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  • Volunteers clean up at Beyond Borders Cafe after driver fleeing police crashes into building

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    Volunteers from the community joined owners and employees of Beyond Borders Cafe in Flossmoor to sweep up broken glass and vacuum dust out of cushions Tuesday, after a driver fleeing Homewood police crashed into the business Monday morning.

    Owners Christopher and Jennifer Zarozny said they plan to reopen as soon as possible. Their goal is to be closed for no more than two weeks.

    “If it was up to us, we’d be up and running next week,” Jennifer Zarozny said.

    The car crashed into the cafe the early Monday after speeding down Sterling Avenue, they said. Christopher Zarozny said the driver was speeding because he was fleeing from Homewood police, and that he was estimated to have been going 80 mph at the time of the crash.

    “It wasn’t an elderly person that had a medical condition,” Christopher Zarozny said.

    The village of Flossmoor’s statement said the driver was taken to the hospital in critical condition.

    “The incident is currently under investigation by the Flossmoor Police Department, and the actions of the Homewood Police Department related to the incident are also being reviewed,” Homewood police Chief Tom Johnson said. “There is no additional information to share at this time.”

    Beyond Borders Cafe opened in August of last year.

    “I think we ran through every emotion,” Jennifer Zarozny said. “The crying, the anger, the going to comedy about it because what else can you do, you know?”

    Despite the damage to their business, the Zaroznys said they’re relieved the accident happened when the cafe was closed and no one was present or walking nearby.

    A car crashed into Beyond Borders Cafe in Flossmoor early Monday morning. (Christopher Zarozny)

    “Generally, as you know, we have people sitting here,” Christopher Zarozny said, indicating the front window of the business. “There could’ve been four dead people.”

    Though the car did heavy damage to the cafe’s front wall and covered everything inside in dust and glass, it hit the front of the building side-on and did not go into the cafe itself, meaning the only major repair work will be to the front wall.

    “This can be replaced, right? Human life can’t,” Christopher Zarozny said.

    Lisa Hawkins, Jennifer Zarozny’s sister, was one of the volunteers helping with cleanup Tuesday. She said she’d also been thinking about how much worse the accident could’ve been.

    “I was just shocked,” Hawkins said. “To me it’s kind of selfish. Just pull over.”

    A car crashed into Beyond Borders Cafe in Flossmoor early Monday morning. (Photo provided by Christopher Zarozny)
    A car crashed into Beyond Borders Cafe in Flossmoor early Monday morning. (Christopher Zarozny)

    The accident also broke a fire hydrant and damaged the building’s gas meter. The situation was especially dangerous because the building has apartments on the upper floors, Hawkins said.

    “He busted the gas meter,” Hawkins said. “With the car being on fire, he could’ve blown the whole building up.”

    Hawkins said it was painful to see the cafe in disarray after all the work that went into getting the it up and running.

    “We’re thankful that the community’s coming together and people are coming here and coming together to help clean up today,” Hawkins said. “It takes a village, for sure.”

    Christopher Zarozny, left, one of the two owners of Beyond Borders Cafe, points out the gas meter that was hit in the crash, Flossmoor, Jan. 13, 2026. (Evy Lewis/Daily Southtown)
    Christopher Zarozny, left, points out the gas meter that was hit in the crash. (Evy Lewis/Daily Southtown)
    Volunteers clean up the Red Velvet Room in the back of of Beyond Borders Cafe, Flossmoor, Jan. 13, 2026. (Evy Lewis/Daily Southtown)
    Volunteers clean up the Red Velvet Room in the back of of Beyond Borders Cafe, where the business recently hosted a wine tasting. (Evy Lewis/Daily Southtown)

    Manager Farzana Ecob said she moved to the area from Los Angeles shortly before the cafe opened last July.

    “The cafe means a lot to me. I’ve seen it from day one, or day zero,” Ecob said. “I like to think this is everybody’s baby, and to see the baby hurt is really devastating.”

    Ecob said her hope for the cafe is that it provides a safe, comfortable space for everyone.

    “It’s such a wonderful communal place, and to see it in this state is a little traumatizing,” Ecob said.

    However, Ecob said she was certain the business would come out stronger from the accident.

    “We have hope, and seeing everybody coming in today and helping out, we’ll persevere,” Ecob said. “Life throws a lot of curveballs at you, but community, at the end, is what thrives and keeps us going, and that’s what everybody is here to do.”

    elewis@chicagotribune.com

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    Evy Lewis

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  • Lowell’s Washington School cleared for lead contamination

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    LOWELL — During separate meetings, both the School Committee and the Board of Health weighed in on suspected lead contamination at a worksite at Washington Elementary School, with the BOH requesting protocols on future projects.

    At the Nov. 19 School Committee meeting, Superintendent of Schools Liam Skinner assured the body that the official report of in-depth testing, performed by Titan Lead Testing LLC on dust generated by recent repair work, showed that “there are no lead levels of concern in the school.”

    “We’re pleased that the situation was mitigated in the way that it was,” Skinner said.

    The school, which Skinner described as one of the district’s oldest buildings, was built in 1910.

    According to previous Sun reporting, a section of the ceiling collapsed in the basement in early fall. But the cleanup of the debris and repair of the area by employees with the Department of Public Works spread dust throughout the building that is home to pre-K through grade 4 students and staff.

    The school district uses the buildings, but almost all are owned by the city. The district is responsible for custodial services, like cleaning, while the city is responsible for repairs and improvements.

    “It seems as though the area was wrapped in such a way that dust should not have escaped from the area where the construction was going on, but that was clearly not sufficient or didn’t work well,” Skinner said. “So, dust from the area did travel. It was quite remarkable to witness the extent to which dust could travel from the lower areas to the upper areas.”

    An over-the-counter kit indicated that there might be lead in the dust, and the district ordered testing through Titan, as well as a thorough cleaning of the school over the weekend of Nov. 15-16.

    Skinner said School Deputy Facilities Director John Leahy oversaw the weekend cleaning. The former School Committee member, District 3 – Belvidere city councilor and mayor owned and operated Leahy Painting for 25 of the 40 years that he was a professional painter. He gave up his private contracting business to take a position in the Facilities Department of Lowell Public Schools.

    “John Leahy was quite familiar with lead paint and lead paint dust issues and knew the correct procedure for cleaning that,” Skinner told the committee. “He was able to be there and instruct people on the proper techniques and the proper equipment.”

    School reopened that Monday.

    The lead conversation was raised in the Board of Health meeting held Jan. 7 at City Hall. Unlike the School Committee meeting, the Titan report was attached to agenda packet and part of the public record.

    Health and Human Services Director Lisa Golden said that although the school does have some lead paint in it, all the testing came back negative.

    Titan referenced the issue of undisturbed lead, noting that when renovation, repair or painting activities are performed in premises identified as housing or child-occupied facilities, work must be done in accordance with the “RRP Rule” as described in the Code of Massachusetts Regulations, 454 CMR 22.00.

    “Renovation and demolition activities that impact surfaces where lead may be present require specific work practices and disposal requirements,” said the report written by Master Inspector/Risk Assessor David Pesce, and addressed to DPW Commissioner Paul St. Cyr.

    “These regulations require the use of trained workers and firms, including a certified Lead-Safe Renovation Supervisor, notification to occupants, occupant protections, posting of signs, use of containment, lead-safe work practices, cleaning requirements, and post-cleaning verification or clearance,” Pesce said.

    The report recommended that an ongoing operations and maintenance plan should be developed in order to identify surfaces containing lead-based paint which may be disturbed by renovation and maintenance activities such as painting or repairs.

    “This plan would outline procedures for testing surfaces, training of workers, worker protection, occupant protection, and post-work cleanup of work areas,” Pesce said.

    Given the age of the building, state regulations and the Titan report, BOH member Kathleen Cullen-Lutter questioned what process was in place to address present or potential lead-based work.

    “Maybe [Golden] can clarify with Mr. St. Cyr that there is a process if they were to disturb the lead that they would have that process in place,” Chair Jo-Ann Keegan said.

    Environmental issues surrounding aging facilities in district buildings have dominated the city-school discourse. For years, the almost 60-year-old Pawtucketville Memorial Elementary School, located at 425 West Meadow Road, has had a proclivity for mold growth that has, at times, delayed the opening of the first day of classes.

    In 2024, a “considerable” amount of asbestos was found in parts of the 1922 building that is under renovation during the $422 million Lowell High School renovation and rebuilding project. Construction dust was monitored during the project after high levels were found in adjacent classrooms.

    More recently, the Sullivan Middle School experienced flooding when four heating coils froze in early December, flooding the school library.

    Pesce’s report cautioned that not all surfaces were tested at the Washington School, suggesting that a protocol for future work would be warranted.

    “Additional lead-containing building substrates and components may be present in other building areas or hidden by floor, wall and ceiling finishes or otherwise may be inaccessible,” his report said.

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    Melanie Gilbert

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  • U.S. Senator Todd Young votes to advance war powers resolution

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    U.S. Senator Todd Young, R-Indiana, was one of five Republican Senators who voted Thursday in favor of the war powers resolution that could limit President Donald Trump’s ability to conduct further attacks against Venezuela.

    Indiana political science experts said the vote was initially surprising but ultimately tracked with Young’s military background.

    In this courtroom sketch, Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, left, and his wife, Cilia Flores, second from right, appear in Manhattan federal court with their defense attorneys Mark Donnelly, second from left, and Andres Sanchez, Monday, Jan. 5, 2026, in New York. (Elizabeth Williams via AP)

    Aaron Dusso, professor of political science at Indiana University Indianapolis, said he was surprised that Young voted to advance the resolution because “it’s not the kind of resistance to the Trump administration that we’ve seen from Todd Young so far.”

    Young’s vote shows that some Republicans are beginning to think about the life of the Republican Party after Trump leaves the White House, Dusso said.

    “This would be my guess, is that Todd Young is looking at that and thinking you have to distinguish yourself and not just be a sycophant,” Dusso said.

    Jennifer Hora, a professor of political science at Valparaiso University, said when she heard that a few Republicans voted to advance the war powers resolution she figured Young would be a part of that group given his experience as a U.S. Marine.

    “Senator Young has been a much more traditional Republican. While certainly he votes along with the Trump administration an overwhelming amount of time, he has taken some more traditional Republican stances in his career,” Hora said.

    The Senate advanced a resolution that sounded a note of disapproval for Trump’s expanding ambitions in the Western Hemisphere, including his renewed call to acquire Greenland.

    Democrats and five Republicans voted to advance the war powers resolution on a 52-47 vote and ensure a vote next week on final passage. It has virtually no chance of becoming law because Trump would likely veto it if it were to pass the Republican-controlled House. Congress can override a presidential veto, but it requires a two-thirds majority in both chambers.

    Still, it was a significant gesture that showed unease among some Republicans after the U.S. military seized Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro in a surprise nighttime raid last weekend.

    The Trump administration is now seeking to control Venezuela’s oil resources and its government, but a war powers resolution would require congressional approval for any further attacks on the South American country.

    Young issued a statement Thursday that he supports Trump’s decision “to bring Nicolás Maduro to justice for his many crimes” and that the “Venezuelan people now have a new hope.” Young also praised the U.S. military personnel who carried out the mission.

    “Today’s Senate vote is about potential future military action, not completed successful operations. The President and members of his team have stated that the United States now ‘runs’ Venezuela. It is unclear if that means that an American military presence will be required to stabilize the country,” Young said. “I — along with what I believe to be the vast majority of Hoosiers — am not prepared to commit American troops to that mission. Although I remain open to persuasion, any future commitment of U.S. forces in Venezuela must be subject to debate and authorization in Congress.”

    Young said he supported Trump’s campaign message against forever wars.

    “A drawn-out campaign in Venezuela involving the American military, even if unintended, would be the opposite of President Trump’s goal of ending foreign entanglements. The Constitution requires that Congress first authorize operations involving American boots on the ground, and my vote today reaffirms that longstanding congressional role,” Young said.

    The other Republicans who backed the resolution were Senators Josh Hawley of Missouri, Rand Paul of Kentucky, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Susan Collins of Maine.

    Trump reacted to their votes by saying on social media that they “should never be elected to office again” and that the vote “greatly hampers American Self Defense and National Security.” Trump criticized the Senate vote as “impeding the President’s Authority as Commander in Chief” under the Constitution.

    Trump likely felt he had to call out the Republicans who voted to advance the measure because “public condemnation” is how the President keeps his party “in line,” Dusso said.

    Presidents of both parties have long argued the War Powers Act infringes on their authority. Passed in 1973 in the aftermath of the Vietnam War — and over the veto of Republican President Richard Nixon — it has never succeeded in directly forcing a president to halt military action.

    Congress declares war while the president serves as commander in chief, according to the Constitution. But lawmakers have not formally declared war since World War II, granting presidents broad latitude to act unilaterally. The law requires presidents to notify Congress within 48 hours of deploying forces and to end military action within 60 to 90 days absent authorization — limits that presidents of both parties have routinely stretched.

    Many presidents have taken military action, with the key to success being not to label the action as a war, while Congress tends to “side-eye” such a move, Dusso said.

    “This has been a gray area basically from day one,” Dusso said. “I think the Trump administration is really good at trying to find those gray areas and then exploit them.”

    Hora said there hasn’t yet been any indication that there are enough votes in the U.S. House to advance the measure to the president’s desk. While Trump hasn’t said specifically said he would veto the bill, he has made negative comments about the bill.

    “You can take that as an indicator that he would veto it,” Hora said. “Certainly, they do not have anywhere near veto-proof majorities in either the House or the Senate. But, it is a significant signal to the White House because they didn’t have to … bring this to the vote.”

    The Associated Press contributed. 

    akukulka@post-trib.com

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    Alexandra Kukulka

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  • ‘People do feel betrayed’: Trahan talks tumultuous 2025, hopes for 2026

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    LOWELL — For U.S. Rep. Lori Trahan, 2025 went about as she expected with the return of the Trump administration, which she thinks has been much like the first term, but with things moving much faster than before.

    That expectation was set, she said, by documents like Project 2025, a 900-page document compiled by the Heritage Foundation outlining a blueprint for a dramatic shakeup of the U.S. government under the next conservative president, which ended up again being President Donald Trump.

    “I think we were all sort of ready for a different cadence in this term, but it certainly started before the inauguration. We had a bipartisan package of health care bills, of all this legislation on its way to passage at the end of the year,” Trahan told The Sun Tuesday.

    “Elon Musk basically in a tweet said ‘it’s way too complicated, legislation shouldn’t be this long,’ and he killed it.”

    Despite the tumultuousness that followed in the federal government for the rest of 2025, Trahan once again closed out the year with a report from her office on what she sees as her biggest accomplishments of the year, even within a Congress she said took on “irrelevance” rather quickly.

    Those highlights included the more than $200 million in federal funding for the long-awaited Rourke Bridge project in Lowell, her support for online privacy protections through the reintroduction of the DELETE Act and the fight to restore Affordable Care Act premiums that expired at the end of the year.

    On Tuesday, Trahan sat down with The Sun to talk about her hopes for 2026, the upcoming midterm elections and what ways Democrats can counter President Trump with a slim minority in Congress.

    Trahan remarked that she was shocked how quickly Congress was pushed to the side in 2025 as Trump issued a record number of executive orders, but expressed confidence Democrats can reassert that authority in the coming midterms in November.

    “I think people want a check and balance on this administration, especially after living through this year, (having) Republicans in charge has really just meant chaos, it has meant higher prices, no checks on tariff policy, no checks on changes to children’s vaccine schedules, no checks on a potential war with Venezuela,” said Trahan. “The president has bombed seven countries since he has been in office and he ran on ending forever-wars (and not) getting the United States involved in foreign wars. People are tired, they are exhausted. They are really trying to make ends meet, trying to establish a better life for their families and themselves, and they are facing higher prices everywhere.”

    Trahan noted her support for a war powers resolution which had yet to be taken up by the Senate and would prohibit the president from waging war in Venezuela. The bill has since been passed in the Senate 53-47, and has yet to be taken up in the House of Representatives. The Senate margin would not be enough to overcome a veto by Trump, which would require a two-thirds majority in both chambers.

    Given the challenges her party faces in getting legislation through without control of any branch of government, Trahan said her aims in 2026 are centered around things like the stabilization of our local health care system after the Nashoba Valley Medical Center closure in 2024.

    “No Plan B until the governor stepped in, working with UMass to come up with a path forward there, but there is anxiety in that region around not having a full community hospital operation,” said Trahan. “What the Big Beautiful Bill did … was really undermine and destabilize our entire hospital system. Without those Medicaid payments, we are absolutely going to see a loss of vital hospital services. We have already seen some of the less profitable services close … that is going to continue.”

    On top of that, Trahan said, the Affordable Care Act premiums expired on Jan. 1, and her office has heard from constituents whose health insurance premiums have since risen to as high as an extra $11,000 a year.

    “It is just incredible to see how beneficial those tax credits were for people, and how unaffordable it is without them,” said Trahan.

    “When you have young, healthy people … who say ‘this is unaffordable for me, I am going to roll the dice,’ one: something catastrophic can happen to them and they are not even going to be able to afford the ambulance bill, never mind what it will take to treat them in the hospital,” said Trahan. “But two: it increases everybody’s premiums because then the insurance pool is older and sicker, people who can’t not have insurance.”

    Trahan and the rest of the House Democrats got the support of nine Republicans to sign a discharge petition to force a vote on a clean three-year extension of the ACA tax credits. The subsequent vote passed the House 230-196 with 17 Republicans joining all Democrats to vote in favor. That bill faces a questionable future in the Senate as of Friday.

    Trahan currently does not have an opponent for this year’s midterm elections, which would be the second straight election she goes uncontested if that remains true. While Trahan could have little to worry about her own seat, Democrats are currently facing a historic popularity crisis according to a number of polls over the past year.

    “We have to reconcile a lot of polls. The institution that has the lowest approval rating is Congress, but there is a difference when you ask how people feel about their own congressperson,” said Trahan. “I have a lot of humility around the state of favorability for the Democrats.”

    Despite the polling challenge, after the off-year 2025 elections across the country showed promising signs for Democrats, the party has expressed confidence it will take back seats from what is currently a very narrow Republican majority. Trahan said that can happen by the Democrats “making the case for a check and balance on this administration.”

    “On any administration, but this administration in particular. Congress has to reassert their authority so the questions people have back home we are actually asking in the halls of Congress and committee rooms,” said Trahan.

    Points of contention for voters who subscribe to Trump’s “America First” messaging might be the military’s intervention in foreign countries, Trahan said, or things like the $40 billion bailout given to Argentina.

    “I think that is why you are seeing some disruption and questions in the Republican Party … My hope is that pressure people feel at home will start to come to Congress with them, and people will start surfacing those questions and having hearings, and forcing the president to not bypass Congress, but instead to work with us,” said Trahan.

    Despite the division, Trahan said she has still been able to find common ground with her Republican colleagues on certain issues. She pointed to two bills, the reauthorization of the Creating Hope for Kids Act  and there is the Accelerating Care for Kids Act, on which she has worked for four years with Republicans in the House and she feels confident will pass this year.

    Just a bit into 2026, and closing in on one year since a new administration and new session of Congress, Trahan said the midterms come down to how “people don’t feel like they are better off right now.”

    “People do feel betrayed … they thought [Trump] was going to make a concerted effort to bring their prices down. That is not happening. That is where Democrats know people expect the government to do something,” said Trahan.

    Trahan and all but one member of the House voted in November in favor of the Epstein Files Transparency Act, a bill to compel the Department of Justice to release all documents related to the investigation into deceased sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein and his clients. The DOJ had a Dec. 19 deadline to release the trove of documents, but those that were released by that time were heavily redacted, and the DOJ said there are millions more documents that needed to be processed for release.

    Trahan said with the DOJ missing deadlines compelled by the law, the House Judiciary and Oversight Committees are “spending a lion’s share of their time just watching the DOJ and making sure they are following the letter of the law.”

    “This was incredibly bipartisan, it was the result of victims coming to Washington and demanding that these files be released, which by the way, this president promised he would make transparent. It shouldn’t have even gotten to the point where that was forced upon his Department of Justice,” said Trahan.

    One of the biggest changes of 2025, which is poised to continue to be a flashpoint in 2026, has been the federal policies surround immigration and its enforcement. Trahan’s office has been tracking 15 cases within her district where immigration enforcement agents have arrested immigrants who in some cases had legal status.

    “We work with legal services … we work with [U.S. Citizenship & Immigration Services] on where they are if they are in Burlington or if they have already gone to Maine, or in horrible cases to Louisiana or somewhere else,” said Trahan.

    Another way her office helps is by advising all immigrants facing these issues to sign a privacy consent release form.

    “It is just one of those things people would never know to ask for, but we can’t be helpful until that piece of paper has been signed, and there has been a lot of obstruction of a detainee getting that piece of paper, getting it signed and getting that communication to us, but once we have all that in place we can work on someone’s behalf in a myriad of ways,” said Trahan.

    Growing up, Trahan said, her family only wanted was to know “that if we worked hard we could get ahead.”

    “Right now that is not the reality,” said Trahan, calling health care and the high cost of living the biggest challenges facing Americans right now. “Families like the one I grew up in are really struggling … they are not seeing their government acknowledge they cannot afford health care coverage.”

    Seven years into her congressional tenure, Trahan said she still sees the job similarly to what she expected going into her first term, which she credits to her decade of experience as a congressional staffer.

    “I started in the second half of Trump’s first term. I am now going to serve, hopefully if I win my reelection, through another Trump term, and I think what has changed has been the abdication by the Republican majority’s authority to the president,” said Trahan. “In 2018 we were part of this blue wave that was part of the backlash of the first two years of President Trump being in office. I got to see a Congress that exerted its authority on a rogue presidency. I have also lived through this first year where we did not have that check and balance. That is really dangerous for our country.”

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    Peter Currier

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  • College basketball: UMass Lowell tops Binghamton, stays perfect in AE

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    The River Hawks are playing like beasts in America East.

    The UMass Lowell men’s basketball team remained perfect in league play Saturday afternoon with a 73-68 victory over host Binghamton before 1,651 fans in Vestal, N.Y.

    The River Hawks (8-10, 3-0 AE) have now knocked off league opponents Albany, Bryant and Binghamton in successive games.

    Xavier Spencer tallied 18 points to power the winners, sinking 4-of-6 3-point attempts. Angel Montas Jr., coming off a career-high 27 points against Bryant, contributed 17 points. Also in double figures with 12 points was Austin Green and he hauled down eight rebounds.

    Guard Darrel Yepdo, a Dracut native, chipped in nine points. The River Hawks broke out to a 45-36 halftime lead and then held off the hosts.

    UML returns to action Thursday, hosting NJIT at 6 p.m.

    Women fall

    UMass Lowell fell 80–52 to Binghamton during America East play Saturday afternoon at the Kennedy Family Athletic Complex in Lowell.

    The River Hawks (6-11, 0-4 AE) opened the afternoon with early energy, trading baskets in the opening minutes as junior guard Maddie Rice (Charlottesville, Va.) finished inside for the first UML field goal before graduate forward Anabel Latorre Ciria (Zaragoza, Spain) converted a second-chance layup to keep the deficit within single digits. Binghamton, however, began to assert control late in the first quarter, closing the period on a 7–2 run to take a 17–12 advantage.

    Senior guard Sabrina Larsson (Uppsala, Sweden) helped spark the offense early in the second quarter, knocking down a three before freshman guard Tyanna Medina (Lawrence) finished a fast-break layup to keep UML within six. Senior guard Jaini Edmonds (Worcester) later buried a triple from the wing, and junior guard Paris Gilmore (Youngstown, Ohio) connected from deep to trim the margin to 10 late in the half.

    “They were very aggressive and very smart against what we do, and the second-chance points really hurt us to start,” said UML head coach Jon Plefka. “For us, we couldn’t match their physicality off the jump, and that set the tone.”

    Larsson led UML with 18 points, hitting five three-pointers. Medina added 11 points and five rebounds, while Edmonds recorded 11 points and five assists.

    The River Hawks play Thursday (11 a.m.) at NJIT.

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    Staff Report

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  • Sand being relocated from Mout Baldy’s parking lot for beach nourishment

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    The parking lot at Indiana Dunes National Park’s Mount Baldy will grow bigger this year as the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers shaves the back of the dune to nourish the front.

    Saves the Dunes Executive Director Betsy Maher praised the plan Thursday during a Green Drinks conference call.

    The Corps of Engineers plans to use trucks to remove sand from the part of the parking lot Mount Baldy has already gobbled up and dump it at Crescent Beach, so it can drift westward to the face of Mount Baldy.

    “That dune has been moving at a rate of sometimes up to 10 feet a year for decades,” Maher said. “There is no longer a natural dynamic where sand naturally accumulates.”

    Manmade structures like the pier and breakwater at Michigan City and the Port of Indiana-Burns Harbor in Portage disrupt the natural flow of sand along the southern shore of Lake Michigan.

    “If you disrupt the littoral drift, then you create the erosion on the other side,” Maher said, so beach nourishment is needed. Sand dredged or removed from one place is needed to replace the sand that manmade structures block from sand-starved beaches.

    “This is on hyperdrive in this area because of the creation of the harbor.”

    “The park, I believe, was out of a lot of good choices. If they had waited any longer, the dune would swallow the comfort station,” Maher said. “This dune has already swallowed structures.”

    The south side of Indiana Dunes National Park’s Mount Baldy is perilously close to the restroom facility on Wednesday, Dec. 18, 2024. (Doug Ross/for Post-Tribune)

    Removing sand from the parking lot and putting it back on beach is a good solution because it’s putting sand where it’s needed, she said.

    Indiana Dunes National Park Superintendent Jason Taylor outlined the plan in December 2024 at a meet-the-public event at the Indiana Dunes Visitor Center in Porter.

    The process is expected to take 100 days, he said at the time.

    “This is a good solution because it’s at least putting sand on the front of the dune where it’s needed,” Maher said. “It is a manmade solution, but it is mimicking a natural solution.”

    “You want sandbars created during those low-water periods where you get more sand,” she said. The lake level is currently low; erosion typically happens when the lake level is high, with the difference measured in feet, not inches.

    “If you have too much scouring and all the sand is gone already, then it’s not as resilient” and erosion gets worse, Maher said.

    Save the Dunes’ mission includes protecting natural assets at the national park, but it also includes preserving public access to the shoreline. That’s why the nonprofit took legal action against Ogden Dunes, the Indiana Department of Natural Resources and others over the town’s plan, now abandoned, to put a rock revetment along the shoreline.

    “This is a hard-fought legal battle that we’re really excited about,” Maher said, but the case continues so the question of whether the DNR illegally issued the permit can be resolved. “That question still remains unanswered.”

    DNR “is responsible for upholding the public’s rights along the shoreline,” Maher said.

    Save the Dunes previously fought a similar legal fight in Long Beach, setting a precedent and inspiring a state law that locks in where the high water mark is calculated to indicate the boundary between private and public land.

    Save the Dunes is committed to defending this public trust doctrine so all Hoosiers can walk along the beach. “We’re seeing a lot of public trust work popping up along the Great Lakes,” Maher said.

    “The most resilient beach is a natural beach,” she said. “We get huge storms off our shoreline, and then you get this natural fluctuation in lake levels.”

    “It used to be a 30-year cycle,” but it’s now less reliable, she said.

    Where visitors once ran down the south face of Mount Baldy, pictured on Wednesday, Dec. 18, 2024, visitors are now urged to keep off the dunes. Visitors traipsing off established trails can harm the ecosystem. (Doug Ross/for Post-Tribune)
    Where visitors once ran down the south face of Mount Baldy, pictured on Wednesday, Dec. 18, 2024, visitors are now urged to keep off the dunes. Visitors traipsing off established trails can harm the ecosystem. (Doug Ross/for Post-Tribune)

    The Indiana Dunes are more than sand, though. Maher noted Indiana Dunes National Park is the fifth most biologically diverse national park in the United States.

    The park has 15 miles of protected shoreline, 16,000 acres and 50 miles of hiking trails.

    When it was created in 1966, it was designated as a national lakeshore. Since 2019, when it was designated a national park, the number of visits has grown from 2 million to nearly 3 million annually. It’s the No. 1 tourist destination in Indiana.

    “Unfortunately, these environmental wonders have not historically been available to everyone,” Maher said, so Save the Dunes is supporting National Park Service accessibility efforts. “We hope to make the dunes a place that is accessible to all.”

    That includes donating special wheelchairs that can be used at the beach. Visitors need to contact the park before arriving to make arrangements for their free use.

    Habitat restoration and preservation are also important to Save the Dunes.

    Save the Dunes administers grants for this work in Northwest Indiana, including working with the National Park Service, Northwest Indiana Paddling Association and Shirley Heinze Land Trust to clear logjams on the Little Calumet River to make it navigable.

    Emerald ash borers, tiny lumberjacks that they are, felled trees and created many logjams.

    So far, nine of 11 miles of the river have been cleared for canoeists and kayakers.

    “We’ve sunk several million dollars into restoring this river collectively,” Maher said.

    In the past 20 years, Save the Dunes has had a heavy emphasis on stewardship of the land.

    “Restoration work is never done, but it’s certainly not something you can start and stop,” Maher said. Eradicating invasive species usually takes five to 10 years. “If you just treat it and walk away, they just come right back.”

    “Currently, about 30% of the park is actively managed,” she said.

    The park needs help with public access work, too, including updating exhibits, some of which haven’t been changed since the park was created, Maher said.

    Resiliency, too, is important in order to address climate change and other threats to ecosystems. A “very complicated grant” of just under $1 million from the National Coastal Resiliency Fund is bringing together conservation partners across the region to address these threats with large-scale projects, she said.

    Doug Ross is a freelance reporter for the Post-Tribune.

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    Doug Ross

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  • South Bay protesters gather against Venezuela actions, ICE killing in Minneapolis

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    Hundreds of South Bay protesters took to the streets Saturday to show their disdain toward President Donald Trump’s military actions in Venezuela and the killing of a Minnesota woman by a federal agent earlier this week.

    Rallies began Saturday morning in Los Gatos and Mountain View, with more planned later into the day in Sunnyvale, Palo Alto, San Jose, Richmond and San Francisco. Many were organized by a coalition of groups including May Day Strong, Indivisible and others.

    Robin Dosskey, of Mountain View, waves at motorist while protesting in Mountain View, Calif., on Saturday, Jan. 10, 2026. About 25 people gathered at the corner of West El Camino Real and Grant Road to protest the recent immigration enforcements and President Donald Trump’s military actions in Venezuela. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) 

    In a statement, May Day Strong called for unity against U.S. occupation of Venezuela and the removal of “reckless untrained ICE agents from our communities.” They argued overseas wars and increased immigration enforcement enriched billionaires at a human cost, and that tax money should be used for “good jobs, better schools, access to health care and (getting) our basic needs met.”

    At Los Gatos, David Bowie’s “Under Pressure” blared to over 100 people as passing cars honked in support of the demonstration.

    George Hoffman, a 49-year-old Los Gatos resident, said he’s been protesting regularly at the town’s Tesla dealership since April 2025, in an effort to push back against Elon Musk’s support of Trump.

    Hoffman said he started attending protests because he was tired of keeping quiet on the Trump administration’s actions and “feeling like everything was broken.”

    “It was killing me,” he said. “I was in a hole of despair and loneliness.”

    One week ago, a U.S. strike in Venezuela killed about 80 people and ended with the capture of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro and his wife Cilia Flores, who are now in New York City awaiting trial on federal drug charges. Trump and others in his administration have said the U.S. would “run” the country, taking millions of barrels of oil with the blessing of the South American nation’s acting leadership.

Many within the U.S. and internationally criticized the attack as a flagrant violation of international law that ignores Venezuela’s sovereignty. However, Venezuelan expatriates in Florida and elsewhere were supportive of Maduro’s removal after years of reported human rights violations and economic troubles in the country.

In Mountain View, a couple dozen people went to a Chevron gas station to protest. Cindy Ferguson, a 73-year-old Mountain View resident, has been going to several demonstrations, including the No Kings protests in June. She specifically wanted everyone to rally around Chevron due to the president’s actions in Venezuela to gain control of their oil reserves. Ferguson was formerly in the Army between 1973 and 1976. She criticized the similarities she saw between the U.S.’s intervention in Iraq and Iran and the attacks in Venezuela, saying “none of it worked, then or now.”

“They stand to profit really big, so he’s just paying off his billionaire buddies, and all the money and spending is for that,” Ferguson said. “Why aren’t we feeding kids? Why aren’t we giving health care? We could do a lot with that money, too. Let’s care for everyone.”

On Wednesday, a Minnesota woman named Renee Good was fatally shot by a federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent in Minneapolis, a killing caught on video that quickly sparked outrage and, from the Trump administration, unsupported claims that Good was a “domestic terrorist.” A day later, two people were wounded in Portland, Oregon, when federal immigration officers shot them in their car outside of a hospital. Both of the shootings inspired vigils and demonstrations against crackdowns authorized by Trump.

Many people that were protesting in the South Bay were enraged over the Good’s death. John Elliott, a 77-year-old Los Gatos resident, said that he had seen the video footage of Good’s shooting and thought it was “striking” that there were people who could justify it. Similarly, 20-year-old Campbell resident Michael Zambon felt that Good’s death was an extrajudicial killing.

“This is really not just about the murder of Renee Nicole Good. It’s also about the rule of law,” Zambon said. “This is a regime of lawlessness. And I believe we need to push back as best we can in order to ensure that the rule of law can endure in the consciousness of the country.”

Lisa Guevara, a 58-year-old resident of Menlo Park, is affiliated with Showing Up for Racial Justice, an organization to help white people organize against racial discrimination. Guevara connected the ICE-involved shootings with the attack on Venezuela as examples of Trump’s government trying to convince Americans that they have a right to enter Venezuela or American cities to strong-arm them.

“I think all of it is connected; It’s all this fascist, patriarchal, white supremacy situation,” Guevara said. “It’s this idea of being able to to determine other people’s lives for them, whether it’s in foreign countries or whether it’s in our own neighborhoods.”

Hoffman said Good’s death was another example of the Trump administration lying to people about what has been happening in the nation.

“We need to stop seeing this as a single issue,” Hoffman said. “It’s all the same fight.”

This is a developing report. Check back for updates.

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Nollyanne Delacruz

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  • Fremont rancher refuses to remove gate after city claims it blocks park access

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    FREMONT — A bison rancher is appealing the city’s order demanding he remove a gate that blocks public access to a regional park, with a hearing over the matter expected to take place soon.

    Rancher Chris George is fighting tooth-and-nail to keep the gate on Morrison Canyon Road in rural Fremont, despite city officials determining it was illegally constructed and blocks a city right-of-way.

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    Kyle Martin

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  • Wednesday’s high school scoreboard

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    BOYS BASKETBALL

    Abington 81, Mashpee 60

    Blue Hills 53, Tri-County 40

    Hanover 68, Scituate 46

    Holliston 53, Bellingham 42

    Hopkinton 78, Norton 59

    Masconomet 56, North Andover 41

    Medfield 63, Dedham 49

    Medway 51, Ashland 20

    Milton Academy 79, Thayer 69

    Norwood 49, Dover-Sherborn 39

    St. Mary’s (L) 75, Bishop Fenwick 37

    South Shore Voke 53, Cape Cod Tech 39

    Weston 61, Roxbury Prep 35

    Westwood 77, Millis 54

    GIRLS BASKETBALL

    Bishop Fenwick 55, St Mary’s (L) 46

    Blue Hills 38, Tri-County 33

    Dracut 54, Wakefield 40

    Hopkinton 46, Norton 40

    Mashpee 59, Abington 49

    Medfield 74, Dedham 32

    Medway 52, Ashland 35

    Millis 54, Westwood 41

    Newburyport 58, Tewksbury 37

    Norwood 70, Dover-Sherborn 27

    Notre Dame (T) 33, KIPP 28

    Phillips Exeter (NH) 36, Pingree 35

    Tahanto 62, Hudson 57

    GYMNASTICS

    Central Catholic 137.8, Chelmsford/Tyngsboro/Billerica 131.95, Dracut 110.2

    Hingham/Hull 130.4, Whitman-Hanson 125.35

    BOYS HOCKEY

    Acton-Boxboro 2, Boston Latin 0

    Amesbury 6, Triton 2

    Arlington Catholic 5, Archbishop Williams 3

    Bedford 2, Cambridge 1

    Billerica 4, Andover 1

    Bourne 9, Greater New Bedford 0

    Bridgewater-Raynham 4, Plymouth South 3 (ot)

    Canton 6, Taunton 1

    Chelmsford 4, Lincoln-Sudbury 1

    Danvers 5, Winthrop 1

    Falmouth 3, Duxbury 2

    King Philip 4, Whitman-Hanson 2

    Lynn 5, Everett/Revere/Mystic Valley 2

    Lynnfield 3, North Reading 2

    Medfield 5, Holliston/Ashland 3

    Medford 3, Somerville 2

    Methuen 4, Lowell 1

    Middleboro 2, Rockland 0

    Needham 4, Newton North 2

    North Attleboro 4, Franklin 0

    Old Rochester 2, Bishop Stang 0

    Pingree 5, Holderness 4

    St. John’s (S) 5, St. John’s Prep 1

    St. Mary’s (L) 5, Bishop Feehan 1

    Waltham 3, Concord-Carlisle 1

    Westwood 4, Norton 1

    Weymouth 6, Brookline 1

    Wilmington 3, Watertown 1

    Woburn 2, Winchester 1

    Xaverian 3, BC High 0

    GIRLS HOCKEY

    Barnstable 7, Nantucket 0

    Belmont 5, Arlington 0

    Beverly/Danvers/Ipswich 4, Medford 2

    Bishop Feehan 1, Arlington Catholic 0

    Canton 5, Stoughton 0

    Central Catholic 7, Concord-Carlisle 1

    Dennis-Yarmouth 5, Martha’s Vineyard 1

    East Bridgewater 1, Ursuline 1

    Falmouth 6, Marshfield 1

    Hanover 3, Quincy/North Quincy 1

    Hingham 9, Plymouth 1

    Hopkinton 3, Norwood 1

    Melrose 2, Burlington 1 (ot)

    Methuen/Tewksbury 1, HPNA 0

    Nauset 3, Duxbury 2

    Newton North 2, Needham 1

    Notre Dame (H) 2, Malden Catholic 1

    PLNR 2, Winthrop 2

    St. Mary’s (L) 3, Bishop Fenwick 0

    Wakefield/Wilmington 3, Stoneham 2 (ot)

    Walpole 4, Wellesley/Lincoln-Sudbury 3

    Waltham 8, Cambridge 0

    Westwood 4, Medfield 1

    Woburn 3, Winchester 2

    BOYS SWIMMING AND DIVING

    Wayland 95, Bedford 80

    GIRLS SWIMMING AND DIVING

    Wayland 91, Bedford 87

    BOYS TRACK

    Bishop Feehan 87, Diman 12

    Central Catholic 70, Billerica 30

    Dover-Sherborn 50, Norton 45

    Masconomet 47, Beverly 39

    Methuen 59.5, Lawrence 40.5

    GIRLS TRACK

    Bishop Feehan 85.5, Diman 13.5

    Central Catholic 59.66, Billerica 40.33

    Methuen 71, Lawrence 20

    Norton 50, Dover-Sherborn 45

    WRESTLING

    Arlington 60, Lexington 11

    Bedford 49, Newton South 28

    Beverly 49, Salem 30

    Boston Latin 39, Concord-Carlisle 39

    Braintree 39, Wellesley 37

    Brookline 42, Milton 42

    Canton 53, Oliver Ames 28

    Chelmsford 54, Tewksbury 24

    Duxbury 48, Whitman-Hanson 32

    Gloucester 48, Danvers 34

    Hingham 45, Marshfield 34

    Lynnfield 54, Triton 27

    Melrose 62, Burlington 17

    Methuen 46, North Andover 34

    Natick 51, Needham 23

    Peabody 63, Marblehead/Swampscott 16

    Quincy/North Quincy 34, Pembroke 31

    Shawsheen 62, Greater Lowell 13

    Silver Lake 50, Plymouth North 29

    Tyngsboro 36, Marlboro 33

    Wayland 44, Westford 22

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  • New Museum Los Gatos to hold newspaper history tour on Jan. 16

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    Newspaper tour

    Follow the local newspapers of Los Gatos through the years with the New Museum Los Gatos on Jan. 16.

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    Nollyanne Delacruz

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  • Secret Service: Man arrested, accused of breaking windows at VP JD Vance’s Ohio home

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    A man has been taken into custody by police after officers and Secret Service agents responded to the Cincinnati home of Vice President JD Vance overnight.William DeFoor, 26, has been charged with criminal damaging/endangering, obstructing official business and criminal trespass, all misdemeanors, as well as one count of vandalism, a fifth-degree felony, according to a police report.Cincinnati Police say DeFoor is accused of being seen by a Secret Service agent and on security footage walking onto the property without permission and damaging four windows, as well as a vehicle. Sister station WLWT’s cameras captured what appears to be damage to the windows of the home. Officers were on scene for several hours, going in and out of the house. The Secret Service said the incident happened shortly after midnight early Monday morning. The Secret Service is coordinating with CPD and the U.S. Attorney’s Office. Vance had been in Cincinnati for the last week. He left Sunday afternoon. This is a developing story and will be updated when we learn more.

    A man has been taken into custody by police after officers and Secret Service agents responded to the Cincinnati home of Vice President JD Vance overnight.

    William DeFoor, 26, has been charged with criminal damaging/endangering, obstructing official business and criminal trespass, all misdemeanors, as well as one count of vandalism, a fifth-degree felony, according to a police report.

    Cincinnati Police say DeFoor is accused of being seen by a Secret Service agent and on security footage walking onto the property without permission and damaging four windows, as well as a vehicle.

    Sister station WLWT’s cameras captured what appears to be damage to the windows of the home. Officers were on scene for several hours, going in and out of the house.

    Hearst Owned

    WLWT’s cameras captured what appears to be damage to the windows of the home. Officers were on scene in the East Walnut Hills area for several hours, going in and out of the house.

    The Secret Service said the incident happened shortly after midnight early Monday morning. The Secret Service is coordinating with CPD and the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

    Vance had been in Cincinnati for the last week. He left Sunday afternoon.

    This is a developing story and will be updated when we learn more.

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  • Acalanes’ Joel Isaac is Bay Area News Group’s prep football coach of year

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    Joel Isaac navigated Acalanes through off-season tragedy, led Dons to undefeated regular season and berth in NCS’s top playoff division.


    This article is only available to subscribers

    Offer valid for non-subscribers only

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    Nathan Canilao

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  • Police respond to Ohio home of VP JD Vance as part of hours-long investigation

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    Police respond to Ohio home of VP JD Vance as part of hours-long investigation

    PEOPLE LINE UP TO WATCH THE HISTORIC ARRAIGNMENT. THIS IS WLWT NEWS 5 LEADING THE WAY WITH BREAKING NEWS. LET’S GET RIGHT TO THAT BREAKING NEWS. WE ARE STILL WORKING TO GET ANSWERS AFTER CINCINNATI POLICE AND THE U.S. SECRET SERVICE RESPONDED TO THE HOME OF JD VANCE OVERNIGHT. THEY WERE THERE IN EAST WALNUT HILLS FOR SEVERAL HOURS. WLWT NEWS FIVE’S NICOLE APONTE LIVE FOR US THERE THIS MORNING. NICOLE, WHAT CAN YOU TELL US? KELLY, WE’RE IN THE VICINITY OF WHERE JD VANCE HOME IS IN EAST WALNUT HILLS. THERE IS STILL VERY LIMITED INFORMATION RIGHT NOW, BUT WE DO KNOW THAT CINCINNATI POLICE AND SECRET SERVICE AGENTS RESPONDED TO VANCE’S HOME OVERNIGHT. IN THIS VIDEO, RIGHT HERE, OUR PHOTOGRAPHER CAPTURED WHAT APPEARS TO BE DAMAGE TO THE WINDOWS. OFFICERS WERE ON SCENE IN THE AREA FOR SEVERAL HOURS, GOING IN AND OUT OF THIS HOME, BUT POLICE HERE COULD ONLY TELL US THEY, QUOTE, HAVE A SUSPECT. IT’S NOT CLEAR IF THAT PERSON IS IN CUSTODY, WHAT THEY’RE CHARGED WITH, OR IF THEY’RE CONNECTED TO THIS INVESTIGATION. VICE PRESIDENT VANCE WAS IN CINCINNATI FOR THE LAST WEEK AND LEFT YESTERDAY AFTERNOON. WE’VE SPOKEN WITH SECRET SERVICE AGENTS HERE ON THE SCENE. THEY TELL US THAT THERE SHOULD BE A STATEMENT MADE LATER THIS MORNING. MEANTIME, WE’LL STILL MONITOR THE SITUATION HERE IN EAST WALNUT HILLS AND BRING YOU THESE UPDATES AS THE

    Police respond to Ohio home of VP JD Vance as part of hours-long investigation

    Updated: 3:28 AM PST Jan 5, 2026

    Editorial Standards

    Police and Secret Service agents responded to the Cincinnati home of Vice President JD Vance overnight.Sister station WLWT’s cameras captured what appears to be damage to the windows of the home. Officers were on scene for several hours, going in and out of the house.Cincinnati police there could say only that they “have a suspect.”It’s not clear if that person is in custody or what they’re charged with.WLWT has spoken with Secret Service agents who say a statement will likely be made later Monday morning.Vance had been in Cincinnati for the last week. He left Sunday afternoon. This is a developing story and will be updated when we learn more.

    Police and Secret Service agents responded to the Cincinnati home of Vice President JD Vance overnight.

    Sister station WLWT’s cameras captured what appears to be damage to the windows of the home. Officers were on scene for several hours, going in and out of the house.

    WLWT's cameras captured what appears to be damage to the windows of the home. Officers were on scene in the East Walnut Hills area for several hours, going in and out of the house.

    Hearst Owned

    WLWT’s cameras captured what appears to be damage to the windows of the home. Officers were on scene in the East Walnut Hills area for several hours, going in and out of the house.

    Cincinnati police there could say only that they “have a suspect.”

    It’s not clear if that person is in custody or what they’re charged with.

    WLWT has spoken with Secret Service agents who say a statement will likely be made later Monday morning.

    Vance had been in Cincinnati for the last week. He left Sunday afternoon.

    This is a developing story and will be updated when we learn more.

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  • High school roundup: Billerica/Chelmsford girls hockey team tops Mansfield

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    The Billerica/Chelmsford girls hockey team continued its strong start to the 2025-26 season on Sunday.

    Hosting Mansfield at the Chelmsford Forum, Billerica/Chelmsford skated to an impressive 5-2 victory to improve to 3-1-2.

    Kara Gambale and eighth-grader Noelle Bussey each potted two goals, Peyton Fitzgerald dished out three assists and Aly Roark (goal, assist) scored the other goal. Picking up two assists each were Lauren Sullivan and Mia Amato.

    Boys hockey

    Billerica 5, L-S 1: Timmy Murphy scored a shorthanded goal and added two assists Saturday to power the Indians past Lincoln-Sudbury.

    Sam Parrella tallied the game-winning goal and notched an assist. It was his first varsity goal. Jacob Greene also pocketed his first goal and John Taft added a goal. Liam Gagne recorded the win in goal, stopping 20 of 21 shots.

    Shawsheen 6, Auburn 2: Justin Thibert, who notched his 100th career point Tuesday against Billerica, continued his torrid scoring Saturday by netting a hat trick and adding an assist for the winning Rams.

    It was Thibert’s second hat trick of the season. Josh Baker netted a goal and assist, while Charlie Shannon and Justin Harrington also scored for ST. Dishing out two assists were Kyle MacKeen, Dylan Minasian and Jacoby Patterson. Goalie Dylan Mainini recorded 15 saves.

    G-D 4, Nashoba Tech 2: Jonas Carpenter, Drew McKennon, Mac Kahwati and Rob Flynn each pocketed a goal and added an assist Saturday to fuel Groton-Dunstable to the victory.

    Nashoba Tech led 2-1 after one period before the Crusaders rallied. Kahwati scored on the power play. Also picking up an assist was Jared Cappella. Cam Columbus made 16 saves for Groton-Dunstable. The Crusaders put 50 shots on goal.

    Alvirne/Milford 11, Brady 2: Brandon Ganas recorded a hat trick Saturday to power an NHIAA win over Bishop Brady at Skate 3 in Tyngsboro.

    Mason Tomkins tallied two goals and added an assist. Brandon Callahan pocketed a goal and had two assists. Also dishing out two assists were Nate Ricci and Evan Pargas.

    Wrestling

    Two Pythons place: Pelham competed in the Bruce Rich Invitational at Chelmsford High and placed two wrestlers on the podium Saturday.

    Junior Victor Zanonni went 3-1 at 285 to take home the second-place medal. Junior Ben Maslanek (165) grabbed took fourth after going 5-1. Maslanek’s second win of the day gave him 100 wins for his career. Junior Drew Nicolosi went 2-2.

    Ghosts excel: Competing in the Bruce Rich Invitational in Chelmsford, Westford Academy had two placewinners Saturday. Owen Millet finished fourth place at 106, while heavweight Alex Luhrs earned sixth place.

    Redmen shine: Tewksbury placed ninth Saturday in the 22-team field at the Bruce Rich Invitational, placing five wrestlers.

    Sean Callahan (144) finished second after falling 3-1 in the final. Jack Lightfoot (132) captured third with an 8-4 decision and his tournament run included his 100th career win.

    “It’s really remarkable for Jack to hit this milestone in the manner in which he has. Because of our star-studded lineup early in his career, Jack did not wrestle varsity as a freshman,” head coach Steve Kasprzak said.

    Also starring were Jack Leone at 190 (third), Ryan Callahan at 138 (fifth) and Angelo Desisto at 150 (sixth).

    Boys basketball

    Tyngsboro 41, G-D 24: Led by TJ Bradford, who scored a team-high 13 points, the Tigers on Saturday defeated Groton-Dunstable.

    Also shining offensively for Tyngsboro were Jack Isenberger with 10 points and George Bell with eight points. Outstanding defense was played by Nico Faretra, and strong rebounding was provided by Jacob McAndrew and Garid Flood.

    Groton-Dunstable received nine points from Riley Henehan.

    Girls basketball

    Wachusett 58, WA 31: Westford Academy fell on the road during a non-league clash against the perennial Central Mass. power in Holden.

    Sophomore guard Grace Trahan led the Ghosts (4-2) with 11 points, while senior forward Kaitlyn Pepin added eight points.

    Billerica 49, Quincy 47: The Indians continue to play tough defense and had just enough offense to hold off visiting Quincy in a non-league thriller.

    Tyngsboro 53, G-D 42: Alanna Anderson drained four 3-pointers and finished with a team-high 16 points to lift the Tigers past Groton-Dunstable on Saturday.

    Maddie Marino added 14 points, while Katie O’Keefe had a huge game for Tyngsboro with 10 points, seven assists and nine rebounds. For Groton-Dunstable, Mackenzie Pauley recorded a game-high 17 points.

    Girls gymnastics

    Andover/NR 135.75, Lowell 104.9: Lowell was unable to upset undefeated Andover/North Reading (5-0) during a MVC meet at Reading Gymnastics Academy.

    Lowell received a fine performance from Grace Sanborn. She placed second on vault with a score of 8.6, took third on bars with a 8.45 and was third in the all-around with a 31.8.

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  • Cops arrest duo at roadblock over stolen Toyota Hilux

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    Police have arrested two men at a festive‑season roadblock along the Harare–Masvingo Road after discovering they were transporting a stolen Toyota Hilux Raider.  

    The arrest was confirmed via the Zimbabwe Republic Police’s X account. Officers deployed at the 103‑kilometre peg in Featherstone intercepted the vehicle on 29 December.  

    The suspects, Lucky Dube (39) and Tapiwa Dube (45), were travelling with the Hilux, which was being towed by a wrecker from Beitbridge to Harare.  

    According to police, preliminary investigations revealed that the vehicle had been stolen in Pretoria, South Africa. It was allegedly fitted with fake vehicle and radio licences, while the number plates attached to it belonged to a different vehicle.  

    The two men were taken into custody as investigations continue.

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  • 3 shot dead after argument in Oakland market

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    OAKLAND — Three men were fatally shot Saturday morning after a fight broke out inside an East Oakland store, authorities said.

    One of the men killed was 22 years old, another was 54 and police were trying to confirm the age and identity of the third man.

    The shooting happened just after 3 a.m. Saturday inside Sky Market in the 8400 block of International Boulevard. According to initial police reports, there were about a dozen customers inside the store when an argument started that turned physical and at least one person produced a gun and started shooting.

    Two of the men died in the shop. The 54-year-old man died later at a hospital. No store employees were injured.

    No arrests have been announced and no suspect information has been released. The killings brought to five the number of homicides investigated by Oakland police this year.

    At this juncture last year, Oakland police had investigated three homicides. The most recent triple homicide occurred in August 2022 when two men were shot dead on the 2800 block of Martin Luther King Jr. Way and another man was killed when a car struck him near the scene.

    Anyone with information may contact investigators at 510-238-3821 or 510-238-7950.

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    Harry Harris

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  • Friday’s high school roundup: Brendan Barth sparks Chelmsford basketball victory

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    Sparked by junior Brendan Barth, the Chelmsford High boys basketball team roared to an easy 69-39 non-league win over Diman Regional Vocational Technical on Friday night.

    Barth compiled 15 points, 10 rebounds and four blocks. Junior Bryce Baker contributed 14 points, two rebounds and five assists, while junior Shane Kangethe claimed 11 points, seven rebounds, three assists and three blocks for Chelmsford (4-2).

    Pelham 66, Sanborn 41: Brady Hegan scored 10 of his game-high 22 points in the third quarter to extend Pelham’s lead to 51-31 and the Pythons cruised to the NHIAA Div. 2 win over the visiting Indians.

    Pelham (2-2) took an early 15-5 lead and held a 28-18 lead at the half. Brady O’Connor added 19 points and Luke Estell tossed in 13 for the Pythons.

    Lynn Tech 82, GLT 49: Greater Lowell Tech wasn’t able to keep pace with the perennial state power.

    The Gryphons (1-5) received strong efforts from freshman Jacen Padial, freshman Max Kelly, sophomore Tommy Mckieran and sophomore Innocent Muhumure.

    NM 47, Auburn 40: North Middlesex played airtight defense in capturing the Mid-Wach victory in Townsend. The Patriots snapped a two-game losing streak.

    Littleton forward Luke Duhamel (5) looks for a passing lane under pressure from Oakmont guard Jackson Pompei during Friday’s boys basketball game in Littleton. Oakmont was a 66-41 winner. (James Thomas for the Lowell Sun)

    Girls basketball

    Fenwick 45, Tewksbury 34: The Redmen gave undefeated Bishop Fenwick (5-0) a scare before falling during a non-league clash.

    Tewksbury only trailed by two (22-20) at halftime before Fenwick pulled away with a 17-5 third quarter. Tewksbury received 11 points and four rebounds from junior Nicole Barron and eight points and four steals from sophomore Reagan Maniscalco. The Redmen played strong defense for most of the game.

    Editor’s note

    High school varsity coaches are asked to submit game results to sports@lowellsun.com.

    Littleton guard Ethan Mugisa (2) goes up and over Oakmont guard Silas Roy as Oakmont's Donovan O'Shaughnessy (4) looks on during Oakmont's 66-41 boys basketball win. (James Thomas for the Lowell Sun)
    Littleton guard Ethan Mugisa (2) goes up and over Oakmont guard Silas Roy as Oakmont’s Donovan O’Shaughnessy (4) looks on during Oakmont’s 66-41 boys basketball win. (James Thomas for the Lowell Sun)
    Littleton guard Clay Blaine (3) drives the lane past Oakmont guard Jackson Pompei during Friday's boys basketball game in Littleton. The host Tigers fell, 66-41. (James Thomas for the Lowell Sun)
    Littleton guard Clay Blaine (3) drives the lane past Oakmont guard Jackson Pompei during Friday’s boys basketball game in Littleton. The host Tigers fell, 66-41. (James Thomas for the Lowell Sun)

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  • Personal history fuels firefighting family to fund scholarship at Moraine Valley Community College

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    Growing up in a single-parent household, Daniel Brand discovered early in life how crucial an education can be for families of lesser means.

    As a longtime firefighter, he also knows how tough it is to find qualified candidates to fill the demand for emergency responder positions.

    So he started the Brand Family Firefighter Scholarship for $1,000 to assist Moraine Valley Community College students attending the school’s Fire Academy and Emergency Medical Services Program.

    “During my childhood and as a young adult myself, my brother Bill, and especially my mom, didn’t have the financial means to further our education past high school,” said Brand, who now handles OSHA compliance and logistics for the Crestwood Fire Department. “Events that occur have lasting effects on a child, so I want to take the opportunity to give a little extra to that person who wants to serve his or her community as a firefighter.

    “Currently many fire departments are having trouble filling open positions, so I hope this helps get someone through the finish line and into a career in the fire service.”

    Brand has a strong link to the profession through his family.

    His cousin, the late Ed Brand, was a battalion chief for the Oak Lawn Fire Department. Another cousin, the late James Drozdz, was a firefighter in Crestwood and Palos Heights before becoming a state police officer and eventually states attorney for Hancock County. Brand’s brother-in-law is on the Oak Forest Fire Department and his father-in-law, Phil Knor, was a firefighter for more than 20 years.

    Also, Brand and his mother both attended the college in Palos Hills, so the scholarship at MVCC was a perfect fit.

    He is one of a handful of recent donors to have established scholarships to help Moraine Valley students get started in the trades. Each has their own personal story about how education and scholarships helped them or their loved ones get where they are today.

    The Adam Bartuzi Trades Career Programs Scholarship established by the Zopf, McNamara and Bartuzi families offers $500 to a student in memory of Adam Bartuzi Sr. After he died, son Adam Bartuzi Jr. nearly dropped his college plans until his uncle Peter Bartuzzi signed up for classes at Moraine Valley too.

    Moraine Valley Community College students Peter Bartuzi and Adam Bartuzi Jr. display their scholarship awards. After being assisted in getting an education at the school the family established a scholarship in memory of Adam Bartuzi Sr., who also was a student at the school. (Moraine Valley Community College)

    “When Peter and Adam Jr. saw how scholarships were changing their classmates’ lives, and theirs. Peter talked to his large family and asked if everyone could chip in to create a scholarship in honor of Adam Sr., who strongly believed in education and was always taking classes even as an adult,” explained Patti Mehallick, director of Alumni and Annual Programs at the MVCC Foundation. “Adam Sr. was a tradesman, so they focused on the scholarship funds helping students pursuing HVAC, automotive repair, welding and electrical.”

    Mehallick, who is also an adjunct business instructor, said she benefited from a scholarship when she started college in Maryland or she might not be where she is today.

    “We have so many students who have big dreams but not the funds, and our donors and our foundation supply the funds for tuition fees and books so they are able to attend classes,” she said. “Community college students are different — they’re also working, may have kids — so any support we can give them to keep them in school, it gives them the drive that someone cares about me and I can do this.”

    Moraine Valley Community College Fire Academy students show off their certificates during a graduation ceremony at the school in Palos Hills. Several new scholarships at the school are aimed to increase access to training in trades such as firefighting. (Moraine Valley Community College)
    Moraine Valley Community College Fire Academy students show off their certificates during a graduation ceremony at the school in Palos Hills. Several new scholarships at the school are aimed to increase access to training in trades such as firefighting. (Moraine Valley Community College)

    The other recently established scholarships at Moraine Valley Community College are the L.A. Schraffenberger Health Sciences Endowed Scholarship for $1,000; the Patricia J. McNamara Scholarship for $1,000 for students in the Nursing Program who are 24 or older and returning to school after being away for five or more years; the Patrick “Irish” Collier Scholarship in memory of Pat Collier, a long-time EMS Program instructor; and the Sullivan Paramedic Scholarship for students in the paramedic program.

    Janice Neumann is a freelance reporter for the Daily Southtown.

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  • Bay Area News Group boys athlete of the week: Isaiah Clendinen, Moreau Catholic

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    Moreau Catholic’s Isaiah Clendinen leads his team to a victory over Madison-San Diego.


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    Darren Sabedra

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  • I-280 crash in Daly City leaves one dead

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    By Bay City News

    A person died Thursday in a crash that shut down two lanes of Interstate 280 in Daly City, according to the California Highway Patrol.

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    Bay City News Service

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