Salem, MA|News|
Salem Bike Share Program Adds Stations
The Salem Bike Share program will add more bike stations around the city this month.

Taylor Rapalyea is a Beverly, MA, native and North Shore enthusiast. She enjoys donuts, hiking, and going off on tangents. To tell her a tangent or give a good donut shop recommendation, email taylor.rapalyea@patch.com.
The Salem Bike Share program will add more bike stations around the city this month.

Peabody Police are warning residents not to fall for a door-to-door scam.
What is possibly an unexploded firework/small Death Star-looking object washed up on West Beach on Thursday.
The North Shore Area Educational Opportunity Center has moved to North Shore Community College's campus.
The yoga classes on the beach are free to Swampscott residents.
Local blog Good Morning Gloucester reports that a tagged great white shark was caught off the coast of a Rockport island.
Not enough french toast sticks, drunken arguing, and more from the Salem Police log.
The concert series is free and open to the public.
The man was found floating near a dock in Amesbury on Wednesday. Foul play is unlikely, according to police.
Peabody's water emergency has gone into effect, alongside voluntary water restrictions.
The Beverly Public Library has launched a survey to inform its strategic plan.
Trash and recycling pickup will be delayed by one day this week due to the Fourth of July.
The fair will be on Saturday, Aug. 26, and includes free admission to the museum.
The school will hold master classes in Spanish Sevillanas, modern, and jazz dances in July and August.
Anti-Semitic graffiti using "disturbing language" was found on the wall of the Causeway on Friday.
Here's what's happening on the Fourth of July this year around the North Shore.
A bat got stuck in a Salem home, a Peabody snapping turtle crossed the road, and more from the North Shore police logs.
The MBTA will have additional bus service for passengers during construction this summer on the Newburyport/Rockport line.
The tradition of rebellion through mockery and humor has been carried from the 1800s to today.