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National Weather Service issues flood watch for most of Western Massachusetts

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Some 1 to 3 inches of rain, maybe more in some areas, is forecast.

rainbige.JPGSeptember 22, 2011 - West Springfield - Staff photo by Michael S. Gordon/The Republican - A morning rain shower did not deter Jonathan Davis, his daughter, Isabella Davis, 4, and Danielle LaFerriere, all of Bristol, Ct. from enjoying the Big E Thursday.

SPRINGFIELD – A flood watch for Hampden, Hampshire and Franklin counties, issued by the National Weather Service, goes into effect Friday night.

Some 1 to 3 inches of rain, some of it delivered by isolated thunderstorms, is anticipated for Friday night and Saturday with heavier amounts possible, according to the weather service.

Flooding in urban areas and other areas where there is poor drainage is possible. The flood watch remains in effect until Saturday night.

Abc40 / Fox 6 meteorologists say this pattern of unsettled weather, with lots of clouds, limited sunshine and showers and downpours, will continue through the middle of next week.

Although fall officially arrived Friday at 5:05 a.m, temperatures will remain summery, with daytime temperatures in the 70s, during this unsettled period.


Cause of fire that destroyed Daytona Street home in Springfield appears to be accidental, remains under investigation

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Demetrius Faust, 13, is credited with helping nine others escape the blaze.

09.14.2011 | SPRINGFIELD - Firefighters continue clean-up efforts at the scene of a 4 a.m. fire at 51-53 Daytona Street in the Forest Park neighborhood.

SPRINGFIELD – The cause of a blaze that destroyed a Daytona Street home last week appears to be accidental, Fire Department spokesman Dennis G. Leger said.

“The exact cause is still under investigation,” he said.

A 13-year-old boy, Demetrius Faust, is credited with helping nine others escape the blaze which was reported about 4 a.m. at 51-53 Daytona St.

Fire Department Capt. Michael R. Richard said that Faust relied on the fire safety training that he received in school to rouse those sleeping inside the two-family home and see that they all got outside safely.

“If it wasn’t for him we would still be inside,” said Lee Hutchins, the boy’s father and owner of the 2½-story wood-frame home which is located in the Forest Park neighborhood.

Demetrius, a Forest Park Middle School student, said he first learned about fire safety when he was in the third grade at Lincoln School on Chestnut Street.

The Pioneer Valley Chapter of the American Red Cross has aided those displaced in the fire.

AM News Links: Worcester Housing Authority gets tough with tenants, Japanese return $48 million in cash recovered after tsunami, and more

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For many, a life-saving drug Out of reach, Jaycee Dugard sues U.S. over monitoring of her captor, Worcester Jail lieutenant placed on leave after union funds go missing, and more

solyndra.jpgIn a file photo dated Oct. 6, 2010, workers confer at Solyndra's solar panel factory on in Fremont, Calif. The Silicon Valley company was the first renewable-energy company to receive a loan guarantee under the stimulus law, and the Obama administration frequently touted Solyndra as a model for its clean energy program. President Barack Obama visited the company's headquarters last year.

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

Mass. library reverses century-old ban on Mark Twain book

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The Mark Twain work "Eve's Diary" was banned in 1906 due to nude illustrations of the biblical Eve.

mark twain, apIn this undated portrait originally released by The Mark Twain House & Museum, author Mark Twain, born Samuel Langhorne Clemens is shown.

CHARLTON — A Massachusetts library has put the Mark Twain work "Eve's Diary" back on the shelf more than a century after it was banned.

The Charlton Public Library's trustees this week unanimously voted to return the book to circulation, reversing the board's 1906 decision to ban the 1905 short story.

Trustee Richard Whitehead said the move was made to coincide with the American Library Association's Banned Books Week.

The book was written from the perspective of the biblical Eve. It was banned because trustee Frank Wakefield objected to nude illustrations of Eve. Whitehead tells The Telegram and Gazette he considers the illustrations works of art.

The 1906 decision drew attention from The New York Times, which reported that Twain was not particularly concerned.

Charlton is 40 miles southwest of Boston.

Driver fired after kindergartner left behind on school bus

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The sleeping student did not wake up until the bus was parked at the driver's house.

WAREHAM — A Wareham school bus driver has been fired for failing to notice a sleeping kindergartner left behind on a school bus for three hours.

Superintendent Barry Rabinovitch said the student was left behind on Tuesday.

He says student at the Hammond Elementary morning kindergarten session did not wake up until the bus was parked at the driver's house. The child was later dropped off at home on the midday bus route.

Rabinovitch said in an email to The Standard-Times the child was on the bus from about 8:30 a.m. until 11:45 a.m.

The student was unharmed.

The driver, whose name was not released, was fired for not following protocol.

Tire-slashing spree on Valley Opportunity Council vans in Chicopee disrupts lives of upwards of a thousand people throughout Hampden County

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Some 51 tires on over 30 Valley Opportunity vans were slashed overnight.

IMG00446-20110923-0944.jpgSome 51 tires on over 30 Valley Opportunity Council vans were slashed sometime overnight in Chicopee. They council had to cancel its transportation Friday and police are investigating

CHICOPEE – The lives of upwards of a thousand people throughout Hampden County have been disrupted today by an overnight tire-slashing spree on vans used by the Valley Opportunity Council.

Kevin Reed, director of planning and programs for the council, said 51 tires on over 30 vans, parked in the council’s Mount Carmel Avenue lot, were slashed some time overnight.

The extreme act of vandalism forced the council to cancel its transportation for the day. Those served by the van include clients with the state Department of Mental Health, state Department of Mental Retardation, 84 home care providers and five day care centers, Reed said.

“I really don’t think (the vandal or vandals) realize if they are trying to hurt the Valley Opportunity Council that’s not who they hurt,” Reed said. “You have upwards of 1,000 people - their days have been thrown completely upside down.”

Others affected by the malicious act is a number of sidelined council drivers who get paid for the work that they perform. “We have got a lot of folks who have gotten hit in the wallet today,” Reed said.

A police report pegs the total damage at about $6,000.

A janitor discovered the vandalism at about 5 a.m. “We have been busting our tails to get those vans up and running again,” Reed said.

Reed said he had no inkling as to why somebody might target the council. “”We don’t know,” he said. “We are still kind of taken back.”

“We have nothing on it,” said Police Capt. Thomas Charette said when asked about potential leads.

At some point overnight, police responded to report of a vehicle on a dike near the lot and a report of the sound of breaking glass in the area. Responding officers, however, did not find anything suspicious.

Charette said there has been some minor instances of theft and vandalism within the lot.

Those with information are asked to call police at (413) 592-6341.

The council occupies the old Mount Carmel School at 35 Mount Carmel Ave.

Solyndra leaders invoke 5th Amendment at hearing

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Lawmakers said that silence from the executives would not stop them from pursuing their investigation into a $528 million loan Solyndra Inc. received from the Energy Department in 2009.

solyndra, apFrom left, attorney Walter Brown, Solyndra CEO Brian Harrison, Chief Financial Officer Bill Stover, and attorney Jan Nielsen Little, are seen on Capitol Hill in Washington, Friday, Sept. 23 2011, prior to Harrison and Stover testifying before the House Oversight and Investigations subcommittee.

WASHINGTON (AP) — Top executives from a bankrupt California solar energy company have declined to testify before a congressional hearing investigating their half-billion dollar government loan.

Solyndra Inc. CEO Brian Harrison and the company's chief financial officer, Bill Stover, both invoked their Fifth Amendment right to decline to testify to avoid self-incrimination.

Harrison told the House Energy and Commerce Committee Friday: "On advice of counsel, I respectfully decline to answer any questions."

Stover did the same.

Lawmakers from both parties said they were disappointed, but said that silence from the two executives would not stop them from pursuing their investigation into a $528 million loan Solyndra Inc. received from the Energy Department in 2009.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.


WASHINGTON (AP) — Top executives from a bankrupt California solar energy company are to appear before a congressional hearing investigating their government loan, but they're not expected to say much.

Solyndra Inc. CEO Brian Harrison and the company's chief financial officer, Bill Stover, have notified the House Energy and Commerce Committee they will invoke their Fifth Amendment right to decline to testify to avoid self-incrimination.

Silence from the two executives will not stop committee leaders from pursuing their investigation into a $528 million loan Solyndra Inc. received from the Energy Department in 2009.

GOP lawmakers say they will ask questions about Solyndra, regardless of whether they are answered.

In a letter to Energy Secretary Steven Chu, GOP lawmakers said they were expanding their inquiry into the Solyndra loan, which has become a rallying point for Republican critics of the Obama administration's push for so-called green jobs.

Lawmakers said they want the administration to turn over all communications between the Energy Department and White House related to Solyndra, as well as all communications between Energy and the Treasury, which lent Solyndra the money.

Committee leaders said the Obama administration may have violated the law when it restructured Solyndra's loan in February in such a way that private investors moved ahead of taxpayers for repayment in case of default. The economic stimulus law provides for taxpayers to be ahead of other creditors in the event of bankruptcy or default.

Deputy Energy Secretary Daniel Poneman said Thursday that the restructuring was "entirely legal," noting that another aspect of the law requires Chu and other officials to protect the overall interests of taxpayers. He said the restructuring accomplished that because it gave the struggling company a better chance to succeed.

Solyndra filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection earlier this month and laid off its 1,100 employees.

The Fremont, Calif.-based company was the first renewable-energy company to receive a loan guarantee under a stimulus-law program to encourage green energy and was frequently touted by the Obama administration as a model. President Barack Obama visited the company's Silicon Valley headquarters last year, and Vice President Joe Biden spoke by satellite at its groundbreaking ceremony.

Since then, the company's implosion and revelations that the administration hurried Office of Management and Budget officials to finish their review of the loan in time for the September 2009 groundbreaking has become an embarrassment for Obama as he tries to sell his new job-creation program.

Willow the cat is reunited with owners, after 5 years and 1,600 miles

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How the calico cat ended up on a Manhattan street -- after going missing in Colorado -- remains a mystery.

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NEW YORK — Five years after she went missing from her Colorado home, Willow the cat has been reunited with her owners in New York City.

How the calico cat ended up on a Manhattan street remains a mystery. But three children and their parents are certainly glad that she'll be headed home with them.

"Hey, kitty cat!" squealed three-year-old Lauren "Lola" Squires, as she greeted the cat for the first time at the Hilton New York hotel on Thursday evening.

Lola hadn't been born when Willow went missing from the family's home near the Rocky Mountains. But since the cat popped up more than 1,600 miles away, she has captured the little girl's imagination. Now the family is on a whirlwind media tour. The "Today" show flew them out to New York and they were headed to NBC's studios for interviews early Friday morning. The reunion — which came just moments after the family arrived at the hotel — was also taped.

The cat's adventures — which mom Jamie Squires now hopes to parlay into a children's book — were the subject of intense speculation in some circles. The news website Gothamist claimed an exclusive when an unnamed tipster said a New York man "fell in love" with the cat while on a ski trip in Colorado and adopted her. A blogger for The New Yorker wondered whether she'd "be bound to complain that nothing stays open late enough," upon her return to Colorado.

Willow disappeared when a contractor left the front door ajar during a home renovation project five years ago. The family sent out frantic online messages and put up posters around their home in Broomfield. But when Willow didn't return, they assumed the petite 2-year-old had been eaten by a coyote.

But it turns out Willow was never on the menu. On Sept. 14, a man brought her to Animal Care & Control in New York, saying he had found her on East 20th Street. A quick scan identified a microchip implanted when she was a kitten. The chip contained a code linked to a database of owner information. Despite moving from Broomfield to Boulder, the Squires had updated their information, making it easy for authorities to contact them.

When Jamie's husband Chris got the call, the couple doubted it could really be Willow. They asked the shelter to send a photo of the cat in question.

Sure enough, it was long-lost Willow.

At the Hilton, Jamie Squires marveled at the weight the cat had put on. She seemed to be well-cared for, with a shiny coat and tipping the scale at a healthy seven pounds when she was found.

The children — the older two are Jack, 10 and Shelby, 17 — delighted in asking where Willow could possibly have been for all that time. They may never know the answer. But Jamie Squires, who has vacationed around the world with her family, tells them Willow might have done some globe-trotting of her own.

Willow is set to fly back to Boulder on Sunday. She will join her former housemate, a yellow Labrador named Roscoe, and a new one: an English mastiff named Zoe.

Julie Bank, executive director of New York's Animal Care & Control, which runs the city's animal rescue and shelter system, said the unlikely reunion underscored the importance of implanting microchips in pets. All animals in city shelters get the chips before they're adopted.

Bank added that when a pet goes missing, people often give up hope too soon.

"You should never give up," she said. "You never know when your pet is going to return home."


Southwick voters to consider expansion of school district, building project

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Granville voters approved the project at their Town Meeting earlier this week.

SOUTHWICK - Voters will decide at an Oct. 4 Town Meeting whether to allow Granville to join the Southwick-Tolland Regional School District and to seek state financial help in pursuing an estimated $69 million expansion and realignment of three schools here.

A handful of residents attended an informational meeting on the project, entitled "Merging Together for a better Tomorrow" at Southwick-Tolland Regional High School earlier this week.

The two dozen residents were told that all three towns, Southwick, Tolland and Granville must approve the merger and construction project to move forward.

Granville overwhelmingly approved the issue, by a three to one margin, at their Town Meeting Monday. Tolland voters will decide at a Town Meeting scheduled in that town Oct. 3.

"All three towns must approve the project," Superintendent of Schools John D. Barry said. If not, the district will remain as is and a plan to expand and make changes at the high school will be developed.

Granville's joining the district will not necessarily participate in the building project but it will benefit from the district's annual capital improvement program. Students in that town will benefit through additional opportunities and the Granville Village School will benefit from capital improvements.

Barry and other school officials informed residents that expansion of the district, to include Granville, will bring additional state funding in the form of reimbursement for the overhaul of the district's three schools, the high school, Powder Mill Middle and Woodland Elementary schools.

The building project, addressing the three schools located in Southwick, is contingent upon the regional expansion, said Barry.

Each of the schools are currently overcrowded by between 100 and 200 students at each.

Approval of expanding the district and voter approval for the construction package will allow the School Committee to submit plans with the state School Building Authority in October and November.

The project includes an addition at the high school and the assignment of grades seven and eight at the facility. Powder Mill Middle and Woodland schools will receive needed repairs and updating. There will also be changes in class assignments in those buildings with grades three to six at Powder Mill and kindergarten through grade two at Woodland.

SBA will finance about $40 million of the total $69 million project providing expanded regionalization is approved.

School officials said that will leave Southwick to finance about $24.5 million; Tolland, $1.2 million and Granville $3.5 million. Local shares will be financed over 30 years, officials said.

Your Comments: U.S. Supreme Court rejects Troy Davis' 11th hour appeal, refuses to block his execution in Georgia

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U.S. Supreme Court rejects Troy Davis' 11th hour appeal, refuses to block his execution in Georgia. What do you think?

troy davis mug.jpgTroy Davis

JACKSON, Ga. (AP) — The Supreme Court late Wednesday rejected an 11th-hour request to block the execution of Troy Davis, who convinced hundreds of thousands of people but not the justice system of his innocence in the murder of an off-duty police officer.

Though Davis' attorneys say seven of nine key witnesses against him have disputed all or parts of their testimony, state and federal judges have repeatedly ruled against granting him a new trial. As the court losses piled up Wednesday, his offer to take a polygraph test was rejected and the pardons board refused to give him one more hearing.

Amnesty International says nearly 1 million people have signed a petition on Davis' behalf. His supporters include former President Jimmy Carter, Pope Benedict XVI, a former FBI director, the NAACP, several conservative figures and many celebrities, including hip-hop star Sean "P. Diddy" Combs

For the full story, click here.

Here's what some of our readers had to say about the execution of Troy Davis:

kakistos writes:

With this much doubt this is just wrong. Maybe he is guilty, maybe he isn't. For an execution there should be 100% no doubt. The fact that 7 of the 9 eye witnesses have recanted their stories saying that they were pressured by police and someone else has admitted to the shooting just leaves too much doubt. Not to mention the murder weapon was never found.


jerdaman writes:

State and federal courts, however, have repeatedly upheld Davis' conviction. One federal judge dismissed the evidence advanced by Davis' lawyers as "largely smoke and mirrors."

The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, which has helped lead the charge to stop the execution, said it was considering asking President Barack Obama to intervene.

"The fact that the White House hasn't addressed this issue is completely disrespectful," college student Talibah Arnett said.

So much for 'Obame Cares'! See Ya!


charlesteckel writes:

The groups closest to this case- the jury, the judges, the courts - have all reached the same conclusion regarding the guilt of this person. And note that all of these groups were comprised of people of many races.

kakistos writes:

Yeah....actually a few jurors now have said that they made the wrong decision. Maybe he did it, maybe he didn't, but if there is this much doubt, then he shouldn't be executed.

What do you think? Join the conversation below.

Westfield Colonial Harvest Day festival postponed one day

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The weather forecast forced the delay, organizers say.

Westfield Colonial Harvest 2009.jpgA horse-drawn wagon provided by Evans Farm, of Granville, carries passengers up Court Street in Westfield during the 2009 Colonial Harvest Days celebration.

WESTFIELD - The seventh annual Westfield Colonial Harvest Day originally planned for Saturday has been postponed because of the weather forecast.

Chris Lindquist and Pamela Leigh, co-chairpeople of the event said that it is now scheduled to be held on Sunday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., which was the previously announced rain date.

For more information, check the Westfield on Weekends, Inc. website, located at www.westfieldonweekends.com for the latest news and updates.

Undercover prostitution stings in Springfield's South End yields arrest of 13 would-be customers, including 7 from outside city

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The suspects, seeking sex for money, approached a female undercover officer, police said.

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SPRINGFIELD – Two recent undercover prostitution stings conducted by police yielded the arrests of 13 would-be customers - include seven from outside the city.

During one of the sweeps, conducted by the department’s vice unit, a female undercover police officer was solicited nine times in under 90 minutes in the South End at Locust Street and Palmer Avenue, Sgt. John M. Delaney said.

The second sweep was conducted Thursday night at the same intersection and the same officer was approached four times in one hour by men offering money for sex, Delaney, aide to Commissioner William J. Fitchet, said.

Delaney said such sweeps or stings do much to reduce crime within a given area. Locust and Palmer is a particularly hot spot for prostitution, he said.

“You get rid of the prostitutes and the drugs go away,” Delaney said.

Arrested Saturday were: Andres Nieves, 37, 59 Ashley St.; Joshua T. Clifford, 34, 27 Kings Highway, Westhampton; David Johnson, 4251 Brickett St.; Joe John Houle, 37, 101 Hawkes Circle, Westfield; Edwin Camacho, 31, 62 Knox St.; David Robillard, 54, 86 Swamp Road, Lanesborough; Ihemelandra K. Onyekaba ,43, 101 Garden St., West Springfield; Jermaine Menzie, 27, 44 Somerset St.; Geoffrey Uba, 47, 50 Hillside St., Hartford

Arrested Thursday night were: Pedro Luis Rojas, 44, 30 Prince St.; Jose Humberto Funez Moncada, 25, 244 Central St.; Joseph K. Kane, 55, 210 Wrights Brook Drive, Somers; Muscoe M. Gibson III, 63, 115 Martin terrace, Glastonbury.

All suspects were charged with sexual conduct for a fee.

Your Comments: Mass. transportation system needs $15 billion in repairs

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The state transportation secretary says an MBTA fare increase could be in the works following a report that says Massachusetts' aging highway, bridge, and transit network needs more than $15 billion in repairs.

highway roadwork interstate 91,Traffic merges down to two lanes before the Chicopee curve on northbound Interstate 91 in Chicopee as seen here yesterday. The lane restrictions are due to a two-month concrete deck repair and bridge resurfacing project.

BOSTON (AP) — The state transportation secretary says an MBTA fare increase could be in the works following a report that says Massachusetts' aging highway, bridge, and transit network needs more than $15 billion in repairs.

The report released Wednesday by the independent Transportation Advisory Committee says the state's highway system is so deep in debt that it must borrow to meet basic operating expenses, including $145 million in payroll, rent, highway striping, and other annual costs.

Secretary of Transportation Richard Davey tells The Boston Globe that with the MBTA facing a projected $161 million deficit for the coming year an "at least modest" fare increase should be discussed.

The committee is a roundtable of academics, activists, business leaders, engineers, and strategists who advise the transportation secretary.

Here's what some of our readers had to say about the $15 billion in repairs needed by the MBTA for infrastructure repair

rt20 writes:

Did anyone ever wonder where all the gasoline taxes go that were allegedly earmarked for highway and bridge repairs? Isn't it charming how the legislature attaches such a feel-good name to a tax increase only to blow it on something else?


Koz writes:

Where has all the money gone. We pay a gas tax, we still pay for the privlege to drive on the turnpike which has been paid for several time over. Where does all the traffic ticket money go along with the DWI fine and payment. The average convicted driver shelled out close to $10,000.

I'll tell you where it goes; it goes to the general fund. Then it get spent on everything else but where it was intended.


HonkeyDonkey writes:

"The report released Wednesday by the independent Transportation Advisory Committee...."

Independent my a$$. Independent of taxpayers, perhaps.

The Boston Globe clarifies the committee's "independence"; "The committee is a roundtable of academics, activists, business leaders, engineers, and strategists who advise the transportation secretary."

For Christ sakes! It's a committee formed by, and reports to, the Secretary of Transportation - the guy that now wants $15 billion to fix things.

There's nothing "independent" about the committee.

gorgon67 writes:

Thank you Big Dig! A $2.7 billion dollar project ballooned into a $17 billion dollar plus debacle. Why do you think our roads need repairs? The so-called "Big Dig" was financed 50/50 between the state & the federal government. State money that should have been distributed throughout the state was, has, and still is, being used to fund this taxpayer funded disaster. And it still leaks. It's like picking up your new $27,000 car and being told that it is now $170,000, has an oil leak, and you have to pay for it. Thanks Ted!

What do you think? Join the conversation below.

United Technologies to buy Goodrich Corp. for $18.4 billion

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It was not immediately clear how the acquisition will affect United Technologies’ Hamilton Sundstrand operation in Windsor Locks and its 4,000 workers.

By HOWARD FRENCH
Journal-Inquirer

HARTFORD – United Technologies Corp. has reached an agreement to purchase Goodrich Corp. for $18.4 billion in cash, or about $127.50 per share, company officials said this week.

It was unclear immediately how the acquisition will affect United Technologies’ Hamilton Sundstrand operation in Windsor Locks and its 4,000 workers. Hamilton and Goodrich will be combined into a new UTC business unit, Aerospace Systems, which will be headquartered in Charlotte, N.C., Goodrich’s home.

Goodrich has three small plants in Connecticut, in West Hartford, Cheshire, and Danbury, the company’s website says.

Marshall Larsen, chairman, president, and chief executive officer of Goodrich, will become chairman and CEO of the Aerospace Systems unit, UTC chairman and CEO Louis Chenevert said.

The combined businesses’ senior leadership team will be located in Charlotte, Chenevert added. No mention was made of a role for Hamilton president Alain Bellemare.

A UTC official declined to make additional comments.

The machinists’ union, which represents more than 1,000 hourly Hamilton workers, has had no information from UTC about Hamilton’s future, James Parent, assistant directing business representative for District 26, said. “That’s something we’re certainly going to take a close look at,” he said.

Mark Hebert, president of the union’s Local 743 in Windsor Locks, also said no company official has discussed the implications of the Goodrich deal.

“But I can tell you that if the headquarters moves out of Connecticut the end result will not be good for Windsor Locks operations, both hourly and salary,” Hebert said.

“We heard a rumor that they wanted to be closer to the new Boeing plant in South Carolina, so maybe this is their idea to get closer to Boeing at the expense of the community and the workers,” he added.

Hamilton makes a variety of equipment for Boeing’s new 787 “Dreamliner” plane, for which Boeing just opened a major new assembly plant in South Carolina.

Richard Pettibone, aerospace companies analyst with Forecast International of Newtown, said that overall the deal could be a precursor to further acquisitions by UTC and shouldn’t have any negative impact on Hamilton’s Windsor Locks operation, at least in the short term.

“For the near future I would say Hamilton’s operations are safe, Pettibone said. “It takes awhile to digest an acquisition of this size, and I doubt that there will be much change in the next few years.

“Whether or not any operations are moved will depend on the uniqueness of the work that is being performed and if there is any overlap between Hamilton and Goodrich.”

The $18.4 billion price tag for Goodrich includes $1.9 billion in net debt assumed, Chenevert said. UTC expects to finance the transaction through a combination of taking on new debt and additional stock sales, he said.

Goodrich produces aircraft landing gear, wheels, brakes, and engine housings, known as nacelles. Those products complement Hamilton’s production of aircraft engine control systems and a variety of other aircraft parts, Chenevert said.

Once the transaction is complete, United Technologies is expected to have worldwide sales of about $66 billion based on projected 2011 results, he said.

“The combined companies’ increased scale, financial strength, and complementary products will strengthen United Technologies’ position in the aerospace and defense industry,” Chenevert said.

He added: “Goodrich delivers on all of our acquisition criteria. It is strategic to our core, has great technology and people, and strengthens our position in growth markets.”

Hamilton posted a nearly 31 percent increase in operating earnings of $267 million for the second quarter of this year, up from $204 million in the same quarter in 2010.

Former Northampton City Councilor Maria Tymoczko wages new battle with City Hall over Three County Fairground project

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Tymoczko, of Pomeroy Terrace, has filed several suits pertaining to the multi-million dollar redevelopment of the nearby fairground.

Three County Fairgrounds barns Sept. 2011.jpgThese new barns at the Three County Fairgrounds were officially dedicated earlier this month.

NORTHAMPTON - What began as a legal battle over documents relating to the Three County Fairground project has escalated into a war of words, with one Ward 3 resident and her lawyer accusing City Hall of dishonesty.

Maria Tymoczko, a former city councilor and Pomeroy Terrace resident, has filed several suits pertaining to the multi-million dollar redevelopment of the nearby Three County Fairground. Tymoczko has several concerns about the project, notably the effect of a new drainage system on what she says says is an already inadequate neighborhood system. In assessing the city's role in the project, Tymoczko has demanded to see all emails to and from Teri Anderson, Northampton's Community and Economic Development Coordinator, in her role as a member of the project's Board of Directors.

The city has contended that some of those emails pertain to Anderson's obligations as a member of the private board and are not public documents. Last month, Tymoczko's lawyer, Michael Pill, argued his case before Hampshire Superior Court Judge Cornelius Moriarty, seeking summary judgment in his client's favor. Although Moriarty took the matter under advisement, City Solicitor Elaine Reall reached a voluntary agreement with Tymoczko to turn over the emails provide that privileged financial information about the fair be redacted.

After receiving the documents, Pill says the city is still holding back.

"It seems clear that documents are being intentionally withheld," he said Thursday, characterizing the gesture as "an intent to deceive us."

Even as Pill expressed outrage over the matter, Reall bristled at the implication that she is not acting honestly.

"Receiving two emails accusing me of destroying documents and being dishonest - I'm almost speechless, because that's not the way I do business," she said.

Maria Tymoczko 1997.jpgMaria Tymoczko

The amount of bad blood between the fairgrounds and Tymoczko rivals the amount of standing water at the fairgrounds after a downpour. Her first suit, according to Reall, came before the Planning Board even had the opportunity to weigh in on the drainage plans.

"It was premature," Reall said.

After the planning and zoning boards approved the plans, Tymoczko and other neighbors appealed their decisions to the state Department of Environmental Protection, at which point, Pill says, the fair withdrew its application for a wetland permit. Tymoczko's original suit, which was filed in Land Court, also sought an injunction against the construction of three barns at the fairgrounds to replace the dilapidated horse barns. Reall said the court denied injunctive relief. Pill said Tymosczko relented on the barns because they were necessary for attracting the profitable Morgan Horse Show to the fairgrounds. The barns have been built and the Land Court suit remains in limbo pending a future attempt to secure a wetlands permit.

"They said they're saving their ammunition for Phase 2 (of the redevelopment project)," Reall said.

Tymoczko believes that the city has been greasing the skids for the fairgrounds project at the expense of the neighborhood, and that Anderson's emails will indicate that. Reall said she has seen nothing that indicates any such collusion. According to Reall, she has turned over all Anderson's documents to Pill except for two that contain her legal opinions, which she said are protected by attorney/client privilege. Pill still believes the city is hiding something and intends to ask the court to intervene.

"What is so damaging that you have to hide it?" he asks.

Reall insists she is hiding nothing and is angry at the suggestion she is.

"I'm an officer of the court," she said. "I take my job pretty seriously."


Wall Street: U.S. stocks trading mixed after brutal week of selling

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Around midday, the Dow Jones industrial average was up about 4 points.

NEW YORK – U.S. stocks bounced between gains and declines Friday, but did little to wipe out heavy losses from a brutal week of selling or ease the fears that hammered the market.

Traders have been racked by growing fears that the economy is headed for another recession. Europe appears no closer to solving the debt crisis that threatens some of its biggest banks. U.S. political leaders are in another standoff over spending that could force the government to shut down.

Shares opened slightly lower, but turned positive in the first half-hour of trading. Later they bounced between small gains and losses.

At 12:48 p.m. Eastern time, the Dow Jones industrial average rose 4 points to 10,738. The Standard & Poor’s 500 index rose 5, or 0.4 percent, to 1,134. The Nasdaq composite index rose 17, or 0.7 percent, to 2,472.

Even with the gain, the Dow and the S&P are down more than 6 percent for the week. Recession fears and concerns about Europe’s debt crisis led traders to abandon all investments that carry risk – from stocks to corporate bonds to commodities.

Until Friday, shares had fallen every day this week. John Merrill, chief investment officer at Tanglewood Wealth Management in Houston, said Friday’s respite might not last.

“Nothing goes in a straight line, even markets that are declining steeply,” he said. Merrill said the market was moderating as traders bought shares that looked like bargains after the week’s selling. But he said the problems that have weighed on stocks for months now show no sign of letting up.

Bargain-seekers “bring some stability into the market for a day or two, until they’ve used up their buying power, then the macro issues surface again” and volatility returns to the market, he said.

The Dow has fallen more than 15 percent since its recent peak on July 21. It fell below its 2011 closing low of 10,719, reached Aug. 10, several times Friday morning.

Treasury yields rose slightly from record lows reached Thursday as the calmer stock market reduced traders’ hunger for lower-risk bets such as Treasurys. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note rose to 1.78 percent from 1.73 percent late Thursday. Demand for Treasurys drives their prices higher and their yields lower.

Finance ministers from 20 leading economies pledged late Thursday to take “all necessary actions to preserve the stability of the banking systems and financial markets” and make sure banks have the cash they need to stay afloat.

The announcement offered no new specifics, and did little to stem selling in overseas markets. But European markets started rising shortly before U.S. markets opened. They closed with small gains.

The Dow Jones industrial average has lost 6.5 percent this week, its worst showing since the week ended Oct. 3, 2008. That’s the week Congress struggled to pass the $700 billion bank bailout known as the Troubled Asset Relief Program.

Fears about Europe’s debt crisis were stoked early Friday by news that Moody’s Investors Service had downgraded eight Greek banks by two notches. The rating agency said the banks hold too much Greek debt. It said Greece’s economic situation is worsening as government attempts to slash spending provoke violent protests.

Greece appears increasingly likely to default on its debts. European officials have begun to speak openly of the possibility, and the fears have roiled international markets.

Greece will run out of money in the coming weeks if it fails to convince lenders it is meeting cost-cutting goals and deserves another round of bailout money.

A default by Greece would hurt banks in Greece, France and Germany that hold billions in Greek debt. A Greek default would also increase investors’ concerns about defaults by other financially troubled nations, such as Ireland, Portugal, Italy and Spain.

Europe’s economy is barely growing. A financial shock could tip Europe into recession and would increase chances for a U.S. recession.

Some companies that produce commodities lost value. Range Resources Corp. declined 10.3 percent. Newmont Mining Corp. fell 5 percent. Cabot Oil & Gas Corp. lost 4.7 percent.

The companies’ profits would shrink if economic weakness reduced demand for products such as silver, fossil fuels and industrial metals.

A sell-off in commodities continued Friday. Benchmark crude oil prices fell 0.8 percent, gold dropped 4.6 percent and silver fell 11.5 percent.

Traders had sold precious metals to raise cash during Thursday’s sell-off and dumped other investments that are more valuable in a growing economy, such as oil and raw materials.

Thursday’s stock plunge marked the second day of steep losses since the Federal Reserve announced a new effort to boost the economy by buying long-term Treasurys. By creating extra demand for the investments, the Fed hopes to drive their yields lower. Many interest rates are based on the yield for the 10-year Treasury note. Lower interest rates might spur investment and increase lending.

The Dow Jones industrial average lost 391 points and at one point was down more than 500, a return to the volatility that gripped the market this summer. Nineteen stocks on the New York Stock Exchange fell for every one that rose.

The Dow almost matched its lowest close of the year. It would have to fall 485 more points to reach the traditional definition of a bear market – a 20 percent decline. The Dow was at 12,810 on April 29.

PM News Links: Amherst residents grapple with student parties, Cooley Dickinson Nurses Face Unsafe Patient Care Burdens, and more

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Students rally in Amherst to protest Troy Davis execution, AP report: No Purple Heart found for RI Rep. Gordon, Republicans may not like it, but the law says the Federal Reserve can do whatever it wants, and more

2008 cooley dickinson hospital exteriorFor the fourth time in the last two years, Cooley Dickinson Hospital in Northampton will eliminate jobs to keep its financial ship afloat. The latest cuts, up to 60 positions, and bring the total job loss to nearly 200 since June 2008.

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

Westfield's Colonial Harvest Day postponed until Sunday

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Colonial Harvest Day focuses on Westfield's colonial era.

Westfield Colonial Harvest 2009.jpgA horse-drawn wagon provided by Evans Farm, of Granville, carries passengers up Court Street in Westfield during the 2009 Colonial Harvest Days celebration.

WESTFIELD - The city's annual Westfield Colonoial Harvest Day has been postponed until Sunday, the event's rain date, because of inclement weather.

Harvest Day Committee and Wesrtfield on Weekends announced Friday afternoon the postponment of activities for Saturday. The event will be held from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday.

A variety of activities that focus on Westfield's colonial era will be held at the Westfield Atheneaum and other locations around Park Square and Court Street.

A list of activities can be found at WOW's website www.westfieldonweekends.com .

Palestinians submit United Nations statehood bid

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Some members of the Israeli delegation, including Foreign Minister Avigdor Liebermann, left the hall as Abbas approached the podium.

Mahmoud Abbas, apPalestinian President Mahmoud Abbas holds a letter requesting recognition of Palestine as a state as he addresses the 66th session of the United Nations General Assembly, Friday, Sept. 23, 2011 at UN Headquarters.

UNITED NATIONS (AP) — Defying U.S. and Israeli opposition, Palestinians asked the United Nations on Friday to accept them as a member state, sidestepping nearly two decades of failed negotiations in the hope this dramatic move on the world stage would reenergize their quest for an independent homeland.

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas was greeted by sustained applause and appreciative whistles as he approached the dais in the General Assembly hall to deliver a speech outlining his people's hopes and dreams of becoming a full member of the United Nations. Some members of the Israeli delegation, including Foreign Minister Avigdor Liebermann, left the hall as Abbas approached the podium.

Negotiations with Israel "will be meaningless" as long as it continues building on lands the Palestinians claim for that state, he declared, warning that his government could collapse if the construction persists. That would put 150,000 people out of work.

"This policy is responsible for the continued failure of the successive international attempts to salvage the peace process," said Abbas, who has refused to negotiate until the construction stops. "This settlement policy threatens to also undermine the structure of the Palestinian National Authority and even end its existence."

To another round of applause, he held up a copy of the formal membership application and said he had asked U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon to expedite deliberation of his request to have the United Nations recognize a Palestinian state in the West Bank, Gaza Strip and east Jerusalem.

Ban has to examine the application before referring it to the Security Council. Action on the membership request could take weeks, if not months.

Abbas' jubilant mood was matched by the exuberant celebration of thousands of Palestinians who thronged around outdoor screens in town squares across the West Bank on Friday to see their president submit his historic request for recognition of a state of Palestine to the United Nations.

"I am with the president," said Muayad Taha, a 36-year-old physician, who brought his two children, ages 7 and 10, to witness the moment. "After the failure of all other methods (to win independence) we reached a stage of desperation. This is a good attempt to put the Palestinian cause and the Palestinian people on the map. Everyone is here to stand behind the leadership."

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, addressing the General Assembly shortly after Abbas, said his country was "willing to make painful compromises."

"I extend my hand to the Palestinian people, with whom we seek a just and lasting peace," he said, to extended applause.

Palestinians, he added, "should live in a free state of their own, but they should be ready for compromise" and "start taking Israel's security concerns seriously."

To be sure, Abbas' appeal to the U.N. to recognize an independent Palestine would not deliver any immediate changes on the ground: Israel would remain an occupying force in the West Bank and east Jerusalem and continue to severely restrict access to Gaza, ruled by Palestinian Hamas militants.

The strategy also put the Palestinians in direct confrontation with the U.S., which has threatened to veto their membership bid in the Council, reasoning, like Israel, that statehood can only be achieved through direct negotiations between the parties to end the long and bloody conflict.

Also hanging heavy in the air was the threat of renewed violence over frustrated Palestinian aspirations, in spite of Abbas' vow — perceived by Israeli security officials as genuine — to prevent Palestinian violence. The death on Friday of 35-year-old Issam Badram, in gunfire that erupted after rampaging Jewish settlers destroyed trees in a Palestinian grove, was the type of incident that both Palestinians and Israelis had feared would spark widespread violence.

Yet by seeking approval at a world forum overwhelmingly sympathetic to their quest, Palestinians hope to make it harder for Israel to resist already heavy global pressure to negotiate the borders of a future Palestine based on lines Israel held before capturing the West Bank, east Jerusalem and Gaza in 1967.

"We extend our hands to the Israeli government and the Israeli people for peacemaking," he said. "Let us build the bridges of diolague instead of checkpoints and walls of separation, and build cooperative relations based on parity and equity between two neighboring states — Palestine and Israel — instead of policies of occupation, settlement, war and eliminating the other," he said.

It was not clear how serious Abbas was about his very public threat to dissolve his limited self-rule government, born of the landmark accords Israel and the Palestinians signed in the 1990s. Dissolution would put 150,000 Palestinians out of work and cause utter chaos. Israel, which is skeptical of such talk, would be saddled with the welfare and policing of 2.5 million unwanted Palestinian subjects.

Palestinians say they turned to the U.N. in desperation over 18 failed years of peace talks. They say they decided to reinvigorate their flagging statehood campaign by bringing it to the broadest possible international forum — the United Nations — in the hope an enhanced world status would pressure Israel to act more boldly.

Netanyahu insists his commitment to peacemaking is genuine and accuses the Palestinians of going to the U.N. specifically to avoid negotiations.

In recent weeks, international mediators have been furiously trying to piece together a formula that would let the Palestinians abandon their plan to ask the Security Council for full U.N. membership, and instead make do with asking a sympathetic General Assembly to elevate their status from permanent observer to nonmember observer state — a lesser option but one that would be widely expected and seen as still valuable to the Palestinians because of the implicit recognition of the pre-1967 borders.

It also would give the Palestinians access to international judicial bodies such as the International Court of Justice and the International Criminal Court, which Israel fears would target them unfairly.

The U.S. and Israel have been pressuring Council members to either vote against the plan or abstain when it comes up for a vote. The vote would require the support of nine of the Council's 15 members to pass, but even if the Palestinians could line up that backing, a U.S. veto is assured.

The resumption of talks seems an elusive goal, with both sides digging in to positions that have tripped up negotiations for years. Israel insists that negotiations go ahead without any preconditions. But Palestinians say they will not return to the bargaining table without assurances that Israel would halt settlement building and drop its opposition to basing negotiations on the borders it held before capturing the West Bank, east Jerusalem and the Gaza in 1967.

Israel has warned that the Palestinian appeal to the U.N. will have a disastrous effect on negotiations, which have been the cornerstone of international Mideast policy for the past two decades. Netanyahu opposes negotiations based on 1967 lines, saying a return to those frontiers would expose Israel's heartland to rocket fire from the West Bank.

He also fears that if that principle becomes the baseline for negotiations, then Palestinians won't settle for anything less, despite previous understandings between the Palestinians and previous Israeli governments to swap land where settlement blocs stand for Israeli territory.

Talks for all intents and purposes broke down nearly three years ago after Israel went to war in the Gaza Strip and prepared to hold national elections that ultimately propelled Netanyahu to power for a second time. A last round was launched a year ago, with the ambitious aim of producing a framework accord for a peace deal, but broke down just three weeks later after an Israeli settlement construction slowdown expired.

The U.N. recognition bid has won Abbas broad popular support at home and help him gain political ground against his main political rival, the Islamic militant Hamas movement, which violently wrested control of Gaza in 2007 and opposes the U.N. move.

Gaza's Hamas prime minister, Ismail Haniyeh, accused Abbas on Friday of relinquishing Palestinian rights by seeking recognition for a state in the pre-1967 borders. Hamas' founding charter calls for the destruction of Israel and a state in all of the territory between the Mediterranean and the Jordan River, though some Hamas officials have suggested they would support a peace deal based on the 1967 lines.

"The Palestinian people do not beg the world for a state, and the state can't be created through decisions and initiatives," Haniyeh said. "States liberate their land first and then the political body can be established."

Obama's Los Angeles campaign office smashed up

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Detectives believed the attack was politically motivated because no other businesses in the usually low-crime area were targeted.

092311obama.jpgPresident Barack Obama gestures as he speaks on No Child Left Behind Reform, Friday, Sept, 23, 2011, in the East Room of the White House in Washington.

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Police said Friday they are investigating what appears to be a politically motivated attack on a newly opened campaign office for President Barack Obama in Los Angeles, only days before he's scheduled to arrive in Southern California.

Several campaign staffers were in a room at the back of the office Thursday night when they heard the sound of smashing glass at the front and side of the building, said police Cmdr. Andrew Smith.

They found three front-door windows and a side glass door had been smashed.

No rocks or projectiles were found, and police believe one or more attackers used a tire iron or something similar to break the glass, Smith said.

"Someone could have run by and hit it with an object," he said.

Detectives believed the attack was politically motivated because no other businesses in the usually low-crime area were targeted, Smith said. No threats were made before or after the attack.

Police notified the Secret Service and FBI officials said they are assisting Los Angeles police with the investigation to determine if the incident was motivated by hate or an act of domestic terrorism.

Katie Hogan, a spokeswoman for Obama's re-election campaign, declined comment.

The office housed in a three-story building is in the Playa Vista area on the suburban west side. Plywood boards covered the broken windows and door. It wasn't known whether staffers were going to return to work on Friday.

Obama is scheduled to visit Los Angeles on Monday to raise money for his campaign.

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