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The mystery foghorn of Andrew Square

Karen asks:

Once in a while I hear what I believe is a foghorn here in Southie. Any idea where it's coming from?

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Andrew station becoming vortex of the weird

Tuesday night, MBTA Transit Police had to dispatch officers to Andrew to deal with an angry man threatening other passengers with a plunger. Yesterday, police dispatched officers to the Red Line station to deal with a naked man (photo NSFW if you squint or have a decent sized monitor).


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Jamaica Plain Neighborhood Council toils, roils

The Jamaica Plain Gazette reports on the controversy over the way the neighborhood council's chairman kinda, sorta said a South Huntington Avenue luxury housing project got approved after its developers greased some elected palms.


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North End reaches a tippling point

NorthEndWaterfront.com reports the North End/Waterfront Residents' Association has put its foot down and is saying no more liquor licenses for the North End.

With 91 restaurants and bars already pouring libations, the group voted recently to oppose any new pouring licenses. It will refuse to meet with anybody seeking a new license and will instead file an automatic letter of opposition with the Boston Licensing Board.

The licensing board requires applicants for liquor licenses to try to meet with neighborhood groups but is not bound by local recommendations. In May, board Chairwoman Nicole Murati Ferrer said she would no longer automatically comply with a similar moratorium request from the Back Bay.


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Mapping ward 21 and 22 results

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Police release sketch of Lower Roxbury attacker

Suspect

Boston Police say this is the man who sexually assaulted two teens in the Camden Street area this week, one on Monday and one on Tuesday.

Although an earlier report suggested separate attackers - one victim described him as a Spanish speaker, the other said he had a Haitian accent - police say just one man is likely responsible for both attacks. In both cases, police say, the man commented on his victim's appearance - and in both cases, the victims managed to escape him.

If he looks familiar, contact the Sexual Assault Unit at 617-343-4400 or the anonymous tip line by calling 800-494-TIPS or by texting TIP to CRIME (27463).


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TV lawyer: What if Romney had been showered by asbestos during his concession speech?

Leave it to James Sokolove to try to whip up some hysteria about that burst steam pipe at Haymarket on Tuesday.

Boston's response to the pipe explosion and potential release of asbestos could also be negatively affected by a number of inconvenient circumstances for the city. The explosion occurred blocks from the Boston Convention & Exhibition Center, where Republican Presidential Candidate Mitt Romney had just finished delivering his concession speech.

Additionally, only one week after being hit by stormy weather caused by Superstorm Sandy that caused damage across the region, Boston is in line to get hit by a nor'easter on Wednesday and Thursday. Any bad weather that hits the area could not only worsen any asbestos issues that were caused by the explosion, but also impede workers from quickly containing any dangerous asbestos products.

Just blocks from the convention center!

Via Steve Annear.


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For once, Boston cab drivers were right

Sometimes, Boston's cab drivers are telling the truth; the credit card machines don't work - and it's not their fault.

According to (Boston's own) Charles Pierce of Esquire, the Romney for President campaign shut off staffers' credit cards in the middle of the night on Tuesday, leaving the Boston crew scrambling for money.

From the moment Mitt Romney stepped off stage Tuesday night, having just delivered a brief concession speech he wrote only that evening, the massive infrastructure surrounding his campaign quickly began to disassemble itself. Aides taking cabs home late that night got rude awakenings when they found the credit cards linked to the campaign no longer worked.

Oh, well, need to save that money for 2016, right?


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DA: Magnetic force draws police to Dorchester apartment; man arrested on gun charges

Magnetic Tom, a.k.a. Tom Magnetic, was arraigned today on charges he was storing loaded, unlocked guns in an apartment full of little kids, the Suffolk County District Attorney's office reports.

Tom, 32, was arrested this morning on two counts each of unlawful possession of a firearm, improper storage of a firearm and unlawful possession of ammunition. He was also charged as a level-II armed career criminal because of drug-distribution convictions in 2003 and 2005, the DA's office says.

Dorchester District Court Judge Michael Coyne set bail at $100,000, the same amount requested by prosecutors.

According to prosecutors, the Boston Police Youth Violence Strike Force and a SWAT team showed up at Tom's apartment at 842 Washington St. in Dorchester around 5 a.m. with a search warrant Nobody answered their knocks, so they burst in, to be greeted by a dog believed to be a pit bull, the DA's office says. Then:

Officers located Tom, the target of the warrant, in a bedroom with a 28-year-old woman and a 1-year-old child. Also in the apartment were four other children ranging from 6 to 11 years of age. Officers offered the woman and her children the opportunity to be evaluated by Boston Emergency Medical Services. She declined and left with the children.

Officers read Tom his Miranda rights and notified him that the warrant authorized them to search his apartment for a firearm.

"You're here to look for guns," Tom allegedly said. "I need to protect my family. I got two guns - a Hi Point .40 and a deuce deuce."

Tom then directed the officers to a plastic bag of clothes inside the room. That bag contained a Hi Point .40 caliber semiautomatic handgun. Tom also directed the officers to a night table near the bed, under which was a Ruger .22 caliber handgun. Tom further directed the officers to "extra ammo" in the drawer of that night table; the officers found 28 rounds of ammunition and a feeding device or magazine with no corresponding firearm.

The DA's office says neither gun was locked. One had six rounds of ammunition loaded, the other eight.

Innocent, etc.


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Not everybody who lives on Comm. Ave. in Allston is a college student

Naama Goldstein, who lives on Comm. Ave., writes her city councilor about the problems caused by the Monday Aerosmith concert - more specifically, the way the entire street was shut down without any coordination with Boston Public Schools to deal with kids who take buses to school:

Dear Councilor Ciommo:

As your Allston constituent, I am writing to request your advocacy on an issue that, to my disappointment, has garnered no response from City Hall or BPS, or other responsible parties.

You may or may not know that on the day of Aerosmith's publicity stunt in Allston, no plan was made by the City or BPS to provide for the children whose school buses stop along the streets blocked off for the concert. Please see my original attempt at communication on this issue, below.

We were fortunate that our 2nd grader's school-bus driver was resourceful and phoned us once he ran into the blockades, and we were able to coordinate a makeshift stop, race across city streets and get my son on his waiting bus. A little girl who waits for another school bus at our stop was not so lucky. Her mother was hung up on when she called the BPS Transportation dept. for help, was forced to get her daughter on a city bus, and was made late to work because of the City's neglectfulness.

This neglect may not seem like a big deal to Aerosmith or to the City of Boston, but it does to two very young children in Allston, and I am sure several more whom I don't know. They remain confused and saddened by the lesson learned on that day: that when the grownups want to play, children just don't matter to the City of Boston.

Councilor Ciommo, please help me to correct that impression.

Thank you,
Naama Goldstein
Allston


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