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Holyoke police recover lost rifle while Mayor Alex Morse was on a ride along

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Morse, who took office Jan. 3, said the ride along was the first in a series of experiences he hopes to have with various city departments. He does plan to make the police ride along a regular event, though.

Holyoke Mayor Alex B. Morse.

HOLYOKE – An anonymous tipster found the Holyoke police department’s lost sniper rifle and alerted police Friday night while new Mayor Alex B. Morse was on a ride along with officers.

The tipster found the rifle in an alley between Appleton and Essex streets, according to Morse and to a news release from Holyoke police.

Both Morse and Police Chief James M. Neiswanger said Saturday that the mayor’s presence was a coincidence. Morse was in one of several cars that responded to the scene.

"The reality is my community policing cops got a tip and they followed up on it. There was no set up," Neiswanger said.

The Remington 700 rifle went missing on Sept. 28 about 11 p.m. Police Sgt. John P. Hart had placed it in the back of his pickup truck and was en route to an extra-duty job, police said at the time.

At Northampton and South streets, a driver at the intersection told Hart the tailgate on his truck was down and that’s when Hart saw the rifle was missing, Neiswanger said.

In December, Neiswanger suspended Hart five days without pay and ordered Hart to repay the city $2,000 for the loss of a department-issued sniper rifle.

Hart, a 17-year veteran, was also removed as department firearms inspector.

072911 james neiswanger mug.jpgJames Neiswanger

Hart’s yearly salary is $70,561, which breaks down to $1,356 for a five-day work week.

With the rifle found, Neiswanger said Hart won’t have to pay the $2,000. But the other punishments stand because Hart was responsible for the firearm.

“I’m happy we got the weapon back,” Neiswanger said Saturday. “The officer that was involved with it was disciplined and we are moving forward.”

Morse, who took office Jan. 3, said the ride along was the first in a series of experiences he hopes to have with various city departments. He does plan to make the police ride along a regular event, though.

“It was great. I really felt part of a team,” Morse said.

Morse’ ride along lasted from about 7 p.m. Friday to midnight. He accompanied community police officers on visits to businesses and residents in the Churchill neighborhood.

“He wanted to get a flavor for what the city looks like from police perspective,” Neiswanger said.

Whately overturned boat draws a response

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WHATELY – Police and firefighters responded to reports of an overturned boat on a pond near Allard Brothers Lumber on Route 5 at about 4 p.m. According to dispatchers, responders did not immediately find people in the water. But the search is continuing. UPDTATE: By 7 p.m. police dispatchers said nothing had been found the search called off

WHATELY – Police and firefighters responded to reports of an overturned boat on a pond near Allard Brothers Lumber on Route 5 at about 4 p.m.
According to dispatchers, responders did not immediately find people in the water. But the search is continuing.

UPDTATE: By 7 p.m. police dispatchers said nothing had been found the search called off

Care for Our Troops to hold fundraiser at East Mountain Country Club in Westfield

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Rock for Our Troops will feature two live bands.

MW25 Troops.JPGMembers of Care for Our Troops gather each month to pack custom care packages for American troops stationed overseas.

WESTFIELD – Care for Our Troops was founded in 2010 for the simple purpose of keeping Western Massachusetts military personnel stationed overseas connected with their communities, and for the second year, the group is sponsoring a fund-raiser to continue that mission.

Organizers of Rock for Our Troops, which will be held Feb. 11 at East Mountain Country Club and feature two live bands, say almost 100 percent of funds raised from the event will go to the shipping costs and purchase of care package items that are sent to American troops stationed in Afghanistan and Iraq.

“It started with one care package and grew from there,” said Eric Dauplaise, one of the organization’s founders.

On the second Wednesday of each month, Dauplaise and co-founders Michelle Cabral, Cassandra Smolkowicz and Karen Paluch, along with volunteers, meet at 6:30 p.m. at the West Springfield Elks Club, located at 429 Morgan Road, to pack items collected for service members put on their list by family.

And, each month, Dauplaise added, the theme changes, and the items in the packages reflect that.

“January was ‘Warm Our Warriors’ and February is “Jerky for Joe,’” he said of the boxes that contained gloves and hats in January and the February ones that will feature beef jerky.

“We are always looking for active military serving overseas who would benefit from our support,” Dauplaise noted. “Feel free to submit names and address to CFOTroops@gmail.com.”

The benefit, being billed as a dinner dance where hot appetizers will be served, will feature the original music of Westfield’s Wolfgang, and the musicianship of the Brass Attack.

Greg F. Garstka, a member of Wolfgang and owner of Performance Music in Westfield, said he became involved in the effort because his son was a soldier in Iraq on the receiving end of the care packages. He added that event organizers expect a good turnout.

“Last year’s benefit was a great success,” he said. “Everyone had a great time, and we expect another sell-out crowd this year.”

Brass Attack founder Carl Sittard said donating the band’s time to the cause is a small act of gratitude it can show to local service people.

“When Brass Attack was approached and asked to perform at this year’s fund-raising event, we didn’t hesitate to support our committed troops,” he said. “It’s such a wonderful project, and we’re proud to be a part of it. We hope our small part in the effort helps to convey our gratitude and admiration for our troops and all they have done to support our country.”

East Mountain Country Club co-owner Ted Perez Jr. says his family’s long tradition of military involvement and support is one reason why donating the hall for the event seemed like a natural thing to do, but mostly, it is because “it’s the right thing to do.”

“Our family has a history of supporting the military,” he said. “It’s the least we could do. Without the military, we wouldn’t have a golf course. We wouldn’t have a lot of things.”

Sen. Scott Brown meets workers and robots at growing Eastern Mass. robotics manufacturer Symbotic LLC

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As part of his ongoing campaign tour across the Bay State, Republican U.S. Sen. Scott Brown spent time Friday at Symbotic LLC, an Eastern Massachusetts robotics manufacturer which expects to add 100 jobs in 2012.

scott brown tours Symbotic in Wilmington, Mass.View full sizeU.S. Sen Scott Brown tours Symbotic LLC.'s Wilmington, Mass. production facility where robots to automate warehouses are manufactured. (Photo courtesy of Symbotic LLC.'s Facebook page)

WILMINGTON, Mass. - As part of his ongoing campaign tour across the Bay State, Republican U.S. Sen. Scott Brown spent time Friday at Symbotic LLC, an Eastern Massachusetts robotics manufacturer which expects to add 100 jobs in 2012.

According to a press release from Symbotic, formerly known as CasePick Systems, Brown toured its headquarters in Wilmington to highlight the company's impact on local job growth.

The company, which manufactures robots designed to automate warehouses, said that in 2011, more than 30 new jobs were added and 2012 is looking even more promising.

“Senator Brown recognizes the importance of supporting start-ups in Massachusetts’s thriving robotics cluster,” said Jim Baum, CEO of Symbotic. “Symbotic employs over 100 men and women and we’re proud to have his support of job growth and recognize our commitment to developing disruptive technology that makes this country more competitive.”

Brown, who is in a heated reelection campaign against Democratic candidates including Elizabeth Warren, touted Symbotic's success as he alluded to crowdfunding legislation he is sponsoring. The Democratizing Access to Capital Act aims to remove roadblocks hindering small business growth by allowing them to raise capital through groups of small investors.

Sen. Scott Brown tours Symbotic LLC in Wilmington, Mass.View full sizeU.S. Sen Scott Brown tours Symbotic LLC.'s Wilmington, Mass. production facility where robots to automate warehouses are manufactured. (Photo courtesy of Symbotic LLC.'s Facebook page)

“Companies like Symbotic create jobs, boost our economy and ensure our country’s competitiveness,” Brown said in a statement. “I’m committed to find ways to make it easier for talented entrepreneurs to start and grow businesses and maintain our status as the world’s greatest economic force.”

Symbotic reported that during the visit, Brown toured the company's manufacturing, research and development facility and met with many of the 88 onsite employees. He also reportedly met with company executives to discuss legislation, such as the Innovate America Act which he co-sponsored in the beginning of 2011.

The bill, introduced by Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., aims to create additional scientific research opportunities for companies and post-secondary students, increase American exports and boost scientific ambitions in the U.S. by creating new science-focused high schools.

Symbotic, which has operated quietly in Wilmington until a few weeks ago, creates robotic technology that automates warehouse operations. According to reports from the Boston Globe, the company began with founder John Lert building it from a shared start-up space in Cambridge.

Through a partnership with the wholesale grocery supply company C&S Wholesale Grocers, Symbotic has implemented their automated warehouse technology in New York, where the robots assemble products onto wooden pallets, which are then trucked to Stop & Shop stores throughout the state.

"Manufacturers, retailers and distributors are facing changes and challenges in such areas as environmental sustainability and high capital for their warehouses," the company said in a press release. "The Symbotic solution offers higher storage density, automated material handling, flexible integration, and simplified operations – all at a much lower cost."

The company is currently hiring skilled technicians, software, hardware, and structural engineers, sales people and people with mathematical PhD’s to compute the algorithms that enable the robots to do what they do.

Massachusetts collects $2 billion in January tax revenue, $44 million below projections

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Officials say Massachusetts collected just over $2 billion in tax revenues in January, down slightly from the same month in 2010 and about $44 million below projections.

generic-dollar-money-hand-grip-cash.jpg

BOSTON (AP) — Officials say Massachusetts collected just over $2 billion in tax revenues in January, down slightly from the same month in 2010 and about $44 million below projections.

Revenue Commissioner Amy Pitter said Friday that total tax collections for the year are up $237 million or 2 percent over the same time a year ago, but are $94 million below the budgetary tax revenue estimate for the 2012 fiscal year that ends June 30.

January is one of the three largest tax collection months of the year. It includes end-of-year bonuses and sales taxes from holiday spending in December.

Pitter said that while tax collections are running below estimates so far, it's premature to draw conclusions about how revenues will perform compared to estimates for the rest of the fiscal year.

Army surgeon Timothy Counihan transitions to civilian life in Western Massachusetts

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Among the last U.S. troops to leave Iraq on Dec. 17, 2011, Counihan went from commanding the 917th Forward Surgical Team back to chairing the department of surgery at Berkshire Medical Center.

 Col. Timothy Counihan.jpgIn this 2002 DOD file photo, Dr. (Lt. Col.) Tim Counihan examines a deaf Afghan girl in the field as a member of the Army Reserve 947th Forward Surgical Team from Connecticut. (Photo courtesy of Sgt. 1st Class Victor Andersen, USA via DOD)


By AMANDA KORMAN, The Berkshire Eagle

PITTSFIELD, Mass. (AP) — Fresh from the last days of the Iraq War, Col. Timothy Counihan is still regaining his bearings in civilian life. But as a surgeon, he's finding plenty of connections between what he learned at the war zone operating table and the needs of trauma patients rolling into the Pittsfield emergency room.

Among the last U.S. troops to leave Iraq on Dec. 17, 2011, Counihan went from commanding the 917th Forward Surgical Team back to chairing the department of surgery at Berkshire Medical Center.

The Hinsdale resident, 48, has been a member of the Army Reserves for almost two decades as an emergency surgeon for troops, enemies and civilians in Kosovo, Afghanistan and Iraq. His Taunton-based team of 20 clinicians has had to create operating rooms out of goat sheds and work to keep patients clear of the ever-present dust in the air.

Medical advances like the ubiquitous use of tourniquets and specialized hemostatic dressings to stem bloodflow from a wound, as well as blood transfusions — rather than saline — for a traumatic injury began in makeshift operating rooms during the war on terror. Now, they're making their way back to trauma care for all Americans.

"These advances on the military side are constantly spilling into civilian practice," Counihan said. "We move along as a group."

During his first year at BMC, Counihan, who transferred from St. Vincent's Advertisement Hospital in Worcester in 2006, treated a young man who'd crashed a car into a tree, shattering his liver. The military tactic of blood transfusions, Counihan said, helped the patient recover from an injury that otherwise has a 50 percent chance of death.

Trained as a colorectal surgeon, Counihan likened his Iraq medical duties to the work of a Civil War surgeon. Because technological improvements have made it possible to transfer the wounded out of the Middle East quickly, he said, his job is limited to stabilizing patients so they can get more complex treatment elsewhere.

Counihan has come to cherish the work.

"Taking care of soldiers is a particular joy," he said. "There are no better patients than soldiers. You're on the same team with them — it's almost like operating on a family member."

The station where Counihan stayed for most of his last eight-month deployment, called Garry Owen, was about 1,500 troops strong — a group he compared to Hinsdale, a town where everyone knows your name.

Of course, the simile only goes so far. At home in Hinsdale, there are no mortar strikes, and tourniquets are in short supply. In Iraq, for what Counihan believes will be his last deployment, he withstood more than 19 rocket attacks, one of which was in the middle of a surgery. When that strike started, Counihan and his team crouched down, held pressure to the patient's open wound, and then resumed working.

In honor of such acts, the county's Here at Home Committee erected a billboard of Counihan's visage that currently looks out from the corner of Tyler and Brown streets in Pittsfield.

"We're very proud of him," said city veterans' services director Rosanne Frieri. "It's a great thing, and we're glad he's back safely."

UMass students warned about Super Bowl celebrations

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Campus dining centers and the Blue Wall Cafe in the Campus Center will be open with snacks and televisions, he said. The college has used e-mails and Twitter as well as table tents and posters to get the word out.

UMass students gather around a debris fire outside the high-rise dorms in the Southwest Residential area at UMass in Amherst after the Super Bowl on Sunday, February 3, 2002.

AMHERST – The University of Massachusetts-Amherst spent last week telling students its OK to get fired up Super Bowl XLVI, just don’t take it to the streets.

And just in case anybody gets any wild ideas, both the University and the town of Amherst plan to have extra police officers on hand.

“We are just hoping there are no problems,” said Amherst Police Capt. Christopher G. Provost. “I know the university has done a good job of outreach. We just need to be prepared.”

Town police will concentrate on North Amherst, Meadow Lane and Hobart Lane, all sections of town that have experienced problems with student parties in the past, Provost said.

On campus, the university has set up floodlights near the Southwest Residential area, said UMass spokesman Daniel J. Fitzgibbons.

“People tend to behave better when they can be seen,” he said.

He pointed out that UMass students have every reason to pay close attention to this game. It features two former Minuteman football players: New York Giants wide receiver Victor Cruz and defensive back James Ihedigbo of the New England Patriots.

“We want people to enjoy the game,” Fitzgibbons said. “But we want you to do it in a safe and responsible way.”

Campus dining centers and the Blue Wall Cafe in the Campus Center will be open with snacks and televisions, he said. The college has used e-mails and Twitter as well as table tents and posters to get the word out.

Students have also been warned that if they fail to disperse or damage property they could face criminal charges and university discipline.

In 2008, UMass police made seven arrests after about 500 students at the Southwest Residential area following a Giants defeat of the Patriots in the Super Bowl. Police fired rubber bullets into the crowd and blocked off streets near those dorms.

In 2006, 1,800 students flooded Southwest Residential Area after UMass lost the NCAA Division I AA football championship game. At that incident, students broke windows, threw rocks and started fires.

Students also rioted several times during the Red Sox playoff and World Series run in 2004, and again in 2001 when the New England Patriots won the Super Bowl.

Crews rescue 2 more dolphins stranded on Cape Cod

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The two bring the number of common dolphins beached on the Cape since early January to 118.

WELLFLEET – Officials said Saturday that two more dolphins were stranded on Cape Cod, but crews were able to rescue them.

Mike Booth, a spokesman for the International Fund for Animal Welfare, said the group received a call Saturday morning about three dolphins that were swimming inside Wellfleet Harbor. He says crews were able to remove two that had stranded by Saturday evening, while the third was last seen swimming.

Booth says the dolphins that were stranded are being evaluated to see if they’re fit to be released.

He said the two bring the number of common dolphins beached on Cape Cod since Jan. 12 to 118.

Scientists are trying to figure out what’s behind the strandings.


Connecticut working to fix troubled food stamp program

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While a fraud scandal cast a cloud over a special emergency food aid program following Hurricane Irene, the state is working to address deeper troubles that have plagued the traditional food stamps program.

food stamp(AP File Photo by Jay Pickthorn) Food stamps have been around since 1939 as a way to help low-income people get their groceries.


By SUSAN HAIGH, Associated Press

HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) — While a fraud scandal cast a cloud over a special emergency food aid program following Hurricane Irene, the state is working to address deeper troubles that have plagued the traditional food stamps program, including high error rates, slow response times and an antiquated computer system.

Connecticut is ranked last among all the states and territories for processing applications for the federal program in a timely manner. In 2006, the state was processing 81 percent of applications on a timely basis. But that dropped to 59 percent in 2010 and the head of the Connecticut Department of Social Services said the current rate is even worse.

The federal government has also warned the state that it could face sanctions, likely financial, if it doesn't improve its error rates, such as providing too much or too little in aid to recipients or unduly denying applicants. Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, is a $650 million-a-year program in Connecticut.

DSS Commissioner Roderick Bremby was appointed by Democratic Gov. Dannel P. Malloy last March, in part because of his past efforts modernizing state government while the former cabinet secretary of the Kansas Department of Health and Environment. Bremby has spent the past year examining the Connecticut agency's challenges. They include a computerized eligibility system that dates back to 1988 and an organization that relies on recipients having to physically visit fewer regional welfare offices to apply for benefits and submit paperwork that often gets lost.

"I like to say we're in the second decade of the 21st century, using 20th-century technology and 40-year-old work processes," he told The Associated Press in an interview last week at DSS headquarters, housed in a former Hartford office building.

"It's not a pleasant system to work in. Our staff are incredibly frustrated because they know that they're limited by what they can do," Bremby said. "And the volume is just incredible — 3.7 million pieces of paper a month is what we process."

It comes at a time when there's a growing demand for the monthly federal food benefits. There were about 100,000 monthly cases in 2007, a figure that grew to more than 210,000 in 2011. Meanwhile, the number of state DSS eligibility workers charged with processing those applications has dropped from 800 in 2002 to more than 500 today.

Since his hiring, Bremby has embarked on a systematic approach to fixing and modernizing DSS. He said that just focusing on payment error rates, where Connecticut is showing some improvement, or timeliness issues won't solve the overall problem at the agency.

He recently finalized a $32.4 million contract with Deloitte Consulting Services, first started during former Republican Gov. M. Jodi Rell's administration, to overhaul the agency's computer and antiquated phone systems to eventually allow recipients to apply over the phone or online for benefits, check on their applications, make changes or renew their applications. A portion of the contract will be reimbursed by the federal government.

He also appointed one person to oversee SNAP, something that hasn't happened in about a decade, and is filling 134 new positions at DSS in the coming weeks, mostly eligibility workers for SNAP and Medicaid.

Over the past six to eight months, Bremby said he has also made programmatic improvements, developing quality teams and holding monthly error review meetings. His deputy commissioner now meets with the regional DSS offices to see how their error rates are coming along. Given these changes, as well as plans to eventually overhaul the 22-year-old eligibility management system, Bremby said he hopes federal officials will recognize the efforts Connecticut has made to improve how it manages SNAP and begin reducing its error rates.

While the emergency food program, known as D-SNAP, is a separate program that assisted different people, Bremby acknowledges the improvements being made to the agency could have helped when DSS was handing out the benefits for D-SNAP to 24,000 residents.

They were initially found eligible for $200 to $1,200, based on information they reported to the state. But in reviewing the cases of more than 800 state employees who received the payments, DSS referred at least 98 applications to the state Office of Labor Relations and the workers' respective agencies possible action. As of last month, four states employees had been fired for providing false information in order to obtain the assistance. DSS is now reviewing applications submitted by the public for possible fraud.

Republicans have criticized DSS's handling of the program and an attorney for several accused state employees has said that DSS employees changed workers' applications.

"Many people are legitimately in need, but it appears from reports that many others took advantage of the situation," said state Sen. Joe Markley, R-Southington, shortly after the storm. "Some claimed, for instance, that they lost hundreds of pounds of meat, and received hundreds of dollars in compensation without providing proof. This is taxpayer money and must not be wasted.

"My question is: How can we handle this better?" asked Markley. "There's no unified system, no single set of criteria for the many aid programs. Mismanagement and the cynicism it breeds most harm those who really need help."

While the federal government set the rules of the emergency food stamp program, Bremby said that if the state had better technology and allowed DSS staff to access its system remotely, the agency could have held application centers at remote sites such as school gymnasiums. Instead, they were forced to use the DSS offices, where thousands lined up and waited hours to apply for benefits.

But Bremby contends that his workers, who are trying to improve the overall system, have been unfairly criticized.

"We have a group of hardworking staff who are asked to go above and beyond their day-to-day responsibilities to process over 20,000 applications, new applications, in the course of a week," he said. "And to be subjected to derision, questions about their integrity, their capability, that's the frustrating part."

Mitt Romney takes strong lead in Nevada Republican primary

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Returns from four of 17 counties showed the former Massachusetts governor gaining 46 percent of the vote in a state where fellow Mormons turned out in heavy numbers.

Mitt RomneyRepublican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, greets supporters after speaking at a campaign rally in Colorado Sporings, Colo., Saturday.

By DAVID ESPO
and KASIE HUNT

LAS VEGAS – Republican presidential front-runner Mitt Romney jumped to a strong lead in the Nevada caucuses Saturday night, reaching for a second straight campaign victory over a field of rivals suddenly struggling to keep pace.

Returns from four of 17 counties showed the former Massachusetts governor gaining 46 percent of the vote in a state where fellow Mormons turned out in heavy numbers.

Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich was running second with 21 percent, while former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum had 17 percent and Texas Rep. Ron Paul 15 percent.

A victory for Romney would cap a week that began with a double-digit win in the Florida primary. That contest was as intense as Nevada’s caucuses were sedate – so quiet that they produced little television advertising, no candidate debates and only a modest investment of time by the contenders.

A total of 28 Republican National Convention delegates were at stake in caucuses held across a sprawling state that drew little attention in the nominating campaign but figures to be a fierce battleground in the fall between the winner of the GOP nomination and President Barack Obama. The state’s unemployment rate was measured at 12.6 percent in December, the worst in the country.

According to the AP count, Romney began the day with 87 of the 1,144 delegates needed to win the Republican nomination. Gingrich had 26, Santorum 14 and Paul 4.

Preliminary results of a poll of Nevada Republicans entering their caucuses showed that nearly half said the most important consideration in their decision was a candidate’s ability to defeat Obama this fall, a finding in line with other states.

About one-quarter of those surveyed said they are Mormon, roughly the same as in 2008, when Romney won with more than a majority of the vote in a multi-candidate field.

The entrance poll was conducted by Edison Research for the Associated Press at 25 randomly selected caucus sites. It included 1,553 interviews and had a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 4 percentage points.

The Nevada GOP’s decision not to release any results from the caucuses until hours after they ended prompted a flurry of unconfirmed reports of vote results on the Internet. At most caucuses, the vote results at the precinct were announced publicly after the voting ended, and people identifying themselves as caucus attendees used Twitter to relay the unverified announcements.

At least one activist cumulated the tweets into candidate totals and posted them on an Internet blog. Purported final candidate totals in at least two counties also were available over Twitter, but party officials would not confirm any of the numbers.

The caucus rules were a demonstration of democracy and a reflection of religious diversity.

Nevada awarded its delegates in proportion to the caucus vote totals, meaning that any candidate who captured at least 3.57 percent of the total number of ballots cast would be rewarded. By contrast, Romney’s victory in the Florida primary on Tuesday netted him all 50 of the delegates at stake there.

While most caucuses were held during the day, an exception was made in Clark County, the state’s largest. There, party officials arranged to hold one meeting well after sundown at the request of orthodox Jews who observe bans on driving, writing or other work-a-day activities during the Sabbath.

Romney’s victory in the state’s 2008 caucuses, coupled with the heavy presence of voters who share his Mormon faith, turned Nevada into something of a way-station on the campaign calendar.

There are just over 175,000 Mormons in the state, roughly 7 percent of the population. But they accounted for nearly a quarter of all 2008 Nevada GOP caucus-goers.

Gingrich said he’d be happy to finish second, behind Romney and ahead of Paul. Paul, a Texas lawmaker, was one of two candidates to air television ads in the state, hoping for a close second-place finish if not an upset.

Romney was the other, joined by Restore Our Future, the ubiquitous organization that supports him and has been heavily involved in earlier states.

Santorum campaigned relatively little in Nevada, although he picked up the support of Sharron Angle, a tea party favorite who won the GOP Senate nomination in a 2010 upset and then lost her race to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid.

From Nevada, the calendar turns to caucuses in Minnesota and Colorado and a non-binding primary in Missouri on Tuesday.

Maine caucuses end next Saturday, and the next seriously contested states are expected to be primaries in Michigan and Arizona on Feb. 28.

Nevada caucuses, coming four days after the Florida primary, meant little time for the type of intense campaign that characterized the first month of the race.

The most memorable event of the four-day Nevada campaign was an endorsement that flamboyant billionaire Donald Trump bestowed on Romney in Las Vegas in a circus-like atmosphere that followed reports he would back Gingrich. The campaign event was brief, and Paul mocked The Donald and his decision. “I don’t think he has that much credibility. I don’t understand why we pay attention to him,” he said.

By the time Nevada Republicans caucused, Paul was campaigning in Minnesota, Santorum in Colorado.

“The one thing that is on our side is the American people are waking up,” Paul said in a speech in Rochester, Minn., that was frequently interrupted by applause. The Texan has yet to win a primary or caucus state.

Santorum, who eked out a victory in Iowa a month ago, has faded since. He said he has raised $1 million online in recent days to help him in the upcoming states.

Gingrich combined campaigning and fundraising in his time in Nevada, in hopes of righting a campaign that was victorious in the South Carolina primary on Jan. 21, only to crater 10 days later in Florida.

Eager to demonstrate he intends to fight on, he announced plans to campaign next week in Ohio, one of several states with a Super Tuesday primary on March 6.

His Florida victory in hand, Romney was acting like a front-runner again, campaigning against Obama more than Gingrich. Restore Our Future took care of the former speaker, airing ads that said he consistently overstated his connections to Ronald Reagan.

Vermont woman robbed while changing baby's diaper

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Police are looking for two men they say assaulted and robbed a woman after she pulled her vehicle to the side of a rural Vermont road so she could change her baby's diaper.

NEW HAVEN, Vt. (AP) — Police are looking for two men they say assaulted and robbed a woman after she pulled her vehicle to the side of a rural Vermont road so she could change her baby's diaper.

State police say 29-year-old Karrie Hall, of Bristol, pulled her car over on the Plank Road in New Haven at 11:30 a.m. Saturday.

She told police that as she changed her infant's diaper, two men in a two-door car with a loud exhaust stopped and demanded the contents of her purse. When she refused, one of the men struck her in the face and threatened to strike her child as well.

Authorities say Hall then emptied her purse and that the men made off with cash and other items.

Mitt Romney wins Nevada Republican caucuses

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Romney’s fellow Mormons turned out in heavy numbers.

Mitt RomneyTommy Sholeff, 3, holds a sign as he sits on the shoulders of his father Jim Sholeff, at the Nevada caucus night victory celebration for Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney in Las Vegas, Saturday.

By DAVID ESPO
and KASIE HUNT


LAS VEGAS – Republican presidential front-runner Mitt Romney cruised to victory in the Nevada caucuses Saturday night, notching a second straight triumph over a field of rivals suddenly struggling to keep pace.

The former Massachusetts governor held a double-digit lead over his nearest pursuer as the totals mounted in a state where fellow Mormons accounted for roughly a quarter of all caucus-goers.

Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich and Texas Rep. Ron Paul vied for a distant second. Former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum trailed the field.

Returns from 12 of 17 counties showed Romney with 41 percent support, Gingrich with 25 percent, Paul with 22 percent and Santorum with 13 percent.

Yet to report its results was Clark County, which includes Las Vegas and often accounts for half or more of the votes in a statewide election.

Mitt Romney mug 2412.jpgW. Mitt Romney

Romney’s victory capped a week that began with his double-digit win in the Florida primary. That contest was as intense as Nevada’s caucuses were sedate – so quiet that they produced little television advertising, no candidate debates and only a modest investment of time by the contenders.

A total of 28 Republican National Convention delegates were at stake in caucuses held across a sprawling state that drew little attention in the nominating campaign but figures to be a fierce battleground in the fall between the winner of the GOP nomination and Democrat President Barack Obama. The state’s unemployment rate was measured at 12.6 percent in December, the worst in the country.

According to the AP count, Romney began the day with 87 of the 1,144 delegates needed to win the Republican nomination. Gingrich had 26, Santorum 14 and Paul 4.

Preliminary results of a poll of Nevada Republicans entering their caucuses showed that nearly half said the most important consideration in their decision was a candidate’s ability to defeat Obama this fall, a finding in line with other states.

About one-quarter of those surveyed said they are Mormon, roughly the same as in 2008, when Romney won with more than a majority of the vote in a multi-candidate field.

The entrance poll was conducted by Edison Research for The Associated Press at 25 randomly selected caucus sites. It included 1,553 interviews and had a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 4 percentage points.

The caucus rules were a demonstration of democracy and a reflection of religious diversity.

Nevada awarded its delegates in proportion to the caucus vote totals, meaning that any candidate who captured at least 3.57 percent of the total number of ballots cast would be rewarded. By contrast, Romney’s victory in the Florida primary on Tuesday netted him all 50 of the delegates at stake there.

While most caucuses were held during the day, an exception was Clark County, the state’s largest. There, party officials arranged to hold one meeting well after sundown at the request of orthodox Jews who observe bans on driving, writing or other work-a-day activities during the Sabbath.

Romney’s victory in the state’s 2008 caucuses, coupled with the heavy presence of voters who share his Mormon faith, turned Nevada into something of a way-station on the campaign calendar.

There are just over 175,000 Mormons in the state, roughly 7 percent of the population. But they accounted for nearly a quarter of all 2008 Nevada GOP caucus-goers.

Gingrich said he’d be happy to finish second, behind Romney and ahead of Paul. Paul, a Texas lawmaker, was one of two candidates to air television ads in the state, hoping for a close second-place finish if not an upset.

Romney was the other, joined by Restore Our Future, the ubiquitous organization that supports him and has been heavily involved in earlier states.

Santorum campaigned relatively little in Nevada, although he picked up the support of Sharron Angle, a tea party favorite who won the GOP Senate nomination in a 2010 upset and then lost her race to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid.

From Nevada, the calendar turns to caucuses in Minnesota and Colorado and a non-binding primary in Missouri on Tuesday.

Maine caucuses end next Saturday, and the next seriously contested states are expected to be primaries in Michigan and Arizona on Feb. 28.

Nevada caucuses, coming four days after the Florida primary, meant little time for the type of intense campaign that characterized the first month of the race.

The most memorable event of the four-day Nevada campaign was an endorsement that flamboyant billionaire Donald Trump bestowed on Romney in Las Vegas in a circus-like atmosphere that followed reports he would back Gingrich. The campaign event was brief, and Paul mocked The Donald and his decision. “I don’t think he has that much credibility. I don’t understand why we pay attention to him,” he said.

By the time Nevada Republicans caucused, Paul was campaigning in Minnesota, Santorum in Colorado.

“The one thing that is on our side is the American people are waking up,” Paul said in a speech in Rochester, Minn., that was frequently interrupted by applause. The Texan has yet to win a primary or caucus state.

Santorum, who eked out a victory in Iowa a month ago, has faded since. He said he has raised $1 million online in recent days to help him in the upcoming states.

Gingrich combined campaigning and fundraising in his time in Nevada, in hopes of righting a campaign that was victorious in the South Carolina primary on Jan. 21, only to crater 10 days later in Florida.

Eager to demonstrate he intends to fight on, he announced plans to campaign next week in Ohio, one of several states with a Super Tuesday primary on March 6.

His Florida victory in hand, Romney was acting like a front-runner again, campaigning against Obama more than Gingrich. Restore Our Future took on the former speaker, airing ads that said he consistently overstated his connections to Ronald Reagan.

Incumbent Richard Neal, challenger Andrea Nuciforo campaign across new Massachusetts 1st Congressional District

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Both have been cris-crossing the district at coffee hours, chambers of commerce gatherings and Democratic committee meetings.

jan2012 andrea nuciforo vs richard neal.jpgView full sizeAndrea Nuciforo Jr., left, seen at an Easthampton Democratic Town Committee meeting, is challenging U.S. Rep. Richard Neal, right, seen campaigning at the Holyoke Elks Lodge, for the Democratic nomination for the new Massachusetts 1st Congressional District.

With 30 campaign stops on one day and another 10 on another, Democratic U.S. Rep. Richard E. Neal has been on a whirlwind tour to raise his profile in the new 1st Congressional District after it was remapped along with others throughout the state in November.

In addition to facing a campaign territory that has doubled in size to 82 communities, the entrenched lawmaker from Springfield is undoubtedly motivated by his first solid challenger from the left, former state senator and now Berkshire Middle District register of deeds Andrea F. Nuciforo Jr., of Pittsfield.

Both have been cris-crossing the district at coffee hours, chambers of commerce gatherings and Democratic committee meetings – with Neal’s goal to retain loyalists and capture new votes, and Nuciforo’s to sway loyalists as well as new voters in new territories.

The new 1st Congressional District encompasses all of Hampden and Berkshire counties, running from the New York border east to Bernardston along the Vermont border and southeast to include the Hampshire County communities of Easthampton and South Hadley, and farther south to include parts of southern Worcester County.

But, Neal hardly seemed a newcomer at a Jan. 14 meeting at a Ward 7 Democratic City Committee meeting in Holyoke, which was among the new communities folded into the 1st Congressional District.

The event featured influential fund-raiser types from that city as well as regional political heavies including longtime Hampden County sheriff Michael J. Ashe, who along with all the speakers, had warm words for Neal.

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“What a fit!” Ashe gushed, referring to the city prospectively falling under Neal’s wing should he win the November election. “It almost feels as though the stars are aligned, if you will,” the sheriff said.

Neal greeted the crowd with his intimate knowledge of top federal funding recipients in the city, including Holyoke Community College and the state-run Soldiers Home, and thanked the crowd for their unyielding loyalty.

“I intend to represent you vigorously over the next four years,” he said, drawing a round of applause.

Neal, however, was a bit coy about his ramped-up presence throughout the new district.

“It’s way too early for campaigning. I’ve just been visiting with new people,” Neal said, adding that the territory may be new, but the issues on the minds of voters are the same everywhere. “So, it’s not new to me.”

To Neal’s advantage, 63 percent of the 1st Congressional District’s voters are in Hampden County, with 22 percent in Franklin County, slightly under 19 percent in Berkshire County and the balance in Hampshire County.

It is the first time in recent memory that one congressional district has encompassed all of Hampden County.

While the overhaul of district lines has prompted some incumbents to go scrambling to shake hands with unfamiliar prospective voters, political observers say it is less necessary for Neal, the darling of the political establishment in Greater Springfield based on his tenure on that City Council, as mayor and a popular 12th-term U.S. representative

Although less well-known, political observers say Nuciforo is no slouch. And, as a pro-choice candidate to Neal’s pro-life stance, he could appeal to more liberal Democrats in the Sept. 6 primary election, although heavily liberal Northampton and Amherst were cut out of the district in the remapping.

The 47-year-old Nuciforo bills himself as a progressive candidate, focusing on combating persistent unemployment and as offering voters a fresh alternative.

011012 andrea nuciforo easthampton.JPGView full sizeAndrea F. Nuciforo Jr. speaks at an Easthampton Democratic Town Committee meeting.

“It’s not a good time for incumbents,” Nuciforo said during a stop at a Greater Westfield Chamber of Commerce mixer at Tucker’s restaurant in Southwick, adding that he is mindful of Neal’s popularity in Greater Springfield and the challenge before him.

Nuciforo said he is not unaccustomed to attending events as the new kid in class, as it were, but has his share of political, professional and personal contacts. As if on cue, he stuck his hand out to a passerby.

“Hi, I’m Andy Nuciforo,” he told the woman.

“Of course, you are. I remember your father,” said Sandy Sorel, a local communications consultant and businesswoman, triggering a quick, easy chat about things in common and Nuciforo’s political intentions.

Nuciforo’s father also served in the state Senate from 1964 to 1973. The younger Nuciforo served from 1997 to 2007.

State Sen. Stephen M. Brewer, D-Barre, says Nuciforo is bright and was a passionate public servant and good debater while the two worked together in the state Legislature. But Brewer, a longtime Neal supporter, said Nuciforo may be no match for the incumbent.

“That is an arena that supports longevity. Richie has risen up in the power structure (on Capitol Hill) and is very grounded in the district, Brewer said. “Every cowboy can get thrown off his horse, but Richie’s a very, very solid legislator.”

Neal beat Republican challenger Thomas Wesley in 2010 by 12 percentage points, the incumbent’s most significant challenge in a relatively charmed political life.

Brewer added that some Democrats are miffed that Nuciforo announced his intentions to run against either Neal or U.S. Rep. John W. Olver, D-Amherst, who last year announced his intentions to retire and smoothed the way for a less contentious redistricting.

“For a Democrat to take on a good, loyal, effective Democratic incumbent ... that troubled some people,” Brewer said. “Massachusetts has lost a lot of powerful people in Congress over the years, and a freshman congressman can’t get a whole lot done.”

Nuciforo responded that intra-party challenges are just part of the American way.

“Given the disastrous results coming out of Washington these days, it is important that voters have a clear choice between two candidates. Incumbents and insiders will always want to choose the Democratic nominee. But I think that voters should make that choice,” he said.

Despite a campaign schedule that’s been humming seven days a week, according to Nuciforo, he is not scheduled to formally announce his candidacy until this Wednesday.

Meanwhile, every campaign stop will be groundbreaking for Bill Shein, a Berkshire County writer and activist who has never held office but announced his Democratic candidacy on Jan. 19 and pledged to visit every town and city in the district.

Springfield native Ron Brace's family hopes for big New England Patriots Super Bowl win

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The Brace family is especially proud of Ron for his fund-raising efforts after the June 1 tornado ravaged Springfield, according to his aunt and father.

Ae tor wrap 3.jpgSpringfield native Ron Brace, a defensive lineman with the New England Patriots, is seen at Springfield College in June at the time the Patriots announced that the team would be matching up to $100,000 in relief for tornado victims in Massachusetts.

SPRINGFIELD – The Brace family has dared to dream for a long time, but it still took a long time for them to become true believers.

“For me, it set in after Ron’s sophomore year at Boston College. That’s when I began thinking things could really move,” says Ronald J. Brace Jr., the father of New England Patriots defensive lineman Ron Brace. “I didn’t want to bank on it, though. I tried to keep an even keel.”

If the Brace family moves off that even keel tonight, it will be impossible to blame them. Ronald J. Brace III, of the New England Patriots, will be in the Super Bowl.

“It all became real for me in his last year of college,” added Rhonda M. Brace, the player’s aunt. “That’s when it kind of hit me. Wow!”

Rhonda Brace is in Indianapolis for the big game. It was not easy for the Springfield resident, a corporate tax auditor for the state of Connecticut, to juggle work and personal plans.

But, she was not about to miss the moment. “I’m the family’s only representative. I’m glad it worked out that way,” Rhonda Brace said.

“I remember when Ron was drafted in 2009. Here he is, on the phone with (Patriots owner) Bob Kraft and (coach) Bill Belichick,” she recalled. ““We were not looking for his name to be called. We were just awestruck, and so ecstatic.”

Brace’s father said the family was certainly not expecting a call from the hometown NFL team. He spoke with his son last week, but only briefly.

“He’s getting bombarded. I spoke with him for about five minutes, only minimal because he was going to a meeting,” Brace Jr. said.

The father is staying in Springfield to host a Super Bowl party at his Indian Orchard home. His pride in his son, whose given name is Ronald J. Brace III, goes far beyond tackles and other stats.

“I’m a facility administrator of the Westfield (Department of) Youth Services center. I use Ron as incentive for these kids,” the player’s father said. “We deal with kids that get in trouble and get arrested. Most of the news we get is negative.

“For them to see positive news like this is so important, and it’s big news,” he said. “They’ve been asking me if I can get an autograph for them.”

Ron Brace Jr., was a football star in his own right. In the 1980s, he played for High School of Commerce , where he was a premier running back who averaged 12 tackles a game on the defensive side.

His son competes in a different world.

“It’s hard not to worry about him getting hurt. He’s being double-teamed by two 300-pound linemen,” Brace Jr. said. “He has had to fight through some injuries, but I knew he’d be back. I was sure of it.”

Now 25, Ron Brace lived in Springfield until he was 12.

“He stayed with me and my mother,” said Rhonda Brace.

Brace’s father said that when a job opportunity opened in Worcester, he moved to that city with his son, who played high-school football at Worcester Burncoat.

brace family.JPGRon Brace Jr., father of Patriots lineman Ron Brace, holds his son's No. 97 jersey as Rhonda Brace, the football player's aunt, holds a photo They will be cheering him on as he plays in Super Bowl XLVI today.

Rhonda Brace said the family has been fortunate that Ron has stayed close to home, first by attending Boston College and then after being drafted by the Patriots.

He went in the second round of the 2009 NFL Draft, the 40th pick overall. The family had not allowed itself to count on Brace being drafted at all, let alone with such a high pick.

He has been used in various positions on the defensive line, including defensive end and nosetackle.

The Brace family is especially proud of Ron for his fund-raising efforts after the June 1 tornado ravaged Springfield, according to his aunt and father.

“It was really nice how Ron came through. He had come back and driven through the old neighborhood in Six Corners to see what had happened,” Rhonda Brace said. “He saw for himself, and he understood what we were going through, the kids and their families.”

Watching Brace and the Patriots play is a thrill, his aunt said. It is also a nerve-wracking experience.

It hit a peak in the AFC Championship game, when the Patriots held off the Baltimore Ravens 23-20. A missed Ravens field goal in the final seconds sent New England to its first Super Bowl since 2008, two seasons before Brace was drafted.

“I did not want that game to go into overtime,” Rhonda Brace said.

She planned on absorbing the cultural opportunities in Indianapolis, which is especially rich in museums and American Indian lore. There is also the NFL Experience, an interactive theme park for fans attending the Super Bowl.

“I want to see what Indianapolis is all about,” she said.

Like her nephew, however, Rhonda Brace has made the trip with one goal in mind.

“I am ready for the game,” she said. “I am looking forward to all the activities, but most of all, I am looking for Ron to come back with a ring.”

Murder charges against Edwin Goitia, Amanda Arsenault of Chicopee to stand, judge rules

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The mother and father are charged in the death of their 6-month-old son Naiden Goitia.

Goitia Arsenault.jpgEdwin Goitia and Amanda Arsenault are seen in 2010 during their respective arraignments in Hampden Superior Court in Springfield.

SPRINGFIELD – A Hampden Superior Court judge has ruled murder charges against a Chicopee mother and father in the 2009 death of 6-month-old Naiden Goitia, their son, will stand and the case will go to trial.

Lawyers for Edwin Goitia, 26, and Amanda Arsenault, 24, had argued a grand jury should not have indicted the two parents for murder based on what the prosecution presented. They wanted the charges dismissed.

George M. Nassar, Goitia’s lawyer, also argued the prosecution distorted the evidence presented to the grand jury.

Hampden Superior Court Judge Richard J. Carey rejected Nassar’s arguments and those of Joseph A. Franco, Arsenault’s lawyer, and so the cases are scheduled to go to trial April 30.

Both Goitia and Arsenault have denied the murder charge and a charge of reckless endangerment of a child.

Although Naiden died July 29, 2009, after suffering two significant skull fractures and bleeding from the brain, the two were not indicted in the death until June 2010.

Carey’s ruling, saying many points raised by the two lawyers can be argued at trial, cited background presented to the grand jury.

Among that background was that medical evidence showed Naiden had been dead for at least one hour before he was brought to Holyoke Medical Center by Amanda Arsenault, her father and a neighbor at 10 p.m.

Carey said the grand jury could have reasonably inferred the only people who were with Naiden from about 7:30 p.m. to 9:50 p.m. were Goitia and Amanda Arsenault.

Goitia did not live with Arsenault at her 373 Dale St. apartment, but went there at about 7 p.m. when Arsenault, Naiden and others were outside.

“Goitia insisted on putting Naiden to bed,” the background in the ruling said. He took Naiden to the third-floor apartment Arsenault and a roommate shared and came back outside.

Goitia and Arsenault walked to a liquor store and eventually went to her apartment. A neighbor heard screams from the apartment at 9:50 p.m.

The neighbor ran there and saw Naiden lifeless and blue. Arsenault said she did not call 911 but called her father, Charles Aresenault, who spells his last name differently than his daughter.

The neighbor did CPR on Naiden in the car to the hospital. She said while they rode to the hospital Goitia, Arsenault and Aresenault tried to devise a story to tell police because Naiden wasn’t supposed to be living with Arsenault or Goitia.

The state Department of Children and Families had placed Naiden in the custody of Aresenault and his wife, Amanda Arsenault’s stepmother, after bruises raising suspicions of abuse were found on Naiden in February of that year.

Charles Aresenault and his wife, Gale Aresenault, face charges of reckless endangerment of a child for giving Naiden back to Amanda Arsenault in violation of the state order.

The neighbor said Goitia got out of the car before they got to the hospital because Goitia had been drinking.

Amanda Arsenault’s roommate said she saw Goitia holding Naiden in the apartment she shared with Arsenault at about 7:15 p.m. She said Goitia had a blanket over Naiden’s head and the baby was not crying.

Arsenault told police she was going up to check on Naiden 20 minutes after Goitia took the baby to bed, but Goitia told her the baby was sleeping and he wanted to walk to the store with her.

Arsenault told police when they got home from the store she kept looking in on Naiden, who she believed was asleep and right before 10 p.m. tried to wake him up.

“It is reasonable to infer, given the medical evidence, that when Amanda went to wake Naiden she found him lifeless and blue,” Carey wrote.


Southwick to round up, neuter, release feral cats

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Euthanizing a cat, “is the absolute very last resort,” animal control officer Tracy Root said.

wct Feral Cat 1.jpgAnimal Control Officer Tracy Rootis seen at the town's cat shelter. Above her Tabitha, a 14-year-old feral cat that lives at the shelter.

SOUTHWICK – Controlling the town’s feral cat population is a task best done by trapping, neutering and releasing the animals back into their habitat, said animal control officer Tracy Root, who was given the approval of town officials to embark on that mission.

Euthanizing a cat, she stressed, “is the absolute very last resort” if all other efforts at socializing a feral feline have failed.

Root appeared before the Board of Selectmen last week to report on the feral cat problem in the Lakeview Street area around Congamond Lakes, saying she was seeking input to address the issue.

“I told them I would like to find a solution to the problem,” she said, and vehemently denied reports that the solution includes rounding up cats and killing them.

She added that residents in areas where she plans to trap will be notified so that they can keep their pets indoors.

Roost said she asked the board for its permission to set traps for the animals for the purpose of having them spayed or neutered, vaccinated with rabies and distemper shots and returned to the area from which they were collected where they are fed by residents.

“At this point, we have not euthanized any cats,” she said. “That is the last resort. I don’t plan on doing that. I do this job because I love animals.”

So far, 25 cats have been trapped, spayed or neutered, vaccinated and released back in the area where they were found at a cost of about $35 per cat, Root said, and with a $960 grant from the Massachusetts Animal Coalition, another 27 cats can be protected.

As word of the problem has spread, Root said, so, too, have the calls from animal activists across the United States, all of whom have offered donations to assist in the effort.

“I got a call today from the Humane Society of the United States, and the Cape Cod Humane Society offered to help, too,” she said.

The ultimate solution to the problem, Root explained, is to socialize as many feral cats as possible through trapping, sterilization and release. With each socialized generation of cats that replaces the feral ones, the numbers will diminish, but only if the process can continue.

Recording of lost Malcolm X speech discovered by Brown University student

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The audiotape of Malcolm X's 1961 address in Providence might never have surfaced at all if 22-year-old Brown University student Malcolm Burnley hadn't stumbled across a reference to it in an old student newspaper.

Lost Malcolm X Speech Found.jpgView full sizeIn this Feb. 2, 2012 photo, Brown University senior Malcolm Burnley, 22, stands with a copy of the 1961 edition of the Brown University Herald in the John Hay Library on campus in Providence, R.I. Burnley discovered a long-lost tape recording of a 1961 address by Malcolm X at Brown while Burnley was combing through archived editions of the Herald conducting research for a nonfiction writing class. (AP Photo/Stephan Savoia)

By DAVID KLEPPER

PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) — The recording was forgotten, and so, too, was the odd twist of history that brought together Malcolm X and a bespectacled Ivy Leaguer fated to become one of America's top diplomats.

He found the recording of the little-remembered visit gathering dust in the university archives.

"No one had listened to this in 50 years," Burnley told The Associated Press. "There aren't many recordings of him before 1962. And this is a unique speech — it's not like others he had given before."

In the May 11, 1961 speech delivered to a mostly white audience of students and some residents, Malcolm X combines blistering humor and reason to argue that blacks should not look to integrate into white society but instead must forge their own identities and culture.

At the time, Malcolm X, 35, was a loyal supporter of the black separatist movement Nation of Islam. He would be assassinated four years later after leaving the group and crafting his own more global, spiritual ideology.

The legacy of slavery and racism, he told the crowd of 800, "has made the 20 million black people in this country a dead people. Dead economically, dead mentally, dead spiritually. Dead morally and otherwise. Integration will not bring a man back from the grave."

The rediscovery of the speech could be the whole story. But Burnley found the young students in the crowd that night proved to be just as fascinating.

Malcolm X was prompted to come to Brown by an article about the growing Black Muslim movement published in the Brown Daily Herald. The article by Katharine Pierce, a young student at Pembroke College, then the women's college at Brown, was first written for a religious studies class. It caught the eye of the student paper's editor, Richard Holbrooke.

Holbrooke would become a leading American diplomat, serving as U.S. Ambassador to Germany soon after that nation's reunification, ambassador to the United Nations and President Obama's special adviser on Pakistan and Afghanistan before his death in 2010 at age 69.

But in 1961 Holbrooke was 20, and eager to use the student newspaper to examine race relations — an unusual interest on an Ivy League campus with only a handful of black students.

Pierce's article ran in the newspaper's magazine and made her the first woman whose name was featured on the newspaper's masthead.

Somehow, the article made its way to Malcolm X. His staff and Holbrooke worked out details of the visit weeks in advance. Campus officials were wary: Malcolm X had been banned from the University of California-Berkeley and Queens College in New York.

Tickets — 50 cents — for the Brown speech sold quickly. About 800 people filled the venue, the 19th-century, Romanesque Sayles Hall, meant to hold about 500.

Pierce introduced Malcolm X and recalls him vividly.

"He came surrounded by a security detail," she recalls. "You got the sense — this is an important person. He was handsome, absolutely charismatic. I was just bewildered that my class paper could have led to something like this."

In his speech, Malcolm X outlined Black Muslims' beliefs and argued that black Americans cannot wait for white Americans to offer them equality.

"No, we are not anti-white," he said. "But we don't have time for the white man. The white man is on top already, the white man is the boss already... He has first-class citizenship already. So you are wasting your time talking to the white man. We are working on our own people."

Richard Nurse, one of three black students in his Brown University class in 1961, came to the speech with his mind made up against Malcolm X.

"I very strongly believed in integration," Nurse said in a telephone interview from his New Jersey home. "These were ideas I had accepted, adopted. Here I was at this Ivy League university. But he confounded me a little bit. I had never heard a black man in public speak as forcefully as Malcolm X did that night. It was cataclysmic."

Nurse, now 72 and retired from teaching at Rutgers University, said the speech didn't cause him to change his views. But he said he understood Malcolm X's message better years later when, in the U.S. Army, he was barred from all-white USO clubs and movie theaters in the South.

"Now things have changed to the point where that kind of notion (separatism) is no longer even considered," he said.

Pierce said the speech exposed her and other students in the audience to a different side of America. She gives Holbrooke credit for bringing Malcolm X to campus.

Holbrooke joined the foreign service after graduation and was posted to Vietnam in 1962. He visited Pierce in Hong Kong, where she worked as a teacher. She went on to work on international refugee projects and at Yale University and now creates computer training programs.

She said she wasn't surprised when Holbrooke became the diplomat presidents dispatched to hotspots like Bosnia and Afghanistan.

"He was a very good friend," she said of Holbrooke. "I was saddened to hear of his death, sad for myself and sad for the world."

The recording of the address is in pristine condition. Pierce obtained the tape after the event — she isn't sure who made the recording — and it sat in a box of mementos for years before she mailed it to the university archives.

Burnley has had the tape digitized and plans to air excerpts next week at an event hosted by the Rhode Island Black Heritage Association.

Lehigh University professor Saladin Ambar, who is working on a book about Malcolm X's 1964 visit to Oxford University, said any new recording of him is reason to celebrate.

"Malcolm's best speeches, they're just gone," he said. "He's not nearly as well-documented as he should be, when you consider his power as an orator."

Easthampton holds emotional farewell party for Stuart Beckley, longtime City Planner and new Town Manager in Ware

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"Your hand-print is everywhere across this city," said City Council President Justin P. Cobb, who presented Beckley with a letter of thanks from the council.

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EASTHAMPTON – City and state officials, along with family and friends, threw a farewell party Thursday for Stuart B. Beckley, the 22-year City Planner who has taken the Town Manager job in Ware.

Beckley, 50, of Sunderland, was hired in December at the unanimous recommendation of a search committee and with 4-0 approval of the Board of Selectmen. Town officials have heaped praise on Beckley since and several selectmen have said they can’t wait for him to start.

Thursday was his last day of work for Easthampton. He starts in Ware on Monday. His contract employs him until June 30, 2015, but Selectman William R. Braman has said he hopes Beckley has a “long and successful career” in the town.

And, with stiff upper lips, many of Beckley's colleagues said the same at a 5 p.m. party at the Municipal Building.

Mayor Michael A. Tautznik read a formal proclamation thanking Beckley for his service, singling out his efforts to expand park land, improve transportation and access to affordable housing, boost the creative economy and promote sustainable building.

"I wanted to do something that came from the heart, but also reflected what the city believes about Stuart and his tenure here," said Tautznik. He then presented Beckley with a ceremonial Key to the City "as a small token of our gratitude."

State Sen. Michael R. Knapik, R-Westfield, spoke fondly of his work with Beckley, saying Ware was lucky to have him on-board.

"This is a bittersweet moment," he said, while Beckley, who is characteristically shy and mild-mannered, smiled and stood stock-still beside him. "The loss of this community is Ware's gain."

State Rep. John W. Scibak, D-South Hadley, presented Beckley with a citation from the state legislature expressing congratulations and gratitude.

Scibak joked that Ware should be redistricted to Worcester County, because now his constituency will have to battle with Beckley for planning and development grants.

Party guests wrote their well-wishes on a poster board, including Scibak, who wrote, "Thanks for all you've done. We expect to see more in Ware!!"

Easthampton City Arts+ coordinator Burns Maxey and three local artists presented Beckley with a painting by Rob Parent, depicting a bear riding a bicycle down the Manhan Rail Trail. It symbolizes his work on the art installation Bear Fest and his efforts to expand and improve the bike path.

"Your hand-print is everywhere across this city," said City Council President Justin P. Cobb, who presented Beckley with a letter of thanks from the council.

Department of Public Works Superintendent Joseph I. Pipczynski gave an emotional adieu, praising Beckley not just for his work, but for his heart.

"I'll miss him as a friend (and) a coworker," he said. "But I'll also miss him as a person who's always trying to do the right thing."

"It's been my pleasure to be here. It's a great, great city to work in," said Beckley in a brief but emotional speech, a smile on his face and shaking in his voice. He pointed out he was "getting all the credit" for the city's rebirth from a dying mill town to an up-and-coming destination, and thanked all those who were working just as hard.

"This is a special place with special people and I thank you all for letting me be a part of it," he said.

Second Obama term could alter makeup of federal appellate court system, Supreme Court

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Fourteen of the 25 appeals court judges nominated by Obama replaced Republican appointees.

View full sizePresident Barack Obama announces Elena Kagan's nomination to the Supreme Court on May 10, 2010

By MARK SHERMAN

WASHINGTON (AP) — A second term for President Barack Obama could allow him to expand his replacement of Republican-appointed majorities with Democratic ones on the nation's appeals courts, the final stop for almost all challenged federal court rulings.

Despite his slow start in nominating judges and Republican delays in Senate confirmations, Obama has still managed to alter the balance of power on four of the nation's 13 circuit courts of appeals. Given a second term, Obama could have the chance to install Democratic majorities on several others.

Fourteen of the 25 appeals court judges nominated by Obama replaced Republican appointees.

The next president, whether it's Obama or a Republican, also has a reasonable shot at transforming the majority on the Supreme Court, because three justices representing the closely divided court's liberal and conservative wings, as well as its center, will turn 80 before the next presidential term ends.

The three justices are Ruth Bader Ginsburg, the leader of the court's liberal wing, conservative Antonin Scalia, and Anthony Kennedy, who leans conservative but on some issues provides a decisive vote for the liberals.

The next high court opening would cause a titanic confirmation fight if it would allow a Republican president to cement conservative control of the court by replacing Ginsburg or if Obama could give Democratic appointees a working majority for the first time in decades by replacing Scalia or Kennedy.

The prospect of such dramatic change on the Supreme Court, along with the justices' strikingly high-profile election-year docket could heighten the judiciary's importance as an election issue, said Curt Levey, who heads the conservative Committee for Justice. The justices will hear arguments on Obama's health care overhaul in March and Arizona's immigration crackdown in April. The court also could soon decide whether to hear a Texas affirmative action case challenging the use of race as a factor in college admissions.

Even one new justice can produce dramatic change. Justice Samuel Alito replaced the more moderate Justice Sandra Day O'Connor and shifted the outcome in cases on abortion, campaign finance and other key issues, even though both were appointed by Republicans.

Openings on the circuit courts of appeals get much less attention, but those courts have the last say in most legal disputes that are appealed in the federal system. Only about 80 cases make it to the Supreme Court every year.

There are still more Republicans than Democrats on the circuit appeals courts and on the entire federal bench. But if Obama merely filled existing vacancies, Democratic appointees would be the majority on the influential court of appeals in Washington, where four current Supreme Court justices once served, and the Atlanta-based 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. Republicans also maintain their edge on the 10th Circuit in Denver only because two judgeships are empty.

Two other appeals courts on which Republicans have comfortable majorities could shift over the next four years. The Chicago-based 7th Circuit has four judges in their 70s who were chosen by Presidents Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush. In the New Orleans-based 5th Circuit, Judge Emilio Garza, a Republican appointee, will take senior status in August, a move that will open a seat while Garza takes a smaller caseload. Two Reagan picks in their 70s remain on the court.

Twelve Reagan appointees now in their 70s remain on circuit appeals courts or, in the case of Scalia and Kennedy, the Supreme Court.

Republican presidents, in recent decades, have been more aggressive than Democrats in filling those seats with younger, more like-minded lawyers.

Many nominees of Presidents Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush were in their early 40s, some even in their 30s, and with reputations as bold conservatives. By contrast, Obama has frustrated some liberal interest groups mainly by favoring older nominees over younger ones who might be the Democratic equivalents of some of the Reagan and Bush picks. Obama's two youngest appeals court nominees, Goodwin Liu and Caitlin Halligan, were stymied by Republican filibusters in the Senate.

The average age of Obama-nominated appeals court judges is more than 55 years old, higher than any president's going back to Jimmy Carter, according to the liberal interest group Alliance for Justice. The age of these judges matters in an era when presidents regularly look to the circuit appeals courts as the pool for Supreme Court candidates. Younger judges have a chance to develop a record that presidents can examine, yet still be young enough to be considered for the high court.

Alito and Justices Stephen Breyer, Sonia Sotomayor and Clarence Thomas all became appellate judges in their early 40s. Chief Justice John Roberts, a Republican appointee, and Justice Elena Kagan, a Democrat, would have been on the appeals court in Washington before their 40th birthdays had senators not blocked their confirmations. Roberts had to wait another decade before becoming an appeals court judge, while Kagan is the only justice who did not serve as an appellate judge.

Obama's picks have yet to surprise anyone with their decisions, said Levey, head of the conservative interest group. "So Obama's liberal critics can rest assured that if he's re-elected, his transformation of the appeals courts will make a big difference in the law."

Party labels do not always foretell a case's outcome. During recent challenges to the Obama administration's health care overhaul, Republican appeals court judges in Cincinnati and Washington cast deciding votes upholding the law, while a Democratic appointee in Atlanta voted to strike down the requirement that most people buy health insurance or pay a penalty.

Still, there is wide agreement that Obama picks have sharply altered the Richmond-based 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which had been dominated by conservative, Republican appointees.

After huge Mitt Romney victory in Nevada, GOP race turns to Colorado, Minnesota

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With votes from 71 percent of the Nevada precinct caucuses tallied, Romney had 48 percent, Gingrich 23 percent, Paul 19 percent and Santorum 11 percent.

020112romney.jpgView full sizeRepublican 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.

By KASIE HUNT and SHANNON McCAFFREY

LAS VEGAS (AP) — Now it's on to Colorado, Minnesota and Maine.

With back-to-back victories fueling him, Republican presidential front-runner Mitt Romney is looking toward the next states that hold GOP nominating contests as main rival Newt Gingrich brushes aside any talk of abandoning his White House bid -- all but ensuring the battle will stretch into the spring, if not beyond.

Shortly after losing big to Romney here, the former House speaker emphatically renewed his vow to campaign into the party convention in Tampa this summer. His goal, he said, was to "find a series of victories which by the end of the Texas primary will leave us at parity" with Romney by early April.

Gingrich continued to shrug off Nevada's caucus results in an appearance on Sunday on NBC's Meet the Press."

"This is the state he won last time, and he won it this time," he said of Romney. "Our goal is to get to Super Tuesday where we're in much more favorable territory."

But first, Gingrich must make it through Colorado and Minnesota, which both hold caucuses Tuesday. Maine follows on Saturday during a month that promises to be as plodding as January was rapid-fire in the presidential race. Romney will look to maintain his position of strength, if not build upon it, as his rivals continue working to derail him even as their options for doing so narrow with each victory he notches.

The former Massachusetts governor held a double-digit lead Sunday morning over his nearest pursuer as the totals mounted in Nevada, where fellow Mormons accounted for roughly a quarter of all caucus-goers. Gingrich and Texas Rep. Ron Paul vied for a distant second. Former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum trailed the field.

Santorum won the leadoff caucuses in Iowa and has trailed in the contests since then. He nonetheless insisted on Sunday that "our numbers are moving up continually."

"I think we're going to show improvement. This race is a long long way from being over," Santorum said on Fox News Sunday.

Ron PaulView full sizeRepublican presidential candidate Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, speaks during the South Carolina Republican presidential candidate debate Monday, Jan. 16, 2012, in Myrtle Beach, S.C. (AP Photo/David Goldman)

And on ABC's "This Week," Paul maintained the results show voters are still up for grabs.

"I get energized because I know there's a large number of people who are looking for another option," Paul said.

With votes from 71 percent of the precinct caucuses tallied, Romney had 48 percent, Gingrich 23 percent, Paul 19 percent and Santorum 11 percent. Turnout was down significantly from 2008, when Romney also won the state's GOP caucuses.

Romney's victory capped a week that began with his double-digit win in the Florida primary. That contest was as intense as Nevada's caucuses were sedate -- so quiet that they produced little television advertising, no candidate debates and only a modest investment of time by the contenders.

A total of 28 Republican National Convention delegates were at stake in caucuses held across the sprawling state. Romney won at least 10, Gingrich at least four, Paul at least three and Santorum at least two. Eight were still to be determined.

That gives Romney a total of 97, including endorsements from Republican National Committee members who will automatically attend the convention and can support any candidate they choose. Gingrich has 30, Santorum 16 and Paul seven. It will take 1,144 delegates to win the Republican nomination.

Preliminary results of a poll of Nevada Republicans entering their caucuses showed that nearly half said the most important consideration in their decision was a candidate's ability to defeat President Barack Obama this fall, a finding in line with other states.

About one-quarter of those surveyed said they were Mormon, roughly the same as in 2008, when Romney won with more than a majority of the vote in a multi-candidate field.

The entrance poll was conducted by Edison Research for The Associated Press at 25 randomly selected caucus sites. It included 1,553 interviews and had a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 4 percentage points.

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