College football signings: Xaverian star Henry Hasselbeck commits to UCLA
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:27:40 GMT
Go west, young quarterback.Xaverian quarterback Henry Hasselbeck made if official Wednesday morning when he announced he will attend UCLA. The 6-foot-3, 175-pounder comes off a banner season in which he completed 120-of-183 passes for 1,349 yards and 19 touchdowns, while adding 735 rushing yards and 11 more scores, in leading the Hawks to the Div. 1 state title.“I really connected with the school and the coaching staff,” Hasselbeck said. “Coach (Chip) Kelly is an amazing man and the players talk so highly of him. The connections I made with coach and his staff was amazing and the offense they run is incredible.”The recruitment ended a whirlwind ride for Hasselbeck, who inititally committed to Maryland on a lacrosse scholaship, then decommitted to accept a football scholarship to Michigan State last June. When the school went through a period of turmoil, Hasselbeck declared in early December he was reopening his recruitment.“It was a unique situation and I have tremendous respect for...From the Archives: An ultimate betrayal in Boston
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:27:40 GMT
The Stuart case remains, as the Herald first reported, “A Terrible night!”But not just for the murder of a pregnant Carol DiMaiti Stuart by her husband, Charles “Chuck” Stuart, but for his evil scheme to blame it all on a random black man.Boston was still healing from the busing crisis and this killer husband preyed on that racial unrest all to move on from his wife and collect her $82,000 life insurance policy.HBO is airing a series on the case — “Murder in Boston: Roots, Rampage & Reckoning” — where the Herald is shown for our coverage and pivot to the story of a murderous husband and a city needing to heal all over again.Here are clips from the 1989 slaying and fallout:BOSTON_HERALD_October_24_1989__p1BOSTON_HERALD_January_5_1990__p1BOSTON_HERALD_January_5_1990__p10BOSTON_HERALD_January_5_1990__p7BOSTON_HERALD_January_5_1990__p7BOSTON_HERALD_January_5_1990__p6The Stuart case from Jan. 5, 1990. (Herald archives)Jermaine Wiggins coaching career at Brockton High ends after one season
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:27:40 GMT
The Jermaine Wiggins Era at Brockton High lasted less than a year.In the spring, Brockton hired Wiggins to replace Peter Colombo as the football coach. After one season, Wiggins is out.This fall, in Wiggins’ only season, the Boxers went 3-8, which included a 1-5 start. The Boxers did not beat a team with a winning record, and lost in blowout fashion to Barnstable, Andover and Pinkerton Academy of Derry, N.H.Word began to leak out last week that Wiggins had stepped down. Reached late last week by text, Wiggins denied the rumors. Wednesday afternoon, Brockton athletic director Kevin Karo said all inquiries regarding Wiggins were being handled by the school’s communication department, who didn’t respond to an email request for comment.The Brockton Enterprise reported that Kelsey Lynch, the assistant director of Marketing and Communications, confirmed that Wiggins had indeed resigned.A local schoolboy star at East Boston High School, Wiggins played his college football...Texas begins flying migrants from US-Mexico border to Chicago, with 1st plane carrying 120 people
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:27:40 GMT
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — Texas began flying migrants from the U.S.-Mexico border to Chicago on Wednesday, a week after the city took a tougher stance on the buses that Republican Gov. Greg Abbott has been sending north since last year.The first flight of 120 migrants arrived in the afternoon, according to Abbott’s office. The governor directed state officials to begin busing migrants to Democratic-led cities starting in April 2022. Over 80,000 migrants have since been relocated through the effort as part of the governor’s multi-pronged border security mission, known as Operation Lone Star, including 23,000 to Chicago. Chicago’s city council voted last week to toughen penalties on bus operators that don’t unload passengers at a designated arrival location or fill out city paperwork. The city has said operators began trying to drop people off in neighboring cities to avoid penalties including fines, towing or impoundment.Concerns have arisen about the living ...Suspect located in kidnapping of 13-year-old girl from Imperial County
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:27:40 GMT
SAN DIEGO — The suspect in the kidnapping of a 13-year-old girl from Imperial County was taken into custody, officials with FBI San Diego confirmed in a statement posted to the social media site X Wednesday.The FBI's announcement that Lorenzo Guerrero, 43, was located comes one day after authorities found Raine Gonzales, prompting the cancelation of the Amber Alert connected to the case.Gonzales had been missing since Dec. 10, when she was last seen with Guerrero near the intersection of I Street and 18th Street in Brawley, officials said. The relationship between the two remains unclear at this time.About a week later, on Sunday, authorities offered up a $10,000 reward for any information regarding the whereabouts of Gonzales and Guerrero.California Highway Patrol issued an Amber Alert issued Thursday afternoon for a 13-year-old girl who was last seen in Imperial County. (California Highway Patrol)In their statement Wednesday, FBI officials said Gonzales was located safely with the...A Kansas City-area man has pleaded not guilty to criminal charges over aviation exports to Russia
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:27:40 GMT
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas City-area man pleaded not guilty Wednesday to federal criminal charges accusing him of conspiring with a business partner to illegally export aviation-related technology to Russia, even after its invasion of Ukraine. Douglas Edward Robertson’s plea to 26 criminal counts came a day after his business partner, Cyril Gregory Buyanovsky, pleaded guilty to two of those charges and agreed to the U.S. government’s seizure of $500,000 of assets, most of them held by their company, KanRus Trading Co.Prosecutors have alleged that KanRus supplied aircraft electronics to Russian companies and offered repair services for equipment used in Russian-manufactured aircraft. Buyanovksy, 60, was the company’s founder and president, and Robertson, 56, was its vice president. Their arrests in March came as the U.S. ramped up sanctions and financial penalties on Russia since its invasion of Ukraine began in February 2022. Along with thousands of sanctions on ...US senator’s son faces new charges in crash that killed North Dakota sheriff’s deputy
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:27:40 GMT
BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) — U.S. Sen. Kevin Cramer’s 42-year-old son is facing additional charges in connection with the pursuit and crash that killed a North Dakota sheriff’s deputy this month.Ian Cramer, who is in jail, is now also accused of theft, criminal mischief and reckless endangerment for allegedly taking a family vehicle and driving through a closed garage door of a Bismarck hospital’s ambulance bay. The new charges were filed Tuesday.He was previously charged in Mercer County with homicide, reckless endangerment, preventing arrest and drug possession, among other counts, in connection with the Dec. 6 pursuit and crash. A state district court judge set a $500,000 cash bond on those charges, and Cramer is set for a Feb. 7 preliminary hearing on them.Cramer’s attorney did not immediately respond to a phone message seeking comment on the new charges. He has not entered any pleas yet.Charging documents say Ian Cramer’s mother was taking him to the poli...US historians ID a New Mexico soldier killed during WWII, but work remains on thousands of cases
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:27:40 GMT
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — After years of combing through military records and making some key deductions, a team of U.S. government historians and researchers has finally put a name to case file X-3212, identifying an Army private from eastern New Mexico named Homer Mitchell who died during World War II.The Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency this week announced the findings, which were confirmed by laboratory testing and brought closure to Mitchell’s family members.Mitchell is one of nearly 160 service members who have been accounted for over the last fiscal year as part of a massive, yearslong effort headed by the federal agency. The list of service members from various conflicts who have yet to be accounted for tops 81,000, but officials say more than 37,000 of those — mostly from WWII — are considered to be recoverable.Each case can take years and involves poring through old reports and medical records, said Sean Everette, who leads outreach and communications for the agency....Movie Review: A transformed Zac Efron gives his all in tragic, true-life wrestling tale ‘Iron Claw’
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:27:40 GMT
It doesn’t take long to understand the level of commitment Zac Efron brings to “The Iron Claw” as Texas wrestling brother Kevin Von Erich. Just one look at the taut mass of muscle and sinew he’s become for the role will do the trick.It’s also clear from the get-go how invested writer-director Sean Durkin was in telling the true-life tale of the Von Erich family wrestling dynasty, which — shockingly, to those of us unfamiliar with the story — suffered a set of tragic losses almost too staggering to imagine. It’s hardly a spoiler alert to say that Kevin, by 35, was the only surviving brother of an original six. (He is now 66). Indeed, so devastating is the story that Durkin felt the need to excise brother Chris, one of three lost to suicide, from this retelling entirely.Durkin has said he was a committed wrestling fan from his childhood in England, where he scoured magazines to learn more about the exploits of the Von Erichs, who made their name in the colorful, high-flying, ent...Two railroad crossings are temporarily closed in Texas. Will there be a significant impact on trade?
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:27:40 GMT
McALLEN, Texas (AP) — The federal government has closed railroad crossings in two Texas border towns, raising concerns about the potential impact on cross-border trade and American consumers.Customs and Border Protection announced Sunday that it would temporarily stop railroad operations in Eagle Pass and El Paso starting Monday. It did not say how long rail operations would be paused.Carriers and politicians have decried the move that closes two of the six available railroad systems between Mexico and the U.S.“This train doesn’t just stop at Eagle Pass. This train doesn’t just impact Texas,” Rep. Tony Gonzalez, a Republican congressman who represents the affected region, said Tuesday during a news conference. “This train impacts all of America, goods that are going all over America.”WHY IS IT HAPPENING?CBP reported as many as 10,000 people entering the country illegally every day through the southwest border this month. Closing the railroad would free up customs o...Latest news
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