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Aerosmith provides economic boost to tow companies

At 7:20 a.m., jegerentwit tweets from the Allston war zone (where police will be asking "papers, please" for anybody claiming to live there):

Scores of tow trucks on Comm toward BC. Anyone towed from Comm Av should consider suing Aerosmith & naming Boston.

Dan Walker, who lives right there and doesn't understand the angst, responds:

It's posted all over the street and BPD left flyers on the cars parked on comm on Friday. It's your own fault if you got towed.


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Boston Police to Aerosmith fans: Be nice, don't make us come back there

BPD issued a statement today:

So, if you're planning on stopping by 1325 Commonwealth Ave to check out the show, the Boston Police Department kindly asks you to be on your best behavior. Said Superintendent-in-Chief Daniel Linskey, "In a city as in rich in tradition and history as ours, it's always nice to honor and celebrate our own. We’re encouraging and expecting good behavior by all those who attend the free concert and we're certainly hoping people behave in such a way as to make our city and Aerosmith proud."

Police had no advice for commuters and Green Line riders who will be forced to find other ways to get where they're going for several hours (click on the link above to see the full list of road closures - it's more than just Comm. Ave.).


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Murdering thug in the hospital


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Helping New York

Bostonians have organized drives to collect basic necessities for New Yorkers. Some examples (add more in the comments):

Jacqueline Carly will be at the Microsoft NERD Center in Kendall Square starting at 3 p.m. on Monday to collect basic supplies and load them into the truck she's rented to drive to New York.

Organize Boston has set up collection points in Roslindale, Cambridge and Arlington this weekend.

Operation Help & Hope will collect non-perishable foods and fleece blankets at the polls in Holliston on Tuesday.


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So who's robo-calling people that the election's been moved to Wednesday due to the hurricane?

Holliston/Hopkinton Patch reports a member of the Holliston Democratic Town Committee got a call today reminding him to vote for Obama and Warren - on Wednesday, because Sandy forced a delay in the election. Of course, it hasn't.


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Only a drill: SWAT team moves in on hostage-taking bank robber in Cleveland Circle

SWAT team surrounds car

Scott Eisen watched a SWAT team remove hostages and surround a suspect's car at the old Circle Cinema in Cleveland Circle today - part of a Boston-wide drill by area police, firefighters and medical workers.

Copyright Scott Eisen.


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Broadway pit fall stops Red Line

Amy Derjue reports from North Quincy this afternoon, where there is no Red Line service because of a person in the pit to the north - but she reports the person was scooped out off the tracks pretty quickly, so there is hope yet.

At 3:47 p.m., Eric Steinhardt tweeted:

2 ambulances & 2 fire trucks. Person on stretcher at bottom of stairs. Carrying her up now.


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The Internet is now complete: Site posts photos of people taking photos of that giant noodle at Faneuil Hall


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Pennsylvania woman who says painkiller shot gave her fungal meningitis sues Framingham pharmacy, owners

A Red Lion, PA resident who says she's still suffering from the fungal meningitis she got from a painkiller shot a year ago, yesterday filed a federal lawsuit against the New England Compounding Center in Framingham and against the individual members of the Conigliaro family who owned and ran it.

In her suit, filed in US District Court in Boston, Michele Erkan recounts what she says happened after she received "a caudal epidural steroid injection from the Wellspan Interventional Pain Management facility in York, Pennsylvania:"

In the immediate days following the November 10, 2011 injection, Ms. Erkan developed high fever, severe headache, neck stiffness, nausea, vomiting, and sensitivity to light and subsequently received a lumbar puncture (spinal tap) confirming a diagnosis of fungal meningitis. She was bed-ridden for over a month suffering from nausea, continued vomiting, severe, headaches, and hypersensitivity to light. She continues to suffer from severe headaches, hearing loss, shortterm memory loss, and remains on a variety of medications. Since her bout with fungal meningitis, Ms. Erkan has been unable to work, forced to rely on social security disability checks, and suffers from severe depression.

Her lawsuit, which details the history of state and federal action against the pharmacy and various Conigliaros and relatives, seeks unspecified punitive damages. The suit was also filed on behalf of her 12-year-old son, whom she says now has to worry about whether she can continue to care for him.


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Roslindale: Boston's afterthought of a neighborhood

Ed. note: Carter Wilkie sent in this "letter to the editor" after the City Council on Wednesday approved a new map for ciy-council districts:

Roslindale loses in redistricting -- again. The neighborhood had one city councilor (District 5) but is now split three ways (districts 4, 5, 7). Even worse, the new center of gravity in district 5 shifts so heavily towards Hyde Park/Mattapan that it virtually ensures no candidate from Roslindale will be able to mount a base of support to win this district in the future.

Incumbent politicians from other neighborhoods have repeatedly carved up Roslindale in redistricting, disenfranchising a neighborhood. In the last round of redistricting on Beacon Hill, Roslindale was carved up among four state representatives from other communities (Coppinger from West Roxbury, Sanchez and Malia from Jamaica Plain, and Scaccia from Hyde Park).

Roslindale, with a population of 34,000, is the largest community in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts without a resident in any elected office. No other community in Boston is as splintered on electoral maps, and no other community has less of a voice when it comes to protecting its interests.

Through redistricting at City Hall and Beacon Hill, Roslindale has been transformed into an afterthought for politicians who live in other places.


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