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Tag: local news

  • Local roundup: UMass Lowell women’s basketball team can’t hold off Maine

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    Under first-year head coach Jon Plefka, the UMass Lowell women’s basketball team continues to impress.

    Even in defeat.

    The River Hawks led after each of the first three quarters only to see Maine rally down the stretch for a 73-65 victory during the America East Conference opener on Thursday night at the Kennedy Family Athletic Complex.

    The River Hawks drop to 6-8, 4-2 at home after a nightmarish 3-25 campaign a season ago.

    UMass Lowell received 20 points and six rebounds from Maddie Rice. Jaini Edmonds contributed 16 points, four rebounds and four assists. Paris Gilmore chipped in 11 points to also reach double figures.

    A jumper by Edmonds pulled the River Hawks to a 63-63 tie with 2:40 left, but the hosts would only score two points the rest of the way. Maine’s Lala Woods (17 points) canned back-to-back 3-pointers to help the Black Bears (6-8) pull away.

    Making the loss extra painful for the River Hawks was the fact that they led the game for more than 31 minutes.

    Maine received a 37-point outburst from Adrianna Smith, who sank 16-of-23 shots from the floor. In one of the keys to the game, Maine was 13-for-17 from the free throw line, while UML only had three free throws, making two.

    Both teams shot over 52 percent from the floor.

    UMass Lowell led 22-16 after one quarter, 39-32 at halftime and 53-49 after three quarters. The River Hawks were coming off a 109-45 win over St. Joseph’s Brooklyn.

    Boys hockey

    Alvirne/Milford 3, Nashua No. 2: Alvirne/Milford skated to a narrow victory over Nashua North at Conway Arena to capture a holiday tournament.

    The Admirals finished the tournament with 7.0 points, just ahead of Nashua’s 6.5 points. Brandon Hiltz scored from Brandon Gianas, Brandon Callahan’s goal came after a pass by Landon Briand, and Dylan MacLeod netted the game-winner after a dish from Luke Green.

    Girls gymnastics

    Dracut falls: The Middies compiled a score of 117.3 and finished behind Andover (136.6) and North Andover (132.85) in a MVC tri-meet.

    Girls hockey

    St. Mary’s 3, Central 1: Central Catholic was nipped during a non-league game against the Lynn School.

    The Raiders received a tremendous 50-save performance from goaltender Sloan Costa. Chloe Luzzo pocketed the goal for Central (1-3), while the assist was earned by Angela Cardillo.

    Editor’s note

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

    North Middlesex’s Sophie Hopkins drives to the basket past Nashoba Regional’s Natalie Sanborn. North Middlesex was defeated earlier this week, 56-22. (Gary Fournier photo)
    North Middlesex's Ava Callahan, right, defends as Nashoba Regional's Sarah Quinn puts up a shot during Nashoba's 56-22 girls basketball win in Townsend. (Gary Fournier photo)
    North Middlesex’s Ava Callahan, right, defends as Nashoba Regional’s Sarah Quinn puts up a shot during Nashoba’s 56-22 girls basketball win in Townsend. (Gary Fournier photo)

     

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  • Wind-battered Lick Observatory rushes to shield historic telescope after dome damage

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    Winds exceeding 110 mph that tore across the top of Mount Hamilton early Christmas morning blasted a massive steel protective door off the iconic white dome at Lick Observatory.

    Now, with back-to-back rainstorms bearing down on the Bay Area, officials this week are racing to seal the gaping hole and protect the historic Great Lick Refractor telescope beneath it.

    “I’ve never seen or even heard of damage like this to a dome,” said Lick Observatory site superintendent Jamey Eriksen.

    The Christmas Day storm that brought winds of 110 mph to the top of Mt Hamilton where the James Lick Observatory sits brought down the 60-foot crescent steel door that once covered half the dome’s vertical opening. The door landed onto an adjoining building where it broke windows and splintered attic beams. (Photo by Jamey Eriksen/UCSC Lick Observatory) 

    The damage threatens one of the Bay Area’s most significant scientific landmarks — a telescope that helped shape modern astronomy and still draws thousands of visitors each year to the mountaintop east of San Jose.

    From the Bay Area below, the dome sheltering the Great Refractor still appears intact. Up close, the damage is stark: a multi-ton, 60-foot crescent of steel that once covered half the dome’s vertical opening is gone. It was one of two giant doors that slid open to reveal the night sky, then closed again to protect the telescope from the elements. Now it lies on the pavement beside the dome.

    Inside, an all-hands scramble by a skeleton holiday-season crew helped avert worse damage. Beneath the dome, the 57-foot-long Great Refractor telescope is wrapped in black plastic tarps from eyepiece to lens assembly. Above it, the fallen door has left a gap in the steel dome roughly 4 feet wide and 10 feet tall, with a larger opening below it covered only by a fabric windscreen.

    The Christmas Day storm that brought winds of 110 mph to the top of Mt Hamilton where the James Lick Observatory sits brought down the 60-foot crescent steel door that once covered half the dome's vertical opening. The door landed onto an adjoining building where it broke windows and splintered attic beams.  (Photo by Jamey Eriksen/UCSC Lick Observatory)
    The Christmas Day storm that brought winds of 110 mph to the top of Mt Hamilton where the James Lick Observatory sits brought down the 60-foot crescent steel door that once covered half the dome’s vertical opening. The door landed onto an adjoining building where it broke windows and splintered attic beams. (Photo by Jamey Eriksen/UCSC Lick Observatory) 

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    Ethan Baron

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  • College basketball: UML men fall on road to 25th-ranked Iowa

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    Junior Angel Montas Jr. (La Romana, Dominican Republic) scored a game-high 23 points, but as the UMass Lowell men’s basketball team (5-10) dropped its final non-conference game of the season 90-62 to 25th-ranked Iowa on Monday afternoon in Iowa City, Iowa.

    “We are excited to be done with our non-conference schedule and move onto conference play,” said UML head coach Pat Duquette. “Iowa is a top 25 team and was the most well-coached team we played all year. I feel like our team has noticeably improved and survived our toughest non-conference schedule ever.”

    Montas Jr., who added six rebounds, three assists, and two steals, was one of three River Hawks (5-10) to finish with double-digit scoring efforts. Junior Darrel Yepdo (Dracut) added 10 points and five assists, while junior Xavier Spencer (Calgary, Alberta, Canada) finished with 10 points and three assists.

    Iowa got to work early, scoring the first eight points of the game in the opening minutes.

    Women win

    The UMass Lowell women’s basketball team turned in a wire-to-wire performance on Monday evening, rolling past St. Joseph’s Brooklyn, 109–45, at the Kennedy Family Athletic Complex in Lowell.

    “Any win is a good win, but I thought we had a lot of players step up tonight, which was great to see,” said UML head coach Jon Plefka. “Coming off the break, it was important for us to get back on track and carry some momentum into conference play.”

    The River Hawks set the tone early, using energy on the glass and strong ball movement to jump out to a 25–5 lead after the opening quarter.

    Junior guard Maddie Rice (Charlottesville, Va.) knocked down an early three during a 15–3 run, while graduate forward Anabel Latorre Ciria (Zaragoza, Spain) and sophomore guard Nia Chima (Toronto, Ontario) controlled the boards to extend possessions and limit the Bears to one shot at the other end.

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  • San Jose bakery seeks public help following attack

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    SAN JOSE — Peters’ Bakery, the 90-year-old San Jose institution, is hoping the public can help them identify the person who caused chaos in the shop this December.

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    Sierra Lopez

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  • Registration is open for El Camino Health’s heart forum

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    Heart forum

    Registration is open for El Camino Health’s 15th Annual Heart Forum.

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    Anne Gelhaus

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  • Filipino engineer and entrepreneur dies at 79

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    Filipino tech entrepreneur Diosdado “Dado” Banatao died at the age of 79.

    Banatao is known for pioneering the technology that made personal computers possible, thus putting Silicon Valley on the map. He also co-founded three technology companies and started a nonprofit to help support Filipinos in STEM fields.

    “Rising from humble beginnings in Cagayan, he went on to co-found transformative technology companies and played a pivotal role in advancing the global semiconductor and graphics industries,” said the National Federation of Filipino American Associations on LinkedIn in honor of Banatao’s passing. “Just as importantly, he invested deeply in people opening doors, mentoring founders and strengthening communities.”

    According to a post on his website by his family, Banatao passed away peacefully on Christmas Day, surrounded by family and friends. His family said he “succumbed to complications from a neurological disorder that hit him late in his life.” He would have been 80 in May.

    His family wrote, “We are mourning his loss, but take comfort from the time spent with him during this Christmas season, and that his fight with this disease is over.”

    Banatao was born to a rice farmer and housekeeper in Iguig, Cagayan, according to ABS-CBN. According to his 2015 documentary, he didn’t have access to electricity growing up and was taught math using bamboo sticks. He said it was typical for his classmates to stop going to school after sixth grade to help their parents work in the fields, but his father told him to continue studying.

    He developed a love for engineering and graduated with a degree in electric engineering from Mapua Institute of Technology, a private research university in Manila. He said in his documentary that there were no design jobs for engineers in the Philippines, so he moved to the U.S. and pursued a master’s degree in electrical engineering and computer science at Stanford University. He graduated in 1972.

    Soon after college, Banatao worked as a design engineering at Boeing. ABS-CBN reported that he then went on to work for other technology companies, like National Semiconductor and Intersil. While at Commodore International, he designed the first single chip, 16-bit microprocessor-based calculator.

    He is credited with developing the first 10-Mbit ethernet CMOS chip in 1981 while working at Seeq Technology. He also developed the first system logic chipset for IBM’s PC-XT and PC-AT and one of the first graphics accelerators for personal computers. These inventions allowed for faster computer performance, according to Inquirer.net. The Harvard Club of Southern California credited Banatao for bringing GPS technology to consumers.

    “Dado is the man who invented a graphical chipset that took us from black screens with green writing to the dynamic displays we have today,” the club wrote for a description of a lecture he gave in 2017 for the Harvard Business School Association of Orange County.

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    Nollyanne Delacruz

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  • Close to 1,000 people gather to mourn, celebrate Park Forest Officer Tim Jones

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    Amid the ceremonial trappings that befit someone hailed as a fallen hero, the life of Park Forest police Officer Tim Jones was celebrated Saturday before a crowd of close to 1,000 people, including police officers from an estimated 30 police departments in the Chicago area.

    Pomp and circumstance were not forgotten as the arrival of police officers was ushered in with a salute by the Chicago Police Department’s Bagpipes & Drums of the Emerald Society.

    Park Forest firefighters process past Detective Tim Jones’ casket before his celebration of life, service Saturday at Tinley Park High School. (Dominic Di Palermo/Chicago Tribune)

    The event was held at Tinley Park High School, the school from which Jones graduated in 2009.

    Jones, 34, died Dec. 3, nearly 10 years after he was critically wounded in deadly confrontation with an angry home invader March 19, 2016. Officers accompanying Jones killed the intruder.

    Park Forest officials, clergy, relatives and friends all took part in Saturday’s observance.

    “This day we celebrate his life” said Park Forest Mayor Joe Woods. “He gave so much with so little urging. We celebrate this superhero who gave everything. Tim did not lose his life. He gave it to an entire community.”

    Former Mayor John Ostenburg said Jones was “a true hometown hero.”

    “The shooting galvanized the community,” former Park Forest village manager Tom Mick told the crowd. “He became known by his first name alone.”

    “He carried himself with quiet strength,” said Park Forest police Chief Brian Rzyski.

    At the time of the shooting, Tim’s father, William Jones, was the Country Club Hills police chief and the person who pinned the badge on his son when he was sworn into office.

    The badge No. 204 became a link between the community and its police. Three days after the shooting at a fundraiser at a Matteson restaurant to defray family expenses, hundreds of people over a four-hour period purchased both food and a blue T-shirt emblazoned with his number. A police car with his badge number on it became part of the village’s fleet.

    Police officers from various departments process past Detective Tim Jones' casket as part of an honorary walk-through during his celebration of life, Saturday, Dec. 27, 2025, at Tinley Park High School in Tinley Park. Jones passed on December 3rd and community members and first responders flocked to the gymnasium to celebrate his life. (Dominic Di Palermo/Chicago Tribune)
    Police officers from various departments process past Park Forest Detective Tim Jones’ casket as part of an honorary walk-through before his celebration of life. (Dominic Di Palermo/Chicago Tribune)
    Coloring sheets of Park Forest Detective Tim Jones hang on the walls during a celebration of life for Park Forest Detective Tim Jones, Saturday, Dec. 27, 2025, at Tinley Park High School in Tinley Park. Jones passed on December 3rd and community members and first responders flocked to the gymnasium to celebrate his life. (Dominic Di Palermo/Chicago Tribune)
    Coloring sheets of Park Forest police Detective Tim Jones hang on the walls of Tinley Park High School during a celebration of life service Saturday for the officer, who died Dec. 3. (Dominic Di Palermo/Chicago Tribune)

    Village officials never seemed to forget Jones. In 2021, he was given the rank of detective and a Tim Jones honorary street sign was placed on Forest Boulevard adjacent to the police station. His Police Department desk and his locker will remain a permanent symbol of his sacrifice.

    Following the 2016 shooting, Jones was airlifted to the Level One trauma unit in Advocate Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn, where he was met by more than 200 police officers of all ranks and from dozens of departments, lining the halls in a silent tribute.

    Doctors told Jones’ father there was almost no hope for any recovery. One told Tim Jones’ father the odds of winning the Power Ball were better than of him living one more day.

    Illinois State Police Officers takes their seats after participating in an honorary walk-through during a celebration of life for Park Forest Detective Tim Jones, Saturday, Dec. 27, 2025, at Tinley Park High School in Tinley Park. Jones passed on December 3rd and community members and first responders flocked to the gymnasium to celebrate his life. (Dominic Di Palermo/Chicago Tribune)
    Illinois State Police officers take their seats Saturday after participating in an honorary walk-through before a celebration of life for Park Forest Detective Tim Jones at Tinley Park High School in Tinley Park. (Dominic Di Palermo/Chicago Tribune)

    Tinley Park High School had posters paying tribute to Jones, and large placards with his picture proclaiming “real heroes don’t need a cape” were given to attendees.

    After his death, 75 people were helped through organ donation, it was reported in the program.

    Jerry Shnay is a freelance columnist for the Daily Southtown.

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    Jerry Shnay

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  • The Bay Area’s week of stormy weather is nearly over. Here’s when the skies should fully clear

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    The end to a wild week of whipsawing weather across Northern California is at hand.

    Sunny skies, calmer winds and cooler temperatures are forecast to return to the Bay Area on Saturday and linger into early next week, offering a respite from a weeklong parade of storms that felled trees, flooded roadways and caused power outages affecting thousands of people.

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    Jakob Rodgers

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  • Tewksbury schools denied state grants due to MBTA Communities noncompliance

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    TEWKSBURY — The first consequences seem to be arriving for the remaining cities and towns out of compliance with the MBTA Communities law after Tewksbury Public Schools was informed it not be receiving certain state grant funding in fiscal 2026 as a result of the town’s noncompliance.

    A little more than a dozen towns remain out of compliance with the MBTA Communities law, which compels 177 communities in eastern Massachusetts to create zoning that would allow the creation of multifamily housing by right.

    Tewksbury is among the communities who remain out of compliance after Town Meeting voted overwhelmingly to reject the proposed zoning in town in 2024. An effort to bring the measure back to Town Meeting in 2025 was blocked by the Planning Board.

    In the Dec. 17 Tewksbury School Committee meeting, Superintendent of Schools Brenda Theriault-Regan said the district was recently notified it was “currently ineligible for certain educational grant funding due to the town of Tewksbury’s noncompliance with the MBTA Communities Act.”

    That funding includes an Early College planning grant for $50,000, an Early College designation funding grant for $250,000 over five years, a time-out practices implementation grant for $50,000, which Theriault-Regan said was meant to support the district with resources to help it comply with new Department of Elementary and Secondary Education regulations on “seclusion and restorative practices.”

    “DESE also shared with us that Tewksbury Public Schools’ participation in current 2026 state-funded grants and future grants remains at risk until the town remediates this compliance issue,” said Theriault-Regan.

    The superintendent referenced how earlier this month Gov. Maura Healey’s administration said Wachusett Regional High School and South Shore Vocational Technical “were mistakenly informed that they were not eligible for Credit for Life grant awards,” as reported by the Boston Herald. A spokesperson for the state Office of Consumer Affairs and Business Regulation told The Herald the mistake had been corrected, and those districts were eligible for that grant.

    “That was the only grant the article referenced, so we are very much concerned that our students could lose out on the programs and resources we depend on through grant funding, especially for factors outside the School Department’s control,” said Theriault-Regan. “But the article I referenced certainly gave us hope that maybe the state leaders and legislators will look at educational grant funding differently moving forward, aside from the MBTA Community Act compliance.”

    Theriault-Regan said the district was committed to working with town and state officials to “see if we can resolve this barrier and secure essential resources for our students.”

    In a phone call Tuesday, Tewksbury Select Board Chair Mark Kratman, a consistent critic of the MBTA Communities law, said there has been little communication from the state to the school district when it comes to grant funding eligibility.

    “When the schools try to reach out, they are not getting a clear answer … When they are applying for grants, we are getting crickets,” said Kratman.

    “Grants are nothing more than taxpayer dollars that have been given to the State House, and they are supposed to be fairly distributed to all the cities and towns,” Kratman continued. “We are sending our money there, and with that they are supposed to govern, they are not supposed to dictate.”

    In Greater Lowell, Tewksbury is joined by Dracut and Wilmington in still being out of compliance with MBTA Communities. In addition to the loss in state grant funding, towns out of compliance with the law have been threatened with the imposition of a special master that would impose a version of the zoning without input from the town.

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    Peter Currier

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  • Tornado warning issued for Santa Cruz County

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    The National Weather Service issued a tornado warning for Santa Cruz County until 1 p.m. Thursday.

    The service reported that a severe thunderstorm capable of producing a tornado was 7 miles south of Santa Cruz at a speed of 35 mph.

    The areas impacted include Santa Cruz, Corralitos, Scotts Valley, Capitola, Live Oak, Soquel, Twin Lakes, Opal Cliffs, Felton, Aptos, Ben Lomond, Rio Del Mar, Eureka Canyon Road, Boulder Creek, Day Valley, Aptos Hills-Larkin Valley and Aptos Hills-Larkin.

    Residents in those areas were encouraged to move to an interior room on the lowest floor of a well-built building away from windows. For people outside, in a mobile home or in a vehicle, the agency recommended relocating to the closest substantial shelter.

    “Flying debris will be dangerous to those caught without shelter,” the agency said in its advisory. “Mobile homes will be damaged or destroyed. Damage to roofs, windows and vehicles will occur. Tree damage is likely.”

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    Devan Patel

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  • Emmanuel Episcopal brings world class musicians to La Grange for ‘Messiah’ performance

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    About 250 people became the chorus last week as La Grange’s Emmanuel Episcopal Church brought to life George Frederic Handel’s “Messiah” at the church on Kensington Avenue, backing four soloists in the rendition of the Christmas classic.

    Mary Hopper, emeritus professor of Choral Music at Wheaton College, conducted the performance.

    “This is great and such a great experience,” Hopper said before the performance. “People really enjoyed singing last year and I enjoyed that.”

    Hopper described Handel’s most famous work as one that resonates with the American people.

    “It’s the story of Christmas and the story of the Gospel,” she said. “It’s got music that’s familiar, probably the most familiar piece of classical music that anybody has.”

    During her 43 years at Wheaton College, Hopper directed the Women’s Chorale and the Men’s Glee Club. She has toured nationally and internationally.

    Since 2018, Hopper has been director of the Hinsdale Chorale, several of whose members were dispersed through the crowd at Emmanuel Episcopal for the performance, singing along to the choruses.

    The oratorio, written in only 24 days by the German-born master, is considered among the most recognizable pieces of English language music.

    The Messiah was first performed in Ireland in 1741, and quickly became a favorite of music-lovers of the era. While it originally was considered appropriate for the Easter Holiday, over the years “Messiah” has become a Christmas staple.

    Oratorios are typically large-scale music works for orchestra and voices, focusing on religious themes; “Messiah” is no exception, with lyrics taken from scripture.

    Chicago-based soprano Olivia Doig, who has performed in venues throughout the Midwest, also returned after performing in last year’s rendition in La Grange.

    “Last year I was eight months pregnant and this year I’m not,” Doig said after the performance, “But my children are here this year.”

    Doig is a veteran of venues like the Chicago Opera Theater, Ohio Light Opera, and the Haymarket Opera. She is currently a guest lecturer in voice studies at Wheaton College.

    Other performers included mezzo soprano Janet Mensen Reynolds, who retired after 26 years in the chorus of the Chicago Lyric Opera, made her concert debut at Carnegie Hall, and currently has a private voice studio of 25 students. Baritone Ryan Cox has been a professional member of the Grant Park Chorus and the Chicago Symphony Chorus, and was the baritone soloist in the 2010 recording of Grant Park’s Pulitzer Project. Lyric Opera tenor Joseph Fosselman has been with the Opera since 1992 and has performed many solo roles in Lyric productions.

    The Kaia String Quartet, dedicated to bringing the music of Latin America to the public, provided the instrumentation for the performance. The group has performed at many Chicago-area venues, including the Chicago Jazz Fest, the Studebaker Theatre, the Morton Arboretum, the Chicago Latino Music Festival, and Chamber Music on the Fox.

    But some artists were first-timers for Emmanuel Episcopal Church’s new tradition.

    Harpsichordist Kathy Christian has served on the music faculty of North Central College in Naperville for 26 years. She is the organist and pianist for the First Congregational Church of Western Springs, as well as the accompanist for Hinsdale Chorale.

    Organist Bobby Nguyen, a native of Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, is the organist at the First United Church of Oak Park. He began his piano studies at Ho Chi Minh Conservatory of Music, continued his education at North Park University and ultimately studied organ at the Juilliard School.

    “At first when Mary contacted me a few months ago, I was a bit worried,” Nguyen said. “The Messiah is a pretty big piece and when I showed up here everything was very casual feeling, a friendly atmosphere, so I said, ‘oh, I can do this.’”

    Dan Mottl, junior warden at Emmanuel Episcopal Church, said bringing the performance back this year was an easy choice.

    “We were pretty confident because of the response from last year,” he said before the performance. “We had a good turnout, the excitement was building and people were saying ‘I hope you do this every year. It was planned to be an annual event and it looks like it’s catching on.”

    Mottl talked about bringing together different artists who normally didn’t work together.

    “We assembled them from all over the neighborhood, some were from La Grange, some from Wheaton, some from Chicago,” he said. “So we assembled the best singers and best musicians that we knew. The Kaia String Quartet was wonderful. So we brought all these people together.

    “Of course Mary Hopper was the key. She knew a lot of the people, but this is independent from anything she had worked on before.”

    After the show, Mottl said “everything was great. It’s probably better than last year.”

    Audience members came away impressed and inspired.

    La Grange resident Nanci Davidson, a member of Emmanuel Episcopal Choir, was also part of the effort to bring the Messiah to the church last year.

    “Oh my gosh this is the best community event this church could be doing,” Nanci said. “It brings everyone together at a very tumultuous time — depending on how you sit — and it sets you off in this wonderful, joyous mood in the holidays.”

    Western Springs resident Janet Helin agreed.

    “It’s just such a thrill,” she said. “Especially when you think of all those who would like to sing it, and especially the text that came up in our sermon this morning. Handel composed this in 24 days. It’s hard to even conceive of this whole thing.”

    Hank Beckman is a freelance reporter for Pioneer Press. 

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  • One Bay Area city tried an innovative program to deal with its abandoned shopping cart problem. Here’s what happened.

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    Earlier this year, San Jose politicians announced they were targeting the thousands of abandoned shopping carts clogging creeks and blighting streets. Now the first data on a pilot program aimed at curbing the problem is in, and the city must decide whether the results justify the financial cost of expanding it.

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    Devan Patel

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  • Clarendon Hills police join Hinsdale and other departments for social worker services

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    Police departments from Clarendon Hills, Hinsdale, Burr Ridge and Willowbrook have formed a team that will enable them to provide additional services by sharing a social worker from Northeast DuPage Family and Youth Services.

    The Hinsdale, Burr Ridge and Willowbrook departments put the Police Social Work Program in place for fiscal year 2025, said Clarendon Hills police Chief Ed Leinweber. He said he and acting village manager Paul Dalen were approached in September by Hinsdale police Chief Brian King about getting involved in the program.

    The cost now is just over $23,000 for a year for each of the four departments. Clarendon Hills becomes part of the local group Jan. 1.

    Leinweber said each department will have the social worker in-house one day per week for 10 hours.

    “The social worker also has the flexibility to respond to one of the other towns, should there be an active critical incident where their services could be utilized,” he said, adding that the social worker would provided services to children, adolescents, adults and families of all backgrounds.

    Leinweber said the social worker would focus on mental health incident follow-up, on-site response to mental health incidents, case management, short-term counseling to achieve crisis stabilization, suicide & mental health assessments, assistance with DCFS calls, homelessness, food insecurity and other basic needs, 24/7 on-call coverage for social service emergencies, ”walk-in” services for residents during designated office hours, domestic violence counseling, safety planning and resource assistance, outreach and training for residents and village officials and community meetings and events.

    “Many police departments are moving toward having a social worker on staff, either on a part-time or full-time capacity,” Leinweber said. “There has been a lot of interest nationwide to have social workers work with police departments in responding to calls involving mental health crisis and domestic violence.  Mental health crisis and domestic violence calls are two of the more common calls for service received by police departments.”

    Leinweber said police and village officials believe partnering with Northeast DuPage Family and Youth Services will further strengthen the commitment to promoting the mental health and social needs of the Clarendon Hills community.

    “We look forward to working with NEDFYS and our neighboring villages in an effort to provide the best police service possible,” he said.

    Chuck Fieldman is a freelance reporter for Pioneer Press.

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    Chuck Fieldman

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  • Harvey approaches 2 months with no City Council meetings, despite mass layoffs and financial crisis

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    The last Harvey City Council meeting was at the end of October, when residents accused the administration of lacking transparency in the midst of a major financial crisis.

    Since then, every one of the City Council’s regular biweekly meetings has been canceled.

    Harvey ordinarily has City Council meetings on the second and fourth Monday of each month, for a total of 24 scheduled meetings a year. The most recent scheduled meeting, which was canceled, would have been Monday, and would have been the last meeting of the year.

    A spokesperson for Mayor Christopher Clark said it was not unusual for the final meeting in December to be canceled due to Christmas, despite it being listed on the city’s website.

    Fourth Ward Ald. Tracy Key said in the past, the city had scheduled around Christmas so that end-of-year conversations could still be held.

    “Even with Christmastime, which always falls at the end, sometimes we would have it like the week before,” Key said.

    Clark said in a statement that given the city’s state of fiscal crisis, not holding meetings was the financially responsible course of action.

    “Canceling meetings in this moment is about responsible leadership, not disengagement,” Clark said. “The City of Harvey is currently navigating staffing shortages and financial constraints, and we are being mindful of how public tax dollars are used. When there is nothing new to report, it is in the city’s best interests to focus our time and funds on the work towards stabilizing finances and bringing our employees back to work. We cannot afford to waste any public resources.”

    However, critics of Clark have said that the move feels like avoidance.

    At a special City Council meeting Oct. 16, outside the normal schedule, Clark led the audience through an hour-and-a-half long presentation about the city’s debilitating financial struggles, which he said were largely the result of corruption and mismanagement by the administration of the previous mayor, Eric Kellogg.

    Under Kellogg, the city diverted water payments owed to the city of Chicago and failed to make required payments to the fire and police pension funds, he said. Compounding problems are Harvey’s high tax rates and correspondingly low collection rates, the third lowest in Cook County.

    Due to the financial hole that Harvey had been left in, Clark said, its only solution was to petition the state for financially distressed status, and to partially shut down city functions until help arrived. Harvey’s City Council voted unanimously to declare Harvey in financial distress under the Illinois Financially Distressed City Law, which would allow for the state to step in to oversee Harvey’s finances.

    Key said he believes that, especially with the state of uncertainty brought on by the declaration, the city should be required to have at least the 24 regular City Council meetings.

    “If not, it’s taking away the residents’ rights to be able to speak and be informed,” Key said. “I’m kind of disturbed with that.”

    There has been no visible movement from the state regarding the city’s declaration of financial distress.

    In the week following the declaration, Harvey laid off 40% of its city staff, including major cuts to the Fire Department and Police Department. A later round of layoffs brought the Fire Department well below half strength.

    Following those developments, there was only one more Harvey City Council meeting, Oct. 27. The last meeting before the hiatus was rancorous, with a resident being escorted out by police from the preceding Finance Committee meeting before the City Council even convened.

    At that meeting, Clark and a majority of the City Council voted to approve bill lists for the city and approved the sale of a set of city-owned properties to an entity called Turlington Homes for redevelopment, over objections from Key and 2nd Ward Ald. Colby Chapman.

    Turlington Homes was established as a business Oct. 2. Its website remains empty. The resolution approving the sale said that the city was “willing to assist the developer by selling the Redevelopment Property at a discounted sale price,” though a price was not specified.

    “You didn’t even say how much you sold our land for,” Chapman said. “It’s ours, because if the city owns it, then it’s mine too, it’s everyone’s who lives in the city. We own it.”

    During public comment at that meeting, several residents strongly criticized Clark and the members of City Council for approving expenses as normal when the city was in crisis, and for approving the sale to Turlington Homes with no discussion or debate.

    Subsequently, every City Council meeting has been quietly canceled with no agenda posted and, Chapman said, a lack of communication to City Council members. Each of the scheduled meetings appears on the city website, but never occurs.

    “I’ve called, I’ve emailed, and I have yet to receive any responses on anything,” Chapman said.

    The lack of meetings also means that no bills have come before the City Council for approval since the meeting at the end of October, when invoices from July 18 to Oct. 21 were approved.

    Chapman said the lack of meetings and public information makes it hard for Harvey residents to see a future for the city.

    “If individuals are seeing increased property taxes, financial distress being called in our city, what is holding them to have a belief that there’s a quality of life, a path forward for Harvey?” Chapman said.

    The next scheduled meeting is set for Jan. 12, next year.

    elewis@chicagotribune.com

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    Evy Lewis

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  • Five stories defined the defined the DC-area in 2025 – WTOP News

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    #1: Federal layoffs and job cuts

    Back in January, President Donald Trump tapped billionaire Elon Musk to lead what was called the Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE. The stated goal was to cut fraud, waste and abuse by downsizing the federal workforce.

    DOGE’s efforts led hundreds of thousands of federal workers to leave their jobs through layoffs, firings or the “deferred resignation” program.

    “When we look January to June, there’s been a huge drop in federal employment in the region. It’s down 4.5%,” said Tracy Hadden Loh, a fellow with the Brookings Institution.

    Loh and Terry Clower, the director of the Schar School’s Center for Regional Analysis at George Mason University, said there are still a lot of unknowns since detailed local third quarter labor data likely won’t be released until next month.

    “The DOGE cuts and the actions of the Trump administration have hit the region very quickly,” Clower said.

    WTOP’s Kate Ryan reports on the impact DOGE has had on the local economy.

    Read the full story here.

    #2: Midair crash near DCA

    The midair collision near Reagan National Airport on Jan. 29 involving an American Airlines passenger jet and a U.S. Army Black Hawk helicopter killed all 64 aboard the jet, and the three-person chopper crew.

    The National Transportation Safety Board concluded the crash was caused by a combination of altitude misreporting, the D.C. area’s congested airspace and communication failures. The chopper’s altimeter was underreporting the helicopter’s altitude, so the crew believed they were flying at the appropriate level, which put the chopper directly in the approach path of the jet.

    The FAA permanently banned nonessential helicopter flights in critical DCA airspace, with exceptions only for medevac, law enforcement, presidential or urgent missions.

    WTOP’s Neal Augenstein reports on how the crash changed D.C.’s airspace.

    Read the full story here on Tuesday.

    #3: Federal government shutdown

    There have been a growing number of government shutdowns in recent years, but none has lasted longer than the one that dragged on for 43 days in the fall of 2025.

    The shutdown had a major impact, causing more than a million federal employees to work without pay, millions of Americans to lose their food assistance when SNAP benefits ran out and widespread disruptions in air travel.

    The U.S. House was also out of session during the duration of the shutdown, bringing all legislative action to a halt.

    The government shutdown, while decried by Republicans and Democrats, was used by both parties to try to achieve their policy goals — a method that usually fails.

    Democrats pressed to get subsidies extended for the Affordable Care Act that would prevent insurance premiums from soaring for millions of Americans in January.

    Ultimately, Senate Majority Leader and South Dakota Sen. John Thune agreed to a vote on extending the subsidies, which failed in the Senate.

    The subsidies are set to expire on Dec. 31, and Congress potentially faces another shutdown showdown when federal funds run out on Jan. 30.

    WTOP’s Mitchell Miller reports on how the 2025 federal government shutdown opened the doors for potentially more in the future.

    Read the full story on Wednesday.

    #4: Washington Commanders stadium deal

    D.C. scored big this year. After months of tense negotiations, the D.C. Council voted to bring the Washington Commanders back home with a new stadium at the former RFK Stadium site.

    The first vote in August passed 9-3, and after some last-minute drama, the final vote in September sealed the deal.

    “Washington, D.C., residents are winning,” said Council member Kenyan McDuffie.

    Demolition of the old RFK Stadium is already underway, and the site will be cleared for construction by fall 2026. The new roofed stadium is expected to open in 2030, marking the largest private investment in city history.

    WTOP’s Mike Murillo reports on what to expect with the development of a new sports stadium in the nation’s capital.

    Read the full story here on Thursday.

    #5: Federal law enforcement surge in DC

    President Donald Trump activated hundreds of National Guard members and described a plan for federal oversight of D.C.’s police department on Aug. 11.

    While city leaders touted significant drops in violent crime before the effort, Trump said the plan would, in part, be “getting rid of the slums.” He also criticized the maintenance of city streets and parks, highlighting graffiti and potholes.

    The crime emergency ended after 30 days, after Congress declined to extend it. White House data described drops in violent crime categories.

    D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser signed an executive order outlining the city’s path for federal collaboration after the emergency declaration ended in the fall, but signs of the surge remain. As of early December, there were over 2,700 National Guard troops assigned to patrol the city, according to data from the Joint Task Force.

    During the week of Thanksgiving, West Virginia National Guard members Staff Sgt. Andrew Wolfe and Specialist Sarah Beckstrom were shot near Farragut Square. Beckstrom died in the shooting, and Wolfe was critically injured. In the days after, D.C. police teamed up with Guard members to patrol city streets.

    There’s an ongoing court battle over whether the military presence in D.C. is legal, and whether the deployment can continue. Guard members are reportedly expected to remain in D.C. through at least February.

    WTOP’s Scott Gelman reports on the August federal law enforcement surge and how the takeover of the District’s police force still echoes months later.

    Read the full story here on Friday.

    WTOP’s Ciara Wells, Kate Ryan, Neal Augenstein, Mitchell Miller, Mike Murillo and Scott Gelman contributed to this report.

    Get breaking news and daily headlines delivered to your email inbox by signing up here.

    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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    Ciara Wells

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  • Lowell High students released on bail after alleged armed robbery

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    LOWELL — Two Lowell High School students and two unidentified juveniles are facing several charges, including armed robbery, after police say they attacked a teenage boy and stole his backpack shortly after he stepped off a bus on Lincoln Street earlier this month.

    Devonathan Thanongsinh and Fidell Chan, both 18, along with two 17-year-old boys whose names were redacted from Lowell Police reports due to their age, are accused of striking the victim in the face with a handgun that officers later recovered.

    Police said they have not determined which suspect wielded the weapon.

    The group also allegedly assaulted the victim’s 58-year-old grandfather when he tried to intervene in the attack.

    According to an officer’s incident report, the assault occurred shortly after 3 p.m. on Dec. 5, when police were called to the 400 block of Lincoln Street for a report of a teen who had been attacked “by a group of kids” on the sidewalk.

    When one of the responding officers arrived in the area, he saw a blue Mazda traveling the wrong way on a one‑way section of Lincoln Street and noticed a pickup truck farther up the road that appeared to have been involved in a crash. The Mazda, meanwhile, had heavy damage to its doors and tires, the report said.

    The driver of the Mazda — later identified by police as Thanongsinh — attempted to maneuver around the cruiser but was unable to get by. The officer activated his lights and conducted a traffic stop.

    “(Thanongsin) … denied being involved,” the officer said in the report. “I then asked what had happened to the vehicle in which he did not have an answer.”

    The officer reported that three other “young male” occupants were inside the Mazda with Thanongsinh, including the two 17‑year‑old boys and Chan, who was seated in the rear driver’s‑side seat.

    As the officer was speaking with the group, he was approached by a woman who said her son — whose name was redacted from the report — had just been assaulted by the four males in the Mazda.

    According to the report, the woman told police she was inside her Lincoln Street home when she heard screaming outside. She tried calling her son, but he did not answer. Moments later, he ran into the house and told her he had been jumped.

    Another family member approached the officer and said that one of the occupants of the Mazda had “used a handgun to pistol whip” the victim, the report said.

    With that information, the officer told the four occupants to remain in the vehicle while additional units were called to the scene. At one point, one of the 17-year-olds allegedly opened his door and tried to get out despite the instructions.

    The officer said in the report that he “commanded him to remain inside and to close the door in which he complied. I then further instructed all four occupants to remain inside and do not do anything too stupid. All complied.”

    Once other officers arrived, the occupants were ordered out of the Mazda one at a time. None of them had weapons on them, according to the report, but officers spotted a handgun on the front passenger‑side floorboard in plain view.

    The weapon turned out to be a 9mm loaded with a magazine containing nine rounds.

    The victim later told police, according to the report, that he had just gotten off a bus with friends and was walking toward his home when a group approached him and struck him with a closed fist.

    He also said he was hit in the face with a “hard object.”

    He told police he could not identify his attackers because they were all dressed in black and wearing masks.

    The teen said he “blacked out” during the assault, the report said. When asked whether he saw a gun, he said “I thought, I think I did,” but added he could not be certain.

    A friend who had been walking with him told police he saw a gun as the group approached and immediately dropped his backpack and ran. Both his backpack and the victim’s were stolen and later allegedly found in the Mazda. The backpacks contained laptops and other personal belongings.

    Police also interviewed the victim’s grandfather, who said he saw four males “punching and kicking” his grandson. He tried to intervene but said the group then turned on him, striking him multiple times in the nose and head and causing him to fall and feel as though he had been “knocked out.”

    He said he was also unable to identify the attackers because they were dressed in black and wearing masks, according to the report.

    After the alleged assault, the victim’s grandfather told police he saw the four attackers get into the Mazda and drive off. He said he got into his pickup truck and followed them around the block. As he did, the Mazda drove the wrong way onto Lincoln Street and allegedly struck a parked vehicle.

    According to the report, the 58‑year‑old told officers he then positioned his truck to block the Mazda from leaving. The Mazda then is alleged to have struck his vehicle moments before the responding officer arrived on scene.

    The officer said in his report that none of the four suspects claimed responsibility for the handgun found in the Mazda or for the assaults. He added that the incident “appeared to be a planned attack on the victims,” noting that surveillance footage showed the masked assailants punching both the teen and his grandfather before stealing the backpacks.

    Both the teen and his grandfather were taken to Lowell General Hospital’s Saints Campus following the attack.

    Thanongsinh and Chan, along with the two juveniles, were charged with masked armed robbery, assault and battery with a dangerous weapon, carrying a firearm without a license, carrying a loaded firearm without a license, assault and battery, and assault with a dangerous weapon.

    Thanongsinh also faces a charge of leaving the scene of property damage.

    Because of their ages, the outcomes of the juveniles’ cases were not available in court records.

    Lowell District Court documents show that Thanongsinh and Chan were arraigned on Dec. 8 and ordered held without bail pending 58A dangerousness hearings on Dec. 11, a proceeding used to determine whether a defendant poses a risk to the public.

    The Middlesex District Attorney’s Office requested they be held without bail. However, after those hearings, a judge set bail for both men at $2,000 cash, which they posted the same day.

    Court documents show that roughly 30 letters were submitted in support of Thanongsinh as part of his 58A dangerousness hearing, including one from a Lowell High School staff member who said the 18‑year‑old “excelled academically” in the classes he taught during Thanongsinh’s sophomore year and again now as a senior.

    “Throughout the time I have known him, Devonathan has consistently demonstrated maturity, responsibility and strong character,” the staff member said in the letter. “He approaches his coursework with diligence and focus. His academic performance as a sophomore stood out among his peers.”

    The letter described him as “polite, respectful, and genuinely well‑mannered,” adding that he “conducts himself with kindness and humility, and interacts positively with both classmates and teachers.”

    “He may have made some poor decisions, but I believe his foundation of strong character and his family will help him atone for those lapses in judgment and become the productive adult I know he can be if given the opportunity,” the staff member concluded.

    Court records show neither Thanongsinh nor Chan have criminal records.

    As a condition of their release on bail, both Thanongsinh and Chan were ordered to remain in the custody of their mothers, continue with their high school educations, avoid all contact with the victims and witnesses, possess no dangerous weapons, abstain from drugs and alcohol, and comply with a 24/7 curfew and GPS monitoring.

    According to court documents, Thanongsinh was brought back to court the day after his release for what was initially believed to be a curfew violation.

    His attorney, Thomas Torrisi, stressed on Friday that the allegation was later determined to be unfounded, explaining that Thanongsinh had not left his home and that the issue stemmed from a GPS signal problem.

    “They determined he had absolutely never left the house, so there was no violation found by the judge,” Torrisi said.

    Torrisi added about the case that “we’re very much at the infant stages at this point.”

    “There’s an awful lot that still needs to be done before we’re in a position to know the totality of the circumstances,” he said.

    Chan’s attorney, Stephen Barton, was unavailable for comment.

    The pair are scheduled to return to court for a pretrial conference on Jan. 20.

    Follow Aaron Curtis on X @aselahcurtis, or on Bluesky @aaronscurtis.bsky.social.

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    Aaron Curtis

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  • Friday’s high school roundup: Chelmsford easily swims past Central Catholic

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    The Chelmsford High boys swim team captured nine of the 12 events to defeat Merrimack Valley Conference rival Central Catholic on Friday, 97-70.

    The Lions (2-1, 1-0 MVC) were powered by junior Finn McMeniman, who touched first in the 100 free and 100 backstroke.

    Also grabbing first place for Chelmsford were zophomore Mike White (200 free), junior Xander Krikorian (200 IM), sophomore Rowan Ward (50 free), sophomore Preston Hay (dive) and freshman Casey Crannell (500 ree).  Chelmsford also won the 200 free relay (sophomore Noah Wildt, freshman Evan Boothroyd, junior captain, Christian Petrilli, Ward) and the 400 free relay (sophomore Max Tobon, White, Ward, Wildt).

    Boys basketball

    Methuen 52, Lowell 40: The Red Raiders couldn’t heat up from the floor during the MVC loss. Aiden Walter canned 12 points to lead Lowell, which received nine points from Joery Martinez.

    Tewksbury 70, Haverhill 64: Up 38-31 at halftime, the host Redmen held on to defeat Haverhill during MVC action.

    Jonny Sullivan canned 21 points in a strong effort. Nick Colametta contributed 17 points and Gabe Keskinides added 15 points.

    G-D 57, Marlboro 45: Seniors Noah Boldenbrook and Andrew Kielliis scored back to back on three-point plays to give Groton-Dunstable the edge.

    Patrick Twomey and Vincent Sinatra led the scoring parade with 13 points each. Twomey added eight rebounds. Zack Ouellette dished out seven assists.

    Pelham 70, John Stark 33: The winning Pythons were led by Brady Hegan’s 19 points, 10 rebounds, six assists and five steals on the road in Weare.

    Luke Estell was also immense for Pelham with 15 points and eight rebounds.

    ST 57, Lowell Catholic 51: Shawsheen Tech grinded out a tough road win vs. Lowell Catholic.

    Down seven points at the half, Shawsheen held Lowell Catholic to five points in the third quarter. Sophomore D’sean Moron led the way with 17 points, and seniors Dyllon Pratt and Jevon Moron scored 13 each.

    Girls basketball

    Lowell Catholic 44, CCSL 40: The visiting Crusaders trailed by 13 at the half and by 11 at the end of three quarters, but Lowell Catholic fought back for a thrilling OT victory over Collegiate Charter School of Lowell.

    Seventh-grader Syd Schofield and freshman Brooke Matthews spurred a furious comeback in the fourth quarter. Schofield (23 points, six 3-pointers) hit three 3 pointers, including one with 10 seconds left to tie the game, and Matthews (15 points) added five points and some big rebounds to get the game to overtime.

    In overtime, Schofield and Matthews hit four big free throws down the stretch to give the Crusaders (1-3, 0-2 CAC Large) their first win. Sophomore Leticia Castro and freshman Maria Dellas contributed big rebounds in the fourth and overtime.

    Westford Academy’s Liam Arnold (3) rises for a layup as Waltham’s Emmett Moynihan defends during Friday’s boys basketball game. Westford battled to a 48-38 win. (James Thomas for the Lowell Sun)

    Nashoba Reg. 52, A-S 13: Ayer-Shirley couldn’t get its offense untracked during a Mid-Wach loss to the Bolton school. Kelsey Peterson scored four points for the Panthers.

    ST 49, Mystic Valley 22: Junior guard Laylah Gomez compiled 19 points and came up with six steals to fuel Shawsheen Tech to the CAC win in Malden.

    Freshman guard Cali Vasta impressed with a 16-point effort.

    Dracut 43, Bridgewater-Raynham 41: With under a minute in the game, senior guard Aiva Pitman hit a 3-point shot to give the Middies a 41-38 lead.

    Freshman forward Lily White sealed the win with two key freet throws in the final seconds for Dracut (2-0) in the non-league thriller.

    Tewksbury 62, Haverhill 43: The Redmen received double-scoring games from three players to collect the MVC win.

    Jane Garabedian led the way with 12 points, while Vera Garabedian and Reagan Maniscalco contributed 11 points each.

    Gr. Lawrence 60, GLT 38: The game was tied 34-34 after one quarter, but Greater Lowell Tech’s 31 turnovers proved costly for the Gryphons.

    Greater Lowell (2-1) received 13 points from Ava Mennella, seven points from Rowan Murphy and six points from Payton Bernier.

    Westford Academy guard Teddy Hirbour (1) fights for position under the basket against Waltham's Eddie Gaston (0) and Jack Tamburro during Friday's boys basketball game. Westford won, 48-38. (James Thomas for the Lowell Sun)
    Westford Academy guard Teddy Hirbour (1) fights for position under the basket against Waltham’s Eddie Gaston (0) and Jack Tamburro during Friday’s boys basketball game. Westford won, 48-38. (James Thomas for the Lowell Sun)

    Lunenburg 44, Littleton 32: Visiting Littleton outscored the hosts in the first and second quarters, but Lunenburg tallied 31 points over the middle quarters to win.

    For Littleton (1-2), Annabelle Caouette paced her team with 14 points, while Caroline DeChane added 10 points.

    Boys hockey

    ST 4, GLT/Nashoba 1: Thanks to a hat trick from Justin Thibert, Shawsheen Tech rolled to a CAC win Thursday over Greater Lowell Tech/Nashoba Tech.

    Editor’s note

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

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    Staff Report

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  • One dead, one wounded in Oakland shooting

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    OAKLAND — One man was killed and another man was wounded early Friday in a shooting in the San Antonio district of East Oakland, authorities said.

    No information was immediately released about either man.

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    Harry Harris

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  • Share the Spirit: Las Trampas helps those with developmental disabilities advocate for themselves

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    LAFAYETTE — The campus at Las Trampas bustled as it usually does on the typical weekday, with dozens of intellectually and developmentally disabled individuals engaging with programs designed to stimulate and assist their independent living.

    This day, though, was busier than most.

    State Sen. Tim Grayson (D-CA9) would be visiting them, touring the grounds and meeting with some of the members, who Las Trampas empowers to advocate for themselves.

    The nonprofit, founded in 1938, currently serves 86 individuals ranging from 22 to 72 years old who live with moderate to profound cases of Down syndrome, cerebral palsy and autism. It has the capacity to help up to 120 people, but because of staffing shortages, a waiting list runs more than 50 deep with an average admittance time of two to three years.

    Recently, an even more dire issue has arisen: Around 35-45% of Las Trampas members are recipients of Medicaid, and through a waiver program, those funds amount to $3.5 million of the organization’s $10 million annual budget. That funding could be lost as the federal government implements its “One Big Beautiful Bill,” as it’s called by supporters, and makes planned cuts of nearly $1 trillion from Medicaid nationwide.

    Las Trampas lead direct service provider, Lindsay Brown, and participant Danny Robinson make cookies during the California Senator Tim Grayson's visit to Las Trampas in Lafayette, Calif., on Tuesday, Oct. 16, 2025. Las Trampas is a nonprofit organization that supports adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD) through day programs, residential services, and supported living. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group)
    Las Trampas lead direct service provider, Lindsay Brown, and participant Danny Robinson make cookies during the California Senator Tim Grayson’s visit to Las Trampas in Lafayette, Calif., on Tuesday, Oct. 16, 2025. Las Trampas is a nonprofit organization that supports adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD) through day programs, residential services, and supported living. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group) 

    “To get the senator here to see the critical work that we do on a regular basis is very important,” said Daniel Hogue, who has run the organization for the past 14 years. “It gives them a personal perspective of what their investments are and that removing any of those investments could really be damaging for people like Ariel, who’s now been living on her own for a very long time.”

    One of three self-advocates who helped prepare for and sat in on the meeting, 40-year-old Ariel Bellet lived with her parents until 2018, when she enrolled with Las Trampas. At first, she said she felt “nervous,” but now? “I love it.”

    A proud paycheck earner and owner of a 9-year-old Maltese Chihuahua, Ariel benefits from Las Trampas’ supportive living services, which allow her to live on her own in the community.

    “All of that could get taken away very quickly if things come to pass,” Hogue said.

    That was the topic at hand during an hour-long meeting with the state senator, who Hogue said has been a “very proactive” ally in Sacramento. Grayson lends not only a sympathetic ear but an empathetic one. His older sister, Shari, lives with an intellectual disability, “and I want to make sure those benefits don’t go away,” he said. “I want to make sure that Shari can age with dignity and be her own person and be very well accepted in the community she lives in.”

    California Senator Tim Grayson, second from right, greets Las Trampas participants during a visit at Las Trampas in Lafayette, Calif., on Tuesday, Oct. 16, 2025. Las Trampas is a nonprofit organization that supports adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD) through day programs, residential services, and supported living. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group)
    California Senator Tim Grayson, second from right, greets Las Trampas participants during a visit at Las Trampas in Lafayette, Calif., on Tuesday, Oct. 16, 2025. Las Trampas is a nonprofit organization that supports adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD) through day programs, residential services, and supported living. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group) 

    And that, in turn, is the mission of Las Trampas.

    Grayson was able to witness it firsthand, making stops in classrooms where program participants showed off their artwork, took a break from learning about indigenous music and prepared snacks in the recently renovated kitchen, where all the counters are at wheelchair height. At other times, there are life skills classes and outings into the community.

    Arie and Tevin Whack, who also participated in the meeting and helped guide the tour, are part of Las Trampas’ Vocational and Occupational Advocacy class. On other days, they can be found marching with signs on Mt. Diablo Boulevard, or even advocating for disability rights and inclusion in meetings with legislative aides at the Capitol.

    Las Trampas participant Tevin Whack cleans the windows at Las Trampas in Lafayette, Calif., on Tuesday, Oct. 16, 2025. Las Trampas is a nonprofit organization that supports adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD) through day programs, residential services, and supported living. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group)
    Las Trampas participant Tevin Whack cleans the windows at Las Trampas in Lafayette, Calif., on Tuesday, Oct. 16, 2025. Las Trampas is a nonprofit organization that supports adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD) through day programs, residential services, and supported living. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group) 

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    Evan Webeck

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  • Boston Fleet stay perfect by skating past the New York Sirens

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    NEWARK, N.J. (AP) — Ella Huber and Liz Schepers scored second-period goals and the Boston Fleet remained unbeaten with a 2-0 victory over the New York Sirens in PWHL action on Wednesday night.

    Boston (5-0-0-0) took the lead 5:27 into the second period when Huber used a pass from Haley Winn to score her first career goal. Winn’s assist was her third.

    The Fleet grabbed a two-goal lead 4:19 later on Schepers’ first netter for Boston. Jamie Lee Rattray collected her fourth assist on the score and Megan Keller notched her third.

    Boston goaltender Aerin Frankel did the rest, turning away 33 shots for her third shutout in five outings this season.

    Kayle Osborne had 19 saves for New York (2-0-0-4), including eight in a scoreless first period.

    Boston won all six matchups last season — two in overtime — and leads the all-time series 8-2-1-0.

    The Fleet began the day with a four-point lead over the second-place Vancouver Goldeneyes — an expansion team. The Sirens entered in a four-way tie for third.

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    Associated Press

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