Hope you had a wonderful weekend. I am daniel miller. Julie good morning, i am julie grauert. February 1 into a new month and warmerthanusual weather. Meteorologist shiri spear joins us at the stormtracker weather center. Shiri, 60s, that true . Shiri possibly 60 degrees in a couple of spots this morning. The way we are starting 40s on the map. Boston at 45 degrees. 42 in worcester. 47 in plymouth. 34 in nashua, so cooler spots in particular into southern New Hampshire, but these temperatures so far above average. Broken cloud cover this morning so by 6 00, we have got temperatures still kind of hovering in the lower 40s here. The brightest time of your day will be the morning hours. Once we hit the afternoon, clouds are on the increase at noontime today. Temperaturewise, how about middle 50s by lunchtime. Upper 50s if not 60 this afternoon. But along with the thicker clouds along southeastern mass, we have the risk for a couple i want to you dress for the 30s and 40s now, but 54 to 60
Horrible incident happened. We are next to the hospital, and despite all this traffic, people roaming out and about around town. Students know they cant have a false sense of security. Its just such a shame that it happened right here, right around the corner from campus. Three men followed a student into the alley way and sexually assaulted her around 12 30 saturday morning. The men got away and the victim reported the incident just before 1 00 in the morning. Its nearly pitch black in the alley way. Yet, its a fairly popular cut through. Came across my mind, but its early. It will be fine, right . Its not something that we should worry about. Something to keep us on our toes. We noticed lepeop walking back and forth all night. Gw students received alerts and emails about the incident. I guess people arent aware its this alley. I got the text, but i disregarded it. I didnt look at where it happened. So now that i saw you, yeah, im scared to walk through here again. The text alert said
February 12, 2021
Experts predict that March Madness, the term typically reserved for the NCAA basketball tournament, will unfortunately apply to the actual month this year.
“Usually March is a fun time with a bunch of crazy college basketball games,” said epidemiologist Stewart Hudson, “But this year we expect all of March to be depressingly and indiscriminately mad.”
With or without college basketball games, experts are expecting to see, at the very least, a continuation of high COVID-19 infection rates, “a catastrophic natural disaster, or two,” and the death of a beloved celebrity.
“You know all those things that make you say ‘This year was the worst’ at New Year’s? That’s all going to happen in March,” said public health expert Natasha Riley. “It is going to be 31 days of abject madness.”