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Springfield police investigating fatal motorcycle accident in Sixteen Acres

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The accident was reported at approximately 9:30 p.m. on Saturday at Wilbraham and Parker streets.

032008 springfield police cruiser cropped.jpg

SPRINGFIELD – Police are investigating a fatal accident involving a car and a motorcycle in the area of 1941 Wilbraham Road in the Sixteen Acres section.

Police Capt. William Collins said the accident was reported at approximately 9:30 p.m. on Saturday at Wilbraham and Parker streets. He said a car was pulling into the Walgreens on Wilbraham Road when it collided with a motorcycle.

Two motorcycles were traveling together at the time, and the other motorcyclist “dumped” his motorcycle when the crash happened, Collins said.

The motorcyclist who was hit by the car was taken by ambulance to Baystate Medical Center, Collins said. The other motorcyclist also was injured, but got to the hospital on his own, Collins said.

Collins said the deceased motorcyclist is from Springfield; his identity is being withheld until his family is notified, he said.


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West Springfield police investigating rollover crash

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The accident, which remains under investigation, was reported at 6:40 p.m. and happened in the area of Riverdale and Morgan roads near the entrance of the Riverdale Shops.

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WEST SPRINGFIELD – A male driver of a northbound BMW struck a guardrail on Route 5 on Saturday night and rolled the car at least three times, according to police and fire officials.

The accident, which remains under investigation, was reported at 6:40 p.m. and happened in the area of Riverdale and Morgan roads near the entrance of the Riverdale Shops.

Police Capt. John A. Ferrarini said the driver, whose name is not being released at this time, had non-life-threatening injuries and was transported to Baystate Medical Center. Ferrarini said it appears the driver as traveling at a high rate of speed when he lost control. He said he rolled through the intersection and took out a light pole.

Deputy Fire Chief Steven A. Manchino said the driver had to be extricated from the vehicle, which came to rest at the top of the guardrail. He said the driver was wearing a seatbelt.

“With the amount of traffic on the road at that time of day, it was surprising no other vehicles were involved,” Manchino said.

Bus drivers cited by Palmer police after May crash

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The citations carry a $35 fine, police said.

palmer bus crash.jpgState and local police at the scene of a school bus accident on Route 32 at the entrance of the Massachusetts Turnpike on May 4.

PALMER – Two of the three bus drivers who were involved in the chain reaction bus accident last month that sent 14 middle school students to area hospitals were cited by police for following too closely.

Police Sgt. Christopher J. Burns said that the drivers cited were Melissa Arnold, 53, of Monson, and Lynn Gregoire, 59, of Brimfield. Arnold was driving the second bus, Gregoire, the third, he said. Burns said drivers are supposed to be least 100 feet behind a school bus.

The citations carry a $35 fine, he said.

Timothy L. Stokes, spokesman for the First Student bus company, said all three bus drivers involved were suspended after the May 4 accident. Stokes said they all returned to work on June 4, after they were retrained.

The accident happened at the entrance of the Massachusetts Turnpike exit on Route 32 (Thorndike Street). Students did not have any visible injuries. Nearly 50 students were on the buses when the accident happened at approximately 1:45 p.m.

Police said the buses had left Converse Middle School and were on the way to the high school to pick up more students when one bus stopped short, setting off the chain reaction.

There were students on all three buses at the time. Frantic parents rushed to the scene to get to their children. Many of the students called their parents from the buses.

Voters in Massachusetts city say 'yes' to tribal casino

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By a nearly 2-1 margin, voters in Saturday's referendum expressed support for having a casino in their southeastern Massachusetts community, according to the Taunton clerk's office.

TAUNTON, Mass. — The Mashpee Wampanoag tribe got a vote of confidence from Taunton residents as the tribe pushes forward with plans to develop a $500 million resort casino.

By a nearly 2-1 margin, voters in Saturday's referendum expressed support for having a casino in their southeastern Massachusetts community, according to the Taunton clerk's office.

While nonbinding, the 7,693-4,571 vote marks the first time local residents have expressed support for a casino project at the ballot box since Gov. Deval Patrick signed the state's new gambling law last year.

The law legalized casino gambling, authorizing the state to license up to three resort-style casinos and giving exclusive rights to a federally recognized Indian tribe to develop one of the casinos if the tribe can reach a compact with the state by July 31. The Indian casino would have to be in southeastern Massachusetts.

Voters in the towns of Freetown and Lakeville recently gave a thumbs-down to a less detailed casino proposal offered by the Wampanoag Tribe of Aquinnah.

"We are overwhelmed by this resounding victory in Taunton," Tribal Council chairman Cedric Cromwell said in a statement. "But let's be clear. This is not just a victory for the Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe, this is a victory for the future of this city, for every person looking for a good job, and for the entire Commonwealth of Massachusetts."

Cromwell said the tribe will be back at work on Monday to finalize a compact with the governor on a project Cromwell said will create thousands of jobs and bring in millions in revenue. Patrick has said he expects negotiations on the compact will be completed by the summer deadline.

Proponents of the proposal say it will be a shot in the arm to the once-prosperous, blue-collar mill city that has struggled to replace manufacturing jobs lost in recent decades.

But opponents worried the project will bring traffic headaches and increased crime to the city of about 55,000. They contended that backers overstated the economic benefits of casino gambling. One major concern is the location of the proposed casino in the East Taunton neighborhood, close to three schools and sensitive environmental areas, said Tony LaCourse, chairman of the anti-casino group Preserve Taunton's Future.

After the vote, LaCourse said he and others individually will continue to push for the interests of the city and to ensure that any downside to the project will be mitigated. He said the group raised about $1,500 and will donate any left over money to the local schools.

"We knew that this was going to be a tough fight," he said. But considering it was a volunteer effort outfunded by project proponents, he said: "I'm proud of our team. We represented our community as best we could."

The tribe has an option to buy 146 acres in an industrial park at the junction of Routes 24 and 140, where it has proposed a 150,000-square-foot casino. The land will have to be placed in federal trust. Eventually, the tribe expects to add three hotels, retail shops, conference space and a water park.

Under a host community agreement negotiated with Mayor Thomas Hoye Jr. and approved 6-1 by the City Council, the tribe would make about $33 million in upfront payments to Taunton, including about $15 for traffic improvements. The deal also calls for minimum annual payments of $13 million after the casino begins operations.

Casino proponents heavily outspent the opposition in the weeks leading up to the vote.

Together for Taunton reported campaign expenditures of $300,000 between March 16 and May 22, according to the city clerk's office. Preserve Taunton's Future formed in mid-May and reported spending only $730 through the end of the month.

On another front since the law passed, Las Vegas casino operator Steve Wynn suspended plans to develop a resort casino in Foxborough after voters there elected two anti-casino candidates to the Board of Selectmen last month.

Fire breaks out at vacant home in Springfield

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The home is reportedly vacant and no injuries are being reported at this time. No word yet on what started the blaze.

Firefighters on the scene of a blaze at 253 Central Street early Sunday morning.

SPRINGFIELD - A fire was reported around 2 a.m. at an apparently vacant home at 253 Central Street in the city's Six Corners neighborhood.

The structure's top floor was fully engulfed. Firefighters have knocked down the flames.

The house is reportedly vacant and no injuries were reported.

No word yet on how the fire started.


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Western wildfires forcing evacuations

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Both fires have damaged property and forced numerous evacuations, but officials haven't yet released specific figures on the numbers who fled.

APTOPIX New Mexico WildfireSmoke billows from the Little Bear fire in southeastern New Mexico near Ruidoso, Saturday, June 9, 2012. Spanning only a few acres on Wednesday, the Little Bear fire began to grow Friday as spot fires formed outside established fire lines due to windy conditions. By Saturday morning, about 10,000 acres had been charred northwest of the mountain community of Ruidoso. (AP Photo/Roswell Daily Record, Mark Wilson)

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — Firefighters in Colorado and New Mexico are battling wildfires that are moving fast through parched forests, forcing scores of evacuations and destroying or damaging numerous structures.

A blaze in northern Colorado was first reported Saturday morning and had grown to about 8,000 acres by mid-evening, while a fire in southern New Mexico's Lincoln National Forest was considered minor until expanding Friday and Saturday to 10,000 acres.

Both fires have damaged property and forced numerous evacuations, but officials haven't yet released specific figures on the numbers who fled.

The wildfire in the mountainous Paradise Park area, about 25 miles northwest of Fort Collins, prompted several dozen evacuation orders.

Larimer County Sheriff's Office spokesman John Schulz said the fire expanded rapidly during the late afternoon and evening and by Saturday night, residents living along several roads in the region had been ordered to evacuate and many more were warned that they might have to flee. An evacuation center has been set up at a Laporte middle school.

Officials didn't specify how many residents had evacuated but said they had sent out 800 emergency notifications alerting people to the fire and the possibility that might have to flee.

"Right now we're just trying to get these evacuations done and get people safe," Schulz told Denver-based KMGH-TV, adding that "given the extreme heat in the area, it makes it a difficult time for (the firefighters)."

Ten structures have been damaged, although authorities were unsure if they were homes or some other kind of buildings. No injuries have been reported. The cause of the fire was unknown.

Aerial footage from KMGH-TV showed flames coming dangerously close to what appeared to be several outbuildings and at least one home in the area, as well as consuming trees and sending a large plume of smoke into the air.

Two heavy air tankers, five single-engine air tankers and four helicopters were on the scene to help fight the blaze, which appeared to be burning on private and U.S. Forest Service land and was being fueled by sustained winds of between 20 and 25 mph.

"It was just good conditions to grow," National Weather Service meteorologist Chad Gimmestad told The Associated Press. "The conditions today were really favorable for it to take off."

A lightning-sparked blaze in New Mexico jumped its containment lines raced through thick conifer forest, and fire managers said 20 structures were damaged or destroyed.

Spanning only a few acres on Wednesday, the Little Bear fire began to grow Friday as spot fires formed outside established fire lines due to windy conditions. By Saturday morning, about 10,000 acres had been charred northwest of the mountain community of Ruidoso.

"It's nerve-racking right now," Mayor Ray Alborn said in a telephone interview Saturday, as he watched what he described as "real heavy smoke" rise from the Sierra Blanca mountain range.

The mix of timber, dry grass and the steepness of the slopes were making the firefighting efforts more difficult. Windy conditions were also limiting what could be done from the air by helicopters and air tankers, Alborn said.

"Today all we see is smoke," he said. "Last night, we saw the flames too and it was an awesome expression of power. It was red, red and we could see it going across the top."

Fire information officers said summer homes in a few subdivisions and several campgrounds were evacuated late Friday, and more on homes on Saturday. Roads throughout the area were closed, said forest spokeswoman Peg Crim.

The fire was burning in steep, rocky, inaccessible terrain in the White Mountain Wilderness of the Lincoln National Forest, which is home to Smokey Bear, the little black cub that became the nation's symbol of fire prevention in the 1940s.

U.S. Rep. Steve Pearce, R-N.M., was on his way to the area Saturday to meet with fire managers. He said decades of mismanagement, forests packed full of trees and persistent drought conditions have resulted in an explosive situation.

"We just can't keep managing our forests this way. It's not a question of if our forests in the West are going to burn, it's a matter of when. This is just one more demonstration of that," he said.

18-year-old dies in 400-foot fall in Yellowstone

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The Park Service says she was a Yellowstone concession employee on her first day in the park. She was hiking a canyon trail with three other acquaintances when she ventured off trail onto a loose rock promontory, which gave way underneath her.

YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK, Wyo. (AP) — The National Park Service says an 18-year-old woman has died after falling 400 feet in the Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone.

The Park Service says she was a Yellowstone concession employee on her first day in the park. She was hiking a canyon trail with three other acquaintances when she ventured off trail onto a loose rock promontory, which gave way underneath her.

The accident occurred near Inspiration Point Thursday afternoon. Her body was retrieved Friday.

Fire at vacant home in Springfield started at two locations on first floor

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"It started on the first floor at two separate locations," said Dennis Leger, aide to Springfield Fire Commissioner Joseph Conant. He added that the circumstances suggest "it's not an accident."

This updates a version posted at 2:47 a.m.

Firefighters on the scene of the blaze at 253 Central Street early Sunday morning.

SPRINGFIELD - A fire around 2 a.m. at a vacant home at 253 Central Street in the city's Six Corners neighborhood is being deemed suspicious.

"It started on the first floor at two separate locations," said Dennis Leger, aide to Springfield Fire Commissioner Joseph Conant. He added that the circumstances suggest "it's not an accident."

Leger said he was under the impression there was no power to the building.

He estimated the damage at at least $80,000, if not a total loss.

The structure's top floor was fully engulfed not long after the fire was reported.

The blaze remains under investigation, Leger said.


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Egypt's Mubarak in critical condition

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The official says Mubarak's wife, former first lady Suzanne Mubarak, and her two daughters-in-law were visiting him in prison Sunday morning after rumors circulated that he had died. Mubarak was admitted to the Torah prison after a judge convicted him on June 2 of failing to stop the killings of protesters during last year uprising which forced him out of power.

Hosni MubarakFILE - In this Sunday, Jan. 29, 2012, file photo, former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak is wheeled into court in Cairo, Egypt. The health of ousted Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak entered a "dangerous" phase on Wednesday, June 6, 2012, with doctors using a respirator to help his breathing on five separate occasions, according to security officials at his prison. The officials at Torah prison south of Cairo said Mubarak, 84, was suffering from shock, high blood pressure and was experiencing breathing problems. Specialists were called in to examine him and a transfer to a military hospital was being considered,s aid the officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media.(AP Photo/Mohammed al-Law, File)

CAIRO — An Egyptian security official says former president Hosni Mubarak has been slipping in and out of consciousness, more than a week after he was transferred to a hospital inside a Cairo prison to serve his life sentence.

The official says Mubarak's wife, former first lady Suzanne Mubarak, and her two daughters-in-law were visiting him in prison Sunday morning after rumors circulated that he had died. Mubarak was admitted to the Torah prison after a judge convicted him on June 2 of failing to stop the killings of protesters during last year uprising which forced him out of power.

The official says Mubarak lives only on liquids and yogurt. The official, who is in the prison, spoke on condition of anonymity because he is not authorized to speak to the media.

AM News Links: Multiple shooting victims in Auburn, upset in welterweight boxing title, and more

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The Times and Democrat reports that an unofficial report from the Auburn Plainsman, the Auburn University student newspaper, has said that former Tigers Ed Christian and LaDarius Phillips have died while former Calhoun County standout and current Auburn Tiger Eric Mack was wounded by a gunshot. No official releases have named the victims or the suspect.

Manny Pacquiao, Timothy BradleyManny Pacquiao, from the Philippines, right, lands a left to the head of Timothy Bradley, from Palm Springs, Calif., in their WBO world welterweight title fight Saturday, June 9, 2012, in Las Vegas. (AP Photo/Chris Carlson)

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

Community colleges in Massachusetts face changes in governance, funding

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Gov. Deval Patrick could get much of what he wanted when he filed bills early this year to overhaul community colleges.

holyoke community collegeStudents walk down stairs at the crowded Holyoke Community College campus.

BOSTON — State legislators are close to finalizing some important changes to the governance of the state's 15 community colleges, including measures that could give a state board in Boston enhanced powers to help select college presidents and that could base future funding for the colleges on performance.

The pending changes could provide Gov. Deval L. Patrick a great amount of what he wanted when he filed bills early this year to create a more close-knit system of community colleges and to improve their ability to train people for jobs.

The state House of Representatives and the state Senate have approved different bills to overhaul governance of the colleges as part of each branch's version of the state budget for the fiscal year that starts July 1. A six-member legislative panel will develop a compromise from the two bills and include those measures in a final state budget to be presented to the governor, likely in the next several weeks.

William F. Messner , president of Holyoke Community College, which has 7,000 students, said the House and Senate bills are less dramatic than the governor's proposals, but they still will have an impact.

The governor, for example, sought to allow only the state Board of Higher Education to appoint community college presidents, who are currently named by local boards of trustees with approval of the state board. The House and the Senate did not give sole appointing authority to the state board but they both require the board to issue guidelines for the search, selection, appointment, pay, evaluation and removal of presidents.

messner.jpgWilliam Messner

Patrick also asked for the power to appoint the chair of a college's local board of trustees. A governor currently appoints trustees, but then the trustees choose the chair.

The House gave Patrick the power to name a chair as long as the person comes from the local region. The Senate requires the governor to choose a chair from among three nominees by local boards.

Messner said he would love to see all the proposed governance changes dropped because the community colleges in Western Massachusetts are working well. He said business leaders have raised no criticisms about the way community colleges in Western Massachusetts are responding to their needs.

"If it ain't broke, don't fix it," Messner said, repeating a phrase. "It ain't broke out here."

Messner said trustees are better equipped to determine among themselves who should be chair. He later said that he does not object to people looking at how the colleges operate and making recommendations for improvements.

Ira H. Rubenzahl, president of Springfield Technical Community College, which has about 6,700 students, said he generally agreed with Messner. Rubenzahl said community colleges in Western Massachusetts have good partnerships with local employers, local vocational-technical and high schools and regional employment boards, which oversee public-financed worker training and job placement programs.

"I think we have been responsive," he said. "We've been able to work in the existing system."

Messner and Rubenzahl said the colleges have been hurt by state budget cuts in recent years that have prompted the colleges to annually raise student fees. The operating budgets for the colleges are set to be level funded for the fiscal year that starts July 1.

ira.jpgIra Rubenzahl

"Unfortunately, we didn't get additional operating funds, which I think we need to improve quality and workforce training," Rubenzahl said.

Messner and Rubenzahl said they do like the House and Senate plans to establish grant programs for the colleges.

The governor wanted to give the state board of higher education the power to set the budgets of individual community colleges with a focus on a college's role in training workers.

Instead, the Senate creates a special commission for this purpose. The House requires the commissioner of higher education to work with campus presidents to develop a funding formula for budgets based partly on the performance of the colleges in meeting goals such as improving graduation rates and the ability to transfer course credits.

The governor also sought to have the state higher education board develop parameters for local boards to approve student fees. The Senate does require the board to develop a statewide tuition and fee plan, taking into account certain needs of individual colleges.

S. Paul Reville, the state secretary of education, said he is optimistic that the administration will receive from the Legislature much of what it is seeking in reforming community colleges. Reville said the goal is to create a tighter organization with a better capacity to respond to the needs of employers.

"We are looking for greater coordination and greater capacity to prioritize certain state employment needs," Reville said. "We were never looking for central authority."

Reville said, for example, that the board of higher education now basically rubber stamps a local board's selection of a president. The House and Senate bills will allow the state board to play a more active role in selecting presidents while working with local boards, making it more of a joint process and a genuine system, Reville said.

rev.jpgClem D. Fucci, left, a department head at Westfield Vocational -Technical High School, and state Secretary of Education S. Paul Reville talk during a tour of the school by Reville in May. Reville is pushing a plan that would partly align community colleges more closely with vocational schools for improved job training.

According to Reville's office, 216,000 people are looking for work in Massachusetts and there are more than 135,000 open jobs, up from 120,000 in January. Many openings for skilled jobs are in information technology, health care, advanced manufacturing and bio sciences.

Paul S. Grogan, president of the Boston Foundation, which financed a report last year that called for better alignment of higher education and workforce needs, said both the House and the Senate bills provide for funding the campuses on a competitive basis and put a clear emphasis on improving a college's ties to employers.

"I think we are going to get a good result,' said Grogan, also a member of a 62-organization coalition working to create more accountability for the colleges and stronger connections with employers.

The coalition last week sent a letter to key legislators, saying the most important issue might be to create and put into effect a funding formula that uses performance metrics to fund community colleges. The formula should reward achievement and innovation while eliminating redundancies and ineffective programs, the letter said.

Grogan said there's no audience for the message that community colleges are working very well and all they need is more money. The colleges are critical for the future of the state, but they have suffered budget cuts partly because they don't have a strong external constituency.

Grogan said a key is that both the House and the Senate include measures to improve the ability of students to transfer credits among community colleges and four-year university campuses.

"This is an opportunity for these schools to come into the spotlight in exchange for modest changes in how they operate," Grogan said. "They would still enjoy very substantial local autonomy."

Here are some aspects of different plans by the state House of Representatives and the state Senate to improve the governance and operation of community colleges:

HOUSE:

• Require each board of a community college to select a trustee to serve as a non-voting member on the board of a local vocational-technical school.

• Calls for analysis of the collaboration between vocational-technical schools and community colleges.

• $5 million for the state Department of Higher Education to award incentive grants to community colleges to promote higher graduation rates and standard course offerings that can be used across colleges and universities.

• Requires commissioner of higher education, working with local college presidents, to develop a funding formula for the campuses based partly on performance data such as graduation rates.

• $1.25 million for grants to the colleges for workforce training.

• Requires state Board of Higher Education to set guidelines for the selection, pay, evaluation and removal of college presidents.

SENATE:

• $750,000 for an office of coordination in the state Board of Higher Education.

• $4 million to establish a degree audit and tracking system with $2 million to establish standard core of course offerings that would be honored for credits across colleges and universities.

• Requires state Board of Higher Education to develop a master plan including a statewide tuition and fee plan for community colleges.

• $3 million in competitive grants for workforce training programs.

Obituaries today: Robert Moras was real estate agent, cantor at Sacred Heart Church

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Obituaries from The Republican.

061012_robert_moras.jpgRobert Moras

Robert Moras, 51, of Windsor, Conn., passed away on Friday. He grew up in East Longmeadow and settled in Windsor 25 years ago. For over 30 years Bob was a constant presence at the Saturday 4 p.m. Mass at Sacred Heart Church in Springfield, where he served as cantor. A graduate of Holyoke Community College and a former retail manager at Stop & Shop Co., Moras was a real estate agent with several Windsor brokers and also spent time renovating a historic home on Court Street in the center of town. He also drove a school bus for Rainbow Bus in Windsor for several years.

Obituaries from The Republican:

Clarke Schools for Hearing and Speech Class of 2012 graduates

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Keynote speaker Josh Swiller, New York Times best-selling author of "The Unheard: A Memoir of Deafness and Africa," gave a moving speech to graduates and their families and supporters.

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NORTHAMPTON — A cascade of gold and white balloons rained down at 10 new graduates of the Northampton-based Clarke Schools for Hearing and Speech on Saturday.

New graduates - who will be moving on to mainstream high schools, as opposed to going directly to college - hailed from as far as Detroit and Broken Arrow, OK, to local communities.

While implants and other technologies have advanced education for the hearing impaired miles compared to a few decades ago, several graduates credited the school with changing their lives. The school is in a transitional period because the acreage at Round Hill is in the midst of a potential sale to Springfield real estate group OPAL. Students in the upcoming year are poised to join Leeds School students for lunch, recess and extracurricular classes such as art and music.

Graduates ranged from 13 to 16, and the student address was delivered by Wayehn Reeves, of Detroit, Mich., who told attendees at the commencement ceremony at Helen Hills Hills Chapel that his father secretly hoped his son wouldn't be accepted there six years ago.

"After Clarke School finished helping my dad, my dad refused to argue with my older brother Toinu anymore," who encouraged their father to explore Clarke, Reeves told the crowd. "I enrolled here. We are all so glad I did!"

Keynote speaker Josh Swiller, New York Times best-selling author of "The Unheard: A Memoir of Deafness and Africa," gave a moving speech to graduates and their families and supporters.

Swiller told the audience that deafness teaches one to be kind.

"And when we are kind to ourselves then we can truly be kind to others. Because as my mother told me when I was your age: 'Everyone has a deafness. You're just lucky that you know what yours is.'"

The 2012 Clarke School Northampton Class included: Nicholas M. Bialka, of Enfield, Conn.; Shanesha J. Brown, of Springfield; Mareo M. Fabozzi, of Amherst; Mikaila I. Fini, of Southampton; Jenna Lang-Xiu Giglietti, of Belchertown; Yolyanna M. Hernandez, of Holyoke; Alexandra G. Kalmore, of Broken Arrow, OK; Ashley M. Mills, of Springfield; Hinter A. Petit, of Stratham, NH; and Weyehn L Reeves, of Detroit, Mich.

Mater Dolorosa Church vigil in Holyoke to end this week

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The vigil began nearly a year ago on June 30.

mater dolorosaVictor Anop (hand raised) announces outside the Mater Dolorosa Church that those holding the vigil inside the church will leave as the Vatican has ordered.

HOLYOKE – Protesters have decided to comply with an order from the Vatican’s highest court and end a round-the-clock prayer vigil at the Mater Dolorosa Church.

“We are starting our systematic withdrawal today,” said Victor Anop, of Chicopee, an organizer for the vigil.

The group must remove some personal property people have brought in for over the past 12 months but they should be finished in a day or two. The members plan to notify the security officers for the Roman Catholic Diocese of Springfield before they leave.

The vigil began on June 30, the last day of Mass at the church, in protest of Bishop Timothy A. McDonnell’s orders to close the church and merge it with the Holy Cross Parish. The new parish, named our Lady of the Cross, is worshipping at the old Holy Cross Church.

“We are cautiously optimistic at news out of Holyoke today that those occupying the Mater Dolorosa Church may be preparing to follow the recent Vatican directive and end their vigil,” said Mark E. Dupont, spokesman for the diocese.

Officials said they will delay any more comment until they receive official word from the protesters.

Members of the Mater Dolorosa Church appealed the closing to the Vatican. When the lower court, the Congregation of the Clergy, upheld McDonnell’s decision they appealed to the Apostolic Signatura, which is the Vatican’s supreme court.

In a preliminary ruling released on Monday, the Signatura agreed to hear the case but also placed two requirements on it.

It asked protesters to leave the church and ordered the bishop from refraining from destroying or selling the church and keeping it in good condition.

Anop said the decision was a difficult one especially because members are concerned McDonnell will order the steeple of the church removed.

The steeple has been a source of contention. Diocesan officials say engineering reports show it is structurally unsound and dangerous. Protesters hired their own engineer however who deemed the steeple safe. The issue has also gone to Springfield courts where the judge ruled there was no imminent danger in the structure but refused to take up the full issue of the protesters trespassing citing separation of church and state.

“I think the people have been so dedicated to the vigil inside the church,” Anop said. “They are doing it in the belief and trust they will not sell and destroy the church.”

Prayer vigil members agreed it was important to abide by the Apostolic Signatura’s order. The group voted on Thursday to leave the church but waited until Sunday to announce the decision.

“The supreme court does not have to entertain your appeal. It is huge to overcome that barrier,” Anop said. “It means they found probable cause and we have a meritorious case.”

As far as protecting the steeple, the City of Holyoke recently ordered the Diocese to either remove the scaffolding that protects the sidewalk in front of the church or renew a permit to allow it.

Anop said the members said the Diocese will have to file for permits if officials wish to remove the steeple so the protesters will be able to have their say to protect it them.

Anthony Lopez, 23, of Springfield gets 5 years probation for encounter with 12-year-old boy

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Lopez was wearing woman's clothing and asked to be called Ms. Lopez during a court hearing.

SPRINGFIELD — A 23-year old city man avoided a prison sentence Monday, but must serve five years of probation for an alleged sexual encounter with a 12-year old boy.

Anthony Lopez, of 350 Liberty St., pleaded guilty Monday in Hampden Superior Court to one count of reckless endangerment of a child. In exchange, prosecutors dropped three counts of statutory rape and one count of indecent assault and battery on a child under 14.

Judge Tina S. Page imposed the sentence on the recommendation of the defense and prosecution.

Assistant District Attorney Matthew Green told Page that both Lopez and the victim initially acknowledged participating in a sexual encounter at the defendant’s apartment in June 2009, but both later recanted parts of their stories.

Green said Lopez approached the victim at a bus stop and propositioned him for oral sex last June 2.

Lopez, who was wearing woman’s clothing and asked to be called Ms. Lopez during Monday’s hearing, later told police the pair had oral and anal sex before Lopez realized the victim was only 12 years old, the prosecutor said.

Lopez ordered the victim to leave, and went to the police station the next day to confess to a consensual sexual encounter with the victim, Green said.

Defense lawyer Audrey Harrington filed a motion to suppress the statement’s, claiming Lopez was emotionally distraught and did not understand the Miranda warning offered by police. The victim’s initial account – which was consistent with Lopez’s – also changed in the months after Lopez was arrested, Green said.

Harrington told the court Monday that her client demanded that the victim leave after learning his age. “(Lopez) recoiled in horror and ordered him to leave at once,” Harrington said.

Citing the shifting witness accounts and a lack of corroborating DNA evidence, Green said the defense and prosecution agreed to a reduced charge of reckless endangerment, followed by a five-year probation.

Under the deal, Lopez must avoid having any contact with the boy, but will not have to register as a sex offender, both lawyers said.


Outgoing state Rep. Michael Kane hopes write-in challenges Holyoke City Councilor Aaron Vega for 5th Hampden District seat

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Kane's name still will be on the ballot because he qualified by the filing deadline before taking the gas company job.

michael kane vs aaron vega.jpgFormer state Rep. Michael F. Kane, D-Holyoke, left, and Holyoke City Councilor Aaron M. Vega, candidate for the legislative seat.


HOLYOKEMichael F. Kane said Monday his resignation as state representative doesn’t mean he wants voters to choose the only other candidate whose name will be on the ballot, fellow Democrat Aaron M. Vega.

Kane, who has taken a job with Columbia Gas of Massachusetts, said he hopes a write-in candidate in line with his political views emerges to oppose Vega, a city councilor.

“I would like to see somebody from the public step forward,” Kane said.

Asked if that means he will support only someone other than Vega, Kane said, “Yes, other than Vega.”

Despite resigning the 5th Hampden District seat on Friday, Kane’s name will remain on the ballot because he filed nomination papers with signatures of registered voters to qualify as a candidate by the deadline of May 1.

Kane said he wouldn’t urge people to avoid voting for him if a like-minded write-in candidate fails to emerge and the only other candidate is Vega.

Would he take the seat if elected and leave Columbia Gas? “We have a long process ahead of us,” Kane said.

Vega said of Kane’s comments, “We’re just running the same campaign we were running before, keeping it positive. We really want it to be about the city. We’re hoping for a strong turnout in the primary election in September that will lead to a strong turnout in the November.”

Kane, who has held the seat since 2001, said the timing of his resignation was unfortunate but couldn’t be helped.

He learned of the job at Columbia Gas, where he will be director of government affairs, around March but didn’t know he was likely to get the job until after the May 1 filing deadline, he said.

Because that deadline passed, the timing of Kane’s resignation means the only way a resident can mount a campaign for the seat is to ask voters to write in his or her name when they enter the voting booth.

Such a candidate must get at least 150 write-in votes to qualify, said Brian S. McNiff, spokesman for the office of Secretary of State William F. Galvin.

A special election to fill the 5th Hampden District seat won’t be held because it’s too close to the scheduled primary election on Sept. 6 and the general election Nov. 6, said Seth Gitell, spokesman for House Speaker Robert A. DeLeo, D-Winthrop.

The House speaker decides whether special elections to fill vacancies will be held, and in cases like the Holyoke seat, secretary of state guidelines about timing in relation to scheduled elections are considered, Gitell said.

A primary election is held to narrow the field to the top vote-getter if a party has more than one candidate.

Under state law, Kane in his new job with Columbia Gas must register as a lobbyist and is prohibited from dealing with the House and Senate for a year. He can deal immediately with executive-branch offices in state government and local officials, he said.

Columbia Gas, based in Westborough, has nearly 300,000 natural gas customers in 65 cities and towns in Massachusetts and New Hampshire.

U.S. Marshals continue search for 'Escape from Alcatraz' trio, 50 years after they busted out of 'the Rock'

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The Marshals intend to continue pursuing Morris and the Anglin brothers until they are either arrested, positively determined to be deceased or reach the age of 99.

alcatraz escapees.jpgIn these photos supplied by the U.S. Marshall's Service, photos of three escaped inmates from 1962 are age-enhanced to show how they could look today. From top to bottom are the actual photos and composite photos of Frank Morris, Clarence Anglin and John Anglin.

It is one of the most famous escapes in the history of U.S. prisons, and even though the case has long since gone cold, the U.S. Marshals Service continues to search for three inmates escaped from Alcatraz in 1962.

Monday marked the 50th anniversary of the only successful escape from Alcatraz. The facility was closed down in 1963 and is now a world-famous tourist attraction.

No traces were ever found of Frank Morris and brothers Clarence Anglin and John Anglin who successfully busted out of "The Rock" with a rowboat made of raincoats.

Getting off the island was one thing, but whether they made it across the difficult waters of the San Francisco Bay at night is quite another. The question has been the subject of speculation for a half century.

No trace of the three was ever found. They remain unaccounted for.


“No matter where the leads take us, or how many man hours are spent on this historic case, the Marshals Service will continue to investigate to the fullest extent possible,” said David Harlow, assistant director, U.S. Marshals Investigative Operations Division.

The U.S. Marshals on Monday released age-enhanced composites of the three men in the event that they are still alive. Frank Morris would be 85 years old, Clarence Anglin would be 81 and John Anglin would be 82.

The escape since 1962 has become the stuff of legend.

Clint Eastwood played Morris in the 1979 movie "Escape from Alcatraz."

And Adam Savage and Jamie Hyneman of the Discovery Channel program "Mythbusters" determined a successful escape was certainly plausible. In 2003, they recreated the escape, right down to the raincoat rowboat and were able to navigate across the Bay from Alcatraz to Marin Island.

The U.S. Marshal Service took over the lead in the investigation from the FBI in 1979. Officials said that since that time, Since that time, countless deputy U.S. marshals have worked the case and investigated thousands of leads in almost every state in the country and a few foreign countries. The agency has also from time to time reached for through the media.

The elaborate escape plan was the result of more than one year of planning and included the design of a life raft and life preservers fashioned from more than 50 raincoats, the fabrication of lifelike dummies to ruse guards on night bed checks and enlarged ventilation holes in their cell walls, which they used spoons to create and concealed with cardboard replicas of vent covers.
alcatraz.JPGView full sizeThe former federal penitentiary on Alcatraz Island is seen in this 2011 photo. The one-time home to inmates ranging from Al Capone to Whitey Bulger is now one of the biggest tourist attractions in San Francisco with more than 1 million people touring it annually. In the background is the San Francisco skyline.

On the night of June 11, 1962, the three escaped through the vents and made their way to the northeast part of the island, where they inflated the makeshift raft and three life preservers and slipped into the water.

Varied reports stated that the inmates either drowned or made their escape via nearby Angel Island.

A fourth inmate, Allen West, was involved in planning the escape, but he never made it out of his prison cell.

The known details of the escape were provided by West during several interviews.

The possibility of survival steered investigators to unusual and detailed leads to suspected whereabouts of the escapees. One example occurred in 2010, when an unmarked grave, claimed to be that of an escapee, was exhumed but failed to offer positive identification.

The Marshals intend to continue pursuing the escapees until they are either arrested, positively determined to be deceased or reach the age of 99.

“The ongoing U.S. Marshals investigation of the 1962 escape from Alcatraz federal prison serves as a warning to fugitives that regardless of time, we will continue to look for you and bring you to justice,” said U.S. Marshal Don O’Keefe of the Northern District of California

The U.S. Marshals have a long history of successfully tracking, locating and apprehending prison escapees. In August 2011, Frederick Barrett, a convicted murderer wanted in Florida for escape, was apprehended after 32 years on the lam. He was found hiding in a remote cabin in the mountains of Colorado.

Westfield School Committee considers teacher professional development proposal

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Professional development for teachers here has been limited in recent years.

WESTFIELD — The School Committee is considering a proposed professional development plan for teachers that will be scheduled during 10 half-day school sessions early in the 2012-2013 school year.

Professional development for teachers, required by the state to maintain certification, has been restricted over the past several years because of the economy and cost savings within the School Department and city.

But Superintendent of Schools Suzanne Scallion has proposed restoration of the program, and the School Committee agreed to address the issue prior to its June 18 regular meeting.

Kevin Sullivan 2007.jpgKevin Sullivan

School Committee vice-chairman Kevin J. Sullivan said he supports professional development, but expressed concern about 10 half-day school sessions. “This will have an impact on parents and students and we must hear from them and address issues first,” Sullivan said.

Scallion said professional development is valuable “because as a school system we are only as good as our teachers,” she said. School staff need professional development to review and improve teaching methods, programs, services, she said.

Scallion also said she plans to address the issue with Parent-Teacher Organizations and civic organizations in an effort to provide alternative learning options for students during the half-day school sessions.

The School Department traditionally set aside about $300,000 annually for professional development, but the Westfield Education Association voluntarily gave up that funding for several years.

In 2010, teachers approved a one-year labor contract with the School Committee that provided no salary increase and no professional development funding.

A new two-year contract approved by teachers and pending School Committee approval restores professional development. The School Committee is expected to approve the contract June 18.

“The return of professional development was a priority for contract negotiations this time around.” Sullivan said.

East Longmeadow Planning Board interviews candidates for zoning review committee

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The East Longmeadow Planning Board is looking to update the town bylaws.

EAST LONGMEADOW — The Planning Board has interviewed four candidates for positions on the town’s Zoning Review Committee.

During a recent meeting the board met with several candidates interested in participating in the advisory committee, which will review the town’s bylaws, first drafted in the 1960s.

Residents Ned Schwartz, Chassity Miller, William Fonseca and Mary Flahive-Dickson expressed their interest in the committee.

Currently the committee has two members, former Planning Board member Marilyn Richards and resident Tyde Richards (no relation), owner of Forest Park Development in town.

Planning Board Chairman George Kingston originally presented the idea of the committee in summer 2011. At the time he said the committee would be charged with correcting typos and grammatical errors, making the bylaws clear and easy to understand, looking at things that are missing from the bylaws and things that should be removed.

Schwartz, a retired professor at Western New England University, said he is interested in developing a brand for the town. He cited Longmeadow for being known as a town with a great school system. He would like to do something similar, he said, and creating zoning bylaws that clearly define business and residential areas in town would help.

Chassity Miller is a social worker and has lived in town for three years. She has several children in the school system, and said she sees the town as a safe and inviting community.

“I don’t have any experience in zoning, but I am very detail oriented and am comfortable working in a collaborative approach,” she said.

Fonseca, currently on the School Committee, said he has an interest in updating the bylaws.

“I think many of the current bylaws are ambiguous,” he said. “ We don’t have to reinvent the wheel, just bring the bylaws up to speed.”

Flahive-Dickinson is an adjunct professor at Bay Path College and a business owner. She said she believes the special permitting process for businesses should be expedited.

“There is a very small window of opportunity when it comes to starting up a business, and if we make it difficult for them they will look elsewhere,” she said.

All of the candidates expressed their desire to keep the town business friendly while still protecting the residential feel of the community.

Kingston said there are several other applicants interested in the committee.

“I find that a working group of six works, a group of 10 or a group of two does not work so well,” he said.

The board will make its decision in the next few weeks.

Palmer 3rd-graders create global story with students from UK, Russia, Australia and elsewhere

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Sometimes, Kellaher moved up their English lessons so they could get to the topics they were addressing in the story. It was challenging for them because third-graders are emerging as readers and writers, he said.

Todd Kellaher's class, Old Mill Pond School, Palmer.JPGView full sizeTodd Kellaher's class at Old Mill Pond School in Palmer.

PALMER — Pupils in Todd Kellaher's third grade class at Old Mill Pond Elementary School went around the world with the help of a story they created about four students in search of a golden nugget that would end hunger.

His class came up with the initial idea for "Legend of the Golden Nugget," featuring four children who met in New York City, where they encountered a giant, mutant poisonous frog in the subway tunnel that gave them their first clue to the whereabouts of the nugget. The frog told them that an evil scientist would not return her to her original form until the nugget was found.

Kellaher said the students voted on the names of the characters and their talents. One was a gymnast, another was a hula dancer. One was a shark tagger and the other, the son of the president.

"Everything was their imagination ... We started the beginning of the story and left it as a cliffhanger," Kellaher said.


The story
then traveled all over the world, with students in the United Kingdom, Russia, Australia, Germany, Spain, Austria, Poland, Turkey, Greece and Romania adding their twists and turns in the quest to find the nugget and avoid the evil scientist.

The students said they learned about the other countries by participating in the project, such as what they ate (vegemite in Australia) and what they were known for (the Spanish students wrote about the running of the bulls, the Romanians wrote about Dracula, and the Greek students incorporated mythology, referencing a centaur).

"This class probably worked harder than any other class," Kellaher said.

After a chapter was written, it was sent back to Kellaher's class, so they could edit it and check it for spelling and grammatical errors. Most of the participants from the other countries were just learning English, Kellaher explained, and they were grateful to participate. The foreign students ranged in age from other third-graders to high schoolers in Turkey.

Aaliyah Placanico noted that there were spelling mistakes in the submissions they received.

They kept seeing color spelled "colour," the British way. They also learned some of the finer points of writing, as the project was part of their English lesson. Some of the problems they encountered with the submissions they hadn't learned about yet in class.

"We learned how to use quotation marks. We hadn't gotten to them yet," Aaliyah said.

Sometimes, Kellaher moved up their English lessons so they could get to the topics they were addressing in the story. It was challenging for them because third-graders are emerging as readers and writers, he said.

Aaliyah said she liked learning how the other students were different from them, and how they lived.

Kellaher's class ended the story. Chance K. Merceri said the poisonous frog turned out to be singer Taylor Swift, and because the students found the golden nugget they ended world hunger and created world peace.

The story ends with "people across the world were so happy that many wonderful things began to happen. Countries that were rich shared their fortunes with those who were poor. Countries that were fighting began to get along with each other. The wish of millions of people around the world was coming true ... world peace was becoming a reality. People finally realized that 'it is a small world after all.'"

Kellaher said he plans to do the project again next year.

"We're very proud of them," Kellaher said about the students. "It was a huge undertaking for the entire year."

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