Quantcast
Channel: News
Viewing all 62489 articles
Browse latest View live

Obituaries today: Patricia McManus-Handler was traveler, reader, dancer

$
0
0

Obituaries from The Republican.

040812_patricia_handler.jpgPatricia McManus-Handler

Patricia A. (Corbiere) McManus-Handler, 65, of Suffield, passed away on Thursday. She was born and grew up in North Adams, and graduated from high school in North Adams. She had lived in Springfield, Marietta, Ga., Windsor Locks, Conn., and Suffield. She obtained an associate's degree in business from Asnuntuck Community College in Enfield. She had a deep appreciation for nature, loved animals, and enjoyed traveling throughout the United States. She was an avid reader, a skilled dancer and had been a figure skater in her youth.

Obituaries from The Republican:


Wall Street stocks dive, Dow Jones industrial average closes below 13,000 for 1st time in a month

$
0
0

Investors had a 3-day weekend to brood over disappointing job growth in March; when they got back to work and delivered their verdict, it wasn't good.

By PALLAVI GOGOI | AP Business Writer

aol logo.JPGAOL stock shot up 43 percent after the company agreed to sell hundreds of patents and patent applications to Microsoft for a little more than $1 billion. The company plans to return some of the cash to shareholders.

NEW YORK — Investors had a three-day weekend to brood over disappointing job growth in March. When they got back to work Monday and delivered their verdict, it wasn't good.

Stocks closed sharply lower, sending the Dow Jones industrial average and the Standard & Poor's 500 index to only their second four-day losing streak this year.

The Dow finished down 130.55 points at 12,929.59, its first close below 13,000 since March 12. The S&P ended the day off 15.88 points at 1,382.20. The Nasdaq composite closed down 33.42 at 3,047.08.

The Dow and S&P had four consecutive trading days of declines at the end of January, but the losses then were smaller. The Dow lost 124 points over that stretch. It has lost about 330 this time.

Stocks had their best first quarter since 1998 but have stumbled in April. Last week, the Federal Reserve suggested that it is disinclined to take further steps to help the economy, and the European debt crisis flared in Spain.

Then on Friday, with the stock market closed for Good Friday, the government said the country added just 120,000 jobs in March, half the pace from December through February.

After a long weekend to think it over, investors sold stocks broadly. All 10 industry groups in the S&P 500 fell on Monday, with financial stocks the worst performers. Bank of America fell 3.2 percent, and Citigroup was off 2.4 percent.

Of the 30 stocks that make up the Dow, only two, McDonald's and Hewlett-Packard, finished higher. Traders at least didn't sell in great numbers: Volume on the New York Stock Exchange was 3.1 billion shares, the lightest in almost a month. Most school districts in New York and New Jersey are closed this week for spring week.

Investors bought bonds, sending the yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note to 2.04 percent, down 0.02 percentage point from Friday. Yields also fell for longer-term U.S. bonds.

Rex Macey, chief investment officer at Wilmington Trust Investment Advisors, cautioned that the jobs report reflected only one disappointing month. Like a doctor, he said, "I'd order up more tests before declaring this as a trend."

The next test will come quickly. Alcoa, the aluminum company, reports its first-quarter earnings Tuesday, the first of the Dow 30 to weigh in. Two major banks, JPMorgan Chase and Wells Fargo, report Friday.

Analysts are expecting quarterly earnings to decline slightly compared with a year earlier. That would break a streak of nine quarters of earnings growth since 2009.

Elsewhere Monday, the price of crude oil fell 1.9 percent, and gold and platinum rose a little less than 1 percent. The euro rose to $1.3116 late Monday, up about two-tenths of a penny from Friday.

Among other stocks making moves:

• AOL shot up 43 percent after the company agreed to sell hundreds of patents and patent applications to Microsoft for a little more than $1 billion. The company plans to return some of the cash to shareholders.

• Avon fell 3.1 percent after the struggling beauty products company named a former executive at Johnson & Johnson, Sherilyn McCoy, to be its CEO. Investors read it as a signal that Avon will fend off acquisition overtures.

• Sherwin-Williams Co. gained 1 percent after the company raised its forecast for first-quarter profit following a 20 percent surge in sales at its paint stores.

Springfield-based trade group to plant tree near City Hall, hand out saplings

$
0
0

The Paperboard Packaging Council was the 1st entity to offer to donate money last June to the City of Springfield to help replace trees lost to the tornado.

tornado strikes Court Square and Six Corners in Springfield06.01.2011 | The Republican file photo by Patrick Johnson | SPRINGFIELD – Two people check out damage to Court Square after the June 1 tornado hit. On Wednesday, the Paperboard Packaging Council will plant a new tree to replace some of those lost last year.

SPRINGFIELD – The Paperboard Packaging Council, which is headquartered in the Sovereign Bank building on Court Square downtown, will assist representatives of the city’s forestry department and ReGreen Springfield in planting a Princeton elm tree at the far end of Court Square Park at 10 a.m. Wednesday.

After the event, members of the Paperboard Packaging Council will be handing out tree saplings free to the community.

The Paperboard Packaging Council was the first entity to step forward to offer to donate money last June to the City of Springfield to help replace some of the trees lost in last year’s devastating tornado.

The tree planting coincides with the Council’s annual Trees Into Cartons, Cartons Into Trees program, in which PPC members from across the country and Canada help to educate students and their community about the environmental benefits of trees and the importance of recycling.

The tree-planting site will be on the green space between Columbus Avenue and Interstate 91.

Massachusetts lawmakers juggle concerns over MBTA fare hikes, regional equity

$
0
0

Rep. William Straus said the Patrick administration’s plan to use a $51 million surplus in the state’s vehicle inspection trust fund to balance the debt-laden MBTA budget fails to take into account money contributed by drivers outside Greater Boston.

040512 the t mbta green line trolley.JPGAn MBTA train pulls into a stop on Commonweath Avenue near Boston University in Boston. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola)

By MATT MURPHY

BOSTON — A key House lawmaker on Monday expressed some concern about tapping a statewide fund to bail out the MBTA, raising the possibility of diverting additional dollars to regional transit authorities that could force the T to reconsider higher fare hikes or deeper service cuts.

Rep. William Straus, a Mattapoisett Democrat and co-chair of the Committee on Transportation, said that the Patrick administration’s plan to use a $51 million surplus in the state’s vehicle inspection trust fund to balance the debt-laden MBTA budget fails to take into account the money contributed by drivers outside of Greater Boston.

“That’s a focus I’d like to see, which is a little different than what the governor has proposed,” Straus told reporters after a three-hour hearing on the governor’s bill. “If the logical reason that justifies this money in particular going to the MBTA is the benefit that it provides for air quality improvements as a mass transit agency, then I think it’s hard to deny to the RTA’s, whether they’re looking at fare hikes or not, the similar benefit that people all around the state are contributing when they get their cars inspected.”

Straus said he did not have a specific amount in mind to help regional transit authorities, but said he was mindful that the Legislature’s ultimate decision could prompt the MBTA to raise fares even more than they did last week.

The MBTA board approved a budget that combined a 23 percent fare hike with some service reductions as part of its plan to close a $159 million budget gap. The use of the fees is among $61 million in additional reforms requiring legislative approval to avoid a bigger impact on riders.

william straus mug.jpgWilliam Straus

“There’s no question that what the Legislature ultimately does on this question affects the viability of their overall plan,” Straus said.

The Joint Committee on Transportation, co-chaired by Straus and Sen. Thomas McGee, held a three-hour hearing on Monday to consider Gov. Patrick’s proposal (H 4011) to balance the MBTA budget, in part, with $51 million in surplus funds expected to accumulate in the vehicle inspection trust fund before the end of fiscal 2013.

The money in that fund, which accrues as drivers pay the $29 annual fee to have their vehicles inspected for emissions, is typically spent on air quality projects. The Department of Environmental Protection receives 15 percent of collected fees, and would take in about $9 million from the $60 million surplus as well.

Transportation Secretary Richard Davey testified for over an hour, fielding an array of questions from lawmakers about aspects of the 190-section bill that goes beyond solving the MBTA’s budget woes.

He continually reminded legislators that while the proposal on the table would balance the MBTA budget for fiscal 2013, a long-term funding solution would be necessary to avoid the same scenario next year when the T is expected to face a $110 million deficit.

“Really, what we’ve proposed, this is the last rabbit out of the hat and next year we’re going to be back if we don’t have a long term solve with cuts in service and fare increases again. This year is important. We need the help to get through this year, and we’re going to need the Legislature’s help for a long-term fix as well,” Davey said.

Defending the appropriateness of tapping a statewide fund to bail out the Boston-centered MBTA, Davey said that 75 percent of the fees deposited into the trust fund come from drivers within the MBTA’s service territory.

Richard Davey 2010.jpgRichard Davey

“Poor air quality knows no boundaries so I think we have a collective interest in the Commonwealth to ensure the T’s success,” Davey said.

Davey said that if the Legislature chose to divert 25 percent of the trust fund surplus to RTAs, the T would have to go back to the drawing board to close the new budget gap.

“We’d have to (close the gap) through either additional fare increases or service cuts so we don’t have a contingency in place. We’d have to go back to our board and talk about how we could close that. It’s a position we prefer not to be in,” Davey said.

Both Straus and McGee indicated that the committee would likely break Patrick’s bill into pieces, focusing first on the sections that directly impact the MBTA budget, including the trust fund transfer and a plan to seek federal Medicaid reimbursements for eligible passengers using the RIDE, a paratransit van service. The chairman said it could be three to four weeks before a bill emerges from committee for consideration by the House and Senate.

The 74-page bill filed by Patrick also proposes increased penalties for fare evasion, authorization for MassDOT to advertise on spaces such as the Registry of Motor Vehicles website, and a restructuring of the Rose Kennedy Greenway Conservancy board.

Patrick has proposed making his secretaries of transportation and energy and environmental affairs voting members of the board, while Rep. Peter Durant on Monday filed legislation in response to reports of high executive salaries to eliminate the conservancy’s control of the park in favor of an unpaid management board operating under the Department of Conservation and Recreation.

The testimony heard Monday at the hearing was near universal in support of the administration plan to direct surplus vehicle inspection money to help the MBTA, though some senior advocates and transportation organizations urged the Legislature to do more by tapping into the more than $1 billion in the state’s “rainy day” account to avoid the cuts and fare hikes on the table.

Rafael Mares, of the Conservation Law Foundation, suggested using state reserves or borrowing money to provide additional resources to regional transit authorities and the MBTA.

“Those are not things you do lightly, but this is an emergency,” Mares said.

Despite expectations that the House will follow Gov. Patrick’s lead and propose tapping the “rainy day” fund for $300 million to $400 million to balance the overall state budget when it presents its plan on Wednesday, Straus said he and McGee were not considering using the fund for the MBTA at this time, noting the House rejected the use of reserves during a recent debate over boosting Chapter 90 road and bridge repair funds for cities and towns.

The Massachusetts Senior Action Council argued that seniors and the disabled are being disproportionately hit by fare hikes and service cuts, particularly those who use the RIDE where the standard fare will increase from $2 to $4. Protestors who have been sleeping on the State House steps since last week also blamed costly interest rate swap agreements for the T’s financial problems, calling on lawmakers to force the banks to renegotiate the terms of the debt payments.

Lawmakers on the committee also had parochial concerns in mind. Calling her constituents “the forgotten ones,” Sen. Jennifer Flanagan said, “The people who ride on my line, the Fitchburg line, have the longest ride, and we have the least amount of service. I do appreciate the work that you’ve done. I really hope that when we consider additional fare increases and cuts it’s important to note how long it takes us to get here,” Flanagan said.

Sen. Robert Hedlund raised questions about ferry service and the level of state subsidy for different modes of public transportation. Davey said that recommended fare hikes for ferry service will make that the least subsidized public transit option. The RIDE, of the other hand, will generate just $2 million to $3 million in fares this year for a $100 million service, he said.

While Davey said the Federal Aviation Administration would likely have a problem with transferring control of the ferries to the Massachusetts Port Authority, he said discussions are ongoing about giving Massport greater control over the Silver Line.

“The great tragedy of all of this is what we heard from our customers is that they want more. There’s not a company on the planet that wouldn’t like this problem. Unfortunately, we can’t deliver.” Davey said.

When Rep. Michael Finn, D-West Springfield, raised concerns that the Springfield regional transit authority is also looking at raising fares and cutting service without momentum for a state bailout, Davey said he has directed his staff to try to find $500,000 to $700,000 in one-time funds that could be used in Springfield to offset cuts.

Asked after the hearing about the prospect of the Legislature agreeing to the administration’s budget plan, Davey said, “I’m hopeful.”

Westfield State University student Lincoln Blackie collecting signatures for 6th Hampden state rep run

$
0
0

Blackie, who would oppose Michael J. Finn, D-West Springfield, was an intern in U.S. Sen. Scott Brown's office in Washington.

WEST SPRINGFIELD – Westfield State University senior and city resident Lincoln A. Blackie is collecting signatures on nomination papers to run this fall for West Springfield’s state representative’s seat.

2012 lincoln blackie mug.JPGLincoln Blackie

However, he said during a recent interview that even though he will submit them to the Town Clerk’s Office by the May 1 deadline to return nomination papers, he has yet to decided if he will run against incumbent state Rep. Michael J. Finn, D-West Springfield.

The 22-year-old Blackie said he already has about 200 signatures, with only 150 signatures of registered voters required to be on the ballot. The West Springfield High School graduate said he is spending lots of time knocking on doors, meeting people and listening to their concerns.

Like him, Blackie said, residents are concerned about the poor state of the economy.

“What I’m hearing is the American Dream is slipping away,” Blackie said. People are no longer sure they can get a job, acquire a home and retire in comfort, he said.

Blackie said he is concerned about young people graduating from college who cannot find jobs and older people who cannot afford to retire after 40 or 50 years in the workforce.

“I represent a generation that is coming out of school that can’t buy a job,” Blackie said.

Blackie, who is not enrolled in any political party, worked as an intern in U.S. Sen. Scott Brown’s Washington, D.C., office two summers ago. He said he learned the importance of constituency service and listening to people.

“Clearly, something is not working. Small businesses create most of the jobs and economic opportunities,” Blackie stated in a press release. “Government should support job creation and provide incentives for real growth, not burden us with more taxes, debt and regulations.”

The 6th Hampden District seat Blackie is eyeing consists of West Springfield and parts of Chicopee and Springfield.

Westfield police officer involved in fatal shooting granted leave as investigation continues

$
0
0

The investigation into the shooting is being conducted by state police detectives assigned to the Hampden County District Attorney's Office.

040712_westfield-shooting_scene.JPGThe building at 128 Elm Street in downtown Westfield, where a man was shot by police after he had stabbed one of the officers while they tryed to arrest him after he broke into Apartment 11, which is on the top floor, where a woman said to be his ex- wife lived.

WESTFIELD — The police officer who shot and killed a 28-year-old Southampton man who had just stabbed another officer early Saturday has been given administrative leave in order to come to grips with the shooting, Westfield police said.

Westfield police as yet are not identifying either officer involved in the 2 a.m. shooting in an apartment at 128 Elm St. that resulted in the death of suspect Douglas Musto.

Musto was shot by one officer after he stabbed another officer in the leg.

Both officers are out of work and it is unclear when either will return to duty, said police Capt. Michael McCabe.

One has to recover from the physical injury of a stab wound to the leg, while the officer who fired the shots has been placed on administrative leave, he said.

McCabe said the second officer made the request to go on administrative leave in order to regroup.

McCabe said the department is handling the leave issue somewhat delicately, partly to respect the officer’s privacy and partly to avoid giving the impression that the officers mishandled the situation at 128 Elm St.

“We don’t want it to seem to the officer that it is punitive,” he said.

According to accounts from police, the officers were responding to a 911 call from a woman who said her ex-husband was trying to break down the door to her apartment

According to Westfield police, Musto pulled a knife on an officer and refused to be handcuffed. The officer was attempting to handcuff him as a precaution while police attempted to sort out the complaint.

When Musto refused to drop the knife, the first officer used a stun gun to stun him. But as he released the electrical charge to place Musto in handcuffs, Musto was able to grab the knife and stab the officer in the leg.

As they struggled for the knife, the second officer on the scene shot Musto.

McCabe said longtime Westfield officers cannot recall the last time an officer was involved in the fatal shooting of a suspect. While the department has policies in place for how to proceed in the aftermath of an officer-involved shooting, no one on the department recalls having to use them.

“This is brand-new territory for us,” he said.

The case is being investigated as a police-involved homicide, and as such is now in the hands of the state police detectives assigned to the Hampden County District Attorney’s office.

There is no internal investigation by Westfield police, although McCabe said if one is necessary at the conclusion of the state police investigation, it would be conducted.

mark g. mastroianni.JPGHampden District Attorney Mark G. Mastroianni

Hampden District Attorney Mark G. Mastroianni said his office is in charge of all homicide investigations in the county, outside of Springfield, and also investigates all cases in which an officer fires a weapon. Each condition applies in this case, he said.

“It’s completely standard for us to be looking at it,” Mastroianni said.

Mastroianni said the investigation now will now focus on interviewing witnesses, investigating the forensic and ballistic evidence from the scene, and waiting for the medical examiner’s autopsy and toxicology report. The medical examiner's portion is expected to take several weeks, he said.

“We’re just trying to get a complete picture of the incident,” he said.

Mastroianni emphasized that his office investigating the shooting does not indicate there are any problems or “red flags” with accounts of what happened.

He said his initial impression so far in the investigation its that the officers use of force was reasonable given the circumstances.

“But I’ve got to look deeper than just the initial impressions,” he said.

2 firefighters die in Philadelphia warehouse fire

$
0
0

The firefighters were killed when an adjacent furniture store they were inspecting collapsed, burying them in a pile of debris.

040912 philadelphia fire.JPGFirefighters greet each other in the aftermath of a fire in a warehouse on York Street near Kensington Avenue in Philadelphia on Monday, April 9, 2012. Two firefighters died after a wall collapsed on them while they fought the massive early-morning blaze. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)

By PATRICK WALTERS

PHILADELPHIA — Two firefighters who were battling a massive blaze at an abandoned warehouse Monday were killed when an adjacent furniture store they were inspecting collapsed, burying them in a pile of debris, authorities said.

It took about two hours to extract the bodies of Lt. Robert Neary, 60, and firefighter Daniel Sweeney, 25, because of all the debris, Fire Commissioner Lloyd Ayers said. Two other firefighters were rescued and taken to a hospital for treatment of non-life-threatening injuries.

"We are deeply saddened by the loss of these two firefighters," Mayor Michael Nutter said. "It just hurts a great, great deal."

The blaze in the city's Kensington section started around 3:15 a.m. and quickly spread. Dozens of nearby homes were evacuated and the firefighters were trying to make sure that the blaze was out at the furniture store when a wall and roof collapsed, Ayers said.

"They were actually going back in to check and ensure that the fire was out," the commissioner said, adding that crews got to them as quickly as they could but that the rescue effort was arduous.

Both firefighters were respected members of the department and had been commended for a long list of rescues over the years, Ayers said.

Neary, a 37-year veteran of the department, served in the Army reserves from 1972 to 1982 and worked as a city police officer before joining the fire department. He is survived by his wife, two grown sons and a grown daughter.

He was a mentor to young firefighters like Sweeney and had great instincts while fighting fires, said Timothy McShea, vice president of the firefighters union.

"He was just a great guy, knew the job very well," McShea said. "He's like one of these old school guys. They just have a second sense about them."

Sweeney, who was single, is survived by his parents. His father is recently retired fire Capt. David Sweeney.

"He was a good young lad," McShea said. "Danny was a young, aggressive firefighter."

The cause of the blaze was not immediately determined.

City officials said the warehouse property owner had been cited three times since November and a fourth citation was issued after a March 29 inspection following a community meeting. Officials said the city was preparing to take the owners to court as required after the first three violations, and that separately, a sheriff's sale was expected this summer because of unpaid tax and water bills.

Fran Burns, commissioner of the city's Licenses and Inspections department, said York Street Property Development had a zoning permit good through July 2012 for an 81-unit development.

"This isn't a landowner or property owner we couldn't find; this is someone who had a very active interest in the property and has an active and open zoning permit for development," Burns said. "I don't understand, when you have a zoning permit for an 81-unit development, that you don't understand your responsibility to have a secure property."

Everett Gillison, deputy mayor for public safety, said he will be talking to the district attorney about whether a criminal negligence prosecution is warranted.

Gillison said city officials were to meet Tuesday with attorneys for the owners, whom they identified as Nahman Lichtenstein, along with Yechiel and Michael Lichtenstein of Brooklyn, N.Y.-based YML Realty Holdings. A message left for the law firm representing YML Realty Holdings, which officials said was connected to perhaps 34 other properties in the city, was not immediately returned Monday evening. Nor was a message left for Nahman Lichtenstein.

Michael Lichtenstein told the blog Hidden Daily Philadelphia last month that a development planned for the warehouse had stalled because of the economy. He said he wasn't sure who was responsible for managing and maintaining the property, but that "the building is being kept up."

Residents tried to seal up the building themselves, cleaned litter around the premises and reported their concerns to the city over the past year, said Jeff Carpineta, president of the East Kensington Neighbors Association.

They also wrote a letter several months ago to an attorney listed in public records as the contact for the owners, Carpineta said. The structure was repeatedly left open and unsecure, he said.

"The building was becoming an anxiety because a lot of us were concerned about the building burning down," he said.

Carpineta blasted city officials for not taking the initiative to secure the premises. The cost would have been minuscule compared with the damage wrought by the blaze, he said.

"At what point does the city say, 'We need to do what's right'?" Carpineta said.

As the early-morning fire spread from the warehouse, flames poured from the windows as crews doused water on it from all sides. Hot embers from the main fire blew to nearby structures, causing small fires that damaged six homes.

Fire trucks lined the nearby streets for hours after the blaze was brought under control. Bricks and debris were scattered on the roads surrounding the fire scene, where much of the warehouse had collapsed. Many of its outer walls had crumpled to the ground by the time the fire was extinguished.

Police began banging on the doors of nearby homes shortly after the fire was reported. No injuries were reported among the displaced.

The Red Cross of Southeastern Pennsylvania set up a shelter and offered aid to about two dozen people who had been forced from their homes. By 10:30 a.m., most had left to see if their homes had been damaged.

Twenty-nine minutes after the fire was brought under control, an alarm went out for the trapped firefighters. Ayers said the department last lost a firefighter in 2006. The last time it lost multiple firefighters on a single call was 2004. Nutter ordered flags in the city to be flown at half-staff for 30 days.

"We're getting a lot of support, just as we give service to our citizens, they're serving us right now," Ayers said.

Associated Press writers Kathy Matheson and Ron Todt contributed to this report.

Sergei Khrushchev to speak on space race at New England Air Museum

$
0
0

Khrushchev, the son of former Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev, is a physicist and engineer and a senior fellow at the Brown University Watson Institute for International Studies.

WINDSOR LOCKS, Conn. – Sergei Khrushchev, son of former Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev, is coming to the New England Air Museum to talk about the Space Race, the competition between the Soviet Union and the United States for supremacy in space exploration.

Khrushchev will speak at a dinner event on April 28.

Khrushchev, an American citizen, is a physicist and engineer and a senior fellow at the Brown University Watson Institute for International Studies. As a historian of the Cold War, Khrushchev is knowledgeable about the history of Soviet missiles and space development.

From 1958 to 1968, Khrushchev was instrumental in the development of the Proton Rocket, the world’s largest space booster. The Proton Rocket first went into service in 1965 and is still in use today, deploying satellites and serving the International Space Station.

Michael Speciale, executive director of the New England Air Museum, said Khrushchev, who spoke to a sold-out crowd at the museum two years ago, is fascinating.

“His dad was premier of the Soviet Union at the height of the Cold War, when the U.S. and Soviet Union were bitter enemies and the Soviet Union was perceived as the bogeyman,” Speciale said. “He’s intimately familiar with what went on in the Soviet Union when his father was premier. He was a teenager at the time, and he accompanied his father on two of his three trips to the U.S., and he himself got involved.”

Now that the U.S. space shuttle program is over, the only way the U.S. can get anything to the International Space Station is by way of the Proton Rocket.

Speciale said learning more about the Space Race will be especially interesting to those who lived through that era.

“The Space Race kind of made an indelible impression on people’s minds,” he said. “The Soviet Union was the first country to put a satellite into space, and everyone in this country was sort of shocked.”

The region’s aerospace industry, such as Hamilton Sundstrand, has also had a hand in making equipment used in the space program, so Speciale said he expects interest from the business community as well.

“The topic is very important, and we’re really honored to have him here,” Speciale said. “He delivers a lot of lectures every year, world-wide.”

Doors open for the event at 6 p.m., and the lecture will begin at 6:30. Khrushchev is expected to speak for about 45 minutes to an hour, and then will take questions from the audience.

Khrushchev’s book, “Nikita Khrushchev and the Creation of a Superpower,” will be available for purchase and autographing at a cost of $32 each (cash only).

Tickets to the event are $35 for museum members and $50 for non-members. Tickets must be purchased in advance by calling (860) 623-3305.

For information on the museum, located near Bradley International Airport, visit www.neam.org.


UMass researchers solve gecko superpower mystery, invent 'Geckskin'

$
0
0

The UMass discovery has led to the invention of "Geckskin," a fabric-like device with amazing holding power they hope will have significant commercial appeal.

022108 gecko.JPGA leopard gecko

AMHERST – It’s one of the mysteries of the natural world that a gecko, which may weigh a mere five ounces, can produce enough adhesive force in its feet so that this tiny lizard could scale a wall carrying a nine-pound weight.

Now, researchers at University of Massachusetts in Amherst have unlocked that mystery. And that has led to the invention of “Geckskin,” a fabric-like device with amazing holding power they hope will have significant commercial appeal.

“It is totally different than anything on the market,” said Alfred J. Crosby, a polymer scientist and one of the team of researchers who developed the material.

“Our Geckskin device is about 16 inches square, about the size of an index card, and can hold a maximum force of about 700 pounds while adhering to a smooth surface, such as glass,” he said.

Doctoral candidate Michael D. Bartlett in Crosby’s polymer science and engineering lab is the lead author of their article describing the discovery in the current online issue of Advanced Materials. The group also includes biologist Duncan J. Irschick, who has studied the gecko’s climbing and clinging abilities for over 20 years, and Daniel R. King, a doctoral candidate in Crosby’s lab.

Previous efforts to replicate the great adhesive power of gecko feet were based on the qualities of microscopic hairs on their toes, called setae. However, that strategy was unsuccessful when used on a larger scale. The UMass researchers demonstrated that setae were not required to achieve strong adhesion.

Geckskin “literally looks like a piece of fabric with a rubber coating,” said Crosby.

However, the material is not sticky, the way tape or glue is sticky. Instead, the material adheres to another surface because of the “van der Waal forces” between molecules on the two surfaces, which is the electrostatic attraction of the molecules on the two surfaces for each other.

Van der Waal forces are why a vinyl decal adheres to a smooth glass or metal surface without being sticky. However, Geckskin is capable of “many many times” that force, Crosby said. In addition, Geckskin can be used, easily detached and then reused numerous times.

Unlike Velcro, Geckskin does not require a special material on the other surface to adhere.The UMass researchers are investigating commercialization of the material, Crosby said. “There’s been significant interest.”

Because it was developed at UMass, the university will share in any royalties. The work was supported by the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) through a subcontract to Draper Laboratories, plus UMass-Amherst research funds.

Nibbles Woodaway, Providence's iconic big blue bug, gets a makeover

$
0
0

New England Pest Control owner Stephan Goldman said he's changing his company's name to Big Blue Bug Solutions to honor the blue behemoth

040912 nibbles woodaway providence big blue_bug.jpgA workman maneuvers near a giant blue termite, an iconic landmark for New England Pest Control, perched on the company's office in Providence, R.I., Monday, April 9, 2012. The company is renaming itself Big Blue Bug Solutions after its corporate namesake. Company owner Stephan Goldman said the new name makes sense because the termite is better known than his business. (AP Photo/David Klepper)

By DAVID KLEPPER

PROVIDENCE, R.I. — After 32 years of surveying Interstate 95 from his perch atop a pest control business, Rhode Island's big blue bug is getting a promotion — and a makeover to go with it.

The towering termite named Nibbles Woodaway now sports a necktie, a sartorial step up befitting his new stature as corporate namesake. New England Pest Control owner Stephan Goldman said Monday he's changing his company's name to Big Blue Bug Solutions to honor the blue behemoth that long ago achieved iconic status in Rhode Island.

"Everyone knows the big blue bug. The bug is more famous than the name of my company," Goldman said after unveiling Nibbles' new neckwear, a spotted tie that nicely matches his compound eyes.

The name change comes as two of Goldman's sons prepare to take over the business that his father started in 1935. Nibbles arrived in 1980, after the company moved to its present location south of downtown Providence and was looking for a way to advertise.

At 4,000 pounds and easily visible from a busy stretch of interstate, Nibbles makes a convincing pitchman. The big bug made the list of quirky attractions compiled by "Roadside America" and scored a cameo in the movie "Dumb and Dumber." Couples have gotten engaged under the big bug. One woman had Nibbles tattooed on her leg.

"You ask anyone — where is the blue bug? And they know where it is," said Providence Mayor Angel Taveras, who rode a lift to the company's roof on Monday to get a close look at Nibbles.

Nibbles' appearance changes through the year, boasting reindeer antlers at Christmas, Uncle Sam's red, white and blue top hat on July 4, or a baseball cap from the minor league Pawtucket Red Sox. The 58-foot-long insect is built from steel and fiberglass.

Nibbles was supposed to be purple, which Goldman said is the actual color of termites when viewed under a microscope. But the sun faded the paint to blue. Good thing, too: Big purple bug doesn't sound as good, he said.

Goldman initially worried that Rhode Island residents would call Nibbles an eyesore but said he's never received any complaints. He said one woman told him she made sure to include a ride past the enormous insect whenever taking her young children to the doctor or dentist.

"They wouldn't want to go, but she'd say 'We can drive by the big blue bug on the way home,'" he said. "And that did it."

Autism research may be about to bear fruit after $1 billion spent in past decade

$
0
0

Some in the field say they are seeing the beginning of a wave of scientific reports that should strengthen some theories, jettison others and perhaps even herald new drugs.

By MIKE STOBBE | AP Medical Writer

irva hertz-picciotto autism researcher.jpgIrva Hertz-Picciotto, a researcher at the University of California, Davis, is leading a study into what sparks autism disorders. More than $1 billion has been spent over the past decade searching for autism's causes. (AP Photo/UC Davis Health System)

ATLANTA — More than $1 billion has been spent over the past decade researching autism. In some ways, the search for its causes looks like a long-running fishing expedition, with a focus on everything from genetics to the age of the father, the weight of the mother, and how close a child lives to a freeway.

That perception may soon change. Some in the field say they are seeing the beginning of a wave of scientific reports that should strengthen some theories, jettison others and perhaps even herald new drugs.

"I do think over the next three to five years we'll be able to paint a much clearer picture of how genes and environmental factors combine" to cause autism, said Geraldine Dawson, a psychologist who is chief science officer for the advocacy group Autism Speaks.

The effort has been infused with new urgency by a recent federal report that found autism disorders are far more common than was previously understood, affecting 1 in 88 U.S. children. Better diagnosis is largely responsible for the new estimate, but health officials said there may actually be more cases of autism, too.

If autism's causes remain a mystery, "you're not going to be able to stop this increase," said Irva Hertz-Picciotto, a researcher at the University of California, Davis who is leading a closely watched study into what sparks autism disorders.

In the past week, a spate of studies released during National Autism Awareness Month has offered tantalizing new information about potential causes. Research published in the journal Nature widened the understanding of the genetic roots of some cases and confirmed the elevated risks for children with older fathers. Another study, released online Monday in Pediatrics, suggested maternal obesity may play a role.

To be sure, finding the causes of autism — an umbrella term for a variety of disorders that delay children socially or intellectually — remains daunting. The causes are believed to be complicated, and not necessarily the same for each child. Some liken autism to cancer — a small word for a wide range of illnesses. In many cases, autism can be blamed on both genetic problems that load the gun and other factors that pull the trigger.

It has been a growing public concern for two decades, as studies have found it to be more and more prevalent. The U.S. government dramatically increased funding for autism research in the last decade, and now budgets about $170 million a year through the National Institutes of Health. That's only about a quarter of what NIH will spend on breast cancer research and $50 million less than what it will spend on asthma.

But more than a half-dozen foundations and autism advocacy groups have been adding to the pot, putting annual research spending in recent years at more than $300 million. About a third of that has been devoted to finding autism's causes.

The lion's share of money for finding a cause has been spent on genetics, which so far experts believe can account for roughly 20 percent of cases. The earliest success was in the early 1990s and involved the discovery of the genetic underpinnings of Fragile X syndrome, a rare condition that accounts for just 2 to 4 percent of autism cases but is the most common form of inherited intellectual disability in boys.

The focus on genetics has been bolstered by dramatic improvements in gene mapping as well as the bioengineering of mice with autism symptoms. Dozens of risk genes have been identified, and a half-dozen drug companies are said to be working on developing new treatments.

"We've made some very significant progress on the genetics end of this search," said Dr. Thomas Insel, director of the National Institute of Mental Health.

Scientists have used autistic mice to test new drugs. Among the most promising is a small, white, strawberry-flavored pill that is so experimental it doesn't have a name. Developed by a Massachusetts company called Seaside Therapeutics Inc., the drug is aimed at a problem area in the brains of autistic children, where neurons connect and conduct signals through the nervous system.

It's a bit like the way tree-hopping ants might cross the twig ends of one tree branch to another. In Fragile X syndrome, scientists have noted the branches are thinner and the twigs too numerous. The experimental drug thins the twigs and strengthens the branches, allowing a more solid and centralized bridge.

The same problem hasn't been as visible in other types of autism, but many believe the phenomenon is somewhat similar.

The drug was deemed successful in mice and is now being tested in children and adults. In small, early studies, the drug made a striking difference in small groups of Fragile X children, causing hermit-like youngsters to start hanging out in the kitchen to chat with their mothers, said Dr. Paul Wang, Seaside's vice president of clinical development.

Now it is being tried in a preliminary study of about 150 children with a range of other autism disorders, including Asperger's. The results are expected to be presented at a scientific conference in the next year.

"It's going to be an exciting time, we hope," when those results come in, said Dawson, from Autism Speaks.

But even genetics enthusiasts acknowledge that genes are only part of the answer. Studies of identical twins have shown that autism can occur in one and not the other, meaning something outside a child's DNA is triggering the disorder in many cases. Some cases may be entirely due to other causes, Dawson said.

That broad "other" category means "environmental" influences — not necessarily chemicals, but a grab bag of outside factors that include things like the age of the father at conception and illnesses and medications the mother had while pregnant.

For years, the best-known environmental theory involved childhood vaccines, prompted by a flawed 1998 British study that has been thoroughly discredited. Dozens of later studies have found no link between vaccines and autism.

But there are other possible candidates. In all cases, these are "association" studies — they don't prove cause and effect. They merely find connections between certain factors and autism. And sometimes these conclusions can be skewed by other things researchers failed to account for. Some study results expected within a year:

— Hertz-Picciotto's study of 1,600 children in Northern California is comparing autistic children, youngsters with other developmental disabilities, and those who have no such diagnoses. Some results have been released already, including the recent finding that suggests a link between autism and a mother's obesity. An earlier part of the study found that children born to mothers living less than two blocks from a freeway were twice as likely to have autism — presumably because of auto exhaust and air pollution, the researchers speculated.

—A Centers for Disease Control and Prevention study involves 2,700 families nationwide. The researchers are interviewing parents and poring over medical records to look for common threads among autistic families, as well as doing genetics tests and checking hair samples for mercury. Much of the focus is on illnesses, medications, nutritional deficiencies or other problems during pregnancy.

—A study by Pennsylvania researchers involves 1,700 families in various regions of the country. Scientists are doing brain-imaging to look for changes over time in the brains of infants who have an older autistic sibling.

—A large Scandinavian study is examining patient registries in six countries for prenatal risk factors.

As study findings are reported, researchers are hoping to see repetition — confirmation, that is — that certain factors are playing significant roles.

Even so, scientists are still casting nets.

Said Coleen Boyle, a CDC official overseeing research into children's developmental disabilities: "We're at the infancy of just understanding how these factors relate to autism."

DA: Massachusetts man kills wife, self

$
0
0

Neighbors told reporters the couple was well liked and there were no signs of problems.

HOPKINTON — The Middlesex District Attorney says a man shot his wife to death then killed himself in their Hopkinton house.

District Attorney Gerard Leone said 43-year-old Todd Vogel and 40-year-old Lori Levangie did not have any children.

Leone said police were called to 141 Hayward St. at about 9 a.m. Monday after a co-worker of Vogel found the two bodies close to each other near a back door, both with obvious gunshot wounds.

Police said there have been no reports of domestic violence at the home.

The house, a brown one-family Cape, is located in a quiet neighborhood next to a lake. Neighbors told reporters the couple was well liked and there were no signs of problems.

Maryland winner claims share of $656 million Mega Millions jackpot

$
0
0

The winner has chosen to be anonymous.

By SARAH BRUMFIELD

BALTIMORE— Maryland lottery officials say a holder of a winning Mega Millions ticket has come forward to claim a share of the record-breaking $656 million prize. The winner has chosen to be anonymous.

Lottery spokeswoman Carole Everett says the winner claimed the prize at lottery headquarters Monday. She says she wouldn't give any more details until a news conference Tuesday.

Maryland's winner bought the ticket at a 7-Eleven store in Milford Mill outside Baltimore. That person will split the prize with a winner each in Illinois and in Kansas.

Lottery officials increased the final jackpot to $656 million after tallying sales from the 44 state lotteries.

Maryland has been the home of Mega Millions winners in the past. In 2007, Ellwood "Bunky" Bartlett won roughly $27 million after taxes.

Wilbraham selectmen approve contract for Boston Road fire station renovation

$
0
0

The contract, for a project that includes building around the existing fire station, adding apparatus bays, crew living quarters and a day room, offices and a front door, was awarded to Western Builders of Granby.

WILBRAHAM — The Board of Selectmen on Monday night voted to award a contract to Western Builders of Granby for a $2.7 million addition and renovation of the Boston Road fire station.

Selectmen Chairman Patrick J. Brady said it was a pleasure to vote to award the contract on the recommendation of Fire Chief Francis W. Nothe and Building Inspector Lance Trevallion.

The vote follows votes at an April 2 special Town Meeting to transfer a total of $531,860 that would allow for completion of the total construction project. The transfers were approved from an ambulance fees account and from the town’s Capital Stabilization Fund. Those funds will be added to $2.2 million appropriated at a Town Meeting in May 2011.

With the addition and renovation, the 3,600-square-foot fire station built in the 1950s will grow to 11,500 square feet.

Nothe said the project includes building around the existing fire station, adding apparatus bays, crew living quarters and a day room, offices and a front door. The completed project will include “kitchen cabinets, landscaping and a new generator,” Nothe told selectmen.

Selectmen are expected to sign the contract at their April 16 meeting so work can begin as soon as possible. The project should take approximately nine months.

Nothe said he hopes the bays will be completed by October to house the fire apparatus. In the meantime, the Fire Department will operate out of the station on Woodland Dell off Main Street.

The fire apparatus will be kept outside and a trailer will be set up for the crew quarters, Nothe said.

During construction, the Boston Road fire station will be closed, Selectman James Thompson said.

Massachusetts education board has 'significant concern' about Collaborative for Educational Services' progress at Holyoke's Dean Technical High School

$
0
0

The state ordered the city hire a manager for its vocational school because of chronically poor academic performances.

2010 dean tech exterior dean technical exterior.jpgView full sizeDean Technical High School in Holyoke

HOLYOKE — The state Department of Elementary and Secondary Education has “significant concern” about the pace of progress at Dean Technical High School, an official said.

The March 29 letter said that the Collaborative for Educational Services, of Northampton, the public non-profit agency hired to manage Dean, “does not appear to be providing the ‘rapid and dramatic’ intervention the students at Dean Vocational School deserve.”

Concerns include lack of effective leadership to establish a turnaround plan, lack of a comprehensive aligned curriculum and classroom instruction that lacked high expectations, said the letter.

The letter was signed by Lynda L. Foisy, senior associate commissioner, division of accountability, partnerships and assistance, and addressed to Holyoke School Superintendent David L. Dupont.

But an official from the Collaborative – which didn’t begin managing Dean until mid-July – questioned how such a judgment could be made less than a year into an effort dominated by problems entrenched in the city’s vocational school for years.

“It’s pretty early to be able to draw those conclusions,” Collaborative Deputy Director William Diehl said in a phone interview.

Diehl and Collaborative Executive Director Joan E. Schuman are scheduled to meet with Foisy on Thursday, he said.

The School Committee discussed the state letter briefly Monday and has scheduled a special meeting on the issue April 17 at 6:15 p.m. at Dean, 1045 Main St.

The state ordered the city to hire a manager for Dean because of Dean students’ chronically poor test results. Federal and other grants are paying the agency $606,520.

2010 david dupont mub.jpgDavid Dupont

Dupont said after Monday’s meeting he didn’t consider Foisy’s letter to be a criticism of the Collaborative, but instead, amounted to the state finding fault with the application to renew the grant that is paying the Collaborative.

Only the superintendent is authorized to decide whether the Collaborative will return to run Dean after the current school year ends in June, and Dupont said he was unable to answer that question Monday.

But Diehl said the content of Foisy’s letter was unambiguous.

“It is a criticism,” Diehl said.

Devin M. Sheehan, School Committee vice chairman, said Foisy’s letter does allege shortcomings in the Collaborative’s plans for Dean.

“I can say that this does show that they did not correctly show a plan for rigor and turnaround,” Sheehan said after the meeting.

Dean has more than 650 students and 160 teachers and other staff.

In February, Dupont filed a report to the School Committee that listed 23 areas of concern about the job that the Collaborative has done in running Dean.

The concerns in Dupont’s report included lack of identifiable leadership, lack of vision, poor scheduling, inconsistent enforcement of rules, confusion about graduation requirements, length of time in filling vacancies and data incorrectly entered into the computer system.

The Collaborative responded at the time that many of Dupont’s criticisms were addressed or were in process of being corrected.

Mayor Alex B. Morse, who is chairman of the School Committee, also said at the time Dupont released his report it was too soon to criticize the Collaborative.

On the 2010 MCAS test, only 28 percent of Dean students were at the proficient or advanced levels in English language arts and 31 percent in math.

Another major challenge in improving students’ academic performan is that the percentage of Dean students for whom English is not the first language is 72 percent. Statewide, the rate is 15.6 percent. Nearly half the city of 40,000 Hispanic.

In the 2009-2010 school year, Dean attendance was 79.6 percent, meaning students missed an average of seven weeks of school a year.

Dean’s high school graduation rate was only 37 percent, at the time the Collaborative was hired, while the statewide high school graduation rate was 82.1 percent.

Lynda Foisy Letter to David Dupont on Dean Tech Progress


Springfield Finance Division proposes series of trash fee increases to help balance city budget

$
0
0

Springfield's chief financial officer favors a series of trash fee increases to make the program self-funded by fees.

SPRINGFIELD — Chief Administrative and Financial Officer Lee C. Erdmann asked the City Council on Monday to consider raising the trash fee by as much as $29 next fiscal year as one strategy to confront budget hardships that include the threat of layoffs and cuts in services.

Erdmann, during a meeting with the council at City Hall, said he favors raising the trash fee from $75 to $104, as of July 1, and then continuing to hike the fee by $29 a year for an additional four years until it reaches $220 in 2017, at which time trash services would be essentially self-funded.

Two other options were presented that would raise the fee by $10 next year, followed by either a $5 or $10 increase for five years. Mayor Domenic J. Sarno is leaning toward the smallest increase, Erdmann said.

All of the options call for the continuation of a $50 senior discount fee.

City officials are also proposing to replace current 95-gallon barrels with new 65-gallon barrels, to encourage more recycling and reduce trash and trash disposal costs.

On Monday, the Finance Division submitted various other fee increase proposals including hikes in the city hotel tax, city clerk fees, building code fees, and animal control fees. The council referred the fee proposals to committee for review, and councilors said they also want to see proposals for reducing expenses and increasing efficiency.

Erdmann said it is too early to predict the number of layoffs and cuts in services the city faces. Even with proposed fee increases that could total $2.9 million, there is still likely layoffs and program cuts due to reductions in state aid and the tax levy, he said.

2012 bud williams mug.JPGBud Williams

Councilor Bud L. Williams urged the mayor and Erdmann to consider taking more money from the stabilization “rainy day” reserve fund that now totals about $38 million and may reach $40 million by June 30.

“My position is this is a rainy day,” Williams said. “This is going to be a tremendous burden. You are raising taxes basically. It’s raining. It’s really raining.”

Erdmann said currently there is discussion of using $7 million from reserve to help balance next year’s budget, but Williams suggested a higher amount should be considered.

Councilor Timothy J. Rooke said the city needs to seek competitive proposals for health insurance, a move he said could possibly save millions of dollars. The city is now part of a state health insurance plan and will be locked into that program if it does not advertise for competitive proposals for a less expensive program in coming months, Rooke said.

Rooke revealed a letter from a Blue Cross Blue Shield official stating the company is confident that Springfield “would be able to realize significant cost savings through a Request for Proposal.” Erdmann said the issue is under review.

LCErdmann2010.jpgLee C. Erdmann

Erdmann said the current trash fee of $75 raises just $3.8 million for trash collection and disposal. The actual cost of those services is about $10 million, meaning taxes cover the balance of the cost, he said.

Sarno who campaigned against the trash fee when he first ran for mayor in 2007, did not attend Monday’s meeting but said in a prepared release that the city’s “fragile” financial situation makes it impossible to absorb the full cost of trash collection.

“I am not willing to make a decision that is based on politics instead of good governance; a decision that is sure to hurt the citizens of Springfield in the long-run,” Sarno said.

City Council President James J. Ferrera III said the council stands ready to work with the administration and finance team to balance the budget.

“Increasing fees is a very tall order in the stage of the overall economy,” Ferrera said. “It’s a very difficult process.”

Nancy Talbot, Gregory Harder win positions on Ware Board of Selectmen

$
0
0

Talbot, who also serves as town clerk, said a total of 844 registered voters, or 7.3 percent of the town's 6,182 registered voters, cast ballots.

greg harder nancy talbot.jpgLeft to right, Gregory Harder and Nancy Talbot were elected to the Ware Board of Selectmen on Monday.

WARE — Nancy J. Talbot was re-elected to the Board of Selectmen, and former selectman Gregory A. Harder was voted back on the board in a four-way race for two available positions in Monday's annual town election.

Talbot, who also serves as town clerk, said a total of 844 registered voters, or 7.3 percent, cast ballots. There are 6,182 registered voters.

Harder received 439 votes, Talbot received 433; William R. Braman, 400; and Gerald L. Matta, 251.

Talbot, who has been on the board for six years, welcomed the opportunity to serve another three years.

"It's a privilege to once again be able to serve the voters of Ware," Talbot, 64, said. "Hopefully we can move forward in an efficient, effective manner."

Harder, who had said he ran for office because he was unhappy with the way Town Hall was operating, said he is glad to be back on the board and serve the community.

"I'm going to try and look at all the issues and do what's right," Harder said.

Harder, 60, left the board in 2006, after serving for a year. He also was a selectman from 2000 to 2003.

Braman, 69, had been on the board for three years until his ouster Monday night.

Braman could not be reached for comment.

Matta, who previously served on the board for 13 years until he was voted out in 2009, said he "probably won't" run again, "but it depends on what opportunity is there."

Matta, 70, said he was pleased with the number of votes he did receive. He also ran unsuccessfully in 2010.

In the Planning Board race, Joseph C. Knight beat incumbent Joseph C. Knapp, 434 votes to 368.

Former Democratic Boston Mayor Ray Flynn backing Scott Brown and Mitt Romney

$
0
0

Flynn said he is supporting Brown for the senator's reputation for working with Democrats in the U.S. Senate.

U.S. Sen. Scott Brown, R-Mass., has picked up an endorsement from Democrat Raymond Flynn, who served as mayor of Boston from 1984 to 1993.

Flynn, who backed Brown over Democratic Attorney General Martha Coakley in 2010, told Jon Keller on CBS affiliate WBZ-TV Sunday that he is supporting Brown over Democratic challengers Elizabeth Warren or Marisa DeFranco, because of Brown's reputation for working across the aisle in the U.S. Senate.

“I support Scott Brown strongly," Flynn said in the interview. "He adds a dimension to what is necessary, needed in the United States Senate. A bipartisan voice, one who is going to place the interests of all the people, not just Republicans, in center.”

Flynn, who also served as the U.S. Ambassador to the Vatican from 1993-1997, said he is supporting former Republican Mass. Gov. Mitt Romney in his presidential bid.

"I think he provides that kind of expertise that will move the economy forward and provide jobs. The middle class in America are really hurting," Flynn said. "They need hope and opportunity. The best way to do that as I learned as mayor of Boston is creating jobs and better opportunities for their kids."

To see all of the endorsements Warren and Brown have racked up so far in the Senate race, click here.

Quabbin Reservoir poised to open for fishing season

$
0
0

The 39-square-mile reservoir will be stocked with more than 3,000 trout just in time for the opening of fishing season.

quabbin shot.jpgThe Quabbin Reservoir fishing season begins on Saturday.

BELCHERTOWN – It's time for spring fishing.

To mark the start of the 2012 freshwater season at the Quabbin Reservoir, which begins on Saturday, state Department of Fish and Game Commissioner Mary B. Griffin and state Department of Conservation and Recreation Commissioner Edward M. Lambert Jr. were expected to join local school children on Tuesday for the release of more than 1,000 rainbow trout into the reservoir — the principal drinking water supply for 2.2 million Massachusetts residents.

Griffin has a busy week planned. On Monday, the commissioner helped Petersham students release trout into the reservoir. On Tuesday, she helped Hardwick students do the same. And on Thursday, she is expected to join Shutesbury students and state Energy and Environmental Affairs Secretary Richard K. Sullivan Jr. for yet another round of fish stocking at the Quabbin.

All told, roughly 3,600 trout will be released into the 39-square-mile reservoir during the three-day stocking initiative — part of an overall statewide program to add more than half a million trout, all of which were spawned at state-run hatcheries, to about 500 bodies of water.

As of Saturday, the Quabbin will be open to boats at the three main areas and to shore fishing, as designated. The fishing season ends on Oct. 13.

Created in the 1930s by the construction of Winsor Dam and Goodnough Dike, the Quabbin is one of the nation's largest man-made drinking water reservoirs and one of the world's largest unfiltered water supplies.

Kia Sorento, found submerged in Connecticut River off Springfield's Riverfront Park, reported stolen from Grover Street 4 months ago

$
0
0

Emergency personnel plan to remove the car from the river this week.

riveboat.jpeg4-6-12 - Springfield - Springfield emergency personnel examine stolen car found in Connecticut River off Springfield's Riverfront Park. The 2005 Kia Sorento had been reported stolen from Grover Street last November.


SPRINGFIELD
– A 2005 Kia Sorento, found submerged in the Connecticut River off Riverfront Park late Friday morning, had been reported stolen from Grover Street last November.

Fire and police units, including rescue boats and members of the police dive team, were dispatched to Riverfront Park Friday for a report of a car in the water.

The car, submerged about 50 feet offshore, was dimly visible from the surface. A responding firefighter, surveying the sunken car from a boat, could be heard to say that the car appeared to have been in the water a long time.

Nothing unusual was found inside the car, Sgt. John M. Delaney said. It was reported stolen from 128 Grover St. on Nov. 30.

Delaney. aide to Commissioner William J. Fitchet, said the Kia could have been dumped in the river upstream and carried down to the park by the current.

Emergency personnel plan to remove the Kia from the river some time this week, Delaney, aide to Commissioner William J. Fitchet, said.

The park is located along the Connecticut River south of the Memorial Bridge.

Viewing all 62489 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images