Politics & Government
Updated: Antonioli, Zeamer Pull Papers For Town Offices
Brian Antonioli will run for a spot on the Water Commission, while Michelle Zeamer is going after a spot on the Finance Committee.

The races for town offices are continuing to take shape as two more residents announced their candidacies earlier this week.
As first reported by the MetroWest Daily News, Michelle Zeamer will seek a spot on the Finance Committee, while Brian Antonioli is running for a seat on the Water Commission.
The 37-year-old Antonioli, who is a Water Department crew leader for the Hudson Department of Public Works, is going for Commissioner Jeff Weise's spot. Weise has said he will not seek re-election if a qualified candidate emerged for his seat.
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Antonioli, a Holliston native, worked for the as a Systems Operator in the past.
BOARDO, ROY MAKE HONOR ROLL AT CATHOLIC MEMORIAL
Find out what's happening in Holliston-Hopkintonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Holliston residents Christopher Roy (a senior) and Tyler Boardo (freshman) each made second honors for the second quarter at Catholic Memorial School.
Principal Richard Chisholm released the honor rolls on Wednesday.
To be recognized for Second Honors, students must maintain an 84.5% to 89.4% average with no grade below a 75.
WHO AM I NO. 10
I used to work in Hartford
Where I had my glory years.
Dressed up like a rabbit
With my big and fluffy ears.
You’ll find me at the
If you go to see a game.
My life has been a Miracle,
Can you guess my name?
PRANA CENTER PERFORMING "SHIRLEY VALENTINE"
The will give two performances of "Shirley Valentine" on Friday and Saturday at 7 p.m.
Starring Dawn Anderson, the play tells the tale of Shirley, a middle-aged British housewife who thinks life has passed her by.
Tickets can be purchased for $15 at the door or reserved by e-mailing roberta@pranacenter.com. Free parking is available in the lot at 21 Charles St. behind the .
PANTHER GIRLS HOOP CLINCHES POSTSEASON BERTH
To the States they will go.
The girls basketball team, led by Jackie Sostilio’s 15 points, defeated Dover-Sherborn 47-17 at the Rowles Field House last night. With the win, their 10th of the season, the Panthers earned a trip to the Division 2 South sectional tournament.
Dover-Sherborn buried a 3-point shot to start the game, and led 9-6, before Sostilio and Co. ran off 21 straight points. Having led 14-9 at the end of the first quarter, the Panthers held the Raiders to one second-quarter point, and took a 29-10 lead into the locker room.
Holliston maintained its dominance into the third quarter and, at one point, had scored 29 of the past 30 points. The third quarter ended at 37-11, and the Panthers cruised to the finish.
Vicky Sostilio chipped in an even dozen points for Holliston.
Catherine Oglevee led the way for the Raiders with nine points.
GREAT STORMS OF THE PAST
The joke was on us.
Local residents may well remember the April Fools Day storm of 1997. On that day, Hollistonians woke to a blizzard of record proportions, a storm that eventually dumped over 30 inches of snow on our town.
That same day, the end of precipitation and rising temperatures initiated a melting process that resulted in town streets being totally cleared in a very short period of time.
GREAT STORMS OF THE PAST PART 1
Arguably our “Storm of the Century,” The Blizzard of ’78 dumped more than two feet of snow on Holliston during the two-day period of Feb. 6 and 7, 1978.
The storm paralyzed Eastern Massachusetts, shutting down major roads for days. Winds, gusting as high as 111 mph, created huge snow drifts and caused extreme coastal flooding.
Life in Holliston, as in neighboring communities, came to a standstill. Non-emergency automobile traffic was prohibited for days. State Lumber, a company located on Central Street behind what is now , saw its roof collapse under the weight of the snow.
And everybody who lived through that storm has a story. What are your Blizzard of ’78 memories?
WHO AM I NO. 9 REVEALED
You might see me at Town Meeting
In the front all prim and proper.
Where I don’t need prepared speeches
Or Obama’s Teleprompter.
I graduated from B.C.
And am a double Eagle.
If you see me running down the street,
It’s not from something legal.
I am Kevin Clancy
HOAGIES A SUPER TREAT
Those who had the privilege of reading last week’s Patch, were clearly .
Those who heeded the advice of said Patch, would surely have purchased one or two of the sumptuous submarines prepared by the lads of . And those who partook of such delights, were naturally quite pleased with the double-fisted torpedoes of delight that certainly satisfied their cold cut cravings until well after kickoff.
Mine was great.
LIONS HAVE A SUPER BREAKFAST
Holliston Lions gathered at the Sunday morning for their annual Super Bowl Brunch. Attendees were treated to a wonderful meal of pancakes, scrambled eggs, sausage, bacon and more. Raffles for a number of sports- and non-sports-related items donated by were also conducted.
Lion Ed Barron oversaw the event, which is a major club fundraiser. All monies raised by the Holliston Lions Club are used for charitable purposes.
sNOw OBLIGATION
Like the Panama Canal, its construction heralds the triumph of man over his environment. Like Stonehenge, its creation is cloaked in secrecy, the identity of its builders lost to time. Like the Great Pyramid of Giza, it symbolizes engineering excellence, its hard, cold exterior sheltering the promise of untold treasure contained within.
It, is the huge pile of snow located at the corner of Chamberlain St. and Andrew Ln. With coordinates of 42° 11.42 north latitude and 71° 27.83 west longitude, it rises to a majestic height of 332 feet above sea level, and is said in some circles, to be visible from space.
It is certainly visible from my home, where it regally sits on the northwest corner of our property where the sidewalks meet. What was once a simple accumulation of snow, has been transformed through weekly plowings into an imposing alpine abyss. I immodestly call this wintry white mass, Mount Shannahan.
I have no problem with Mount Shannahan, or with its volcanic-like rise during the recent snow storms. I also have no problem with the . The snow has to go somewhere, and as a delta can serve as the depository of a river’s sediment, the plowing of snow into a huge pile at the corner of Chamberlain and Andrew seems natural and logical.
Where I do have a problem, is when courts or municipalities impose on individuals the obligation to remove snow from sidewalks that are adjacent to the individual’s property. Fortunately, Holliston is not such a community.
That is not to say I do not understand or appreciate the value in having sidewalks clear of snow. I, having never owned a snowblower, have been the grateful beneficiary of the efforts of a number of snow-blowing neighbors over the years. And when the snow has been light, I have often shoveled the sidewalks myself.
But I am all too sick of bullying municipalities imposing obligations where they have no right to do so. The City of Boston is one such place. In Boston, property owners are required to remove snow and ice from “their” (my italics) sidewalks within three hours of snowfall ending, or face the possibility of significant fines.
Where does Boston get the power to impose on their citizens the obligation to clear city sidewalks? Maybe it’s the same place that a Hopkinton group, ironically named beFree, is looking. Their hope is that Hopkinton adopts a bylaw by which teens caught smoking on town property, would be fined and subsequently obligated to perform community service and attend a mandatory smoking cessation course.
The Town of Swampscott also recently sought to impose on the parents of student-athletes the obligation to attend a drug/alcohol awareness meeting. Failure of the parent to attend the meeting would result in the student-athlete being prohibited from participating in their selected sport.
Fortunately, there is hope for those who believe, like William Pinkney, that “Oppression is just another name for irresponsible power.” Last Monday, a Federal Court in Florida determined that the national health plan commonly referred to as ObamaCare was unconstitutional, temporarily at least, giving hope to many who believe in individual liberties.
Just six months earlier, in a slip-and-fall case, Justice Ralph Gants wrote for the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, as it abolished the distinction between natural and unnatural accumulations of snow and ice, applying the obligation of reasonable care for both to property owners. The practical effect of the ruling, say some, is to create an obligation for property owners to clear sidewalks adjacent to their property of snow.
Yet, in spite of the ruling, Mount Shannahan stands tall. Overlooking the valley where Paul Revere is believed to have sought refuge from 18th-century British oppression, it represents the unburdened spirit that exists in a free citizenry. In its shadow, people of strong mind and weak back, might join with their shovels and say “no more” to those that would seek to obligate them.
And there it shall stay, until the day when the sun light shines upon its face, and the warm March winds whisper along its back, and Mount Shannahan is no more.
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