Dump truck hits tunnel in Boston
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 20:37:06 GMT
A dump truck struck the top of a tunnel in Boston Wednesday, drawing an emergency response and prompting a brief ramp closure, according to the Massachusetts State Police. Police said a call came in reporting the crash just after 1 p.m. after police said the truck hit the tunnel entrance on the Purchase Street ramp toward the westbound lanes of the Mass Pike and I-93 South. Officials reopened the ramp after a brief closure.State police said no structural damage was found after this crash, adding that the truck driver was cited in connection with the incident.Red Sox notebook: Corey Kluber’s redemption start not enough to prevent sweep
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 20:37:06 GMT
On Wednesday afternoon, Corey Kluber took the mound for his second start of the season, looking to bounce back from a rough Opening Day in which he’d allowed five earned runs in just 3 ⅓ innings.Bounce back he did, though without a crumb of run support.It’s a puzzling phenomenon in Boston: when Red Sox pitchers dominate, the bats go silent, and vice versa. It happened with Chris Sale for years before the injuries took hold. Eduardo Rodriguez typically received avalanches of run support (a 15-2 victory over the White Sox comes to mind). Just last week, Kluber and Sale gave up a combined 12 earned runs in less than seven innings combined between their respective season debuts, and the lineup scored 18 runs over their first two games.The first time through the rotation had gone poorly, confoundingly so. Starting from the top with Kluber felt like a chance to hit the reset button for everyone.Over five innings, the two-time Cy Young Award-winner held the Pittsburgh Pirates to one run on...Grayson Rodriguez impresses in MLB debut but Orioles lose series finale, 5-2, to Jacob deGrom, Rangers
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 20:37:06 GMT
Since Grayson Rodriguez was selected in the first round of the 2018 MLB draft, the right-handed pitcher, the organization and Baltimore fans have spent the past four and a half years envisioning what the 6-foot-5 hurler would look like in an Orioles uniform.His major league debut wasn’t supposed to take this long. He was primed for a call-up last season as he dominated Triple-A batters, but a lat muscle injury sidelined the consensus top 10 prospect for three months. Rodriguez was then expected to make the Orioles’ opening day roster, but the team chose instead to start him in Norfolk after his uneven spring training.Nevertheless, Rodriguez’s big league debut Wednesday was well worth the wait.The 23-year-old impressed in his first big league start against the Texas Rangers in the Orioles’ 5-2 loss. After struggling in the first inning and giving up two runs, Rodriguez pitched four scoreless frames and looked every bit worthy of the hype.Rodriguez, a Nacogdoch...Massachusetts AP scores highest in the nation for second year
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 20:37:06 GMT
Massachusetts again led the nation with the highest percentage of 2022 graduating students who scored a 3 or higher on AP exams during high school, according to CollegeBoard reports released Wednesday.“I’m proud of the students and educators who worked hard to make sure Massachusetts remains a leader in student participation and success,” Governor Maura Healey said in a DESE release, expressing a commitment “to expanding access to AP courses for all students.”In the state, 30.5% of students who graduated in 2022 scored a 3 or higher on Advanced Placement exams during high school — generally considered a passing grade to obtain college credit in the course — far outpacing the national percentage, 21.6%.The continued upswing in AP scores comes even as 2022 MCAS across the board took a whopping pandemic-hit, plunging to their lowest levels in decades.Massachusetts previously held the top spot for AP scores in 2021, 2019 and 2017, and the percen...FBI says Department of Defense agents detained the wrong person in a Boston hotel room
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 20:37:06 GMT
Department of Defense agents reportedly detained the wrong person in a Boston hotel room during a training exercise Tuesday night, according to FBI Boston.The local FBI division was assisting the Pentagon in a Department of Defense training exercise at the Revere Hotel to “simulate a situation their personnel might encounter in a deployed environment.”“Based on inaccurate information, they were mistakenly sent to the wrong room and detained an individual, not the intended role player,” the FBI Boston spokesperson added. “Thankfully nobody was injured. The Boston Police Department was called and responded to the scene to confirm that this was indeed a training exercise.”The person who was detained might be a Delta crew member.“Safety is always a priority of the FBI, and our law enforcement partners, and we take these incidents very seriously,” the FBI Boston spokesperson said. “The Boston Division is reviewing the incident with DO...Pitch clock transforming Red Sox viewing experience
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 20:37:06 GMT
It’s long been the worst part about following the Red Sox. The games finish too darn late.For the past two decades the Red Sox have perennially averaged among the longest game times in baseball; in recent years, often well over three hours. Since 2003, the club has led the league in 10 of 20 seasons and never ranked lower than fourth.That’s meant games regularly stretching deep into the night, often well past 10 p.m., sometimes even until almost 11.For fans who have work or school the next day, or for parents of young children, that’s a lot to ask. Yet intractable as the problem seemed, MLB’s new pace-of-play rules appear to have finally provided a solution.Tuesday night, Red Sox fans got their first taste of what a difference the pitch clock could really make. After a couple of long games to open the season, the Red Sox and Pirates played a quick 2:36 affair, which moved along at a brisk pace and wrapped up at around 9:45 p.m.Wednesday afternoon’s series finale was even faster, wit...Dave Hyde: Stop the clock! Marlins beat Twins and time as baseball finds answer to endless problem
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 20:37:06 GMT
Hello, and welcome to loanDepot park for the first pitch between — oh, there’s one out! — the Miami Marlins and Minnesota Twins on — that’s two outs! — Wednesday afternoon as we time baseball’s new rule change to … stop the clock!Three minutes, three outs!Fast and foremost, the top of the first inning Wednesday still felt like the top of the morning one week into a new baseball era. Who hasn’t fallen in love with the pitch clock?It’s safe to watch baseball again without packing an overnight bag. The seventh-inning stretch isn’t a wake-up call to various body parts.Take me out to the ball game.Take me out to the cro—Well, OK, there were 8,981 fans at Wednesday’s series-closer for the Marlins. Some things don’t change quickly. The disaster of Derek Jeter (he made people actually miss Jeffrey Loria) and the lack of Marlins payroll (the New York Mets pay more for their luxury tax) this opening, 3-4 homes...Wall Street slips following latest signs of slowing economy
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 20:37:06 GMT
By STAN CHOE (AP Business Writer)NEW YORK (AP) — Stocks on Wall Street mostly slipped Wednesday following the latest signals that the U.S. economy is slowing under the weight of much higher interest rates.The S&P 500 dipped 10.22 points, or 0.2%, to 4,090.38, a day after it broke a four-day winning streak. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 80.34, or 0.2%, to 33,482.72, and the Nasdaq composite dropped 129.47, or 1.1%, to 11,996.86. Yields also fell in the bond market following weaker-than-expected reports on the health of U.S. services industries and the job market. They’re the latest signs that the economy is losing momentum following a feverish set of hikes to interest rates by the Federal Reserve meant to get inflation under control.One report from the Institute for Supply Management said that growth in the U.S. services sector slowed last month by more than economists expected, as the pace of new orders cooled. A separate report suggested private employers a...Yankees Notebook: Bombers top Phillies behind Gerrit Cole’s strong start, Michael King and Aaron Hicks face adversity
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 20:37:06 GMT
After a strong 2023 debut, Gerrit Cole shoved again. Gleyber Torres, meanwhile, continued his hot start to the season. But it was catcher Jose Trevino who put the nail in the Phillies’ coffin as the Bombers beat Philadelphia, 4-2, in a series-deciding game on Wednesday afternoon.With the Yankees already up 2-1 in the seventh inning, Trevino lined a two-run homer to left field, his first longball of the season. The shot, which came off Phillies reliever Gregory Soto, gave the Yankees a desirable cushion after the Phillies found their way onto the scoreboard earlier in the frame.Phillies slugger Kyle Schwarber hit a solo homer in the eighth, but that was the most Philadelphia’s offense could muster.Prior to Trevino’s home run, Torres picked up a pair of RBI singles in the first and sixth innings. He added a double in the eighth, and he also stole two bases on the day. Torres is now hitting .421 with two dingers, six RBI and five swipes over six games to start the yea...Johns Hopkins surgeons get $21.4 million to study pig-to-human organ transplants
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 20:37:06 GMT
Angela Roberts | (TNS) The Baltimore SunBALTIMORE — Two Johns Hopkins Medicine surgeons will receive $21.4 million over the next two years to advance research needed to successfully transplant living cells, tissues and organs from animals to humans.The scientists, Dr. Kazuhiko Yamada and Dr. Andrew Cameron, will receive the funding under two research agreements with the United Therapeutics Corp., a biotechnology company that focuses on projects meant to expand the availability of transplantable organs, Johns Hopkins Medicine said last week in a news release.Over the next two years, Yamada and Cameron plan to advance the use of genetically modified pigs in human organ transplants, improving techniques already used in the approach to reduce the risk of organ rejection and failure and to increase the likelihood of a patient’s long-term survival.The funding will help Yamada and Cameron complete the necessary studies in animals requested by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration before th...Latest news
- Systemwide subway shutdowns planned to fix MBTA
- Jury rejects insanity defense for man convicted of Pelham, NH wedding shooting
- Healey Will Stop Disclosing Out-Of-State Travel
- Exemptions for required vaccines for US kindergartners reach record high
- ‘I felt so naughty’: New open carry alcohol laws boost downtowns
- You make the call. Charlie Winterhalter weathers storm to become Geneva’s defensive leader. ‘He’s that smart.’
- States reconsider religious exemptions for vaccinations in child care
- Will the Fed raise interest rates one more time this year? Some economists aren’t convinced
- A lighter lasagna that still packs a cheesy punch
- US childhood vaccination exemptions reach their highest level ever