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Westfield Mayor Daniel Knapik asks City Council to create new Public Safety Communications Department

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Central dispatch operations will be housed at the city's Technology and Emergency Management Center.

DKnapik2009.jpgDaniel M. Knapik

WESTFIELD – City officials are moving forward with plans to combine dispatch duties for both police and fire to satisfy new statewide emergency 911 communications responsibilities as well as future emergency communications needs.

Mayor Daniel M. Knapik is asking the City Council to adopt local legislation authorizing the creation of a new Public Safety Communications Department, hire a department head and necessary civilian personnel to man the new department.

The department will be located at the city’s new Technology and Emergency Management Center on Apremont Way. The $1.2 million facility opened in October, 2007.

Fire Chief Mary R. Regan and Police Chief John A. Camerota said the new department will address manpower concerns in both department and improve emergency communications citywide.

“Central dispatch is a great idea,” said Camerota. “It provides efficiency, better trained personnel to handle emergency communications. It leaves that work to the professionals,” he said.

Regan agreed saying “central dispatch will take emergency communications out of Fire Department headquarters where things can get chaotic and improve services to residents.”

The Police Department will gain at least two officers for street or other types of duty and the Fire Department stands to gain the assignment of three additional firefighters.

Currently there are civilian dispatchers assigned to two of three duty shifts in the Police Department with patrolmen assigned that duty on the midnight to 8 a.m. shift. Currently firefighters man dispatch responsibilities daily.

Knapik said central dispatch is supported in an effort to meet a July 1 state mandate that requires emergency dispatchers to be qualified to provide medical advice to people in need until the arrival of emergency medical technician response and future emergency 911 equipment needs and protocol.

Camerota said the new department will also handle the prospective future regionalization of dispatch services.

Knapik said a request for financial support, probably $400,000 initially will be requested shortly.

“The city will probably need to hire four dispatchers, along with a department head and purchase or enhance some equipment to launch the new department,” Knapik said.

Information sent to the council for immediate consideration includes the proposed ordinance creating the department, job description for department head and legislation creating a five-member Public Safety Communications Commission.

A Combined Dispatch Working Group, representatives of police, fire and technology center, developed the responsibilities of the new department including a cost estimate on its creation.

The initial cost estimated provided by the group is $371,000 that does not include training of new personnel. City officials expect receipt of a state grant to cover that cost.

Camerota said new emergency medical dispatch regulation requires higher level professional certification, structured call procedures, ongoing training and quality assurance.


Southwick votes no, Granville and Tolland yes, for school construction project; proposal dies

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Approval was required by each town to move the project to design and construction states.

This is an updated version of a story posted at 9:10 p.m.


Special Election 1.jpgThomas H. Hultine, of Granville, checks in at Town Hall with clerks Gloria J. Knoener, left, and Isabell D. LaCrosse to cast a no vote in Tusday's special election on a debt exclusion ballot question to provide funding for a $72 million school building project in the Southwick-Tolland Regional School District.

SOUTHWICK – By a slim 249 vote margin voters here Tuesday rejected funding for a $72 million school construction and renovation project for the Southwick-Tolland-Granville School District.

Voters in Granville and Tolland supported financing the project at special town elections there but an affirmative vote from each town was necessary to move the project to design and construction stages.

“We are very disappointed,” said Superintendent of Schools John D. Barry. “The district must now reassess the future,” he said.

Southwick voted 1,141 yes to 1,390 no while in Tolland voters approved the project by a 64 to 24. Granville passed the measure by a 217 to 120 vote. In Southwick, voter turnout was about 40 percent of the total 6,257 registered voters. Granville’s vote represented about 30 percent of its 1,137 voters and Tolland turnout was about 25 percent of the town’s 346 registered voters.

The Southwick vote sent a shock wave through Town Hall when City Clerk Michelle L. Hill read the results to an estimated 20 people who had gathered in the building’s foyer.

A visibly upset Karen O’Connor, chairman of the school building committee, was unable to comment.

But, long-time school advocate and volunteer Diana L. King said “It is just sad that in Southwick our schools are not a higher priority.”

School Committee chairman James E. Vincent said “We are highly disappointed. A lot of time, a lot of effort went into this. It is very disappointing.”

Southwick voters Dawn M. and Michael J. McBride said they voted no because of the cost. “I think they could no a lot less in renovations,” Dawn McBride said. “They have good intentions but the price is a little high,” added Michael McBride.

The project has been in the making for about the past 10 years and according to local school officials it represents the first such regional school district project of its kind to receive support and funding from the state’s School Building Authority. The SBA had approved 62 percent reimbursement of the project costs.

Southwick’s disappointment was shared in Granville. Kathryn W. Martin, town administrator, said “It would have been a wonderful opportunity for our children to be integrated in larger classes and have more options to better educate them. Granville, with its Granville Village School, voted late last year to join the school district.

The question before voters Tuesday sought approval to exclude the cost of the project from restrictions of Proposition 2 1/2. The three towns would have shared a total cost of $29.1 million for the project with the state School Building Authority financing the balance.

Approval of the project would have increased property taxes for homeowners on average $394 in Southwick; $110 in Tolland and $329 in Granville.

The project would have added an addition and modernization to Southwick-Tolland-Granville High School and added grades seven and eight. It would have resulted in renovations and upgrades at both Powder Mill Middle School and Woodland Elementary School and changed the middle school to a grade three through six school. Woodland would have become a pre-school through grade two school.


Freelance writer Manon Mirabelli contributed to this report.

Belchertown selectmen seek to fill vacancies on 11 committees

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The Housing Needs and Assessment Committee can’t conduct business until it has more members. There are four open seats on the seven-member panel.

BELCHERTOWN – The Board of Selectmen is seeking volunteers to join 11 committees with vacancies and the deadlines for applying are right around the corner.

A vacancy recently opened on the Board of Assessors, which will join with the selectmen in making an appointment until the next Town Meeting. That position then will be up for election. The deadline to apply is Friday, Feb. 3, at 4 p.m.

The deadline for all other positions is noon on Wednesday, Feb. 1. Anyone interested in joining a committee should send a letter of interest to: Board of Selectmen, One South Main Street, P.O. Box 670, Belchertown, Mass., 01007.

Any registered town voter wishing to join the Planning Board as the Alternate Voting Member for Special Permits should send a letter of interest and resume to Town Planner Douglas Albertson at dalbertson@belchertown.org or P.O. Box 964, Belchertown, Mass., 01007-0964. For more information, call (413) 323-0407.

The Housing Needs and Assessment Committee can’t conduct business until it has more members. There are four open seats on the seven-member panel.

“This committee will work with local boards and commissions, regional planning agencies, housing authorities and the Town’s Community Preservation Committee to establish an inventory of affordable housing opportunities in the Town of Belchertown, to assess current and future needs, and to create an action plan to fulfill those needs,” according to a release from the town.

The Economic Development and Industrial Corporation is tasked with facilitating the development of the former Belchertown State School. Associate member applicants should describe their expertise in their letters.

The Cultural Council, which promotes and gives grants for the arts, has two full member spots available and the Zoning Board of Appeals needs an associate member.

An at-large member is sought for the Historic District Commission, a regulatory body that controls building construction, reconstruction, alterations, movements and demolition in designated historic districts.

The Skate Park Committee, the Mobile Home Rent Control Board, the Animal Control Advisory Board and the Technology Advisory Committee need members, as well.

Ware child porn case highlights risk of recidivism, challenges to sex offender registry board

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Convicted sex offender Christopher Boucher, 43, allegedly downloaded a video of a girl performing a sex act on a man. But a recent Appeals Court ruling said possession of child porn doesn't necessarily mean a person poses a public threat.

A Level 2 sex offender is supposed to pose only a moderate risk of committing more sex crimes. But the case of a registered sex offender from Hampshire County, freshly accused of receiving child pornography over the Internet, underscores the risk of recidivism and may further test a sex-offender classification system that's faced legal challenges over the years.

Christopher Boucher, 43, a convicted Level 2 sex offender from Ware, downloaded a video of a girl between the ages of 10 and 12 performing oral sex on a man, according to police and prosecutors. Boucher was arraigned in Eastern Hampshire District Court on a single count of possession of child pornography, to which he pleaded not guilty.

The charge was a subsequent offense for Boucher, who was convicted a dozen years ago of similar charges in a federal child-porn case in Boston that also involved electronic images.

However, a recent Massachusetts Appeals Court ruling has thrown a legal monkey wrench into the state's classification system for Level 2 offenders, though it's unclear how that decision might impact Boucher's case.

The Appeals Court ruled in August that the state's Sex Offender Registry Board (SORB) can't force an individual to register as a Level 2 sex offender based solely on a conviction of possessing child pornography. The court's decision was based on a 2004 conviction involving a man who admitted to ordering online child porn from a Miami-based pornography ring. Investigators said they found two sexually explicit movies involving minors on the man's computer.

Deval Patrick 6611.jpgGov. Deval Patrick

A SORB official classified the man as a Level 2 sex offender, but the Appeals Court said the board failed to offer evidence linking possession of child porn to the likelihood that the man, who received probation and a brief prison sentence, may pose a threat to commit future sex crimes.

"Just because you committed an offense, doesn't mean you're dangerous," attorney Michael Nam-Krane, who represented the defendant, said in August. "They simply assume that they can find these people dangerous. Hopefully this case will bring some reform to the agency."

SORB officials agreed to "fully comply with the court's decision," but Gov. Deval L. Patrick has filed legislation aiming to update the state's sex offender laws. The bill would redefine child pornography as "sex offense involving a child" – a change that would make it easier for SORB officials to classify those who possess child pornography as sex offenders.

In May, the bill was referred to the Joint Committee on the Judiciary, which scheduled a hearing on the matter, but the status of the legislation remains unclear.

The Appeals Court ruling, which reversed an earlier Superior Court decision, ordered SORB to reconsider its decision to classify the defendant as a Level 2 offender, stating that an "error of law" had occurred in regard to the man's classification. The appellate ruling noted that the state's list of sex offenses involving a child doesn't include possession of child pornography.

"The (SORB) hearing officer's equation of possession of child pornography (and the victimization of its subjects) with the dangerousness contemplated by the statute ... does not rest upon any specified evidence," the court said in August. "Without such support, it runs the risk of arbitrariness."

Boucher was arrested Monday and arraigned Tuesday in Eastern Hampshire District Court in Belchertown on a single count of possession of child pornography, subsequent offense. Judge Laurie McLeod set bail at $2,500 cash, $25,000 bond and ordered him to return for a Feb. 29 hearing.

The state classified Boucher as a Level 2 sex offender after he pleaded guilty in 2000 to possession of computer-generated child pornography in U.S. District Court in Boston. Investigators at the time said they were able to track Boucher, then 31, through his computer's email system.

Level 3 sex offenders pose the greatest risk of re-offending, while Level 1 offenders pose a minimal risk, according to SORB guidelines.

Massachusetts State Police Sgt. Thomas Bakey, head of the Child Sexual Predator Task Force, got a bead on Boucher after receiving information from fellow state police Sgt. Michael Hil, a member of the Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force and an investigator for Berkshire District Attorney David F. Capeless. Hill discovered that child porn was being traded via "eMule," a file-sharing network, from a computer inside Boucher's apartment, according to authorities.

sept 2010 david sullivan mugNorthwestern District Attorney David Sullivan

Bakey, together with troopers assigned to Northwestern District Attorney David E. Sullivan's detective unit, the state police Crime Scene Services Section and the mobile computer forensic lab, executed a search warrant at Boucher's Ware apartment around 5 p.m. Monday.

Using the mobile lab, troopers from the Digital Evidence and Multimedia Section said they located a pornographic video that had been downloaded from the Internet last Wednesday, Jan. 25.

The video has been identified by law enforcement and the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children as "known" child pornography, meaning investigators have confirmed the child was less than 18 years of age when the video was made, according to Sullivan's office. Boucher "made statements admitting to the use of eMule to download the video," a press release from Sullivan stated.

There are 30 registered Level 2 offenders and 11 Level 3 offenders currently living in the town of Ware, according to SORB records.

Holyoke job fair lets hundreds of seekers mingle with 25 companies

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The un-employed and under-employed came away with business cards, contacts and, they hope, a solid lead to a job.

manley.JPGManley F. Miles, of Chicopee, hopeful after Holyoke job fair.


HOLYOKE – Manley F. Miles has bounced from construction to slinging fast-food, so he felt at home entering the War Memorial building for the first time.

Miles, 42, of Chicopee, said he got job tips at the “New Year New Job Fair” sponsored by the city and CareerPoint on Jan. 19 at the War Memorial, 310 Appleton St.

Manley said in a phone interview the day of the fair that he pocketed a deck of business cards and did as many face-to-face greetings as he could with the dozens of businesses represented at the event.

The fair put him in touch with Premiere Staffing Services, 476 Appleton St., which helps employers fill positions, he said.

“These people bent over backwards to try to reintegrate people” into the workforce, Manley said.

He was doing roofing work for a while, he said, and when the company he was working for stopped operating, he began taking whatever job would bring a paycheck – “fast-food, Burger King, Friendly’s, anything and everything.”

The job fair drew about 500 people who mingled with 25 companies from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m., Mayor Alex B. Morse said.

Morse’s perspective is unique since he worked as a job developer and career counselor at CareerPoint before winning the Nov. 8 election to become mayor. Helping people get jobs and doing it in a way that brings people downtown are positive effects, he said.

Getting people into jobs involves steps. One step is marketing the city to bring in new businesses, said Morse, who said to do that he will be forming a creative team to devise a new city logo and slogan. Another step is helping existing employers, he said.

“The important job for us is to connect people with the positions that are available,” Morse said.

Among the companies at the job fair were Baystate Health Systems, Burger King, C & S Wholesale Grocers, First Student, Loomis Communities, M1 Security, Masiello Employment Services, Sisters of Providence Health Systems, Smith College, Unique Auto Sales, Victoria’s Secret and Yankee Candle.

Information is available at Careerpointma.org

Holyoke police: South Hadley man arrested for alleged OUI, leaving crash scene

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William J. Cavanaugh, 29, of 32 Grandview St. was charged with OUI and leaving the scene of a property-damage accident, among other alleged offenses.

HOLYOKE &38211; A South Hadley man was arrested for drunken driving and leaving the scene of an accident near 69 Linden St. at about 10:50 p.m. Tuesday, according to Holyoke Police Department records.

Details of the accident were not immediately available, but William J. Cavanaugh, 29, of 32 Grandview St. is expected to be arraigned Wednesday in Holyoke District Court.

Police said charges against the South Hadley man include operating under the influence of liquor; leaving the scene of an accident with property damage; drinking alcohol from an open container inside a motor vehicle; and operating to endanger or negligently.

Developer claims race bias in Mass. casino law

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A developer that wants to build a casino in southeastern Massachusetts has told a federal judge the state's casino law is unconstitutional because it gives a race-based advantage to the Mashpee Wampanoag Indian tribe.

BOSTON — A developer that wants to build a casino in southeastern Massachusetts has told a federal judge the state's casino law is unconstitutional because it gives a race-based advantage to the Mashpee Wampanoag Indian tribe.

Lawyers for KG Urban Enterprises told a judge Tuesday the law prevents KG from competing "on an equal footing."

Gov. Deval Patrick signed a law in November authorizing up to three resort casinos in different areas of the state.

The law gives the Mashpee Wampanoags until July 31 to negotiate a gaming compact in the southeast. Only if they fail would other applicants be allowed to seek a license for the area.

There are no restrictions in other parts of the state.

State lawyers said there is no evidence KG has been harmed by the law.

AM News Links: Facebook to file $5 billion IPO, Mitt Romney focusing on President Obama after Florida victory, and more

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Northampton is considering allowing alcohol-serving establishments to stay open later, a Maine girl undergoes a multi-organ transplant, and more morning news.

greece financial.jpgA man wrapped in a sleeping bag during near-freezing temperatures walks past a graffiti-covered wall in central Athens today, Wednesday, Feb. 1. An International Monetary Fund debt inspector said in a newspaper interview published Wednesday that negotiations for landmark debt deals with Greece will be concluded in a "matter of days," but pressed the recession-hit country to lower employment costs and even slash the minimum wage.

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


Will Facebook deliver an IPO surprise?

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Facebook, the social network that changed "friend" from a noun to a verb, is expected to file as early as Wednesday to sell stock on the open market. Its debut is likely to be the most talked-about initial public offering since Google in 2004.

facebookIn this May, 26, 2010 file photo, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg talks about the social network site's new privacy settings in Palo Alto, Calif. The Wall Street Journal reported Friday, Jan. 27, 2012 that Facebook is preparing to file initial paperwork for an offering that could raise as much as $10 billion and value the company at $75 billion to $100 billion

NEW YORK — Facebook, the social network that changed "friend" from a noun to a verb, is expected to file as early as Wednesday to sell stock on the open market. Its debut is likely to be the most talked-about initial public offering since Google in 2004.

The Menlo Park, Calif.-based company expects to raise as much as $10 billion, though some accounts say it could be less than that. At $10 billion, the company would be valued at $75 billion to $100 billion.

The highly anticipated documents Facebook files with the Securities and Exchange Commission will reveal how much it intends to raise from the stock market, what it plans to do with the money and details on the company's financial performance and future growth prospects.

A stock usually starts trading three to four months after the filing.

Around the nation, regular investors and IPO watchers are anticipating some kind of twist — perhaps a provision for the 800 million users of Facebook, a company that promotes itself as all about personal connections, to get in on the action.

After all, Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg is anything but a conformist. He turns up at business conventions in a hoodie. "Cocky" is the word used to describe him most often, after "billionaire." He was Time's person of the year at 26. So when he takes Facebook public, why would he follow the Wall Street rules?

"Pandemonium is what I expect in terms of demand for this stock," says Scott Sweet, senior managing partner at IPO Boutique, an advisory firm. "I don't think Wall Street would want to anger Facebook users."

The most successful young technology companies have a history of doing things differently. Google's IPO prospectus contained a letter from its founders to investors that said the company believed in the motto "Don't be evil."

Facebook declined to comment, but Reena Aggarwal, a finance professor who has studied IPOs at Georgetown University's McDonough School of Business, believes Zuckerberg will emulate Google's philosophy, at least in principle.

Founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin wanted an IPO accessible to all investors, and said so in their first regulatory filing. Facebook may say something similar when it files to declare its intention to sell stock publicly.

Along with Wall Street investment banks, Google used a Dutch auction, named for a means of selling flowers in Holland, to sell its shares. It took private bids and allowed investors to say how many shares they wanted and what they were willing to pay.

The process wasn't smooth, though, and Google had to slash its expected offer price at the last minute. If you bought at the IPO, for roughly $85 a share, you still did well: Google closed Tuesday at $580.

More recently, when it filed for an IPO last June, Groupon, which emails daily deals on products and services to its members, added a letter from its 30-year-old founder, Andrew Mason.

"We are unusual and we like it that way," the letter said. "We want the time people spend with Groupon to be memorable. Life is too short to be a boring company."

It's almost become conventional for tech companies to include an unconventional letter when they make their stock market debut. It's widely expected that Zuckerberg, in the very least measure of showmanship, will write one.

But IPO watchers wonder whether there might be a provision specifically designed to give the little-guy investor, even the casual Facebook user who doesn't invest, a piece of the debut.

"There is a feeling that there will be something unique in store for Facebook users," Aggarwal says.

When most companies go public, they let Wall Street investment banks handle everything, with the sweet ground-floor stock price reserved for big institutional investors.

But that probably won't do for Facebook, created in a Harvard University dorm room eight years ago. Or Zuckerberg, whose antiestablishment credentials include spurning a $15 billion takeover offer from Microsoft.

Few expect Zuckerberg to offer a Dutch auction because of the Google experience. But he is at least as unorthodox as Google's founders. People expect him to be in the driver's seat on Wall Street, rather than hand over the controls to bankers.

Facebook is a vital part of people's Internet lives and the most successful company in the history of social media. Its closest competitor, Google+, has less than a tenth the active membership — 60 million people.

"While there is no such thing as untouchable, Facebook is getting near there, with even Google imitating it," says Sweet, of IPO Boutique.

In "really hot IPOs," 90 percent of the shares go to institutional investors and 10 percent to everyday investors, Sweet says. It's a perk for the banks' biggest clients, like Fidelity Investments or T. Rowe Price or hedge funds.

The funds pay big commissions to the banks for regularly trading large blocks of stocks or bonds. Those relationships are deep and long-lasting — and lucrative for the banks. The funds expect to be rewarded.

But Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs, the banks expected to guide the Facebook IPO, are in an awkward place: They don't want to tick off 800 million Facebook users — but they don't want to tick off Fidelity, either.

Most IPOs are underpriced, and the stock usually shoots up the first day. Lucky large investors get the basement price and usually a big payday if they sell on the first day. Smaller investors buy on the open market, after the price has spiked, and pay more.

And most early investors do sell. One university research paper found that about 70 percent of the new stock changes hands in the first two days. Groupon introduced 35 million shares, but on the first day its shares were traded almost 50 million times.

Ann Sherman, associate professor and IPO expert at DePaul University, raised the possibility that Facebook could set aside a portion of its shares for the small investor and use a lottery system if there is a lot of demand.

She says the U.S. is the only country without IPO rules that put traditional investors on an equal footing.

"Given that this is such a huge and popular IPO, I've been hoping that Facebook would use this opportunity to try a new method to bring in retail investors — a public offer where shares are set aside for only individual investors," Sherman says.

But Zuckerberg will also probably be careful how he plays his cards. He doesn't want to anger Facebook users, but his primary goal is to raise money.

The recent experience of Groupon's faltering IPO holds tough lessons for young entrepreneurs. After analysts started questioning its accounting, Groupon had to amend its regulatory filing several times.

Trying to salvage the IPO, founder Mason shed his trademark jeans and T-shirt and donned a suit. He dropped the irreverent talk and spoke about the company's growth prospects at the IPO "roadshow" to impress investors.

Other companies have encountered problems when they went public and tried to reward customers. Upstart Internet phone company Vonage wanted to give customers a chance to buy up to 15 percent of its 31 million shares at its IPO at $17 apiece.

But when the shares fell 13 percent on the first day of trading, many of its small investors that had put in orders to buy didn't want to pay the offer price. It gained the dubious title of one of the worst IPOs that year, something Facebook wants to avoid.

It's also more expensive to sell shares to many people. When thousands of small investors want to buy in, it becomes a logistical nightmare to make sure each investor gets a prospectus with all the important information.

Banks like large investors because it costs about the same to process an order of 50 shares as 50,000. But William Hambrecht, founder and CEO of WR Hambrecht & Co., a firm that runs IPO auctions, says companies that value their customers benefit in the long run.

He gives the example of Boston Beer, maker of Samuel Adams, which went public in 1995. Its founder, James Koch, wanted to reward the people who made his company successful: the buyers of Sam Adams.

Koch set aside a quarter of his shares for the small investor. The deal was a big success and attracted more interest from his beer drinkers than there were shares available. Some people left out were dissatisfied.

Hambrecht says about two-thirds of the investors who bought those shares still owned the stock two years after the IPO. Even today, about a third still own it. Hambrecht says that's because these investors appreciate the company's product.

"Our argument has always been that true buyers of your stock ought to be your own customer base," says Hambrecht. "As the great investor Peter Lynch said: Invest in what you know."

FBI apologizes to Fitchburg woman after raiding wrong apartment

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Judy Sanchez says says she was held face down on the floor at gunpoint for at least 30 minutes.

FITCHBURG— The FBI is apologizing to a Fitchburg woman after cutting her door open with a chainsaw and pointing their guns at her during a raid last week.

It turns out agents had the wrong apartment, and were actually after the other tenant on the floor of the multi-unit building who is suspected of dealing drugs.

Judy Sanchez says she was terrified last Thursday when she awoke to heavy footsteps in the stairwell and walked to her kitchen in time to see a chainsaw blade cut through her door.

She says she was held face down on the floor at gunpoint for at least 30 minutes. Her 3-year-old daughter, meanwhile, cried in another room

Sanchez says she and her daughter now have trouble sleeping.

The FBI apologized and is paying for the damage.

Rivals set to meet on virtual gridiron

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While the upcoming Patriots-Giants Super Bowl is a polarizing topic for the northeastern United States, two Westfield State alumni have built a friendship, and business, off of the rivalry.

Madden BibleSubmitted photo: Zach Farley, left, and Steve Gibbons, Westfield State Class of 2008 and co-authors of "Prima's Official Player's Guide to Madden NFL '12" and "NCAA Football '12" and creators of MaddenBible.com.

BY MIKE JOHNSON

While the upcoming Patriots-Giants Super Bowl is a polarizing topic for the northeastern United States, two Westfield State alumni have built a friendship, and business, off of the rivalry.

Steve Gibbons, a Patriots fan, and Zach Farley, a Giants fan, are the creators of maddenbible.com, a website tailored toward the latest in player strategy for the popular NFL Madden video game series.

"I only have one kidney, so I've never been able to play full-contact sports," Gibbons said. "But I've always been a football junkie. Madden became an outlet to learn more about the game."

Gibbons and Farley became friends in college, eventually touring the east coast to participate in Madden tournaments. When they posted a brief instructional video online, it received several hundred thousand views in just a few days.

Since graduating in 2008, they've maintained Madden Bible full-time, offering gaming updates across a variety of platforms.

"I have a show every day called 'Mad-Den TV,' but we also do something called 'This Week in Madden' in a local TV studio," Gibbons said. "We have a producer who does all of the camera-shifting and graphics, so it's nice because he's the strength to our weaknesses."

Tonight, both men will put their Madden skills to work when they square off in a virtual Super Bowl preview pitting the Patriots and Giants that can be watched at www.ustream.tv/primamadden at 8:30.

On Thursday at 7 p.m., the two will host a free discussion open to the public in Scanlon Banquet Hall at Westfield State to discuss everything Madden related. Refreshments will be provided.

"I was told a bunch of mothers in the city plan on attending because their kids love Madden, and they're like 10 to 12 years old. I guess they just want to know more," Gibbons said.

Gibbons, a Westfield native, and Farley, a resident of Natick, are always eager to share the latest information among the virtual pigskin community.

When the Patriots and Giants played in the 2008 Super Bowl, Farley chose to watch the game at home to avoid pestering from local Patriots fans. His plan did not work.

"When the Pats scored with two minutes to go I called and left a message ragging on him," Gibbons joked about a game the Giants came back to win, 17-14. "Worst thing I've ever done in my life. He saved the message and he'll never let me forget it."

Due to a strong social networking presence, the two also had the opportunity to play Madden with wide receiver Chad Ochocinco of the Patriots.

"I made a website a couple years ago called challenge85.com. We sent out a tweet, and by the luck of the draw he said, 'Let's play,'" Gibbons said. "But I made him put his controller down in the third quarter because that's how bad I was beating him."

As for their virtual rematch of the Super Bowl from four years ago, nothing beyond bragging rights is on the line. For both men, that's more than enough incentive.

"On the virtual gridiron, it's about getting into his head," Gibbons said. "We have this thing called reverse-reverse-reverse-reverse psychology. He knows everything I'm going to do, and I know everything he's going to do. He knows I'm the better player, but I have to make sure I let him know that early on."

CDC: 2nd Mass. resident caught rabies

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Federal and state health officials have confirmed that two people in Massachusetts contracted rabies last year.

BARNSTABLE, Mass. — Federal and state health officials have confirmed that two people in Massachusetts contracted rabies last year.

A Cape Cod man died last week after apparently getting bitten by a bat at his home. The Department of Public Health said it was the first case of human rabies contracted in Massachusetts since 1935, although others have contracted the virus outside of the state since then.

The Cape Cod Times reports that the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta says Massachusetts reported two human rabies cases in 2011.

The state did not publicize the second case, in which the victim apparently got the disease from a dog bite in Brazil. There was no information on whether that person died.

Rabies is transmitted through the saliva of infected animals.

Mitt Romney: 'I'm not concerned about the very poor'

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Romney's comments are likely to become fodder for his critics.

romney very poorRepublican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, greets supporters at his Florida primary primary night rally in Tampa, Fla., Tuesday, Jan. 31, 2012.

WASHINGTON — Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney said Wednesday that he's "not concerned about the very poor" because they have an "ample safety net" and he's focused instead on relieving the suffering of middle-class people hit hard by the bad economy.

In comments likely to become fodder for his critics, Romney emphasized, "You can focus on the very poor, that's not my focus."

He brought up the subject of the poor in a CNN interview marking his big win in Florida's GOP primary Tuesday night, a major step toward becoming the party's challenger to President Barack Obama in the fall. A multi-millionaire former venture capitalist, Romney has been criticized by Democrats and his Republican rivals alike for earlier remarks seen as insensitive, such as saying "I like being able to fire people" and declaring that he knew what it was like to worry about being "pink-slipped" out of a job.

"I'm not concerned about the very poor." he said Wednesday. "We have a safety net there. If it needs repair, I'll fix it. I'm not concerned about the very rich. They're doing just fine. I'm concerned about the very heart of America, the 90-95 percent of Americans who right now are struggling."

Asked whether his comment about the poor might come across as odd to some, Romney reiterated.

"We will hear from the Democrat party the plight of the poor and there's no question, it's not good being poor, and we have a safety net to help those that are very poor," Romney said, adding that he's more worried about the unemployed, people living on Social Security and those struggling to send their kids to college.

"We have a very ample safety net and we can talk about whether it needs to be strengthened or whether there are holes in it. But we have food stamps, we have Medicaid, we have housing vouchers, we have programs to help the poor," Romney said. "But the middle-income Americans, they're the folks that are really struggling right now."

Susan G. Komen cancer charity halts grants to Planned Parenthood

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Planned Parenthood says the move results from Susan G. Komen bowing to pressure from anti-abortion activists.

susan g komenIn this Tuesday, March 8, 2011 file photo, a Planned Parenthood supporter and opponent argue during a rally at the Indiana Statehouse on the South Lawn in Indianapolis in response to an Indiana House bill which would end funding to Planned Parenthood because it provides abortions.

NEW YORK — The nation's leading breast-cancer charity, Susan G. Komen for the Cure, is halting its partnerships with Planned Parenthood affiliates — creating a bitter rift, linked to the abortion debate, between two iconic organizations that have assisted millions of women.

The change will mean a cutoff of hundreds of thousands of dollars in grants, mainly for breast exams.

Planned Parenthood says the move results from Komen bowing to pressure from anti-abortion activists. Komen says the key reason is that Planned Parenthood is under investigation in Congress — a probe launched by a conservative Republican who was urged to act by anti-abortion groups.

The rupture, which has not been publicly announced as it unfolded, is wrenching for some of those who've learned about it and admire both organizations.

"We're kind of reeling," said Patrick Hurd, who is CEO of Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Virginia — recipient of a 2010 grant from Komen — and whose wife, Betsi, is a veteran of several Komen fundraising races and is currently battling breast cancer.

"It sounds almost trite, going through this with Betsi, but cancer doesn't care if you're pro-choice, anti-choice, progressive, conservative," Hurd said. "Victims of cancer could care less about people's politics."

Planned Parenthood said the Komen grants totaled roughly $680,000 last year and $580,000 the year before, going to at least 19 of its affiliates for breast-cancer screening and other breast-health services.

Komen spokeswoman Leslie Aun said the cutoff results from the charity's newly adopted criteria barring grants to organizations that are under investigation by local, state or federal authorities. According to Komen, this applies to Planned Parenthood because it's the focus of an inquiry launched by Rep. Cliff Stearns, R-Fla., seeking to determine whether public money was improperly spent on abortions.

Cecile Richards, president of the Planned Parenthood Federation of America, has depicted Stearns' probe as politically motivated and said she was dismayed that it had contributed to Komen's decision to halt the grants to PPFA affiliates.

"It's hard to understand how an organization with whom we share a mission of saving women's lives could have bowed to this kind of bullying," Richards told The Associated Press. "It's really hurtful."

Reaction to the news was swift and passionate. On Twitter, it was one of the most discussed topics Tuesday evening, with some tweets praising Komen's decision and others angrily vowing never to give to it again.

Two Democrats in Congress — Sen. Patty Murray of Washington and Rep. Michael Honda of California — issued statements denouncing Komen's action.

"I am stunned and saddened," said Honda, whose longtime chief of staff, Jennifer VanderHeide, had breast cancer last year. "I call on Komen to reconsider this decision, stand strong in the face of political pressure and do the right thing for the health of millions of women everywhere."

Anti-abortion groups, in contrast, welcomed the news. The Alliance Defense Fund praised Komen "for seeing the contradiction between its lifesaving work and its relationship with an abortionist that has ended millions of lives."

A statement issued Tuesday evening by Komen made no reference to the vehement reactions, instead citing its new grant-making criteria and pledging to ensure there were no gaps in service to women.

"While it is regrettable when changes in priorities and policies affect any of our grantees, such as a long-standing partner like Planned Parenthood, we must continue to evolve to best meet the needs of the women we serve and most fully advance our mission," the statement said.

Planned Parenthood has been a perennial target of protests, boycotts and funding cutoffs because of its role as the largest provider of abortions in the United States. Its nearly 800 health centers nationwide provide an array of other services, including birth control, testing for sexually transmitted diseases, and cancer screening.

According to Planned Parenthood, its centers performed more than 4 million breast exams over the past five years, including nearly 170,000 as a result of Komen grants.

Komen, founded in 1982, has invested more than $1.9 billion since then in breast-cancer research, health services and advocacy. Its Race for the Cure fundraising events have become a global phenomenon.

For all its mainstream popularity, however, Komen has been a target of anti-abortion groups since it began its partnerships with Planned Parenthood in 2005.

Life Decisions International includes Komen on its "boycott list" of companies and organizations that support or collaborate with Planned Parenthood. In December, Lifeway Christian Resources, the publishing division of the Southern Baptist Convention announced a recall of pink Bibles it had sold because some of the money generated for Komen was being routed to Planned Parenthood.

Aun, the Komen spokeswoman, said such pressure tactics were not the reason for the funding cutoff and cited Stearns' House investigation as a key factor.

That investigation, which has no set timetable, was launched in September when Stearns asked Planned Parenthood for more than a decade's worth of documents.

Stearns, in a statement emailed to the AP on Monday, said he is still working with Planned Parenthood on getting the requested documents. He said he is looking into possible violations of state and local reporting requirements, as well as allegations of financial abuse, and would consider holding a hearing depending on what he learns.

Many of the allegations were outlined in a report presented to Stearns last year by Americans United for Life, a national anti-abortion group, which urged him to investigate.

Democrats and Planned Parenthood supporters have assailed the probe as an unwarranted political ploy.

Komen, while not publicly announcing its decision to halt the grants, has conveyed the news to its 100-plus U.S. affiliates. Richards said she was informed via a phone call from Komen's president, Elizabeth Thompson, in December.

"It was incredibly surprising," Richards said. "It wasn't even a conversation — it was an announcement."

Richards subsequently sent a letter to Komen's top leaders — CEO Nancy Brinker and board chairman Dr. LaSalle D. Leffall, Jr. — requesting a meeting with the board and asserting that Komen had misrepresented Planned Parenthood's funding-eligibility status in some states.

According to Planned Parenthood, the Komen leaders replied to Richards with a brief letter ignoring the request for a meeting, defending the new grant criteria, and adding, "We understand the disappointment of any organization that is affected by these policy and strategy updates."

Aun, in a telephone interview, said Komen was not accusing Planned Parenthood of any wrongdoing.

"We want to maintain a positive relationship with them," she said. "We're not making any judgment."

Richards said Planned Parenthood is intent on raising funds quickly to replace the lost grants so that women in need do not go without breast-screening services. Already, the family foundation of Dallas oilman/philanthropist Lee Fikes and his wife, Amy, has donated $250,000 for this purpose, Planned Parenthood said.

The Komen decision was perplexing to Dottie Lamm, a Denver newspaper columnist and breast cancer survivor. She has done fundraising for Planned Parenthood, participated in several Races for the Cure, and serves on an honorary advisory council for the local Komen affiliate.

"It really makes me sad," said Lamm, wife of former Colorado Gov. Richard Lamm. "I kind of suspect there's a political agenda that got to Komen ... I hope it can be worked out."

Stephanie Kight, a vice president with Planned Parenthood of Orange and San Bernardino Counties, said her affiliate in Southern California received a Komen grant for 2011 and was able to obtain an additional grant of $120,000 for 2012 by signing the deal with its local Komen counterpart just before Komen's new criteria took effect. Under the criteria, no further grants will be allowed unless the pending House inquiry is resolved in Planned Parenthood's favor.

Kight said her conversations with local Komen leaders indicated there was a shared sense of frustration over the national Komen decision.

"One of the things these organizations share is the trust of women across the United States," Kight said. "That's what we're concerned about — not losing the trust of these women, who turn to both of us at their most difficult moments."

Mitt Romney says GOP fight strengthens him for general election

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Romney said his path ahead "is looking very good" as he heads to Minnesota and Nevada for campaign stops Wednesday.

020112romney.jpgRepublican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, stands with his wife Ann as he celebrates his Florida primary election win at the Tampa Convention Center in Tampa, Fla., Tuesday, Jan. 31, 2012.

TAMPA, Fla. — Barreling out of Florida with money and momentum on his side, Republican presidential front-runner Mitt Romney said Wednesday that the bare-knuckled nomination fight thus far has toughened him up for contests to come. Chief rival Newt Gingrich is regrouping after a significant loss and faces serious disadvantages in the next states to vote.

Romney, who won big in Florida with a barrage of negative ads, predicted the tone of the GOP campaign was "just a precursor to what you'll see" from President Barack Obama in the general election. And he said voters paid more attention to what they heard in the campaign debates than whatever ads were flooding the airwaves.

"Perhaps what we're getting now inoculates us, or at least prepares us, for what will come down the road," Romney said as he made the rounds of morning television shows.

Looking ahead, Romney said his campaign is focused squarely on middle-income Americans — to the exclusion of others at either end of the spectrum. But his comments Wednesday about the poor appeared certain to be fodder for critics.

"I'm not concerned about the very poor," he said on CNN. "We have a safety net there. If it needs repair, I'll fix it. I'm not concerned about the very rich. They're doing just fine. I'm concerned about the very heart of America, the 90-95 percent of Americans who are struggling."

Questioned about his comment on the poor, Romney reiterated that they have "a very ample safety net" but that "we can talk about whether it needs to be strengthened."

Obama's campaign, looking to make some money off the GOP squabbling, issued a fundraising appeal Wednesday focused on the millions that Romney and his supporters had poured into negative ads.

"That's ugly, and it tells us a lot about what to expect from Romney if he wins the Republican nomination," said campaign manager Jim Messina. "They're going to try to spend and smear their way to the White House."

Romney said his path ahead "is looking very good" as he heads to Minnesota and Nevada for campaign stops Wednesday. Gingrich, meanwhile, worked to convince supporters that the primary is a two-person race.

Vowing to stay the course, Gingrich said Tuesday, "We are going to contest everyplace." He planned one appearance in Reno, Nev., on Wednesday.

Nevada and Maine have caucuses on Saturday. Minnesota and Colorado hold contests on Tuesday. Michigan and Arizona hold primaries on Feb. 28.

Romney begins February with formidable advantages in fundraising and organization. His campaign raised $24 million in the final months of 2011, dwarfing his competitors and leaving him with $20 million to fight a primary battle that's increasingly spread across many states.

The former Massachusetts governor has had staff and volunteers on the ground in upcoming states for months as he's prepared for a drawn-out fight for delegates to the Republican National Convention in August. Gingrich, meanwhile, doesn't have a strong ground game as he looks to contests in states that could prove problematic for him. And in a nomination fight so far defined by debates — typically a strong point for the former House speaker — he faces a three-week stretch without one. The candidates will next debate in Arizona on Feb. 22.

Romney won Nevada's caucuses in 2008, and a substantial Mormon population there could propel him to victory. Still, Texas Rep. Ron Paul has been organizing in the state for months and could pose a strong challenge. Romney's campaign is working to paint the nomination fight as a four-candidate contest, with Paul and former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum still in the mix. Santorum was campaigning in Colorado on Wednesday, and Paul in Nevada.

Romney's Florida win was a smart rebound from an earlier defeat and represented a major step toward the nomination. He'll receive Secret Service protection, beginning Wednesday, requested by his campaign.

Romney had 46 percent of the Florida vote to Gingrich's 32 percent. Santorum had 13 percent and Paul 7 percent; neither mounted a substantial effort in the state.

The winner-take-all primary was worth 50 Republican convention delegates, the most of any primary state so far.

But the bigger prize was precious political momentum.

That momentum belonged to Romney when he captured the New Hampshire primary three weeks ago, then swung stunningly to Gingrich when he countered with a South Carolina upset 11 days later.

Now it is back with Romney, after a change to more aggressive tactics, coupled with an efficient use of an overwhelming financial advantage to batter Gingrich with television commercials.

For the first time in the campaign, exit polls showed a gender gap in Romney's favor. He ran far better among women than Gingrich, winning just over half of their votes, to three in 10 for his rival.

Only about half of women voters said they had a favorable view of the thrice-married Gingrich, while about eight in 10 had a positive opinion of Romney.


Pfizer recalls 1M birth control packs after mixup

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Pfizer Inc. is recalling 1 million packets of birth control pills due to a packaging error that could raise the risk of an accidental pregnancy by leaving women with an inadequate dose.

INDIANAPOLIS — Pfizer Inc. is recalling 1 million packets of birth control pills due to a packaging error that could raise the risk of an accidental pregnancy by leaving women with an inadequate dose.

The problem affects 14 lots of Lo/Ovral-28 tablets and 14 lots of generic Norgestrel and Ethinyl Estradiol tablets. Both products are manufactured by Pfizer and marketed in the U.S. by Akrimax Rx Products under the Akrimax Pharmaceuticals brand.

Pfizer found that some packets of the drugs had too many active tablets, while others had too few. Oral birth control products use a series of 21 hormone tablets and 7 inactive sugar tablets to regulate the menstrual period while providing contraception.

The risk of an accidental pregnancy depends on how many doses a patient misses in the pill cycle, pharmacist Mike Parker said. Patients normally can miss a dose and then catch up the next day, but the risk rises if a woman goes more than a couple of days without the right dose.

Parker said birth control pills account for about 25 percent of the prescriptions filled at his store, Fred's Neighborhood Pharmacy, in New Castle, Ind. But he doesn't expect many worried calls from customers about this recall.

He said it focuses on an older pill that used to be popular but doesn't sell as well anymore compared with newer versions that have fewer side effects.

"It's not a No. 1 or No. 2 seller," he said.

U.S. pharmacists filled 38.9 million birth control prescriptions in the first six months of last year, according to the most recent statistics from data firm IMS Health. A total of 78.6 million prescriptions were filled in 2010.

An IMS spokesman said the pills subject to the recall are not among the top 5 prescriptions filled.

A Pfizer spokeswoman said the problem was caused by both mechanical and visual inspection failures on the packaging line. She said the problem has been corrected.

Patients with the affected lot numbers should return them to the pharmacy.

The affected packets have expiration dates ranging between July 31, 2013, and March 31, 2014.

The drugs were distributed to warehouses, clinics and retail pharmacies throughout the U.S.

Florida primary analysis: $15 million spent in support of Romney influenced Florida voters

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Forty percent of Florida Republicans said they were influenced by negative ads aired against GOP candidate Newt Gingrich.

Scenes from Mitt Romney's win in Florida primaryRepublican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, greets supporters at his Florida primary primary night rally in Tampa, Fla., Tuesday. (Photo by Gerald Herbert)

The Republican primaries have become a game of money with outside groups bringing in more than the candidates themselves are raising while GOP presidential candidate Mitt Romney is effectively outspending than the other candidates in the field.

Restore Our Future, a super political action committee supporting Romney, raised $23.6 million in cash on hand last year according to federal filings released Tuesday, compared to $20 million Romney's campaign has brought in.

In the last week before the Florida primary, that money was largely used to fuel attack ads targeting Romney's GOP rival Newt Gingrich. Ninety-two percent of the ads aired against Gingrich were negative, according to The Houston Chronicle.

Restore Our Future, Romney's campaign and other Romney allies combined spent $15.3 million to air 12,768 ads, outspending Gingrich and his supporting super PAC Winning Our Future by $12 million on ads. Gingrich aired 210 ads in Florida, according to a Wesleyan Media Project study.

The money spent by Romney and his supporters was effective in turning the outcome of the Florida in his favor. Forty percent of Republican voters in Florida said they were influenced in their voting by the ads against Gingrich, reported the Houston Chronicle.

Restore Our Future spent $11 million in Florida to support Romney. The super PAC has spent a total of $17.4 million supporting him. Most of the donors come from an investment background, including three hedge fund managers who donated $1 million each to the super PAC.

In Florida, Gingrich was largely backed by Winning Our Future, run by a casino billionaire couple who each donated $5 million to it.

As the campaigns move forward toward Super Tuesday in March, the gap is likely to grow between the spending by Romney and his supporting super PACs and the rest of the Republican candidate field.

"I expect it would be much easier for the Romney super PAC to go out and solicit big contributions after a win in Florida, and the other super PACs will be even more dependent on the largesse of a few wealthy individuals to continue to be willing to write large checks," Colby College government professor Anthony Corrado told Reuters.

Route 20 crash in Chester sends 2 to Baystate Medical Center with serious injuries

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The cause of the crash remains under investigation.

CHESTER - A two-car crash on Route 20 Tuesday afternoon sent the vehicles' drivers to Baystate Medical Center with serious injuries.

The crash, between a 1997 Cadillac DeVille and a 2001 Chevrolet Impala, happened on the 400 block of Route 20 at 1:51 p.m. In a press release, state police identified the driver of the Impala as a 19-year-old Becket man. Police did not provide information about the driver of the DeVille, and did not identify either driver by name.

A passenger in the DeVille was not injured, police said.

Troopers from the Massachusetts State Police Barracks in Russell and the State Police Collision Analysis and Reconstruction Section responded to the crash, which forced a full closure of Route 20 until 3 p.m. Police did not fully reopen the road until 5:20 p.m.

The cause of the crash remains under investigation.

Adam Sandler signs deal to make movie about Hasbro's Candy Land board game

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The East Longmeadow toymaker recently announced preliminary results saying it expects to report approximately 7 percent revenue growth for 2011.

Adam SandlerAdam Sandler accepts the award for favorite comic movie actor during the People's Choice Awards on Jan. 11 in Los Angeles.

EAST LONGMEADOW – Happy Gilmore is headed for Gum Drop Mountain.

Actor Adam Sandler has signed a deal with Sony and Hasbro, which manufactures the Candy Land board game at its East Longmeadow plant, to make a movie based on the colorful children’s board game that sends kids on a colorful quest to find the lost King Kandy, the Imperial Head Bonbon and Grand Jujube of Candy Land and his lost Castle.

“I think it will be a movie for the whole family,” said Wayne S. Charness, senior vice president of communications for Rhode Island-based Hasbro. “It’s such a beloved brand. You just think about all the imagery in the game, and you can imagine what a wonderful world it will make on the screen.”

Candy Land is just one of movie projects involving Hasbro’s games and toys. “Battleship,” an action movie without the little plastic pegs, opens in May.

It is too early to tell when Adam Sandler’s “Candy Land” is expected to hit theaters, Charness said.

Earlier this week, Hasbro announced a deal to make a movie based on the Stretch Armstrong toy from the 1970s. “We’ve really moved from being a toy and game company to a branded play company,” Charness said. “We are really about the immersive brand experience.”

He said the “immersive brand experience” includes movies, television and electronic games and toys.

“You can play Monopoly the game across the table from your family,” he said “You can play Monopoly on your iPhone.”

Hasbro doesn’t announce its full financial results for the year 2011 until Monday.

But last month Hasbro announced preliminary results saying it expects to report approximately 7 percent revenue growth for the full year 2011 from the $4 billion in revenue reported in 2010. For the fourth quarter 2011, the company anticipates revenues to be approximately $1.33 billion compared to $1.28 billion in 2010.

Analysts found those results disappointing based on the performance of rival Mattel, according to published reports. Holiday sales were sluggish for the company. Mattel reported that it had four of the five best-selling toys of the holiday season.

Hasbro makes Monopoly games, which retail for $9.99 on the company’s website, at its sprawling factory in East Longmeadow. The company has about 700 employees, although the game-design and development staff were moved to Rhode Island last year.

The former Milton Bradley Co. started making Candy Land in 1949, said Guy A. McLain, director of the Lyman & Merrie Wood Museum of Springfield History.

Milton Bradley wanted a simple game for preschoolers, and Candy Land fit the bill because it didn’t require children to read, only to match colors.

Milton Bradley’s timing couldn’t have been better. The Baby Boom was on its way in 1949, and many of those young families bought Candy Land.

The first games had wooden pieces and cost $1, according to the Hasbro website. Milton Bradley came out with a 45 rpm record about Candy Land that same year.

“In the idyllic America of the 1950s, Candy Land would have been a big part of your childhood,” McLain said. “My understanding is it is still one of their most popular games.”

Hasbro bought Milton Bradley in 1985.

Home health aide Rose Sorrell charged with stealing $90K from 93-year-old Chicopee client

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Over the course of three months, Sorrell emptied the victim's bank account of more than $90,000, making cash withdrawals to make what police called "lavish purchases"

Rose Sorrell AmakerRose Sorrell

CHICOPEE - Police arrested a Chicopee caretaker Wednesday and charged her with stealing more than $90,000 from a 93-year-old client.

Rose Sorrell, also known as Rose Amaker, was charged with larceny and improper use of a credit card, police said.

She denied the charges at her arraignment Wednesday afternoon in Chicopee District Court. She was ordered held without the right to bail and is being held at the Western
Massachusetts Women’s Correctional Center in Chicopee.

According to police, Sorrell, a home health-care worker persuaded the elderly woman into getting a debit card for her savings account. The card arrived and was activated by Sorrell without the client’s knowledge or permission, police said.

Over the course of three months, Sorrell emptied the account of more than $90,000, making cash withdrawals to make what police called “lavish purchases” and to even finance a vacation, police said.

The identity of the elderly woman was not released.

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