Newburyport’s Kyle Hodsdon named CAL athletic director of the year

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 07:34:32 GMT

Newburyport’s Kyle Hodsdon named CAL athletic director of the year The Cape Ann League has named Newburyport High School’s Kyle Hodsdon as its 2022-23 Athletic Director of the Year for having excelled in his profession and making significant contributions within the field of athletic administration at the local and state levels. Hodsdon has been the Athletic Director at Newburyport since 2015.“We can think of no more deserving recipient of this award than Kyle,” said Hamilton-Wenham AD Craig Genualdo. “He is a leader in our meetings, always at the forefront of league wide initiatives on equity, sportsmanship, and creating great environments for all of our athletes in competitions.”Hodson has been instrumental in providing a great perspective on the significance and importance of educational athletics. This past school year, he spearheaded the creation of the Cape Ann League sportsmanship summit, which had over 50 student-athletes from all eleven Cape Ann League schools. The students worked together during the day and l...

Lucas: Hunter Biden deal show’s the fix was in, just ask Jack Jones

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 07:34:32 GMT

Lucas: Hunter Biden deal show’s the fix was in, just ask Jack Jones Jack Jones ought to hire Christopher Clark.Jones is the New England Patriots cornerback who was arrested on gun charges at Logan Airport a week ago.Christopher Clark is Hunter Biden’s lawyer. He is the man who helped Joe Biden’s degenerate son Hunter, 53, dodge jail time for illegally carrying a gun, as well as for two watered down tax charges.Jones, 25, was released on $30,000 bail Tuesday after pleading not guilty in East Boston Municipal Court.Biden on the same day was released without bail after pleading guilty to two misdemeanor tax crimes and to the illegal possession of a gun.It took the U.S Justice Department and the FBI five years to investigate Biden and get him before a judge.It took only five days for Jones.Jones faces serious prison time if convicted.Biden doesn’t, but he’ll be on probation.And Joe Biden’s war on gun violence has suddenly turned into gun silence.One obvious difference in the cases is that Hunter Biden only had a Colt Cobra .38 Special that his gir...

Somerville school to remain closed next year due to rotting infrastructure

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 07:34:32 GMT

Somerville school to remain closed next year due to rotting infrastructure The Somerville school that shuttered after concrete crumbled in its halls this spring will continue to hold classes at a different venue next year.Most students at the pre-kindergarten-grade 8 Winter Hill Community Innovation School will be learning at the city’s Edgerly administrative building, while pre-K and kindergarten classes will be moved to the Capuano School.Officials alerted parents and community members last week of the change in learning venue, citing uncertainty around whether Winter Hill’s rotting infrastructure would be secure enough for classes to proceed.Structural engineers are studying the 95,000-square-foot school, built in 1975, and the reports should be done sometime in July, according to Interim Superintendent Jeff Curley, Winter Hill Principal Courtney Gosselin and Mayor Katjana Ballantyne.“Because we expect assessments and final reports to take several more weeks, and to be sure we have a formal plan in place for the fall with enough time to plan, we h...

Tax talks begin for second summer with billions potentially needed elsewhere

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 07:34:32 GMT

Tax talks begin for second summer with billions potentially needed elsewhere It’s fair to wonder how far state politicians will get toward cutting taxes this year, considering how last year’s efforts turned out.House and Senate lawmakers will meet in joint conference committee beginning this week, with the goal of ironing out the differences between their respective tax cut proposals and hoping, one imagines, that this year’s efforts aren’t as wasted as the last.Last June talks fell apart after negotiators learned a rarely invoked law from 1986 would require the state to send nearly $3 billion back to taxpayers. This summer tax talks come just as the Commonwealth grapples with a potential multi-billion-dollar budget hole stemming from the Baker Administration’s apparent misuse of COVID-era funds for unemployment benefits.Despite that, Doug Howgate, president of the Massachusetts Taxpayers Foundation, told the Herald Sunday that there is room for lawmakers to make tax cuts work.“I think it will happen,” Howgate said, before explaining that the news the Common...

Orioles reset: What’s it like to be baseball’s No. 1 prospect? Adley Rutschman, Gunnar Henderson share their experience.

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 07:34:32 GMT

Orioles reset: What’s it like to be baseball’s No. 1 prospect? Adley Rutschman, Gunnar Henderson share their experience. Before the Orioles drafted him in 2019′s second round, Gunnar Henderson was committed to play baseball at Auburn. But in detailing how he’s handled the pressures and attention that have come with his status as baseball’s top prospect, he evokes Alabama football coach Nick Saban.“Growing up,” Henderson said, “my parents always instilled, ‘Don’t let things get to your head, no matter if it’s good or bad. Just always keep your head down and just humbly work and don’t let all the ‘rat poison’ that people have go to your head.’”The Sabanism, in which rodent killer is used to describe outside noise, doesn’t fully summarize how Henderson and teammate Adley Rutschman viewed their respective terms as the sport’s No. 1 overall prospect. Both players viewed that status with pride but said the most important response was not to let it go to their heads.“It’s a really cool honor, just beca...

Indiana tornado kills one as severe weather causes damage and power outages across multiple states

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 07:34:32 GMT

Indiana tornado kills one as severe weather causes damage and power outages across multiple states SHOALS, Ind. (AP) — A tornado struck a home, killing one occupant and injuring another as severe weather hit parts of Indiana, Tennessee and other states, an official said.The tornado that struck the home Sunday evening was part of a storm system that pushed through Martin County, Indiana, WXIN-TV reported.Martin County Emergency Management Agency Director Cameron Wolf confirmed the death and injury, according to WXIN, which reported that the home was in a rural area where multiple trees were brought down by high winds.Martin County emergency management officials did not immediately respond to an email from The Associated Press seeking additional information about the casualties and the extent of storm damage.The town of Shoals, the Martin County seat, is about 85 miles (137 kilometers) southwest of Indianapolis and 80 miles (128 kilometers) northwest of Louisville, Kentucky.A tornado also touched down Sunday afternoon in Johnson County, south of Indianapolis, the Indianapolis Star ...

Suspected militants from Somalia kill 5 people in Kenya border village

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 07:34:32 GMT

Suspected militants from Somalia kill 5 people in Kenya border village NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — Five people have been killed in a Kenyan border village, fueling concerns that such attacks are increasing after a decline. The weekend attack raises the death toll over the last month to more than 30 people — including soldiers, police reservists and civilians.In Saturday’s attack in the coastal Lamu county, four of the victims had their throats slit and one was shot at close range, according to local police.The officials said about 30 attackers also torched houses in the village and stole food.The village borders Witu Forest, where al-Shabab militants have created hideouts and held abductees.Lamu County has been attacked two other times in the last two weeks, with both incidents targeting Kenya Defense Forces running a security operation in the area and leaving four of them dead.In Kenya’s north, Mandera, Wajir and Garissa counties have seen several attacks this month in which more than 10 people – including soldiers, police reservists and c...

Major NASCAR street closures begin in downtown Chicago

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 07:34:32 GMT

Major NASCAR street closures begin in downtown Chicago CHICAGO — A host of major street closures have begun in downtown Chicago for the NASCAR races in early July. Crews are preparing the 2.2-mile course around Grant Park ready for the Chicago Street Races on July 1 and 2. Construction is well underway as crews are putting up suites, grandstands, along with barriers and fencing around the circuit. A guide to the inaugural NASCAR Chicago Street Race Here are the closures that are ahead this week, starting on Jackson Drive on Sunday just after Midnight. Sunday, June 25 – Beginning at 9 p.m. Temporary overnight closure of westbound Roosevelt Rd between DuSable Lake Shore Drive and Columbus Dr.  Sunday, June 25 – Beginning at 1 a.m. - Closure of Jackson Dr. between Michigan Ave. and Columbus Dr. and closure of Columbus Dr. between Jackson Dr. and Roosevelt Rd. Monday, June 26 – Beginning at 6 a.m. Closure of Congress Plaza Dr. and lane closures on eastbound Roosevelt Road between Columbus Dr. and DuSable Lake Shore Dr. ...

Uber passenger shot and killed in University Village

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 07:34:32 GMT

Uber passenger shot and killed in University Village CHICAGO — A rideshare passenger died after he was shot while inside an Uber Sunday night, police said.According to police, the 19-year-old was in the car in the 1300 block of West Taylor Street around 9 p.m. Sunday in the city’s University Village neighborhood.Police said the man was approached by an armed man who fired shots then fled.Police said the driver took the victim to Rush Hospital where he was pronounced dead.No one is in custody.Police are investigating.

Why your flood risk could be a lot worse than you think

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 07:34:32 GMT

Why your flood risk could be a lot worse than you think (The Hill) - The federal government is spending hundreds of billions of dollars on a generation of new roads, bridges and sewers — which could be overwhelmed by floodwaters the moment they are installed.That's because federal estimates about flood risk haven't kept up with climate change, according to a study published on Monday in the Journal of Hydrology.First Street Foundation was auditing the gold standard of government rainfall calculations: the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration's (NOAA) Atlas 14 model. These projections of future risks of catastrophic downpours are a current key determining factor in the engineering standards by which $1.3 trillion in new infrastructure — paid for by a bipartisan 2021 legislative package — will be built.But according to First Street's report on Monday, even the best government estimates are "fundamentally flawed." That means the very infrastructure intended to bolster American cities against a changing climate may...