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Worcester diocese ordains 5 Catholic priests

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As the number of priests continues to dwindle in the U.S., the Roman Catholic Diocese of Worcester has just ordained five new priests.

crucifix.JPG

WORCESTER -- As the number of priests continues to dwindle in the U.S., the Roman Catholic Diocese of Worcester has just added five new priests to its ranks.

The five men, all currently deacons, were ordained Saturday by Bishop Robert McManus during a ceremony at St. Paul's Cathedral.

Juan Echavarria, Edwin Montana, Marcin Nowicki, Guillermo Ochoa and Nelson Rivera will be assigned to parishes within the diocese.

Diocese spokesman Ray Delisle said the new priests will help strengthen the ranks of the clergy, which has been thinned in recent years by retirements, deaths and decreased interest in entering the priesthood.

The diocese expects to train 10 more new priests in the next two years.
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Information from: Telegram & Gazette, http://www.telegram.com


Senators target Internet narcotics

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Two U.S. senators said Sunday they will ask federal authorities to crack down on a secretive narcotics market operated on the Internet with anonymous sales and untraceable currency.

MICHAEL GORMLEY, Associated Press

ALBANY, N.Y. — Two U.S. senators said Sunday they will ask federal authorities to crack down on a secretive narcotics market operated on the Internet with anonymous sales and untraceable currency.

Heroin, cocaine and methamphetamines are among the drugs being sold in the well-protected website apparently operating for just a few months.

Sens. Charles Schumer of New York and Joe Manchin of West Virginia, both Democrats, said they asked the Justice Department and Drug Enforcement Administration to shut down and investigate the website, often referred to as the Silk Road after an ancient Asian trade route.

"This audacious website should be shut down immediately," Manchin said.

"Never before has a website so brazenly peddled illegal drugs online," Schumer said. "By cracking down on the website immediately, we can help stop these drugs from flooding our streets."

The senators planned to release their letters to the agencies on Sunday.

A key to the illicit trade is use of a network by buyers and sellers that conceals their identity.

Websites including Gawker have reported on the site.

Schumer said the website began operating in February and uses "layers" of secrecy to thwart authorities. Sellers are told to make shipments in vacuum-sealed bags to avoid drug-detecting dogs.

WMECO: Power restored to Springfield customers

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The power company says patrols will continue Sunday to determine if more work is needed. Watch video


SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (AP) — Western Massachusetts Electric Co. says power has been restored to customers in the Springfield area.

The subsidiary of Northeast Utilities said Sunday that electricity has been restored to more than 34,000 customers. Tornadoes that killed three people swept through western Massachusetts on Wednesday.

The Springfield area towns of West Springfield, Springfield and Agawam sustained major damage from the tornado. Western Massachusetts Electric Co. says more than 14,000 customers in Springfield alone were affected during the worst of the storms.

The power company says patrols will continue Sunday to determine if more work is needed. It said that in some cases, customers may still have no power because electric service could not be restored due to severe structural damage to a house or business.

State trooper's funeral highlights perils facing highway cops

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A surge in job-related injuries for troopers struck by intoxicated or impaired motorists is causing concerns for public safety officials.

englehardt mug.jpgTrooper Ellen Englehardt

Monday's funeral for a Massachusetts State Trooper who succumbed to injuries from an 8-year-old incident involving a drunken driver who crashed into her vehicle illustrates the dangers facing troopers, dozens of whom have been injured on state roads over the past year.

Trooper Ellen Englehardt died Wednesday from injuries sustained in a July 2003 incident in Wareham, where a speeding drunk driver plowed into her parked cruiser and seriously injured the veteran trooper, according to David Procopio, a state police spokesman.

Procopio said the death of Engelhardt, whose funeral will be held Monday in Marshfield, marks the 32nd state police trooper killed in the line of duty since the department's creation in 1865.

Englehardt Senne.jpgEllen Englehardt, left, and the man who crashed into her police cruiser, William Senne, who apologized to the trooper for the 2003 drunken-driving incident that left her with debilitating injuries.
As Englehardt's family lays her to rest, the latest incident involving a trooper injured by an allegedly intoxicated driver is now wending its way through the courts.

Boston police said Cara Dellabarba, 28, of Weymouth, was drunk and driving the wrong way when she crashed into Trooper Brian Quigley on May 28. Dellabarba denied charges of operating under the influence of alcohol, negligent operation of a motor vehicle and leaving the scene of an accident at her arraignment last week.

Police said Dellabarba attempted to flee after crashing head-on with Quigley's cruiser. ate

Quigley is one of 45 state troopers injured since Jan. 1, 2010, with about half of those incidents involving drivers under the influence of drugs or alcohol, according to state police officials. The dramatic rise in trooper strikes over the past year has prompted the commanding officer of the state police to make a public appeal for motorists to slow down and watch out for troopers working the state's highways.

dellabarba.jpgAccompanied to court by her parents, Cara Dellabarba , right, 28, was arraigned in Dorchester District Court in Boston on May 31. She's accused of driving drunk on May 28, traveling the wrong way on Morrissey Boulevard in Boston and hitting State Trooper Brian Quigley's cruiser head-on. Quigley was treated at Boston Medical Center and released.

Englehardt managed to hold on for several years after her incident. But she ultimately succumbed to her "debilitating injuries," Procopio said.

Englehardt was struck by motorist William Senne, of Wayland and Cape Cod, was sentenced to 2 1/2 years in the Plymouth County Jail & House of Correction. He also was ordered to serve probation and to perform 500 hours of community service.

Engelhardt was seated in her cruiser, which was parked along the shoulder of Route 25 in Wareham, when Senne hit her car.

Meanwhile, a popular running race was named in Englehardt's memory, and a Mid-Cape Highway interchange on Cape Cod was dedicated to her. Englehardt was a longtime fixture at Exit 7 of the Mid-Cape Highway (Route 6) in Yarmouth, where she often was seen directing traffic.

GOP presidential hopeful Jon Huntsman maps out 2012 strategy

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Huntsman said his role will be to make certain that the candidates are talking seriously about fixing Washington, from spending to entitlement programs such as Social Security that many have declared off limits.

Jon Huntsman.jpgView full sizeFormer U.S. Ambassador to China and former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman applauds at the commencement ceremony at the University of South Carolina on Saturday, May 7 2011 in Columbia, S.C. Huntsman, weighing a Republican White House bid, used his first formal event after stepping down as President Barack Obama's ambassador to China to confront the line on his resume that conservatives were mostly likely to declare a deal-breaker. In a high-profile speech to the University of South Carolina, Huntsman said patriotism should trump partisanship and defended his two years in Beijing as the Democratic administration's top diplomat. (AP Photo/Mary Ann Chastain)

NORTH CONWAY, N.H. (AP) — Toeing the 2012 line, former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman sounded like a full-fledged White House candidate Saturday set to join the field this month as he mapped out a campaign strategy that bypasses early-voting Iowa to focus on New Hampshire, South Carolina and Florida.

In an Associated Press interview during a visit to New Hampshire's rural North Country, Huntsman said his party's nomination race has "never been this wide open." The unsettled nature, he said, benefits the kind of campaign he's preparing to undertake.

"That uncertainty is good. It allows people to get in, assess, express their opinions, see whether their ideas rise or fall. ... It's unlike any other election cycle in recent history," Huntsman said between stops.

Just five weeks removed as President Barack Obama's ambassador to China, Huntsman said the GOP campaign at this point is about personalities, not policy, but that will change as the field firms up.

"This is the marketplace of political ideas. This is how America operates," Huntsman said. "It's a free market. It's free-wheeling. From the outside, it looks unpredictable. ... There's a circus-like free market."

He's not rushing to join that circus. He's skipping a debate June 13 in New Hampshire; he said he won't be an official candidate by then.

Iowa's lead-off caucuses are out for him, Huntsman said, because of his opposition to subsidies for corn-based ethanol. Why waste time trying to court Iowa voters who see that support as a way of life and a deal-breaker, he said.

"I'm not competing in Iowa for a reason," he said.

Look for him a lot in New Hampshire, where independent voters who can cast ballots in either party's primary are the largest political bloc. They twice rewarded Arizona Sen. John McCain in his presidential campaigns; many of Huntsman's advisers are veterans of those runs.

Then it's on to South Carolina, which is open to anyone, and then to Florida, which he called his "make-or-break state." Television ads hold huge sway in Florida and Huntsman, a successful and wealthy businessman, could blanket the airwaves with ads if he makes it that far.

During a three-day New Hampshire swing to introduce himself to voters who have the nation's first primary, he held court at breakfast, indulged in ice cream at a fair and dropped by a veterans' hall.

That kind of campaigning, a hallmark of this state, contrasted with former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin's visit last week, when she was treated more as a celebrity that a potential contender, or former Massachusetts' Gov. Mitt Romney's choreographed race-entering announcement on Thursday.

Huntsman is trying to portray himself as an "honest broker" willing to say what others will not. For instance:

—He said the next budget should consider cuts in defense spending, sacrosanct for hawkish Republicans. "If we can't find cuts in the defense budget, we're not looking carefully enough," he said.

—He isn't eager to dispatch U.S. military might. "We need to look at a map and say, realistically, 'Where do we need to be?' They all add up and they all cost us something."

—America's economic decline hasn't been solely Democrats' fault. "It's happened now during many administrations. ... It's taken a lot of presidents to get us where we are today, a lot of deployments, a lot of wars, a lot of engagements. You add them all up."

He said he understands that approach may not be the best political course.

"If you go down talking about it, that's OK. What is important is that you're honest with the American people. They're ready for that kind of discussion," Huntsman said.

Huntsman said his role will be to make certain that the candidates are talking seriously about fixing Washington, from spending to entitlement programs such as Social Security that many have declared off limits.

"If you're looking to cut a family budget or a business table, you put everything on the table. You don't automatically dismiss things as sacred cows," he said. "It's just not intellectually defensible. ... Any other approach would smack of politics. I don't think we can afford to do that."

Huntsman, who served three Republican administrations, said his time as envoy in Beijing for a Democratic president would not be the disqualifier some have predicted.

He cited Gen. David Petraeus, Obama's pick to lead the CIA, and outgoing Defense Secretary Robert Gates; their service dates to the George W. Bush administration.

"They are representing every American's interests," Huntsman said.

They are not, however, running for president against the man who put them in their current jobs.

"I'm surprised that we've gotten to a point where we don't put our country first and put our party first. ... Accepting an assignment from everyone's president during a time of war, during a time of economic hardship is putting your country first.

"I won't shy away from that," he said. "If someone wants to hold that against me, they can."

He said in the interview that he wasn't certain about his presidential ambitions before accepting the China post.

"Sometimes you don't see yourself the way other people do. It wasn't something that was a burning desire within, you know?"

Three days after tornado, state police rescue puppy from Monson house collapse

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On Saturday, three days after a series of twisters shredded buildings from Westfield to Sturbridge, a puppy was rescued from the wreckage of a home collapse in Monson, according to state police.

trooper crop.jpgTrooper Brian Pearl and Shadow, the dog Pearl rescued Saturday from a Monson house collapse.

MONSON -- It may very well be one of the few happy stories to emerge from the rubble of Wednesday's tornadoes, which cut a swath of destruction through Hampden County last week.

On Saturday, three days after a series of twisters shredded buildings from Westfield to Sturbridge, a puppy was rescued from the wreckage of a home collapse at 20 Stewart Avenue in Monson, according to David Procopio, a spokesman for the Massachusetts State Police.

Trooper Brian Pearl, who's stationed at the Sturbridge barracks, crawled under a pile of splintered wood and broken glass and plucked a 25-pound pooch from the rubble, police said.

Pearl had been patrolling Monson, which was among the region's hardest-hit towns, when a woman flagged him down for help.

"She said, 'We found a dog hiding or trapped under a collapsed roof,' " Pearl said in statement recalling the rescue.

"You could hear the dog barking but you couldn't see it. He was way, way, way under there," the trooper said.

Pearl then grabbed the animal pole he keeps in his cruiser -- a long pole with a loop at the end to capture reluctant dogs and other animals -- and began climbing under the rubble pile on his hands and knees.

Pearl homed in on the dog, but it took four attempts before he successfully slipped the loop around the dog's head.

As word of the rescue spread quickly through the storm-weary town, the Carabetta family arrived minutes later to lay claim to the puppy -- a six-month Sharpei-Chow mix named Shadow.

The Carabettas, who live nearby, said Shadow had been missing since a tornado steamrolled through Monson on Wednesday, destroying or seriously damaging virtually everything in its path.

According to state police, Audrey Carabetta said her family retreated to their cellar with one of their two dogs, but Shadow got "sucked out of the house by the tornado."

She said her family searched everywhere for Shadow and posted pictures online, but had pretty much given up hope of finding the dog alive.

Pearl described the rescue as "very gratifying." .

Police said the dog wasn't injured in the storm. But he was wicked tired and hungry.

THE MAP BELOW shows the approximate location of where a puppy was found alive and well Saturday under the rubble of a collapsed home at 20 Stewart Avenue, Monson:


View Larger Map

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Holyoke High School graduates told to "set powerful, positive, challenging goals"

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Salutatorian Erin Corrigan took a photo of the class of 2011 from her spot on the dais. "In this camera is now a memory of the day we officially grew up," she said.

HOLYOKE - Mayor Elaine Pluta told Holyoke High School graduates that "the small dreams are over" and now "the sky's the limit" at the school's 146th commencement Sunday.

"The time flies, so please enjoy your life and make good choices," said Pluta. "Only you are now responsible for your own future and the choices you will make."

Pluta delivered the congratulatory address on the 50th anniversary of her own graduation from Holyoke High in 1961.

Out of 157 students in the class of 2011, 42 graduated with honors and 17 with high honors.

Salutatorian Erin Corrigan spoke to her peers about the memories they shared and created her own: she took a photo of the class from her spot on the dais.

"In this camera is now a memory of the day we officially grew up," she said.

Valedictorian and class treasurer Noah Whitcomb said the school and the city have a less-than-ideal reputation, but he and his classmates will reach out to the "skeptics" and show them what they're made of.

"We must share our passion with them so they will develop a greater understanding of who we truly are," he said. "We are impassioned about our school and city and we always will be."

"People who have passion, and nurture and share it, will be happy and successful in life," he said.

Principal Diane L. Bauer told the graduates to keep aiming higher than their achievements have brought them thus far.

"I want you to set powerful, positive, challenging goals. These goals, backed by perseverance, will make your dreams come true," said Bauer. "Do not follow the path in front of you. Instead, blaze your own trail."

Gov. Patrick in Springfield: "We'll do everything we can" to help tornado victims

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At the Department of Transitional Assistance, state and local workers have set up a command center to provide information and help.

Springfield, 6/5/11, Staff Photo by David Molnar -- From left, Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick, Springfield Mayor Domenic J. Sarno and City Councilor Timothy C. Allen at an informal press conference at Roosevelt Ave. and Island Pond Rd., one of the stops on the Governor's tour of Springfield's devastation.


SPRINGFIELD - Governor Deval Patrick and Mayor Domenic J. Sarno met with constituents Sunday, offering words of comfort and insight into what victims of Wednesday's tornadoes can do to recover.

At the Department of Transitional Assistance, state and local workers have set up a command center to provide information and help. Patrick said they will be there from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. every day "until everyone who needs assistance has been served."

The office is one of three that have been transformed into Massachusetts Storm Assistance Centers.

"We've had folks going door-to-door in the affected neighborhoods just letting people know that there are resources here for information," he said.

Small business owners can take advantage of several financial assistance programs from the state. More assistance from the federal government may be on the way, he said.

"Once we get the presidential declaration of disaster, presuming we qualify for it, there will be some federal aid that comes in as well," he said. "We'll do everything we can."

Patrick said everyone affected should check their private insurance policies before seeking government aid.

The command center at 95 Liberty St. is one of three in the region.

The other centers are at the Department of Developmental Service Central/West Regional Office, 171 State Avenue, Monson/Palmer Line, and the Department of Transitional Assistance Office, 1 North Street, Southbridge.

Sarno has asked all business owners who were affected to contact the city's Office of Planning & Economic Development to take part in the Emergency Business Assistance program. He also asked that unaffected businesses help out their peers in any way they can.

Patrick expressed gratitude to all the workers and volunteers who have "stepped up."

"We've got to be patient. We're going to get through this and we're going to get through it together," he said.

This map shows the location of the Massachusetts Storm Assistance Center in Springfield.

View Larger Map



Monson pastor delivers message of hope after tornado; massive volunteer effort under way to help those in need

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Information for residents is being posted at www.monson-ma.gov, and on the Monson Tornado Watch 2011 Facebook page.

MONSON - Rev. Robert Marrone, pastor of the First Church of Monson, told parishioners gathered in his damaged church at Sunday's service that "thing are going to get better."

Marrone said the town will recover, and that the most important thing is that everyone is safe. He thanked everyone for coming, "in the aftermath of unspeakable devastation."

Wednesday's tornado stormed through Monson, ravaging downtown, and neighborhoods behind the Town Office Building on Main Street, up by the First Church off Ely Road, and in the areas of Waid, Cote, Carpenter, East Hill and Pinnacle roads.

"We're now picking up the pieces and trying to make sense of what happened," Marrone said. "We are grateful that so few lives were lost here in Massachusetts . . . After seeing the devastation, this is nothing less than a miracle."

Officials said there was a tornado-related death, Joan Bacon of Bethany Road. She died the day after in the hospital.

"Today our hearts are in turmoil. We are still in shock. We don't know exactly what to do, but we do offer you our prayers today," Marrone told those gathered.

"This has been quite a week. Words seem insufficient to capture the full effect of what has happened," Marrone said.

Marrone said that some people may be wondering, where was God on Wednesday, and "did he take a break between 4 and 6?" That was when the tornado struck. He began seeing evidence of God's presence shortly after, when he saw neighbors appear out of their homes, checking on each other, helping each other.

The next day, people rallied and began preparing food and organizing a response. The First Church, despite losing its steeple to the tornado, is still operational and has become the center for information and recovery efforts.

Donations have been pouring in, "the basement looks like a grocery store," Marrone told the parishioners.

"Volunteers are coming in, saying, 'What can I do?' . .. A woman drove three hours to come and clean people's houses," Marrone said.

Parishioner Kelly J. Couture, of 23 State St. lost the roof of her home to the tornado.

Her husband, Joe, just stepped through the door when the tornado hit. Joe Couture said they are staying with friends.

"We don't want to keep eating all their food," he said.

The Coutures were "shopping" in the church's basement.

What used to be the Sunday School area has been transformed into something that really does look like a grocery store. Everything is organized- pasta in one area, canned goods in another. There are baby products, pet food, Ramen noodles, toiletries. Marrone said they got so much clothing they had to start turning it away.

There are toys, snacks, everything a family would need.

Marrone said he is heartened by the outpouring of generosity.

Volunteers were running the kitchen upstairs, serving lunch. Sunday night, another community meal was planned for 5 p.m. He estimated that more than 1,000 meals were being served each night.

Outside, the grills were going. Hamburgers and hot dogs were on the menu. Those interested in volunteering could sign up at a table. Church member Brian Connors was coordinating efforts outside. Tarps, work gloves and water all were available. Teams of high school students were hauling bottled water in wagons around town to emergency workers.

Shuttle buses were running from the church, bringing sandwiches and beverages to the decimated and hard to reach neighborhoods.

Lisa and Christopher Jalbert, along with Kathy Dreyer and her daughter, Jillian, drove to King Street and East Hill Road, where public access is limited. Jillian Dreyer, who now lives in Atlanta, Ga., took a plane back Saturday to help with the volunteer effort.

Another bus, operated by Jeff Lord, was taking residents from Colonial Village, the elderly housing complex on State Street, to the church so they could get food. The town's supermarket, Adams IGA, had part of its roof blown off, and windows smashed in from the tornado, leaving the town without a market.

F. Davis Johnson, with some yard tools in hand, was preparing to go to 126 East Hill Road with fellow volunteers, Reese Connors, 15, and Chris Riley, 16, all of Monson.

Johnson's home was undamaged, but he noted he had problems during the flood in 2005 that washed out bridges and roads in town.

"It's our turn now to help," Johnson said.

Marrone said the church now needs monetary donations, which will be given to families in need. There are families without insurance who lost everything.

"We want to help people in any way we can. A lot is going to be needed," Marrone said. "The real issue is the people who lost their homes. Everything is destroyed. Our steeple can be replaced."

Information for residents is being posted at www.monson-ma.gov, and on the Monson Tornado Watch 2011 Facebook page.

Selectman Edward A. Maia said residents need to be wary of scam artists.

Residents should not pay for work until it is done. Licenses should be checked. Residents also should get signed contracts. There have been at least three looting incidents, including one on Stewart Avenue.

Thomas D. Metcalfe was at First Church, doing shopping for his fellow elderly neighbors at Colonial Village. He said of the 78 residents there, who range in age from 70 to 95, all but two could stay. One of the buildings had to be condemned due to storm damage, he said.

"I'm picking up things easy to cook," Metcalfe said.

Metcalfe watched the tornado coming from his window, and saw a tree fly by. State Street is next to the Town Office Building, one of the neighborhoods that experienced rampant destruction. The Town Office Building lost its roof, and is unsafe to be in. Town offices, starting Monday, will operate out of the former Hillside School on Thompson Street.

Jackie Rogalski was clearing branches from the sidewalk outside her roofless 1870 home, which was built in the 2nd Empire Italianate style. She said that on Wednesday, her husband Walter was grilling as the tornado approached.

"He just made it inside when we saw the gazebo go by," Rogalski, of Main Street, said. "It came over so quick."

Library Director Katie Krol, who was walking downtown on Sunday, said children's programming was going on when the tornado struck. She said she somehow managed to squeeze 14 people into a bathroom. The library is closed indefinitely, and had damage to its roof.

"It all took five seconds," she said of the tornado.

"To walk out and see this . . ."

Monson was the picture of a small, New England town, with its quaint downtown, historic churches, buildings and homes. The tornado ripped through Main Street, the gateway to the community, leaving downed wires, trees and debris in its wake.

Marrone reminded the parishioners that things will be different, but life will go on. Trees will be replanted. Homes will be rebuilt.

"There are going to have happy days again," Marrone said.

Obituaries today: Faith Beard taught elementary school in Gateway district

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Obituaries from The Republican.

060511_faith_beard.jpgFaith J. Beard

Faith J. Beard, of Blandford, passed away on Thursday. She was born in Buffalo, N.Y., and was raised in Armonk, N.Y. She graduated from Smith College in 1953, and was married two weeks later to Henry S. Beard, who predeceased her in 1966. She earned her masters of education from the University of Massachusetts. Beard taught elementary school in the Gateway district for 27 years, retiring in 1996.

Obituaries from The Republican:

High school students accept diplomas across Western Mass

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In Longmeadow 243 students graduated; 95 percent of the students will to college.

2011 Holyoke High School's 146th Commencement6/5/11 Holyoke High School - Staff photo by Michael Beswick -Capturing the moment before Holyoke's 146th Commencement is Zujeily Stephens (left) and Alyssa White.

Families and friends cheered on hundreds of students donned in caps and gowns during graduations held across Western Massachusetts Sunday.

In West Springfield, 300 students were advised to remember where they come from as they go through their journey in life.

“When you are in doubt or feel a little bit lost allow me to offer a suggestion, wear your (school) IDs,” said Principal Michael J. Richard. “It will remind you of who you are and where you have been and it will also identify you as a West Side Terrier, a label you should all be proud of.”

Richard said he is proud of the senior class. About 80 percent of the students will go on to a four-year colleges, with others joining the military, entering the workforce or going on to a vocational school.

“I know we are sending a confidant, compassionate and creative group out into this world,” he said.
Gallery preview


Class valedictorian Summiya Qureshi and salutatorian Grace H. Slawski gave their classmates words of encouragement and hope for the future.

“We are all in this together. West Springfield High School is part of a diverse city, full of people of all different ethnicity’s. We are immigrants who come from all over the world and we are talented young individuals,” Slawski said.

In East Longmeadow 231 students graduated with 90 percent going on to college, said Principal Michael Knybel.

“The class of 2011 set the tone for the entire student body, no other class has done this with such distinction, “ he said.”

The class turned in a documented 15,436 hours of community service, volunteering their time at Shriners Hospital and Mercy and Baystate Medical Center.

Valedictorian Max Y. Lu, 17, who will go on to Harvard University in the fall, delivered a comical speech about the success of teen sensation Justin Bieber and credited his mom and dad for helping him make it where he is today.

“Hi, mommy, hi daddy, thanks,” he said.

“As we leave the familiar halls of East Longmeadow High and enter the world we must actively take risks and embrace change,” he said.

Mayor Elaine Pluta told 157 Holyoke High School graduates that “the small dreams are over” and now “the sky’s the limit” at the school’s 146th commencement Sunday. Pluta delivered the congratulatory address on the 50th anniversary of her own graduation from Holyoke High in 1961.

“The time flies, so please enjoy your life and make good choices,” said Pluta. “Only you are now responsible for your own future and the choices you will make.”

Salutatorian Erin Corrigan spoke to her peers about the memories they shared and created her own: she took a photo of the class of 2011 from her spot on the dais.

“In this camera is now a memory of the day we officially grew up,” she said.

Valedictorian Noah Whitcomb said the school and the city have a less-than-ideal reputation, but he and his classmates will reach out to the “skeptics” and show them what they’re made of.

“We must share our passion with them so they will develop a greater understanding of who we truly are,” he said. “We are impassioned about our school and city and we always will be.”

In Longmeadow, 243 graduates accepted their diplomas. More than 95 percent of the students will go on to college.

“The members of the class are contributors, you built a reputation as a group of young people committed to improving their school and community,” said school principal Lawrence Berte.

As in previous years, there is no valedictorian and salutatorian selected for the graduating class. Various students spoke and performed musical numbers for the audience.

Class President Edward O’Reilly told his classmates they should not forget the past, but they should embrace the future.

“In fact our future is so bright, I have to put my shades on,” he said and put on sunglasses along with the school principal and other students on stage.

BOOM TOWN: Springfield becomes vital to the Civil War effort

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Just a few days after the degrading incident of having to give up their arms to Boston, the local soldiers at Hampden Park were notified by the governor that they would be among the volunteer companies called up for a three-year enlistment as part of Lincoln’s call for another 75,000 men.

SCT CIVIL 2 GORDON.JPGSpringfield could outfit Union volunteers from head to toe and take care of all their weapons needs.


By the late spring of 1861 the stars were aligned for Springfield to play a major role in the newly born Civil War.

Already at the crossroads of major east-west and north-south rail lines, home to more than 200 manufacturing concerns, and designated a rendezvous for troop recruitment and training, Springfield’s position was solidified with the fall of Harper’s Ferry. The Springfield Armory was now the last federal arsenal in operation. The former commandant of that facility, Col. James Ripley, had been named Chief of Ordnance for the United States Army.

Since he spent 13 years at the Armory, from 1841-1854, and was responsible for most of the major building there, including the massive the arsenal with its clock tower and storage area for thousands of arms, Ripley was well aware of the capacity of that facility and other private manufacturers in the area. He also had the nation’s checkbook at his disposal. And he wasn’t afraid to use it.

James_Ripley_edit_edited-1.jpgCol. James Ripley


For the Union soldier Springfield area merchants and manufacturers could supply their every need, from the clothes on their backs to the shoes on their feet, to the military muskets and personal pistols to the swords at their sides, to the candies and gum they savored. There were railroads and steamships for transportation, cannons and howitzers for annihilation, and fireworks for recreation — all locally made.

In 1861 the Brigham brothers received an order for 60,000 uniforms for the war effort that they made at their Main Street Springfield store. The D. H. Brigham Company made nearly $500,000 in one year of the war. L.C. Smith was advertising lace boots under the headline, “ATTENTION SOLDIERS, “ after which he added the comfort and durability of his footwear “cannot be surpassed.”

Several photographers were advertising their studios for soldiers’ portraits. These would often show the wooden handle of a small pistol peeking out from a belt or sash. Chances are that it was a personal sidearm made by Smith & Wesson. These small caliber weapons were often given as gifts to departing soldiers. When the war started Smith & Wesson went from making 40 revolvers per day to 2,500. By war’s end the company sold 111,149 pistols out of their Stockbridge Street factory and shops licensed by them.

Many Springfield residents made the short trip to Chicopee to work in the Ames Manufacturing Company . In June of 1861 Ames received an order for 17,000 swords from Ripley’s Ordnance Department. They also manufactured howitzers, mortars, cannon, and various projectiles. But it was the Civil War sword that made the company famous.

When it came to weapons manufacturing and its impact on Springfield nothing was more important than the Armory. At the beginning of the war in April there were 250 employees turning out 800 guns a month, within a week of the bombardment of Fort Sumter that jumped to 1,500 and by the end of the conflict, 2,600 workers were making 3,000 guns a month. One in every four men in Springfield worked for the Armory by the time the war ended in 1865.
7_69_10 Armory Civil War.jpgSketch of Springfield Armory work place during Civil War


The Republican reported, on June 1, 1861, that there was still “an undue proportion of foul weather, and the farmers are greatly behind in their spring planting.” The newspaper explained that “a wind of uncommon severity, taking on the form of a severe tornado, and doing considerable injury to trees, fences and houses” visited parts of New England.

Despite the talk of tornadoes, or how entertaining the circus was the night before, or the fact that clam chowder, fresh shad and innumerable delicacies were being served that night at Evans’ Union Restaurant, the number one topic was the war and that lack of action between the soldiers of the North and South near Washington D.C.

The men of the 10th Regiment who had been occupying the barns and sheds at Springfield’s Hampden Park for more than a month were, according to The Republican, “murmuring at the indifference with which they have been treated by the state authorities.” The boredom of camp life and their anger over not being called to the front was about to turn to humiliation.

The soldiers, including the Springfield City Guard, were ordered to turn in the Armory muskets they had been issued the month before and they were taken to the state arsenal in Cambridge to be distributed to Boston area units being equipped for “actual service.”

“There seems to be need enough of soldiers at Washington; but the road thither from Massachusetts is blocked by Boston,” The Republican reported on June 3.

On the next day the newspaper ran a story on the death of Stephen Douglas, whom The Republican referred to “as a man of great power.” His famous Lincoln-Douglas debates were recounted and he was credited with offering the President “his hand a friendly counsel” before leaving Washington. What the newspaper didn’t report is that Douglas’ reconciliation with Lincoln to help solidify a nation about to go to war was actually the work of Springfield Congressman George Ashmun, a long-time friend of both men.

Just a few days after the degrading incident of having to give up their arms to Boston, the local soldiers at Hampden Park were notified by the governor that they would be among the volunteer companies called up for a three-year enlistment as part of Lincoln’s call for another 75,000 men. The Western Massachusetts regiments would most likely be armed with English Enfield rifle muskets purchased by state authorities from Great Britain.

“These rifles are much like those made at the U.S. Armory in Springfield , and were modeled originally after them; but they are not, on the whole, considered so good an arm as the American,” the paper reported.

It wasn’t only the men who served, or wanted to serve their nation, who were angry over decision by the government. The Republican carries a humorous item aimed at the women who wanted to serve under the headline — PRETTY WOMEN AT A DISCOUNT:

“For the first time since Eve ate the apple, her daughters are regretting that they are fair. It has been decreed by the powers that be, that none but plain women, and those over thirty at that, shall be accepted as army nurses. And even these are to be rendered more unbecoming by the abolition of hoops and the adoption of a regulation dress. Nothing has been said as yet about the shaving of the head and the style of hood to be worn, but it is expected the authorities will attend to these little items next...”

A “pretty woman” who stated her case was quoted as saying:

“Handsome women are in dismay. The Ladies’ Relief Association refuses all volunteer nurses except plain ones...Beauty is to stay at home and scrape lint!”

On a more serious note, The Republican ran several articles on Gen. Benjamin Butler’s holding escaped slaves as “contrabands of war” and using their services to support the Union war effort. It was obvious the subject stirred the newspaper’s long history of antislavery. This issue would divide Northern politicians but it would not go away and eventually led to the first steps towards emancipation. The Republican pointed out that “the destruction of slavery should be one of the penalties of continued rebellion.”

Butler was the Massachusetts general from Lowell who commanded the first trainload of troops to head for Washington. On their way there he stopped in Springfield in April, shortly after Fort Sumter’s fall, and gave a rousing speech to thousands gathered at the railroad depot.

Readers of The Republican were treated to a story on June 8 that must have lifted their spirits. Commanding Gen. Winfield Scott, at a Washington dinner party, told those present that our soldiers were fighting against their brothers as he was against many friends of his own in the south and he wanted to “shed as little blood as possible.” He added that he would be in command of 80,000 troops in a few days and predicted the rebels would be so hemmed in that “in ninety days the active contest would be ended.”

General Scott was only off on his timing by about four years, but his hopes for as little bloodshed as possible was even further off the mark, by about 620,000 dead soldiers. But that was in a future known only to those who can look back in time. The citizens of Springfield were reading of rumors that large bodies of troops were gathering at a place called Manassas Junction or Bull Run.

Patriotism was at a fever pitch and by the end of June there was a growing number of ads in the paper touting The Glorious Fourth and the importance of buying lots of fireworks because “THE UNION MUST BE SAVED.”

Springfield tornado cleanup assisted by Boston Police, others

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Gov. Deval L. Patrick visited Sunday to continue to examine tornado damage.

tornado.jpgJean Mitchell of Arcadia Blvd., left, gets a hug from outreach volunteer Elizabeth Cardona, center, also of Springfield, as Mitchell thanks and relates her tornado experience to Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick at an informal press conference at Roosevelt Ave. and Island Pond Rd., one of the stops on the Governor's tour of Springfield's devastation.

Looking down his side yard, Alan Smith predicted it would have taken him all day to clear a quarter of the path and months to clear the back yard of the ancient oaks that fell during Wednesday’s tornadoes.

Instead, a squadron of police officers from the Boston area armed with chain saws and a small Bobcat tractor cleared his Agnes Street back yard in an hour and then moved onto another home in the East Forest Park neighborhood.

“I have nothing but five stars for them,” Smith, a retired firefighter, said.

Four days after a tornado ripped through parts of Springfield, West Springfield, Westfield, Monson, Wilbraham and Brimfield, residents are trying to reclaim anything they owned and rebuild.

Gov. Deval L. Patrick made his third trip to the city Sunday, visiting a command center and walking through East Forest Park.

There are financial assistance programs also set up for small business owners, and the state unemployment assistance department will help those who lost their jobs because of the tornado, he said.

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“We’ve had folks going door-to-door in the affected neighborhoods just letting people know that there are resources here for information,” he said.

Patrick expressed gratitude to all the workers and volunteers who have “stepped up.”

The emergency assistance center the governor visited was established by the state Department of Transitional Assistance at 95 Liberty St. It will be open from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. while cleanup and recovery efforts continue.

Patrick, area congressmen and Mayor Domenic J. Sarno have been pushing for assistance but have to wait for Federal Emergency Management Agency officials to assess the damage to ensure it is heavy enough to warrant federal disaster assistance.

That is expected to take about two weeks, Thomas T. Walsh, spokesman for Sarno, said.

Residents of the hardest-hit areas say that help is essential.

“This city will lay down on its back without the help of the federal government,” said Michael Carney, an East Forest Park resident and Springfield Police officer.

Members of the Boston area’s Irish American Police Officers Association, inspired by a deputy police superintendent who grew up in the neighborhood, decided to drive the two hours to Springfield to see what they could do to help.

“This weekend was a tough time to mobilize with graduations, but eight of us came out, said Kevin M. Shea, a sergeant with the Belmont police and president of the Irish association.

The crew arrived in Springfield at about 8 a.m. and was joined by several local volunteers, including East Longmeadow Police Chief Douglas Mellis and Ryan Cuimby, East Longmeadown’s information technology director.

The group of about a dozen stopped at least 15 houses in the about nine hours, Shea said.

“One woman we spoke to off Arcadia said she got a quote of $7,500 to remove a tree, it was on her roof. We took it down for nothing,” Shea said.

The team moved from spot to spot, removing trees from roofs and driveways.

“We went to one place and helped someone who couldn’t get a car out of the driveway. When we heard the next neighbor was an elderly woman, we helped her too and across the street there was a guy with one little chain saw, with little kids and we cut up a tree into small lengths,” Mellis said.

Driving through the neighborhood, Springfield Police Officers Carney and Capt. Robert T. McFarlin said they talked to the crews and offered suggestions to where they could help: There was a former judge’s house, a past police commissioner needed assistance, a retired police lieutenant had half a tree on his house and many were regular citizens.

The officers and Mellis all live in the neighborhood and were said they felt lucky to have the tornado miss their homes. Many other current and retired police and firefighters also own homes in the area that was among the hardest hit by the tornadoes.

“In New England, you don’t expect this. We are used to blizzards,” McFarlin said. “You can’t imagine the destruction.”

McFarlin pointed to one home that was flattened on Arcadia Street, near the Smith’s home. He said he would ride his bike there and admire the house.

The Smiths lost large oak trees from their property and shingles from their roof, and were still sweeping up glass from many broken windows. The cleaning crew that was augmented by their grandson and a few of his friends, made it easier, Virginia Smith said.

“It is just overwhelming. Really overwhelming,” she said.

The city will give tornado victims priority when it comes to inspection services, and its housing department has been activated to assist people who need housing. Already some apartment owners have called to report vacancies, Walsh said.

Schools are opening again after being closed Thursday and Friday. But students from Elias Brookings and Dryden will not be able to return because of damage to their schools.

Most of the power has been restored to homes, but many in East Forest Park did not get electricity back until Saturday night or Sunday morning. There are also still some sporadic outages.

About 245 people were staying at the emergency shelter that had been moved Sunday from Central High School back to the MassMutual Center, which was used as a shelter on Wednesday. In between, those were left homeless were also housed in the Greenleaf Community Center, which was too small to handle all of the displaced.

The Pioneer Valley Chapter of the American Red Cross is providing cots and food and giving referrals to those seeking help, said Richard Knight, sheltering manager, who came from Connecticut to assist.

Families staying at the MassMutual Center Sunday night said it has been difficult to keep moving from place-to-place. Marisol Lozada fell and broke her arm during one move and a 92-year-old woman had a stroke during a second, officials said.

“We need to stay in one place. I cannot sleep, I just wake up,” Lozada said.

Lozada said she lost her duplex at 15-17 Searle Place during the storm. At least two trees went through the house while her six children, aged 15, 13,10,7, 4 and 6 months, were cowering in the basement with her sister and sister-in-law who live on the other side of the duplex.

Carmen Rodriguez said she lived on the first floor of 452 Central St., which was destroyed. Moving from shelter to shelter has been especially difficult for her because she uses a wheelchair.

A neighbor saved her life. She was sitting on the porch when the tornado came through. He pushed over her chair and dragged her inside by her arms.

“I lost my walker, my clothing my money,” she said.

In West Springfield, about 120 people are staying in the two shelters at the Coburn Elementary School and West Springfield Middle School. Two people in that city died, and about eight to nine homes will have to be torn down, Mayor Edward J. Gibson said.

“We have another 30 homes that will be habitable once they are repaired,” he said. “We are working to get people into their homes when they can.”

Most of the streets in West Springfield and Westfield have been cleared and opened. The south end of Main Street in Springfield remained closed until buildings that are in danger of collapsing can be removed or repaired.

In Westfield, most of the out-of-down crews from the Massachusetts Department of Transportation and others are expected to leave by Monday. Emergency repairs to Munger Hill Elementary School will allow it to reopen, Mayor Daniel Knapik said.

“We lost three to five homes and there are damage to over 100,” he said.

Republican reporter Brian Steele contributed to this story.



Western Massachusetts communities announce meetings for the week of June 6

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Here is a list of major municipal meetings for the coming week: Amherst Mon.- Town Meeting Coordinating Committee, 3 p.m., Town Hall. Tues.- Jones Library Board of Trustees, 7 p.m., Jones Library. Wed.- Personnel Board 9 a.m., Town Hall. Conservation Commission, 7 p.m., Town Hall. Thu.- Zoning Board of Appeals, 7:30 p.m., Town Hall. Chicopee Mon.- Public Works Committee,...

holyokecityhall.jpg

Here is a list of major municipal meetings for the coming week:

Amherst

Mon.- Town Meeting Coordinating Committee, 3 p.m., Town Hall.

Tues.- Jones Library Board of Trustees, 7 p.m., Jones Library.

Wed.- Personnel Board 9 a.m., Town Hall.

Conservation Commission, 7 p.m., Town Hall.

Thu.- Zoning Board of Appeals, 7:30 p.m., Town Hall.


Chicopee

Mon.- Public Works Committee, 7 p.m., City Hall

Utilities Committee, 6:30 p.m., City Hall

Tues.- City Council, 7:15 p.m., City Hall

Easthampton
Mon.- Community Garden Committee, 6 p.m., 50 Payson Ave.

Tues.- Public Safety Committee, 6 p.m., 50 Payson Ave.

Planning Board, 6 p.m., 50 Payson Ave.

Wed.- Finance Committee, 6:30 p.m., 50 Payson Ave.

Thu.- School Policy Subcommittee, 5:45 p.m., 50 Payson Ave.

Granby
Mon.- Selectboard, 7 p.m., Senior Center

Selectboard and School Committee, 7:15 p.m., Senior Center

Police Advisory, 7 p.m., Safety Complex

Board of Assessors, 7 p.m., Town Hall Annex

Greenfield
Mon.- Town Council Committee Chair, 6 p.m., Police Station Meeting Room.

Appointment and Ordinance Committee, 6:30 p.m., 321 High St.

Tues.- Board of License Commissioners, 6 p.m., 14 Court Square.

School Building Committee, 6:30 p.m., High School Library.

Wed.- Ways and Means Committee, 5 p.m., 321 High St.

Town Council, 6 p.m., 393 Main St.

Thu.- Zoning Board of Appeals, 7 p.m., 321 High St.

Hadley

Tues.- Board of Health, 7 p.m., Town Hall.

Planning Board, 7 p.m., Senior Center.

Wed.- Park and Recreaton Commission, 5:30 p.m., Senior Center.

Hatfield

Tues.- Emergency Management Committee, 9 a.m., Memorial Town Hall.

Board of Health, 9:30 a.m., Memorial Town Hall.

Wed.- Council on Aging, 5:30 p.m., Memorial Town Hall.

Holyoke
Mon.- Council on Aging, building committee, 10 a.m., Council on Aging, War Memorial, 310 Appleton St.

Board of Public Works, Sewer Commission, Stormwater Authority, 5:30 p.m., Department of Public Works, 63 Canal St.

City Council, budget hearings, 6 p.m., City Hall, City Council Chambers.

School Committee, 6:15 p.m., Dean Technical High School, 1045 Main St., Fifield Community Room.

Fairfield Avenue Local Historic District Commission, 6:30 p.m., Wistariahurst Museum, carriage house, 238 Cabot St.

Holyoke Historic Commission, 6:30 p.m., Wistariahurst Museum, carriage house, 238 Cabot St.

School Committee, 7 p.m., Dean Technical High School, 1045 Main St., Fifield Community Room.

Tues.- Council on Aging, 10 a.m., War Memorial, Council on Aging, 310 Appleton St.

City Council Ordinance Committee, 6:30 p.m., City Hall, City Council Chambers.

Soldiers’ Memorial Commission, 7 p.m., War Memorial, 310 Appleton St.

City Council, 7:30 p.m., City Hall, City Council Chambers.


Huntington
Wed.- Board of Selectmen, 7 p.m., Town Hall

Gateway Regional School Committee, 7:30 p.m., Gateway Regional High School

Northampton
Mon.- Committee on Public Safety, 6 p.m., Council Chambers.

Committee on Cultural and Recreation Services, 4 p.m., Council Chambers.

Tues.- Ordinance Hearing, 6:30 p.m., Council Chambers.

Wed.- Board of Public Works, 5:30 p.m., 125 Locust St.

Thu.- School Committee, 7:15 p.m., John F. Kennedy Middle School.

Central Business Architecture Committee/Planning Board, 6 p.m., Council Chambers.

South Hadley
Mon.- Selectboard, 12:10 p.m., Town Hall 109.

Negotiations subcommittees, 3:15 p.m., High School Conference Room.

School Building Committee, 6:30 and 7 p.m., Town Hall.

Tues.-Planning Board, 6 p.m., Town Hall 204.

Selectboard, 6:30 p.m.,Town Hall.

Tri-Board, 7:30 p.m.,Town Hall.

Wed.- School Committee, 5:30 p.m., High School Library

Thu.- School Building Committee, 6:30 p.m., Town Hall

Southwick
Mon.- Board of Selectmen, 7 p.m., Town Hall.

Board of Assessors, 7 p.m., Town Hall.

Finance Committee, 7 p.m., Town Hall.

Tues.- Planning Board, 7 p.m., Town Hall.

Thu.- Lake Management Committee, 7 p.m., Town Hall.

Springfield

Mon.- City Council Planning and Economic Development Committee, 5:30 p.m., Room 220, City Hall.

Mon.- City Council Government Committee, 6 p.m., Room 200, City Hall.

Mon.- City Council, 7 p.m., Council Chambers, City Hall.

Tues.- Responsible Employee Ordinance, noon, Room 309, City Hall.

Wed.- City Council Green Committee, 6 p.m., Room 200, City Hall.

Thu.- City Council Committee of the Whole, 4:30 p.m., budget hearings. Council Chambers, City Hall.

Thu.- License Commission, 5:30 p.m., Room 220, City Hall.

Westfield
Mon.- Fire Commission, 7 p.m., City Hall.

License Commission, 7 p.m., City Hall .

School Committee, 7 p.m., 22 Ashley St.

Tues.- Planning Board, 7 p.m., City Hall.

Wed.- Board of Health, 7 p.m., City Hall.

Thu.- Airport Commission, 7 p.m., Barnes Municipal Airport Terminal, Appremont Way.

MacDuffie School graduates after a dramatic year

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Five days before graduation a tornado damaged the school's Springfield campus.

macduffie graduationMacDuffie School graduates Emily Grzelak and Benjamin O'Neill-Abel gave the senior address at the school's 121st Commencement at Trinity United Methodist Church

SPRINGFIELD – For seniors of The MacDuffie School, their final year and graduation has been a dramatic time of change.

First, there was the announcement that the school would be moving to Granby. Then, five days before graduation, a tornado hit, seriously damaging the campus while many students were inside.

But Sunday, the 42 graduates dressed in long white gowns or white pants and blue blazers showed their resilience as they talked and joked about past adventures and their senior year before they collected their diplomas in a ceremony at the Trinity United Methodist Church.

School Trustee Michael Serafino told students that they have proved they are adaptable and are prepared for the many changes they will see in the future.

“You will certainly, absolutely, positively remember your senior year,” he said.

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Students Emily Grzelak and Benjamin O’Neill-Abel kicked off their senior address by ducking behind the podium and doing a skit with pig hand puppets. After the laughter died down, they alternated line by line to give a commencement address.

“This is our day, and we deserve the best graduation ever,” O’Neill-Abel said.

Grzelak talked about being in the school with other seniors when the tornado hit, calling it the scariest night of her life.

“I wouldn’t have wanted to spend it with anyone else,” O’Neill-Abel said.

English Department Chairman Alun Polga peppered his speech with dozens of jokes, telling students they worked very hard, except for the past five or six weeks of school and thanked the class for electing him as their very favorite teacher of all time.

“What the tornado did not realize is the force is strong at MacDuffie,” he said.


President Obama's toughest obstacle to 2012 reelection remains the economy

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The jobs report was the latest economic indicator suggesting the nation's recovery from the worst recession since the 1930s has hit another soft patch with the presidential election 18 months away.

Barack ObamaPresident Barack Obama is all smiles in this recent photo, but a lack-luster jobs report could foreshadow troubled times ahead as the 2012 presidential election draws nearer.

By Mike Dorning
Bloomberg News

WASHINGTON – While the field of Republican presidential candidates remains unformed, President Barack Obama is facing a rising threat from potentially his toughest re-election opponent: the American economy.

Job growth slowed to 54,000 in May, down from 232,000 in April and the smallest gain in eight months, the Labor Department reported Friday. The unemployment rate rose to 9.1 percent, the highest level this year.

“If job creation doesn’t continue on the pace it’s been on in recent months, that’s going to be an enormous hurdle for the president,” said Tad Devine, a Democratic strategist who worked for the party’s 2000 and 2004 presidential nominees.

The jobs report was the latest economic indicator suggesting the nation’s recovery from the worst recession since the 1930s has hit another soft patch with the presidential election 18 months away.

U.S. consumer spending slowed in the first quarter of the year and confidence levels have since fallen. Manufacturing growth, a consistent contributor to the recovery, weakened across the globe in May. The S&P/Case-Shiller Index released May 31 showed U.S. home prices in March dropped to the lowest level since 2003, further eroding home equity available to Americans.

“It highlights the tenuous nature of things,” said Mark Zandi, chief economist for Moody’s Analytics in West Chester, Pa. “Everybody has been through so much it really doesn’t take much to push people over the proverbial edge.”

Over the past two weeks, private economists at firms such as J.P. Morgan, Goldman Sachs and Macroeconomic Advisers cut their forecasts for economic growth in the current quarter. Zandi, who began the 2nd quarter forecasting a 3.7 percent growth rate for the period, has trimmed his estimate to 2.2 percent.

The 1.8 percent growth rate in the first quarter, a decline from 3.1 percent the prior quarter, also came in below forecasters’ estimates.

Obama hasn’t suffered in the polls so far. Gallup’s daily tracking poll showed him with an average 53 percent job approval May 29 through June 1, tied for the highest level of the year. It has climbed from 41 percent in mid-April, following the killing of Osama bin Laden and an easing of gasoline prices.

Potential Republican candidates for the White House are making the economy an issue. Former Massachusetts Gov.Mitt Romney, who formally announced his candidacy for the Republican nomination Thursday, said Friday in New Hampshire that the number of people out of work is “simply inexcusable.”

“The Obama policies have failed America,” he said.

Investor concern over the economy has sent stocks down, extending the longest streak of weekly losses for the Dow Jones Industrial Average since 2004, while Treasuries rose.

The current ebb parallels the movement of the U.S. economy last year, when payrolls grew by an average of more than 300,000 from March through May only to slow down and start shedding jobs in the wake of the European debt crisis. Growth picked up again in October. Zandi is among the forecasters who say the recovery likely will strengthen again in the second half of 2011.

Austan Goolsbee, chairman of the White House Council of Economic Advisers, said Friday’s jobs report represents a “little bump” in the road and that broader trends are “substantially more positive” than they were when Obama took office.

“We should never read too much in to any one month’s report,” Goolsbee said in an interview on Bloomberg Television.

Slowing growth would at least temporarily cut into the pace of employment gains in an economy that still has a long way to go in digging out from the recession. Only 1.8 million of the more than 8.7 million lost since January 2008 have been regained.

Even before the recent series of negative indicators, forecasters predicted Obama would face a challenging economic climate for re-election. The unemployment rate in the final quarter of 2012 was expected to be 7.9 percent, according to the median forecast of economists in a Bloomberg survey taken May 2 through 12. Zandi said he now expects the Election Day unemployment rate to be “north of 8 percent.”

Ronald Reagan, who faced an unemployment rate of 7.2 percent on Election Day in 1984, was the only U.S. president to win re-election with a jobless rate above 6 percent since World War II.

A soft recovery also increases the challenge to Obama’s message that the nation is on a positive trajectory. The White House has distilled the theme into the catchphrase “Win the Future.”

Devine said the credibility of Obama’s view of the path forward – more than a specific jobless rate – will be the most important ingredient in his re-election campaign.

“Voters will make choices on how they feel the candidate will affect their future,” Devine said. “I don’t think there’s a magic number for unemployment.”

Reagan won 49 states with an unemployment rate that was “really high at the time” because “people believed he had the nation headed in the right direction,” he said.

The public right now is pessimistic. The proportion of Americans who believe they will be better off in 10 years dropped from 72 percent in 2009 to 54 percent this year, according to a survey by the Pew Economic Mobility Project.

Fewer than half of Americans now believe their children will enjoy a higher standard of living, a centerpiece of the traditional American Dream, the March poll found. That’s down from 62 percent who thought so in 2009.

“The danger is that if we continue to take two steps forward, two steps back, people are going to continue to suffer a high level of economic anxiety,” said Bill Carrick, a Democratic strategist. “There’s no way that can be good politically for the president.”

With assistance from Lisa Lerer in Manchester, New Hampshire.

Motorcycle rider dies from injuries suffered in Springfield crash

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Vincent M. Surprenant, a 24-year-old Hungry Hill resident, died June 2 from injuries he suffered in a May 25 motorcycle crash on Boston Road in Springfield.

surprenant crash.jpgDebris was scattered over a large area after Vincent M. Surprenant crashed his motorcycle on Boston Road in Springfield last month. Surprenant has died from injuries he suffered in the crash.

SPRINGFIELD -- A Springfield man who crashed his motorcycle on Boston Road last month has died from the injuries he sustained in the May 25 accident, according to his family.

Vincent M. Surprenant, a 24-year-old Hungry Hill resident, died Thursday, June 2, after remaining in critical condition at Baystate Medical Center for about a week.

Funeral arrangements for Vinny, as Surprenant was known to his family and friends, are pending under the direction of Sampson's Funeral Home. Additional information was not immediately available.

Springfield police said Surprenant, a Newbury Street resident, collided with a car on Boston Road after losing control of his motorcycle on the evening of May 25.

The incident occurred shortly before 8 p.m. as Surprenant was eastbound in the area of 600 Boston Road. Police said speed appears to have been a factor in the crash.

Springfield Police Sgt. John M. Delaney said Surprenant apparently lost control while rounding a curve, skidding into a westbound car driven by a Morton Street man. After making impact with the car, the motorcycle skidded for roughly another 100 feet before eventually coming to a stop near Dezi's Jewelry Exchange and Pawn Shop.

Surprenant's death was the second motorcycle-related fatality this spring.

Joseph Placanico, 55, of Palmer died on April 17, three days after colliding with an empty horse trailer on Route 9 in Ware. A truck was towing the trailer, which jacknifed into Placanico's lane of travel, according to police. That accident remains under investigation.

Motorcycle riders are 37 times more likely to die in an accident as opposed to automobiles, according to Tim Aloisio of Monson, The Republican's motorcycle columnist and a member of the Massachusetts Motorcycle Association.

Aloisio said many people think automobile-vs.-motorcycle crashes are more common, but national statistics show the majority of fatal motorcycle accidents are single-vehicle accidents with excessive speed and inexperience being the main culprits. In cases where car-to-bike crashes do occur, he wrote in a May column for the newspaper, two-thirds of the time it is the fault of the automobile operators.

THE MAP BELOW shows approximately where a Hungry Hill man crashed his motorcycle on Boston Road in Springfield on May 25:


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AM News Links: Zombie bikini girls invade Enfield; bear tranquilized after killing dog; and more

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Sarah Palin talks about Paul Revere; high school basketball star killed at birthday party; aerial images of the Massachusetts tornadoes; and more of this morning's news.

flying bus.jpgIn this aerial photo, an overturned school bus lies in the woods at the Village Green Family Campground in Brimfield on Thursday, June 2, 2011, in the aftermath of Wednesday's tornadoes. Residents of 19 communities in central and western Massachusetts woke to widespread damage Thursday, a day after a series of llate-afternoon tornadoes shocked emergency officials with their suddenness and violence and caused the state's first tornado-related deaths in 16 years.

NOTE: Users of modern browsers can open each link in a new tab by holding 'control' ('command' on a Mac) and clicking each link.

Holyoke firefighters respond to Essex Street apartment building blaze

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Firefighters extinguished a fire that broke out shortly before 1 a.m. Monday at an apartment building at 117 Essex Street. Some of the building's nine tenants were injured, but none seriously, according to Holyoke fire officials.

holyoke fire pic.jpgA Monday morning fire injured some of the tenants who live at 117 Essex St. in Holyoke. Their conditions were not immediately known.

HOLYOKE -- Firefighters extinguished a blaze that broke out shortly before 1 a.m. Monday at a three-story brick apartment building at 117 Essex Street.

The building has nine tenants -- seven adults and two children -- some of whom were hurt in the fire, according to Holyoke Fire Lt. Thomas G. Paquin. Their injuries were not considered life-threatening, he said.

Red Cross officials were at the scene to assist the displaced residents.

As precautionary measure, firefighters remained on scene well after the fire had been extinguished.

"They're still chasing some hot spots," Paquin said.

Some smoke was still seen coming from the building around 6:50 a.m., according to a Republican reporter at the scene.

Officials have yet to determine what caused the fire, which is under investigation by the arson squad.

The fire was reported at 12:51 a.m. Monday, according to Holyoke Fire Department records.

The nearly 7,000-square-foot apartment building, known as "The Barlow," was built in 1889. The building has six apartments -- three of which were already unoccupied when the fire broke out -- and is managed by Trela Realty, Holyoke fire officials said.

Holyoke man in critical condition after being hit by driver, then dragged

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A bizarre chain of events involving an overturned vehicle, and car that hit that vehicle, led to a man being dragged down Lincoln Street for about 100 feet, according to Holyoke police.

1999 holyoke police car.jpgHolyoke police are investigating an incident Saturday in which a man was dragged by a car for a distance of about 100 feet. The man is in critical condition at Holyoke Medical Center.

HOLYOKE -- A city man was still in the hospital Monday morning after being dragged by a car on Lincoln Street Saturday night, according to Holyoke police, who continue to investigate the chain of events leading up to the 11:39 p.m. incident.

The man, whom police declined to identify, remains in "very, very critical condition" at Holyoke Medical Center, according to Holyoke Police Lt. Michael Higgins.

Higgins described a bizarre set of circumstances leading up to Saturday's incident, in which the man was dragged about 100 feet after assisting at the scene of a separate motor vehicle incident.

In that incident, a woman flipped her car after crashing into a parked vehicle on Lincoln Street near Nonotuck Street. When the man went to help her, another vehicle crashed into the woman's overturned car and the man somehow got dragged by that vehicle, Higgins said.

"He fell to the ground and got trapped underneath" the passing vehicle, which dragged him roughly 100 feet up the block before stopping, Higgins said.

Police have not decided whether to charge the female driver of the vehicle that dragged the man.

"It's still under investigation. Whether or not there will be any charges, that (determination) will be down the road," Higgins said.

As of 7 a.m. Monday, the man remained at Holyoke Medical Center. Higgins said police would be calling the hospital to get an update on the man's condition.


THE MAP BELOW shows approximately where a man was dragged by a car on Lincoln Street in Holyoke Saturday night:


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