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Category: Boston, Massachusetts Local News

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  • Human remains found in a residential part of Saugus

    Human remains found in a residential part of Saugus

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    Evidence of human skeletal remains was found in Saugus woods Sunday morning, according to Essex County District Attorney Paul F. Tucker and Chief Michael Ricciardelli.

    The remains were discovered in the woods near David Drive shortly after 10 a.m. by an individual walking their dog. The remains were then transported to the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner to determine a cause of death and for identification.

    The ongoing investigation has been assigned to the Massachusetts State Police, the District Attorney’s Office, and the Saugus Police Department. There is no known risk to the public.

    This is a developing news story that will be updated when we know more.

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    Laney Broussard

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  • NBPT Docu Fest to screen ‘Bathtubs Over Broadway’

    NBPT Docu Fest to screen ‘Bathtubs Over Broadway’

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    NEWBURYPORT — The Newburyport Documentary Film Festival is presenting the inaugural screening of the NBPT Docu Fest Series on Friday, Feb. 23, to celebrate its 20th anniversary, welcoming back an award-winning audience favorite that opened the 2018 festival, “Bathtubs Over Broadway.”

    Sponsored by Dyno Records and hosted by the Firehouse Center for the Arts, One Market Square, Newburyport, the event will begin with a 6 p.m. reception and will be followed by the 7 p.m. screening. 

    While gathering material for a segment on “The Late Show With David Letterman,” comedy writer Steve Young stumbled onto a few vintage records that would change his life forever.

    Bizarre cast recordings marked “internal use only” revealed elaborate Broadway-style musicals about some of the most recognizable corporations in America: General Electric, McDonald’s, Ford, DuPont, Xerox.

    Directed by Dava Whisenant, “Bathtubs Over Broadway,” follows Young on his quest to find all he can about this hidden world. Along the way, Steve forms unlikely friendships and discovers that this discarded musical genre starring tractors and bathtubs was bigger than Broadway. Featuring David Letterman, Chita Rivera, Martin Short, Jello Biafra, Florence Henderson, and more.

    Following the screening, there will be a Q&A with Young and a live performance of a favorite corporate show tune and screening of a bonus vintage clip.

    Ticket prices are $15/$12 for seniors/students. To purchase tickets online, visit the Firehouse website: (www.firehouse.org), visit the Firehouse box office in person or call 978.462.7366.

    Be sure to mark your 2024 calendars for the Newburyport Documentary Film Festival taking place Sept, 20-22, and visit the website: www.nbptdocufest.org.

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  • Tyngsboro High’s December Students of the Month

    Tyngsboro High’s December Students of the Month

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    TYNGSBORO — Tyngsboro High School has announced its Students of the Month for December.

    Jessica Nguyen, daughter of Melissa Tran and Giang Nguyen, is a two-year member of the National Honor Society. She has also received the Academic Excellence Award for three years and Outstanding Achievement in World Language. Jessica is also a member of the Diversity Equity Inclusion Club where she serves as the vice president, Student Council, Medical Professional Club, and National Honor Society. She has also participated in community service such as a teacher assistant at St. Mary Magdalen Church for the Vietnamese community, volunteering at Festival of Trees, Tyngsboro Block Party, and the Holiday Marketplace. Her hobbies include working out, late-night drives with friends, photography, and cooking. Jessica’s favorite subjects are math and English. Her goals are to major in finance and become a financial analyst, get her real estate license, and become an agent.

    Leilana So, daughter of Jane Song and Sambath So, has received the Academic Excellence Award, the Core Values Award, Outstanding Achievement in Business, and Outstanding Achievement in Science. She is a member of the DECA club where she has been president for the past two years. She is also a member of the Student Council where she has served as the communications director, and DEI Club social media manager. Her hobbies include playing the guitar, listening to new music, playing video games, and spending time with family. Leilana’s favorite classes are Writing Research and Sociology and her future plans include studying computer science to become a software engineer.

    Timothy Guilmette, son of Kim and John Guilmette, is a three-year member of the National Honor Society. He has also received the Outstanding Achievement in Business Award and was a four-year recipient of the Principal’s Award. Timothy is a member of DECA and has served as the secretary. He is also a four-year member of the varsity baseball and varsity football teams where he was named a two-year captain and league all star and received the Coaches Award his senior year. Timothy was also a member of the varsity basketball team for two years. He has completed community service at events like the Tyngsboro Block Party, Tyngsboro Elementary School, Tyngsboro Youth Baseball and Tyngsboro Youth Football. His favorite subjects are computer science and business. Timothy plans to study computer engineering in college.

    Stephanie Tyros, daughter of Katherine and Daniel Tyros, is a two-year member of the National Honor Society. She has received the Outstanding Achievement in Mathematics Award, Outstanding Achievement in Science, Outstanding Achievement in Business, Smith College Book Award, Academic Excellence Award, and the Core Values Award. She is also a member of the Medical Professional Club, National Honor Society where she serves as secretary, and Senior Sidekicks. Stephanie is also a two-year member of the varsity tennis team. She has also participated in community service such as Give Kids the World, Tyngsboro Public Library, Festival of Trees, Tyngsboro Block Party, Trunk or Treat and The Big Red. Stephanie’s hobbies include reading, puzzles, going to the beach, and hanging out with friends. Her favorite subjects are math and science and her future goals are to go to college and eventually work in the science field.

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  • Car accident at intersection of School and Center St. in Chicopee

    Car accident at intersection of School and Center St. in Chicopee

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    CHICOPEE, Mass. (WWLP) — A car crashed at the intersection of School and Center streets in Chicopee on Saturday evening.

    Our 22News crews got to the crash just after 8 p.m. where they saw one person being loaded on to an ambulance.

    There has been no word yet on what caused the crash, but 22News will update this story as more information becomes available.

    22News began broadcasting in March 1953 providing local news, network, syndicated, and local programming to western Massachusetts. Follow WWLP-22News on X @WWLP22News and Facebook.

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    Alanna Flood

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  • Support shown for new police station at Salem NH deliberative

    Support shown for new police station at Salem NH deliberative

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    SALEM, N.H. — A proposed, new $40 million police station that residents will vote on in March received nothing but positives recommendations at Saturday’s deliberative session.

    Salem’s Town Council presented warrant articles for the March 12 election, including the station, on Saturday at Salem High School to an audience of about 100 people.

    Many residents who spoke agreed that the new station was long overdue, and should have been passed when this project was brought forward in past years.

    “I wrote a letter 20 years ago to the paper supporting it,” said Betty Gay, a former state representative from Rockingham 8, which encompassed the Salem area until 2022 but which now includes Danville due to redistricting. “This building, I’ve been told, is to cover us for the next 50 years.”

    Police Chief Joel Dolan gave a detailed presentation about the current station, which was originally built in 1966 for 14 staff members.

    Dolan said reports from the engineer and construction team at the time of the construction said the original building, at approximately 3,700 square feet, was too small for the number of staff members at that time.

    Over the years, the size of the structure — and the number of employees — has grown, and is now comprised of approximately 12,000 square feet, for a little more than 100 civilian and sworn-in officers.

    “This is their office space,” Dolan said, referring to the triple-wide trailer that’s used for evidence storage and investigation space. “It’s just too cramped to conduct proper, safe, law enforcement at this time.”

    Dolan also said there are serious issues with mold, poor ventilation for heating and air conditioning throughout the station, and a sally bay that can only accommodate one cruiser at a time, which makes transporting detainees dangerous.

    Another issue with the lack of space is not having anywhere to put victims of crimes who might need a quiet area. Dolan said victims have to be in the same area where officers are doing their work, so that lack of privacy is also a problem.

    The new station is projected to be a two-story, 40,537-square-foot building with ample space to meet the needs of a growing staff. The square footage includes a training area in the back and six bays for storage and a kennel.

    As for payment, Joe Sweeney, the vice chair of the Town Council said the town would take out three, 20-year bonds. The bonds will be approximately $9 million, $15 million and $14 million each.

    Over the 20-year life of the bonds, the estimated property tax increase for a house valued at $500,000 would range from $62.50 to $250 a year.

    The payment does not include the $3 million that has been donated by Tuscan Village owner Joe Faro, who gave the money due to its size and the impact the village has had on the town’s police force.

    The warrant article was moved to the ballot as written. It will ask voters for permission to raise and appropriate $38.6 million for a new station, as well as to authorize the Town Council to apply and accept federal, state and other aid and revenue sources for the project.

    This article requires at least 60% of voters to approve it.

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    By Katelyn Sahagian | ksahagian@northofboston.com

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  • Quick Fix: Vegetable creole

    Quick Fix: Vegetable creole

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    I used the vibrant flavors of Creole cooking to create this easy vegetarian dinner. Louisiana creole cooking is a fusion of Spanish, French and African cuisines. Onions, celery, green bell pepper, tomatoes and hot pepper seasoning are the basic ingredients.

    The heat is up to you. The amount of cayenne pepper in the recipe gives a mild zing to the sauce. If you like a spicier kick, add more, or serve hot pepper sauce at the table. Dried thyme and oregano are used in the sauce. A secret to bringing out the flavor of these spices is to cook them in the oil with the onion and other vegetables.

    HELPFUL HINTS:

    Six garlic cloves can be used instead of minced garlic.

    Black Beans can be used instead of red beans.

    Make sure your ground thyme and oregano are less than 6 months old for best flavor.

    COUNTDOWN:

    Microwave rice and set aside.

    Prepare the ingredients.

    Make Creole.

    SHOPPING LIST

    To buy: 1 package microwaveable brown rice, 1 green bell pepper, 1 bunch celery, 1 jar minced garlic, 1 bottle dried thyme, 1 bottle dried oregano,1 bottle cayenne pepper, 1 large can reduced sodium diced tomatoes, 1 bottle Worcestershire sauce and 1 can red kidney beans.

    Staples: Canola oil, onion, salt and black peppercorns.

    Vegetable Creole

    1 package microwaveable brown rice (to make 1 1/2 cups cooked)

    1 tablespoon canola oil

    1 cup sliced onion

    1 cup sliced green bell pepper

    1/2 cup sliced celery

    3 teaspoons minced garlic

    2 teaspoons dried thyme

    2 teaspoons dried oregano

    2 cups canned reduced sodium diced tomatoes

    1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce

    1 cup rinsed and drained red kidney beans

    1/8 teaspoon cayenne pepper

    Salt and freshly ground black pepper

    Microwave rice according to package instructions. Measure 1 1/2-cups and reserve the remaining rice for another meal. Divide rice between two dinner plates. Heat oil in a medium-size nonstick skillet over medium-high heat. Add the onion, green bell pepper, celery, garlic dried thyme and dried oregano to the skillet. Saute 7 to 8 minutes until vegetables soften, stirring occasionally. Stir in the tomatoes, Worcestershire sauce, red kidney beans and cayenne pepper. Add salt and pepper to taste. Cook 3 to 4 minutes. Serve with the rice.

    Yield 2 servings.

    Per serving: 510 calories (19% from fat), 10.6 g fat (1.3 g saturated, 5.0 g monounsaturated), no cholesterol, 18.6 g protein, 90.0 g carbohydrates, 17.6 g fiber, 173 mg sodium.

    Linda Gassenheimer is the author of more than 30 cookbooks, including her newest, “The 12-Week Diabetes Cookbook.”

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    By Linda Gassenheimer | Tribune News Service

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  • Suspect IDed in Bellingham convenience store stick-up, police chase, crash

    Suspect IDed in Bellingham convenience store stick-up, police chase, crash

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    Police say they’ve identified the man believed to have robbed a convenience store in Bellingham, Massachusetts, at gunpoint last week, then escaped after a police car and foot chase in nearby Woonsocket, Rhode Island.

    Agapito Davila, a 41-year-old from Woonsocket, is wanted in the stick-up, Bellingham police said Saturday, noting he “should be considered armed and dangerous” and that anyone who sees him should call police immediately.

    Davila frequents Woonsocket and Lowell, Massachusetts, police said, and may be driving a black Honda Civic with no front license plate.

    “We urge everyone to remain vigilant and report any sightings right away. Your cooperation is crucial in ensuring the safety of our community,” police said in a statement.

    Last Saturday’s armed robbery began when a Bellingham police officer officer noticed suspicious activity outside of the convenience store, a male running into a vehicle, the department has said. The officer checked the vehicle’s registration, found it was stolen and attempted to pull it over, but the driver sped away.

    At the same time, someone called 911 to report an armed robbery at the convenience store, police have said.

    The police chase went through Blackstone and into Woonsocket. When the vehicle became disabled, the driver abandoned it, running away from the crash scene, police have said.

    Woonsocket police said they found the vehicle on Rathbun Street, according to NBC affiliate WJAR. The driver is believed to have bailed out while the vehicle was still in motion after crashing into two other vehicles.

    A police dog tracked the man to another street through a shoe found in the vehicle, Woonsocket police told WJAR, but the suspect wasn’t found.

    No injuries were reported in the robbery.

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    Asher Klein and Kaitlin McKinley Becker

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  • House arrest lifted for former teacher charged with sexually assaulting girls

    House arrest lifted for former teacher charged with sexually assaulting girls

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    SALEM, Mass. — A North Andover man and former North of Boston school teacher accused of sexually assaulting a dozen young girls can now leave his home during the day despite previously being on house arrest.

    Daniel Hakim, 38, is charged with aggravated indecent assault and battery on a child under age 14, indecent assault and battery and two counts of rape of a child.

    Hakim, a former teacher at the Saltonstall School in Salem, Mass., is accused of sexually assaulting 12 girls between the ages of 6 and 8.

    His bail was set at $200,000 cash and he was under house arrest and monitored by a GPS bracelet.

    Hakim’s defense attorney filed a motion to amend his pre-trial, home confinement.

    Superior Court Judge Thomas Dreschler ruled this week that Hakim can leave his home with the GPS monitor remaining in place. His curfew is 7 p.m. to 7 a.m., according to court records.

    Also, Hakim is not allowed to enter the center of the city of Salem, town of Swampscott or “any municipality requested by the Commonwealth,” according to the order.

    Hakim is barred from having any contact with children under 18 and he is now allowed to work without the approval of the court, the judge ruled.

    Essex County District Attorney Paul Tucker on Friday said prosecutors were opposed to altering the conditions of release but they respect the judge’s decision.

    Prosecutors say the assaults took place while Hakim was teaching at the Saltonstall school between 2015 and 2018.

    He was first charged in late 2021 with sexual assault on a student at the Saltonstall; other girls subsequently made disclosures.

    School officials, the Department of Children and Families, and Salem police were aware of multiple accusations of inappropriate behavior by Hakim in 2018, when he was terminated from the school and his teaching license suspended.

    He later formally surrendered his teaching license in 2020, according to records obtained by The Salem News, a sister paper of The Eagle-Tribune, through a public records request.

    DCF had previously made a determination that the accusations were “unsupported.”

    Prior to working in the Salem Public Schools, Hakim had been employed by several other school districts and schools.

    He worked at the Brooks School in Andover in 2015 and 2016 in a “Teen Challenge” program.

    He had also worked as a health teacher at the Shawsheen Elementary School in Wilmington from 2013 until 2015 and for the Collaborative for Educational Services from 2009 until 2013.

    Hakim’s next court date is March 7 for a status review of the case.

    Follow staff reporter Jill Harmacinski on Twitter @EagleTribJill.

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    By Jill Harmacinski jharmacinski@eagletribune.com

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  • NH first reponders unite for benefit hockey game

    NH first reponders unite for benefit hockey game

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    Local New Hampshire first responders will trade their uniforms in for jerseys as they compete in the 16th annual Children’s Hospital at Dartmouth Battle of the Badges on March 10 at the SNHU Arena in Manchester.

    The charity hockey game raises money to provide critical services for children with chronic illnesses or injuries. Funds also help support pediatric patients and their families.

    Ten emergency personnel from police and fire departments in Salem, Hampstead, Londonderry, Derry and Danville are represented on the two teams.

    This will be Hampstead police Officer Bryan Lamontagne’s fourth time playing in the game. He’s joined by Officer Tyler Phair to represent his department.

    For Lamontagne, the game is secondary to the greater purpose of the event.

    It’s a way for him to give back and help children and families going through difficult times.

    “You see the families that need the support and help,” Lamontagne said. “If it takes a little bit of time and effort on my side to help these families and raise some money for them then that is what I am going to do.”

    The players each year are assigned to a special buddy from the hospital. Lamontagne and his wife have built a relationship with their buddy’s family over the last few years and offer a little extra support, whether through social media or texts, wherever they can.

    He has children of his own and hopes his oldest son will see the impact of that relationship and what the game means.

    Phair also felt it was important to be a part of something bigger than the game of hockey, which he’s played his whole life.

    He was injured during last year’s game so this will be his first time playing in it.

    “It’s great to give back to a great cause while also playing the sport we love,” Phair said. “That’s the main reason I became a cop – to help others in need.”

    Both Phair and Lamontagne have raised funds together and already met their goal. Now, they are looking to exceed the goal.

    While local departments on both the fire and police side face off against each other, they are still united for a singular cause. But that doesn’t mean there isn’t friendly rivalry between the two sides – or a chance for friends to switch teams.

    Phair went to high school with fellow benefit player, Hampstead firefighter Zach Sylvester who is on the roster for the opposing team.

    Salem Fire Fleet Mechanic Leo LeBlanc is another first timer like Phair. He is one of three from Salem Fire in the game, joining Firefighters Ashton Rome and Dylan Ferguson.

    He saw Rome’s repeated involvement in the game and wanted to join in. He’s looking forward to being a part of this with multiple members of Salem Fire.

    As a mechanic, LeBlanc spends most of his day at the station repairing and fixing broken apparatuses and doesn’t get as many opportunities to participate in community events.

    “This is my chance to get involved with the community that I don’t get to go out and see all the time,” LeBlanc said.

    While he’s excited to gear up in a sport he plays, LeBlanc knows there’s a bigger picture why they will be there.

    “Everyone is coming together for the same reason and that’s to help these kids,” LeBlanc said. “That’s what it’s all about.”

    Danville Officer Padraig Capsalis, Londonderry Field Training Officer Cameron Verrier, Derry firefighters Cody Lappas and Timary Malley are also skating in the game and raising funds for the children’s hospital.

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    By Angelina Berube | aberube@eagletribune.com

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  • Stuntwoman helps her father celebrate 100th birthday

    Stuntwoman helps her father celebrate 100th birthday

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    METHUEN — Rosine “Ace” Hatem has appeared as a stuntwoman in over 100 movies that starred people like Tom Cruise, Clint Eastwood and Jim Carey.

    But the most satisfying production she has been part of may be the 100th birthday party that is being held for her father, Tuffic Hatem, on Wednesday, Feb. 21, at the Senior Activity Center.

    “I want him to see how he’s loved,” Hatem said.

    The event is a dual celebration that will also salute the 100th birthday of Violet Jessel, a Haverhill resident and former yoga instructor at Methuen’s Senior Activity Center. Her birthday is on Feb. 12, and his is on Feb. 19. The party will run from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., but reservations for lunch are full.

    Jennifer Loiselle, activity director at the senior center, invited Mayor Neil Perry and the Methuen City Council to the party at a council meeting in January, and said that the mayor and city council of Haverhill were also being invited.

    “We believe that sharing in the festivities with our community leaders will further emphasize the unity and sense of togetherness that makes our city great,” she said.

    While Hatem tells people that her most difficult stunt was “surviving Hollywood for 40 years,” it may also include her ability to take care of her parents while maintaining a career in Los Angeles.

    “I started coming back when my mom got sick, 13 or 14 years ago,” Hatem said.

    Hatem moved to Los Angeles in September 1980 after transferring to the University of California, Los Angeles, with her sights set on getting into movies.

    She had resolved on that career as a youngster, when she was the only girl taking classes at Larry Giordano’s Methuen Karate Association. That was where she discovered that she loved to fight, and where she earned the nickname “Ace” after hockey Hall of Famer Ace Bailey.

    In Los Angeles, she took a break from UCLA and instead enrolled in a stunt school, where she learned how to do high falls and to stage fight scenes.

    She then spent five years working at gyms while trying to break into the movie business.

    “I did it the hardest way,” Hatem said.

    That meant finding out where films were being shot, then showing up on set and asking for work, where people sometimes tore up Hatem’s resume and threw it in the trash.

    “I was so tenacious, and so naive,” she said.

    But Hatem eventually worked for people like stuntman “Judo” Gene LeBell, who she said is “one of the toughest men alive,” and whom she credits with helping her get her first job as a stunt double, for Ruth Buzzi.

    Hatem’s ambition was eventually rewarded with jobs that included the original “Point Break” in 1991, “Three Kings” and “Man on the Moon” in 1999, “Spider-Man” in 2002 and “Spider-Man 2” in 2004, “Ghostbusters” in 2016 and “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever” in 2022.

    Hatem won work as a stunt actress in “Million Dollar Baby” with Clint Eastwood in 2004, which she said was the highlight of her career, where she appears as a boxing opponent for the character played by Hilary Swank.

    “I convinced the stunt coordinator,” Hatem said. “They were looking for someone really mean. I said, ‘Look in my eyes.’”

    But before long Hatem was also flying home to make protein shakes for her mother, Diana, and checking in on her at nursing homes.

    After her mom died in 2014, Hatem focused her attention on her father, whose recent challenges have included two cases of COVID-19 and a fall that required 18 staples in his scalp.

    “He looked like Frankenstein,” Hatem said.

    It might have been her father, in fact, who provided her with the toughness needed to succeed in Hollywood.

    He had gone to work at an early age after his father died during the Depression, when the family lived on Chestnut Street in Lawrence.

    He scavenged cardboard for $2 a ton, cleaned out mills, and drove people to work at four in the morning for 10 cents a ride, like an early version of Uber, Hatem said.

    For a while he delivered ice – the tongs he used to carry the huge cubes still hang from a beam in his home in Methuen.

    Among other manual labor jobs, Tuffic dug graves at St. Anthony’s Maronite church.

    “I dug graves from the age of 10 until I was 86,” Tuffic said. “When I turned 70, I started using a backhoe.”

    He shares his daughter’s affection for “Million Dollar Baby,” and said it was his favorite of her films.

    About two years ago, Hatem sold her house in Los Angeles and moved back to Massachusetts so she could be near her father.

    Moving home has worked out because it corresponded with slowdowns in film and TV production caused by the pandemic, then by the striking Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Television and Radio Artists from July to November last year.

    Hatem also admits that, at 63, she isn’t in demand the way she used to be for punishing stunts, although the business is safer than it used to be.

    “There were a lot more ‘thumpers’ back in my day,” Hatem said. “You knew you were going to get bumps and bruises falling down stairs or taking a car hit.”

    But Hatem is working as a stunt double on several projects, including “The Old Man,” a thriller series on FX Networks that stars Jeff Bridges.

    “I just got a call to work as a wife that gets shot and killed and has a couple of lines,” Hatem said. “I get a lot of stunt acting ones that don’t need big stunts, stair falls or car hits. I’m OK with that. I just want to work.”

    She can fly standby wherever she needs to go, and stays with friends when she goes to LA, so living in Methuen or Boston is no impediment to her career.

    “I can get a call to work in Italy, Florida, LA, I just need a couple of days to fly back,” Hatem said.

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    By Will Broaddus | wbroaddus@eagletribune.com

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  • Suicide Prevention Resources

    Suicide Prevention Resources

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    If you or someone you know is thinking of suicide, call the Samaritans crisis helpline at 877-870-4673 or the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 800-273-TALK (8255). Those in need of mental health support or substance use crisis care in New Hampshire can call or text the NH Rapid Response Access Point at 1-833-710-6477 or visit NH988.com. Anyone needing assistance outside either state can call or text the national Suicide and Crisis Lifeline at 988.

    Here are more resources:

    Safe Place Support Group: Meets in North Andover on the second and fourth Tuesday of each month from 7 to 8:30 p.m. at St. Michael Parish, at 196 Main St.

    Attempt Survivor Support Group: Offered three to four times annually by Samaritans of Merrimack Valley, 978-327-6671.

    Family and Community Resource Center: Samaritans of Merrimack Valley, at 1 Union St. in Lawrence, 978-327-6607; 866-912-4673, www.stop-suicide.org

    Crisis Text Line: A texting service for emotional crisis support. To speak with a trained listener, text HELLO to 741741. Free, available 24/7, and confidential.

    Lahey Health Behavioral Services: Lowell Area, 800-830-5177; Haverhill area, 800-281-3223; Lawrence area: 877-255-1261; Salem area, 866-523-1216

    Eliot Community Human Services Community Behavioral Health Center in the North Shore: at 10 Harbor St., Danvers, 888-769-5201

    Massachusetts Behavioral Health Help Line: open 24/7, 833-773-2445

    Care Dimensions: Formerly Hospice of North Shore, 978-620-1250

    Compassionate Friends: assists families throughout grief following a death 1-877-969-0010

    International Association of Chiefs of Police and the National Consortium on Preventing Law Enforcement Suicide: surveymonkey.com/r/ZKZ7KHG

    National Suicide Prevention Lifeline: lifelineforattemptsurvivors.org

    Mass. Coalition for Suicide Prevention: masspreventssuicide.org

    Waking Up Alive: wakingupalive.org

    Suicide Survivors: suicidesurvivor.org

    Action Alliance for Suicide Prevention: actionallianceforsuicideprevention.org

    National Alliance on Mental Illness: namimass.org

    Mass 211: staffed by United Way and connects callers to information about critical health and human services programs, mass211.org

    The Merrimack Valley Prevention and Substance Abuse Project: mvpasap.com

    Call2Talk: national suicide prevention lifeline crisis center, 508-532-2255

    The Children’s Room: largest independent non-profit in Massachusetts dedicated to supporting grieving children, teens and families, 781-641-4741

    Follow Monica on Twitter at @MonicaSager3

    Follow Monica on Twitter at @MonicaSager3

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    msager@eagletribune.com

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  • An ecstatic Super Bowl rally, upended by the terror of a mass shooting. How is Kansas City faring? – Boston News, Weather, Sports | WHDH 7News

    An ecstatic Super Bowl rally, upended by the terror of a mass shooting. How is Kansas City faring? – Boston News, Weather, Sports | WHDH 7News

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    KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — “Are you feeling good today, Chiefs Kingdom?” Kansas City Mayor Quinton Lucas shouted to a sea of football fans fresh from their town’s third Super Bowl victory in five years.

    Less than an hour later — with music still blaring and the confetti of celebration still hanging in the air — the mayor and throngs of others were running from gunfire, unsure where it was coming from, desperately seeking safety.

    At its highest moment of community pride, Kansas City experienced one of 21st-century American culture’s most traumatic events — a public mass shooting. By the time it was over, one woman was dead and nearly two dozen other people were wounded.

    Police now blame a dispute among several people. On Friday, authorities said two juveniles were charged with gun-related and resisting arrest charges. Additional charges are expected.

    Wednesday’s shootings lasted only moments, their immediate aftermath only a couple hours. But in its wake, the event left a knocked-back community struggling to make sense of how something so positive could turn so quickly into something so terrifying and sad.

    As the mayor put it later: “This is absolutely a tragedy, the likes of which we would have never expected in Kansas City, and the likes of which we’ll remember for some time.”A DAY OF HIGH SPIRITS, AT THE BEGINNING

    The relationship between local fans and their sports teams is often an intense one. And nowhere more so than at this particular moment in history in this particular town, where talent and luck and success and civic pride blended into an enthusiastic cocktail — one that made sure the festivities Wednesday began on a happy and light note.

    For many young fans, the top question was whether Taylor Swift would join her tight-end boyfriend Travis Kelce for the Valentine’s Day festivities. Fans and tabloids breathlessly followed the path of her plane, showing it had landed in Melbourne, Australia, where she had a concert scheduled. That meant she was absent as double-decker red buses rolled down the 2-mile (3.2-kilometer) parade route

    No one seemed to mind. There was enough afoot for lots of fun. With many school districts canceling classes, children were among the throngs begging for autographs and exchanging high-fives with their favorite players. Some of the Chiefs wore ski goggles to protect themselves from champagne showers.

    The city and its leaders were beaming at being on the world stage, eager to celebrate the Chiefs’ come-from-behind 25-22 win over the San Francisco 49ers in overtime.

    “All over the world,” team owner Clark Hunt said at the rally, “they know about this amazing place.”

    And Missouri Gov. Mike Parson, addressing the crowd, chided those who dismiss the state as mere “flyover country”: “If you want to see the Lombardi Trophy, you’re going to have to fly your asses to Kansas City, Missouri, and we’ll show you more trophies.”

    Nearly every speech was filled with talk about bringing home the trophy again next season for a third straight time. The bravado was stunning from a team that, until 2020, hadn’t won a Super Bowl since 1969.

    And the city had embraced the turnaround, T-shirts had been flying off store shelves, Fireworks erupted in neighborhoods after each playoff win. Schools and businesses celebrated “Red Friday” en masse throughout the season.

    “Three times. First time in NFL history. We’re doing it. Love y’all,” quarterback Patrick Mahomes vowed. “Three-peat!” the crowd chanted in response.

    As the rally waned, Kelce grabbed the mic and began singing his own version of county music singer Garth Brooks’ old standard “Friends in Low Places.” It was a dig at analysts who had written off the Chiefs, who were hardly dominant during the regular season and had entered the playoffs as the AFC’s No. 3 seed.

    “We were the last one they would thought they would see there,” Kelce sang as the crowd joined along. Some had climbed trees to watch.

    Then: As the sea of red slowly dispersed, a sound. “Pop. Pop. Pop,” recalled one witness. Gunshots. But from where?‘THIS IS NOT KANSAS CITY’

    Some fans ran. Others stayed put, assuming they were hearing fireworks. Officers rushed toward the scene, guns drawn. Two fans even tackled an armed person. As ambulance sirens blared and helicopters swooped overhead, police cordoned off the rally site with crime scene tape.

    “I can see it now, the headline: ‘Dark Day’,” said Gene Hamilton, a 61-year-old from Wichita, Kansas, as he waited behind the tape.

    The thing that he couldn’t get out of his mind was the music. It kept playing as people ran and he made plans to kneel behind a stone wall if needed. “Change the music,” he recalled thinking.

    Hana Lee, 28, had been walking to a bus when she heard gunshots and people yelling to “get down, get down.” She saw two people on the ground and joined the shoving, pushing mass.

    “How,” she asked, “can something go from this happy to this?”

    Everyone seemed to know someone who was there; that’s the kind of town Kansas City is. Those in attendance were barraged with texts: Where are you? Are you safe?

    “I just thought I’d do a quick check in after this day of celebration turned tragedy,” Sarah Fox of Prairie Village, just over the state line in Kansas, texted to members of her book club.

    Police Chief Stacey Graves said the parade likely attracted 1 million people in a city with a population of about 508,000 and a metropolitan area of about 2.2 million. The shootings, she said, do not reflect the community she knows.

    “This is not Kansas City,” said Graves, who had stationed around 600 of her officers along the route in addition to 200 more from other agencies. “I’m angered by what happened.”

    Lisa Lopez-Galvan, a mother and popular disc jockey, died. Among the 22 injured, many were children. School districts that had called off classes offered counseling, as did churches.

    “It began with such joy and anticipation and has ended with tragedy and pain that none of us could have anticipated,” said Michelle Hubbard, the superintendent of one of the largest Kansas school districts, Shawnee Mission.

    One district student was even comforted by Chiefs coach Andy Reid in the chaos, and Hubbard underscored the importance of the community’s interconnectedness. “In the next few days,” she said, “we will need to lean on that unity, and on each other.”

    In one way in Kansas City, the sense of community that the Super Bowl championship provided earlier in the week has ebbed into the sense of community that a tragedy can create — unity of a different flavor, but just as potent. You could see the beginnings of that in the immediate aftermath of the violence, where there were no strangers in the chaos.

    Ashley Coderre, a 36-year-old from Overland Park, Kansas, met a shaken father amid the gunfire, fleeing with him and his child, crouching with them behind a car. As she retold it, a truck rolled over a glass beer bottle, a remnant of the earlier celebration, shattering it. Coderre jumped. “Oh,” she said, “that is not OK right now.”

    Eventually, she stopped behind a fire truck to regroup. That is where she met Allie Tipton, 30, of St. Louis, who was far from her car and was all alone. Tipton, too, had fled after hearing the gunshots and had helped a terrified woman find her missing child. Now, as the aftermath swirled around her, she didn’t know what to do. Coderre, a stranger, was there.

    Of her new friend, Tipton had this to say: “We trauma-bonded.”

    (Copyright (c) 2023 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)

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    Owen Boss

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  • It was a ‘Night to Shine’ at Beverly church

    It was a ‘Night to Shine’ at Beverly church

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    BEVERLY — North Shore Community Baptist Church in Beverly hosted Night to Shine 2024, sponsored by the Tim Tebow Foundation, on Feb. 9.

    Almost 80 guests and their parents and caregivers attended the event, a prom-like experience centered on “God’s love and celebrating people with special needs,” according to a press release from the church. The event was held in-person by host churches around the world simultaneously on Feb. 9.

    The evening at North Shore Community Baptist Church began with guests walking the red carpet complete with an enthusiastic welcome from a friendly crowd and paparazzi. Once inside, guests received a corsage or boutonniere as well as the royal treatment at hair, makeup and shoeshine stations.

    The festivities continued with limousine rides, a catered dinner, karaoke and dancing. Every special guest had the honor of being crowned king or queen of the prom.

    Nearly 260 volunteers from area churches, Gordon College, Gordon-Conwell Seminary, Joni and Friends, and the community worked together to make the evening memorable, organizers said.

    This was the 10th anniversary of Night to Shine. The event has provided over a half a million guest experiences through hundreds of churches from 56 different countries.

    As sponsor, the Tim Tebow Foundation provides each host church with the official Night to Shine Planning Manual, personalized guidance from a foundation staff member, the opportunity to apply for a financial grant, and access to planning sources.

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  • Plan to expand child care subsidies advances

    Plan to expand child care subsidies advances

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    BOSTON — State lawmakers are making another push to approve a plan expanding access to child care options for parents while attracting and retaining new workers to ease chronic staffing shortages in the industry.

    The proposal, approved by the Legislature’s Education Committee last week, would expand financial assistance for families seeking child care, establish new funding for child care providers, and boost pay and benefits for early educators.

    Senate President Karen Spilka, who has made early education and care a top priority for her two-year term as the chamber’s leader, said passage of the bill would expand access to affordable child care for parents across the state “by supporting families, providers and educators.”

    “Our state’s families face child care bills that are higher than the cost of in-state college tuition, and that are often so high that they force one parent to drop out of the workforce,” the Ashland Democrat said in a statement. “If we are serious about solving our labor shortage, supporting families, and getting new parents back into the workforce, we must act to lower the cost of child care.”

    A key plank of the proposal calls for expanding eligibility for subsidized child care by raising the income level to qualify for state-backed programs.

    The current threshold is 50% of state median income for a family of four – which is about $55,000 annually for a family of four. The plan calls for “gradually” increasing that level to 85% of state median income, or $93,662 for a four-member family.

    The Common Start coalition, which includes labor unions, business and advocacy groups, praised the bill’s progress and said its final passage would make the state “significantly more affordable, greatly improve our economic competitiveness, and dramatically increase racial and gender equity.”

    “This comprehensive early education and child care legislation would provide the specific structure that is needed to deliver affordable care options for families; significantly better pay and benefits for early educators; a permanent, stable source of funding for providers; high-quality programs and services for children; and substantial relief for businesses and our economy,” the group said in a statement.

    Many child care centers are financially strained and advocates say low compensation and the rising costs of caring for children are putting some providers out of business.

    Meanwhile, care providers are struggling to retain workers in an industry where the pay is traditionally low and the risk of becoming sick is now elevated as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, advocates say.

    The lack of child care options in Massachusetts is costing families, some of whom are spending 20% to 40% of their annual income on programs.

    The average cost of child care is more than $20,000 a year in Massachusetts, the most expensive state in the nation, only behind Washington, D.C., and well above the national average of $15,888, according to a recent report from the Massachusetts Taxpayers Foundation.

    Working families are losing an estimated $1.7 million a year in lost wages from not being able to show up for work because they cannot find or afford child care services, the report noted.

    Meanwhile, employers are losing an estimated $812 million a year in productivity and worker turnover because of the shortage of child care options, according to the report, while the state government is missing out on $188 million a year in tax revenue.

    Compounding the lack of options are changes in the workforce and other factors that have seen fewer people looking to work in the child care industry.

    Gov. Maura Healey has made expanding child care options for parents a key plank of her agenda in her first term, tying the issue to a broader effort to make the state more affordable.

    Healey’s preliminary budget for the next fiscal year calls for $93 million in new child care spending, as well as an additional $475 million in state grants to continue supporting early education providers

    The state Board of Early Education and Care recently approved a plan to tap into $65 million from this year’s budget to reimburse child care providers that serve families receiving financial assistance, including a 5.5% cost-of-living adjustment for providers to help offset increased operating costs.

    Christian M. Wade covers the Massachusetts Statehouse for North of Boston Media Group’s newspapers and websites. Email him at cwade@cnhinews.com

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    By Christian M. Wade | Statehouse Reporter

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  • Hopeful Thinking: Is God Benevolent or Not? Part II

    Hopeful Thinking: Is God Benevolent or Not? Part II

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    I asked my husband recently about whether or not he believes in a benevolent God. He said no. The existence of suffering was his rationale. When I asked then if he thought it was all pointless, he said he did not believe it was. We then concluded that this was an indication of a form of faith, that all things have a purpose. Or at the very least, a potential. That does not automatically indicate a belief in the existence of God. For suffering can have potential with or without the presence of the Divine. Meaning, we can learn from our mistakes either way if we choose to.

    That doesn’t mean God laid the mistake at our feet for that purpose. Faith in the potential value of our mistakes has an agnosticism to it which neatly evades the question about the existence of God. Something which many people could find helpful. It focuses on an inherent opportunity within suffering to improve things based on our personal experience of it.

    As a person who believes in God, however, I have a hunch that Its benevolence can be seen as a withholding of interference. The reason I feel that is because we already know that natural consequences are better educators than punishment. If a kid draws on the wall, they learn more from having to clean the wall themselves than from being grounded and the wall getting cleaned on their behalf. They are disconnected from the consequence, and therefore learn nothing. The behavior may indeed be modified away from doing it again, but through coercion and negative reinforcement rather than actual learning.

    Are we saying that we understand this concept better than God does? I can’t imagine that being the case. Further, I believe that allowing us to fail is an indication that God has faith in our ability to figure it out on our own using the principles and guidelines we’ve been given through history’s spiritual teachers.

    But are we alone in our suffering? I can’t believe that, personally. The fact that there is so much guiding spiritual text in the world designed to help inform our choices in a more loving direction serves as an indicator that we were either made with that inner understanding or that it’s being constantly whispered to us. Or possibly both. I choose to see this as a signal that we are accompanied by God through our suffering because to prevent it entirely would be enabling us rather than empowering us. It would violate the prime directive.

    The Old Testament describes God as a dispenser of unnatural consequences. It describes God as an all powerful male figure who casually annihilates everything from individuals to cities to flooding the entire world as a punishment for human misbehavior. Does that seem logical?

    If Sodom and Gomorrah were so horrible, then they were already dying by the sword they lived by, and did not need to be destroyed in a cataclysm they could not possibly understand as a consequence of their actions. I think the authors of the Old Testament were making assumptions about why that cataclysm occurred, assuming it did. They were choosing to connect dots that felt logical to them. Perhaps they even saw their reporting of it as a helpful cautionary tale. But there is no spiritual logic to wrathful punishment. Although to be clear, this does not mean that someone who commits a crime against society should not be separated from it for a time to reflect upon their actions. But through a rehabilitation process informed by benevolence, the intention should be that they are one day restored to it. We already know that this approach reduces the number of those who return to prison, and isn’t that what we want? Benevolence also dictates that even for those who cannot be rehabilitated, their confinement must at least be humane.

    We should also examine the character of suffering itself when looking for clues about the benevolence of God. For that is the aspect which hinges our complicated feelings about it.

    What is suffering? Obviously, it is unhappiness or trauma due to unfavorable circumstances. But from what types of things do we typically suffer? As an illustration, child abuse is a form of suffering that exposes flaws within our wider system. It is hereditary in the sense that frequently adults who have suffered in their childhood from abuse are much more likely to inflict it upon their own children. Improving our systems of education and mental health would reduce the likelihood of child abuse by orders of magnitude. So it points to even that form of abuse as a natural consequence of ignoring our people and their emotional needs.

    Check out next Saturday’s Hopeful Thinking column for Part III of “Is God Benevolent or Not?”

    Wil Darcangelo, M.Div, is a Unitarian Universalist Minister at the First Parish of Fitchburg and the First Church of Lancaster. He is also the host of a monthly radio show called Our Common Dharma based on his columns every 4th Monday at noon on WPKZ 105.3FM. Email wildarcangelo@gmail.com. Follow him on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram @wildarcangelo. His blog, Hopeful Thinking, can be found at www.hopefulthinkingworld.blogspot.com.

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    Wil Darcangelo

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  • ‘Living Well’ in Wilbraham celebrates grand opening

    ‘Living Well’ in Wilbraham celebrates grand opening

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    WILBRAHAM, Mass. (WWLP) – A new wellness center has opened in Wilbraham. ‘Living Well’ on Boston Road is a new Christian psychotherapy, life coaching, and creative arts center.

    It strives to promote well-being and restore balance in people’s lives. Mental health has been a major topic of dissucsion of the last few years, especially after the pandemic. They aim to help people with anxiety, depression, trauma, and relationships, while also aligning with Christian values.

    It offers a range of services, such as clinical counseling, coaching, training, and creative art experiences. The co-founder, Michaelia Daubon hopes these services will help to benefit those suffering from mental health challenges. “If we’re able to draw down to what is causing some of the challeneges, process and work through them, learn coping skills for how to get through these things or manage them, then that’s going to help our relationships,” said Daubon.

    Daubon said positive changes in the brain and body have been linked to psychotherapy and improved emotional and psychological well-being. According to a study, about 75 percent of people who enter psychotherapy benefit from it.

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