Quantcast
Channel: News
Viewing all 62489 articles
Browse latest View live

Westfield and Greenfield library directors finalists for Amherst's Jones Library post

$
0
0

Christopher Lindquist of the Westfield Athenaeum and Sharon Sharry of the Greenfield Public Llibrary were chosen from 6 applicants from 5 states.

Christopher Lindquist Sharon Sharry.jpgChristopher Lindquist, left, director of the Westfield Athenaeum, and Sharon Sharry, right, library director at The Greenfield Public Library, are the finalists to become director of the Jones Library in Amherst.

AMHERST – The directors of the Westfield Athenaeum and the Greenfield Public library have been named the finalists to run the Jones Library.

Christopher Lindquist of the Athenaeum and Sharon Sharry of the Greenfield library were chosen from six applicants from five states, according to a release from the Jones Library Board of Trustee president Sarah McKee. “The finalists were by far the best candidates for the Jones Library,” she wrote.

The board wants the community involved in the selection and has scheduled two public meetings as well as a day and a half of meetings, tours, and second-round interviews for the candidates.

Sharry will visit July 21 and 22, with a public presentation July 21. Lindquist will visit July 26 and 27 and meet the public July 26.

The public presentation topic is “Do We Still Need Public Libraries? Aren’t Community Centers With Computers Enough?”

The board will provide community feedback forms at the presentations and an online form will be available at http://www.joneslibrary.org. All public feedback will be considered by the search committee, according to the release.

JONES2_7739533.JPGBonnie J. Isman was the library director for more than 30 years before her retirement in December. Trustees hope to have a permanent director in place by Sept. 1.

The annual Jones Library budget is $2.1 million, and it circulates more materials than any other library in Western Massachusetts, according to the library budget report. The system includes the Jones Library and two branches.

The Director Search Committee will meet July 29 to talk about its choice and a recommendation will be made to the trustees Aug. 2. The trustees are hoping to have the next director begin work by Sept. 1.

The Jones Library longtime library director Bonnie J. Isman retired Dec. 10 after 30 years. Since then Tevis Kimball, curator of special collections, has been acting director.

Besides McKee and Kimball, the search committee includes trustee Austin Sarat; Tony A. Maroulis, executive director of the Amherst Area Chamber of Commerce; Lucy McMurrer, president of the Friends of the Jones Library and Matthew Berube of the Jones library staff.


China media dismiss reports of retired President Jiang Zemin's death

$
0
0

Jiang led China through massive changes after the crushing of the 1989 Tiananmen Square democracy movement.

aug2008 jiang zemin.jpgFILE - In this Friday, Aug. 8, 2008 file picture, former Chinese President Jiang Zemin waves during the opening ceremonies for the Beijing 2008 Olympics in Beijing. Rumors that the retired Chinese leader was dead or dying raced through China's Internet on Wednesday, July 6, 2011, sending censors into overdrive to excise them and in turn spurring people to craft ever more cryptic and inventive postings. (AP Photo/Kevin Frayer)

By ALEXA OLESEN

BEIJING — China on Thursday dismissed reports that retired President Jiang Zemin, who led the country through massive changes after the crushing of the 1989 Tiananmen Square democracy movement, has died.

The official Xinhua News Agency quoted what it called authoritative sources as saying the reports were "pure rumor." The one-sentence dispatch in English wasn't carried by the Chinese-language service of the state-run agency, indicating it was meant for overseas audiences.

The need to comment underscores the difficulties the secretive, authoritarian government faces in controlling information. While state media are under tight control, foreign reports seep into China via the Internet, giving Chinese access to news — and rumors — the leadership dislikes.

An official from the Cabinet's information office said only, "It's a rumor," when asked about Jiang's death. The official, like many in China, would give only her surname, Li.

The denials follow days of intense online conjecture over whether Jiang, 84, had died or was close to death, fueled by his failure to appear at last Friday's celebration of the 90th anniversary of the ruling Communist Party's founding.

A Hong Kong TV station and Japanese and South Korean media had reported that Jiang had died.

The Internet speculation sent censors into overdrive to excise the comments.

Searches for "Jiang Zemin" in Chinese or simply "Jiang" — which means "river" — drew warnings on Sina Corp.'s popular Twitter-like service that said the search was illegal. Some posts then began appearing on Sina Weibo about former leader "River" in English.

News that some overseas media had reported Jiang's death whizzed around the social networking site, with some mainland users puzzling over how Hong Kong media could have received the news first.

The government is very secretive about the health of top leaders and is particularly sensitive ahead of a looming leadership transition that kicks off late next year at a major Communist Party congress. The death of Jiang, a retired but still very influential figure, could cause some of his proteges to shift allegiances, affecting the jockeying for power among China's rising political elites.

China prefers to keep such machinations behind the scenes as much as possible.

The U.S.-based dissident news site Boxun.com said Shandong News in eastern China had its website disabled by authorities for reporting Jiang's death, though the newspaper dismissed Boxun's report.

Boxun showed what it said was a screenshot of Shandong News with a banner headline reading, "Venerable Comrade Jiang Zemin Will Never Be Forgotten" next to a photo of the former leader.

A woman in the news department at Shandong News said the newspaper's site went offline Wednesday because their servers crashed and they were still trying to fix the problem.

The woman, who would only give her surname, Wang, said the website never posted news saying Jiang had died.

"That's a rumor," she said. "Maybe someone with ulterior motives made that screenshot."

Jiang led China for a dozen years until transferring power to President Hu Jintao in 2002.

AP researcher Yu Bing contributed to this report.

Los Alamos nuclear weapons lab reopens as wildfire danger fades

$
0
0

Although the threat to Los Alamos National Laboratory and the town that surrounds it has passed, the largest fire in New Mexico's history continued to burn in remote areas.

070501_new_mexico_wildfire.jpgA grove of ponderosa pines charred by the Las Conchas fire stands on a hillside near Cochiti Mesa, N.M. (AP Photo/Susan Montoya Bryan)

By SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — Smoke still hung in the air from a northern New Mexico wildfire that came dangerously close to the nation's premier nuclear weapons laboratory, but life was returning to normal Wednesday as thousands of employees showed up for their first day of work in more than a week.

Although the threat to Los Alamos National Laboratory and the town that surrounds it has passed, the largest fire in New Mexico's history continued to burn in remote areas. The fire, which began last month, had forced the closure of the lab along with the evacuation of thousands of residents in nearby communities.

Lab officials say they have a "methodical and careful" plan to resume operations suspended by the blaze known as the Las Conchas fire. "There's going to be a lot of assessing over the next two or three days of where exactly we are on key research projects," lab spokesman Kevin Roark said.

"But that's going to take some time," he added. "It's going to take a couple of weeks at least."

The lab had some 10,000 experiments running that were put on hold because of the fire and the evacuations.

The delayed projects include experiments on two supercomputers and studies on extending the life of 1960s-era nuclear bombs.

The lab also works on such topics as renewable energy and particle physics, solar flares, forensics on terrorist attacks, and studying the AIDS virus at the molecular level to help scientists develop strategies for developing vaccines.

At one point, the fire also raised concerns about possible contamination from material stored or buried on lab grounds. As a precaution, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency sent a plane equipped with radiation monitors over the lab. Samples from air monitors on the ground also showed nothing abnormal in the smoke.

"Since we didn't have any fire on lab property other than one small spot fire, we had literally zero impact to all of our key facilities," Roark said.

The blaze started June 26 when a tree fell onto a power line. The flames exploded on the hillside and then raced across tens of thousands of acres of tinder-dry forest in the Jemez Mountains before firefighters were able to establish control along the lab's southern boundary.

The fire had chewed through more than 204 square miles by Wednesday. Firefighters have managed to contain 40 percent of the blaze by Wednesday night, and only five injuries have been reported among those working on the fire lines. No civilians were injured by the flames.

Lab director Charles McMillan plans to address employees Thursday. He has been telling managers to let workers know that their health, their families and homes should be priorities.

"He's really been very conscious about the stresses, both recognized and unrecognized, in people when they go through something like this. You're worried about all these unknowns," Roark said.

McMillan's message has been for workers to slow down.

"Yes, we're behind in some things but trying to work quickly isn't the answer," Roark said. "Be deliberate, be safe."

In the mountains southwest of the lab, where more than five dozen homes were destroyed, trees were left without branches and the ground was bare except for ash and blackened boulders.

In some spots, the fire had burned so hot and fast that pine needles had been replaced by ghostly white ash that had yet to be blown away by the wind. Other trees had charred trunks with bits of green at their tops.

Some lab employees lost everything, and managers were taking steps to give those workers time to recover, Roark said.

It was more than luck that kept the flames out of the lab and the town, lab officials said. They pointed to the backburns done by firefighters along the lab's southern boundary, the work done along the bottom of Los Alamos canyon to stop the flames and the clearing of fuel on the edges of town.

"Some of the things they did Sunday night quite literally saved the town," Roark said.

Residents on Cochiti Mesa and in Peralta Canyon didn't fare as well. Some got to survey the damage to their properties Tuesday.

Some areas were wiped clean by the fire, leaving behind only the blackened skeletons of thousands of trees and melted pickup trucks, snowmobiles and sheds.

At the lab, officials have been inspecting buildings to ensure they were safe for workers to return. Only a few required cleanup due to things such as rodent infestation.

Residents were also being warned about hungry bears wandering into town after being displaced by the fire. Officials said the highly mobile nature of black bears was making it impossible to determine how many bears might be in town.

Kevin Smith, site manager for Los Alamos for the Department of Energy's National Nuclear Security Administration, said bringing people back to Los Alamos and the lab has gone according to plan but that signs of the fire remain.

He pointed to the helicopter missions being flown out of the town's airport, the lingering smoke and the flare-ups on the hills west of the community.

"It's just the natural order of things," Smith said. "You just take time and get yourself squared away and gradually get back to being focused on operations."

Massport asks for release from 9/11 lawsuit

$
0
0

A suit filed by the mother of a Boston man who died in the attacks says hijackers were able to board United Airlines Flight 175 in Boston because of negligence by United and Massport.

BOSTON (AP) — The Massachusetts Port Authority has asked to be released from the last pending wrongful death lawsuit related to the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.

The suit filed by the mother of a Boston man who died in the attacks says hijackers were able to board United Airlines Flight 175 in Boston because of negligence by United and Massport, which runs Logan International Airport.

The Boston Globe reports that Massport in a filing last week said the airport had no role in screening passengers and no "causal connection" to the attacks.

The suit was filed in federal court in New York City by Mary Bavis. Her son, Mark, died when his plane crashed into the World Trade Center's south tower.

A Massport spokesman had no comment. Bavis' lawyer could not be reached.

Western Massachusetts Puerto Rican Parade and Family Festival celebrates 25 years

$
0
0

The 4-day festival begins with a performance by Plena Libra, a Grammy-nominated band, and continues with mariachi, salsa, merengue and reggaeton performances.

072505 Western Massachusetts Puerto Rican Parade.JPGView full sizeFILE – The Western Massachusetts Puerto Rican Parade winds down Sargeant Street in Holyoke.

HOLYOKE – The Western Massachusetts Puerto Rican Parade and Family Festival will celebrate 25 years this weekend.

“It’s been a long standing tradition in the city of Holyoke, and an opportunity for everyone to come together to have a good time,” said Freddie Vazquez, who is organizing the parade. The festival is organized by Holyoke City Councilor Diosdado Lopez.

The four-day festival begins Thursday at 5:30 p.m. with a performance by Plena Libra, a Grammy-nominated Puerto Rican folkloric band, at 8:30 p.m.

The event continues Friday and Saturday with mariachi, salsa, merengue and reggaeton performances including Mariachi Connecticut, Neo y Anesti and David Cedano y su Orquestra, Los Toros Band and many more.

“We wanted to bring a variety of musical talent, not just one type of music,” Vazquez said. “While this is primarily a Puerto Rican event we want all Latino countries to be represented.”

The festivities culminate on Sunday with the parade, which kicks off at noon from Holyoke High School. On Sunday, there will also be a performance at 6 p.m. by Latin salsa singer Tito Allen, a well-known Puerto Rican salsa singer.

The parade will include local dance groups and musicians as well as floats.

“It’s going to be a great parade with something for everyone,” Vazquez said.

The event will also include crafts, activities for children and Puerto Rican cuisine sold by local vendors.

“This is a family-oriented event,” Vazquez said. “We want people to come out and have fun.”

Westfield officials consider regulations governing placement of political signs

$
0
0

The City Council is expected to consider sign regulations at its August meeting.

big lawn sign detail.jpgA detail from an extra-large lawn sign that was deemed illegal in Springfield several elections ago.

WESTFIELD – The Planning Board has agreed to review and consider regulations governing the posting of political campaign signs and submit a recommendation to the City Council for adoption in August.

The review was requested by City Councilor David A. Flaherty who called existing regulations “outdated and not enforced.”

The councilor, preparing to launch his re-election campaign for a second two-year term, presented planners with a proposed new ordinance that will govern the placement and use of “temporary free-standing ground signs” for political campaigns, sales, promotions, educational or religious organizations.

“This is not a perfect list, but it is a base line, a good starting point,” said Flaherty.

“There needs to be clarification and more specific standards for the display of temporary ground signs,” Flaherty said.

The board agreed to review the proposed ordinance Aug. 2 and make recommendations to the full City Council by its Aug. 18 meeting.

The proposed new ordinance addresses the size, number of and height of signs as well as where they can be placed during campaigns:

• Candidates or causes will be limited to the placement of one sign per residential lot throughout the city, and signs will not be permitted on public property including road sides;

• Signs will not be displayed on buildings except headquarters of candidates or organizations sponsoring the sign;

• Signs cannot contain moving parts, shall not be illuminated and shall not obstruct view by motorists and of traffic control signals.

Flaherty proposes a time line that would prevent placement of signs more than three months before an election or event and require removal within three days following an election or event.

Westfield’s municipal election season is under way with a preliminary election, if necessary, scheduled for Sept. 7 and the general election set for Nov. 8.

Sunrise report: Forecast, poll and more for Thursday July 7

$
0
0

Today's poll: Will Congress reach a deal on raising the debt limit?

Space ShuttleThe sun rises behind the clouds as fishermen try their luck along the Indian River in Riverfront Park in Titusville, Fla., Thursday, July 7, 2011. Unsettled weather threatens to postpone the final launch of space shuttle Atlantis, on Friday.

The Forecast

The cool gusts that accompanied last evening's storms were only a memory this morning. The sun was back, the air a little chewy with the lingering humidity.

The National Weather Service is calling for sun with a high of 86 today. Friday's looking more unsettled, with a 50% chance of rain.

Find the full forecast here.





Today's Poll

Members of Congress are still working this week to strike a deal on raising the debt limit. The AP reports:

President Barack Obama is pressing Democrats to support a higher deficit reduction proposal that could win Republican support for new tax revenue while reducing costs for major benefit programs such as Medicare and Social Security as the price to reach a deal on raising the government's debt limit.

Congressional leaders from both parties will go to the White House Thursday, hoping to move closer to a budget deal with less than four weeks to avert a first-ever default on U.S. financial obligations.

What do you think -- will Congress reach a deal on raising the debt limit? Vote in our poll, and check back tomorrow for the results.

Wednesday's results: Yesterday, we asked "Are you planning to watch Friday's launch of space shuttle Atlantis?"

12 people responded. 66.67% said "No"; 33.33% said "Yes."




Wednesday's Top 5:

The top 5 headlines on MassLive.com on July 6 were:

1) MLB trade rumors 2011: Do any of the hot names fit with the Red Sox? [photo gallery]

2) Casey Anthony acquitted of murdering 2-year-old daughter Caylee in Florida

3) Rev. Paul Archambault's death at Our Lady of the Sacred Heart Rectory in Springfield was suicide, police say

4) 17-year-old man, shot twice by a Palmer police officer during armed stand-off, expected to survive, faces criminal charges

5) Boston mobster Whitey Bulger and girlfriend Catherine Greig arrested in California




Quote of the Day

“He said, 'I lost my fence, but now I know who my neighbor is'.”

~Richard F. Devine, the sheriff department’s director of operations, recalling a conversation with a resident shortly after the June 1 tornadoes. Read Jack Flynn's story here.

Cost for Chicopee to tear down Market Square Billiards building gets pricier

$
0
0

The City Council had approved spending about $350,000 to tear down the building last summer.

080706 market square billiards player.JPGFILE – A player lines up a shot at Market Square Billiards in Chicopee.

CHICOPEE – The plan to tear down the former Market Square Billiards building and use the property to create a small downtown parking lot has grown more expensive.

This week the City Council was asked to spend another $250,000 to tear down the building at 6-20 Springfield St. It has already allocated about $350,000 for the project.

But faced with questions including one about an outstanding lawsuit over the building, the City Council voted 12-0 to discuss the issue in its finance committee instead of approving the money.

“We are $615,000 into this project if this is passed,” Councilor James K. Tillotson. “It is pretty expensive for 28 parking spaces.”

A year ago, the City Council gave Michael D. Bissonnette its approval to acquire the structure, which was in bank foreclosure, by eminent domain. The 1925 building is in poor condition.

During the process of tearing down the building, officials discovered there was a common wall shared by the adjacent Starzyk Building, creating a new problem.

“A significant amount of unanticipated structural investigation and engineering was required to prepare the plans and (specifications) for the work. In addition the structural stabilization of the Starzyk Building adds significant cost to the project,” Stanley W. Kulig, superintendent of the Department of Public Works said in a letter to the mayor.

The initial estimate of $350,000 was for design, building demolition and construction of the parking lot. The additional $250,000 is needed to stabilize the Starzyk building and for hazardous waste abatement and structural engineering and inspection costs, according to the report.

“If there is a party wall that connects two buildings ... you have to offer them some structural support,” Karen T. Betournay, the city solicitor said.

Members questioned if they were getting into more problems because there is a lawsuit over the building taking.

Betournay confirmed there is a lawsuit filed by IB Property Holdings, of Florida, the company which owned the property. The case is currently in the discovery phase.

“I don’t think there is much of a case,” Betournay said, adding she will have to research it more.

Councilor Charles M. Swider, whose ward includes the downtown area, said many want to see the parking lot, even though it will be small.

“It will be helpful to some businesses downtown,” he said.


Motor vehicle stop at Appleton and High streets in Holyoke yields arrest of 4 city men on drug charges

$
0
0

Police stopped the vehicle shortly after 12:30 a.m. on Thursday.

1999 holyoke police car.jpg

HOLYOKE – A motor vehicle stop by police at Appleton and High streets early Thursday yielded the arrests of four city men on drug charges.

Steven Brown, 21, of 72 Essex St.; Victor Alvarado, 21, of 532 Pleasant St., Apt 3R; Luis Alberto Roman-Soler, 60 Center St., Apt. 3L, 27; and Ulises Casiano, 21, of 125 Center St. They were charged with possession of pharmaceuticals, possession of pharmaceuticals with intent to distribute and conspiracy to violate drug law.

Brown was also charged with possession of cocaine. Police arrested the four shortly after 12:30 a.m. Additional information was not immediately available.

Lawmakers visit White House for budget talks

$
0
0

Congressional leaders from both parties will go to the White House Thursday.

Eric Cantor, APHouse Majority Leader Eric Cantor of Va. speaks to reporters during a pen and pad on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, July 6, 2011.

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama is pressing Democrats to support a higher deficit reduction proposal that could win Republican support for new tax revenue while reducing costs for major benefit programs such as Medicare and Social Security as the price to reach a deal on raising the government's debt limit.

Congressional leaders from both parties will go to the White House Thursday, hoping to move closer to a budget deal with less than four weeks to avert a first-ever default on U.S. financial obligations.

"I think there will be a spirit of trying to get results here," House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, R-Va., said early Thursday.

While discussions on trimming the costs of entitlement programs had centered on Medicare, the health care program for older Americans, the White House is revisiting a proposal raised earlier in the negotiations to change the inflation measurement used to calculate Social Security cost-of-living adjustments, thus reducing annual increases.

The White House signaled Wednesday that the president is aiming for deficit reduction closer to $4 trillion over 10 years — an ambitious number that would nearly double the roughly $2 trillion that had been at the center of negotiations. Negotiations are gaining urgency by the day, because Republicans are insisting on major cuts to the deficit as the price for approving legislation to maintain the government's ability to borrow money and stave off a market-rattling default.

Democratic and Republican officials familiar with the discussions said Thursday that Social Security was in the mix for potential cost savings. Reintroducing the retirement program to the talks is likely to cause anxiety among congressional Democrats who have insisted that Social Security does not contribute to the nation's deficit problems.

The officials spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the talks. They stressed that no aspect of the deal had been accepted by either side.

One official said that an option under discussion would allow Republicans to make a commitment to overhaul and simplify the tax system that would lower individual and corporate tax rates while closing loopholes, ending some deductions and limiting other tax subsidies. Those changes could generate tax revenue and was central element of a deficit reduction plan proposed by a bipartisan commission late last year.

That discussion also included lowering the costs of Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid.

Two Democratic officials allied with Obama said the president believes it would be easier to win bipartisan support in the House and Senate for a deal that embraces larger deficit cuts closer to the $4 trillion over 12 years that Obama proposed in April.

The officials, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss the secret negotiations more freely, said the precise number was still in flux, but they said Obama would be making the case for more rather than less deficit reduction in his discussions with congressional leaders Thursday.

However, any larger figure would depend on agreement on a long-term deficit or spending cap, enforced by automatic spending cuts and, under Obama's proposals, a tax-increase "trigger" that would be tripped if targets were not met. Negotiations within the Biden-led group on the idea of spending caps and tax triggers had reached an impasse, however, a GOP aide familiar with the talks said.

The negotiations are the first official sit-down since last month, when House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, R-Va., left talks that had been led by Vice President Joe Biden, citing an insistence by Democrats on raising taxes.

But Cantor went out of his way Wednesday to make clear that he bolted the Biden group over an administration proposal to limit the ability of upper-bracket taxpayers and small businesses to claim deductions — and he signaled a willingness to consider closing some tax loopholes for businesses as part of a broader budget pact.

"If the president wants to talk loopholes, we'll be glad to talk loopholes," said Cantor, adding that any revenues raised from closing loopholes "should be coupled with offsetting tax cuts somewhere else."

On Thursday, Cantor said that any deal to avert a government default must include "reforms to the system" to show that Washington can manage the country's finances.

The Virginia Republican conceded in an interview that special interest loopholes in the tax code must be addressed. But he also said Republicans are being falsely accused of blocking agreement on a package of spending cuts necessary to produce enough votes to renew the Treasury's borrowing authority, which expires Aug. 2.

Cantor said differences between Democrats and Republicans over such issues as tax breaks for owners of corporate jets were not the factors behind his decision last week to walk out of deficit-reduction talks led by Vice President Joe Biden.

"There was a fundamental disagreement over whether we should raise taxes right now," he said.

His comments reflected important, if nuanced, flexibility by Republicans. His earlier position was that closing loopholes should wait for a comprehensive overhaul of the tax code. And he didn't rule out using loophole revenues to extend existing tax cuts instead of paying for new ones.

In the Senate, however, GOP leader Mitch McConnell was against the idea. "To sort of cherry-pick items in the context of this current negotiation at the White House strikes me as pretty challenging," he said.

After a pugnacious news conference last week, Obama struck a far softer tone Tuesday in inviting lawmakers to the White House.

But on Wednesday, Obama attacked Republicans as defenders of wasteful and unfair loopholes, such as subsidies for highly profitable oil companies or a break given to companies that purchase private jets.

"The debt ceiling should not be something that is used as a gun against the heads of the American people to extract tax breaks for corporate jet owners or oil and gas companies that are making billions of dollars," Obama said during a town hall that featured questions posed through the online social network Twitter.

Thursday's session comes several days after Obama and House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, met secretly at the White House to try to end political posturing and get negotiations back on track.

Cantor was interviewed on CBS's "The Early Show" and NBC's "Today" show.

Man killed by grizzly bear at Yellowstone National Park

$
0
0

The mauling occurred just after Yellowstone's peak weekend for tourism.

yellowstone grizzly bearA grizzly bear roams near Beaver Lake in Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, Wednesday July 6, 2011.

YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK, Wyo. — A killer grizzly is roaming Yellowstone National Park's backcountry after mauling a man who apparently surprised the female bear and its cubs while hiking with his wife.

Officials closed remote campgrounds and trails near the scene of Wednesday's attack close to Canyon Village, which sits in the middle of the sprawling park. The identity of the 57-year-old victim was being withheld until his family could be notified, said Yellowstone spokesman Al Nash.

The mauling occurred just after Yellowstone's peak weekend for tourism. While lamenting the death, officials said they didn't want to overemphasize the danger to visitors.

"This is a wild and natural park," said Diane Shober, director of the state Wyoming Travel and Tourism agency. "At the same time, the likelihood of this happening again is small."

It was the park's first fatal grizzly mauling since 1986, but the third in the Yellowstone region in just over a year amid ever-growing numbers of grizzlies and tourists roaming the same wild landscape of scalding-hot geysers and sweeping mountain vistas.

The bear attacked Wednesday morning to defend against a perceived threat, park officials said. The wife of the victim called 911 on her cell phone and other hikers in the area responded to her cries for help.

Nash said the couple saw the bear twice on their hike. The first time, they continued hiking. The second time, the grizzly charged them and the man told his wife to run.

The woman told park officials she didn't see the bear attack her husband. When the bear went for her, Nash said, she dropped to the ground. The grizzly lifted her off the ground by the day pack she was wearing, then dropped her. The woman may have had scrapes and bruises but didn't seek medical attention.

Yellowstone and surrounding areas are home at least 600 grizzlies — and some say more than 1,000. Once rare to behold, grizzlies have become an almost routine cause of curious tourists lining up at Yellowstone's roadsides at the height of summer season.

Those tourists have been flooding into Yellowstone in record numbers: 3.6 million last year, up 10 percent from 2009's 3.3 million, also a record.

In June 2010, a grizzly just released after being tranquilized for study killed an Illinois man hiking outside Yellowstone's east gate. Last July, a grizzly killed a Michigan man and injured two others in a nighttime campground rampage near Cooke City, Mont., northeast of the park.

Full-grown Yellowstone bears can stand 6 feet tall and top 600 pounds. They have been known to peel off a man's face with a single swipe of their massive, clawed paws.

They are an omnivorous species with a diet of berries, elk, fish, moths, ants and even pine nuts. In 2009, a federal judge restored threatened species protections for Yellowstone grizzlies, citing beetle-caused declines in the numbers of whitebark pine trees in the region. The protections had been lifted in 2007.

Environmentalists have cited the beetle-caused decimation of the whitebark pine as putting grizzlies in greater danger of extinction because some bears rely on whitebark pine nuts. But experts caution that it sometimes can be impossible to determine the cause of bear attacks on humans.

Grizzlies require constant vigilance for tourists and park employees alike, said Caleb Platt, a service station manager at Canyon Village. Platt said he has had a handful of fairly close encounters with grizzlies while hiking in the park.

"When it's close and you realize it does see you, it gets the heart racing," Platt said.

Park officials worked to clear the area near Wednesday's attack of people. A warning sign was posted on the trailhead, Nash said.

"It is in the backcountry of the park, and we have access challenges and limited communication," he said.

Officials also issued recommendations for visitors to stay safe from backcountry bears: Stay on designated trails, hike in groups of three or more, and make noise in places where a grizzly could be lurking. Bear spray — pressurized hot-pepper residue in a can — is effective in stopping aggressive bears, they said.

A spokesman for the Wyoming state tourism agency doubted the attack would cause anybody to change their Yellowstone vacation plans.

"What has happened here hasn't happened for a quarter century," Chuck Coon said. "It is very sad, though, and I'm very sorry to hear of it."

Extreme coupon cutters save cash, teach their ways

$
0
0

Many who have watched the television series "Extreme Couponing" want to join the craze themselves.

extreme coupon cuttersIn this photo taken Tuesday, June 28, 2011, Monica Knight, a dental hygienist and mother of two, shows her coupon binder at her home in Boise, Idaho. Knight, a used to spend spent $600 a month on groceries. Thanks to extreme couponing she's down to $100-150 a month.

BOISE, Idaho — The women sat expectantly as Monica Knight told them she once routinely spent $600 a month on groceries for her family of four. Breaking into a broad smile, Knight says that figure has been reduced to only $100 to $150 a month.

And now the dental hygienist and mother of two is about to tell them her secret.

The women lean forward in their seats. They're the latest disciples of extreme couponing; women who carry pictures of their overflowing pantries on their cell phones; savvy shoppers who will spend hours flipping through newspaper and magazine advertisements in search of their bargains, and homemakers who have pinched pennies to put food on the table during the recession and need the extra help.

Most have watched the television series "Extreme Couponing," which debuted on TLC in April and follows shoppers whose intense devotion to finding bargains can whittle a $555.44 grocery store bill down to $5.97, to cite one extreme example.

Heather Border, a 36-year-old mother of four in rural Idaho, is a new to the extreme coupon phenomenon. But she was hooked a few weeks ago, after coupons and store deals brought her $180 grocery bill down to $40.

"I was feeling a little conspicuous because people were staring at me," Border said. "Then, I felt a rush."

She was among about 20 women who attended an extreme coupon class on a recent Saturday in Boise. The three-hour course was taught by Knight and her business partner, Cathy Yoder. They own the extreme couponing blog, "Fabulessly Frugal."

The women oohed and awed as Knight pulled out the fat binder of coupons that saves her 50 percent to 90 percent on every grocery bill. She showed off pictures of the stockpile of food at her home, where 46 boxes of cereal are stowed in her children's bedroom closet and packages of breakfast drink mix are kept under a bed.

In their class, Yoder and Knight warn against some of the practices that have given extreme coupon cutters like themselves a bad rap.

They instruct their students to be kind to their cashiers. They encourage them to stockpile food to help their families, but caution against "hoarding" or clearing shelves of items that their families don't need or won't use. They also warned against photocopying coupons, which can place stores on alert and ruin deals for everyone.

"I think the stores are a little freaked out because of the television show," said Knight, who advises her students to keep a copy of grocery store policies on hand during shopping trips in case problems arise.

Even before the "Extreme Couponing" series, grocery stores were put on alert about counterfeit coupons that were circulating online. The National Grocers Association issued a warning in 2009, as couponing made a fierce comeback during the peak of the recession.

The coupon-processing company Inmar Inc. reported coupon use doubling in the first half of 2009 compared with the same period a year earlier,

The Internet has also bolstered coupon use, with a wide range of online promotions, databases of coupons and bloggers who regularly post about the best deals.

"This is a whole new ballgame," said Glenda Glisson, 63, who attended the extreme couponing class in Boise.

The Kroger Co., which operates the nation's largest traditional grocery chain, launched a website about 18 months ago that allows customers to download coupons to their store discount cards or onto home computers to print. The site added a mobile phone coupon app last year.

"We've seen slightly more complex couponing, which can take longer for us to help our customers exit the store," said Kroger spokesman Keith Dailey.

The so-called extreme couponers make up a small portion of customers and Kroger has not been forced to limit coupon use because of the trend, he said.

"But we're certainly keeping an eye on the industry," Dailey said.

At Fabulessly Frugal, savvy shoppers can find video tutorials and state specific coupon lists. The site boasts nine bloggers, including the coupon class instructors Yoder and Knight, who specialize in specific grocery stores.

Yoder started the blog about three years ago for family and friends. She knew Knight, who had also started to clip coupons, from her church and the two started blogging together in November 2008. A few months later, Yoder learned that she was pregnant with her seventh child, and then her husband lost his job.

Her family, however, had a reserve of food to fall back on thanks to coupons, Yoder said.

During her best shopping trip, she purchased 165 boxes of cereal for about $14.

It wasn't long before Yoder and Knight realized their extreme coupon website could make money. The site features advertisements and they get paid per click on about 75 percent of the coupons found on the website, Yoder said. They made $35 the first month it featured the coupons, she said.

"We make that in an hour now," said Yoder, who now supports her family with the website, which gets about 30,000 hits per day.

The coupon craze is both good and bad, she said.

On one hand, she makes a living off it.

"At the same time there's just an increased level of frustration for everybody," she said in reference to the long lines and sometimes empty shelves.

Yoder and other extreme coupon cutters acknowledge some participants do cross the line.

In Idaho, two newspapers reported this month that coupon inserts were being stolen from their racks. The state's largest newspaper, the Idaho Statesman, set up a sting in Boise and filed a police report after a woman was caught pulling the ads from more than a dozen copies.

In nearby Nampa, a woman said she was banned from Wal-Mart stores because of an argument over her use of a competitor's coupon.

"We should have accepted the coupon, and we understand that this could have been handled differently from both sides. I've since reached out to the customer and invited her back to our store," said Lorenzo Lopez, a Wal-Mart spokesman based in Arkansas.

While some newspapers have reported thefts, several have also reported that sales are up with help from coupons.

In Washington state, the Columbia Basin Herald reported single copies sales were up 12 percent in May, compared to the previous year. The newspaper reported that more than 800 newspapers were sold at its Moses Lake, Wash., offices on a recent Wednesday afternoon.

While the coupon clipping trend is probably not a huge factor when it comes to newspaper circulation, the coupon business has been very healthy during the recession, said Rick Edmonds, a media business analyst at The Poynter Institute in St. Petersburg, Fla.

"I think, particularly with unemployment rates what they are, the phenomenon is going to be around for a while," he said.

Lisa Curtin to take over as principal of Soule Road School in Wilbraham

$
0
0

Curtin is the former assistant principal at Sullivan Elementary School in Holyoke.

WILBRAHAM – Hampden-Wilbraham Regional School Superintendent M. Martin O’Shea has appointed Lisa Osgood Curtin as the new principal of Soule Road School.

Curtin is the former assistant principal at Sullivan Elementary School in Holyoke, where she has worked since 2004. Prior to being named assistant principal, Curtin was the literacy coach at Sullivan School for a number of years. Sullivan has approximately 600 students in grades K through 8.

She replaces Mary Goodwin as principal of Soule Road School. Goodwin is retiring after working in the school district since 1995.

O’Shea said Curtin will be introduced to the regional School Committee at its July 12 meeting.

Before she joined the Holyoke public schools, Curtin was an elementary teacher in South Hadley and a literacy instructor to teachers for the Hampshire Educational Collaborative.

She has a master’s degree in education, with a focus on curriculum, instruction and literacy, from Lesley University. Her undergraduate degree, a bachelor of arts degree in English, is from Mount Holyoke College.

Curtin will assume her duties on July 25.

O’Shea said, “We had many good applicants for the position, but Lisa Curtin rose to the top of the list during the interview process.”

He said that Curtin’s credentials and depth of knowledge and experience in literacy, curriculum and instruction, as well as her professionalism and high level of energy, “make her a great choice as the new leader at Soule Road Elementary School.”

Casey Anthony sentence: Casey Anthony to be freed in late July or early August

$
0
0

The judge sentenced Casey Anthony two days after she was acquitted of first-degree murder in the death of her 2-year-old daughter Caylee.

casey anthony sentenceCasey Anthony talks with her attorney, Dorothy Clay Sims, before a sentencing hearing in Orlando, Fla. on Thursday, July 7, 2011. Anthony was acquitted of killing her daughter, Caylee, but faces four charges of lying to police officials.

ORLANDO, Fla. — A judge sentenced Casey Anthony on Thursday to four years for lying to investigators but says she can go free in late July or early August because she has already served nearly three years in jail and has had good behavior.

While acquitted of killing and abusing her 2-year-old daughter Caylee, Anthony was convicted of four counts of lying to detectives trying to find her daughter in July 2008. She lied to them about working at the Universal Studios theme park, about leaving her daughter with a non-existent nanny named Zanny, about leaving the girl with friends and about receiving a phone call from her.

At the time of the girl's disappearance in June 2008, Anthony, a single mother, and Caylee were living with Anthony's parents, George and Cindy Anthony, in suburban Orlando. No one has come forward as the child's father.

Prosecutors contended Anthony, then 22, suffocated Caylee with duct tape because she was interfering with her desire to be with her boyfriend and party with her friends.

Defense attorneys countered that the toddler accidentally drowned in the family swimming pool. They said that when Anthony panicked, her father, a former police officer, decided to make the death look like a murder. They said he put duct tape on the girl's mouth and then dumped the body in woods about a quarter-mile away.

The defense said Anthony's apparent carefree life hid emotional distress caused by sexual abuse from her father. Her father firmly denied both the cover-up and abuse claims. The prosecution called those claims absurd, and said no one makes an accident look like a murder.

Obesity: Massachusetts ranked as 4th thinnest state in nation

$
0
0

Even so, obesity rates here are climbing.

Diabetes 7711.jpgA patient underges a blood test for diabetes. The number of adults worldwide with diabetes has more than doubled in three decades, jumping to an estimated 347 million, a new study says. In the United States, however, Massachusetts is ranked as the 4th thinnest state in the nation.

BOSTON – Massachusetts is still one of the thinnest states in the country even as waistlines are continuing to expand across the Bay State.

A new study has ranked Massachusetts the fourth least obese state, behind Connecticut, the District of Columbia and the state with the lowest adult obesity rate, Colorado.

Even so, obesity rates here are climbing.

The study by the Trust for America’s Health and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation found Massachusetts’ adult obesity rate is now 22.3 percent.

Fifteen years ago, Massachusetts was still the fourth thinnest state in the country, but had an obesity rate of 11.6 percent.

That’s an increase of more than 90 percent.

The greater levels of obesity have led to a rise in related health problems including higher rates of diabetes and high blood pressure.

In 1995, Massachusetts had a diabetes rate of 4.5 percent. Now the diabetes rate is 7.5 percent. Diabetes rates have doubled in 10 states over the past 15 years.

High blood pressure, also known as hypertension, is also up.

Fifteen years ago, Massachusetts had a hypertension rate of 22.1 percent. Now, the rate is 25.6 percent.

The study found blacks and Hispanics in Massachusetts have higher obesity rates than white residents.

For whites, the adult obesity rate was 21.8 percent in Massachusetts compared to 30.5 percent for blacks and 29.1 percent for Hispanics.

The state did win some praise for taking steps to curb obesity.

The report found that Massachusetts was among 20 states with school meal standards that are stricter than the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

Massachusetts is also among 26 states with farm-to-school programs. Five years ago, only New York had a law establishing a farm-to-school program.


David Castricone: Former North Andover wrestling coach indicted on child pornography charges

$
0
0

Castricone coached wrestling in Massachusetts for 38 years before he resigned following his arrest.

David Castricone 21511.jpgNorth Andover High School wrestling coach David Castricone, left, listens to his lawyer John Baccari, as he is arraigned in Lawrence District Court in February on charges of possession of child pornography.

NORTH ANDOVER – One of the most successful high school wrestling coaches in Massachusetts has been indicted on child pornography charges.

Authorities say an Essex County Grand Jury on Wednesday indicted 60-year-old David Castricone on two counts of illegal possession of child pornography.

His Superior Court arraignment was not immediately scheduled.

Castricone was arrested in February a week after he was spotted in the North Andover High School girls locker room by a female student. Police searching his home allegedly found child pornography.

He has previously pleaded not guilty and is free on bail.

The Eagle-Tribune, of Lawrence, reported that Castricone coached wrestling in Massachusetts for 38 years, the last 25 at North Andover High School before he resigned following his arrest. He has an overall record of 681-142-3 and two state championships.

Norman Rockwell painting, 'The Problem We All Live With,' loaned to White House

$
0
0

The painting commemorates Ruby Bridges’ integration of a New Orleans school.

The problem we all live with 7711.jpgView full sizeThis painting by Norman Rockwell entitled "The Problem We All Live With," has been loaned to the White House until Oct. 31.

STOCKBRIDGE – A Norman Rockwell painting depicting a landmark moment in the civil rights movement has been loaned to the White House.

The Norman Rockwell Museum in Stockbridge said the loan of “The Problem We All Live With” was requested by President Barack H. Obama in commemoration of the 50th anniversary of Ruby Bridges’ integration of a New Orleans school in November 1960. It was painted for a January 1964 issue of “Look” magazine.

It will be exhibited at the White House until Oct. 31.

The oil-on-canvas painting depicts the 6-year-old Bridges, who is black, being escorted to school by four U.S. marshals. A splattered tomato and a racial epithet are on the wall behind her.

The 36-inch-by-58-inch painting marked a milestone in Rockwell’s career to more direct social commentary.

Memorial service scheduled for Lauren Astley, Wayland teen allegedly slain by former boyfriend

$
0
0

Nathaniel Fujita, 18, is being held without bail after pleading not guilty to murder.

Lauren Astey 7711.jpgWayland High School senior Lauren Astley sings with a school group at a reception at the Town Building in Wayland in February.

WAYLAND – A memorial service for the Wayland teenager slain over the holiday weekend has been scheduled.

Family and friends will come together on July 16 at First Parish Unitarian Universalist church in Wayland to remember 18-year-old Lauren Astley.

The 2011 graduate of Wayland High School was reported missing Sunday after failing to return home from her job at a store at the Natick Collection mall.

Her body, with a cut to the neck, was found in a marshy area of town on Monday.

Her former boyfriend, 18-year-old Nathaniel Fujita, is being held without bail after pleading not guilty to murder.

Nathaniel Fujita 7711.jpgNathaniel Fujita, 18, is led into Framingham, Mass., District Court Tuesday for arraignment on charges that he murdered Lauren Astley.

Lauren’s father, Malcolm, said that the service will include songs, readings and poems.

Malcolm Astley says he has been in touch with Fujita’s parents and they share each other’s anguish.

Casey Anthony to be freed next week, following acquittal in death of 2-year-old daughter

$
0
0

While cleared of charges of killing and abusing her daughter Caylee, Anthony was convicted of lying to investigators and sentenced Thursday to four years.

This is an updated version of a story posted at 9:55 this morning.


Casey Anthony 7711.jpgCasey Anthony smiles before the start of her sentencing hearing in Orlando, Fla.,Thursday.

ORLANDO, Fla. – Casey Anthony will be freed next week after spending nearly three years in jail on accusations she murdered her 2-year-old daughter, a case that captured the nation’s attention and divided many over whether a killer had been acquitted.

While cleared of charges of killing and abusing her daughter Caylee, Anthony was convicted of lying to investigators and sentenced Thursday to four years. But she was given credit for the time she has already served and her good behavior, and a court official said she would be released Wednesday.

Inside the courtroom, before her sentenced was announced, Anthony was animated, smiling and occasionally played with her hair, which was let down for the first time since her trial began in late May. Perhaps she thought, like many, that she would be let go as early as Thursday. Her demeanor changed to stone-faced when she heard she would be spending more time in jail.

The scene outside the courthouse highlighted a divide that has had social networking sites abuzz since the not guilty verdict was announced Tuesday. Amid increased police presence, a throng of protesters gathered near the courthouse, holding signs that said “Arrest the Jury!!” and “Jurors 1-12 Guilty of Murder.” Nearby, a handful of supporters also turned out, including a man who held a sign asking Casey Anthony to marry him.

Gallery preview

A day after Caylee was reported missing in July 2008, Anthony was interviewed by police and told them several lies. She lied about working at the Universal Studios theme park, about leaving her daughter with a non-existent nanny named Zanny, about leaving the girl with friends and about receiving a phone call from her.

Her defense attorneys argued before sentencing that her convictions should be combined into one, but Judge Belvin Perry disagreed. He also fined her $1,000 on each count.

At the time of the girl’s disappearance, Anthony, a single mother, and Caylee were living with Anthony’s parents, George and Cindy Anthony, in suburban Orlando. Prosecutors contended Anthony, then 22, suffocated Caylee with duct tape because she was interfering with her desire to be with her boyfriend and party with her friends.

Defense attorneys countered that the toddler accidentally drowned in the family swimming pool. They said that when Anthony panicked, her father, a former police officer, decided to make the death look like a murder. They said he put duct tape on the girl’s mouth and then dumped the body in woods about a quarter-mile away.

The defense said Anthony’s apparent carefree life hid emotional distress caused by sexual abuse from her father. Her father firmly denied both the cover-up and abuse claims. The prosecution called those claims absurd, and said no one makes an accident look like a murder.

Anthony stopped staying at the family house after the girl disappeared. She told her mother by phone that she and Caylee were spending time with friends. When Cindy Anthony asked to see Caylee, she said her daughter told her a series of lies: that they were in Jacksonville with a rich boyfriend Anthony concocted; that Caylee was with Zanny; that Zanny had been in a car crash and they were spending time with her in the hospital.

In mid-July 2008, Cindy and George Anthony were contacted by a towing yard that their daughter’s car had been impounded for being abandoned and would be junked if not claimed. When George Anthony picked it up, he and the tow yard manager said it had the overwhelming stench of human decomposition. The defense said the smell was caused by a bag of trash that was in the trunk.

In one of the biggest and most important fights of the six-week trial, a prosecution scientist said the trunk contained air molecules consistent with a human body having decomposed there – but the defense questioned his methods and said they were unproven.

Jurors declined to talk with reporters immediately after Tuesday’s verdict. But juror Jennifer Ford told ABC News in an interview that it was because “we were sick to our stomach to get that verdict.”

“We were crying and not just the women,” Ford said in an interview posted on the network’s website Wednesday night. “It was emotional and we weren’t ready.”

Ford, a 32-year-old nursing student, said the case was a troubling one.

“I did not say she was innocent,” Ford said. “I just said there was not enough evidence. If you cannot prove what the crime was, you cannot determine what the punishment should be.”

The prosecution didn’t paint a clear enough picture of what happened to Caylee, Ford said.

“I have no idea what happened to that child,” Ford said.

As the sentencing was announced, Flora Reece, an Orlando real estate broker, stood outside the courthouse holding a sign that read “Arrest the Jury.”

“At least she won’t get to pop the champagne cork tonight,” Reece said of the judge’s decision to keep Anthony in jail for now.

The crowd of a few dozen emotionally charged protesters occasionally chanted “justice for Caylee.”

There handful of Anthony supporters included Tim Allen of Orlando. The 24-year-old cook at a pizza shop held a sign asking Anthony to marry him.

“Everyone deserves a second chance.” Allen said. “She’s beautiful. Put some makeup on her, she’s gorgeous.”

Authorities in Florida were being mostly quiet about what might take place when Anthony is released. There are obvious complications with her returning to her parents’ home, where she lived before she was jailed, given the stinging accusations her attorneys leveled against them during the trial.

It’s not clear what the future holds when Anthony is released. Threats have been made against her, and online she is being vilified. More than 17,000 people “liked” the “I hate Casey Anthony” page on Facebook, which included comments wishing her the same fate that befell little Caylee.

Ti McCleod, who lives a few doors from Anthony’s parents, said: “Society is a danger to Casey; she’s not a danger to society.”

Her family also has been fractured by her attorneys’ unproved claims that Anthony’s father and brother molested her and the contention that her father participated in a cover-up of Caylee’s death. When the verdict was read, Anthony’s parents rose from their seats without emotion and left the courtroom. They were in the courtroom for sentencing but left without speaking to reporters.

Their attorney, Mark Lippman, has said they haven’t spoken with their daughter since the verdict, and he wouldn’t say whether they believed she was guilty.

Prosecutors and defense attorneys also did not speak to reporters.

Anthony is a high school dropout who, before her arrest, had limited work experience. Her last job was in 2006 as a vendor at Universal Studios theme park. While she once professed an interest in photography, and even found some work in the field, it’s not known whether she has skills that could translate into a career.

In a 2010 jailhouse letter to a friend, Anthony said she would like to adopt a child from Ireland “accent and all.”

No injuries reported when 83-year-old man accidentally drives into front wall of Liquors 44 in Northampton

$
0
0

Police said the driver, Eugene J. Pilis of Hatfield, was not cited.

2010 northampton police car.jpg

NORTHAMPTON - No injuries were reported late Wednesday morning when an 83-year-old man accidentally drove into the front wall at Liquors 44 on King Street.

Eugene J. Pilis, of 74 Prospect St., Hatfield, told police that his foot accidentally hit the gas when he went to step on the brake, Capt. Scott A. Savino said

The impact of the crash damaged some of the brickwork below a plate glass window to the store’s bottle redemption room, Savino said. The glass did not break.

Pilis was not cited, Savino said. “I think it was just an accident, he said.

Viewing all 62489 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images