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Cape Cod black bear recaptured in Boston suburb

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Authorities say they're relocating the bear to a remote location in western Massachusetts.

BROOKLINE — A black bear that showed up in suburban Boston is the same one that swam to Cape Cod on Memorial Day weekend, authorities say.

For the second time this month, wildlife officials used a tranquilizer dart on Tuesday to immobilize the bear so they could capture it. It happened after the bear climbed a tree in Brookline, drawing a crowd of onlookers and police officers.

On June 12, authorities relocated the 180-pound male bear to central Massachusetts after it wandered for two weeks on the Cape.

Wildlife officials said then that the bear's breeding instinct may have sparked its travels, with that trip marking the first time authorities believe a black bear visited the Cape.

Now authorities say they're relocating the bear to a remote location in western Massachusetts.

The bear was spotted Tuesday morning in a tree in Brookline's upscale Chestnut Hill neighborhood. An environmental police officer perched in a cherry picker and fired the dart at the bear, said Reginald Zimmerman, a spokesman for the state office of Energy and Environmental Affairs.

The startled bear initially climbed farther up the tree before tumbling about 80 feet to the ground.

Brookline police Chief Daniel O'Leary told reporters at the scene that the bear wasn't believed to be the one spotted in several other Boston suburbs recently. He said it was wearing tags indicating that it had been previously tracked.

Officials couldn't immediately remember another bear sighting in Brookline, but Zimmerman said the presence of the bear so close to Boston shouldn't be a major surprise.

"Bears have been in suburban areas and among people for many years," he said. "They are highly adaptable."


Homebuilders help stock market recoup some of previous day’s losses

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The Dow Jones industrial average rose 32 points to close at nearly 12,535.

Earns Lennar 2012.jpg Lennar homes are advertized for sale in San Jose, Calif., earlier this year. Lennar Corp. and other home builders' stock rose Tuesday following reports that new housing grew in April.

By MATTHEW CRAFT

NEW YORK – Homebuilders led stocks up on Tuesday, helping major indexes recoup some losses from the day before. Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp. surged after the media conglomerate said it may split into two companies.

The Dow Jones industrial average rose 32.01 points to close at 12,534.67.

PulteGroup, Lennar and other housing stocks climbed following news that a measure of national home prices rose 1.3 percent in April, the first increase in seven months. The Standard & Poor’s/Case-Shiller home price index showed a rise in 19 out of the 20 major cities tracked; Detroit was the only city where prices fell.

PulteGroup rose 49 cents to $9.72 and Lennar rose 81 cents to $27.39.

“There’s some good news out there, especially if you look at the housing market,” said John De Clue, regional investment director of U.S. Bank’s wealth management unit in Minneapolis. “But there’s this overriding theme: concerns over global growth. Things are pretty much slowing everywhere you look.”

News Corp. jumped 8 percent. The company confirmed that it’s contemplating a breakup into two publicly traded companies. The split would divide its publishing from its entertainment businesses. The media empire includes The Wall Street Journal, Fox News Channel, and newspapers in Britain and Australia. News Corp.’s stock leapt $1.68 to $21.76.

In other trading, the broader Standard & Poor’s 500 index gained 6.27 points to 1,319.99. The Nasdaq composite rose 17.90 points to 2,854.06.

Investors sold coal company stocks after S&P lowered the credit rating for James River Coal deeper into junk status, citing weaker demand for coal. Utilities have favored natural gas instead of coal to generate electricity and are also preparing for new emission standards. James River plunged 15 percent, or 43 cents, to $2.49.

Alpha Natural Resources sank 20 cents, to $7.73. Peabody Energy dropped 34 cents to $21.12.

More worrisome developments in Europe kept U.S. markets in check. Spain’s borrowing costs jumped in a pair of short-term debt auctions, the latest sign that investors are hesitant to lend the country money. The interest rate on the country’s 3-month bills was 2.36 percent Tuesday, nearly triple the rate in the last such auction in May.

Spain’s main stock index sank 1.5 percent, the second day straight of deep losses, and the yield on its benchmark 10-year government bond rose to 6.81 percent, which makes it more expensive for the country to borrow. The slump in Spanish financial markets came a day after the credit rating agency Moody’s lowered ratings on 28 Spanish banks.

Stock markets fell sharply in the U.S. and Europe on Monday as Europe’s latest efforts to calm its financial crisis sapped investors’ confidence. Spain’s formal request for help for its banking systems left many questions unanswered, including how much money it needs.

Markets have also been battered by signs of withering economic growth around the world. Manufacturing has slowed in China, and hiring has weakened in the U.S. The Dow has taken its two largest daily losses of the year this month: a 250-point plunge June 21 and a 274-point one June 1.

Even with those losses, the Dow remains up 1.1 percent for June. The S&P 500 is up 0.7 percent.

Among other stocks making big moves:

• Apollo Group, a for-profit education company which operates the University of Phoenix, soared 10 percent. The company reported quarterly income that was far larger than analysts had expected. The company’s stock rose $3.34 to $35.81.

• Seagate Technology gained 4 percent. The maker of hard disk drives is going to replace Progress Energy in the S&P 500 index. As a result, fund managers, whose performance is measured against the S&P index, are more likely to buy Seagate. The stock rose 85 cents to $24.12.

Casinos forum planned for Western Massachusetts

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The Massachusetts Gaming Commission also moved to hire an ombudsman to deal with communities and developers.

Deval Patrick, Stephen CrosbyStephen Crosby, left, is show last December when the governor appointed hims as chairman of the Massachusetts Gaming Commission.

BOSTON - State gambling regulators are planning to hold a half-day forum in Western Massachusetts, focusing on tourism, training workers and helping communities negotiate agreements with potential casino developers.

Seeking to speed the process for approving casinos, the Massachusetts Gaming Commission on Tuesday also moved to hire an ombudsman to deal with communities and developers. The commission also agreed to seek initial bids from casino companies in October. Those preliminary bids would allow the commission to judge a company's financial strength and check the background of top managers and directors.

Gaming commissioners said the forum in Western Massachusetts would be held late next month or in early August. The event is being scheduled partly because the region is experiencing strong interest from casino companies.

"There's a lot of action in Western Mass," said Stephen P. Crosby, chairman of the gaming commission during a break in Tuesday's meeting in Boston. "There's a lot of communities and it's a long schlep to get out here. We might as well go where the action is."

It's unclear where the forum would be held. Paul E. Burns, president of the Palmer Town Council, wrote to the commission saying Palmer would be honored to host a forum in Western Massachusetts. Commissioners said the forum might be held at Western New England University in Springfield.

Burns said it might make sense for the commission to hold three forums in Western Massachusetts.

Several casino developers are eyeing Western Massachusetts. Ameristar Casinos is planning a casino for Page Boulevard and Interstate 291 in Springfield and the Mohegan Sun is planning a casino on a hill overlooking Exit 8 of the Massachusetts Turnpike in Palmer. Several big casino companies are considering other possible sites in Western Massachusetts, including MGM Resorts, Penn National Gaming and Hard Rock International.

Bruce Stebbins 32012.jpgBruce Stebbins

Last week, two companies associated with Peter A. Picknelly, chairman and CEO of Peter Pan Bus Lines, submitted a proposal for an option to buy The Republican's Main Street building and property in Springfield and the newspaper's eight vacant acres on the Connecticut River. The two companies would like to develop a casino in the city's North End.

The forum will offer tips for communities to reach agreements with casinos, according to Bruce Stebbins, a member of the commission.

Casinos need to have signed agreements with leaders of communities where they plan to locate, including possible fees, traffic improvements and job guarantees. Casinos also need to ink similar agreements with municipalities abutting or near the so-called host community.

The forum will also investigate ways to bolster tourism with casinos and to train a casino workforce.

During Tuesday's meeting, two of the commission's consultants -- Guy S. Michael and Robert J. Carroll of Atlantic City, N.J. -- provided a timeline for the commission to complete steps needed for the first of a two-step bidding process for casinos.

According to the schedule, the commission would seek the initial bids on Oct. 12. Companies would pay a $400,000 application fee and would include information about their finances, as well as key executives, officers and directors. If the commission approves a company's finances and integrity, then a company would be qualified to participate in the second part of the process and submit bids for licenses for actual casinos, possibly some time next year.

The state's casino law authorizes up to three casino resorts in different regions of the state, including one for Western Massachusetts. The law requires competitive bids for Western Massachusetts and a region that includes Boston.

The governor's office is currently negotiating a compact with the Wampanoag tribe of Mashpee for a casino planned in Taunton for the southeast region. The compact would need to be approved by the state Legislature by July 31, or the commission might be clear to seek bids from commercial operators by Oct. 31 for the southeast area.

A single slots facility would also need to be bid.

Crosby said he hopes people see that the commission is picking up the pace, about three months after the panel's first meeting.

"We're starting to really roll," he said. "There is a lot that is going on all of a sudden."

Crosby said the commission is also planning to hire an ombudsman to work with communities and to help developers obtain information or meetings with state agencies. The commission might hire an ombudsman by the end of next month, he said.

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Palmer Town Council approves $32 million budget

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The town manager said 12 positions were studied and were compared to those in similar communities, such as Ware, Wilbraham, Sturbridge and Charlton.

palmer seal palmer town seal.jpg

PALMER - The Town Council quickly passed the $32 million fiscal 2013 budget at its meeting Monday night, a 2.3 percent increase over the previous year's appropriation of $31 million.

The budget process earned praise from District 4 Councilor Donald Blais Jr., who noted that he did not support last year's budget.

At the time, Blais criticized the number of meetings that had to be canceled due to lack of a quorum.

This time around, Blais said he felt the process went much more smoothly, and thanked Town Manager Charles T. Blanchard and his assistant, Andrew M. Golas and Town Council President Paul E. Burns.

Blanchard, in a Tuesday interview, said he also was pleased with the budget and the amount of time that the council dedicated to it.

Blanchard noted that the budget restores eight positions that had been cut previously, and also adjusts salaries for several department heads and non-union administrative employees. The latter was the result of a salary study launched earlier this year after department heads brought their salary concerns to the council.

Burns, at the meeting, explained that the salary subcommittee developed a category and pay grade system, taking into account knowledge, experience, decision making and supervision.

Blanchard said 12 positions were studied and were compared to those in similar communities, such as Ware, Wilbraham, Sturbridge and Charlton.

Burns later said that most of the employees received a $6,000 raise through the process, and that the amount was split between the fiscal 2012 and fiscal 2013 budgets. Burns said many of the employees had been working "for years and years and years" below the average salary in the region.

He said it may take until fiscal 2014 to bring some of the employees' salaries to the midpoint on the scale. Non-union employees also received a 2 percent pay raise for fiscal 2013.

Said Blanchard, "I think we made great strides in making the salaries more competitive. They were pretty significantly underpaid, considering the length of time" they have been working for the town.

Blanchard said the pay issue became apparent last summer when the town accountant left to take a similar position in Easthampton that paid $10,000 more.

Positions were restored in the planning, assessor, town clerk, wastewater, public works, conservation and health departments, totaling approximately $150,000. A Council on Aging van driver also had his hours increased from 30 a week to 35. The town accountant asked for a part-time employee, but that request was denied.

"We'll keep an eye on it as we move forward," Blanchard said.

In other business, the council voted to take $100,000 out of the "free cash" account from fiscal 2012 to fund three new police cruisers. Two cruisers were funded in the fiscal 2013 budget. Next year, the police will only have two replace two cruisers, officials said.

Replacing five cruisers will get the department back on its schedule of buying two new cruisers a year. In more difficult budget years, only one cruiser had been funded at a time.

Councilors Karl S. Williams and Blake E. Lamothe, defeated in the June 12 election, were absent.

Monson voters approve plans for new town hall / police station

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It may take up two years to build a new facility, according to the town administrator.

francis beaulieu (2).jpgFrancis H. Beaulieu casts his vote on Tuesday at Quarry Hill Community School in Monson. Beaulieu said he voted for the $3.4 debt exclusion for a new Town Hall-Police Station to replace the tornado-damaged building on Main Street.

MONSON - Voters here on Tuesday said yes to a $3.4 million debt exclusion for a new Town Hall-Police Station, giving the go-ahead to raze the former facility, closed since the tornado last year tore through it.

The vote was 694 to 472, with 21 percent of the town's 5,625 registered voters turning out to cast ballots, according to Assistant Town Clerk Mary F. Watson.

Town Administrator Gretchen E. Neggers said it was exciting to hear the news.

"I think that we're all very pleased that the taxpayers voted to move the community forward to do something newer and better than what was there before," Neggers said.

Neggers said they respect the people who voted no and their concerns, and will be "very conscientious" moving forward with the project. She said they will continue to look for other available funds to put toward the project. The total cost is $10.3 million, but the town is receiving a $6.9 million insurance settlement toward the project, leaving taxpayers with $3.4 million to fund.

Neggers said she expects that the demolition of the former Town Building-Police Station on Main Street will begin soon. The building was built in 1925 as a school.

The new structure will be constructed on the same spot and will be two stories and 26,000-square-feet, which is 5,000-square-feet less than the former building. There will be a large community meeting space, and an emergency 911 dispatch center. The police will have cells for the first time, and a sally port to drop off prisoners in a secure area.

It will likely take two years for the new building to be built, Neggers said. Town offices have been operating out of the former Hillside School on Thompson Street, and the police are in temporary trailers behind the boarded-up Town Building.

Outside Quarry Hill Community School, where voting was taking place, Margaret Harrison said she voted for the project. Harrison said she thinks the town will save money in the long run by spending it now. Harrison pointed to the energy savings that a new facility is expected to bring, approximately $59,000 a year.

Donna and Thomas Gilman said they were against the project until they saw the presentation at the annual Town Meeting by Neggers that detailed the poor conditions in the old Town Hall-Police Station.

"We feel it's a good deal. For the little bit of money it's going to cost a year, we feel it's worth it," Thomas Gilman said.

Francis H. Beaulieu said he voted for the debt exclusion.

"I'm the one who doesn't send good money after bad. Even if you rebuild (the Town Hall-Police Station), it's still an old building," Beaulieu said.

George R. and Carol M. Monte sat with a "Vote No" sign. George Monte said he felt the residents were not given any choices, and called the proposal "an unnecessary expenditure for people."

"Why impose a tax when you're getting an insurance settlement to fix the old building?"

Joan F. Watson voted against it, and said the insurance money should be used to repair it. Watson said homeowners with tornado damage had to use their insurance settlements to repair their homes, and the town should do the same, and not ask for anything extra.

Janet P. Foy supported the project. Foy said some people are attached to the building because it's old, but she said there are other historic buildings in town. She said the building is outdated, and improving the handicapped access alone is a huge expense.

While voters approved the borrowing for the project at the annual Town Meeting in May, Tuesday's vote was the final step in the process needed for it to move forward.

The debt exclusion will be for 15 years. It is expected to cost the owner of the average home valued at $220,000 an extra $100 the first year. Adding in savings from the refinancing of the Monson High School construction debt, the actual cost is expected to be only $40 the first year.

Watch LeBron James share laughs, NBA trophy with David Letterman

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The Miami Heat are on a media tour after winning the NBA title.

lebron.jpgThe Miami Heat’s LeBron James, left, embraces the Larry O'Brien trophy as television show host David Letterman watches Tuesday on the set of the “Late Show with David Letterman” in New York.

By TIM REYNOLDS
MIAMI — LeBron James got a standing ovation from the studio audience as he began his appearance on CBS' "Late Show with David Letterman."

And at the end of the interview, James even got a compliment from Letterman — who was not exactly a fan of his joining the Miami Heat to begin with.

The newly crowned NBA Finals MVP appeared on CBS' "Late Show with David Letterman" in New York on Tuesday night, and Letterman wasted no time before asking a tough question. The first offering from the late-night host: "Well, now that you've got this out of your system, are you ready to go back to Cleveland and play some ball?"

James laughed it off. "Right now, I'll play no ball right now," James said.

Letterman had taken a jab or two at James in the past about his decision to leave Cleveland for Miami, saying Tuesday that he was "furious" about the move. In a 2010 episode of "Late Show," Letterman told Jay-Z — a minority owner of the Nets — that if James left it would "cut the heart out of" Cleveland. And after the Heat lost in last season's finals, actress Betty White read Letterman's nightly Top 10 list of her "tips for living a long and healthy life."

No. 2 on that night's list?

"Never dwell on past mistakes," White said, "especially you, LeBron."

But on Tuesday, there were no mistakes for James and Letterman to dwell on for too long. Letterman asked the three-time NBA MVP how winning a championship changes things.

"I went from being ringless on Wednesday night to, you know, having a ring on Thursday night," James said. "So it changed that."

Later, Letterman told James that "nobody loves a winner more than basketball fans, and you certainly are the big winner." James replied, "I appreciate that."

James, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh are in the midst of a media tour in New York. Bosh appeared on "Live! With Kelly" on Tuesday and Wade sat down for NBC's "Late Night with Jimmy Fallon." On Wednesday, all three are scheduled on ABC's "The View." Oprah Winfrey also taped an interview with the Heat trio in Miami on Monday, and that is scheduled to air on her network Sunday night.

Letterman also spent time talking about the upcoming London Olympics with James, who also played for the U.S. team at the Athens Games in 2004 and the Beijing Games in 2008.

James told Letterman that he expects Argentina, Spain and France to be good challenges for the Americans in London.

"Team USA, we try to go out there and showcase our talent at the highest level and represent our country the right way," James said. "So, you know, we always look forward to bringing home the gold."

As the interview was ending, Letterman took the championship trophy out from behind his desk.

"That's my baby right there," James said, giving the trophy a kiss.

Daisuke Matsuzaka on the mound? That's good news in Red Sox win

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The right-hander kept it close until the Red Sox offense awakened.

navakalish.JPGBoston Red Sox's Daniel Nava, right, jumps as he celebrates with Ryan Kalish after they scored on Dustin Pedroia's single in the seventh inning against the Toronto Blue Jays at Fenway Park in Boston on Tuesday, June 26, 2012.

BOSTON - Maybe Red Sox fans should stop being so squeamish about having Daisuke Matsuzaka in the rotation.

He did not get the victory Tuesday night, and in fact has yet to claim a win. Boston's 5-1 victory over Toronto would have probably not been possible without him, though.

"He's fun to play behind,'' Red Sox shortstop Mike Aviles said.

That's not the reputation of Matsuzaka, whose style has been described as tedious - and worse.

Not lately, though. The Dice-K of 2012 has had some trouble in the first inning, but has been sharp afterward.

"His pitches have so much movement that sometimes I don't know what they are,'' Aviles said.

"He keeps us on our toes, and the important thing is that he's out there competing. We can feed off that.''

Until the seventh, an inning after Matsuzaka had left with a 1-0 deficit, it looked like he might wind up the hard-luck loser.

Jarrod Saltalamacchia's home run and Dustin Pedroia's two-run single keyed a three-run seventh that pushed the Red Sox past the Jays in the game, and eventually in the AL East standings.

Boston is in fourth place, a game ahead of Toronto.

It was Matsuzaka who kept this one within range. He allowed only a run in the first and left after 5 2/3 innings.

He allowed six hits with five strikeouts and one walk, throwing 60 of his 100 pitches for strikes. When the bullpens took over, the scales swung decisively in Boston's favor.

Saltalamacchia continues to send reminders that his candidacy for the All-Star Game has merit.

His 14 home runs lead all major league catchers. He is at or near the top in the other power categories as well.

"I haven't seen him get down on himself or down on a pitcher,'' Red Sox manager Bobby Valentine said.

"He's playing a confident brand of baseball
and believing in himself. Things that haunted him in the past seem gone.

"He's just playing baseball and looking good at it.''

Pedroia is also back in business. Breaking out of a prolonged slump, he is 7-for-15 in his last four games.

All the seventh-inning scoring came with two out. Defying percentages, left-handed Ryan Kalish followed Salty's home run with a pinch-hit double off lefty reliever Luis Perez.

In came former Red Sox pitcher David Pauley, who hit pinch-hitter Daniel Nava with a pitch and walked Mike Aviles.

Pedroia's two-run single followed, giving the win to reliever Andrew Miller (2-0). The Sox added two runs in the eighth.

Valentine figured that if Kalish made the third out in the seventh, Nava could lead off the eighth. But he also thinks Kalish has a knack for saving his hits for clutch situations.

The manager also found value in the inning-continuing walk by Aviles, who has walked only 10 times this year.

Adrian Gonzalez had an RBI double in the eighth. Gonzalez has hit in seven straight games at 10-for-28.

Since ending a year-long rehab after elbow surgery, Matsuzaka has made four starts, each a bit better than the last.

In this one, he gave up a leadoff double to Brett Lawrie in the first, ending a nine-pitch at-bat.

The Jays had runners at the corners with no out, but managed only run. Matsuzaka had allowed five first-inning runs over his previous two starts, so this time, Valentine came out to talk to him.

"I just asked him if he believed in himself and could forget about what had happened,'' Valentine said.

"He said yes, and he pitched a good game.''

To address the issue of slow starts, Dice-K altered his pregame routine. He spent more time in the bullpen, though manager Valentine did not indicate that necessarily meant more pitches.

He also threw during the day, an unheard-of approach for American pitchers.

Holyoke Council approves $43,000 salary for new position of creative economy coordinator

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Supporters said the new position will mobilize the city's artists, performance spaces and other creative forces to help the economy.

tallman.JPGPeter R. Tallman

HOLYOKE – The City Council voted 11-4 Tuesday for the newly established position of creative economy coordinator to have a yearly salary of $43,037.

Mayor Alex B. Morse, who proposed the new position, had sought a salary of $47,148, but told councilors they were free to approve a pay in a range that had $43,037 at the bottom.

The meeting featured councilors criticizing Morse for what Ward 5 Councilor Linda L. Vacon said was a “morphing” salary that was stated initially as $40,000 and what Councilor at Large Daniel B. Bresnahan said was a rushed process for a position the city couldn’t afford.

But most councilors disagreed. They sided with with Councilor at Large Peter R. Tallman, who said the process had been thorough, including three reviews by the Ordinance Committee, and Councilor Joseph M. McGiverin, who said capitalizing on creative parts of the city with such a coordinator is the way to pump the economy and grow the tax base.

“This is an investment in our city and an investment in our future,” Tallman said.

Morse has said the person in the new position will work with local, state, regional and national officials and others to promote Holyoke’s arts community. The person will organize the city’s creative strengths like galleries and performance spaces into an economic force, he said.

Morse told councilors the process showed his office and the council can work together.

In approving the position last week, the council included requirements that the job-holder be a Holyoke resident and that there be a two-year “sunset clause.” That means the law establishing the job is automatically repealed in two years if the job has been found not to generate enough revenue to pay for itself, council President Kevin A. Jourdain said.

“It’s been a good experience because we’ve been able to work together,” Morse said.

Voting to approve the salary were councilors Gordon P. Alexander, Aaron M. Vega, David K. Bartley, Rebecca Lisi, Gladys Lebron-Martinez, Jason P. Ferreira, James M. Leahy, Anthony Soto, Tallman, McGiverin and Jourdain.

Voting no were councilors Todd A. McGee, Brenna M. McGee, Vacon and Bresnahan.

The vote came in a special session of the City Council called to approve a supplemental budget that included the new position’s salary.

Vacon said councilors were told the salary would be $40,000, not $43,000 or $47,000.

“This is a morphing job, a morphing pay scale,” Vacon said.

But, McGiverin said the council in establishing the position last week approved it with a pay range, in exactly the kind of step needed to expand the tax base.

“That’s how we make what we want to happen in the city, by being creative,” McGiverin said.

Morse said it was untrue that he spoke only of the job at a $40,000 salary, producing copies of stories on MassLive.com and reminder.com in which he discussed a range of $40,000 to $50,000 for the post.

Still, Bresnahan said, the city shouldn’t be creating new positions while having to lay off dozens of school employees.

“I just think it is fiscally irresponsible,” Bresnahan said.

Morse and others said school problems are tied to funding specific to the School Department.

The school layoffs are unfortunate but out of City Council control, whereas the creative economy coordinator is a step the council can take to improve the city, Vega said.

“This is ‘big picture’ thinking,” Vega said.

Alexander said he got a dozen calls from people saying the $40,000 was too low for the position and should be upped to $60,000 to attract qualified applicants.

But Todd McGee said the only calls he got were from people worried about rising sewer and other bills and school layoffs and urging a no vote on the salary for the creative economy coordinator.


Roll-up door makes 'citizen's arrest' in Brockton; burglary suspect's head pinned underneath for nearly 9 hours

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Brockton police say a burglary suspect got his head stuck underneath a roll-up loading bay door when he apparently couldn't pry it open.

BROCKTON, Mass. (AP) - Brockton police say a burglary suspect got his head stuck underneath a roll-up loading bay door when he apparently couldn't pry it open.

Police Officer Stan David tells The Enterprise newspaper officers who responded to a Rent-A-Center store Tuesday morning found 53-year-old Manuel Fernandez trapped with a piece of a metal bed frame he had apparently used to try to open the door.

David said Fernandez was taken to a hospital to be checked for a large bruise on the back of his head.

Store manager John Rodriguez said he found Fernandez at about 8:45 a.m. He said Fernandez told him he'd been there since midnight. Rodriguez said Fernandez first said he was trying to fix the door, then asked him to let him go because he hadn't taken anything.

Ludlow School Committee votes to restore 6 teaching positions

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The positions were restored following approval of the school budget at the June 18 annual town meeting.

LUDLOW - The School Committee on Tuesday voted to restore six teaching positions, after passage of a $25.7 million school budget at the June 18 annual town meeting.

The positions which will be restored are a grade 2 teacher, a math teacher and a reading teacher at the middle school and a health teacher, modern language teacher and guidance counselor at Ludlow High School.

The positions were restored after the Board of Selectmen and the Finance Committee voted to recommend an additional $300,000 to the recommended school budget for fiscal 2013.

An additional special education teacher and a special education teacher’s aide will be added to next year’s budget for East Street School.

Interim School Superintendent Donna Hogan said five teaching positions will be eliminated next year, three due to retirements.

School Committee member Patricia Gregoire said she was pleased to see the guidance counselor at the high school would be retained.

She said that because the position will be retained, students at the high school will continue to have the same guidance counselor for all four years of high school.

Maintaining a relationship with a guidance counselor helps students to realize the importance of continuing their education after high school, Gregoire said.

Gregoire said that of the 208 graduates from Ludlow High School this spring, 80 will go on to four-year colleges and 108 will continue on to a two-year college.

Gregoire said there are many students who do not know what career they want to pursue when they graduate, but many realize it is important to pursue an additional degree, beyond high school.

Of the numbers who will attend four-year and two-year colleges after graduating from Ludlow High School, Gregoire said, “Those are pretty good numbers.”

Ludlow High School Principal Lisa Nemeth said that besides the teaching positions which have been cut for next year, four assistant coaching positions also have been cut as well as an intramural sports program and advisers to high school clubs.

Comedian Louis C.K. sidesteps Ticketmaster, sells tours himself

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After selling a comedy special directly to fans and upending the comedy business, Louis C.K. is taking the same approach with tickets to his next tour.

Louis C.K.FILE - In this April 28, 2012 file photo, comedian Louis C.K. from the FX comedy "Louie" appears onstage at The 2012 Comedy Awards in New York. After selling a comedy special directly to fans and upending the comedy business, Louis C.K. is taking the same approach with tickets to his next tour. The comedian announced Monday, June 25, that he'll charge a flat, no-fee rate of $45 to all of the shows on a 39-city tour he kicks off in October. Tickets will bypass ticketing services and be available only through louisck.com. Louis C.K.'s show “Louie” debuts its third season on FX on Thursday. (AP Photo/Charles Sykes, file)

By JAKE COYLE, AP Entertainment Writer

NEW YORK (AP) — After selling a comedy special directly to fans and upending the comedy business, Louis C.K. is taking the same approach with tickets to his next tour.

The comedian announced Monday evening that he'll charge a flat, no-fee rate of $45 to all of the shows on a 39-city tour he kicks off in October. Tickets will bypass ticketing services and are available only through his website.

That's similar to how he sold downloads of his special "Live at the Beacon" for $5, a move that was widely hailed and has since been imitated by other comics like Jim Gaffigan and Aziz Ansari. It made more than $1 million in 12 days.

"I'm trying something new, building on the fun, success and fan-benefit of selling my content online," the comedian, whose FX show "Louie" debuts its third season Thursday, said in an email to fans.

In an effort to deter scalping, he pledged that any tickets sold above the original price will be canceled. True-market value for a show by Louis C.K., one of the most popular stand-ups in the country, would fetch higher prices. (Online ticketing company Etix is assisting the comedian's sale.)

Often, booking venues without the inclusion of a large ticketing service can prove problematic for acts looking to avoid Ticketmaster, which merged with concert producer LiveNation in 2010. Louis C.K. said booking venues had been "a real challenge."

"About a year ago I reached a place where I realized I am making enough money doing comedy so the next thing that interested me is bringing your price down," he told fans. "Either way, I still make a whole lot more than my grandfather who taught math and raised chickens in Michigan."

Kevin Garnett retiring ... oh, wait ... you mean not everything on Twitter is true?

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A fake Twitter account set off a frenzy and kept a sports editor up past his bedtime.

kevingarnett.JPGBoston Celtics forward Kevin Garnett is reacting to either an official's call or a Twitter report that he has retired. Both, he knows, are wrong.

The last words Boston Celtics fans want to hear these days came across Twitter on Tuesday night: "Sad day for the NBA, as the great Kevin Garnett has decided to retire. Press conference scheduled for 1 pm EST tomorrow on ESPN." The tweet was posted under the name StephenASmith, the ESPN sports reporter, radio host and columnist.

You would have thought Larry Bird had been named coach of the Lakers. The Twitterverse went nuts. Some examples:

"KG will walk into the HOF- one of the all-time greats"

"Daayum Kevin Garnett retired. You were a great player KG much respect to your game, passion & your love of the game. You will be missed."

"KG Is Retiring , Ray Might Be In A Heat Jersey Next Year & Doc Might Take A Break Coaching ?! Sheeesh, The Celtics Are Finished!"

"Can you please stop talking about KG. I'm already depressed."

But maybe people should have looked a little closer at the account: "@stephenasmifh The fake Stephen A. Smith. Don't check me out at StephenA.com and Stephenasmithshow.com"

Oops.

I first heard about the fake rumor courtesy of the Twitter account of Springfield Armor player L.D. Williams: "So KG is retiring...gonna be an emotional press conference to say the least...what a great career though!"

Yes, I just had to check this one out even though I already had been in the office close to 12 hours. The last we had heard, former teammate Kendrick Perkins was predicting Garnett would return to the Celtics. A few anxious moments of research unveiled the truth about the tweet. But I will leave you with one last tweet on the subject.

"Say I'm retired one more time. I dare you, I double dare you." - What KG would say on the retirement rumors.

Mediation with creditors fails in Stockton, California, making it the largest American city ever to declare bankruptcy

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City Manager Bob Deis said officials were unable to reach a deal to restructure hundreds of millions of dollars of debt under a new state law designed to help municipalities avoid bankruptcy.

stockton-city-hall.jpgA light standard rests at the dilapidated entrance to city hall Tuesday, June 26, 2012, in Stockton, Calif.
STOCKTON, Calif. — Officials in Stockton said Tuesday that mediation with creditors has failed, meaning the Central California city is set to become the largest American city ever to declare bankruptcy.

City Manager Bob Deis said officials were unable to reach a deal to restructure hundreds of millions of dollars of debt under a new state law designed to help municipalities avoid bankruptcy.

Monday marked the three-month deadline for negotiations.

"Unfortunately we have no comprehensive set of agreements with our creditors that would eliminate the deficit and avoid insolvency," Deis said at a City Council meeting. He said, however, that the city was still negotiating with some creditors and could reach deals with as many as one-third of them.

"We think Chapter 9 protection is the only choice left. If we get any agreements, those will be honored in Chapter 9," Deis said.

The City Council voted Tuesday evening to approve a special bankruptcy budget to plug next year's anticipated $26 million deficit. The budget will suspend debt payments, reduce payments for retiree medical benefits and increase revenue through code enforcement and parking citations, among other steps.

The proposed budget includes no major service reductions, Deis said earlier.

City lawyers would have to file for Chapter 9 protection in court by Friday.

"If we had other choices that would fill the millions of dollars of deficit, we'd be doing that," Mayor Ann Johnston said. "The reality is the gap is so big and so broad, we have to do something this drastic. This is not what we wanted to do but this is what we have a responsibility to do."

The river port city of 290,000 in Central California has seen its property taxes and other revenues decline, while expensive investments and generous retiree benefits drained city coffers.

In the past three years, officials in the city that was slammed by the collapse of the housing market dealt with $90 million in deficits through a series of drastic cuts.

They eliminated one-fourth of the city's police officers, one-third of the fire staff, and 40 percent of all other employees. They also cut wages and medical benefits.

"The whole purpose of filing Chapter 9 is to avoid an uncontrolled chaotic situation," he said. "Bankruptcy provides the equivalent of a pause button. It retains services and provides structure so you don't have a bunch of lawsuits."

In a standing-room only chambers Tuesday, former city employees told council members about their life-threatening medical conditions and said benefit cuts meant they would effectively lose their health insurance.

"For me, bankruptcy might as well be a life sentence," said Gary Jones, a retiree who used to be a police officer in Stockton and said he was diagnosed with a brain tumor.

Other residents complained about plummeting property values, and recurring break-ins and robberies.

"The average citizen will not put up with this. Their home prices have plummeted, they have no jobs, a lot of people are getting fed up so that they have to resort to crime." said Gregory Pitsch, a 22-year-old unemployed resident who made an unsuccessful run for mayor. "I'm asking you to make the right decision, not destroy the property values in this city, which bankruptcy will do."

But city officials say Stockton has run out of options. In recent years, thousands of new homes mushroomed in the city about 80 miles east of San Francisco, part of a suburban housing boom that attracted buyers from the Bay Area and beyond.

When the economy crashed and the construction bubble burst, Stockton was battered by foreclosures and lost income from property taxes and other fees.

Multi-year labor contracts for city workers carrying escalating costs and generous retirement plans added to the burden.

In addition, expensive city investments — a promenade, sports arena and hotel — failed to produce economic benefits.

The unemployment rate has doubled in Stockton over the past decade and now hovers around 16 percent. One-fifth of residents live below the poverty line, and the city has twice topped Forbes magazine's list of "America's most miserable cities."

Under a bankruptcy filing, officials would retain power over day-to-day city operations and staffing, but a judge would take over all decisions concerning the city's debts, said Robert Benedetti, professor of political science at the University of the Pacific in Stockton.

The judge would decide which creditors should be paid, how much and in what order. He would make allowances for expenditures needed by the city to function, and it would be up to city officials to decide how to spend that money.

"One of the reasons a city might want to go the bankruptcy route is that they don't want a situation where they have to pay out debts and have to close the police or fire department," Benedetti said. "Filing for Chapter 9 means you're asking the court to protect you against lawsuits from people who hold your debt."

Stockton's bankruptcy would make it the largest city by population to file for Chapter 9 protection, according to Jim Spiotto, a Chicago bankruptcy lawyer who tracks such cases. He said Bridgeport, Conn., was the largest city to file for bankruptcy, which it did in 1991, followed by Vallejo, Calif., which filed in 2008.

Jefferson County in Alabama is the largest local government bankruptcy filing to date in terms of the size of its debt. It occurred in November 2011 and was followed by Orange County, Calif., in 1994.

Experts say the bankruptcy filing, while protecting the city from catastrophe in the short run, should not be seen as Stockton's panacea.

"Bankruptcy won't take away Stockton's underlying financial problems, one of which is the economy, the high unemployment rate and the high foreclosure rate," Benedetti said. "It will take years for them to come out of this."

Stockton was the first city to test a new state mediation law, which is less than 6 months old.

Under the law, municipalities considering bankruptcy must first negotiate behind closed doors with creditors for up to three months, with the goal of settling debts without filing for Chapter 9 protection.

The city spent $3 million on mediation with creditors that included Wells Fargo & Co., the California Public Employees' Retirement System, labor groups, and major bondholders.

Stockton officials have said that even with a bankruptcy, they are optimistic. They point to Vallejo, which emerged from bankruptcy last year.

"Vallejo is leaner, smarter and they've got the confidence of their citizenry," Deis said. "I think Stockton will be doing the same."

Johnston said Tuesday night that the city would eventually come out of the ordeal with a brighter future.

"We will survive," she said. "We will manage to get through this. It will be painful for us, but we will come out stronger."

Holyoke to host walk-run to raise money to fight Huntington's disease

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The organizer's faither died after a 20-year battle with the disease.

gilburg.JPGJennifer A. Gilburg

HOLYOKE – A 3.1-mile walk-run to raise research money to find a cure for Huntington’s disease will be held here July 14.

Hunting for a Cure will begin at 4 p.m. at Holyoke Elks Lodge at 250 Whitney Ave. and proceed around Ashley Reservoir, organizer Jennifer A. Gilburg said Tuesday.

For registration and other information call (413) 335-4687.

Or, to register, click on this link: http://www.active.com/running/holyoke-ma/hunting-for-a-cure-5k-run-walk-2012

Registration is $10 to $25, depending on age and when each entrant registers.

All proceeds will go to the Huntington’s Disease Society of America, Gilburg said.

This is the second year of the event organized by Gilburg in memory of her father, Michael Allen Dudley, who died June 6, 2010 after a 20-year fight with Huntington’s disease.

Huntington’s disease is inherited and causes progressive breakdown of nerve cells in the brain, causing disorders in movement and thinking and psychiatric disorders, according to mayoclinic.com

Chicopee water main break reported near City Hall

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Traffic will be detoured away from the Market Square section of Chicopee Center as work crews address the soggy situation.

CHICOPEE — A water main break near City Hall is expected to make for a wet and messy commute in Chicopee Center this morning.

The break was reported around 1:30 a.m. Wednesday. The affected streets include sections of Springfield, Exchange and Grape streets near City Hall, and officials are asking motorists to avoid these areas this morning, a city police spokesman said.

There's no official word on what caused the main to break, but crews are attempting to fix the problem. A section of Springfield Street has reportedly collapsed as a result of the break.

The impact on area residents and businesses was not immediately clear, though a local TV station is reporting that the break is not expected to affect water delivery or pressure to residents of the Market Square section of the city.

Chicopee Water Department Superintendent Alan M. Starzyk told abc40 that roughly 1.7 million gallons of water was released during the break. No water was flowing as of 5:30 a.m., Starzyk said.

This is not the first time a water main break has resulted in a soggy situation in the city's center. An April 2011 break in a cast iron pipe buried under South Street between Nonotuck Avenue and School Street caused about $100,000 in damage, officials said at the time.

In February 2009, a major break left all of Chicopee without water, dumping about 650,000 gallons onto city streets and causing part of Granby Road to collapse.

"The water came flying out," Mayor Michael D. Bissonnette said Sunday.


Check back with MassLive.com later today for updates on this and other stories.

MAP of area where a water main break was reported early Thursday:


View Larger Map


Roca, celebrating 2 years in Springfield, credited with helping young men at risk turn their lives around

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Roca’s Springfield operation, which has a budget of about $1 million a year in state and private money, now has a roster of 100 young participants

ROCA 1.jpgRoca co-director Yusef Iddeen, left is seen with second year Roca participant Kelord Kynard and co-director Christine Judd,right. The Roca program celebrates its second year in Springfield Wednesday.

SPRINGFIELD – Kelord Z. Kynard’s life used to revolve around the street: selling drugs, chasing women, fighting.

Now he says the best part of his day is when he gets home from his work at the JiffyLube on Memorial Avenue in West Springfield. Home to his wife and two children, a son who is nearly 2 and a 5-year-old daughter who is about to start kindergarten in the fall.

“It brings a tear to my eye,” Kynard said. “She’ll ask me what I did that day. And I can tell her what I’ve been doing.”

The difference, he said, is Roca, an anti-crime and job-training program serving young men ages 17 to 24 who have been in trouble with the law and are disconnected from the working world and from education.

Roca celebrates its second-anniversary in Springfield, and its first anniversary in its own building at 25-33 School Street Wednesday. The building has a barbershop, weightlifting equipment and a recording studio as lures to gain the interest of new arrivals before they get to work.

Roca’s Springfield operation, which has a budget of about $1 million a year in state and private money, now has a roster of 100 young participants

Seven of those young men have earned their graduate equivalency diplomas, or GEDs. Fourteen of the 100 have jobs outside. The rest of the 100 participants in training or assigned to work crews on tasks like painting hallways for the Springfield Housing Authority or building roof trusses under a contract with a local company.

Yusef B. Id-Deen, assistant director of Roca in Springfield, said that might sound like slow progress to some. But he points out that Roca’s initial program takes two years and the is two more years of follow up. It can take 18 months to two years just to get one of these young men motivated and trained to the point where they can show up on time and ready to go for 60 consecutive working days.

“Nobody ever demanded it of them before. No one ever cared,” Id-Deen said.

Molly Baldwin founded Roca, it the Spanish word for rock as in something to be built upon, in 1988 in Chelsea. She called it an evidence-based program with relentless outreach and follow up where leaders track every youth worker and counselor and every participant.
She brought the program to Springfield with the support of Hampden County Sheriff Michael J. Ashe and others.

“The data informs what we do every day,” Baldwin said. “We find out what strategies work and what doesn’t.”

But she doesn’t have rose-colored glasses. Roca in Springfield has called the police and had a participant arrested for having a gun.

“We took a gun of the street,” Baldwin said. “We are dealing with people who have done bad things. Sometimes they do bad things here and we have to call the police.”

Baldwin’s experience in Springfield has lead her to refine Roca’s mission in Chelsea away from all young people just to young males at the highest risk of continuing a life of crime. Chelsea will keep a program for young mothers but won’t do as much with young women who are not mothers.

And Roca won’t focus on young males who are not at high risk.

“If you come to us and you show up every day and get to work, we’ll say you are a nice guy but you don’t need us and we don’t want you mixing with our high-risk population,” Baldwin said. “We’ll refer you to another program.”

Id-Deen said knows what its like to be “high-risk”. He was there himself.

“I used to be one of these guys,” Id-Deen said. “I had to get a GED. I had to get my life on track.”

Judge halts sales of Samsung Galaxy 10.1 tablet in face of Apple challenge

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U.S. District Judge Lucy Koh said Apple's lawsuit, which claims Samsung illegally copied iPad's design, appeared likely to prevail.

samsung galaxy.jpgSamsung Galaxy 10.1

SAN FRANCISCO – A judge late Tuesday ordered Samsung Electronics to halt sales of its Galaxy 10.1 tablet computer while the court considers Apple's claim the South Korean tech giant illegally copied the design of the popular iPad.

U.S. District Judge Lucy Koh said Apple's lawsuit appeared likely to prevail.

"Apple has established a strong case on the merits," Koh said.

Koh had earlier said the two products are "virtually indistinguishable," but she declined in December to take the dramatic step of prohibiting sales of the Galaxy 10.1. She changed her mind after the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit told Koh to take another look at Apple's request for an injunction, ruling June 19 that it appeared the Cupertino-based company had a strong case. The Washington, D.C., court handles most patent appeals.

"Although Samsung has a right to compete, it does not have a right to compete unfairly, by flooding the market with infringing products," Koh wrote in her Tuesday order. She said Apple would be "irreparably harmed" if sales of the Galaxy 10.1 continued.

Samsung representatives didn't respond to email requests for comment late Tuesday.

Koh ordered Apple to post a $2.6 million bond in case it ultimately loses the case.

The ruling is a small part of a much larger patent battle between the two tech giants, who are scheduled to go to trial next month in San Jose.

Apple filed its lawsuit last year, and the two companies are enmeshed in patent disputes around the globe revolving around smartphones and handheld computers. Samsung, with its Android-powered products, has emerged as one of Apple's chief rivals.

Apple also accuses the South Korean company of infringing patents related to the iPhone. Apple is seeking a similar injunction barring Samsung from selling one of its smartphones in the United States.

Springfield man caught on camera stabbing pit bull

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The dog was euthanized after being stabbed by a man embroiled in an altercation with another man on Palmer Avenue in the city's South End.

SPRINGIFLED &38212; A city resident has been charged with assault and battery with a dangerous weapon and animal cruelty in connection with a South End fight that ended after a dog was stabbed.

A pit bull was stabbed twice during an afternoon fight between two men on Palmer Avenue on June 7. The dog had to be euthanized, according to a 22News report.

David Montes, 33, of Springfield, was charged in connection with the incident, which was caught on tape by a bystander who filmed the violent episode with a cellphone.

Springfield Police Sgt. James Martucci, reached early Wednesday, said he was unaware of the incident and had no information about the case.

Montes was arrested last week and is expected back in court for a July 9 hearing, according to 22 News.

"He was like my son," dog owner Jeanelis Gonzalez told the TV station.

David Ortiz' 399th home run leads a Red Sox rout

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Big Papi moved into baseball's all-time top 50 in home runs.

papi.JPGFans cheer as Boston Red Sox designated hitter David Ortiz rounds the bases with a solo home run at Fenway Park in Boston on Wednesday.

BOSTON - David Ortiz is on the verge of a milestone.

His team should be on the verge of being taken seriously as a playoff contender.

The Red Sox are heading to the West Coast in a third-place tie after Wednesday's 10-4 rout of the Toronto Blue Jays, a game highlighted by Ortiz' 399th career home run.

It's a far cry from April 21, when the Sox blew a nine-run lead in a 15-9 loss to the New York Yankees.

They were 4-10 at the time, and New England was in an uproar. While analysts were asking if Bobby Valentine would make it until Memorial Day, the manager declared the team had hit rock-bottom.

"I wasn't sure of it, but I believed it. Things were going so wrong and we couldn't catch a break,'' Valentine said Wednesday.

"The season turned around. I believed it and the players did, too.''

Even as recently as a week ago, this team was refuting reports of turmoil and near-chaos from within. They certainly look fine now, with nine wins in 11 games.

They are 28-16 since May 11. In all of baseball, only the Yankees have a better record in that time at 29-14.

For the first time this season, the Red Sox are five games above .500 at 40-35. They are tied for third with Tampa Bay, the first time this year they have been higher than fourth.

The Sox have won 11 of their last 14 series, and finished off the Jays early in the final game of a 7-2 homestand.

Boston scored six runs in the first inning against Ricky Romero, who brought an 8-1 record into the game.

The Toronto left-hander had been 5-6 with a 6.45 career ERA against Boston, but most of the damage had come in his early years. Romero had won his last three decisions against Boston, but was gone by the fourth inning of this one.

"In the first three innings, we took a lot of pitches. We hardly swung at anything out of the strike zone for the first 75 pitches,'' Valentine said.

Adrian Gonzalez went 2-for-5 with three RBIs. He is 12-for-33 in an eight-game hitting streak that suggests a revival.

"Adrian has had the same aggressiveness he had before, but he's been a little more selective,'' Valentine said.

Ortiz' home run in the fifth inning pushed him into baseball's all-time top 50. He is tied with Al Kaline and Andres Galarraga for 49th.

Asked if he was thinking about No. 400, he said no.

"Not at all,'' said Ortiz, who was much more excited to talk about his baserunning. He scored four runs with one hit (the homer) and three walks.

"I'm moving better because of what I went through in the offseason,'' said Ortiz, who is in his best shape in years.

Ortiz struck out in the eighth. The bid for No. 400 will be taken to Seattle, where the Red Sox play Thursday night.

Jon Lester allowed home runs to sluggers Jose Bautista and Edwin Encarnacion but went seven innings, allowing four runs and seven hits. He made good use of a 6-1 first-inning lead.

"I don't want to over-analyze it. It was just trusting I had better stuff,'' said Lester (5-5), who had four strikeouts and didn't walk a man.

"With a big lead like that, I'm not giving in and walking guys. I'm going to make them get a hit and earn it,'' he said.

In the ninth, right fielder Darnell McDonald robbed pinch-hitter Kelly Johnson of a home run with a leaping catch.

"The Lord was looking out for me, because I really can't jump that high,'' McDonald said.


Weather forecast: Sun and humidity on their way back

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It's a high UV index now through the weekend

The cold pocket of air over us responsible for building afternoon clouds and showers the past two days and aiding in generating our wind today is ready to depart. Enjoy tonight, it's our last refreshing one with dew point temperatures on the rise tomorrow.

The jet stream pattern shifts to the north with high pressure building in the upper atmosphere. This will push a warm front through on Friday warming things up as we head into the weekend with the potential for another heat wave. I don't expect mid to upper 90s, but moderate humidity with highs breaking 90 Friday through Sunday is in the forecast.

High pressure from the mid-west will deliver a lot of sunshine through Saturday. A cold front approaches late Sunday. This should give us a slight cool down to begin next week as well as kick off some thunderstorms and showers Sunday afternoon and evening.

lightning4.jpgNOAA Photo library

It's lightning safety awareness week. We continue to educate and enthuse with some facts and questions.
Lightning safety question: True or False: If you see lightning and count the seconds until you hear the thunder, you can roughly know how far the lightning bolt that created the thunder is from you.

This Evening: Sun and clouds.Diminishing wind. 65-70.

Tonight Starlit and refreshing. Lows near 55.

Thursday: Pleasant. High 84.

Friday: Sunny and more humid, High near 90.

Answer: True. Light travels about 300 million meters in a second, so nearly instantaneous. Sound travels at about 340 meters every second depending on the temperature of the air. That is about 1/4 mile. So, for every 4 seconds you count, the lightning is 1 mile away!

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