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Dow climbs 168 points following improving economic data from Japan, Europe

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Trading remained relatively quiet ahead of the release later this week of the U.S. government's monthly jobs survey and a Federal Reserve meeting later this month.

By KEN SWEET

NEW YORK -- target=_blankstarted off December on a strong note, helped by improving economic data from Japan and Europe as well as hopes that the European Central Bank will expand its stimulus program. Trading remained relatively quiet ahead of the release later this week of the U.S. government's monthly jobs survey and a Federal Reserve meeting later this month.

The Dow Jones industrial average rose 168.43 points, or 1 percent, to 17,888.35. The Standard & Poor's 500 index rose 22.22 points, or 1.1 percent, to 2,102.63 and the Nasdaq composite rose 47.64 points, or 0.9 percent, to 5,156.31.

Financial stocks were among the biggest gainers, helped by the prospect of higher interest rates. Banks are more profitable when interest rates rise because they can charge more to lend. JPMorgan Chase rose 93 cents, or 1.4 percent, to $67.61. Goldman Sachs rose $3.05, or 1.6 percent, to $193.07 and Bank of America rose 38 cents, or 2.2 percent, to $17.81.

Investors are keyed into both the European Central Bank and the Federal Reserve this month. Policy decisions from both central banks will be important in determining the fate of the market in the last month of 2015.

"As it has been most of this year, central banks are still running the show," said Samantha Azzarello, global market strategist at J.P. Morgan Funds.

The ECB will decide on Thursday whether to expand its economic stimulus program, which functions similarly to the bond-buying program the Fed used after the financial crisis to keep long-term interest rates low. ECB head Mario Draghi has signaled the bank could expand its bond-buying program or even cut interest rates further.

Investors are so certain that Draghi will expand his program that data out Tuesday showing the unemployment rate in the 19-country eurozone edged down to a four-year low of 10.7 percent in October is not seen as likely to derail those measures.

In the U.S., most of the focus will be on the November job's report, to be released Friday. Expectations are high. Economists expect that U.S. employers added 271,000 jobs last month, according to FactSet. The unemployment rate is expected remain at 5 percent.

This jobs report comes shortly before the Fed's two-day meeting later this month, where policymakers will debate moving interest rates in the opposite direction of the ECB: higher. Securities that allow investors to bet on which way the Fed will move rates are forecasting a 79 percent probability that the Fed will tighten. Unless Friday's jobs report is horrific, that is unlikely to change.

"Generally the last couple of weeks have been very quiet. We've been and will be in a holding pattern head of the Fed's December meeting," said Ryan Larson, head of equity trading with RBC Global Asset Management.

In energy markets, benchmark U.S. crude rose 20 cents to $41.85 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Brent crude, which is used to price oil internationally, lost 17 cents to $44.44 a barrel in London. Heating oil rose a cent to $1.369 a gallon, wholesale gasoline rose six cents to $1.363 a gallon and natural gas was roughly unchanged at $2.231 per thousand cubic feet.

U.S. government bond prices rose. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note fell to 2.14 percent from 2.21 percent. The U.S. dollar slipped to 122.84 yen from 123.25 yen on Monday on the Japanese economic data. The euro rose to $1.0631 from $1.0572.

Gold fell $1.80, or 0.2 percent, to $1,063.50 an ounce, silver was roughly unchanged at $14.08 an ounce and copper rose two cents, or 1 percent, to $2.072 a pound.


FBI processes record number of firearms background checks on Black Friday

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The agency processed a record 185,345 background checks — roughly two per second — the same day that three people were killed and nine others wounded in an attack at a Planned Parenthood office in Colorado.

WASHINGTON -- The FBI processed a record number of firearms background checks on Black Friday, the agency said Tuesday.

The agency processed a record 185,345 background checks -- roughly two per second -- the same day that three people were killed and nine others wounded in an attack at a Planned Parenthood office in Colorado.

The agency received about 5 percent fewer background check requests on Black Friday in 2014, the FBI said.

FBI background checks processed by the National Instant Criminal Background Check System are conducted for gun purchases from federally licensed deals and for permits to carry guns. A background check does not mean a gun was purchased but manufacturers rely on the background check statistics as a measurement of the industry's health.

The FBI started processing background checks for potential gun owners in 1998 as part of the Brady Handgun Violence Prevention Act.

The previous record for the most background checks in a single day was Dec. 21, 2012, about a week after 20 children and six adults were shot to death in a Connecticut elementary school. The week following the massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary saw the processing of 953,613 gun background checks.

After the Colorado shootings, President Barack Obama once again called for stricter limits on the availability of guns.

"Enough is enough," Obama said in a statement on Saturday. He said the Planned Parenthood shootings showed the need to "to do something about the easy accessibility of weapons of war" for "people who have no business wielding them."

Robert Lewis Dear, 57, is accused of killing a local police officer and two others in the shooting rampage. He is expected to be formally charged later this month.

Law enforcement officials have not disclosed details about multiple weapons found after Dear's arrest.

Photos, video: The weavers at Tejo Holyoke showcase skills on antique looms

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Pastora Torres and Jessica Roman weaved their magic on hand-operated looms for guests attending the event, showcasing their talents using recycled T-shirts and rags. Watch video

HOLYOKE — Hand-crafted rugs and other textiles were on display during an open house at Tejo Holyoke in a formally vacant building at 207 Elm St.

Pastora Torres and Jessica Roman weaved their magic on hand-operated looms for guests attending the event, showcasing their talents on antique looms using recycled T-shirts and rags.

Katy Moonan, founder and director of the women's cooperative group, noted the two-year program moved into its new facility in partnership with Olde Holyoke Development, which donated the vacant space.

Future expansion plans in the building include an area where youth and young adults have a place to build, refinish, upholster and sell furniture.

Westfield State University's 1st Latino president, Ramon Torrecilha, confirmed by state Board of Higher Education

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Westfield State's Board of Trustees unanimously recommended the selection of Torrecilha at a meeting in October, capping a 40-week and 400-candidate presidential search.

WESTFIELD - Ramon Torrecilha was confirmed Tuesday as the 20th president of Westfield State University, making him the first Latino chief executive in the school's 176-year history.

Ramon Torrecilha mug 2015Ramon Torrecilha 

Torrecilha's appointment was confirmed by the Massachusetts Board of Higher Education. He is scheduled to start work on Jan. 25.

"I am delighted by the appointment of Dr. Ramon Torrecilha as the new President of Westfield State and look forward to working with him," said Carlos E. Santiago, Massachusetts Commissioner of Higher Education. "I want to thank the Westfield Board of Trustees and the search committee for delivering an exceptional pool of quality candidates, and congratulate them on an outstanding selection."

Westfield State's Board of Trustees unanimously recommended the selection of Torrecilha at a meeting in October, capping a 40-week and 400-candidate presidential search.

Torrecilha, a sociology professor and former administrator at California State University, Dominguez Hills, was competing with Framingham State university Vice President of Academic Affairs Linda Vaden-Goad, and Ethical Culture Fieldston School CEO Damian J. Fernandez, who withdrew from consideration in October.

Trustees praised Torrecilha's ideas, knowledge of Westfield State and commitment to student success in comments before the unanimous roll-call vote. Torrecilha, a former migrant worker from Brazil who graduated from Portland State University and won jobs at CSU Dominguez Hills, Berkeley College in New York and Mills College, pledged to help build Westfield State into a "premiere" public institution during a campus forum earlier this month.

Torrecilha, reached by phone minutes after he was notified of the board's vote, said he had been sitting by his phone "hoping and waiting" for the news.

"I am delighted," he said. "I am humbled to have been bestowed this confidence and this responsibility, to work with the Westfield community and to take Westfield University to another level so that we can become a model, a premiere public comprehensive institution for the commonwealth of Massachusetts."

During a campus forum in October, Torrecilha called for expanded programs, stronger retention and graduation rates, deeper engagement with the off-campus community and better relationships with donors.

"Quite simply, my vision is for us to become a premier comprehensive public institution in the commonwealth and in the nation," Torrecilha said.

Torrecilha, who demonstrated a casual command of Westfield State's finances, academic offerings and demographics in his talk, proposed several programs as part of his four-point plan.

He endorsed an enrollment strategy to better meet state benchmarks that may determine future funding, a four-year retention program to better engage undergraduate students with seminars and research, a community advisory board to guide off-campus relations and an expansion of the school's graduate program.

"Why not a doctorate in nursing? Why not a master's in translation?" Torrecilha said during the October forum.

Torrecilha, a sociologist who cited social theorist and philosopher Simone de Beauvoir as a personal hero, served as executive vice president at Mills College and New York's Berkeley College before joining CSU Dominguez Hills. He was hired as vice president of academic affairs in 2012, before leaving his administrative post in July 2013 and returning to the classroom and research full time.

Torrecilha said among his first priorities on campus would be to assemble a leadership team, meet with stakeholders on campus and in the broader Westfield community and begin building relationships with the state Legislature.

The university's presidential search process officially launched in January, following the resignation of former president Evan Dobelle, with the appointment of a search committee comprising 13 members of the campus community.

Trustees Steven Marcus and Terrell M. Hill were appointed to serve as the chair and vice-chair of the committee.

Other members of the search committee included Katheryn Bradford, director of Alumni Relations; Justin Connolly, student trustee; Junior Delgado, director of the Career Center; Evelyn Dina, student government association president; Margot Hennessy, chair of Ethnic and Gender Studies; Robin Jensen, former Foundation Board member; Ron'na Lytle, administrative assistant, Ethnic and Gender Studies and World Languages; Luis Perez, trustee; Carlton Pickron, vice president, Student Affairs (NUP); Henry Thomas, Board of Higher Education Representative and Edward Welsh, associate professor of mathematics.

Elizabeth Preston, former vice president of academic affairs at the university had been serving as interim president.

Before he left as president, Dobelle's salary had been approximately $242,000.

Northwestern DA: Body found in Connecticut river off South Hadley identified as missing Chicopee woman

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The body found in the Connecticut River off South Hadley on Nov. 27 has been identified as 61-year-old Janice Camerlin, a Chicopee woman reported missing on Nov. 24, according to Mary Carey, spokeswoman for Northwestern District Attorney David Sullivan.

SOUTH HADLEY — The body found in the Connecticut River off South Hadley on Nov. 27 has been identified as 61-year-old Janice Camerlin, a Chicopee woman who was reported missing by her family on Nov. 24, according to Mary Carey, communications director for Northwestern District Attorney David Sullivan.

Carey said the Medical Examiner's Office confirmed the identity of the body on Tuesday, though Camerlin's official cause of death has yet to be determined.

The circumstances surrounding her disappearance remain under investigation by police in Chicopee and South Hadley and State Police detectives assigned to Sullivan's office.

On Nov. 25, the day after Camerlin's family reported her missing, police found her car in the area of 30 Main St. in South Hadley, near the base of the Vietnam Memorial Bridge. Her body was found in the river under the bridge two days later.


'State of Entrepreneurship in the Valley' at TechSpring: Pioneer Valley 'the place people want to be'

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Thirty startup companies have participated in Spark Holyoke, one of several programs, this far in 2015.

SPRINGFIELD -- Farid Khelfaoui went to California to start his businesses, first in IT and social media and then with the oh-so-California enterprise of making fins for surf boards from discarded skateboard decks.

"I came from Amherst and everyone told me that if you wanted to be an entrepreneur, you had to get out. Get out of the Pioneer Valley. Go to Silicon Valley," said Khelfaoui, who now serves as executive director of the Spark Holyoke business accelerator program. "But now I feel this is the place people want to be."

The reason people want to be here, he said, is in part the array of support structures now in place for budding business owners from Spark Holyoke to Tech Foundrywhich trains people in IT, to business accelerator Valley Venture Mentors and others.

Khelfaoui and representatives from a number of those organizations and from the Pioneer Valley's business and academic communities as a whole gathered Tuesday night for the "State of Entrepreneurship in the Valley," a year-end status report and look ahead organized by the Entrepreneurship Committee of the Economic Development Council of Western Massachusetts.

The get-together was part informational - participants heard from state and local officials - and part informal - they sampled hard cider from Artifact Cider, which is a Springfield startup and a graduate of Valley Venture Mentors.

It's the third year in a row for the annual event. The "State of Entrepreneurship" is the idea of Steve Davis of the Davis Foundation and chairman of the Economic Development Council's Entrepreneurship Committee.

"I think we have unbelievable activity here on the entrepreneurship side," Davis said. "It's very exciting."

That's good not only for the business startups but for the region.

"I talk about it as business regeneration," Davis said. "We had Friendly's and MassMutual and Smith & Wesson here for generations. These all started as small businesses. Now we have to plant the seeds for the next crop of businesses."

People at the event referred to an ecosystem, as in a system of interlocking organisms that support growth, like the ecosystem in a forest.

Some highlights from the scorecard:

  • Valley Venture Mentors in Springfield has assisted 96 startup business and has helped those businesses earn $6 million.
  • River Valley Investors, an angel investor group, has invested $850,000, worked with 10 startups and heard 25 pitches form prospective businesses.
  • TechSpring, host of Tuesday's event, has worked with 10 startups, has helped them earn millions and has created five jobs. TechSpring is a health technology accelerator started by Baystate Health.
  • The Grinspoon Entrepreneurship Initiative has helped 66 startups and heard from 15 teams in its business pitch contest.
  • The Berthiume Center for Entrepreneurship at the University of Massachusetts Amherst and its Isenberg School of Management has worked with 25 startups, helping them gain $100,000. The program was launched in April.
  • The Springfield Innovation Center at the Trinity Block, a project of DevelopSpringfield, will one day be a physical home for Valley Venture Mentors, a technology cafe where entrepreneurs can fuel up on caffeine and swap ideas, meeting space and low-cost office space for companies that graduate from accelerators and incubators. It will be at 270-276 Bridge St.
  • Spark Holyoke has worked with two classes totaling 30 startups.

Spark works with many mom-and-pop type enterprises, Khelfaoui said.

"We've had some bakeries," he said. "We just had a sock business. That will be interesting."

The city of Holyoke received a $250,000 grant from the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston's Working Cities Partnership for Spark's first  three years.

Ludlow doctor faces 41 counts of illegally prescribing opioids, Medicaid fraud

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According to the Massachusetts Attorney General's Office, Dr. Fernando Jayma of Ludlow, who was indicted by a Hampden Superior Court grand jury, illegally prescribed opioids to some patients who had documented substance abuse issues.


SPRINGFIELD — A Ludlow doctor has been indicted on 41 charges including illegally prescribing oxycodone and other drugs and making false Medicaid claims.

Fernando Jayma, 73, was indicted Monday by a Hampden Superior Court grand jury.

The counts alleging illegal prescribing said there was no legitimate medical purpose for the drug.

Of the 22 illegal prescribing charges, eight are for oxycodone, three for morphine, four for fentanyl and seven for methadone. Jayma faces 17 counts of making a false Medicaid claim as a provider and two counts of making a false claim for office visits on days he was out of the country.

No date has been set for arraignment. The dates of the alleged crimes go back as far as 2011 and are as recent as 2015, but many are for dates in 2013.

According to a press release from the Massachusetts Attorney General's Office, Jayma illegally prescribed opioids to some patients who had documented substance abuse issues.

Attorney General Maura Healey said Jayma is a solo practitioner of general medicine.

"We trust physicians to be responsible with their care and treatment of patients," Healey said. "Dr. Jayma allegedly violated that trust by writing medically unnecessary prescriptions for opioids to people with documented substance abuse problems. Our office will continue to combat the opioid epidemic in our state from all angles, including prosecuting those who are prescribing these drugs illegally and recklessly."

The AG's office began an investigation in June 2014 after the matter was referred by MassHealth. In 2013, Jayma was the second-highest MassHealth prescriber of oxycodone, the press release stated.

The investigation revealed that in multiple instances, Jayma prescribed opioids, including oxycodone, morphine, methadone and fentanyl, to patients for no legitimate medical purpose, according to the attorney general. Authorities allege that Jayma prescribed the drugs to some patients despite their documented substance abuse. The illegal prescriptions Jayma wrote allegedly caused pharmacies to unwittingly falsely bill MassHealth for the medication.

In several instances, urine drug screens indicated that patients were negative for the prescribed opioids but positive for heroin or other non-prescribed opioids, but Jayma allegedly continued to prescribe opioids to those patients, the attorney general's office stated.

Jayma also allegedly continued to prescribe fentanyl and oxycodone to a patient who in the recent past was determined to have overdosed on fentanyl.

In addition to the claims of illegal prescribing, Healey's office alleges that Jayma arranged for another doctor to see his patients when he was out of the country and directed his office staff to bill MassHealth as if Jayma was treating those patients.

The Department of Public Health is working with local health officials to ensure that patients of Jayma are referred for proper care and treatment by other medical professionals, Healey's office said.

Assistant Attorney General Steven Hoffman, Deputy Division Chief of the Medicaid Fraud Division, and Assistant Attorney General Alexandra Brazier are prosecuting the case, which was investigated by Medicaid Fraud Division Investigators Chris Cecchini and Nan Browne.

The attorney general's office cited the assistance of the Ludlow Police Department, MassHealth, the Hampden County District Attorney's Office, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Office of Inspector General and DEA New England Field Division.


Photos: Melha Shriners present 5th Annual "Fez'tival of Trees in Springfield

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The Melha Shriners will host their annual "Fez"tival of Trees" from Friday, Nov. 27 to Sunday, Dec. 6 at the Melha Shrine Center on Longhill Street in Springfield.

Looking for ideas on how to decorate your Christmas tree this year? Then a trip the Melha Shriners 5th Annual "Fez'tival of Trees being held at the Melha Shrine Center at 133 Longhill St. in Springfield is in order.

The event, which runs thru this Sunday, December 6th, showcases 65 artificial trees all decorated in different themes.

Guest can buy 15 raffle tickets for $5 dollars and place their ticket in a bucket next to the tree that they would like to win. The drawing will be held at 5 p.m. on Sunday. The winners of each tree also get to take home the presents underneath them.

A silent auction, tag sale and a bake sale will also add to the holiday atmosphere for the guests who make their way thru the Shriner center.

Bill Faust, chairman of the event, says organizations and businesses donated the trees as well as the presents and that all proceeds from the event go to the Melha Shriners to help cover their costs during the year.

Admission is $2 for adults and children under 12 are free and parking is free. The show is open 4 to 8 p.m. during the week and from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. on Saturday and 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Sunday, the final day.

For more information, visit melhashriners.com.


What's in your kitchen drawer? For Springfield man, it was loaded firearm, cocaine

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Edwin Torres was sent to jail for 2½ years after pleading guilty to having drugs and guns in a Springfield case in Hampden Superior Court.

SPRINGFIELD — When Springfield police officers executed a search warrant on the Lebanon Place home of Edwin Torres last year, he helped them out.

"He told police there was a loaded firearm in the kitchen drawer," Hampden Assistant District Attorney Amy Wilson said Tuesday.

Police executing the search warrant on March 7, 2014, also found 66 grams of cocaine in a kitchen drawer, as well as a large amount of marijuana in a bedroom ceiling. The .380 caliber handgun in the kitchen with seven rounds of ammunition was stolen from Springfield in 2013.

There was another gun in a a bedroom dresser, this one a Walther .22 caliber rifle with 10 rounds of ammunition. That gun was stolen from Monson in 2010.

And in the home was $14,590 that Torres agreed to forfeit as part of a plea agreement, Wilson said.

Torres was sentenced Tuesday by Hampden Superior Court Judge John S. Ferrara to 2½ years in the Hampden County Correctional Center followed by three years probation. That was the sentence recommendation of Wilson and defense lawyer David A. Keller.

He pleaded guilty to cocaine trafficking, possession of marijuana with intent to distribute, two counts of illegal possession of a firearm, three counts of illegal possession of ammunition, possession of a Class E drug (steroids) and two counts of receiving stolen property worth over $250.

Wilson said the sentence was appropriate based on Torres' limited prior record.

Keller said Torres understands "these were bad choices."


From Bhutan to Kazakhstan, 147 people become U.S. citizens during ceremony at UMass Springfield (photos)

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There were 44 countries, ranging in the alphabet from Azerbaijan to Vietnam, represented during the citizenship ceremony at the UMass Center at Springfield.

SPRINGFIELD — Kathleen Jones is 96 years old and has lived in the United States since 1982. On Wednesday the United Kingdom native became a U.S. citizen.

"It feels pretty great," said Jones, who lives in Amherst with her son and his family.

Jones was one of 147 people representing 44 countries who were presented for naturalization by the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services.

The event was held at the UMass Center at Springfield, with U.S. Magistrate Judge Katherine A. Robertson.

"I have a few colleagues who really like presiding over these ceremonies. We think of them as one of the most meaningful things that we do as judges," she said. "We all have immigrants in our background."

Before they received their certificates, applicants were asked to stand as the name of their country was called.

When Widad Isha's name was called, she jumped up from her chair waving an American flag and beaming. She is a native of Iraq and was surrounded by her family.

"I love America," she shouted to applause from the crowd.

Other countries read by Robertson included: Azerbaijan, Belarus, Bhutan, Brazil, Canada, People's Republic of China, Colombia, Dominican Republic, Egypt, El Salvador, Estonia, Germany, Ghana, Guyana, Haiti, Honduras, Iraq, Israel, Jamaica, Kazakhstan, Kenya, Lithuania, Moldova, Morocco, Nepal, New Zealand, Nigeria, Pakistan, Peru, Philippines, Poland, Portugal, Russia, Somalia, South Korea, Sri Lanka, Sudan, Sweden, Tanzania, Trinidad and Tobago, Turkey, Ukraine and Vietnam.

Springfield Mayor Domenic Sarno, a third generation American, welcomed the new citizens and said while he hopes they have embraced the many wonderful things about America, it is important to honor their cultures as well.

"You have persevered with strength and fortitude in your quest to come to America, land of opportunity, beacon of hope and protector of all," he said.


Holyoke to designate Dwight Street portion in honor of late clerk Susan Egan

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Susan M. Egan, who died Jan. 5, worked for the city of Holyoke for 43 years.

Updated at 4:57 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 2, 2015 to add a photo of Susan Egan officiating at a swearing-in ceremony in 2002 and comments from former councilor Diosdado Lopez praising Egan.

HOLYOKE -- The late, long-time city clerk Susan M. Egan will be honored with the renaming of a street outside City Hall where she worked for 43 years.

The City Council Tuesday approved the designation of the part of Dwight Street between High and Heritage streets in honor of Egan, 65, who died Jan. 5.

Egan was city clerk for more than two decades.

"Obviously we could sing Susan Egan's praises all night long. She was a wonderful person and we miss her very much," council President Kevin A. Jourdain said.

Such a street renaming is an honorary overlay and does not change the actual street address. The Department of Public Works (DPW) will hire a local sign-maker to craft a black and gold sign bearing the Susan M. Egan designation, DPW General Superintendent William D. Fuqua said.

The order to honor Egan was introduced by Ward 6 Councilor Todd A. McGee, who said former councilor Diosdado Lopez was involved, as well.

ega.sully.JPGSusan M. Egan, left, who died Jan. 5, administers the oath of office to Holyoke Mayor Michael J. Sullivan in 2002 in her capacity as city clerk. 
Honoring Egan at that location is appropriate, current City Clerk Brenna Murphy McGee said.

"Susan Egan truly had a passion for serving the city of Holyoke. Susan was a dear friend to my family and I and along with many others, miss her each and every day. I think naming a portion of Dwight Street, right in front of the doors of City Hall, where she dedicated over 40 years of her life, is a remarkable way to honor her," Murphy McGee said in a text message.

Lopez, the Ward 2 councilor for 20 years, said he felt it was important that the city honor not only Egan but other women important to Holyoke.

"She dedicated so much to the city," said Lopez, who didn't run for reelection 2011.

Egan retired March 1, 2013 because of poor health and died at Heritage Hall South in Agawam.

Egan worked in the clerk's office with James J. Shea, the former city clerk, after whom City Council Chambers at City Hall is named. Shea retired in 1992 and Egan, who was assistant city clerk, was appointed to fill the remainder of his term.

In 1993, Egan won the first of five elections as city clerk, each with a four-year term.

Southwick 'peeping Tom' accused of stalking teenage girls at their homes, on Facebook

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Charizione reportedly followed two high-school aged girls in separate instances on several occasions, and also allegedly stared into their bedroom windows and harassed one through Facebook, police reports show. One girl told investigators she had been stalked by Charizione for three years.

WESTFIELD -- A 33-year-old Southwick man has been accused in three separate cases of allegedly stalking two teenage girls and one woman, according to court documents.

Kevin Charizione of 27 Feeding Hills Road was arraigned in Westfield District Court Wednesday on charges of disorderly conduct and trespass in two of the cases, and another count of disorderly conduct in the third.

Charizione reportedly followed two high school-aged girls in separate instances on several occasions, and also allegedly stared into their bedroom windows and harassed one through Facebook, police reports show. One girl told investigators she had been stalked by Charizione for three years.

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In the first case, a 16-year-old victim told police on Oct. 22 that she was in her basement bedroom on Renny Avenue when saw a man on his hands and knees peering at her through a window, reports said. The victim said she looked at him for a couple of seconds, became alarmed and ran upstairs and told her grandmother, who called police.

Charizione was already known at this time to officers, and the victim confirmed through Charizione's Registry of Motor Vehicles photo that he was the perpetrator, court records said.

Southwick Police then went to Charizione's house, where they found him at his living room computer desk "completely naked looking at his Facebook page," Officer David Massai wrote.

Police asked Charizione if he was in anyone's backyard that evening, which he denied. He also said he was not the alleged peeping Tom.

On Nov. 17, Southwick Police responded to two incidents allegedly involving Charizione.

A Southwick-Tolland Regional High School student told the school's resource officer, Daniel Ryan, that a man she identified as Charizione had harassed and stalked her for three years, starting when she was a high school freshman.

Charizione allegedly messaged the victim on Facebook and asked her "weird and inappropriate" questions, such as if she would marry him, where she lived and if she had sex, she wrote in a statement. She told Charizione to leave her alone and blocked him. That is when he reportedly began to stalk her.

"Every time I walk by he is out of his house asking me to come here and come inside," the victim said in the statement.

For the past 7 months Charizione reportedly walked behind the victim's apartment and stared into her window at around 7 a.m., and made another Facebook account after she had blocked him, police reports said. She blocked him a second time, and after that Charizione began staring into her windows at night, the victim told police.

Another officer took a similar report of Charizione looking into a bathroom window on Shirley Terrace earlier that morning.

The victim said she was showering when she saw a shadowy figure cast onto her blinds, report said. She pulled them back and found herself face-to-face with a man she identified to police as Charizione.

This adult victim said she was familiar with Charizione and had seen him around the neighborhood for the past 8 years, court records said. She also told police she feared for the safety of her daughters.

"I am concerned that at one point he is going to get sick of just looking and might snap and do something worse," the victim said in a statement.

Charizione was released on his own recognizance. He is due back in court on Feb. 4.

San Bernardino shooting: At least 14 dead, police chief Jarrod Burguan says

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At least 14 people are dead and 14 wounded in a shooting this morning at a state-run facility for developmentally disabled people in San Bernardino, Calif.

An updated version of this story is now available at MassLive.


At least 14 people are dead and 14 wounded in a shooting this morning at a state-run facility for developmentally disabled people in San Bernardino, California, San Bernardino Police Chief Jarrod Burguan said this afternoon.

Speaking at a press conference at 5 p.m., Burguan said those are preliminary numbers and that the situation is still developing.

"We think those are pretty reliable, but keep in mind that those are subject to change," Burguan said.

The shooting triggered a "massive law enforcement response" with aid from multiple agencies, he said.

Police believe that up to three shooters entered the building, opened fire and fled, possibly in a dark colored SUV. No suspects have been identified and no motive has been determined, Burguan said.

Assistant Director in Charge of the Los Angeles FBI Field Office David Bowditch said it was too early to tell whether the attack qualifies as terrorism.

"We do not know if this is a terrorist incident," Bowditch said.

Burguan told reporters that bomb technicians were on scene to assess unidentified objects in the building, though there is no clear evidence that the objects are explosives or were brought by the attackers. There is no current credible threat to other facilities in the area, he said.

News Links: Sex offender accused of exposing self after break-in, dad killed terminally ill son in drunken-driving crash, and more

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Notorious mass murderer Daniel Tavares was convicted and sentenced to life in prison Tuesday for a 27-year-old Fall River cold case.

A digest of news stories from around New England.

Stephen McIntire.jpgStephen McIntire 
  • Convicted sex offender charged with breaking in, exposing self to Maine woman [Portland Press Herald] Photo at left, related video above


  • New Hampshire man gets 7 years after admitting he killed terminally ill son, 14, in drunken driving crash [Union Leader] File video below


  • Convicted mass-murderer Daniel Tavares found guilty in Fall River cold case slaying [Boston Herald]


  • Everett police arrest 19-year-old in stabbing of star high school football player [Boston.com] Video below


    src="http://launch.newsinc.com/js/embed.js"
    id="_nw2e-js">

    WGMT-TV report aired March 3, 2014.


  • Drug maker Zafgen's stock drops after 2nd patient taking experimental obesity-related drug dies [Boston Globe]


  • New Hampshire police officer pays suspected shoplifter's tab after learning she had stolen items to bake child's birthday cake [SeacoastOnline.com]


  • 31-year-old Worcester woman's stabbing death caught on video, police say [Telegram & Gazette]


    WHDH-TV, 7News, Boston


  • 70-year-old Vermont man dies in fire after being unable to get to his wheelchair [WPTZ-TV, NBC5, Plattburgh, N.Y.]


  • Nurse charged with assaulting, abusing Alzheimer's patient in New Hampshire nursing home [NECN]


  • 2 people arrested, charged with interfering with Blue Hills deer hunt [Brockton Enterprise]


    src="http://launch.newsinc.com/js/embed.js"
    id="_nw2e-js">

    WTIC-TV report aired Tuesday.





  • Ballot dispute brewing over cage-free eggs and ban on calf confinement

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    A dispute is brewing between animal rights and agriculture over a ballot initiative that would prohibit the confinement of pigs, calves and chickens, and prohibit the sale of meat and eggs in Massachusetts from animals that have been confined.

    Where do your eggs come from?

    A fresh dispute is brewing between animal rights and agriculture over a ballot initiative that would prohibit the confinement of pigs, calves and chickens, and prohibit the sale of meat and eggs in Massachusetts from animals that have been confined.

    "This initiative really speaks to some very basic standards in terms of animals being able to stand up, lie down, turn around," said Mary Nee, president of the Animal Rescue League of Boston. "This is pretty fundamental."

    But Richard Bonanno, president of the Massachusetts Farm Bureau Federation, said the main impact will be to drive up food prices for Massachusetts shoppers. "This isn't going to affect the farms of Massachusetts. This is going to affect the public and the cost of food," Bonanno said.

    Supporters of the ballot initiative announced Wednesday that they had collected 133,000 signatures, apparently enough to get a question on the 2016 ballot. The Massachusetts initiative would go further than any similar law in the country.

    Although the Legislature could take action before then, preempting the ballot question, lawmakers have declined to act on similar bills in previous legislative sessions. Speaking to reporters recently, Gov. Charlie Baker, Senate President Stan Rosenberg, D-Amherst, and House Speaker Robert DeLeo, D-Winthrop, all declined to take a stance on the ballot question.

    "Massachusetts is far ahead of many other states in that we only have one facility where this is a question ... I'm not sure if this that much of an issue here in Massachusetts," DeLeo said.

    Nationwide, 10 states have banned the practice of confining calves raised for veal, breeding pigs and egg-laying hens in small cages. The part of the question prohibiting extreme confinement would have limited impact in Massachusetts, which has mostly family farms and not large scale breeding of pigs or calves. No farmers here use small crates for confining pigs or calves. Only a single farm cages chickens.

    "It doesn't impact a lot of our animals," said Carrie Chickering-Sears, extension educator at the University of Massachusetts Amherst.

    Supporters of the ballot initiative, however, say it is still important both for the chickens on that one farm and to prevent other farms from confining animals. "It's really important to ensure that does not happen in Massachusetts in the future, and the values of Massachusetts voters to have animals lead decent lives on farms is reflected in the laws," said Daisy Freund, director of farm animal welfare at the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals.

    The far bigger impact would be from the part of the ballot question that would prohibit the sale of eggs, uncooked veal or uncooked pork from an animal that was confined.

    "You can't supply all of our consumers here in the state with actual Massachusetts-grown products as far as beef and eggs," Chickering-Sears said.

    The proposed law would severely limit the sale of meat and eggs imported from out of state, which accounts for the vast majority of meat and eggs sold here. So far, only California has passed a law banning the sale of non-cage-free eggs, and no state has banned the sale of veal or pork from confined animals.

    Bonanno, who opposes the initiative, said this would significantly drive up prices. For example, he said most eggs bought in the supermarket today cost less than $3 a dozen. Cage-free eggs produced in Massachusetts are generally sold for at least $5 a dozen. The price of eggs rose in California after its cage-free egg law passed.

    "This is about hunger. This is about food supply. This is about the public," Bonanno said.

    Stephanie Harris, Massachusetts state director for the Humane Society of the United States and campaign manager for the ballot question, countered by citing a University of California study done for the egg industry finding that moving to cage-free eggs would cause only a penny per egg price increase.

    cagefree.JPGAnimal rights activists celebrate having gathered enough signatures for a ballot question banning confinement of farm animals during an event at the Animal Rescue League of Boston on Dec. 2, 2015. 

    According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Nov. 27 weekly summary of egg prices, a dozen USDA Grade A white eggs cost an average of $1.86 nationwide; a dozen cage-free eggs cost $3.05.

    Supporters of the initiative, many from animal rights organizations, say the bottom line is about treatment of animals - ensuring that animals are not confined to the point that they cannot stretch their legs. "Right now, farm animals are kept in close confinement, crammed in cages so small they can't turn around. This ballot measure will go a long way to improving their welfare," Harris said.

    But opponents question the initiative's consequences. Michael Austin, owner of Austin Brothers Valley Farm in Belchertown, said, "The people that are bringing this question up aren't understanding the ins and outs of farming." He said there can be legitimate reasons to confine animals. (The ballot initiative has some exceptions - for example, it allows the confinement of pigs that are nursing, who may otherwise hurt their babies.)

    Bonanno said he believes the Humane Society is pushing a "pro-vegan agenda" and will use the Massachusetts ballot question primarily to raise money from Massachusetts donors.

    Chickering-Sears is part of a group promoting legislation sponsored by State Rep. Stephen Kulik, D-Worthington, to create a Livestock Care and Standards Board to set standards for things like animal confinement. The board, she said, would create a local governing board to regulate the industry that takes into account animal rights activists' concerns as well as the interests of farmers, consumers and others.


    British lawmakers vote to launch airstrikes against Islamic State in Syria, despite protests

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    The 397-223 vote in the House of Commons means Royal Air Force fighter jets could be flying over Syria within days or even hours.

    By JILL LAWLESS
    and DANICA KIRKA

    LONDON -- British lawmakers voted by a wide margin Wednesday to join the international campaign of airstrikes against the Islamic State militant group in Syria, after Prime Minister David Cameron asserted that bombing the "medieval monsters" in their heartland would make Britain safer.

    The 397-223 vote in the House of Commons means Royal Air Force fighter jets -- already operating against IS in neighboring Iraq from a base in Cyprus -- could be flying over Syria within days or even hours.

    Anti-war protesters outside Parliament booed as they learned the result of the vote. The decision came after an emotional 10 1/2-hour debate in which Cameron said that Britain must strike the militants in their heartland and not "sit back and wait for them to attack us."

    Opponents argued that Britain's entry into Syria's crowded airspace would make little difference, and said Cameron's military plan was based on wishful thinking that overlooked the messy reality of the Syrian civil war.

    Cameron has long wanted to target IS in Syria, but had been unsure of getting majority support in the House of Commons until now. He suffered an embarrassing defeat in 2013 when lawmakers rejected a motion backing attacks on the forces of Syrian President Bashar Assad.

    The mood has changed following the Nov. 13 Paris attacks, claimed by IS, that killed 130 people. Both France and the U.S. have urged Britain to join their air campaign in Syria, and Cameron said Britain should not let its allies down.

    He said Britain was already a top target for IS attacks, and airstrikes would reduce the group's ability to plan more Paris-style carnage.

    "Do we work with our allies to degrade and destroy this threat and do we go after these terrorists in their heartlands, from where they are plotting to kill British people?" he said. "Or do we sit back and wait for them to attack us?"

    He said that attacking IS was not anti-Muslim but "a defense of Islam" against "women-raping, Muslim-murdering, medieval monsters."

    Cameron was backed by most members of his governing Conservative Party -- which holds 330 of the 650 Commons seats -- as well as members of the smaller Liberal Democrat party and others.

    Labour, the main opposition, was divided. Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn -- who represents the left wing of the party -- spoke against what he called a "reckless and half-baked intervention." But more than 60 Labour lawmakers, including senior party figures, voted in support of airstrikes, a move likely to make fissures between the right and the left of the party even worse.

    Labour foreign affairs spokesman Hilary Benn said Britain could not "walk by on the other side of the road" when international allies were asking for help against IS "fascists."

    Britain already conducts airstrikes against IS targets in Iraq, and in August launched a drone strike that killed two British IS militants in Syria.

    British officials say Royal Air Force Typhoon and Tornado fighter jets, armed with Brimstone missiles capable of hitting moving targets, would bring the campaign highly accurate firepower and help minimize civilian casualties.

    Critics claim British airstrikes will make little practical difference, and that ground forces will be needed to root out IS. Britain has ruled out sending troops, and critics of the government have responded with skepticism to Cameron's claim that there are 70,000 moderate Syrian rebels on the ground.

    Cameron stood by that claim Wednesday, though he conceded, "I'm not saying that the 70,000 are our ideal partners."

    Karin von Hippel, who was chief of staff to U.S. Gen. John Allen when he was the United States' anti-ISIS envoy, said force alone would not defeat the militants -- but neither would diplomacy by itself.

    "The Brits have expertise and capabilities," she said. Their involvement "brings moral authority and legitimacy to the fight."

    The British debate comes as U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said NATO members were ready to step up military efforts against the Islamic State group -- and held out hope of improved cooperation between the West and Russia to end Syria's four-year civil war.

    A day after U.S. Defense Secretary Ash Carter said the United States would deploy a new special operations force to Iraq to step up the fight against the militants, Kerry said other countries could provide assistance that did not involve combat. He said the effort to expand operations would require more medical facilities, intelligence-gathering, military support structure, refueling operations, aerial defenses and other action.

    The German Cabinet has approved plans to commit up to 1,200 soldiers to support the anti-IS coalition in Syria, though not in a combat role.

    Despite talk of increased international cooperation, tension has soared between Russia and Turkey after the shooting down of a Russian military jet by Turkish forces last week.

    On Wednesday, Russia's deputy defense minister, Anatoly Antonov, accused Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his family of benefiting from illegal oil trade with Islamic State militants.

    Erdogan called the claim "slander" and said Turkey would not "buy oil from a terror organization."

    Russia and the United States also disagree about tactics in Syria, with Moscow backing Assad and Washington saying he must go.

    But Kerry, speaking after NATO meetings in Brussels, said that if Russia's focus on fighting IS was "genuine," it could have a constructive role in bringing peace. He didn't say whether the U.S. might be willing to bring Russia into its military effort against the group, as some members such as France have proposed.

    The top NATO commander in Europe, U.S. Air Force Gen. Philip Breedlove, said the bulk of Russia's air operations in Syria are still directed against moderate anti-Assad opposition forces, not Islamic State positions.

    U.S. officials had hoped Russia would change its bombing focus after the Oct. 31 attack on a Russian airliner over Egypt, which killed 224 people.

    Asserting that the "vast majority" of Russian sorties targeted moderate groups, Breedlove said coalition forces were "not working with or cooperating with Russia in Syria" but had devised safety routines to make it easier for both groups.

    The British debate was sometimes bad-tempered as opposition lawmakers demanded Cameron apologize for remarks, reportedly made at a closed-door meeting, in which he branded opponents a "bunch of terrorist sympathizers."

    Cameron did not retract the comments but said "there's honor in voting for, there's honor in voting against" the motion to back airstrikes.

    From the passionate speeches in the House to the anti-war protesters outside Parliament, the debate recalled Britain's divisive 2003 decision to join the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq on what turned out to be false claims about Saddam Hussein's alleged weapons of mass destruction. Many lawmakers came to regret supporting the war and ensuing chaos, and blamed then-Labour Prime Minister Tony Blair for lacking a plan for post-war reconstruction.

    Labour leader Corbyn said that "to oppose another reckless and half-baked intervention isn't pacifism. It's hard-headed common sense."

    Labour's Shabana Mahmood -- one of the few Muslim lawmakers in Parliament -- called IS "Nazi-esque totalitarians who are outlaws from Islam," but said she opposed the strikes because "we cannot simply bomb the ground, we have to have a strategy to hold it as well."

    But Cameron said doing nothing was a worse option.

    "The risks of inaction are greater than the risks of what I propose," he said.


    AP writers Gregory Katz in London, Suzan Frazer in Ankara, Deb Riechmann in Washington, Jamey Keaten in Brussels and Sinan Salaheddin in Baghdad contributed to this report.

    Authorities on the lookout for inmate who escaped from Hampden County Jail in Ludlow

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    Ackeem Graham, 23, was starting a jail sentence for a gun crime on Wednesday, Dec. 2, when he managed to escape during the intake process, said Rich McCarthy, spokesman for the Hampden County Correctional Center.

    LUDLOW — Authorities were hunting for an inmate who bolted from the Hampden County jail in Ludlow on Wednesday afternoon.

    Ackeem Graham, 23, was starting his jail sentence for a gun crime when he somehow escaped during the intake procedure, according to Richard J. McCarthy, public information director for the Hampden County Correctional Center. Graham managed to exit through the pedestrian sally port around 3:19 p.m., McCarthy said.

    "He was starting his sentence today," the spokesman said.

    Graham was described as a 5-foot-8, 145-pound black man with brown eyes and black, dreadlocked hair. He may have left the Ludlow campus in a maroon or red Jeep Cherokee driven by another person, according to authorities.

    Police in Ludlow, Springfield and other communities were alerted about the jailbreak. The incident marks the first time an inmate has escaped from the secure facility, McCarthy said.

    Authorities are asking anyone who spots Graham to call 911 or their local police department.



    Activists submit signatures for 11 Massachusetts ballot questions, including charter schools and marijuana

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    Massachusetts Secretary of the Commonwealth William Galvin abandoned his effort to get public records reform on the 2016 ballot.

    BOSTON -- With festooned boxes of papers, rallies and press conferences, proponents of ballot questions dropped their signatures off with Secretary of the Commonwealth William Galvin's office on Tuesday and Wednesday.

    "This is what people power looks like!" exclaimed Elena Letona, an organizer with Neighbor to Neighbor, at a rally celebrating the signatures for a constitutional amendment for a millionaires' tax.

    Obtaining 64,750 certified signatures from voters is the first major hurdle for activists who want to have a referendum on a public policy issue in 2016 or a vote on a constitutional amendment in 2018. According to Galvin's office, activists submitted signatures for 11 ballot questions, halving the number of potential questions that were approved by Attorney General Maura Healey in September. However, that does not mean all the organizations gathered enough signatures or that the signatures meet all the requirements, such as being spread across counties.

    One initiative that did not have signatures submitted was Galvin's own attempt to shore up the state's public records law. Galvin told the State House News Service that he anticipates the Legislature taking action instead.

    A wide range of initiatives appear to have met the signature threshold.

    Charter school advocates apparently turned in enough signatures for a ballot question to authorize up to 12 new charter schools a year outside of an existing cap, with priority given to underperforming school districts.

    Union members from 1199SEIU, which represents health care workers, turned in signatures for an initiative to limit the disparity in the amount commercial insurers can reimburse different hospitals for the same procedure.

    cagefree.JPGAnimal rights activists celebrate having gathered enough signatures for a ballot question banning confinement of farm animals during an event at the Animal Rescue League of Boston on Dec. 2, 2015. 

    A group that opposes Massachusetts' use of the Common Core education standards has secured enough signatures to move forward with an initiative to repeal the standards.

    A coalition of unions, religious leaders and liberal community organizing groups got 105,000 certified signatures for a constitutional amendment that would raise taxes by 4 percentage points on income of more than $1 million a year.

    Adam Gomez, a Springfield city councilor-elect representing Ward 1, was among those collecting signatures with the working class organizing group Neighbor to Neighbor. "It's important that the money will be allocated to help wards like mine," Gomez said, pointing to the road repair and transportation needs in Massachusetts' poorest neighborhoods. Advocates for the tax hike say they want the wealthy to pay more for transportation and education.

    The Department of Revenue issued a report showing that the constitutional amendment would raise an additional $1.6 billion to $2.2 billion in tax revenue from around 19,500 filers.

    The Campaign to Regulate Marijuana Like Alcohol submitted around 75,000 certified signatures. A competing marijuana legalization group, Bay State Repeal, filed signatures, but a spokesman said the group does not believe it gathered enough.

    The Campaign to Regulate Marijuana Like Alcohol is proposing higher tax rates and more oversight of recreational marijuana than Bay State Repeal.

    "I don't think that Massachusetts voters are interested in another experiment," said Will Luzier, campaign manager of The Campaign to Regulate Marijuana Like Alcohol. "They're interested in seeing what Colorado, Oregon, Washington and Alaska have done and improving on that but not going to a farm tomato model like the other folks are proposing." Luzier said Bay State Repeal wants to "regulate marijuana no more than tomatoes."

    A coalition of animal rights activists said they had enough signatures for an initiative to ban "extreme confinement" of farm animals, by requiring that breeding pigs, calves raised for veal and egg-laying hens have enough room to turn around, stand up, lie down and stretch their limbs. Business owners would be prohibited from selling meat or eggs from farms that do not meet these standards. Opponents of the initiative warn that it would raise prices on eggs and meat.

    "I don't think any animals deserve to be confined to the point they can't move for 24 hours a day every day of their shortened lives," said Abby Monkarsh, a volunteer signature gatherer who described herself as a vegan who loves helping animals.

    http://www.masslive.com/politics/index.ssf/2015/12/ballot_dispute_brewing_over_ca.html#incart_river_home

    Organizers of several other initiatives submitted signatures, but the number of signatures was still unknown Wednesday, including one initiative to allow an additional slots parlor in Massachusetts.

    Spokesmen for several initiatives previously told The Republican that they were unsuccessful in gathering signatures or chose not to do so, including attempts to eliminate the net metering cap on solar energy, to eliminate the state's 6.25 percent sales tax on tobacco products and to require employers to give more notice of employee schedule changes. Other initiatives that did not submit signatures would have required retail electricity suppliers to increase the amount of electricity they get from renewable sources and would have prohibited the sale of fishing gear known to entangle whales.

    Dan Kane Singers set to assist fundraising efforts of Westfield Athenaeum

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    WESTFIELD - Dan Kane Singers will headline a concert Sunday to help the Westfield Athenaeum's fundraising efforts this holiday season. The concert is scheduled for 2 p.m. at the Athenaeum's Lang Theater. "This event is always a great kickoff to the Christmas Season'" Dan Kane said. This will mark the fifth consecutive year that Dan Kane Singers have assisted the...

    WESTFIELD - Dan Kane Singers will headline a concert Sunday to help the Westfield Athenaeum's fundraising efforts this holiday season.

    The concert is scheduled for 2 p.m. at the Athenaeum's Lang Theater.

    "This event is always a great kickoff to the Christmas Season'" Dan Kane said. This will mark the fifth consecutive year that Dan Kane Singers have assisted the library.

    Kane said the concert will showcase the talent of Shea Braceland, a nine-year-old student in the Westfield Public School system.

    "The audience will love her. Shea is an outstanding vocalist and a terrific young lady," said Kane.

    Tickets for the concert are $20 each and available by calling the Athenaeum at 413-568-7833 or in person at the library.

    Massachusetts weather: End of rain in sight Wednesday evening

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    While is was a wet Wednesday in Massachusetts, it's expected to stay dry tomorrow.

    SPRINGFIELD -- While is was a wet Wednesday in Massachusetts, it's expected to stay dry tomorrow.

    The National Weather Service reports temperatures may dip into into the high-30s in Western Massachusetts. The low in Boston and Worcester is expected to be in the mid-40s.

    While rain may continue to fall during the evening, Western Mass News Meteorologist Jacob Wycoff said, "the rain will be coming to an end near midnight."

    By the end of the evening, Wycoff expects less than an inch of rain to have fallen.

    There's a slight chance of showers Thursday morning in Western and Central Massachusetts, the National Weather Service reports.

    Strong winds are expected to blow on Thursday. Gusts as strong as 32 miles per hour may hit Springfield, the National Weather Service reports, with 39, 38 mile per hour gusts expected in Worcester and Boston, respectively.

    The high for Thursday is in the mid-40s for Springfield, Boston and Worcester, low-40s for Berkshire County. 

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