Community Corner

UMass Can't Suspend Student With Neo-Nazi Ties: Patch PM

Also: Girl, 2, falls from window | EEE still a threat in MA | Green Line extension delayed | MA woman heading to Olympics | More

Chris Hood (left), who founded NSC-131, at an anti-Black Lives Matter rally in Boston in June 2020. Hood discussed the group with another member, Liam McNeil, who is also a UMass-Lowell student, in an online broadcast earlier this month.
Chris Hood (left), who founded NSC-131, at an anti-Black Lives Matter rally in Boston in June 2020. Hood discussed the group with another member, Liam McNeil, who is also a UMass-Lowell student, in an online broadcast earlier this month. (@AntiFashGordon/Twitter, used with permission)

MASSACHUSETTS — It's Tuesday, June 22. Here's what you should know this afternoon:

  • Eastern Equine Encephalitis, the rare but deadly mosquito-borne disease, is still a threat Massachusetts this summer.
  • A Peabody High and University of Massachusetts-Amherst alumna earned Team USA's final spot in the 1,500 meters for the 2021 Summer Olympic Games.
  • The opening of both branches of the Green Line Extension into Somerville and Medford has been delayed as project managers grapple with supply chain issues caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Scroll down for more on those and other stories Patch has been covering in Massachusetts today.


Today's Top Story

Find out what's happening in Worcesterfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

UMass-Lowell officials are frustrated they "cannot legally ban all messages of hate from our lives" but promised to investigate "threats to members of the campus community," according to a letter sent to students and faculty last week.

"Colleges and universities for decades, and especially in recent years, have seen an increase in hate messaging both from their campus communities as well as from organizations and individuals who visit campus expressly to promote hatred and division knowing the law and the First Amendment limits universities' legal ability to prevent it," the letter from the university's executive cabinet said. "Indeed, for many of the members of these hate groups, the attention from attempted bans or efforts to sanction or punish them is what they most crave."

Find out what's happening in Worcesterfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Thursday's letter was sent nine days after Patch reported on an online broadcast by members of NSC-131, a Massachusetts-based hate group, that included Liam McNeil, a UMass-Lowell student who graduated from Waltham High School in 2018. NSC-131 members suggested college students should bully "kids who race mix" and McNeil said NSC-131 was "pretty much a frat, just racist."

Read the full story.


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Tuesday's Other Top Stories

EEE still a threat in Massachusetts: Just a few months before coronavirus hit, Massachusetts was in the grips of another epidemic: Eastern Equine Encephalitis (EEE). The rare but deadly mosquito-borne disease typically comes in three-year cycles, which means there's still an EEE threat this summer. This week, the Wayland Health Department issued a warning to residents to be on the lookout for mosquito breeding areas due to recent rain and warm weather.

Opening of Green Line extension delayed: The opening of both branches of the Green Line Extension into Somerville and Medford has been delayed as project managers grapple with supply chain issues caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. The revised schedule now puts the opening of the one-stop branch to Somerville's Union Square – originally slated for October – in December. The longer branch, which runs through Somerville into Medford, is now expected to open in May 2022, five months behind the original schedule.

Girl injured in fall: A 2-year-old girl in Worcester fell from a second-story window Tuesday afternoon after pushing on a window fan, police said. She was conscious when police arrived, but the department did not immediately know her condition.

Mayor to Moog: Framingham Mayor Yvonne Spicer is taking an interesting move. She's been picked to serve on the board of the Robert Moog Foundation in North Carolina. Moog invented the first commercial synthesizer instrument in the 1960s, giving rise to the electronic music genre.

Wet day in Marlborough: Two separate water main breaks on opposite ends of the city left residents and businesses without water. One of the breaks shut down Hosmer Street, a main north-south route between Marlborough and Hudson.


Eat fresh: Patch's 2021 Massachusetts Farmers Market Guide


Picture This

North Shore woman one step closer to Olympic dream: Heather MacLean (above, in a February file photo) stamped her ticket to Tokyo with less than a tenth of a second to spare. The Peabody High and University of Massachusetts-Amherst alumna finished third in Monday night's Olympic Trials in the 1,500 meters from Eugene, Oregon to earn Team USA's final spot in the event for the 2021 Summer Olympic Games. MacLean held off the fourth-place runner — Shannon Osika — by just nine-hundredths of a second for the final qualifying spot. (Photo by Al Bello/Getty Images)


In Case You Missed It

Court upholds chief's right to deny gun license: A Supreme Judicial Court judge recently affirmed a decision that the former police chief could consider past incidents in determining a local man's suitability to carry a gun despite no convictions, ending a back-and-forth legal battle. In 2019, then-Wakefield Police Chief Richard Smith denied Adam DeSisto's application for a license to carry. The chief said DeSisto was "unsuitable" following his alleged involvement in two 2011 drug deals and being charged with heroin possession in 2012.


By The Numbers

$4.5 million: The asking price for the Wellesley home of Danny Ainge, the former Celtics champion player and executive. The six-bedroom home hit the market this week and boasts 8,309 square feet of space, a renovated kitchen and a media room complete with golf simulator.

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