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Nomination papers available for Monson town election

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The town election is June 10.

Monson Seal_WEB.jpg 

MONSON - Nomination papers will be available starting on Monday for the annual town election on June 10.

The deadline for obtaining nomination papers is April 18, according to Assistant Town Clerk Mary F. Watson. To be on the ballot, papers must be returned by April 22 and have 32 certifiable signatures, Watson said.

The following three-year positions will appear on the ballot: selectman (incumbent is Edward A. Maia), town clerk (Nancy C. Morrell retired last year), assessor (incumbent is Michael Benfield), School Committee (incumbent is Peter Sauriol), Water and Sewer Commission (incumbent Douglas North), Parks and Recreation Commission (incumbent is Stephen O'Shea), and Cemetery Commission (incumbent is George Courtemanche)

Questions may be directed to the clerk’s office at (413) 267-4115. All elections will take place in the gymnasium at Quarry Hill Community School, 43 Margaret St., in the pool entrance.


Sen. Elizabeth Warren reacts to news of Scott Brown's likely US Senate run in New Hampshire with fundraising plea for Democratic Sen. Jeanne Shaheen

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Elizabeth Warren's fundraising plea for New Hampshire's Sen. Jeanne Shaheen wasn't her first, but it came just minutes after Brown announced he had formed an exploratory committee.

Just minutes after Republican Scott Brown announced he was launching an exploratory committee and a state-wide tour of New Hampshire for a potential U.S. Senate run there, his most well-known political foe fired off an email to supporters.

U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren, the Massachusetts Democrat who unseated Brown in the 2012 contest in the Bay State, reacted to the news by making a fundraising plea to her own supporters, asking them to open up their wallets for U.S. Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, the incumbent Democrat Brown will face should he indeed end up running as the Republican Party's nominee.

"It just happened: A few minutes ago, Scott Brown officially announced that he’s forming an exploratory committee to run against my friend Jeanne Shaheen for the Senate in New Hampshire," Warren wrote in the email. "Scott Brown may have moved to the Granite State, but we’re not going anywhere. Will you help us raise $25,000 for Jeanne Shaheen’s campaign right now? Let’s remind Scott Brown what he’s still up against if he runs for the Senate in New Hampshire."

Warren pouncing on Brown came as the New Hampshire Democratic Party took a page from the book of their counterparts in Massachusetts. After Brown announced the establishment of the exploratory committee, which allows him to raise money and hire staff, the N.H. Democrats sent out a statement saying Brown was beholden to big oil and other special interests, a message pushed by Warren followers for the entire 2012 campaign.

And for his part, Brown indicated he was also focused on a race from the past- the special election that made him a superstar of the Republican Party. In front of a crowd at the Northeast Republican Leadership Conference in Nashua, Brown indicated he'd be drawing upon the opposition to President Barack Obama's Affordable Care Act which helped propel him to an unlikely victory in the 2010 special election following the death of Massachusetts' Democratic U.S. Sen. Ted Kennedy.

"That disastrous law began with a promise we all remember: 'If you like your health plan, you can keep it, period.' Then the attitude became, 'You’re going to change your plan and like it, period.' And here’s the message Americans are waiting for right now: 'If we don’t like Obamacare, we can get rid of it, period,'" Brown told the group. "The Democratic leadership likes to say that Obamacare is the law because elections have consequences. But false promises have consequences too. And the party that put everything on the line for that takeover of healthcare is going to have a lot to answer for."

Should Brown indeed run in New Hampshire, he faces potential Republican challengers including ex-state Sen. Jim Rubens, ex-U.S. Sen. Bob Smith, conservative activist Karen Testerman and perennial candidate Andy Martin.


Republican Scott Brown's full remarks to the Northeast Republican Leadership Conference as he announced forming exploratory committee for US Senate run in New Hampshire

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At the conference, Brown announced he was forming an exploratory committee, allowing him to raise money and hire staff for a potential U.S. Senate run against Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, the Democratic incumbent in New Hampshire.

NASHUA, N.H. — Below are the full remarks of former U.S. Sen. Scott Brown, as prepared for delivery, as he addressed the Northeast Republican Leadership Conference on March 14, 2014. At the conference, Brown announced he was forming an exploratory committee, allowing him to raise money and hire staff for a potential U.S. Senate run against Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, the Democratic incumbent in New Hampshire.

“Thank you very much. Jennifer Horn, I appreciate the great efforts of you and your team at the state party. Gail and I are honored to join all of you today. I thank the elected officials here, and I especially thank all of you activists who made so many victories possible. We have a lot of work ahead of us, but together we’re going to make 2014 a great Republican year in New Hampshire and across this country.

“I know that because, for about a year now, I’ve been all over this state, talking to folks and supporting good candidates. I’ve traveled so much in New Hampshire that I’m closing in on an important personal milestone: 300,000 miles on my truck. I’m pretty proud of that old GMC Canyon, and it’s sure looking good with those license plates that say, “Live Free or Die.”

“Since the last election, I have made it my personal mission to travel not just around our state, but around the country. Republican groups and candidates are gathering strength, ready to give their best efforts in this election year. I’ve journeyed far and wide, glad to help wherever I can. Every one of us here shares that commitment. And if we do things right, this year will bring a defining victory for our cause.

“It wasn’t so long ago that the Democratic establishment in Washington was feeling very comfortable, like they just couldn’t lose. You could tell they were comfortable because they kept shoving Obamacare at us, and didn’t much care how the American people felt about it. Well, Election Day is still eight months away, and they’re already in panic mode. A big political wave is about to break in America, and the Obamacare Democrats are on the wrong side of it.



“That disastrous law began with a promise we all remember: “If you like your health plan, you can keep it, period.” Then the attitude became, “You’re going to change your plan and like it, period.” And here’s the message Americans are waiting for right now: “If we don’t like Obamacare, we can get rid of it, period.”

“The Democratic leadership likes to say that Obamacare is the law because elections have consequences. But false promises have consequences too. And the party that put everything on the line for that takeover of healthcare is going to have a lot to answer for.

“Tens of thousands of people in New Hampshire have lost the health coverage they liked. Thousands more are paying higher premiums for coverage they don’t like. The whole thing is such a fiasco that the administration keeps changing the law, without even bothering to ask Congress or ask you.

“There’s only one way to get rid of Obamacare once and for all, and that is to get rid of the Obamacare Democrats who rammed it through Congress and forced it upon the American people. Whether it’s Nancy Pelosi saying we have to pass the bill to see what’s in it, or the go-along senators who vote 99 or 100 percent with Obama – it is time for that whole crowd to go.

“The failing health care law is just the centerpiece of an agenda that is holding America back. That agenda is keeping unemployment high, raising taxes, over-regulating the private sector, hurting middle class families, overwhelming this country in debt, and weakening America’s standing in the world.

“The federal government spends too much, taxes too much, and borrows too much – and as I’ve said before, the last thing we need in Washington is another yes-vote for a broken and misguided agenda.

“We need to get off the road of big government, and focus again on private enterprise, new jobs for our people, and basic federal duties starting with the rights of our citizens and the security of our nation.

“We’re seeing a constant expansion of federal power, and it’s up to us to ask the fundamental questions:

“Since when can a president ignore or rewrite acts of Congress as he sees fit, as this president has done?

"By what right does the IRS get off targeting groups unfavored by the federal establishment?

"Why are politicians in Washington passing a stimulus that added debt but instead of being a windfall for jobs was a bonanza for insiders and special interests or friends of politicians?

“The answer to all these questions is the same: None of this is anywhere near defensible in a free society.



“We need a fresh new approach, and here’s the best I can do offhand: How about we start running this government again by the principles and limits of the United States Constitution?

“At our best, that’s where we Republicans come in – as defenders of freedom and champions of opportunity. And “opportunity” is more than just another word in politics, when you’ve had a glimpse of life without it. We are still the party of Lincoln – we believe in the goodness and possibilities of every life.

“We Republicans try to speak for men and women who work hard to make a decent living … want schools that build knowledge and character … in a nation committed to security, fairness, and freedom. We see our country as a force for the good like no other in this world. And we understand how much rides on a strong and confident America.

“All of this describes the people and neighborhoods I’ve known since I was a kid, starting right here in New Hampshire. So much of my life played out in Massachusetts, but a big part of it has always been here.

“I would like to take a moment to reflect back, so we can move forward.

“My parents met when my Mom was a waitress at Hampton Beach, and my Dad an airman at Pease Air Force Base. They were living on Islington Street in Portsmouth when I came along. Pease had no hospital, so I was born at the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard.

“We stayed in Portsmouth until my parents separated. The story doesn’t get better from there, at least for a while, and if you read my book a few years ago you know the rest of it. It was a pretty rough upbringing. Mom and Dad were married 4 times each and I lived in 17 houses by the time I was 18. We were on public assistance for a while. And now and then, as a young boy and teenager, I got into trouble.

“I worked all through college and then law school, in jobs that usually involved a mop, a paintbrush, or a shovel. Any honest work that paid the bills was good by me, as long as it kept me moving toward something better.

“During my challenging early years, one influence that made all the difference for me was the care of my grandparents. And I think of them often these days, because so much of the time we spent together was here in New Hampshire.

“There were summers at Hoyt’s cabins … exploring on the Rocks along the Rye Coast … playing around at Hampton Beach … walking through the gardens and catching a show at Prescott Park … or strolling through Strawbery Banke with my grandfather telling stories about how life used to be in Portsmouth.

“Those places were a refuge for me as a kid, and I’ll always be grateful that I had them. Those memories are so powerful for me, that I’ve tried to share them with my wife and our own children. I cherish those memories, and those long and strong ties to this state, and without a doubt they helped to draw me back here as a full-time resident of New Hampshire.

“My upbringing doesn’t always set the best example. And it might not sound like the making of a Republican. Yet when I cast my first vote for president in 1980, I knew which candidate talked my language – the language of opportunity and personal freedom – and that was Ronald Reagan.



“Back then, just like today, national Democrats offered themselves as champions of the little guy … a voice for people at the bottom who didn’t have it easy. But I had been pretty close to the bottom myself, and I didn’t see it that way. When critics talked about Republicans as defenders of wealth and privilege, that sure didn’t describe the party and the cause that earned my loyalty when I had nothing.

“The party of Ronald Reagan stood for liberty and equality, an upward path in life for everyone, and a strong national defense to protect our country and advance our cause in the world. That was the party I was proud to join. And though we have never been perfect, it is still the best party to lead this nation.

“Since 2012, we Republicans have had to do some serious thinking after a tough loss. I’ve done some reflecting myself, and as you might recall I came up short in my last campaign.

“I’m a proud Republican, but I’ve always been able to work with every person of good will, whatever their party. And we sure need more of that spirit in Washington right now, if we’re going to rise to the big and fundamental challenges facing this nation. Unless enough people in both parties can work on that basis, all you’re going to get are bad laws and a lot of resentment. There has to be a time and place where we act as Americans first, putting our country first.

“That’s what I’ve been saying to fellow citizens all around New Hampshire, and there sure seems to be a lot of agreement. I’ll be listening even more closely in these coming weeks, as I near a big decision. It won’t surprise you that I’ve been paying special attention to Gail, who’s been telling me that if I really want to make a difference then I should run for United States Senator in New Hampshire.

“Honey, you are right, I’m going to stop complaining and get involved again. So I am announcing that I have formed an exploratory committee to prepare a campaign for the U.S. Senate.

“Starting tomorrow morning, and for the next several weeks, Gail and I will be traveling around the state to introduce ourselves, to ask questions, to speak with everyone of every background – Republicans, independents and Democrats alike – and above all to listen to them and learn of their concerns. We look forward to meeting you … to the great journey ahead … and to all that is yet to come. Thank you, and God bless you.”

Missing Malaysian Airlines jet: Could disappearance have been an act of piracy?

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Piracy would require special skills -- Improbable but not impossible, experts say.

To steal Malaysian Airlines Flight 370 out of midair would require a pilot who knew how to elude detection by both civilian and military radar. It would take a runway at least a mile long to land the wide-body jet, possibly in the dark, and a hangar big enough to hide it. All without being seen.

Improbable but not impossible, experts say.

With the search for the missing airliner entering its eighth day, scenarios involving piracy or hijacking are increasingly being talked about as possible explanations for the disappearance of the Boeing 777 with 239 people on board.

Authorities say they're not ruling out other theories, which include a catastrophic structural failure causing the plane to break up, engine failure, or pilot suicide. But a U.S. official gave an intriguing twist to the story Friday by saying that investigators are considering whether the plane's disappearance was due to "an act of piracy" and whether the big jet might have landed somewhere without being detected.

A takeover of the plane seemed to be ruled out a few days ago, when officials discounted any link between terrorism and two passengers who were traveling on fake passports. The piracy theory, however, gained new life when it was reported that the plane's transponders had been turned off, making it more stealthy; and that signals from the plane indicated that it kept flying for several hours after the last radio contact, possibly turning west toward the Indian Ocean.

Scott Shankland, an American Airlines pilot who spent several years as a co-pilot on Boeing 777s, said a captain would know how to disable radios and the plane's other tracking systems. But a hijacker, even one trained to fly a plane, "would probably be hunting and pecking quite a while -- 'Do I pull this switch? Do I pull that?' You could disable a great deal" of the tracking equipment, "but possibly not all of it."

Some of the plane's data is transmitted automatically from equipment not located in the cockpit, making it even harder to avoid leaving electronic bread crumbs, he said.

John Hansman, an aeronautics professor at MIT who is familiar with the Boeing 777, said it would be possible for an intruder to turn off the transponders, but knowing how to shut down other systems in a bid to be stealthy would be more difficult. Even if 9/11-style hijackers got that far, he said, they would be challenged to keep flying, make a successful landing, and hide the plane.

"If it was a hijacking, it was probably a hijacking gone bad," he said.

Instead, Hansman thinks that there could have been a cascading series of malfunctions or a fire that shut down key systems on the plane and incapacitated the pilots. He compared it to the 1999 crash in South Dakota of a Learjet carrying pro golfer Payne Stewart.

Air traffic controllers couldn't contact the crew shortly after the Learjet took off from Florida; pilots in other planes saw no movement in the cockpit; and eventually the jet ran out of fuel. The National Transportation Safety Board ruled that the crash probably was caused by the pilots passing out for lack of oxygen after a loss of cabin pressure.

Without any wreckage from Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, it's hard to dismiss any theory. A week after the plane left Kuala Lumpur for Beijing, it remains a mystery how a jet with a good safety record and flying in clear weather could just disappear without even a distress call. And without being spotted by radar.

If it was a hijacking, "they would have to be somebody who has detailed knowledge of the plane," said Alan Diehl, a former NTSB crash investigator. "Could they get down below the radar and make a beeline to an abandoned airstrip somewhere? I suppose the short answer is yes. Even today, satellites don't cover every square kilometer of the Earth."

Photos: The 29th annual WGBY Wine & Food Tasting at the Springfield Marriott

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The event kicked off WGBY's Wine Lovers' Weekend, which will conclude with a gourmet dinner on Saturday.

The 29th annual WGBY Wine & Food Tasting held at the Springfield on Friday, March 14. Those attending sampled more than 300 wines and were treated to a huge variety of bite-sized specialty foods from local chefs and food artisans. The event is the largest wine and food tasting in Western New England. The event kicks off WGBY's Wine Lovers Weekend which will conclude with the annual Wine Lovers Dinner, a seven-course gourmet extravaganza on Saturday, March 15, at the Marriott.

February numbers show Connecticut slot-machine revenue increased slightly at Foxwoods while dropping at Mohegan Sun

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The casinos, which contribute 25 percent of their slot revenue to the state of Connecticut, have been struggling to reverse a slump related to the weak economic recovery and growing competition.

HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) — Connecticut’s two tribal-owned casinos have released data showing slot-machine revenue rose slightly in February at the Foxwoods Resort Casino but declined at Mohegan Sun.

The share of wagers kept by the casino, also known as revenue, was $39.3 million at Foxwoods. That marks an increase of 2 percent compared with the same month a year ago.

Foxwoods CEO Scott Butera said Friday the February 2012 figures were affected by a major blizzard but the latest data reflects a positive step and continued consistency.

Revenue at Mohegan Sun was $43.9 million, which was down 3 percent compared with the same month a year ago.

The casinos, which contribute 25 percent of their slot revenue to the state of Connecticut, have been struggling to reverse a slump related to the weak economic recovery and growing competition.

No injuries when Boston commuter ferry gets stuck near Hingham

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The incident is being investigated.

BOSTON (AP) — The Coast Guard says there are no injuries or damage after an MBTA ferry ran aground on a sandbar in the Boston Harbor area near Hingham.

The agency said the grounding occurred at around 5:30 p.m. Friday when the 97-foot passenger boat Massachusetts was near the Hingham Back River.

The Hingham harbormaster and Massachusetts State Police responded along with the Coast Guard. State police safely transferred the nine passengers back to shore. The ferry had five crew members.

The Coast Guard says the ferry wasn't damaged and was being towed back to Rowes Wharf in Boston on Friday night.

Routine drug and alcohol tests have been conducted on the crew as is procedure. The incident is being investigated.

Amherst Select Board holding a reception to thank Stephanie O'Keeffe and Diana B. Stein for service

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The reception to thank Select Board members Stephanie J. O'Keeffe and Diana B. Stein will be held in Amherst Town Hall Monday night.

AMHERST – On Most Mondays, Select Board Chairwoman Stephanie J. O’Keeffe has been at the Black Sheep early in the morning to talk with anyone in town who wanted to share an opinion or concern.

And on many of those same nights, she would be chairing the Select Board meetings – something she has done for five of the six years she served on the board.

On Monday night, the board is holding a reception to honor and thank her and Select Board member Diana B. Stein for their two terms of service. Neither is seeking re-election later this month.

Select Board chairs typically serve a year or two, not five, but colleagues gave O’Keeffe that honor and responsibility, which she embraced as a full-time job. She talked recently about those years at the Black Sheep at the same table where has met with people from town.

She started holding office hours when she was campaigning and continued when elected. “It was a real low threshold (of providing) access to government,” she said.

O’Keeffe said she has been committed to making government transparent and accessible and has helped focus and organize the business of the board.

“I’ve worked with a lot of local officials over 25 years,” said Town Manager John P. Musante. “She’s one of the finest public officials I’ve ever had the honor of working with. Her work ethic, integrity, honesty, leadership, organizational skills, her ability to help lead the town that is inclusive, hearing different points view,” has made her stand out and be a role model, he said.

“I had the time to make it a full-time job,” O’Keeffe said. But she said, “It’s an exhausting (undertaking).” She said there is responsibility but no authority or compensation.

She said the board works well together, “I’m proud to provide an organizational structure that helps things happen.”

Each member brings his or her own particular skills and talents. Stein, a retired Mount Holyoke College biology professor, supported environmental and social issues including the resettlement of Guantanamo detainees in Western Massachusetts.

In setting the agenda with Musante, O'Keeffe made sure agenda items had a point and the board and the town had all materials they needed. She saw to it that all the packet information was available on the town’s website.

She also felt she helped manage former Town Manager Laurence Shaffer’s “retirement situation. It was complex.” He retired in 2010, a year after he asked the board for a contract extension, which he received with all but O’Keeffe supporting that extension.

She is also proud of the town manager evaluation process in which there are tangible performance markers that help the board and manager set tangible goals.

O’Keeffe said she believes “a strong process should determine the outcome,” not the other way around.

Looking back, she said she is also pleased with how the helped expand the town-gown relationship with more people involved, which has led to “a broader conversation, much more collaboration.”

“I like being able to have a positive influence on important issues. I’ll miss that,” she said. As for now, she’s not sure what kind of involvement she will have in the town. She would like to take a step back and see.

The reception begins at 4:30 p.m. in Town Hall.


Following report revealing Massachusetts Gaming Commission's 'lavish spending,' Republican legislators introduce bill to further regulate state employee spending

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The bill in the Massachusetts Legislature would make it so any agency which receives state appropriations must adhere to the regulations on the book, without exception.

In light of a report by the Boston Business Journal documenting just how the Massachusetts Gaming Commission has spent much of the interest-free $15 million loan it was initially funded with, Republicans in the state Legislature are proposing a bill that would tighten up the rules around such expenditures.

The bill, proposed by Senate Minority Leader Bruce Tarr, Assistant Minority Leader Robert Hedlund, Senate Minority Whip Don Humanson and Sen. Richard Ross, would make it so any agency that receives state appropriations must adhere to the regulations on the book, without exception.

"Our state's expense rules need to be clear, understandable, and even-handed," Tarr said in a statement. "These commonsense reforms achieve those goals and go a long way toward preventing abuses and extreme expenses."

While the gaming commission is a state agency technically operating on taxpayer money, it is considered to have a unique mission, and interprets itself as exempt to spending regulations.

Among the areas of the law the bill aims to clarify are:

  • the reimbursement rules regarding lodging, entertainment, airfare, and other travel expenses;
  • applying the state reimbursement rules to every state employee;
  • removing the current distinction between managers and employees.

In short, the Republicans are aiming to have the same rules that apply to every other state agency apply to the gaming commission.

An analysis of credit card statements and spending practices by the commission concluded that between May 2012 and January 2014, spending included nearly $78,000 on parking, approximately $85,000 on air travel and around $37,000 for food, with many meals tallying at triple the rate the state allows for per diem reimbursements for employees of other agencies.

The report also documented around $20,000 in expenses incurred in trips to Las Vegas, as well as thousands in spending relating to trips across Asia and Europe. Following the report's release Commission Chairman Steve Crosby defended the spending as necessary but said he would order a review of the group's spending practices.

"These loopholes, if left unchanged, would at the very least create a cloud of impropriety, and at the very worst, allow widespread abuse," Tarr said. "With state government continuing to evolve, this measure aims to instill confidence by removing speculation to ensure state employees are spending precious dollars appropriately."


Authorities ask public for help locating missing New Haven teen Jhari Thomas

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A Silver Alert was issued for Jhari Thomas, a 15-year-old from New Haven, following a report filed with police in that city.

NEW HAVEN, Conn. — Authorities in Connecticut are asking the public for help locating a missing teen who hasn't been seen since Thursday.

JHARI THOMASView full sizeJhari Thomas 

A Silver Alert was issued for Jhari Thomas, a 15-year-old from New Haven, following a report filed with police in that city.

Connecticut's silver alert system is commonly used to spread the word about runaways and endangered runaways, as well as missing persons with dementia and other cognitive impairments. this specific Silver Alert didn't indicate under what conditions Thomas went missing.

Thomas was described by police as a young black male, standing 6-feet, 2-inches tall and weighing approximately 130 pounds with black hair and brown eyes. A description of the outfit he was wearing at the time of his disappearance wasn't available, but police said he has a distinct mole on his upper lip.

Anyone with information on Thomas' whereabouts is asked to call the New Haven Police Department at 203-946-6316.


Source: Julian Edelman re-signs with New England Patriots

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Tom Brady's favorite target is returning to New England. After testing the market, Julian Edelman reached an agreement that will keep him with the Patriots, according to a source. "Foxboro is home," Edelman tweeted after news broke. "Excited to be back." The terms of the deal are not yet known. The Patriots and Edelman were unable to reach a...

Tom Brady's favorite target is returning to New England.

After testing the market, Julian Edelman reached an agreement that will keep him with the Patriots, according to a source.

"Foxboro is home," Edelman tweeted after news broke. "Excited to be back."

The terms of the deal are not yet known.

The Patriots and Edelman were unable to reach a deal before the start of free agency Tuesday, which led the wide receiver to explore his options in free agency. He reportedly received interest from the Cleveland Browns, Baltimore Ravens, and San Francisco 49ers, with whom he visited Friday.

Baltimore reached a deal with former Carolina Panthers wide receiver Steve Smith, who was scheduled to visit New England next, and Cleveland is expected to land former Cincinnati Bengals wide receiver Andrew Hawkins. With the options quickly dwindling for both parties, a reunion became expected.

Both sides should view it as a welcome development.

After drawing little interest last offseason, Edelman returned to the Patriots on a one-year deal worth a little more than $1 million. With the receiver group suffering through injuries and growing pains throughout the year, he took advantage of his chemistry with Brady and set career highs in games played (16), catches (105), yards (1,056), and touchdowns.

New England likely would have moved forward with Danny Amendola as the slot receiver, the role he was signed to fill after Wes Welker bolted to Denver last year, and banked on wide receivers Aaron Dobson, Kenbrell Thompkins, and Josh Boyce making a leap in their second season with the team if Edelman had not returned.

It's possible that the Patriots could have survived with that group, but this move brings back Brady's most trusted targeted and prevents the team from having to locate another receiver either through free agency or the draft.

In terms of production, it remains unclear what to expect of Edelman moving forward. While it shouldn't be considered a knock on his talents, much of his production came as the result of injuries to other key players, namely Rob Gronkowski.

In nine games without Gronkowski on the field, Edelman caught an average of seven passes on 11 targets for 76 yards. In seven games with the big tight end on the field, Edelman caught an average of five passes on seven targets for 52 yards.

The latter numbers equate to 832 yards receiving over the course of a season, and could be further bitten out of if Dobson takes a step in his second season and Amendola (groin) and Gronkowski (ACL) have better luck with health in 2014. However, with his ability to play outside, Edelman's role could further evolve next season if Amendola is better prepared to assume slot duties.

Those issues will all be dealt with down the road. For now, Edelman is back in the fold, and unlike last season when Welker got away, Brady doesn't have to spend the next few months envisioning a future without his favorite target.

For the rest of his teammates, who came out in force on Twitter to congratulate Edelman, an odd occurrence in Foxborough, the move was loudly applauded.

"Welcome back!" Gronkwoski wrote. "Let me know if you need a place to stay!"

Edelman should already have that covered.

Warmer temperatures draw people outside to enjoy Springfield's Forest Park

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With temperatures rising just above 50 degrees Saturday, it made for a great day to get outside and shake the winter blues with a visit to Forest Park in Springfield.

With temperatures rising just above 50 degrees Saturday, it made for a great day to get outside and shake the winter blues with a visit to Forest Park in Springfield.

The park, which spans approximately 735 acres, is one of the largest municipal parks in the United States.

Going for a walk or a run in short sleeves gave the winter weary a chance to get some fresh air without becoming an ice cube.

Temperatures are expected to slide back to the 20-degree range, but Saturday gave everyone hope that Spring, which is supposed to arrive in the next five days, is a real possibility despite the seemingly never-ending Winter we've had.

Orange Republican Town Committee to host meet-and-greet with candidates for state offices

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Candidates appearing to meet members of the public include gubernatorial candidates Charlie Baker and Mark Fisher; and state Legislature candidates James Ehrhard, Michael Valanzola, Karen Anderson and Susannah Whipps Lee.

ORANGE — The Orange Republican Town Committee is hosting a meet-and-greet event on March 30 with candidates running for state office.

massachusetts republican party logo 

The event is scheduled to take place from 2-4 p.m. at the Orange American Legion on Route 202. Candidates appearing to meet members of the public include gubernatorial candidates Charlie Baker and Mark Fisher; and state Legislature candidates James Ehrhard, Michael Valanzola, Karen Anderson and Susannah Whipps Lee.

Approximately 50 Republicans gathered in Holyoke on Thursday to discuss the 2014 elections, and welcome a number of new candidates who emerged recently to challenge Democrats in a number of races. The gathering in Orange will provide rural citizens the same opportunity to meet some of the candidates and discuss the upcoming elections.

Jesse Stanley of Easthampton prepares for Vermont's Spartan Death Race

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Stanley said he first learned about the Death Race a few years ago through friends he met at races and through online blogs and groups.

By JERREY ROBERTS, Daily Hampshire Gazette

EASTHAMPTON, Mass. (AP) — Jesse Stanley, 34, admits that his idea of fun is unlike most other people's thoughts on the matter.

The Federal Street resident, who works as an occupational health technician for the Army National Guard in Windsor Locks, Conn., competed in his first obstacle race in 2011 at Mount Snow in Vermont. The 10-mile Tough Mudder event involved, among other things, running up a long, steep slope that he had skied down years before. While that would feel like torture to some, Stanley loved it. He was hooked.

"Most people think I'm crazy," he said. "They say, 'Why would you ever pay money to do that?'"

This year, he will compete in more than 20 similar events, including a few 24-hour events around the Northeast. But he said none will be tougher, longer or more punishing than the Death Race.

Spartan Death Race, Stanley said, is renowned in the obstacle racing community as the most difficult of its kind. It starts June 27 in a wooded area of Pittsfield, Vt., can last up to three days, and involves both mental and physical challenges that are not revealed in advance. Usually only 10 percent of the field finishes.

Stanley said he first learned about the Death Race a few years ago through friends he met at races and through online blogs and groups. "It sounded really, really insane and I said, 'I'll never do that, that's crazy,'?" he recalled.

But when registration opened last summer, he paid his $300 and signed up.

Jessee StanleyIn this March 3, 2014 photo, Jesse Stanley lifts weights at Easthampton Crossfit in Easthampton, Mass. Stanley plans to compete in a grueling Spartan Death Race in June. (AP Photo/Daily Hampshire Gazette, Jerrey Roberts) 

Doug Drotman, a spokesman for the event, said a small group of obstacle racers headed by Joe De Sena and Andy Weinberg dreamed up the first Death Race in 2005 or 2006 (he said record keeping wasn't their strong suit then) and it has been held every year since.

"They were sick of the old events they had been doing and wanted something better," Drotman said. A few dozen people took part that first year, and it has grown to include about 300 competitors.

Drotman said the Northeast is always well represented, but competitors come from all over to take part. In 2013, 37 states and four other countries were represented, he said. Among the competitors, 31 were Massachusetts residents, he said.

Peter St. John, a former Northampton resident and alumnus for the Clarke Schools for Hearing and Speech and Northampton High School, competed but did not finish in 2011. The Cambridge resident told the Gazette at the time that 20 hours into the race, he could not complete a hike up a mountain lugging an 80-pound log.

What makes the Spartan Death Race popular among obstacle racers is its reputation as the hardest challenge out there, Drotman said.

"People in this world are always looking for the next challenge," he said. "The athletes we get have done it all and they're looking for something different, and Death Race is different in that it has both mental and physical challenges."

Competitors' biggest mental challenge is not knowing what they will face on the course, because it is different every year and obstacles are a secret until the event. And once they start on one obstacle, whether it is a hike up a hill or digging up stumps, they do not know when it will end. "Not knowing is really brutal," Drotman said.

Obstacles at previous races have included chopping wood, building fires from scratch, diving for cinder blocks, cutting bushels of onions and memorizing and recreating Lego buildings.

Republican Scott Brown calls NH Sen. Jeanne Shaheen's suggestion of a 'People's Pledge' hypocritical

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Democratic U.S. Sen. Jeanne Shaheen is calling on newly announced Republican challenger Scott Brown to sign the same pact in New Hampshire that helped prevent outside groups from pouring millions of dollars into his last Massachusetts Senate election.

By STEVE PEOPLES, Associated Press

NASHUA, N.H. (AP) — Democratic U.S. Sen. Jeanne Shaheen is calling on newly announced Republican challenger Scott Brown to sign the same pact in New Hampshire that helped prevent outside groups from pouring millions of dollars into his last Massachusetts Senate election.

In a letter sent Saturday, less than 24 hours after the former U.S. senator from Massachusetts entered the race, Shaheen said she "very much admired the People's Pledge" that Brown signed with Sen. Elizabeth Warren in 2012. Brown lost his Senate seat to Warren.

"I believe it limited the influence of outside groups and allowed the people's voices to be heard," Shaheen wrote. She asked Brown to make a similar pledge this year to give New Hampshire voters "the assurance that their voices will not be drowned out by third-party expenditures."

Brown would not comment on whether he would agree to a pledge but said Saturday that Shaheen is on a multiple-city West Coast fundraising swing that he says will provide money to third-party groups for more outside negative ads against him.

"It's hard to view Jeanne Shaheen's actions as anything other than hypocritical and self-serving," Brown said. "The people of New Hampshire can see through the Washington-style game she is playing."

The challenge comes as national outside groups gear up to send a river of money into a New Hampshire Senate contest that could be the most expensive in state history.

Brown on Friday night formally launched an exploratory committee to enter the Senate campaign during a Republican conference in Nashua, ending months of speculation about his intentions. While Brown has yet to file formal candidacy papers, his decision all but assures the GOP will have a top-tier contender in a November election that Shaheen was once expected to win easily.

The Washington-based Republican ally American Crossroads immediately announced plans to invest $650,000 in a television advertising campaign against Shaheen beginning next week. And even before Brown joined the race, outside groups on both sides spent more than $1 million in recent months on television advertising to influence the New Hampshire Senate contest.

The League of Conservation Voters, an environmental group which spent more than $1 million attacking Brown in his 2012 campaign, launched a $220,000 series of TV ads attacking Brown in February.

Brown was to meet with voters in New Hampshire's North Country on Saturday.

The deal would require both candidates to donate half the cost of any outside group advertising campaign to a charity of the opposing candidate's choosing. The deal was credited with preventing the crush of negative advertising in the 2012 Massachusetts race that flooded airwaves in races in other states.

Shaheen included a signed copy of the pledge in her letter to Brown and asked him to sign and return it as soon as possible.


Springfield man sentenced to 7 years for his part in Connecticut home invasion

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Juan Otero and his partner dressed as delivery men in order to force their way into an elderly couple's home.


NEW BRITAIN, Conn. - A 34-year-old Springfield man was sentenced to seven years in prison after pleading guilty in New Britain Superior Court to his role in a 2010 home invasion in which he and another man forced their way into an elderly couple’s home by pretending to be delivery men.

Otero was sentenced Wednesday, one month after he pleaded guilty to a charge of first-degree robbery, according to court records.

Otero was originally arrested and charged with first-degree burglary, home invasion, first-degree robbery and second-degree assault and battery. All but the burglary charge were dropped in exchange for Otero pleading guilty, according to the New Britain Herald.

The Hartford Courant reports, Otero and an accomplice, Felix Pagan, 35, also of Springfield, forced their way into the home of an elderly couple on Dec. 9, 2010. The pair dressed in matching overalls and one of them carried a clipboard. They knocked on the front door, and when one of the residents opened it, they barged inside.

The two occupants of the house, a 64-year-old woman and a 62-year-old disabled man, were assaulted. The woman managed to flee the house and call for help.
Otero and Pagan then fled to their car, but Pagan apparently dropped the clipboard and a magazine that had his address on the label.

According to the Courant, Pagan was later apprehended by U.S. Marshals in Orlando, Fla. on March 2, 2011, and while in custody, he implicated Otero. Otero was charged in connection with the New Britain home invasion March 19, 2013.

According to court records, Pagan was sentenced to 10 years in prison and five years probation in October 2011.

The Currant also reports Otero’s 7-year-sentence is to run concurrently with time he is already serving in Massachusetts for unrelated charges.

Northampton ceremony to honor memory of Dominic Daley and James Halligan, 2 Irishmen wrongly convicted of Wilbraham murder 200 years ago

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The ceremony is planned for 10:30 a.m. Monday at the Daley and Halligan memorial off West Street.

NORTHAMPTON - Northampton on Monday will observe the 30th anniversary of Massachusetts officially exonerating Dominic Daley and James Halligan, two Irish immigrants who were hanged in Northampton more than 200 years ago for a Wilbraham murder they did not commit.

The ceremony is planned for 10:30 a.m. at the Daley and Halligan memorial at Hospital Hill off West Street. It will be led by Northwestern District Attorney David E. Sullivan, former Judge Michael Ryan and former Hampshire chief probation officer William O’Riordan, members of the Daley and Halligan Bicentennial Committee.

The observance marks the anniversary of their March 18, 1984 exoneration by then-Gov. Michael Dukakis.

Daley, 34, and Halligan, 27, were arrested in November 1805 after the body of a young farmer, Marcus Lyon, was discovered in Wilbraham, then part of Hampshire County.
They were convicted based on circumstantial evidence by a jury that deliberated for just a few minutes. When they were hanged on June 6, 1806, more than 15,000 people turned out to watch.

Some years later, another man confessed to the murder on his deathbed.

The trial of Daley and Halligan is considered one of the earliest documented examples of prejudices faced by Irish immigrants in America.

As Dukakis put it in his 1984 declaration, their trial and executions is a reminder that society needs to guard against “the intrusion of fear and prejudice in all judicial and governmental decisions, and to resolve to not allow the rights of any racial, ethnic or religious group to be denied or infringed as a result of such prejudices.”

The story of their trial and execution has been the subject of much historical research as well as even works of literature and music.

Most recently, it was the subject of a novel by Michael C. White called “The Garden of the Martyrs.” The book also inspired an opera by the same name by Eric Sawyer and Harley Erdman that was performed in September at Northampton’s Academy of Music.

"Keep Your Head Low," from "The Gardens of the Martyrs."

2 men from East Longmeadow, Longmeadow arrested for drag racing on R.I.'s Newport Bridge

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Marco Basile and Curtis Lussier were clocked by state police driving 91 mph in a 40 mph zone


NORTH KINGSTOWN, R.I. (AP) -- Authorities say two young Massachusetts men have spent the night in jail in Rhode Island on charges stemming from racing on the Newport Bridge.

Rhode Island state police say troopers recorded the two suspects racing their vehicles at 91 mph in a zone with a posted speed limit of 40 mph.

Police say Marco Basile of East Longmeadow, Mass., and Curtis Lussier of Longmeadow, Mass., were arrested shortly before 2 a.m. Saturday for reckless driving and drag racing.

They were held overnight at state police barracks and arraigned Saturday morning. Police say the 21-year-old Basile and 24-year-old Lussier were released after posting $2,000 bail.

They are scheduled to appear later in the 2nd District Court.

Map of the Newport Bridge.

Goodyear unveils next-generation blimp, seeks name

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The 246-foot airship fits 12 passengers and has a semi-rigid internal skeleton, a feature that wasn't present in earlier models and raises questions about whether it is truly a blimp, though the company still refers to it as such. The structure is covered by a silver, balloon-like body emblazoned with Goodyear's yellow logo on a blue background.

blimp.jpgThis photo taken Feb. 28, 2014, shows Zeppelin and Goodyear crews working together in prepping Goodyear's new zeppelin in the Wingfoot Lake Hangar for its debut in Suffield Township, Ohio. 

AKRON, Ohio — The next generation of the well-known Goodyear blimp is getting ready to take flight as the company moves toward replacing its old fleet of airships with a new trio.

The helium-filled airship, assembled at an Akron-area hangar and unveiled there Friday, is bigger, quicker and more maneuverable than earlier models, Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. said.

The 246-foot airship fits 12 passengers and has a semi-rigid internal skeleton, a feature that wasn't present in earlier models and raises questions about whether it is truly a blimp, though the company still refers to it as such. The structure is covered by a silver, balloon-like body emblazoned with Goodyear's yellow logo on a blue background.

It can travel at up to 73 mph and has custom computer-controlled avionics, an upgrade from the manual flight system used by the blimp pilots since the 1920s, the company said. It plans to build two more.

A spokesman wouldn't specify the cost of the new airship, which is expected to provide a longer flight range and better aerial broadcast capabilities for event coverage.

"The completion of the new blimp marks the beginning of a new era for our airship program and reflects Goodyear's commitment to remaining at the forefront of aerial broadcast coverage and support," Paul Fitzhenry, Goodyear's senior vice president for global communications, said in a statement.

The airship is scheduled to start test flights this month and go into service this summer.

It still needs one component: a name. Ohio-based Goodyear is collecting suggestions through a contest on its website until April 4. Whoever submits the chosen name will get to use the blimp for a day, the company said.

Thousands of suggestions were submitted in 2006 when the company named its Spirit of Innovation blimp, which now operates from Pompano Beach, Fla.

That is where the old Ohio blimp, Spirit of Goodyear, retired. It is being decommissioned this year.

Oil mars Alabama swamp months after crude train crash

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An environmental group now says it has found ominous traces of oil moving downstream along an unnamed tributary toward a big creek and the Tombigbee River, less than 3 miles away. And the mayor of a North Dakota town where a similar crash occurred in December fears ongoing oil pollution problems in his community, too.

train.jpgCrude oil seeps into water in an isolated wetland near Aliceville, Ala., on Wednesday, March 5, 2014. A train carrying nearly 3 million gallons of oil crashed at the site in November 2013, resulting in the pollution. Environmental regultors say cleanup and containment work is continuing, but critics contend the Alabama accident and others show the danger of transporting large amounts of oil in tanker trains. 

JAY REEVES
Associated Press

ALICEVILLE, Ala. — Environmental regulators promised an aggressive cleanup after a tanker train hauling 2.9 million gallons of crude oil derailed and burned in a west Alabama swamp in early November amid a string of North American oil train crashes.

So why is dark, smelly crude oil still oozing into the water four months later?

The isolated wetland smelled like a garage when a reporter from The Associated Press visited last week, and the charred skeletons of burned trees rose out of water covered with an iridescent sheen and swirling, weathered oil. A snake and a few minnows were some of the few signs of life.

An environmental group now says it has found ominous traces of oil moving downstream along an unnamed tributary toward a big creek and the Tombigbee River, less than 3 miles away. And the mayor of a North Dakota town where a similar crash occurred in December fears ongoing oil pollution problems in his community, too.

As the nation considers new means of transporting fuel over long distances, critics of crude oil trains have cited the Alabama derailment as an example of what can go wrong when tanker cars carrying millions of gallons of so-called Bakken crude leave the tracks. Questions about the effectiveness of the Alabama cleanup come as the National Transportation Safety Board considers tighter rules for the rail transportation of Bakken oil, which is produced mainly by the fracking process in the Bakken region of North Dakota and Montana. Oil production is increasing there, boosting the amount of oil being transported across the country.

Environmentalist John Wathen, who has conducted tests and monitored the Alabama site for months for Waterkeeper Alliance, said Genesee & Wyoming railroad and regulators did the bare minimum to spruce up an isolated, rural site and left once the tracks were repaired so trains could run again.

"I believe they really thought that because it's out of sight, out of mind, out in the middle of a swamp, that nobody was going to pay attention," said Wathen.

Regulators and the company deny any such thing occurred, however.

The Environmental Protection Agency and the Alabama Department of Environmental Management, which oversaw the cleanup, say more than 10,700 gallons of oil were skimmed from the water after the derailment, and workers collected about 203,000 gallons of oil from damaged rail cars using pumps. Another 290 cubic yards of oily dirt was excavated with heavy equipment, or enough to cover a basketball court with soil nearly 2 feet deep.

Yet four months later, officials still say no one knows exactly how much oil was spilled. That's mainly because an unknown amount of oil burned in a series of explosions and a huge fire that lasted for hours after the crash. Since no one knows how much oil burned, officials also can't say how much oil may be in the swamp.

About a month after the crash, the head of Alabama's environmental agency, Lance LeFleur, promised "aggressive recovery operations" in a written assessment for a state oversight commission. He said the oil had been contained in a "timely" manner and none had left the wetlands.

Michael Williams, a spokesman for the Connecticut-based Genesee & Wyoming, which owns the short-line Alabama & Gulf Coast Railway line where the crash occurred, said the company is still monitoring the site closely and maintaining a system of barriers meant to keep oil from spreading. The work is continuous, he said.

But regulators and the railroad confirm one of Wathen's worst fears: That environmental agencies let the railroad repair the badly damaged rail bed and lay new tracks before all the spilled oil was removed. Wathen calls the move a mistake that's behind the continuing seepage of oil into the water.

"I do agree that they needed to get the rail cars out. But there were other ways to do it," said Wathen. "Those would have been more expensive."

James Pinkney, an EPA spokesman in Atlanta, said the rail line had to be fixed quickly to remove oil and damaged rail cars that still contained crude from the wetland.

Agencies are now working with the company and its contractors to recover the remaining oil trapped in the rail bed, but it's unclear when or how that might happen.

"The EPA and ADEM are continuing to work together to ensure all recoverable oil is removed from the site," Pinkney said in a written response to questions.

Ed Overton, an environmental sciences professor at Louisiana State University, said spilled crude can linger at a site indefinitely if it's buried in the ground. Depending on the amount of oil that remains, he said, containment devices may be needed in the swamp for at least a couple of years.

But Bakken crude evaporates quickly once exposed to air because of its composition, said Overton, so the fact that oil remains in the swamp isn't "the end of the world."

"It's going to look bad for awhile," he said. "It's amazing how quickly Mother Nature can handle such things, but it will take time."

The cause of the derailment — which happened at a wooden trestle that was destroyed by the flames and has since been replaced by buried culverts that let water flow underneath the tracks — remains under investigation by the Federal Railroad Administration.

The crash site appears in better shape now than right after the derailment, partly because burned tanker cars misshapen by explosions are gone. Much of the water surrounding the site appears clear, and the odor from the site isn't bad enough to reach the home of Leila Hudgins, just a few hundred yards away.

"I haven't smelled anything," said Hudgins. "They did a good job. They hauled off truckload after truckload."

The crash site, located off an old dirt road and a new one that was built during the response, is accessible both by car and foot, but Hudgins said she hasn't looked closely at the spot where it happened.

The railroad said testing hasn't detected any groundwater contamination, and EPA said air monitoring ended about a month after the crash when it became apparent there were no airborne health hazards.

Still, questions linger. Wathen said he has been taking water samples several hundred yards downstream from the crash site and has detected the chemical fingerprint of so-called Bakken crude, which the train was carrying when it derailed.

"There's no question it is outside their containment area, and I think it's even further away," said Wathen. "This is an environmental disaster that could go on for years."

The Alabama train was on a southbound run when it derailed less than 3 miles south of Aliceville, a town of about 2,400 people near the Mississippi line. Another oil train derailed and burned in December at Casselton, N.D., and 47 people died in July when a train carrying Bakken oil exploded and burned in Quebec.

The mayor of Casselton, Ed McConnell said he has been keeping up with the Alabama cleanup because spilled oil also was buried under the rebuilt railroad tracks near his town of 2,400 people. He worries that oil will reappear on the ground at Casselton as the spring thaw begins in coming weeks.

"It's still in the ground here, too," said McConnell. "They've hauled a lot of dirt and stuff out. But they covered up the (oily) dirt before getting it all up and rebuilt the track to get it going."

Alabama's environmental agency said it still regularly visits the wreck site, which is encircled with the same sort of absorbent fencing, oil-snaring pom-poms and plastic barriers that were used on the Gulf Coast after the BP well blowout in 2010.

Once the "emergency" phase ends, the state environmental agency will install wells to monitor groundwater, said spokesman Jerome Hand.

Government regulators will approve any plans for removing remaining oil from the site, he said.

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