Outdoors: Early wildflower colors spruce up spring landscape By Mark Blazis © Photo/Mark Blazis Opening day duck hunter Matt Blazis wades in a swamp to retrieve a mallard for his dad.
While many of us sighted in our shotguns and bows for the forthcoming wild turkey season, we were all reminded last Friday that outdoors in April also means yellow splashes of forsythias, daffodils, and dandelions and snow-white surprises. Up to 7 inches of the latter fell at higher elevations. But while that soggy snow soon melted and proved its worth as “poor man’s fertilizer,“ those three botanical immigrants continued to make our spring perennially come alive with their colorful brilliance.
Fire hits house on Simonds Hill Road in Hubbardston
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T&G honored by NENPA for pursuit of Worcester police records
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WORCESTER George Clooney officially arrived downtown Monday morning.
Clooney, in the role of director, is overseeing the shooting of scenes for the movie The Tender Bar.
The old Commerce High School building off Main Street is the setting.
Shortly before 8:30 a.m., Clooney drove up in a black Grand Cherokee with a golden retriever in the back seat.
Unlike previous shoots in Massachusetts, where he took time to say hello and pose for photos, Clooney waved to the five onlookers outside and made a beeline into the former city high school.
After some rescheduling, “The Tender Bar” has finally started filming scenes in downtown Worcester.
10 Apr 2021
A federal judge recently ruled a University of Virginia (UVA) School of Medicine student, who was suspended for questioning the validity of “microaggressions” at an academic panel discussion, may move forward with a lawsuit against the school for allegedly violating his First Amendment rights.
In 2018, Kieran Bhattacharya, then a second-year medical student, attended a panel discussion hosted by several UVA professors that dealt with the topic of how “microaggressions” impact the practice of medicine. Apparently concerned with how the standard for “saying a microaggression” might apply, Bhattacharya questioned how it is possible the “person who is receiving the microaggressions somehow knows the intention of the person who made it,” adding, “a microaggression is entirely dependent on how the person who’s receiving it is reacting.”