Loyola (MD) Greyhounds (2-2) at Boston College Eagles (2-1)
Boston; Tuesday, 6 p.m. EST
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BOTTOM LINE: Boston College hosts Loyola (MD) after Elijah Strong scored 25 points in Boston College’s 72-69 win over the Temple Owls.
Boston College finished 20-16 overall with a 10-6 record at home during the 2023-24 season. The Eagles averaged 74.1 points per game last season, 30.8 in the paint, 12.9 off of turnovers and 6.9 on fast breaks.
Loyola (MD) went 5-13 on the road and 7-25 overall last season. The Greyhounds averaged 12.8 assists per game on 23.0 made field goals last season.
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The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.
Another storm comes in today bringing the snow, especially from late morning through this evening.
A coastal storm passing just offshore will bring a widespread, wet snowfall to much of southern New England.
Here’s what’s in the forecast:
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How much snow will we get in Massachusetts today? Other parts of New England?
Most of Southern New England is looking at 2–5 inch accumulations, with localized spots near 6 inches possible in southeastern Massachusetts and Rhode Island where the snow falls the steadiest and will have the most intensity.
Snow timing
Snow begins moving into Connecticut late morning, then spreads northeast into eastern Mass. after lunchtime.
It starts light, but the heaviest snow arrives late afternoon into the evening, when rates could reach ½ to 1 inch per hour, and even higher near the South Coast if temperatures cool just enough. Temperatures will be close to freezing, so this will be a heavy, wet snow, which can still accumulate even with readings hovering near or just above freezing.
Snow tapers off from west to east late tonight, generally between 10 p.m. and 2 a.m..
Travel impacts
Expect slippery roads, reduced visibility during heavier bursts, and slushy travel near the coast. Travel could be hazardous.
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Winter weather advisory
A winter weather advisory is in effect from 7 a.m. today through 7 a.m. Monday for much of southern New England, plus parts of Vermont, New Hampshire and Maine.
Click here for active weather alerts
Live radar
This week’s forecast
Looking ahead, colder air rushes in behind this system Monday night as an arctic front sweeps through. Tuesday into early Wednesday will be the coldest stretch, with well-below-normal temperatures and wind chills near or below zero at times. The cold eases a bit by Wednesday afternoon into Thursday, with quieter weather overall, but passing front could bring a brief chance for light snow or rain showers, mainly near the coast. Below normal temperatures may return later in the week.
BOSTON (WHDH) – A crowd of demonstrators gathered on the steps of the Boston Public Library on Saturday to show solidarity with anti-government protesters in Iran as a human rights group reports the death toll in the nation has risen above 3,000.
Many of those gathered said they want to see the United States take action to support the protesters.
“We want the United States to take action to go in and strike IRGC bases and to help arm the people so that they can fight back,” one protester said. “We don’t need the U.S. military to go in boots on the ground but we need our own people to be armed.”
President Trump has vowed to take action if Iran continues to kill protesters.
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Wall Street’s eyes are on the Federal Reserve, and what happens with well-regarded chair Jay Powell now that President Trump is trying to push him out.
No such dramatics are playing out here in Boston, where a new chair for the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston was named, and new members added to the board of directors, without controversy.
Lizanne Kindler, chief executive of apparel retailer KnitWell Group, was designated the new Boston Fed board chair as of Jan. 1. Liberty Mutual chief executive Tim Sweeney, Hannaford president Mike Vail, and New Balance chief executive Joe Preston all joined the nine-member board for the first time, while MassMutual’s Roger Crandall and Kimberly Sherman Stamler, of development firm Related Beal, cycled off.
The Boston Fed’s board holds eight regular meetings a year, along with regular calls to discuss rate recommendations. Aside from their oversight functions, board members offer important economic information to Boston Fed chief executive Susan Collins and the entire Federal Reserve system and an important link between the Fed and the private sector — all while trying to avoid the kinds of headlines that trail Powell and Trump.
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This is an installment of our weekly Bold Types column about the movers and shakers on Boston’s business scene.
Jon Chesto can be reached at jon.chesto@globe.com. Follow him @jonchesto.