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RAPID RIVER, Mich. (WLUC) – A group of Rapid River fourth and fifth graders took their Lego robot and headed to Massachusetts Wednesday night for a weekend competition.
A police escort led the Rapid River Robotics team out of town as the group hit the road. They had more than an 18-hour drive ahead of them, and fifth grader Terrell Harris had plans.
“What do I have planned for the bus ride? Just kind of like talk to my friends,” Harris said. “I’m going to read a lot. Party, probably.”
The team is heading to Worcester, Massachusetts, where they’ll compete against more than 100 teams from across the world at the WPI First Lego League International Championship.
“I’m not really nervous about that,” Harris said.
The students qualified for the event by doing well in earlier meets.
“This was the first year that we qualified out of our regional event at NMU,” Co-Coach Jake Denkins said. “So, it was a good year for us because we qualified for our state meet and now, we qualified to go out to Boston.”
At the state meet in December, the team placed 7th out of 726 teams in Michigan. Fourth grader Tristen Leadman said he couldn’t believe it.
“I was super excited,” he said. “I teared up a little.”
Denkins said the students build the robot and program different missions. They then have the robot complete the missions during competition. Engineering, problem-solving and teamwork are all skills the students develop while being on the team.
“Everybody gets to work with everybody, and everybody gets to work on a different section every week,” Denkins said.
Leadman said the team had a system for dealing with any conflicts.
“Whenever we would get into disagreement, we would vote democratically,” he said.
Leadman added that the team got along with each other most of the time.
Both Leadman and Harris said they joined the team because they wanted to hang out with their friends.
“And I really like playing with Legos,” Leadman said.
Denkins said the trip isn’t all about work and competition. They planned to stop at Niagara Falls on their way to Massachusetts and spend an afternoon in Boston, exploring history, after the competition is over.
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Just as the summer travel season heats up, gas prices are finally dropping, with the national average falling below $4 a gallon.
It marks the first time since March 30 prices are that low, and follows nearly four straight weeks of declines, according to data from AAA.
Massachusetts and the northeast as a whole are still above that average, at $4.09 a gallon, but it’s down sharply just in the past week.
Prices are lower south of Boston, such as in Bristol and Plymouth counties, and some wholesale clubs are selling at $3.60 a gallon.
Mark Schieldrop, spokesperson for AAA Northeast, says the highest price paid at the pump in Massachusetts during the war was $4.50 a gallon.
Schieldrop said the decrease comes on the heels of the U.S. agreement with Iran to end the war and open the Strait of Hormuz, causing crude oil prices to fall.
“We’ve seen a nice steady decline in prices that really started more than three weeks ago,” he said, “Markets anticipated this happening, and that really led to prices beginning to fall.”
Since prices can vary, he recommends drivers shop around and avoid convenient locations.
“You are going to see those higher gas prices right off that highway exit at that first gas station that you see, because they know that they’re going to catch a lot of stray travelers,” he said.
Decreasing gas prices comes as millions of Americans prepare to travel for July 4 in record numbers starting next weekend.
“When prices are on a downward trajectory, that certainly is conducive to encouraging folks to travel,” Schieldrop said. “We do expect strong travel over the July Fourth holiday. And people are still very interested in travel.”
While gas station owners are sometimes accused of price gouging, Schieldrop said most are trying to navigate a volatile market themselves, and are looking to stay competitive when prices drop and they have a surplus.
“They have to be very careful about sort of using a price buffer to ride that volatility so that way you’re able to make money, but you’re not gouging customers, and you’re being competitive in a market because the retail gasoline market is very competitive, ”he said.
Prices a year ago were $3.05 a gallon, but he said we won’t be getting anywhere near those prices this summer.
Local News
The Massachusetts Registry of Motor Vehicles announced on Monday it is now taking applications for the 2026 Annual Low Number Plate Lottery.
The annual lottery is for standard white Massachusetts passenger license plates. Winners and alternate winners will be selected using an electronic random number generator and notified by mail no later than Sept. 15.
To be eligible, an applicant must be a current Massachusetts resident with an active, state registered and insured passenger motor vehicle. They must also have a state-issued driver’s license or ID in good standing.
You can apply through Aug. 14 at the myRMV Online Service Center.
While there’s no cost to enter, “applicants selected in the lottery will be required to pay the special plate fee in addition to the applicable standard vehicle registration fee,” the RMV said.
Commercial vehicles and motorcycles will not be accepted as applicants. MassDOT workers and contract employees and their immediate family members are ineligible to participate, the RMV said.
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HINSDALE, N.H. (ABC22/FOX44) – Two men from Massachusetts have been indicted after they allegedly stole more than $200,000 in cigarettes and fled in a stolen U-Haul van before setting it on fire.
According to court documents, the men robbed the T-Bird Mini Mart on Brattleboro Road in Hinsdale, New Hampshire back on March 15. They then allegedly drove the U-Haul north into Brattleboro, Vermont before heading south on Interstate 91 down in Massachusetts.
Cartons of cigarettes reportedly fell from the back of the van as it drove through Brattleboro, which were estimated to be worth more than $50,000. The “trail of cigarettes” was reportedly used by investigators examining surveillance footage to track the path of the van leading up to the arrest of two suspects last week.
Richard Conner, 64, of Greenfield, Massachusetts, and James Ferguson, 66, of Worcester, Massachusetts, were arrested on Friday.
According to court documents, Ferguson was also seen on camera earlier in March stealing the U-Haul van in Northampton, Massachusetts.
The two men now face federal charges under the Hobbs Act and, if convicted, could spend up to 20 years in prison.
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