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Libya forces fight rebels advancing toward capital

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The seesawing battles for towns and oil installations along the coastline signaled that Libya's fighting could be prolonged, compared with the ousting of Mubarak after just 18 days

98dd8ff23e10be05e60e6a7067003c4f.jpgAnti-Libyan Leader Moammar Gadhafi rebels, fire multiple launcher rockets during a fighting against pro-Gadhafi fighters near the town of Bin-Jawad, eastern Libya, Sunday, March 6, 2011. Thousands of Moammar Gadhafi's supporters poured into the streets of Tripoli on Sunday, waving flags and firing their guns into the air in the Libyan leader's main stronghold. Earlier, the city woke to the crackle of heavy machine-gun fire that rattled the capital before dawn.


BIN JAWWAD, Libya (AP) — Libyan helicopter gunships fired on a rebel force advancing west toward the capital along the Mediterranean coastline Sunday and forces loyal to leader Moammar Gadhafi fought intense ground battles with the rival fighters.

The opposition force pushed out of the rebel-held eastern half of Libya late last week for the first time and has been cutting a path west toward Tripoli. On the way, they secured control of two important oil ports at Brega and Ras Lanouf and by Sunday, the rebels were advancing farther west when they were hit by the helicopter fire and confrontations with ground forces.

The uprising against Gadhafi, which began just days after President Hosni Mubarak was ousted by protesters in neighboring Egypt, has been sliding rapidly toward civil war, making it the bloodiest episode in the Middle East's wave of unrest.

The seesawing battles for towns and oil installations along the coastline signaled that Libya's fighting could be prolonged, compared with the ousting of Mubarak after just 18 days. The protesters-turned-rebels — backed by mutinous army units and armed with weaponry seized from storehouses — are going on the offensive to try to topple Gadhafi's 41-year-old regime. At the same time, pro-Gadhafi forces have conducted counteroffensives to try to retake the oil port of Brega and the rebel-held city of Zawiya west of Tripoli — where bloody street battles were reported over the weekend.

In Sunday's fighting, AP reporters on the scene said government airstrikes hit the town of Ras Lanouf, and ground troops loyal to Gadhafi retook the town of Bin Jawwad, about 110 miles (160 kilometers) east of Gadhafi's hometown and stronghold of Sirte, which could prove to be a decisive battleground.

From the edge of Bin Jawwad, a steady barrage of rockets and artillery fired by pro-Gadhafi forces thumped to the ground. About 50 rebel fighters were trapped inside a mosque, and their comrades who had retreated to the edge of the city sent 20 pickup trucks back through the bombardment to try to rescue them. One of the trucks was hit.

A warplane attacked a small military base at Ras Lanouf and destroyed three hangars and a small building. Regime forces shelled rebel positions there with rockets and artillery. Ambulances sped toward the town and rebels moved trucks and four multiple-rocket launchers toward the front lines.

Four people were killed in the fighting in those two towns, and a French journalist for France 24 TV was wounded, hospital officials said.

In Tripoli, the city of 2 million that is most firmly in Gadhafi's grip, residents awoke before dawn to the crackle of unusually heavy and sustained gunfire that lasted for at least two hours. Some of the gunfire was heard around the sprawling Bab al-Aziziya military camp where Gadhafi lives, giving rise to speculation that there may have been some sort of internal fighting within the forces defending the Libyan leader inside his fortress-like barracks. Gadhafi's whereabouts were unknown.

The U.S. has moved military forces closer to Libya's shores to put military muscle behind its demand for Gadhafi to step down immediately. But Washington has expressed wariness about talk of imposing a "no fly" zone over the North African nation to prevent the Libyan leader from using his warplanes to attack the population.

At the same time, the U.N. has imposed sanctions, and Libya's oil production has been seriously crippled by the unrest. The turmoil has caused oil prices to spike on international markets.

Some of the day's heaviest fighting was over the city of Misrata, where residents said pro-Gadhafi troops punched into the city with mortar and tank artillery and were pushed out five hours later by rebel forces. Misrata is 120 miles (200 kilometers) east of Tripoli.

Rebel military commanders intentionally opened the way for the government tanks to enter the city, then surrounded them and attacked the armor with anti-aircraft guns and mortar shells, said Abdel Fatah al-Misrati, one of the rebels.

"Our spirits are high," he said. "The regime is struggling and what is happening is a desperate attempt to survive and crush the opposition, but the rebels are in control of the city."

"Now the Gadhafi forces are trapped inside the city," he said.

A doctor reached by The Associated Press in the city's main hospital said tanks shelled its stores of medical supplies, setting them on fire.

The residents said the shelling was almost over by early afternoon.

The residents and the doctor spoke on condition of anonymity because they feared reprisals.

Four rebels and five pro-Gadhafi troops were killed, al-Misrati said.

Hundreds, perhaps thousands, have died since the uprising began on Feb. 15. Tight restrictions on media make it near impossible to get an accurate tally.

The rebels headquartered in the main eastern city of Benghazi have set up an interim governing council that is urging international airstrikes on Gadhafi's strongholds and forces.

British Defense Secretary Liam Fox said Sunday that a "small British diplomatic team" is in eastern Libya to try to talk to rebels. But he would not comment on a report that special forces soldiers were captured by Gadhafi opponents when a secret mission to put British diplomats in touch with leading rebels went awry.

British Foreign Minister William Hague urged Gadhafi to hand over power and put an "immediate stop" to the use of armed force against Libyans.

In Tripoli, Libyan authorities tried to explain the unusually heavy gunfire that erupted before dawn by saying it was a celebration of the regime taking back Ras Lanouf and Misrata, though both places remained in rebel hands late Sunday afternoon.

After the gunfire eased in the early morning, thousands of Gadhafi's supporters poured into Tripoli's central square for a rally, waving green flags, firing guns in the air and holding up banners in support of the regime. Hundreds drove past Gadhafi's residence, waving flags and cheering. Armed men in plainclothes were standing at the gates, also shooting in the air.

Britain's Sunday Times newspaper reported that up to eight British special forces soldiers, armed but in plain clothes, were captured while escorting a junior British diplomat through rebel-held territory in eastern Libya. It said the special forces intervention angered Libyan opposition figures who ordered the soldiers to be locked up on a military base.

The British Defense Secretary Fox said his government was in touch with the team in Benghazi but told BBC radio it would be "inappropriate" to comment further. When pressed on whether the U.K. diplomatic team was in danger, Fox reiterated that the government is in contact with the diplomatic team.

"It is a very difficult situation to be able to understand in detail," he said. "There are a number of different opposition groups to Colonel Gadhafi in Libya who do seem relatively disparate."

British Foreign Minister Hague repeated the international community's demand for Gadhafi to step down.

"Given the continued levels of illegitimate violence within Libya we call upon Colonel Gadhafi to put an immediate stop to the use of armed force against the Libyan people," Hague said in a statement. "He must hand over power without delay to a government which fully recognizes the legitimate aspirations of the Libyan people," he added.

"The U.K. reiterates its support for the transition to a government that will deliver greater democracy, justice, transparency, human rights and accountability in Libya. We understand the desire of Libyans to enjoy the freedoms which have been denied to them for many years and support them in this endeavor," he said.

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Michael reported from Tripoli.


Mass. to continue to enforce funeral protest rules, despite Supreme Court ruling protecting free speech of Kansas church

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Coakley told The Boston Globe she will advise police to continue to enforce a 500-foot buffer zone around funerals to prevent disruptions.

7086fd72eca06204e60e6a7067006899.jpgFILE - In this June 6, 2009 file photo, protesters from Rev. Fred Phelps' Westboro Baptist Church demonstrate during funeral services for Dr. George Tiller at College Hill United Methodist Church in Wichita, Kan. In an 8-1 ruling, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled the group's protests were protected by the First Amendment. The father of a Marine killed in Iraq sued after they picketed his son's 2006 funeral service.)


BOSTON (AP) — Attorney General Martha Coakley says Massachusetts will continue to enforce state law that keeps protesters at least 500 feet from a funeral despite last week's U.S. Supreme Court ruling upholding the right of a Kansas church group to picket military funerals.

Coakley told The Boston Globe she will advise police to continue to enforce a 500-foot buffer zone around funerals to prevent disruptions. She says police have discretion in maintaining order and that the Massachusetts law strikes a balance between protesters' free speech and the rights of military families.

The Supreme Court ruled Wednesday that members of the Westboro Baptist Church of Topeka, Kan., exercised their right to free speech when they picketed the Maryland funeral of a Marine killed in Iraq and carrying inflammatory messages such as, "Thank God for Dead Soldiers."

Springfield study comittee recommends revamped police oversight board

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There already exists a seven-member, mayor-appointed Community Police Hearing Board.

Henry Twiggs speaks during the Ward 4 Democratic Caucus Day at Family Kitchen Restaurant in Springfield on February 4, 2006. STAFF PHOTO BY CHRISTOPHER EVANS.


SPRINGFIELD – A special study committee established by the City Council has filed a proposal for an expanded, revamped citizen oversight board to deal with police brutality and misconduct complaints.

The proposed ordinance, which would establish a nine-member Police Oversight Board, is set to be considered by the City Council tonight, and follows several meetings and public hearings in recent months. The council meeting is at 7 p.m., at City Hall.

“My hope is that the majority of the council members will buy into it, and the stakeholders will buy into it,” said City Councilor E. Henry Twiggs, chairman of the 11-member study committee. “I am hopeful that what we are proposing will guarantee citizen participation as part of the oversight of the Police Department.”

There already exists a seven-member, mayor-appointed Community Police Hearing Board that reviews police misconduct complaints and files recommendations with Police Commissioner William J. Fitchet.

Some councilors and residents, however, have said the hearing board has inadequate powers and inadequate community outreach.

Some critics have suggested a return to a civilian Police Commission in Springfield with full disciplinary powers.

Twiggs said the study committee, consisting of six councilors and five residents, rejected the idea of returning to a Police Commission. The committee supports a single commissioner having final authority as stipulated in Fitchet’s contract, and that he can be held accountable, Twiggs said.

Under the study committee’s proposal, the new police oversight board would be appointed by the mayor, but would include four members recommended to the mayor by a caucus of various neighborhood councils and civic associations.

The board would accept civilian complaints, review the sufficiency of internal investigations, and act individually or as hearing officers. The board would still provide recommendations on discipline, but Twiggs said he and other study committee members believe the revamped ordinance ensures Fitchet would support those findings.

Under the existing board, Fitchet followed recommendations in all hearing cases, even exceeding the recommendation for discipline in one case, according to a year-end draft summary.

The new ordinance also requires the new oversight board to conduct public outreach and communication, Twiggs said.

With the expanded number of members, the new board will have the ability to separate into three panels to divide up the heavy workload as well as having full board meetings, Twiggs said.

Mayor Domenic J. Sarno, who has repeatedly defended the existing hearing board, said he will await council action including amendments, before commenting on the new proposal.

In addition, Councilor Thomas Ashe is sponsoring an alternate ordinance that would create a five-member police oversight board. That proposal is also on the council agenda.

Roberts Pond project to reduce sewer back-ups and prevent problems at the former dam

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An informational meeting will be held at 6 p.m. Monday in the Edward J. Bellamy Middle School.

CHICOPEE – Faced with a potential disaster because of an eroding spillway, the city plans to replace sewer mains near Roberts Pond this spring.

But before the city starts hiring contractors or ripping up pavement, officials want more information about problems with drainage, sewer backups or other issues in the area, said Thomas M. Hamel, project supervisor for the water pollution control facility.

“We are going to have plans and we want to know what is going on,” he said. “We can’t fix something if we don’t know about it.”

The meeting will be held at 6 p.m., Monday in the Edward J. Bellamy Middle School. Residents can hear a description ofthe project, but what officials really want is information, Hamel said.

The city is planning to replace the sewer main on Irene Street between Factory Street and Cyran Street. A storm drain line will be added on Roberts Pond Lane, separating it from the sewer main to end back-ups into homes, he said.

The project is in part designed to correct a problem that was created about five years ago when Roberts Pond was drained because the spillway was eroded and engineers deemed it a danger if the dam ever burst.

There is also a sewer main running through an earthen embankment under the spillway that will be redesigned and replaced.

“If that erodes away the sewer will be dumping directly into the river. We were alarmed by that if the embankment ever failed,” Hamel said.

An emergency pipe was also installed when Roberts Pond was drained that would allow the Willimansett Brook to flow through the dam. However the pipe is a small 4-foot one and water backs up and fills the former pond in a heavy rain. The pipe must be monitored by employees at all times during a rainstorm to ensure it does not get blocked and threaten the dam, Hamel said.

The project will replace that 4-foot pipe by one measuring 14 feet by 10 feet, which can handle all the water even during a heavy rain, he said.

The city is eligible for a low-interest state loan to fund the $3 million project, but all the work will be paid for through city money. If the work begins by the spring, it could receive a grant to pay for 10 percent of the project, Hamel said.

He expects the work to begin in early April, he said.

South Hadley and state DEP work to fix landfill odor

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The DEP has set up a hotline which residents can use to report any unusual odors in their neighborhood.

SOUTH HADLEY – Following complaints about a bad odor in the area of the landfill on Industrial Drive, the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) is working with South Hadley Landfill LLC to fix the problem.

“The most recent complaints are from a residential area north of the landfill,” said DEP spokeswoman Catherine Skiba, of the Western Massachusetts office in Springfield.

The problem has been going on for several weeks.

The DEP has set up a hotline which residents can use to report any unusual odors in their neighborhood. That number is (413) 493-8547.

Skiba urges callers to leave their addresses. The more specific they can be about the location of the smells, the more it helps investigators.

At this point, the culprit seems to be the gas collection system at the landfill.

Skiba said the DEP staff could detect the ordor at the landfill site but not when they were in the neighborhood.

“The operator of the landfill confirms that, and is investigating modifications to the existing gas collection system,” said Skiba.

At South Hadley’s Department of Public Works, Director James Reidy explained how gas collection works at the landfill. The gases emitted there, including methane, go into pipes that are buried in the perimeter of the landfill. A big blower sucks gas into these underground pipes.

It then pumps the gas into an “enclosed flare,” which looks like a silo from the outside. The enclosed flare has an open flame inside, and that’s where the gas is burned.

South Hadley Landfill LLC is a division of Interstate Waste Services.

Skiba said the current problem is not related to a similar problem the town had with landfill-based odors about five years ago.

At that time, the materials and the processes involved were different, and even the company that ran the landfill was different.



A roast honoring retiring Holyoke Police Chief Anthony Scott will be held at the MassMutual Center

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A roast honoring retiring Holyoke Police Chief Anthony Scott is scheduled for April .


01/28/11 Holyoke- Republican Photo by Mark M.Murray - Holyoke Police Chief Anthony R. Scott shown here in his office at Police Headquarters on Appleton Street.

SPRINGFIELD – A roast honoring retiring Holyoke Police Chief Anthony R. Scott is scheduled April 7 at the MassMutual Center on Main Street, with a panel of roasters that features comedian Bill Cosby.

The doors will open at 5:30 p.m., and the dinner begins at 6 p.m., with a cash bar.

The roast panel will also include area politicians, law enforcement officials and media members.

Scott, who has been police chief in Holyoke since 2001, is retiring in April. During his tenure, he has garnered a reputation of being a no-nonsense crime fighter and often-vocal critic of lenient jail sentences and low bails.

Ticket prices are $40 per person or $375 per table of 10.

Tickets are available at:

- Sullivan, Hayes & Quinn, One Monarch Place, Suite 1200, Springfield, (413) 736-4538, and

- Holyoke Police Department – 138 Appleton St., chief’s office, (413) 322-6901.

The tickets can be picked up in person or by sending a check made payable to “Chief Scott Retirement Roast” to either location. The tickets will be returned by mail.

The masters of ceremony are Brad Shepard, co-host of the WHYN Morning Show, and Michael A. “Bax” Baxendale, co-host of the WAQY Rock 102, the Bax & O’Brien show.

The “Inquisitional Court” will include Cosby, an award winning comedian and star of “The Cosby Show” and co-star of the long-running “I Spy” television series.

Other members of the roast panel are expected to include U.S. Sen. Scott Brown; state Sen. Michael R. Knapik; former Holyoke Mayor Michael J. Sullivan; Springfield Mayor Domenic J. Sarno; and Chicopee Mayor Michael D. Bissonnette.

Also: Hampden County District Attorney Mark G. Mastroianni; Springfield lawyer Meghan B. Sullivan; Chicopee Police Chief John R. Ferraro Jr.; Bo Sullivan of the WHYN Morning Show, John O’Brien of Rock 102; Jim Polito of WTAG News Talk Radio in Worcester; Barry Kriger, WWLP-TV news anchor; Ray Hershel, abc40; and Baxendale and Shepard.

Various media representatives, and friends and supporters of Scott are members of the Retirement Roast Planning Committee.

The proceeds from the roast will benefit the Valley Press Club scholarship program.

The dinner menu includes chicken breast stuffed with sweet sausage apple stuffing, red bliss home-style mashed potatoes, vegetables and dessert.

Western Massachusetts communities list municipal meetings for the week

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Here is a list of major municipal meetings for the coming week: Amherst: Mon.-Disability Access Committee, 11:30 a.m., 210 Old Belchertown Road Town Meeting Coordinating Committee, 2 p.m., Town Hall. Select Board, 6:30 p.m., Town Hall. Tues.-Public Shade Tree Committee, 4 p.m., Town Hall. Local Historic District Committee, 5:15 p.m., Bangs Community Center. Jones Library Board of Trustees, 7...

Here is a list of major municipal meetings for the coming week:


Amherst: Mon.-Disability Access Committee, 11:30 a.m., 210 Old Belchertown Road

Town Meeting Coordinating Committee, 2 p.m., Town Hall.

Select Board, 6:30 p.m., Town Hall.

Tues.-Public Shade Tree Committee, 4 p.m., Town Hall.

Local Historic District Committee, 5:15 p.m., Bangs Community Center.

Jones Library Board of Trustees, 7 p.m., Jones Library.

Amherst Regional School Committee, 7 p.m., Town Hall.

Wed.-Munson Library Board of Trustees, noon, Munson Library.

Conservation Commission, 7 p.m., Town Hall.

Amherst School Committee, 7 p.m., Amherst Regional High School.

Thu.-Finance Committee, 7 p.m., Town Hall.

Zoning Board of Appeals, 7:30 p.m., Town Hall.



Chicopee: Mon.-Public hearing for Roberts Pond project, 6 p.m., Bellamy School

Library Board of Trustees, 6 p.m., 449 Front St.

Tues.-Ordinance Committee, 6:30 p.m., City Hall

Historical Commission, 4 p.m., Bellamy House

Council on Aging, 4:45 p.m., 7 Valley View Court

Parks and Recreation Commission, 7 p.m., 687 Front St.

Wed.-Housing Authority public hearing on annual plan, 5:30 p.m., 7 Valley View Court

Sewer Commission, 5:30 p.m. 80 Medina St.

Zoning Board of Appeals, 6:30 p.m., City Hall

Golf Commission, 7 p.m., 449 Front St.

East Longmeadow: Tues.-Board of Assessors, 6:30 p.m., Town Hall.

Wed.-Board of Library Trustees, 6 p.m., Public Library.

Easthampton: Tues.-Planning Board 6 p.m., 50 Payson Ave.

Wed.-Commission on Disability, 4 p.m., 50 Payson Ave.

Thu.-Easthampton City Arts, 5:30 p.m., 43 Main St.

Granby: Mon.-School Committee, 5:30 p.m., Jr.-Sr. High School

Selectboard, 7 p.m., Senior Center

Finance Committee, 7:30 p.m., Senior Center

Tues.-Selectboard, 3:35 p.m., Aldrich Hall

Library Trustees, 6 p.m., Library

Board of Health, 6:30 p.m., Town Hall Annex

Hadley: Tues.-Board of Health, 7 p.m., Town Hall.

Hatfield: Mon.-Board of Health, 9 a.m., Town Hall.

Cable Advisory Board, 6 p.m., Smith Academy

Planning Board, 7:30 p.m., Town Hall.

Tues.-Rescue Pumper Committee, 7 p.m., fire station.

Holyoke: Mon.-City Council Public Service Committee, 6 p.m., City Hall, City Council Chambers.

Tues.-City Council Public Service Committee, 6 p.m., City Hall, City Council Chambers.

Huntington: Wed.-Board of Selectmen, 7 p.m., Town Hall

Gateway Regional School Committee, 7:30 p.m., Gateway Regional High School

Longmeadow: Mon.-School Finance subcommittee, 7 p.m. Wolf Swamp School.

Select Board, 7 p.m., Police Department.

Board of Health, 7:30 p.m., Fire Department.

Tues.-Finance Committee, 7 p.m., Fire Department.

Zoning Board of Appeals, 7:30 p.m., Police Department.

Thu.-Select Board Finance subcommittee, 9 a.m., Town Hall.

Monson: Mon.-Finance Committee, 6:45 p.m., Town Office Building.

Tues.-Board of Selectmen, 7 p.m., Town Office Building.

Northampton: Mon.-Recreation Commission, 6 p.m., 90 Locust St.

Public Safety, 6 p.m., 212 Main St.

Agricultural Commission, 6 p.m. City Hall.

Waste Management Task Force, 7 p.m., JFK Middle School.

Tues.-Smith Vocational Board of Trustees, 5 p.m., Smith Voke.

Wed.-Capital Improvements Projects Committee, 5 p.m., City Hall.

Thu.-School Committee, 7:15 p.m., JFK Middle School.

Palmer: Mon.-Town Council, 7 p.m., Town Building.

Tues.-Board of Health, 6 p.m., Town Building.

South Hadley: Mon.-Golf Commission, 6:30 p.m., Town Hall

Electronic Communication Advisory Committee, 6:30 p.m., Police Station conference room

Tues.-Master Plan Implementation Committee, 9 a.m., Town Hall

School Building Committee, 6:30 p.m., Town Hall, second floor

Appropriations Committee, 7 p.m., Police Station conference room

Wed.-School Committee, 6:30 p.m., High School Library

Thu.-Fire District 2 Water Commissioners, 5 p.m., 20 Woodbridge

School Committee, 6:30 p.m., High School Library

Southwick: Mon.-Board of Selectmen, 7 p.m., Town Hall

Board of Assessors, 7 p.m., Town Hall

Tues.-Planning Board, 7 0.m., Town Hall

Wed.-Emergency Management Agency, 7 p.m., Town Hall

Thu.-Lake Management Committee, 7 p.m., Town Hall

Springfield: Mon.-Springfield Redevelopment Authority, 5:30 p.m., Public Works conference room, 70 Tapley St.

Mon.-Traffic Commission, 6 p.m., hearing, Forest Park Middle School, 46 Oakland St.

Mon.-City Council, 7 p.m., council chambers, City Hall

Tues.-City Council Green Committee, 6 p.m., Room 200, City Hall

Wed.-Springfield Water and Sewer Commission, 2 p.m., administration building, Bondi’s Island.

Thu.-License Commission, 5:30 p.m., Room 220, City Hall

Warren: Mon.-Historical Commission, 5:30 p.m., Shepard Municipal Building.

Tues.-Housing Authority, 7 p.m., community room.

Wed.-Planning Board, 6 p.m., Shepard Municipal Building.

Westfield: Mon.-School Committee, 7 p.m., 22 Ashley St.

Tues.-Board of Public Works, 7 p.m., City Hall

Conservation Commission, 7 p.m., City Hall

Wed.-Board of Health, 7 p.m., City Hall

Water Commission, 7 p.m., City Hall

Board of Assessors, 7 p.m., City Hall

Municipal Light Board, 7 p.m., 100 Elm St.

Thu.-Westfield Airport Commission, 7 p.m., Municipal Airport Terminal, Appremont Way.

Woman rescued after her Chicopee home caught fire Sunday

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None of the pets had serious injuries.

eastst1.jpgChicopee firefighters extinguish a blaze in the basement of 261 East St.

CHICOPEE – A woman, four dogs and a cat were rescued from a home after a fire ignited in the basement Sunday.

The woman had called the fire department about the blaze and was conscious when firefighters arrived. She was taken by ambulance to the hospital, said Deputy Fire Chief Daniel Dupre.

eastst2.jpgFirefighters extinguish a blaze at 261 Springfield St. Fire damage was limited to the basement but there was smoke damage throughout the house.

Her injuries or condition was unknown and her name was not released. Dupre said he was not sure which hospital treated her.

None of the pets were seriously injured in the fire, he said.

The fire started at about 6:30 p.m. in the basement of a home at 261 East St. Firefighters were able to extinguish it before it spread to the first floor but there was smoke damage throughout the house, Dupre said.

The woman was found on the first floor. Firefighters were able to rescue her quickly, Dupre said.

The rain and fog from Sunday night did make fighting the fire more difficult, he said.

“It is a struggle, especially when you have a rescue. A lot of work had to be done,” Dupre said.

There were no damage estimates. The cause of the fire is under investigation, he said.

This is the second fire in Chicopee in eight days. Last Saturday a fire at 17-23 Center St. destroyed a prominent downtown building, left six people homeless and destroyed Wickles FinePrinting.


Structural problems at Wales Town Office Building force police department to relocate to Senior Center

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Selectmen will continue their discussion about the displaced town offices at their March 15 meeting.

wales.jpg

WALES – The Police Department will relocate to the Senior Center’s wellness room, now that structural deficiencies forced the closure of the second floor of the Town Office Building, where it was previously housed.

Board of Selectmen Chairman Michael J. Valanzola said selectmen and department heads convened Friday at the Senior Center – the new site of public meetings – to discuss options for the displaced town offices.

The selectmen, in a majority vote, directed the police chief to coordinate with the senior center director regarding the move.

While the police have found a new home, still in limbo are offices for the Planning Board, Board of Health, Cemetery Commission and building inspector; all were housed on the second floor of the Hollow Road building.

Valanzola said he has instructed officials to brainstorm ideas, and to bring them to the selectmen’s meeting on March 15. In the interim, he said selectmen have authorized the building inspector to make temporary repairs to the stairwell so officials can access the second floor to remove records.

A state and local building inspector determined the second floor was unsafe after an inspection last week. The stairwell separated from the wall.

Selectman Richard J. Learned said he called the state because he was concerned that an employee, or a member of the public, could get hurt.

“My number one concern is public safety,” Learned said.

Learned was the only selectman to vote against moving police into the Senior Center, and said alternative locations should have been considered.

Senior Center Director Judith M. Jegelewicz voiced concerns because the building was funded by a $600,000 block grant, which stipulates that it can only be used for Senior Center business for five years after the project’s completion. She had said the town could be forced to pay back the grant, or pay fair market value of the property.

There are clauses in the grant that make exceptions for emergencies, and the town counsel will be reviewing the issue, Valanzola said. He added that he is confident that the current ordeal qualifies as an exception.

While the fire chief issued an order in January saying the 200-year-old Town Office Building would be closed as of July 1, Valanzola said it has been withdrawn. Valanzola said it was not under the fire chief’s jurisdiction to issue such an order.

All town-owned buildings are being looked at for use, including the old Town Hall, Valanzola said.

Valanzola said Selectmen Vice-Chairman Jeffrey Vannais also has been asked to reach out to the owner of 2 Main St., the old Tedore’s restaurant, to see if he would be willing to rent space to the town. Voters last month rejected a $1.1 million Proposition 2 ½ debt exclusion that would have moved town offices, the library and police station into the former restaurant property.

Flood advisory issued for portions of Hampden and Hampshire counties

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The Mill River and Westfield River in Huntington were flood stage early Monday morning.

The National Weather Service has issued a Flood Advisory for central Hampden County and south central Hampshire County, including the city of Northampton.

According to the advisory, issued at 1:40 a.m., the Mill River and the Westfield River in Huntington "were approaching flood stage and will likely over spill their banks resulting in minor flooding over the next few hours."

The advisory indicated flooding should subside by 4:30 a.m., when the advisory will expire.

Palmer girls softball torch passed along to Tracey Cole

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Registration is under way for the new Palmer Girls Softball Association, which is under new stewardship.

madison and mom.jpgSubmitted photo – Tracey L. Cole poses with her daughter, Madison, 7. Tracey Cole is the coordinator of the new Palmer Girls Softball Association.

PALMER – A local woman has stepped up the plate to ensure that there will be softball for the girls in town.

When Tracey L. Cole heard that Margaret R. Ferry was retiring as director of the Palmer Lil’ Girls Softball League, leaving the future of girls softball up in the air, she decided to do something about it.

“When I saw the news that Maggie was stepping down, I was surprised. I said, ‘I’m going to jump right on it,’” Cole said. “This will benefit the kids in town.”

She is the coordinator of the new Palmer Girls Softball Association, and is accepting registrations in the recreational league for girls in grades two through nine.

Cole grew up playing softball under Ferry and has many memories. She said her daughter Madison, 7, played last year for the Palmer Lil’ Girls and also loved it. Cole said Madison “is thrilled” that there will be softball again.

Cole, who is director of pharmacy at the Holyoke Health Center, was an assistant coach last year. Kenny Johnson, another coach from last year, is helping her with the endeavor, she said.

They are also working with Palmer Baseball, which has provided a link to the Palmer Girls Softball Association on its website, www.palmerbaseball.org, where applications can be downloaded.

Applications for girls softball also can be found at the Palmer Public Library on North Main Street, Nick’s Sports Shop on Park Street, and at the schools. Applications can be dropped off at Nick’s, or mailed to PO Box 762, Palmer, MA 01069.

The softball group also is partnering with Palmer Baseball for in-person sign-ups at the library on March 15 from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. and March 19 from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.

The registration fee for the Palmer Girls Softball Association is $60 and covers umpire fees and uniforms. Cole said they will play teams in Belchertown, Chicopee, Granby, South Hadley, Monson and Ware, and practices start next month with the first games in early May.

She said the Palmer Softball Association, Palmer Baseball and Palmer Soccer Association also are working together and brainstorming ways to see how they can improve the fields in town.

Cole also has two sons, Tyler, 10, and Ben, 17. Tyler plays for Palmer Baseball.

For more information, email Cole at palmerglsoftball@comcast.net.

Ferry announced last month that after 35 years, she was stepping down as president of Palmer Lil’ Girls Softball League. Ferry said she is glad that Cole and Johnson are offering the sport again, and called them “good people.”

“The girls are in good hands and I’m glad to see it,” she said.

Ferry has donated equipment to the new organization, and has been there for Cole when she has questions. She said she started the softball league because there were no other opportunities for girls to play the sport in town. The new Softball Association publicly thanks her on the Palmer Baseball website for her dedication and years of service.

Cole said she is happy she can continue the tradition of Palmer softball.

“My goal is for lots of teams, and lots of girls playing,” she said.

Car fire damages two houses in Springfield

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Firefighters extinguished a burning Dodge Charger and saved two adjacent homes on Grover Street in Springfield Monday morning.

Rizzutofire030711 012.jpgFirefighters work to crack open the hood of the Dodge Charger shortly after extinguishing the blaze Monday morning.

UPDATE: 7 A.M.- Dennis Leger, public information officer with the Springfield Fire Department said no one was injured in the fire and cause has yet to be determined. He said an estimated $10,000 in damage was done to the houses at 38-40 and 42-44 Grover St.

SPRINGFIELD- Firefighters extinguished a burning 2011 Dodge Charger and saved two adjacent homes on Grover Street in Springfield Monday morning.

Around 5:30 a.m., several 911 calls reported a car in a driveway exploding and catching two nearby houses on fire in the Liberty Heights neighborhood.

Springfield firefighters arrived and had the situation under control within minutes, although the houses at 38/40 and 42/44 Grover Street were both damaged in the incident.

Springfield police and American Medical Response EMTs also assisted at the scene.

sct fire grover.jpgSpringfield firefighters look under the hood of a 2011 Dodge Charger which burst into flames on Grover Street.

An investigation to determine the cause of the fire is underway.

It wasn't immediately known if anyone was injured in the incident.

More information will be published as it becomes available on this developing story.

Palmer Rotary Club holding 'snow melt' contest

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Proceeds from the contest will be used to fund the 4 scholarships that the Palmer Rotary Club gives to local students each year.

a;an f.jpgThe Republican photo by Lori Stabile – Alan P. Fauteux, president-elect of Palmer Rotary Club, stands next to the snow pile at Depot Plaza on North Main Street in Palmer that is the subject of the club's latest fundraiser. The club is sponsoring a "snow melt" contest and will award $500 to the person who can correctly guess the date and time the snow pile will melt. Tickets are $5 and proceeds will fund the club's annual scholarships that it gives to area students.

PALMER – The pile of snow at the Depot Plaza on North Main Street is the subject of the Palmer Rotary Club’s latest fundraiser, and the club will give $500 to the person who can guess the date and time that the massive pile will melt.

Palmer Rotary Club President-Elect Alan P. Fauteux said the club is selling tickets for $5 each, or five tickets for $20, for the fundraiser.

Proceeds will be used to fund the scholarships it gives out each year to four students – two at Pathfinder Regional Vocational Technical High School, and two at Palmer High School.

Fauteux was inspired by similar snow melt contests held around the country, and said he happens to drive by the snow pile at Depot Plaza every day on his way to his business, Fire Fighting Equipment at 2146 Main St. in Three Rivers.

“This is something new and different that we haven’t tried before,” Fauteux said recently.

He said it is one of the largest piles in town, adding the ones that are larger are off the beaten path. He liked this snow pile because it overlooks busy Route 20, and has the most visibility. Fauteux got in touch with the plaza’s owner, Century Investment Co., to let officials there know about his idea – and so they wouldn’t remove the snow.

“We’re supportive of efforts of a civic group to raise money. We’re happy to leave the snow pile there,” said Robert P. Dashevsky, Century’s property manager for Depot Plaza.

Fauteux said tickets are available from rotary members, or from Palmer Package Store and Capitol Cleaners, the two businesses that sandwich the snow pile. Fauteux said tickets are also available at Fire Fighting Equipment, or by calling him at (413) 531-9033. The last day for ticket sales will be April 1.

If there is a tie, the winnings will be split between the two people, he said. He said they have secured a “judge” who will determine when the snow pile melts, but his identity will remain secret. Melting will be observed only between the hours of 6 a.m. and 8 p.m.

Fauteux estimated that the snow pile is 120 feet long, and 50 to 60 feet wide. Its average height is 8 feet, but there are some areas that are smaller, and some that are taller, he said.

“There’s 18,000 to 20,000 cubic yards of snow there. It’s as solid as a rock,” Fauteux said.

Information about the rotary can be found at the website www.palmerrotary.org

Study: Massachusetts needs more supermarkets

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The problem is particularly acute in urban areas and rural parts of central and western Massachusetts.

cornerstore_0010.jpgA corner store in Springfield's North End. Convenience stores and snack foods are abundant in the city -- but, there are about 30 percent fewer supermarkets per person than the national average

BOSTON (AP) — A new study says Massachusetts is suffering from a shortage of supermarkets that stock fresh, nutritious food.

The report scheduled for release Monday by the Massachusetts Public Health Association was conducted by public health advocacy group, the Food Trust.

The Boston Globe reports that Massachusetts ranks third from the bottom among all states. The problem is particularly acute in urban areas and rural parts of central and western Massachusetts.

In Lowell and Fitchburg, the number of supermarkets would need to double to be in line with the national average. In Boston, Springfield, and Brockton, there are about 30 percent fewer supermarkets per person than the national average.

Representatives of state government, health advocates, and the supermarket industry are working on ways to attract more grocery stores to underserved areas.

AM News Links: East Coast Rapist suspect taunts police, battles continue across Libya and more

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East Coast Rapist suspect taunts police following suicide attempt, battles continue across Libya and more headlines.

east-coast-rapist-billboard.jpegAfter eluding capture for more then 13 years, police believe they have captured the man known as the East Coast Rapist.

  • East Coast Rapist suspect taunts police following suicide attempt [NewHavenRegister.com]

  • CNN Updates from various cities across Libya [CNNInternational.com]

  • Body found near commuter rail tracks on MBTA Property [Boston.com]

  • Troops have 10 more days to get stop loss benefits [WashingtonPost.com]

  • Flooding in Connecticut closes roads and causes delays across the state [HartfordCourtant.com]

  • Judge OKs subpoenas for PS3 hacker's accounts [Wired.com]

  • Western Digital to buy Hitachi for $4.3 Billion [NewYorkTimes.com]

  • The space shuttle and space station crews said goodbye after more than a week together as Discovery gets set for its return to Earth.

  • French court opens trial of ex-President Chirac [AssociatedPressReport]

  • After Attacks, Google Vows to Fortify Android Market [PCWorld.org]

  • Twitter posts tagged #westernma in Western Mass. [MassLive.com]

  • Read more News Links »

  • Do you have News Links? Send them our way or tweet them to @masslivenews
  • NOTE: Users of modern browsers can open each link in a new tab by holding 'control' ('command' on a Mac) and clicking each link.


    Flooding closes Route 2 in Charlemont

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    Heavy rainfall over the past 24 hours has closed Route 2 in Massachusetts as well as several roads across Connecticut.

    stearns-flood.jpgView full sizeThis panorama, taken with a smart phone, shows flooding at a "'small' tributary of the Manhan river off of West Street in Easthampton," according to Josh Stearns.

    Is there flooding in your area? Submit photos to feedback@masslive.com. Be sure to include your name, a description of the photo and the location of the flooding.

    UPDATE: 9 A.M.- The Massachusetts Department of Transportation has reopened both travel lanes on Route 2.

    Heavy rainfall over the past 24 hours has closed Route 2 in Massachusetts as well as several roads across Connecticut.

    03.07.2011 | HAMPDEN - The Scantic River is running fast and starting to overflow into the backyards of homes along Main St. in Hampden, seen here from a bridge on Chapin Rd.

    Massachusetts DOT crews are working to clear about two feet of standing water on Route 2 near Mohawk State Park, according to State Trooper Bernie Trott.

    State police at other Western Massachusetts barracks reported some puddling on the roads but no official closures.

    Troopers at the Westfield barracks cautioned drivers traveling West via the Mass Pike into Berkshire County as icy road conditions have cause a number of vehicle spinouts this morning.

    In Connecticut, Gov. Dan Malloy has authorized the Dept. of Emergency Management and Homeland Security to open the Emergency Operations Center to monitor flooding across the state.

    The National Weather Service has issued flood warnings for several communities in Western Massachusetts and across Connecticut.

    A flood warning remains in effect for Eastern Hampden and Southern Worcester counties.

    The weather is expected to clear by early afternoon, according to NWS, and the forecast looks clear for at least the next day.

    Help us with our coverage

    Is there flooding in your area? Submit photos to feedback@masslive.com. Be sure to include your name, a description of the photo and the location of the flooding. If you can't take a photo, let us know the situation near you in the comments.


    Chicopee Public Library figures prominently in new short story by horror writer Stephen King

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    Chicopee is not particularly renowned as a haven for the monstrous or the supernatural - with the possible exception perhaps of the King Kielbasa.

    full dark no stars book cover.jpg

    CHICOPEE - Ask Chicopee Public Library Director Nancy M. Contois if she has read anything by Stephen King lately and her response will likely be laughter.

    That’s because much of the action in one of the short stories in King’s latest book, “Full Dark, No Stars,” takes place in Chicopee.

    That might seem a stretch to some, given that Chicopee is not particularly renowned as a haven for the monstrous or the supernatural. With the possible exception perhaps of the King Kielbasa (no known relation to the author).

    That eerily ever-expanding edible sausage, which graced the World Kielbasa Festival for 22 years, was last seen weighing in at an astonishing 623 pounds back in 1994.

    Contois’s laughter, however. is for an even more personal reason. (mild spoiler to follow). One of the story’s nastiest villains is none other than the “head librarian” at the Chicopee Public Library.

    “Isn’t that a hoot?” Contois said, laughing.

    Rest assured, Contois is nothing like her fictional doppelganger, Ramona Norville, described by King as a “jovial woman of about 60 or so,” with a “Marine haircut and a take no prisoners handshake.”

    “She is the salt of the earth, one of the sweetest persons you could ever meet,” Mayor Michael D. Bissonnette said of Contois.

    In the story, the protagonist, an author named Tess, is invited to speak at the library’s book club. Tess, who lives in Connecticut, accepts and drives to Chicopee for the event.

    Although her talk goes without a hitch, Tess’s trip to Western Massachusetts turns into a nightmare after the evil librarian recommends that she take a shortcut home that will allow her to avoid getting on Interstate 84.

    That shortcut, which involves the intersection of the very real Route 47 and the seemingly made-up Stagg Road, leads Tess to an abandoned store. What happens next is not for the squeamish.

    “We don’t even do that to people who bring their books back late,” joked Bissonnette.

    It’s not the first time that a fictional character has come to trouble in Chicopee. Actor Joe Gannascoli’s character on “The Sopranos” got lost in the city during an episode of the hit HBO show back in 2006.

    The Republican newspaper makes a brief cameo later in King’s piece when Tess goes online to find more about Norville and learns from a news story that her husband, a prominent Chicopee businessman, committed suicide.

    Contois said she read the book after several library patrons mentioned the Chicopee connection.

    “You have to be a Stephen King fan to get through the bad stuff,” she said.

    Bissonnette called the Chicopee connection, “a curiosity more than anything,” and likened it to the time a few years back that Al’s Diner in Willmansett was featured in a “Zippy” comic strip.

    Contois said she was relieved to see that with the exception of the route that Tess drives from Connecticut to her speaking engagement, just everything else about Chicopee and its library are pure fiction.

    “I was relieved that it didn’t get too close too home,” Contois.

    King has used Western Massachusetts as a venue for his fiction at least once before. In his 2001 novel, "Dreamcatcher," the fate of all mankind hangs in the balance right here at the Quabbin Reservoir when an alien attempts to poison the water supply with deadly spores.

    King met with Quabbin officials and got a tour there while gathering material for that book.

    It’s unlikely, however, that King visited the Chicopee Public Library before writing this particular story, which is titled “Big Driver,” Contois said “I bet my staff would have picked him out in a second,” she said.

    Why Chicopee? Contois theorizes that King have been simply drawn by the somewhat unusual name. In his afterward, King said he got the inspiration for the setting while driving to an autograph session in Western Massachusetts in 2007.

    “There’s nothing else you can do but appreciate his sense of humor,” Contois said. “He had to have known that there would be a librarian out there that would connected with this by the chosen location.”

    Contois said that the library does invite authors to speak and that she would relish a visit from King.

    “He could come, do a book talk and I could give him the wrong directions,” she said, laughing. Directions that could very well send King down Route 47 toward Stagg Road.

    Western Mass. communities deal with flooding

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    Communities across Western Massachusetts are dealing with flooding issues after a prolonged rainfall melted several inches of snow Sunday into Monday morning.

    stearns-flood.jpgView full sizeThis panorama, taken with a smart phone, shows flooding at a "'small' tributary of the Manhan river off of West Street in Easthampton," according to Josh Stearns.

    Is there flooding in your area? Submit photos to feedback@masslive.com. Be sure to include your name, a description of the photo and the location of the flooding.

    Communities across Western Massachusetts and Connecticut are dealing with flooding after prolonged rainfall Sunday into Monday melted several inches of snow.

    The National Weather Service's flood warning for the Westfield River was for good reason, as the Westfield Police Department has closed two roads for safety reasons.

    According to Sgt. Edward Murphy, Union Street at Springfield Street has been closed to Eastwood as there is significant water in the road. Police were allowing larger cars and trucks to pass through the road previously but the increasing depth of the water has made that impossible.

    Murphy said that Norte Dame Road has also been closed, although that closure is expected to be short-term compared to Union Street which will likely remain closed much of the day.

    In Granby, Chicopee Street is reportedly flooded although the police department said there are no official road closures in the town.

    In Easthampton, the municipal building on Payson Avenue have closed due to flooding in relation to the sewer lines for the building. A dispatcher with the Easthampton Police Department said that while the offices were open earlier this morning, employees were coming to the police department to use the restrooms.

    River Road in Easthampton is closed and under about three feet of water while Ford Hill Road is down to one lane.


    03.07.2011 | HAMPDEN - The Scantic River is running fast and starting to overflow into the backyards of homes along Main St. in Hampden, seen here from a bridge on Chapin Rd.

    National average for gasoline rises above $3.50 per gallon as oil nears $107 a barrel

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    Pump prices have jumped an average of 39 cents per gallon since mid-February.

    030711gasprices.jpgHigher gas prices are posted at a Chevron gas station in San Francisco, Friday, March 4, 2011. Gasoline prices have shot up an average of 35 cents per gallon since an uprising in Libya began in mid-February.

    NEW YORK — The crisis in Libya is again pushing oil higher as the New York Mercantile Exchange opens for trading.

    Benchmark West Texas Intermediate crude for April delivery gained 83 cents Monday at $105.25 per barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The price almost hit $107 per barrel earlier in electronic trading, the highest since Sept. 26, 2008.

    In London, Brent crude added 64 cents at $116.61 per barrel.

    The rise in oil is driving gasoline prices to levels that weren't expected for at least another month. Pump prices have jumped an average of 39 cents per gallon since the Libyan uprising began in mid-February. The national average hit $3.509 per gallon overnight, according to AAA, Wright Express and Oil Price Information Service.

    Libya, which sits on the largest oil reserves in Africa, has been engulfed in a four-week rebellion as militants try to oust Moammar Gadhafi after 41 years in power. Officials in the country say the country's oil fields continue to operate, but experts say that the Libya's daily shipments of more than 1 million barrels will likely be cut off for some time to come.

    The fighting could last for weeks, or months, and international oil companies have pulled their workers to safer locations. With no clear leader in charge of the country, analysts say the world cannot depend on Libya's exports. Saudi Arabia has increased production to make up for the loss of Libyan crude, which goes mainly to Europe, but that puts a tighter squeeze oil supplies as the global economy recovers and consumption rises.

    The Energy Information Administration estimates OPEC can crank up production by another 4-5 million barrels per day. An extended shut down of Libya's exports would slice that capacity by about 20 percent.

    In other Nymex trading on Monday for April contracts, heating oil picked up a penny at $3.0953 per gallon, while gasoline futures lost a penny at $3.0391 per gallon. Natural gas rose 6 cents to $3.867 per 1,000 cubic feet.

    Springfield police seek suspect in State Street bank robbery

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    Police released a photo of a suspect from a 5 p.m. robbery at the TD Bank branch at 958 State St.

    State St bank robbery.jpgPolice are looking for this man who is a suspect in a bank robbery at TD Bank, 958 State St., Springfield.

    SPRINGFIELD

    – An unknown man robbed the TD Bank branch at 958 State St. Tuesday afternoon, making off with an undisclosed sum, police said.

    The robbery occurred at about 5 p.m., police said.

    The robber was described as a white male, possibly Hispanic, who was in his late 20s or early 30s, police said.

    He was described as about 5 feet, 7 inches tall and thin. He was clean shaven but had a slight 5-o’clock shadow, police said.

    At the time of the robbery, he was wearing a black, knit winter hat with a brim and a small white logo. He was also wearing white sneakers, black sweat pants, and a navy blue hooded sweatshirt underneath a black North Face-brand jacket.

    He was last seen running west through the parking lot after fleeing the bank, police said.

    People with information about the robbery or the identity of the suspect are asked to call the Springfield Police Detective Bureau at (413) 787-6355.

    Those who wish to remain anonymous may text a tip via a cell phone by addressing a text message to “CRIMES,” or “274637,” and then beginning the body of the message with the word “SOLVE."

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