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One man dead, another injured during Valentine's Day shooting in Milford

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One man is dead and another seriously injured after a shootout in a Fortune Boulevard motel parking lot Saturday.

MILFORD - One man is dead and another seriously injured after a shootout in a Fortune Boulevard motel parking lot Saturday.

The dead man, identified by authorities as Thomas E. Coburn III of Hopkinton, allegedly confronted a man and a woman in the Holiday Inn Express parking lot around 10:30 a.m. Saturday.

Coburn confronted Christian Nealon, 48, of Hopkinton, who was also armed with a gun, according to the Worcester District Attorney's Office.

"The preliminary investigation showed that Mr. Coburn confronted Mr. Nealon and the woman in the parking lot of the motel. Both men were armed with handguns and shots were fired," the district attorney's office said in a news release. "Eventually Mr. Nealon and the woman retreated to the motel lobby to report the shooting and to get Mr. Nealon medical help."

Coburn, 51, was found in his car with what authorities said was an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound. He was pronounced dead at Milford Hospital. The state medical examiner's office will officially determine cause of death.

Emergency responders rushed Nealon to the same hospital, where he was then picked up by medical helicopter and flown to UMass Memorial Medical Center--University Campus in Worcester.

The woman at the scene was not harmed, the district attorney's office said. State police assigned to Worcester District Attorney Joseph D. Early Jr. and Milford Police continue to investigate.


Former NHL defenseman Steve Montador found dead at age 35

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Former NHL defenseman Steve Montador, who played briefly with the Boston Bruins in 2008-09, was found dead at his home in Mississauga, Ontario on Sunday.

Former NHL defenseman Steve Montador was found dead at his home in Mississauga, Ontario, early Sunday morning, according to the Mississauga News.

Montador was 35. He first broke into the NHL with the Calgary Flames in the 2001-02 season and also played for the Florida Panthers, Anaheim Ducks, Buffalo Sabres and Chicago Blackhawks in addition to a brief stint with the Bruins in the 2008-09 season.

Montador last played in the NHL in 2011-12, when a serious concussion ended his season with the Blackhawks. He played in the Kontinental Hockey League in 2013-14.

According to the Mississauga News, a police spokesperson said foul play is not suspected in his death at this time.

Video allegedly shows Islamic State beheading of Coptic Christian hostages in Libya

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A video purporting to show the mass beheading of Coptic Christian hostages has been released by militants in Libya claiming loyalty to the Islamic State group.

CAIRO -- A video purporting to show the mass beheading of Coptic Christian hostages was released Sunday by militants in Libya affiliated with the Islamic State group.

The killings raise the possibility that the Islamic militant group -- which controls about a third of Syria and Iraq in a self-declared caliphate -- has established a direct affiliate less than 500 miles (800 kilometers) from the southern tip of Italy. One of the militants in the video makes direct reference to that possibility, saying the group now plans to "conquer Rome."

The militants had been holding 21 Egyptian Coptic Christians hostage for weeks, all laborers rounded up from the city of Sirte in December and January. It was not clear from the video whether all 21 hostages were killed. It was one of the first such beheading videos from an Islamic State group affiliate to come from outside the group's core territory in Syria and Iraq.

The Associated Press could not immediately independently verify the video. But the Egyptian government and the Coptic Church, which is based in Egypt, both declared it authentic.

The Egyptian government declared a seven-day mourning period and President Abdel Fattah el-Sissi addressed the nation late Sunday night, pledging resilience in the fight against terrorism.

"These cowardly actions will not undermine our determination" said el-Sissi, who also banned all travel to Libya by Egyptian citizens and said his government reserves the right to seek retaliation. "Egypt and the whole world are in a fierce battle with extremist groups carrying extremist ideology and sharing the same goals."

The Coptic Church in a statement called on its followers to have "confidence that their great nation won't rest without retribution for the evil criminals."

The video's makers identified themselves as the Tripoli Province of the Islamic State group. A still photo, apparently taken from the video, was published last week in the Islamic State group's Dabiq online magazine -- indicating a direct connection between the Libyan militants and the main group.

The video, released Sunday night, depicts several men in orange jumpsuits being led along a beach, each accompanied by a masked militant. The men are made to kneel and one militant, dressed differently that the others, addresses the camera in North American-accented English.

"All crusaders: safety for you will be only wishes, especially if you are fighting us all together. Therefore we will fight you all together," he said. "The sea you have hidden Sheikh Osama Bin Laden's body in, we swear to Allah we will mix it with your blood."

The men are then laid face-down and simultaneously beheaded.

The militant speaker then pointed northward across the red-stained waves and said, "We will conquer Rome, by Allah's permission."

In el-Aour, a dusty and impoverished village some 200 kilometers (125 miles) south of Cairo and home to 13 of the hostages, friends and family assumed the worst as soon as the photo was published on Thursday.

On Saturday, two days after the photo appeared, the community was wrapped in sorrow. Men covered their heads with dirt in a sign of both grief and shame. Women slapped their own faces or let out heart-wrenching shrieks of pain.

Villagers accused the Egyptian government of doing little to help the captives. The authorities, they say, were able to free Muslim Egyptians abducted in Libya in recent months but have done nothing to save the 21 because they are Christian -- an accusation rooted in the deep sense of religious discrimination felt by most Egyptian Copts.

Samuel Walham's family immediately recognized him from the picture, showing him kneeling on the beach alongside four other hostages -- each flanked by a knife-wielding militant.

"Look at my love. Look how beautiful he is," Walham's mother, Ibtassal Lami, said through tears as she cradled a photo of her son and women wailed in the family's ramshackle, two-story home. "He only went there to earn his living."

Libya, rich in oil and short on labor, has long been a magnet for Egyptians from all professions. Laborers have flocked there to escape poverty and unemployment at home, while professionals have gone in search of a better salary. Libya's 2011 civil war left much of the country in ruins, creating a boom for skilled foreign workers.

Egyptians have jumped at the opportunity: they are the largest single group of foreign workers in Libya. But over time, the risks have grown for those looking to Libya for a better paycheck. Egyptians, and Copts in particular, have become frequent targets for Islamic extremists who have flourished amid Libya's political turmoil. Islamic and tribal militias have overrun Libya's two largest cities, Tripoli and Benghazi -- forcing the elected Western-based government and parliament to meet elsewhere.

Egyptian authorities have responded by suspending most flights to Libya and issuing travel warnings. Yet, Egyptian workers remain undeterred, and still line up outside the Libyan Embassy in Cairo in search of visas.

Walham secured his visa in late 2013. He arrived months before militias seized the capital Tripoli in August 2014. He found work as a plumber in the coastal city of Sirte, which was largely destroyed during the war and was the hometown of ousted Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi

It was there that Walham was kidnapped on Dec. 28. Six days later, gunmen seized another 13 Egyptian Christians from Sirte in a targeted raid on a housing compound for laborers.

Abanoub Ishaq, a 19-year-old worker from el-Aour, was there the night the militants burst in just before dawn, knocking on doors with a list of names. Those who answered were hauled away, Ishaq said. He managed to evade capture by remaining silent after receiving a phone call from a Muslim neighbor who warned him not to open the door because militants were searching for Christians.

"We heard nothing but my friends' screams, then they were silenced," he told The Associated Press.

The video at the end makes reference to the case of Camelia Shehata -- a longstanding rallying point for Muslim fundamentalists. Shehata is an Egyptian Coptic woman who went missing and was rumored to have converted to Islam to escape an unhappy marriage to a Coptic priest. The Coptic Church bans divorce.

Shehata was eventually found by Egyptian police and returned to the Church and promptly disappeared from public view. Her case became a rallying point for fundamentalist Muslims, who regard her as a Muslim being held prisoner by the church. Salafist Muslims in Alexandria held weekly rallies on her behalf throughout 2010, and Shehata's case is believed to be one of the motivations for a deadly bombing of a Coptic church in Alexandria on New Year's Eve 2010.

As the men are being beheaded, a subtitle on the video declares: "This filthy blood is just some of what awaits you, in revenge for Camelia and her sisters."

Photos: Winter Storm Neptune's snow, gusty winds and bitter temperatures in Springfield

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SPRINGFIELD - According to Masslive reports, Winter Storm Neptune, the fourth high snowfall storm in a row in the past four weeks, pounded the Bay State this weekend. The snow storm dumped more than a foot of snow on some areas and high winds continued to blow snow around long after the snowfall stopped.

SPRINGFIELD - According to Masslive reports, Winter Storm Neptune, the fourth high snowfall storm in a row in the past four weeks, pounded the Bay State this weekend.

The snow storm dumped more than a foot of snow on some areas and high winds continued to blow snow around long after the snowfall stopped.

Obituaries today: Joseph Viecelli was longtime West Springfield resident

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Obituaries from The Republican.

 
021515-joseph-viecelli.jpgJoseph Viecelli 

Joseph W. Viecelli, 36, formerly of West Springfield, passed away on Wednesday. He was born in Springfield, and spent most of his life in West Springfield. His survivors include his wife and daughter.

To view all obituaries from The Republican:
» Click here

Melha Shriners chili cook-off pits pros against amateurs

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Meat in the chili included venison, turkey, kielbasa, beef and more.


SPRINGFIELD — It may have been her first time competing but Melissa Ostrander, of Westfield, makes a mean chili.

Ostrander and her 10-year-old son Sean Roselli served up venison chili at the 4th annual Melha Shriners Chili Cook-Off Sunday afternoon in Springfield.

"I went to culinary school and I just love to cook and try new recipes,"Ostrander said.

Shonn Monday started the cook-off four years ago after a competition with his wife to see who had the best chili. Now about 20 chefs gather every year to test their skills.

"This is a home style competition, so it's any way you want to make chili," said Monday who served up a chili with smoked venison and dark chocolate.

Monday's secret to good chili: "Top notch ingredients and time," he said.

The chili is judged by a professional group of judges as well as the public.

Dr. Robert Wool, a physician at Women's Health Associates in Springfield and Westfield and member of the Melha Shriners, submits an entry every year and helps organize the event.

"We solicited cooks from the community particularly some of the restaurants in the area including Collin's Tavern in West Springfield, Murphy's Pub in Agawam, Roberto's and Sylvester's in Northampton. We get local chefs as well as anyone who wants to enter," Wool said.

Wool thanked Steve Stark a national chili champ who participates in the competition every year and encourages others to do the same.

"The variety of different flavors that we call chili is amazing. Each chili is different from the next and they are all really good this year," Wool said.

There was a green chili, a Portuguese chili, chili made with venison, kielbasa and even ground turkey.

Dave Rose, of Monson, used smoked brisket, smoked chourico (Portuguese sausage), ground turkey and several varieties of beans in his sweet and spicy chili.

Rose said he has been competing in the cook-off for several years.

"I'm a member of the New England Barbeque Society and the Kansas City Barbeque Society. I just enjoy cooking and competing," he said.

Winners were selected by a blind taste test as well as a People's Choice award.

Proceeds from the event will be used for Melha Shriner programs in the community.

MBTA to operate on limited schedule Monday after Winter Storm Neptune

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The beleaguered MBTA will operate on a limited schedule Monday in the aftermath of the fourth major snowstorm to hit Boston in three weeks.

BOSTON -- The beleaguered MBTA will operate on a limited schedule Monday in the aftermath of the fourth major snowstorm to hit Boston in three weeks.

The MBTA has struggled mightily since Winter Storm Juno blanketed the region with over two feet of snow that crippled the system's outdated infrastructure.

Subway service on all lines will be limited to underground stations only, with supplemental bus shuttles running between aboveground stations. The Blue Line will continue to service Airport Station in East Boston.

Some buses will operate on a winter schedule and service will be limited. Several bus lines will not run on Monday. Check mbta.com/winter for a complete and up-to-date list.

The entire Commuter Rail system will run on a Saturday schedule.

Ferry service is set to run on a regular weekday schedule.

The Ride is scheduled to operate but will be affected by weather and street conditions.

MBTA General Manager Beverly Scott submitted her resignation after the poor condition of the public transportation system required the system to shut down on February 10. MassDOT officials met Friday in private to discuss the process for finding Scott's replacement.

West Springfield fire displaces one person

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Firefighters contained a kitchen fire to one unit of the Boulevard West apartments Sunday evening.

WEST SPRINGFIELD— West Springfield firefighters extinguished a kitchen fire in a unit at the Boulevard West apartments at 608 Westfield Street Sunday evening.

Fire Lt. Steven Link said Unit #10 sustained fire damage to the kitchen area, and smoke damage to the other rooms. He said the tenant of that apartment was not home when firefighters arrived, so forced entry was made to reach the blaze. Firefighters extinguished the flames and ventilated the rest of the unit.

Link said the flames were contained in the kitchen area and did not extend to other parts of the building. He could not, however, give a formal cause for the fire. He said that remains under investigation.

Only the one unit was involved and other tenants were not displaced.


Gov. Baker appoints GOP's Mike Heffernan to Pension Reserves Investment Management Board

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Gov. Charlie Baker appointed Mike Heffernan to serve as the governor's designee to the nine-member Pension Reserves Investment Management Board.

BOSTON -- A former Republican candidate for state treasurer has been named to the board that oversees the state's $60 billion pension fund.

Gov. Charlie Baker appointed Mike Heffernan to serve as the governor's designee to the nine-member Pension Reserves Investment Management Board.

Heffernan was defeated by Democrat Deb Goldberg in the treasurer's race last November.

Baker said in appointing Heffernan that he had more than 25 years of experience in financial services, including senior roles at CitiGroup's Markets and Banking Division. In 2011 he co-founded Mobiquity Inc., a Massachusetts-based professional services firm.

The PRIM board supervises the Pension Reserves Investment Trust that manages that manages assets of state employee and Massachusetts teachers' retirement funds.

PM News Links: FBI joins probe of Islamic School vandalism, GOP says proposed sales tax cut won't do much good, and more

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Boston police seeking public's help in finding Kristopher Lewis, 14-year-old Dorchester boy missing since Feb. 4

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The boy ws last seen Feb. 4 at his Dorchester home, according to city police, who are asking anyone with information about his wherabouts to call 617-343-4712.

kristopher lews via BPD.jpgKristopher Lewis (BOSTON POLICE DEPARTMENT) 
BOSTON — Police are seeking the whereabouts of a missing child who was last seen at his Boston home earlier this month.

Kristopher Lewis, 14, has not been seen since Feb. 4, when he left his Dorchester residence "but failed to return," said Boston police, who are asking anyone with information about his whereabouts to dial 911 or call Detective Hubert Valmond at 617-343-4712.

Police described Lewis as a 5-foot-1 black-Hispanic male with brown hair and eyes who weighs about 87 pounds. He was wearing a navy blue shirt, brown pants, white-and-red sneakers, a black sweater with red writing on the front, and a black pea coat at the time of his disappearance, police said.

Lewis has gone missing on previous occasions, according to police, who have located him in the Fields Corner area in the past.


Video: Northampton Ice Festival sculptures, with 'Downtown Dan' on guitar, on Presidents Day 2015

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The remains of the 2015 Northampton Ice Festival sculptures benefited from the extremely cold temperatures on President's Day. Watch video

NORTHAMPTON — The remains of the 2015 Northampton Ice Festival sculptures benefited from the extremely cold temperatures on President's Day.

On Monday afternoon, some were still in great shape three days after they had been sculpted. At least one had been broken. Others that were still standing were difficult to interpret.

"Downtown" Dan Evans, as he does almost every day, was playing his guitar outside on Main Street despite the weathers. He said it was "a little bit" cold.

"At least it isn't windy," he noted.


West Springfield Council on Aging seeks nominations for 'Citizen of the Year' award

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Anyone of any age who lives in town can be nominated. The award will go to the person "who best exemplifies outstanding volunteer service to older adults residing in West Springfield."

WEST SPRINGFIELD - The Council on Aging is planning to award its inaugural Charles W. Gonnello Citizen of the Year award this spring, and it's looking for nominations.

The award will be presented "for selfless giving and distinguished service on behalf of older adults," according to the council's website.

Anyone of any age who lives in town can be nominated. The award will go to the person "who best exemplifies outstanding volunteer service to older adults residing in West Springfield."

The nomination deadline is March 20.

The award is named after the first professional director of the Senior Center, who died in 2013. It will be presented at the volunteer recognition dinner on April 17.

Nomination forms can be found by clicking here. They should be mailed to:

Ms. Laurie Cassidy, Executive Director West Springfield Council on Aging 128 Park St. West Springfield, MA 01089

For more information, call (413) 495-1803 or email Laurie Cassidy at LCassidy@west-springfield.ma.us.

Those icicles over your door may be pretty, but you should consider knocking them down

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Snow rakes are available at most hardware stores.

WILBRAHAM - The town of Wilbraham has issued a public safety advisory on potential roof collapses on the town website. You can find tips for safely removing accumulated snow from roofs which could be in danger of structural collapse. According to the advisory, flat and low pitched roofs are at the greatest risk of buckling under heavy snow and ice accumulations. Lower roofs, where snow accumulates from higher roofs, also are vulnerable.

The following are tips for homeowners for removing snow and ice from roofs.

1. Use a snow rake for pitched roofs (available at most hardware stores) to remove snow from your roof.

2. Start from the edge and work your way onto the roof.

3. Try to shave the snow down to 2 or 3 inches on the roof instead of scraping the roof clean, which will risk damage to your shingles or other roof covering. Keep in mind that any metal tool could conduct electricity if it touches a power line.

4. Remove large icicles carefully if they're hanging over doorways and walkways. Consider knocking down icicles through windows using a broom stick.

5. Wear protective headgear and goggles.

6. Consider hiring professionals if you are combating ice plus heights.

7. Have someone outside with you in case anything goes wrong.

8. Keep gutters and drains free, free of ice and snow and keep downspouts clean at ground.

Don't:

1. Don't add your weight to the weight of equipment on the roof.

2. Don't use a ladder since ice tends to build up on both the rungs of the ladder and the soles of your boots.

3. Don't use electric heating devices to remove snow and ice.

4. Don't use open-flame devices to remove ice and snow.


March 9 new date for joint meeting of Westfield School Committee and city's vocational-technical advisory committee

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The joint meeting is normally held each January.

WESTFIELD - The School Committee plans to hold its annual meeting with the Westfield Vocational-Technical High School Advisory Committee on March 9.

The meeting, routinely held in January each year, has already been postponed twice because of snowstorms. The March 9 meeting is scheduled for 6 p.m. at Tigers' Pride student restaurant at the Smith Avenue high school.

The meeting will focus on current and future vocational-technical training programs, a tour of most, if not all, vocational-technical programs and a review of advisory committee recommendations for the future of Westfield Vocational-Technical High School.


Mother teaching daughter to drive dies following apparent road rage incident in Las Vegas: video

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Tammy Meyers, 44, was shot following a dispute with people in another car.

A mother who was teaching her teenage daughter how to drive died Saturday night after being shot in an apparent road-rage incident in Las Vegas earlier in the week.

The woman, Tammy Meyers, 44, died after being taken off life support.

Meyers was shot Thursday following a dispute with people in another car, the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department told ABC News.

According to the Associated Press, Meyers was driving home after giving her daughter, 14, a driving lesson in a school parking lot. Police said Meyers almost collided with another vehicle.

After an argument, Meyers drove home and asked her adult son for help as her daughter went inside the home, the AP report said.

The suspect vehicle appeared outside the home, and someone inside fired multiple shots, one of which struck Meyers, investigators said.

ABC reported that the daughter, who it said was 15, ran into the house before the shooting and did not witness the incident. The AP said Meyers' husband and son came out of the house and returned fire at the fleeing car.

Robert Meyers told the AP that he thinks his 23-year-old son hit the car that contained three people.

"There was no excuse, no reason and I hope to God they know we're looking and they will be caught," a cousin, Susan Ramos, was quoted by Reuters in a report that appeared in the Huffington Post.

The son, Matthew Meyers said at a press conference outside University Medical Center in Las Vegas that his mother suffered from at least one gunshot wound to the head, according to the Las Vegas Review-Journal.

Family members said Tammy Meyers was a stay-at-home mother, who was a former nurse.

Police released a sketch of one of the men who was described as being in his mid-20s, being about six feet tall, and weighing about 180 pounds, with dirty blond spiked hair.

Police described the vehicle as a four-door gray sedan with possible damage on the front driver's side.

"It was an outrageous, senseless act of violence," Ramos said during the press conference. "There was no excuse and no reason."
"She was a strong woman," Matthew Meyers said. "My mom did not deserve this."

Matthew Meyers said that his mother initially pulled over after getting into a collision with the other car. There was a confrontation with the people in the other car, in which one of them threatened her, causing her to drive away, he said.

Police Department spokeswoman Laura Meltzer said that detectives are "doing everything they can to find the suspect or suspects."


Utility work scheduled in Westfield's Northwest Road neighborhood

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Work is scheduled between 7 a.m. and 5 p.m. Mondays through Saturdays.

WESTFIELD - Eversource Energy, formerly known as Western Massachusetts electric Company is scheduled to conduct work on its existing transmission structures here for the next several months.

Mayor Daniel M. Knapik announced the work is scheduled now through spring in the vicinity of Northwest Road.

Eversource will replace five structures that carry Eversource transmission lines between the hours of 7 a.m. and 5 p.m. Mondays through Saturdays.

Service for customers of Westfield Gas and Electric will not be impacted by the project.

"This announcement is meant to inform residents in the Northwest Road area of upcoming construction," Knapik said. "I have been assured that the new structures will be of substantially similar size and that no additional tree trimming will be necessary to accomplish this work," the mayor said.

Questions concerning the project should be directed to Eversource at 1-800-793-2202 or by email at TransmissionInfo@eversource.com.

Oil tankers explode in fireball in West Virginia train derailment (raw video)

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By JOHN RABY and JONATHAN MATTISE MOUNT CARBON, W.Va. — A train carrying more than 100 tankers of crude oil derailed in southern West Virginia on Monday, sending at least one into the Kanawha River, igniting at least 14 tankers and sparking a house fire, officials said. See raw video at end of this article One person was being...

By JOHN RABY
and JONATHAN MATTISE

MOUNT CARBON, W.Va. — A train carrying more than 100 tankers of crude oil derailed in southern West Virginia on Monday, sending at least one into the Kanawha River, igniting at least 14 tankers and sparking a house fire, officials said.

See raw video at end of this article

One person was being treated for potential inhalation issues, but no other injuries were reported, according to a news release from CSX, the train company. Nearby residents were told to evacuate as state emergency response and environmental officials headed to the scene about 30 miles southeast of Charleston.

The state was under a winter storm warning and getting heavy snowfall at times, with as much as 5 inches in some places. It's not clear if the weather had anything to do with the derailment, which occurred about 1:20 EST along a flat stretch of rail.

As federal railway and hazardous materials officials were heading to the scene, the company said it's still investigating what caused the train to come off the tracks.

Public Safety spokesman Lawrence Messina said responders at the scene reported one tanker and possibly another went into the river. Messina said local emergency responders were having trouble getting to the house that caught fire.

Kanawha County Manager Jennifer Sayre said a reported 14 to 17 tankers caught fire or exploded.

James Bennett, 911 coordinator for Fayette County, said a couple hundred families were evacuated as a precaution.

The rail company said it's still sorting out many specifics in its response.

"CSX teams also are working with first responders to address the fire, to determine how many rail cars derailed, and to deploy environmental protective and monitoring measures on land, air and in the nearby Kanawha River," CSX spokesman Gary Sease said in a news release.

The fire continued burning along a hillside Monday evening, and small fires could be seen on the river.

David McClung said he felt the heat from one of the explosions at his home about a half mile up the hill.

His brother in law was outside at the time of the derailment and heard a loud crack below along the riverfront, then went inside to summon McClung, his wife and their son.

One of the explosions that followed sent a fireball at least 300 feet into the air, McClung said.

"We felt the heat, I can tell you that," McClung said. "It was a little scary. It was like an atomic bomb went off."

Becky Nuckols heard the train hit the house directly across the river from her house in the community of Boomer.

"I thought it was a snow plow," she said. That's what made me look out. All you heard was a big boom."

After calling 911 Nuckols said she ran outside and saw a man leave the house and take off running.

The office of Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin, which has issued a state of emergency, said the tanker cars were loaded with Bakken crude from North Dakota and headed to Yorktown, Virginia.

Local emergency officials said all but two of the 109 cars being hauled were tanker cars.

West Virginia American Water spokeswoman Laura Jordan said the company shut down a water treatment plant, located about 3 miles from the derailment, at about 2:30 p.m. The plant serves about 2,000 customers.

State health officials said another water plant downstream in the town of Cedar Grove also closed its intake. They asked customers from both water systems to conserve water.

The U.S. Transportation Department is weighing tougher safety regulations for rail shipments of crude, which can ignite and result in huge fireballs.

Responding to a series of fiery train crashes, including one this spring in Lynchburg, Virginia, the government proposed rules in July that would phase out tens of thousands of older tank cars that carry increasing quantities of crude oil and other highly flammable liquids. It's not clear how old the tankers were on the derailed train.

The Lynchburg train also was hauling Bakken crude oil from North Dakota to Yorktown, Virginia.


Mattise reported from Charleston, West Virginia.

Winter storm slams the South; bitter cold freezes Northeast

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New York City came close to breaking a 127-year-old record when the temperature in Central Park hit 3 degrees, just 2 degrees above the record set in 1888.

By ADAM BEAM

FRANKFORT, Ky. -- Snow swirled sideways in Kentucky and the typically bustling state capital of Frankfort came to a frozen halt Monday as a storm walloped parts of the South, which unlike the Northeast, had been mostly spared this winter.

That all changed with a mix of snow, sleet and freezing rain across the region, making roads treacherous and knocking out power to thousands of people. Luckily, the storm arrived on a holiday, Presidents Day, when many schools and businesses were already closed and the morning commute was not as busy.

Officials also made certain roads were prepared this year after Southern cities -- most notably Atlanta -- were caught off guard a year ago when a winter storm stranded thousands of people on interstates overnight. Raleigh suffered a similar fate last year.

Still, some weren't quite ready for the winter blast.

RL Doss said he had already used his 1987 GMC Suburban -- which can haul up to three-quarters of a ton with ropes and chains -- to rescue several people and their cars on the hills surrounding Frankfort. Cars were fishtailing and sliding off the slick roads.

"I look at it this way. Everybody is trying to get out, to get their last bit of food and stuff, getting home from work and people leaving for work and stuff, and it happens," he said, shivering in a pair of tan overalls pulled over a hooded sweat shirt.

Glancing at his truck, the burgundy behemoth, he said: "I like to see what the truck can do and what it can't do. I push it to its limits."

In the Northeast, which has been slammed by seemingly endless snow, the white stuff stopped falling but the temperatures were bitterly cold. New York City came close to breaking a 127-year-old record when the temperature in Central Park hit 3 degrees, just 2 degrees above the record set in 1888, said Jeffrey Tongue, a National Weather Service meteorologist.

Boston Mayor Martin J. Walsh said the latest snow storm left one person dead, apparently due to a heart attack while shoveling snow. A partial roof collapse at an eight-building apartment complex in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, left 500 to 700 people looking for warmth. In New Jersey, a 66-year-old woman who had been drinking at a benefit was found dead in the snow, just two doors from her home. Firefighters working on a blaze in Philadelphia left behind a building coated in icicles. No one was hurt.

West Virginia getting hit hard by the snowstorm when a train carrying crude oil derailed about 30 miles Charleston. At least one tanker went into the Kanawha River and nearby house caught fire. It wasn't clear if the winter storm had anything to do with the crash.

The storm was headed toward the Carolinas overnight, and then expected to march through the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast.

Kentucky Gov. Steve Beshear urged people to stay home if possible. By Monday afternoon, 9 inches of snow had fallen in Louisville and other parts were buried under a foot of snow.

In central Kentucky, home to much of the state's signature thoroughbred industry, horses kept warm by galloping through the deep snow, pausing occasionally to shake it off from their thick winter coats. Ned Toffey, general manager of Spendthrift Farm in Lexington, said the horses enjoy running in the snow because it gives them a nice cushion as opposed to the harder, packed earth.

Arkansas, where temperatures plummeted from the 70s on Saturday to highs in the 30s a day later, had nearly 30,000 people without power at the peak of the storm.

Roads were slushy and traffic was moving slowly in Tennessee. Justyn Jackson, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Nashville, said the last bad winter storm in the city was 2010 when up to 4 inches of snow fell.

"A lot of cities up North, they deal with this several times during the winter. It's really not uncommon for them at all," Jackson said. "Down here, especially in Nashville, although it's not rare, it certainly on average happens once or twice a winter."

Georgia officials were taking no chances, bringing in more personnel to the state operations center and pre-treating roads with a mixture of salt and water. Atlanta was expected to get rain, dodging any icy or snowy conditions. Up to a quarter of an inch of ice could accumulate in a handful mountainous northern counties.

North Carolina Gov. Pat McCrory says he hopes the government is "over-prepared and underwhelmed." It's been almost a year since a winter storm dumped as much as 22 inches of snow in the North Carolina mountains and pelted the eastern part of the state with ice. In Raleigh, much like Atlanta, many abandoned their cars alongside the road or in parking lots -- if they could navigate.

John Moore, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Memphis, said he believes Tennessee was prepared in part because of the embarrassing scene that paralyzed Atlanta last year.

"We got the word out ahead of time to let people know, that even if we're not expecting a lot, still check your forecast before you leave home in the morning because stuff can change so quickly," he said.


AP writers Lucas Johnson in Memphis, Tennessee; Julie Walker in New York and Allen Reed in Little Rock, Arkansas, contributed to this report.

Irish dancer Jean Butler, of 'Riverdance' fame, named Holyoke St. Patrick's Parade 2015 Ambassador Award winner

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Butler, who grew up in Mineola, Long Island, studied step dancing as a girl, winning numerous honors en route to becoming an internationally known Irish dancer. She's received numerous plaudits for her solo work since the success of "Riverdance."

jean butler.jpgJean Butler will be feted in Holyoke this month after being named the recipient of the 2015 Ambassador of Ireland Award. 

HOLYOKE — A redheaded daughter of an Irishwoman from County Mayo will receive the 2015 Ambassador of Ireland Award from the Saint Patrick's Committee of Holyoke Inc. and the Republic of Ireland.

But this isn't just any redheaded Irish daughter – this year's recipient is Jean Butler, the champion Irish step dancer from Long Island, New York, who helped jump-start an Irish dance craze with "Riverdance," the show that blended traditional Irish music and dance with other elements that went on to become an international sensation.

The Ambassador of Ireland Award, presented annually by a representative of the Irish government, honors individuals who have made extraordinary efforts in furthering the relationship between the people of Ireland and America. And Butler fills the bill perfectly, according to Jacqueline Reardon, president of Holyoke's Saint Patrick's Committee.

"Few have contributed more to the bond between the United States and Ireland than Jean Butler," Reardon said.

The Ambassador's Award will be presented to Butler on March 22 at the committee's pre-parade breakfast and reception in Holyoke. Past award recipients, dignitaries and representatives of various Irish-American organizations are expected to be on hand, according to event organizers.

As the lead woman dancer in "Riverdance" and a featured solo dancer with the world-renowned Chieftains, Butler helped bring "awareness of Irish dance" to thousands of Americans, according to Reardon.

Kateri Walsh, co-chair of the selection committee, said Butler helped spread an appreciation of Irish dance. "The essence of the Ambassador's Award and the activities and accomplishments of this year's award recipient, Jean Butler, very much converge," Walsh said.

The origins of "Riverdance" stem from a brief Irish dance and musical performance that wowed the crowd during a 7-minute interval at the 1994 Eurovision Song Contest. After the popularity of that performance, the husband-and-wife team of Moya Doherty and John McColgan expanded the dance piece into a full-blown musical stage production in 1995. By March 1996, "Riverdance," with Butler as lead dancer, made its U.S. debut at Radio City Musical Hall in New York.

The rest, as the saying goes, is history, with "Riverdance" taking on a life of its own, including spinoffs and pop culture parodies.

Since then, Butler, who's now a New York-based choreographer and performer, has focused on other dance initiatives, including "hurry," which had its premier at Manhattan's Danspace Project in March 2013. "Hurry" subsequently played at the Project Arts Center as part of the Dublin Dance Festival 2013, and at New York's Joyce Theater as part of Focus Dance Festival, curated by Laurie Uprichard.

Butler told The New York Times that she became so enamored with a work by Tere O'Connor, the American dancer, choreographer and educator, that she subsequently asked him to choreograph "DAY," another of her solo projects, which premiered in 2010 to critical acclaim.

Other post-"Riverdance" successes include 1999's "Dancing on Dangerous Ground," which Butler produced and choreographed with Colin Dunne, a former dance partner in "Riverdance."

Critic Anna Kisselgoff, in a 2000 dance review in the Times, characterized "Dancing on Dangerous Ground" as an "infinitely more creative spectacle" than "Riverdance," channeling Irish step dancing "into genuine artistic expression."

Although the extravaganza that was "Riverdance" helped launch her professional dance career, Butler, who'll turn 44 next month, has spent the past several years working mostly in a contemporary context.

Her work has been commissioned and supported by the the Irish World Academy of Music and Dance at the University of Limerick, Ireland (artist in residence, 2003-2005); the Arts Council of Ireland; Culture Ireland; the Dublin Dance Festival (2007-2013); the Project Arts Center (Dublin), the Abbey Theatre (Dublin); Plankton Productions (Japan); Movement Research; the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council; Jacob's Pillow Dance Festival; Danspace Project; and the Joyce Theater.

In addition to collaborating with O'Connor, Butler has worked with Yoshiko Chuma, Jodi Melnick, Jen Rosenblit and Jon Kinzel since moving back to New York in 2006. She is also an adjunct assistant professor of Irish Studies at Glucksman Ireland House NYU, the center for Irish and Irish-American Studies at New York University.

Butler is the recipient of the prestigious "Irish Post Award," awarded for her outstanding contribution to Irish dance, among numerous other honors.

She attended Long Island's Hofstra University, earned an honors degree in theater and drama from Birmingham University, England, and earned her master's in contemporary dance performance from the University of Limerick.


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