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State police sobriety checkpoint on State Street in Springfield yields 5 drunken driving arrests

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The checkpoint was held Friday night into early Saturday

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SPRINGFIELD – A state police sobriety checkpoint, held on State Street Friday night into Saturday morning, yielded at least 5 arrests for drunken driving, state police said.

A 6th motorist was arrested on a warrant, state police said. Information as to where on State Street the checkpoint was held was not immediately available.

The state police conduct periodic checkpoints throughout the state to look for drivers who are impaired by drugs or alcohol and to educate the public.

The checkpoints are funded by a grant from the Highway Safety Division of the state Executive Office of Public Security and Safety.


NJ Gov. Chris Christie gets no endorsement from Deval Patrick on 'Meet the Press'

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Christie has been the subject of much buzz as a possible presidential candidate.

New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie has been denying it up and down, but buzz of his possible bid for the Republican presidential nomination stays strong.

After a much talked-about speech at the Reagan Presidential Library, the one-term NJ Governor has been the target of candidates already in the running. And in a Sunday appearance on NBC's "Meet The Press," he got some lukewarm criticism from Gov. Deval Patrick.

"I like Chris. He's one of my favorites," Patrick told host David Gregory when asked about Christie's possible candidacy, adding: "I wish him well — not that well."

Deval Patrick, Chris ChristieNJ Gov. Chris Christie, left, talks with Gov. Deval Patrick in this AP file photo.

Patrick went on to give a vote of no confidence to Christie and lend some support to his friend and political ally, President Barack Obama. Patrick said:

Look, you know, he's been governor for — what is it, a year and a half, two years? I think unemployment in New Jersey is higher even than the national average. There's some unfinished work in New Jersey in order to have the points for the case he wants to make.

The point is that the President is not leaving the outcome of this election up to pundits, pollsters or some view of what the current or future field will be in the Republican Party. It's about getting out and appealing to people where they live, where they are, where they feel and making sure that they understand he's trying to do what he can to help them out himself.

Patrick appeared alongside Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell, who called Christie a "unique, successful governor" who would "fare very well against the President."

The Star Ledger in New Jersey has the latest on Christie's possible candidacy. Read their profile »

In the wide-ranging interview, Patrick also touched on points he has frequently in national appearances, hailing job creation in Massachusetts and framing the state's health care reform efforts as the model for reform on the national level. Watch the full clip here »

Senators Scott Brown, John Kerry holding hearing on state of the Massachusetts fishing industry

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Kerry said most fishermen continue to struggle while Brown said there is a complete lack of trust between fishermen and the government.

012110 john kerry scott brown.jpgMassachusetts' U.S. Senators: John Kerry, left, a Democrat, and Scott Brown, right, a Republican.

BOSTON (AP) — U.S. Sens. John Kerry and Scott Brown have opened a field hearing in Boston on the state of the Massachusetts fishing industry.

Jane Lubchenco, head of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, launched the hearing by saying the federal government's goal is to help give fishermen more control over their industry. She also said that fish stocks are gradually being replenished and catch limits are being raised.

Kerry said that most fishermen are continuing to struggle while Brown said there is a complete lack of trust between local fishermen and the federal government.

The hearing comes days after Attorney General Martha Coakley called on the U.S. Department of Commerce to release documents related to what investigators have called the "overzealous" prosecution of Massachusetts fishermen.

Congressmen Barney Frank and John Tierney also attended the Statehouse hearing.

Massachusetts gas prices down 10 cents in past week

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Massachusetts is four cents above the national average of $3.41 per gallon.

BOSTON (AP) — The average price of gasoline in Massachusetts has now dropped to its lowest level since March.

AAA Southern New England reports that its latest survey finds self-serve regular selling for an average of $3.45 per gallon in the Bay State, down 10 cents in the past week.

Massachusetts is four cents above the national average of $3.41 per gallon.

A year ago at this time, the average cost for self-serve regular was $2.63 per gallon in Massachusetts.

Amanda Knox pleads innocent, awaits jury's deliberations in appeal of 2009 conviction

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Presiding Judge Claudio Pratillo Hellmann said the jury would not emerge before 1800 GMT (2 p.m. EDT) at the earliest.

Italy KnoxAmanda Knox, right, arrives for an appeal hearing at the Perugia court, central Italy, Monday, Oct. 3, 2011. A tearful Amanda Knox has told an appeals court in Italy that accusations that she killed her British roommate are unfair and groundless. Knox fought back tears as she addressed the court Monday, minutes before the jury went into deliberations to decide whether to uphold her murder conviction. A verdict is expected later in the day. (AP Photo/Stefano Medici)

PERUGIA, Italy (AP) — Amanda Knox tearfully told an Italian appeals court Monday she did not kill her British roommate, pleading for the court to free her so she can return to the United States after four years behind bars. Moments later, the court began deliberations.

Knox frequently paused for breath and fought back tears as she spoke in Italian to the eight members of the jury in a packed courtroom, but managed to maintain her composure during the 10-minute address.

"I've lost a friend in the worst, most brutal, most inexplicable way possible," she said of the 2007 murder of Meredith Kercher, a 21-year-old Briton who shared an apartment with Knox when they were both students in Perugia. "I'm paying with my life for things that I didn't do."

Knox and co-defendant Raffaele Sollecito, Knox's former boyfriend from Italy, were convicted in 2009 of sexually assaulting and murdering Kercher, who was stabbed to death in her bedroom. Knox was sentenced to 26 years in prison, Sollecito to 25. They both deny wrongdoing.

"I never hurt anyone, never in my life," Sollecito said Monday in his own speech to the jury.

Presiding Judge Claudio Pratillo Hellmann said the jury would not emerge before 1800 GMT (2 p.m. EDT) at the earliest.

Kercher's mother, sister and a brother traveled to Perugia and were expected in to be in court for the verdict. They have expressed worry over the possibility of acquittal but told reporters as the jury deliberated that they hoped the jury would do the right thing.

"As long as they decide today based purely on the information available to them and they don't look into the media hype, I think justice will be found," the victim's sister, Stephanie Kercher, told reporters.

She lamented that Meredith had been "most forgotten" in the media circus surrounding the case, with news photos more frequently showing Knox and Sollecito than "Mez" — the victim's nickname.

"It's very difficult to keep her memory alive in all of this," she said.

The family's lawyer said it wants the original verdicts upheld.

"The lower court found the defendants guilty. The Kercher family's interest is to have the verdict confirmed," he said.

The highly anticipated verdict will be broadcast live. Hundreds of reporters and camera crews filled the underground, frescoed courtroom before Knox's address on Monday, while police outside cordoned off the entrance to the tribunal.

The trial has captivated audiences worldwide: Knox, the 24-year-old American, and Sollecito, a soft-spoken Italian, were convicted of murdering a fellow student in what the lower court said had begun as a drug-fueled sexual assault.

Knox insisted Monday that she had nothing to do with the murder and that Kercher was a friend who was always nice to her. Gesticulating, at times clasping her hands together, the American said she has always wanted justice for Kercher.

"She had her bedroom next to mine, she was killed in our own apartment. If I had been there that night, I would be dead," Knox said. "But I was not there."

"I did not kill. I did not rape. I did not steal. I wasn't there," Knox said.

Also convicted in separate proceedings was Rudy Hermann Guede, a small-time drug dealer and drifter who spent most of his life in Italy after arriving here from his native Ivory Coast. Guede was convicted in a separate fast-track procedure and saw his sentence cut to 16 years in his final appeal. Lawyers for Knox and Sollecito have said Guede was the sole killer.

Knox said she had nothing more than a passing acquaintance with Guede, who played basketball in a court near the house, and didn't even know his name. Sollecito, who addressed the court before Knox, told jurors that he did not know Guede at all.

Sollecito was anxious as he addressed the court, shifting as he spoke and stopping to sip water. He said prior to the Nov. 1, 2007 murder was a happy time for him, he was close to defending his thesis to graduate from university and had just met Knox.

The weekend Kercher was murdered was the first the pair planned to spend together "in tenderness and cuddles," he said.

At the end of his 17-minute address, Sollecito took off a white rubber bracelet emblazoned with "Free Amanda and Raffaele" that he said he was been wearing for four years.

"I have never taken it off. Many emotions are concentrated in this bracelet," he said. "Now I want to pay homage to the court. The moment to take it off has arrived."

Knox and her family, present in Perugia, hope she will be set free after spending four years behind bars caught up in what they say is a monumental judicial mistake. Prosecutors, who have depicted Knox as a manipulative liar, are seeking to increase her sentence to life in prison.

The jury is made up of the presiding judge, a side judge and six jurors, five of them women, and they have several options as they go into deliberations. They can acquit both defendants and set them free. They can uphold the conviction, then confirm the sentence, reduce it or increase it. They can theoretically decide to split the fate of Knox and Sollecito, convicting one and acquitting the other.

The verdict doesn't have to be unanimous, only a majority is required. A verdict is expected late Monday, though in theory deliberations could continue into Tuesday.

Over the course of the appeals trial, the defendants' positions have significantly improved, mainly because a court-ordered independent review cast serious doubts over the main DNA evidence linking the two to the crime.

Prosecutors maintain that Knox's DNA was found on the handle of a kitchen knife believed to be the murder weapon, and that Kercher's DNA was found on the blade. They said Sollecito's DNA was on the clasp of Kercher's bra as part of a mix of evidence that also included the victim's genetic profile.

But the independent review — ordered at the request of the defense, which had always disputed those findings — reached a different conclusion.

The two experts found that police conducting the investigation had made glaring errors in evidence-collecting and that below-standard testing and possible contamination raised doubts over the attribution of DNA traces, both on the blade and on the bra clasp, which was collected from the crime scene 46 days after the murder.

The review was crucial in the case because no motive has emerged and witness testimony was contradictory. It was a huge boost for the defense's hope and a potentially fatal blow for the prosecution.

The prosecutors, however, refute the review and stand by their original conclusions.

Massachusetts residents spin off 'Occupy Wall Street' with 'Occupy Boston'

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Demonstrators have been camped outside the Federal Reserve Bank in Boston since Friday.

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After 700 arrests on the Brooklyn bridge over the weekend, the New York City protest that started with just a few hundred people has spread to demonstrations in states across the country, including Massachusetts.

Occupy Wall Street, which began on September 17, spread to Boston over the weekend, with protesters setting up camp outside the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston building.

Harvard doctoral student Marisa Engerstrom told the Associated Press that demonstrators chose the bank because it's "in the middle of the cathedrals of wealth."

The AP reports that the Boston protest is one of several events sparked by the demonstrations in New York, with Occupy Boston, Occupy Los Angeles and Occupy Chicago springing up over the past week, and more to come in the U.S. and Canada.

The Guardian notes that the Boston protest is one of the more successful spin-offs over the past week:

Unlike previous attempts, such as a march that fizzled out in Chicago with just 20 people, the people behind Occupy Boston showed a strong dose of media savvy and organisational skill on Monday night, as they drew a committed crowd of volunteers to their cause: to occupy a slice of the city. Local TV crews were in attendance at the evening mass planning meeting, and it had been flagged on the front pages of Boston's newspapers. Read more »

The Boston event has its own website and active Twitter account, and has drawn support from scholar and left-wing activist Noam Chomsky.

"There's no question that the country desperately needs something like this," Chomsky said in a brief statement posted to YouTube. "Not just protest against the pretty awful things that are happening but some ideas and proposals and some suggestive, constructive proposals about how to organize to achieve a different kind of world."

Unlike the Wall Street demonstrations that saw frequent clashes between protesters and police, Boston police tell the AP that there have been no problems.

Metro Boston is providing live coverage of the Occupy Boston Monday »

Material from The Associated Press was used in this post

George Soros sympathizes with Wall St. protesters

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Soros says he understands the frustrations of small business owners.

george soros, apGeorge Soros, chairman of Soros Fund Management, speaks during a forum "Charting A New Growth Path for the Euro Zone" at the IMF/World Bank annual meetings in Washington, Saturday, Sept. 24, 2011.

UNITED NATIONS (AP) — Billionaire financier George Soros says he sympathizes with protesters speaking out against corporate greed in ongoing protests on Wall Street.

Soros answered a question about the protests During a Monday news conference at U.N. headquarters about his participation in a large-scale development project in rural Africa.

Soros says he understands the frustrations of small business owners, for instance those who have seen credit card charges soar during the current crisis.

Soros founded the Open Society Foundations. He and Earth Institute at Columbia University director Jeffrey Sachs are announcing the newest phase of the Millennium Villages Project, which works closely with several U.N. agencies.

14-year-old Springfield girl, shot in leg, told investigators that she and others had been playing with gun when it fired

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Police arrested two 16-year-old males following the incident.

032008 springfield police cruiser cropped.jpg

This updates a story originally filed at 4:40 a.m.

SPRINGFIELD – A 14-year-old Springfield girl, shot in the lower leg early Sunday in the Forest Park neighborhood, told investigators that she and two 16-year-old males had been playing with a gun when it went off accidentally.

“It’s possible that the female shot herself,” Police Sgt. John M. Delaney said. The victim was treated at a hospital and released.

The victim, shot in the right leg, originally told police that she had been walking on Dickinson Street near Wigwam Place when she was shot by an unknown suspect in a car, Delaney, aide to Commissioner William J. Fitchet, said.

Police, however, could not find a crime scene and the girl’s story did not hold up.

Police ultimately determined that the shooting occurred inside the rear doorway at 49 Dickinson St. There, they found the weapon in question, a .22 caliber bolt action Remington rifle, inside a backpack that had been stuck inside a washing machine.

Both of the 16-year-olds were charged with carrying a firearm and discharging a firearm within 500 feet of a dwelling. It’s possible, Delaney said, that the 14-year-old will be charged as well.

The three juveniles were up all night and without any adult supervision, he said.

“Officer Daniel Brunton did a great job piecing the story together to get to the bottom of what actually happened,” Delaney said.


Jury selection begins in the trial of Eric Denson, accused of killing Cathedral High School student Conor Reynolds

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About half of the prospective jurors had been dismissed by 1 p.m.

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SPRINGFIELD – Jury selection began Monday in the trial of a city man accused of killing Cathedral High School student Conor W. Reynolds during a party at the Blue Fusion bar in 2010.

Hampden Superior Court Judge Peter A. Velis told 120 prospective jurors that the case against Eric B. Denson, 22, had a long list of potential witnesses and would take an estimated four weeks to complete.

By 1 p.m., the jury pool had been whittled down by nearly half as Velis dismissed dozens of prospective jurors after brief interviews. Denson, wearing a blue dress shirt over a white T-shirt. listened in on the interviews along with Hampden District Attorney Mark G. Mastroianni, Assistant District Attorney Karen J. Bell and defense lawyers Harry L. Miles, David Rountree and Bonnie G. Allen.

Denson is charged with one count of first degree murder and two counts of assault and battery with a dangerous weapon from the March 13 stabbing. He is accused of fatally stabbing Reynolds and wounding a second Cathedral student, Peter D’Amairo during a crowded party at the night club.

Jury selection will resume at 2 p.m. after an hour break for lunch.

It was unclear if the 12 jurors and two alternates would be impaneled by the end of the day.

Police arrest 50-year-old Thomas Beckwith of Wethersfield, Conn. after high speed chase through Northampton, Easthampton and Southampton

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The chase ended deep in a muddy field at the King Oak horse farm in Southampton

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SOUTHAMPTON - A 50-year-old Connecticut man faces a slew of charges after allegedly leading police from three communities on a high speed vehicle chase early Sunday that ended deep within a horse farm field off Route 10.

Lt. Michael Goyette said the Northampton police initiated the chase in their city shortly after midnight.

The Daily Hampshire Gazette reported that the incident began with an altercation at the World War ll Club on Conz Street in Northampton.

Police pursued the suspect, Thomas Beckwith, 15 Church Place, Wethersfield, Conn., down West Street and into Easthampton where officers from that city joined in the chase, Goyette said.

Beckwith, driving a Mercury Marquis, then got onto Pomeroy Meadow Road, narrowly missing a Southampton cruiser. “The officer had to swerve out of the way,” Goyette said, adding that the suspect hit 70 mph while driving on Pomeroy Meadow Road.

At the intersection of Pomeroy Meadow Road and Route 10, Beckwith failed to turn left or right and continued straight across the road and through a fence at King Oak horse farm, just to the right of the Opa Opa Steakhouse and Brewery.

Beckwith drove deep into the field, with police cruisers still in pursuit before came to a stop and attempted to escape on foot, Goyette said.

Southampton police charged Beckwith with operating to endanger, driving with a revoked license, failure to stop for a stop sign, failure to stop for police and a marked lanes violation.

A tow company had a difficult time extracting the suspect’s car from the muddy field, Goyette said.

Northampton police could not immediately reached for comment. The Gazette reported, however, that police in that city charged him with operating a motor vehicle under the influence of alcohol, failing to stop for police, operating recklessly so as to endanger.

Also, speeding, a marked lanes violation, a passing violation, attaching plates to a motor vehicle, receiving stolen property under $250 (license plates), driving an uninsured motor vehicle, operating a motor vehicle with a suspended registration as well as a suspended license (second offense), and refusing to produce a license and registration.

Springfield police identify man killed in early morning crash in Pine Point neighborhood as 35-year-old city resident Manuel Teixeira

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Police continue to probe the crash.

10-3-11 Springfield firefighters work to free the driver of a BMW 328 that crashed into a wooded area next to 5 Gerals St. early Monday morning. Springfield Fire Department photo by Dennis Leger

This is an update of a story originally filed at 3:40 a.m.

SPRINGFIELD – Speed is a likely factor in an early Monday morning crash that took the life of a 35-year-old city man in the Pine Point neighborhood.

Police have identified the victim as Manuel V. Teixeira, 35, of 129 Kane St., Sgt. John M. Delaney said.

Teixeira, the driver and sole occupant of the vehicle, a 2007 BMW sedan, lost control at Breckwood Boulevard and Gerald Street about 1:45 a.m., Delaney, aide to Commissioner William J. Fitchet, said.

The car hit the curb and a wooden utility pole, came down onto the sidewalk and front lawn of 8 Gerald St., where it rolled several times and came to rest against a tree, Delaney said.

Delaney said there were no skid marks at the scene, indicating that the driver either passed out of fell asleep behind the wheel.

The car did not belong to the Teixeira, Delaney said, adding it was not immediately clear whether the he had been wearing a seat belt.

The driver was pronounced dead at the scene. Investigators continue to probe the crash.

Yahoo, ABC joining forces in news partnership

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For the first time, ABC is launching Web-only news series, starting with a live interview with President Barack Obama by George Stephanopoulos Monday afternoon.

100311yahoo-abc.jpgABC News President Ben Sherwood, left, and Ross Levinsohn, Yahoo's Executive Vice President of Americas, address a news conference in New York, Monday, Oct. 3, 2011. ABC News is joining forces with Yahoo to deliver more digital news content to their audiences. With the deal, the companies say ABC News content will be prominently featured on the Yahoo News and Yahoo front page.

NEW YORK (AP) — ABC News and Yahoo Inc. are joining to deliver more online news to their audiences. With the deal, ABC News content will be prominently featured on Yahoo News, the most visited news website in the world. It will also show up on Yahoo's popular front page.

The partnership comes as a growing number of people turn to the Internet for news and other information. The two news organizations have a combined online audience of more than 100 million users per month in the U.S. — something ABC News president Ben Sherwood noted was "the size of the Super Bowl audience."

While, the deal helps ABC grow its online reach, Yahoo News can drive further traffic to its own site by featuring original, made-for-online content. For the first time, ABC is launching Web-only news series, starting with a live interview with President Barack Obama by George Stephanopoulos Monday afternoon. That launches a series, "Newsmakers," with online interviews conducted by the likes of Diane Sawyer, Barbara Walters, Katie Couric, Robin Roberts and others.

Couric said the deal offers an "incredible opportunity to do extended interviews" and delve deeper into subjects without the constraints of "TV time."

Both companies will maintain editorial control of their own content.

Yahoo and ABC News have already had agreements to share content online, but the companies say the latest venture goes deeper than that. Sherwood called it a "game-changing day" for ABC News.

Outside of Monday's announcement, there hasn't been much reason for fanfare at Yahoo lately. The company has struggled to grow advertising revenue in the last few years, in part, because of competition from Google and Facebook. The company fired its CEO, Carol Bartz, last month, and is trying to decide whether to sell all or at least part of the company.

Colin Gillis, an analyst with BGP Financial Partners said Yahoo's alliance with ABC "is not going to fix Yahoo's problems." Gillis noted: "This is a relatively small event in the broader ecosystem of what is going on with Yahoo."

Yahoo's problem, Gillis believes, is that "it doesn't have a strong voice for a lot of its content," the way AOL has Huffington Post, for example. So the ABC deal will help the company share some of ABC's news brand. But Gillis pointed out that Yahoo's bigger issue is its leadership void.

"No major deal is going to get done until that void is filled," he said.

Though the quality of its journalism is well-regarded, ABC News has suffered from a business standpoint during the past decade because it doesn't have a regular cable partner, the way NBC News has MSNBC and CNBC. The tight relationship with Yahoo could give the network a chance to step beyond that weakness. ABC is owned by The Walt Disney Co.

"This is about the networks of the future," Sherwood said. "This is about how people get their news and information from different networks, whether it's on television, online, on mobile devices, on tablets and, quite frankly, in ways that we haven't even thought of yet."

As part of the deal, ABC and Yahoo will work together to sell advertising. ABC will sell online ads during the spring "upfront" season, when advertisers bid on commercial time for next fall's TV season. Yahoo will take care of sales during the rest of the year.

Executives would not disclose how the companies would share revenues created by the venture. Levinsohn said Yahoo has already heard from advertisers and agencies looking to be part of new programming created for the Web.

Sherwood and Levinsohn are both new in their jobs, having taken over leadership roles in their companies over the past year. Sherwood said they have known each other for a while through past digital ventures and began talking about ways to work together as soon as they began in their new positions.

Also part of the deal, Christiane Amanpour will have a Web-only series discussing the top international stories of the day and "Nightline" anchor Bill Weir will do a weekly series on innovations titled "This Could Be Big."

ABC will work together with Yahoo on political coverage heading into the election year, he said.

ABC already contributes video streams to Yahoo's news sites, but the deal deepens the relationship with far more content and makes ABC the top news source on the Web site, executives said.

"To be able to go deeper with this array of talent at ABC News is a big statement for us," said Ross Levinsohn, executive vice president of the Americas at Yahoo.

Shares of Yahoo rose 81 cents, or 6.2 percent, to $13.98 in morning trading. Investors were buying the shares after the CEO of Chinese Internet company Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. said he would be "very interested" in buying Yahoo.

Year-to-date, Yahoo shares are down about 16 percent.

You never write any more; well, hardly anyone does

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Last year the typical home received a personal letter about every seven weeks.

100311postoffice.JPGAn employee at the United States Post Office on Main Street in Springfield cases letters.

WASHINGTON (AP) — Mom might get a quick note in the mail. Sister might get a birthday card. But that's about it. For the typical American household these days, nearly two months will pass before a personal letter shows up.

The avalanche of advertising still arrives, of course, along with magazines and catalogs. But personal letters — as well as the majority of bill payments — have largely been replaced by email, Twitter, Facebook and the like.

"In the future old 'love letters' may not be found in boxes in the attic but rather circulating through the Internet, if people care to look for them," said Webster Newbold, a professor of English at Ball State University in Muncie, Ind.

Last year the typical home received a personal letter about every seven weeks, according to the annual survey done by the post office. As recently as 1987 it was once every two weeks. That doesn't include greeting cards or invitations.

It's very different from the nation's earlier days. When Benjamin Franklin was in charge of the mail, letters bound far-flung Americans together.

"If I write, it's only to my mother and it's a quick note," said Andy Aldrich, an education program coordinator who lives in Vienna, Va. He said he sends his mother a hand-written letter about once every four months. Otherwise, Aldrich said he mostly communicates through emails, text messages and Skype with relatives.

Bob Cvetic, of Waldorf, Md., a health specialist with a federal law enforcement agency, said different forms of communication have different purposes.

"Emails are something quick," he said. "Letters are letters. When I'm writing a letter to a friend, it's a personal note. You can't send an email saying 'hey, sorry to hear you lost your father.'"

Mike Stanley of Silver Spring, Md., said he mostly uses the Postal Service to pay bills. He did send his sister a birthday card in August. "I don't send letters. I use the cellphone or email," he said. "It's faster."

Even Stanley's mailing of bill payments is no longer the norm, with the post office reporting that, "for the first time, in 2010, fewer than 50 percent of all bills were paid by mail."

The Postal Service says the decline in letter-writing is "primarily driven by the adoption of the Internet as a preferred method of communication."

The loss of that lucrative first-class mail is just one part of the agency's financial troubles, along with payment of bills via Internet and a decline in other mail. The Postal Service is facing losses of $8 billion or more this year.

The loss to what people in the future know about us today may be incalculable.

In earlier times the "art" of letter writing was formally taught, explained Newbold.

"Letters were the prime medium of communication among individuals and even important in communities as letters were shared, read aloud and published," he said. "Letters did the cultural work that academic journals, book reviews, magazines, legal documents, business memos, diplomatic cables, etc. do now. They were also obviously important in more intimate senses, among family, close friends, lovers, and suitors in initiating and preserving personal relationships and holding things together when distance was a real and unsurmountable obstacle."

"It's too early to tell with any certainty whether people are using email, texting, Twitter tweets, Facebook status updates, and so on in the same ways that we earlier relied on the letter for; they are probably using each of these media in different ways, some of which allow people to get closer to each other and engage in friendly or intimate exchange. It seems that email is the most letter-like medium," added Newbold.

But Aaron Sachs, a professor of American Studies and History at Cornell University, said, "One of the ironies for me is that everyone talks about electronic media bringing people closer together, and I think this is a way we wind up more separate. We don't have the intimacy that we have when we go to the attic and read grandma's letters."

"Part of the reason I like being a historian is the sensory experience we have when dealing with old documents" and letters, he said. "Sometimes, when people ask me what I do, I say I read other people's mail."

"Handwriting is an aspect of people's identity," he added. "Back in the day, when you wrote a letter it was to that one person, so people said very intimate things." Today with things like Facebook being more public people may not say as much, he said. And while some people are open in what they email, "it's a very different kind of sharing."

Said history professor Jeffrey Nathan Wasserstrom of the University of California, Irvine: "There are indeed many ways that a decline in letter-writing will affect future historians, as many people in my profession have certainly benefited from the insights that written missives provide into how people of the past thought and felt,"

"Personally, I don't get or send many letters, at least not carefully composed ones," he added.

Wasserstrom still turns to them as a source for his research. "I expect to make a lot of use of letters written by people held hostage in Beijing in the summer of 1900 in my upcoming book on the Boxer Crisis."

Historian Kerby Miller of the University of Missouri-Columbia said friends "who have done research on immigrants of the last 10 to 20 years say that the letters were used as late as the 1950s and '60s, being replaced by long-distance phone calls and emails."

Any subject that relies on correspondence — culture, manners, husbands and wives, lovers, friends, brothers, historical business, political history — could suffer a loss with the decline in letter-writing, Miller said.

Yet there could be some benefit, he said.

"Many of us used to always feel guilty because we never wrote enough — remember all those letters from Mom and Dad? Well, if Mom and Dad have a computer it's much easier to dash off a note every day or so," he said. "So maybe all the consequences aren't going to be completely negative. Maybe a vast load of guilt will be lifted from the shoulders of the American people."

James Grossman, executive director of the American Historical Association, said future historians will be turning to email, as journalists already are doing.

"Email is different from letters, but it is comparable. It is more easily searchable," he said. "But we will have to learn how to use it."

So the loss of the personal letter may be a threat, but at least some of its functions will live digitally.

Still, it's hard to imagine poet Robert Browning imploring Elizabeth Barrett to be his BFF.

Singer Stevie B, arrested in Springfield over weekend, reaches deal to pay child support

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Steven Bernard Hill was hauled off a Springfield stage and handcuffed on Saturday.

SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (AP) — A singer known for his 1990 chart-topping love song has agreed to pay more than $400,000 in child support after he was hauled off a Massachusetts stage and arrested.

State Department of Revenue spokesman Robert Bliss says Steven Bernard Hill of Las Vegas appeared in Hampden County Family and Probate Court on Monday. He'll stay in jail until he comes up with a $10,000 payment.

Hill performs as Stevie B and is best known for the song "Because I Love You (The Postman Song)."

He was arrested Friday at the MassMutual Center in Springfield, where he was performing. His child and the child's mother live in Agawam.

Under the agreement, he must pay $921 a week plus $500 a month.

A message seeking comment was left with his attorney.

UMass police annual report shows number of alcohol-related arrests down

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UMass Police Chief Johnny Whitehead believes the report shows the campus is safe.

WHITE.JPGUMass Police Chief Johnny C. Whitehead pictured at recent ceremonies celebrating the new UMass police station.

AMHERST – The number of arrests for liquor law violations on the University of Massachusetts campus dropped about 23 percent in 2010 from the previous year, according to the annual university crime statistics report.

Federal and state laws require campus police to report crime statistics of the past three years by Oct. 1 each year.

According to the report, police arrested 371 in 2010 compared to 483 in 2009. UMass Police also referred 1,588 for further services, up from 1,556 in 2009.

UMass Police Chief Johnny C. Whitehead said “I think it was a little calmer (last year.) We’re still putting the emphasis on liquor law violations,” he said. “We haven’t eased up on enforcement. We’re trying to make the campus safer.”

He said he thinks the numbers might be down in part because resident assistants are calling police earlier. “They’re doing a more effective job (calling) before things get out of hand,” he said.

Whitehead said “there’s less binge drinking.”

The liquor-related arrests in 2010 are still higher than the 316 in 2008, he said. And he said, “We’re getting off to a busy start this year.”

Amherst police in particular have made numerous arrests and issued fines for a range of off-campus infractions. On the last weekend in September alone, police filed charges against 132 people between Friday and Saturday nights and took 61 of them into custody over the weekend.


Most of the violations were alcohol-related, with the majority being either minors in possession of alcohol or for breaking the open container law.

Other statistics from the annual report showed the number of arrests for drug law violations more than doubled from 27 in 2009 to 56 in 2010. Whitehead is not sure why those numbers are up.

UMass-Amherst 2010 Security Report

In 2008 there were 182 drug arrests, but the numbers dropped because of the change in the state marijuana laws. 
In January 2009 a new state law provided for a $100 fine to people caught with less than an ounce of marijuana, rather than criminal penalties.

The number of burglaries remained the same with 59.

Forcible sex offenses were up from eight to 12 on campus. Of those numbers, forcible rape was down from six to three.

“Overall, (the report) indicates it’s a safe campus.” Whitehead said. “We’re one of the largest resident universities in the country.”

UMass has more than 27,000 graduate and undergraduates, and about half live on campus, he said.


Obituaries today: Thelma Brown worked at F.W. Sickles Co., was top Avon seller

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Obituaries from The Republican.

10_03_11_Brown).jpgThelma Brown

Thelma O. (Stone) Brown, 91, of Springfield, passed away on Sept. 25. Born in Ladonia, Texas, a daughter of the late Charles Stone and Magnolia (Anderson) Stone, she was raised in Boley, Okla., and lived in Springfield for more than 50 years. Brown formerly worked as an assembler at F.W. Sickles Co. in Chicopee. She was self-employed for many years as an Avon product representative, and consistently was recognized as a top salesperson in the area.

Obituaries from The Republican:

Baystate Health eases health advisory, announces hospital cafeteria did not serve listeria-tainted lettuce subject to national recall

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Baystate Health spokesman Benjamin Craft said Monday that the hospital subsequently learned that none of the lettuce that falls under the recall notice was ever shipped to Baystate.

This is an update of a story first posted at 9:47 p.m. Friday

lettuce.jpgBaystate Health has ceased a health advisory it issued last week after learning none of the lettuce served in its cafeteria in late September was included in a national recall for listeria contamination.

SPRINGFIELD - Baystate Health announced Monday that its initial concerns about Baystate Medical Center serving listeria-contaminated lettuce in its cafeteria proved unwarranted after subsequently determining it did not receive any batches of California lettuce that were subject to recall.

Baystate officials Friday night issued an advisory to patents, visitors and employees that the hospital between Sept. 19 and Sept. 27 may have served romaine lettuce that may have been contaminated with listeria. The grower, Trueleaf Farms of Selinas, Ca., last week issued a voluntary recall for nearly 2,500 cartons of chopped Romaine lettuce after discovering traces of listeria.

Baystate Health spokesman Benjamin Craft said Monday that the hospital subsequently learned that none of the lettuce that falls under the recall notice was ever shipped to Baystate.

“Baystate Health is pleased to report that any concerns about illness due to this batch of potentially contaminated lettuce at Baystate facilities may now be put to rest,” Craft said.

He said that the hospital realizes its initial advisory may have caused some concerns among patients and their families and Baystate staff. Baystate Health, he said, stands by its decision to notify the community immediately of a potential health risk.

Amanda Knox murder conviction overturned by Italian appeals court

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Knox collapsed in tears after the verdict was read out Monday.

Italy KnoxAmanda Knox talks with her lawyer Carlo Dalla Vedova upon arrival for an appeal hearing at the Perugia court, central Italy, Monday, Oct. 3, 2011. (AP Photo/Antonio Calanni)

PERUGIA, Italy (AP) — An Italian appeals court threw out Amanda Knox's murder conviction Monday and ordered the young American freed after nearly four years in prison for the death of her British roommate.

Knox collapsed in tears after the verdict overturning her 2009 conviction was read out. Her co-defendant, Italian Raffaele Sollecito, also was cleared of killing 21-year-old Meredith Kercher in 2007.

The Kercher family looked on grimly and a bit dazed as the verdict was read out by the judge after 11 hours of deliberations by the eight-member jury. Outside the courthouse, some of the hundreds of observers shouted "Shame, shame!"

Yet inside the frescoed courtroom, Knox's parents, who have regularly traveled from their home in Seattle to Perugia to visit the 24-year-old over the past four years, hugged their lawyers and cried with joy.

"We've been waiting for this for four years," said one of Sollecito's lawyers, Giulia Bongiorno.

The judge upheld Knox's conviction on a charge of slander for accusing bar owner Diya "Patrick" Lumumba of carrying out the killing. He set the sentence at three years, meaning for time served. Knox has been in prison since Nov. 6, 2007.

Prosecutors can appeal the acquittal to Italy's highest court. There was no word late Monday if they planned to do so.

In Seattle, about a dozen Knox supporters were overjoyed that she has been cleared of the murder conviction.

"She's free!" and "We did it!" they shouted at a hotel where they watched the court proceedings on TV.

PM News Links: Scott Brown not worried about poll; bicyclist killed by Pittsfield school bus; and more

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A new UMass Lowell-Boston Herald poll shows Brown in a virtual dead heat with Democrat Elizabeth Warren in a potential 2012 Senate matchup.

021811 scott brown.jpgU.S. Sen. Scott Brown, R-Mass., says he's not worrying about a new UMass Lowell-Boston Herald poll showing him in a virtual dead heat with Democrat Elizabeth Warren in a potential 2012 Senate matchup.

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

Obama: No regrets about Solyndra loan

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Obama said officials always knew a clean energy loan program would not back winners 100 percent of the time.

100311solyndra.jpgCEO Brian Harrison, center left, and Chief Financial Officer Bill Stover, center right, from the bankrupt solar energy company Solyndra, invoke their Fifth Amendment right to decline to testify to avoid self-incrimination as they appear before the House Energy Committee's Oversight and Investigations Subcommittee which is investigating Solyndra's $528 million loan government loan, on Capitol Hill in Washington, Friday, Sept. 23 2011. The Fremont, Calif.-based company which has laid off its 1,100 employees 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.

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama said Monday he does not regret a $528 million loan to a solar energy company that later collapsed, saying officials always knew a clean energy loan program would not back winners 100 percent of the time.

"There are going to be some failures, and Solyndra's an example," Obama said in a television interview, referring to a California solar panel maker that declared bankruptcy last month and laid off its 1,100 workers. The company's failure has become a rallying cry for critics of Obama's clean energy program who say the government should not try to predict winners and losers in the volatile renewable energy market.

Obama disputed that, saying China is pouring "hundreds of billions of dollars into this space." If the United States wants to compete with China, Germany and other countries that are heavily subsidizing clean energy, "we've got to make sure that our guys here in the United States of America at least have a shot," Obama said.

Obama, in an interview with ABC News, was asked whether his administration had ignored warnings about Solyndra, as some congressional Republicans assert.

"Well, hindsight is always 20-20," he said.

The Solyndra loan, which was approved in 2009, "went through the regular review process and people felt like this was a good bet," Obama said in his first comments on the loan that has caused a headache for his administration.

A House energy panel released emails Monday showing that a Democratic fundraiser warned the White House to be "careful" about a planned Obama trip to Solyndra.

Steve Westly, a Silicon Valley investor and Energy Department adviser, said in an email that he and others were worried that Solyndra might not "survive long-term."

Westly urged Obama to reconsider the trip, but said that if Obama did visit the company, he should avoid any remarks "that could haunt him in the next 18 months if Solyndra hits the wall, files for bankruptcy etc."

Two days after the May 24, 2010, email, Obama traveled to Solyndra's Fremont, Calif., headquarters.

The Silicon Valley 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. Energy Secretary Steven Chu attended the company's September 2009 groundbreaking for a new manufacturing plant, and Vice President Joe Biden spoke by satellite at the groundbreaking ceremony.

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 2009 groundbreaking have become an embarrassment for Obama.

Even so, the administration has pushed forward with loans, awarding more than $6 billion in the past week alone for seven separate projects. In all, the clean energy loan program has awarded 28 loans worth more than $16 billion since 2009.

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