson at 8:38 AM | Comment

CVS Caremark 3rd-quarter profit more than doubles

WOONSOCKET -- CVS Caremark Corp., the nation's largest pharmacy chain, said today its third-quarter profit more than doubled due to same-store sales gains and the use of more generic drugs.

For the quarter ended Sept. 29, net income after preferred dividends jumped to $686.1 million, or 45 cents per share, from $280.7 million, or 33 cents per share in the prior-year quarter.

Analysts polled by Thomson Financial expected earnings of 44 cents per share for the quarter.

CVS said costs associated with its acquisition of Caremark in March hurt earnings by 1 cent per share in the quarter.

The company said its gross margins significantly improved from using generic drugs and implementing "margin-enhancing strategies" in the front of its stores.

Revenue rose 83 percent to $20.50 billion from $11.21 billion in the third quarter of 2006. Analysts predicted revenue of $20.56 million.

Same-store sales, or sales at stores open at least a year, grew 4.3 percent in the company's pharmacy division and 6.5 percent in the front-end segment. Same-store sales is a key indicator of retailer performance since it measures growth at existing locations rather than newly-opened ones.

-- The Associated Press

Posted by Jack Perry at 8:10 AM | Comment

Tropical storm likely to kick up wind, seas Saturday

MIAMI -- Tropical Storm Noel is going to mean more rain and wind for South Florida today.

Southern New England could feel some impact from the storm starting Saturday with high seas and gales across outer coastal waters, according to the weather service.

The Atlantic storm season's 14th named storm is blamed in more than 80 deaths in its march through the Caribbean, most of them on the island shared by Haiti and the Dominican Republic.

The National Hurricane Center in Miami says Noel is heading toward the northwestern Bahamas this morning with top winds of nearly 60 miles an hour. It's expected to turn northeast away from Florida, although the southeast coast is being buffeted by strong winds and high surf. A tropical storm watch remains in effect, and forecasters say an already soggy South Florida could get another two inches of rain.

-- The Associated Press

Posted by Brandie Jefferson at 7:39 AM | Comment

The upgraded Dunk will open doors to media

PROVIDENCE -- The Dunkin' Donuts Center will open its doors today to give members of the news media a sneak peak of the upgrades.

The half-hour tours will begin at 2 p.m.

The general public, meanwhile, will have to wait until Nov. 14 to check out the arena, when the building officially reopens after six months of upgrades.

There are 12 events are scheduled for November, including Providence College basketball games and a performance by the Trans-Siberian Orchestra. The first event is a Providence Bruins hockey game.

-- Journal staff writer Benjamin N. Gedan

Posted by Mike McKinney at 7:29 AM | Comment

Photo: Sunrise in Richmond

110107_andreasunrise.jpg
Projo.com photo/ Andrea Panciera
The eastern sky, off Kenyon Hill Trail in Richmond, at about 6:45 a.m.

Posted by Jack Perry at 7:20 AM | Comment

Groundbreaking on new immigration office

A groundbreaking is scheduled today for a new U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services field office in Johnston.

It's scheduled for 2:30 p.m. at 1543 Atwood Dr., Johnston.


Posted by Jack Perry at 7:02 AM | Comment

Cloudy and 66 degrees

It's pretty humid now, at 85 percent but it should go down to 60 percent as the day goes on. The National Weather Service is forecasting cloudy skies and a high temperature of 66 degrees.

The temperature should drop to 38 degrees overnight when the clouds should give way to clear skies.

Tomorrow is looking sunny with a high of 52 degrees.

For more weather and regular updates, see projo.com/weather.

Posted by Brandie Jefferson at 7:01 AM | Comment

Today's front page

Today's front page features photographs and a story about a crash that killed two people on Route 95 in Attleboro.

Download a copy of today's front page in .pdf format.

Posted by Jack Perry at 7:00 AM | Comment

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