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

Erin Andrews leaving ESPN; will she sign with Fox Sports?

$
0
0

Andrews, whose contract expires Saturday, has been with the network since 2004.

erin.jpgErin Andrews may be joining Fox Sports soon.

Erin Andrews, ESPN’s signature sideline reporter for college football and college basketball, is leaving the network, ESPN confirmed Friday.

“Erin Andrews leaving ESPN. She did great work for us & we made aggressive offer to keep her. Wish her best on her next chapter,” network publicist Mike Soltys wrote on his Twitter account.

Fox Sports is pursuing Andrews for a role in the network's college football coverage, according to SI.com.

A Fox Sports spokeperson declined to comment on the matter to SI.com.

Andrews’ contract with ESPN expires Saturday. She has been with the network since 2004. Her last on-air assignment was the ACC college basketball tournament in March, SI.com notes.

Fox has made a big splash in college football over the past two years, with a 12-year agreement with the Pac-12 and the hiring of Gus Johnson to serve as the network's lead play-by-play announcer. Fox Sports also has a deal with the Big 12 Conference for exclusive cable rights to 40 college football games per season, SI.com notes.

Last season, all of Fox's college football coverage was on cable, except for the Pac-12 and Big 10 title games. This season, Fox will have a full slate of over-the-air telecasts, in addition to the college football coverage on its cable networks.

Jenn Brown was mentioned as a possible replacement for Andrews the last time Andrews' contract was up, and Brown will surely be mentioned again as Andrews' successor on ESPN's college football coverage.

Andrews is the second prominent female broadcast personality to leave ESPN over the past month and a half. Michelle Beadle, former host of "SportsNation," left for NBC Universal where she will be part of the network's 2012 London Olympics coverage.


Fourth of July celebrations kick off with fireworks at Holyoke Community College

$
0
0

The booming show needed the dark of night for proper display, but families, couples and teen-agers poured into the campus off Homestead Avenue hours earlier.

Gallery preview

HOLYOKE - Thousands of people watched the kick-off to the Pioneer Valley's July 4th fireworks season Friday as streamers colored the sky above Holyoke Community College.

"I like the different colors and to be with the family," said Maria Lopez, of Holyoke, attending with her daughter and granddaughter.

The first fireworks lit the sky in a circle of yellow and pink at 9:32 p.m.

The booming show needed the dark of night for proper display, but families, couples and teen-agers poured into the campus off Homestead Avenue hours earlier. They lay on blankets and reclined on lawn chairs, the Independence Day theme evident in instrumental music playing songs like "This Land is Your Land."

Parents pushed toddlers in strollers while children played Frisbee and vendors sold bubble-makers, light-up sticks and blow-up figures of Spiderman and other superheroes.

One field had a makeshift carnival midway look, with portable booths selling fried dough, fresh lemonade, ice cream, hot dogs, pizza, onion rings and s'mores.

Lopez and her family weren't there to eat.

"It's the fireworks," Lopez said.

Cathleen Maisonet, 20, Lopez' daughter, said it was a nice event for a family. Her 1-year-old son Damir Padilla sat in a stroller.

"The kids have fun here and it's a safe place to bring the kids," Maisonet said.

Parents waited in line with children so the young ones could play in three "bouncy houses."

Police and firefighters strolling the grounds estimated the crowd to be a few thousand people.

The Holyoke Gas and Electric sponsored the event.

Jeff Xavier, of West Springfield, held his son Nathaniel, 5 months old.

"The family comes out here every year. We thought we'd bring him. We don't know how he's going to react. We brought some ear plugs but he doesn't want to wear them," Xavier said.

Hampden DA: Drug suspect rams police cars in Riverdale Shops, leads police on wild chase through West Springfield, holds couple hostage

$
0
0

Mastroianni said officials are still sorting out many of the fine details involved in the incident, which was part of an investigation involving state, local and federal agencies.

This is an update of a story originally posted at 10:10 p.m. Friday


WEST SPRINGFIELD - An FBI agent fired his weapon at a drug suspect Friday afternoon in the Riverdale Shops parking lot as the suspect rammed into several police cars that were attempting to block him, Hampden County District Attorney Mark G. Mastroianni said.

The suspect managed to escape the parking lot in his car and head up Route 5 toward Holyoke, before he abandoned the vehicle in an apartment complex. The man then forced his way into an apartment, and held two residents against their will, Mastroianni said.

Police were able to get him out and take him into custody without anyone being hurt, he said.

Mastroianni said officials are still sorting out many of the fine details involved in the incident, which was part of an investigation involving state, local and federal agencies.

Police were not yet releasing the suspect's name or what the charges will be, but Mastroianni said the list of charges will likely be lengthy and include assault and battery on a police officer kidnapping. Additional information will be released later as the different agencies involved compile their reports, he said.

The suspect is not from the area and may be from out of state, he said.

An amount of drugs was recovered, but Mastroianni said he was not prepared to say how much.

Among the agencies involved in the investigation were the FBI, Massachusetts State Police, the Hampden County Narcotics Task Force and the Holyoke and West Springfield police, he said.

The operation was in motion from Holyoke and then to West Springfield to the Riverdale Shops on Route 5 where police attempted to box the man's car in and take him into custody.

Instead, the man gunned his engine and began ramming the police vehicles, he said. Several of the officers were already out of their vehicles at this time, and the FBI agent fired at the car when the suspect drove directly at him, Mastroianni said.

No one was hit by the gunfire, he said.

According to a brief statement by special agent Greg Comcowich of the FBI office in Boston, the unnamed agent discharged his weapon while "assisting in a local police matter."

The FBI automatically reviews all instances where an agent discharges a weapon, he said.

"At the present time, the identity of the agent will not be released or verified in response to inquiries by the media, nor will any other details related to the shooting be released." he said.

Iconic Atari turns 40, tries to stay relevant

$
0
0

The iconic video game company turns 40 years old this week, much slimmer these days as it tries to stay relevant in the age of "Angry Birds" and "Words With Friends."

Atari at 40FILE- In this June 5, 1984, file photo, a woman in Chicago demonstrates Atari's new game, Mind Link, which utilizes a headband that picks up electrical impulse from the movement of the forehead and transmits them to a receiver attached to a video game or home computer console. (AP Photo/Charlie Knoblock)

NEW YORK — A scruffy, young Steve Jobs worked at Atari before he founded Apple. "Pong," one of the world's first video games, was born there, as was "Centipede," a classic from the era of quarter-guzzling arcade machines. "Call of Duty" creator Activision was started by four of Atari's former game developers.

The iconic video game company turns 40 years old this week, much slimmer these days as it tries to stay relevant in the age of "Angry Birds" and "Words With Friends."

But Atari's influence on today's video games is pervasive.

Although it wasn't the first company to make video games, Atari was the first to make a lasting impression on an entire generation. At arcades — or at video game bars such as Barcade in the trendy Williamsburg section of Brooklyn — nostalgic patrons still gather around such Atari classics as "Asteroids," ''Joust" and "Centipede."

The Atari 2600, launched in 1977, was the first video game console in millions of homes, long before the Nintendo Entertainment System (1985), Sony's PlayStation (1994) and Microsoft's Xbox (2001).

Today's younger iPhone gamers might not remember how "Pong," that simple, two-dimensional riff on Ping-Pong, swept across living rooms and arcades in the 1970s. But they might recognize elements of it in easy-to-learn, hard-to-master games based on simple physics — among them, "Angry Birds."

"For tens of millions of Gen X-ers, or kids who grew up in America in the '70s and '80s, Atari is a cultural icon, an intrinsic part of childhood," says Scott Steinberg, tech analyst and author of "The Modern Parent's Guide to Kids and Video Games."

"Pong," he adds, was in some ways the very first social video game, one designed to play in bars, at home or at an arcade, while spectators crowded around to watch the action.

Launched in 1972 from Atari's Silicon Valley headquarters, "Pong" featured a basic black-and-white screen (that's black and white only, no shades of gray here), divided by a dotted line. Short white lines on either side stood in for paddles. Two players controlled them and tried to get a moving dot — the ball — past their opponent.

With "Pong," Atari introduced video games to the masses just as Apple and Microsoft ushered in the personal computer era by bringing computers to people's desktops in the 1980s.

"It makes me think that I am getting really old," says Nolan Bushnell, the co-founder of Atari. "I'm 69, which means I was 29 when I founded Atari. It seems really young in retrospect."

It doesn't take much effort these days to see 20-something entrepreneurs in technology. Mark Zuckerberg was just 19 when he started Facebook in his Harvard dorm room. But back in the early '70s, Bushnell said, "no one in their 20s started companies. In some ways it paved the way for Apple, Microsoft and those guys."

Bushnell said Atari succeeded early on because it nurtured ideas from its engineers and computer programmers.

"We dominated not because of our manufacturing and marketing prowess but because of creativity," Bushnell says. "The lasting legacy: That creativity is a real weapon. And in some ways Apple has shown that as well."

Jobs was just 19 when Atari hired him as a technician, making $5 an hour. He worked the night shift because many of his co-workers didn't get along with him and didn't appreciate his refusal to wear deodorant, according to Walter Isaacson's recent biography of the late Apple chief executive.

He wasn't there for long — he left the company in 1974 to travel to India and co-founded Apple two years later, in 1976.

Dona Bailey, one of the creators of "Centipede," recalls a notebook that Atari had with maybe 30 ideas for games in it.

"Most of them were laser games," says Bailey, who was the only female programmer in Atari's arcade division when she was hired in 1980 and when she left in 1982. "I wasn't really interested in war, or lasering anything, or violence."

The only ideas in the notebook that didn't have to do with "lasering things or frying things" were two sentences about a multi-segmented insect that walks out on the screen and winds its way down the screen toward the player, she says. There was implicit shooting, as the player at the bottom had to destroy the insect before getting hit by it, but "it didn't seem that bad to shoot a bug."

Thus, "Centipede" was born.

Atari, Steinberg says, pioneered a lot of the concepts that are popular in gaming today: Games should be for both men and women, and they should be social by allowing many people to compete with each other.

Atari "defined games as not just a product but a social movement," Steinberg says.

But there is a generational divide. For kids born in the '80s and later, Atari elicits a respectful nod as a retro video game icon at best — and a clueless shrug at worst.

"It may rise again, but it remains to be seen whether Atari's place is among retail giants (such as) Activision and Electronic Arts," Steinberg says, "Or in a future that is defined by its own past."

Activision, which now makes such hit games as "Call of Duty" and "Diablo III," was founded in 1979 by four disgruntled Atari game designers who wanted more recognition for their work.

As Activision's future rose, Atari's faltered. Having cemented video games as a form of mass entertainment, Atari was sold to Warner Communications Inc. in 1976 and began to pile up big losses.

Warner, now part of Time Warner Inc., discontinued the Atari 2600 and fired Bushnell, says Stephen Jacobs, professor of interactive games and media at the Rochester Institute of Technology in Rochester, N.Y.

Meanwhile, several companies tried to capitalize on Atari's success, but flooded the market with terrible products. It was a gold rush, with little gold to be had.

Atari contributed to that decline in quality with "E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial," still considered one of the worst video games ever made — and that's being generous.

"They tried to push something out in six weeks," Jacobs says. "They pushed out a million units of a horrible game that they were sure was just going to be the bomb. And it ended up tanking Atari."

That was the Christmas of 1982. What followed is now referred to as the "great video game crash of 1983." People stopped buying video games.

Companies began collapsing and Atari was soon sold to a man named Jack Tramiel. Over the next decade, Atari made computers, a game console called Jaguar and a handheld game machine called the Lynx. None were hits.

Atari was then passed to the toy company Hasbro, then to Infogrames Entertainment, a French company that owns it today.

Recognizing the promise of mobile devices and its best-known titles, Atari today makes such phone games as "Centipede: Origins" and "Breakout Boost," a take on the game Steve Jobs worked on back in the day.

"The legacy is that Atari is essentially where it all began," says Jim Wilson, the company's current CEO.

So is Atari living off its legacy?

"To a certain point almost all entertainment companies are doing a bunch of living on their legacy. That's why we have 'sequel-itis' in triple-A games, movies, books," Jacobs says. "Why invest in new things when you can beat the old things to death and still make money out of them?"

Red Sox hit four home runs in 5-0 win over Seattle

$
0
0

Aaron Cook threw a two-hitter in the finest performance of his career.

Aaron CookBoston Red Sox starting pitcher Aaron Cook throws to a Mariners batter in the first inning of a baseball game, Friday, June 29, 2012, in Seattle.

SEATTLE (AP) — Aaron Cook was in the minor leagues just a few weeks ago, unsure if he would get another chance at showing the Boston Red Sox he could be an option in their starting rotation.

Cook's start Friday night was a strong argument to keep him on the pitching staff.

Cook threw a two-hitter in the finest performance of his career, Will Middlebrooks, Cody Ross and Daniel Nava all hit solo homers in the fifth inning, and the Red Sox beat the Seattle Mariners 5-0.

Making his third start of the season, Cook (2-1) struck out two, walked none and needed just 81 pitches for his third career shutout and 12th complete game. He made it look easy with the overaggressive Mariners showing little patience at the plate and feeding into Cook's game plan of inducing groundballs and meek pop outs thanks to his diving sinker.

Cook worked with speed and efficiency to the point that catcher Jarrod Saltalamacchia joked it felt like he only caught five innings and only put down the fingers for one pitch.

It was hard not to call for the sinker with the results Cook was getting.

"When you're throwing strikes early and getting them swinging it makes a world of difference. They aren't getting quite as comfortable an at-bat," Cook said. "I was able to pound the zone early and keep them swinging at pitches I want them swinging at."

Cook's only hit allowed through seven innings came on a slow tapper from Ichiro Suzuki in the fourth inning. Second baseman Dustin Pedroia charged and made a strong throw to try and get Suzuki, but first-base umpire Lance Barksdale ruled Suzuki safe on the bang-bang play.

John Jaso put any uncertainty around Suzuki's single to rest with a base hit to right field to lead off the eighth. That was it for an offense that continues to frustrate Mariners manger Eric Wedge.

"It's a step back today offensively and that's hard as hell to do the way we've been swinging the bats here at home," Wedge said. "I'm tired of watching it."

Cook's last complete game victory came on April 24, 2010, against the Marlins. Because of a broken finger that cost him part of the 2011 season and the knee issue this year, that complete game felt like an eternity ago and made Cook even more appreciative of what he accomplished.

"It means a lot to go out there and prove it, that I'm where I want to be and get back to be an effective pitcher and get back to giving our team a chance to win games and be efficient," Cook said.

In his previous two starts with the Red Sox this season, Cook failed to make it past five innings. His first start in May was done after 2 2-3 innings and six earned runs allowed to Baltimore. He then went on the disabled list with a knee laceration and made his return to the rotation with a victory last Sunday against Atlanta, throwing five innings and giving up two earned runs.

Far from overpowering, Cook didn't record his first strikeout of the season until getting Chone Figgins looking in the third inning. He was extremely economical with his pitches entering the eighth inning having thrown just 63 total and only 17 balls. Only four of the first 21 outs Cook got were recorded by the outfield.

Jaso's single leading off the eighth was sharply hit and it gave Seattle its third runner of the game. Dustin Ackley reached on an error leading off the sixth, but all three times the Mariners got a baserunner, they never reached second. Pedroia made sure of that closing out the eighth by making a diving grab of Ackley's hard grounder, flipping to shortstop Mike Aviles with his glove for the first out and Aviles finishing the double play with a strong throw.

Seattle starter Hector Noesi (2-10) became the first pitcher in the majors to reach 10 losses by dropping his seventh straight and he was hammered during a stretch of nine batters in the fifth and sixth innings.

Middlebrooks was up first in the Red Sox homer parade after nearly hitting one out to deep center field in his first at-bat in the second inning. Noesi continued his season-long struggles of putting away batters with two strikes by leaving a pitch down the middle that Middlebrooks lined to the back of the Red Sox bullpen in left field.

Then came Ross' 432-foot shot into the second deck in left for his 12th homer of the season. It was the fourth time this year the Red Sox went back-to-back. Two batters later, Nava went deep and an inning later, Saltalamacchia hit his 15th homer doing the opposite way to left-center.

"Everything is going well. I'm staying with the same approach I've had all season, not trying to change it and things are working," Saltalamacchia said.

Notes: Cook's other two shutouts came in 2009 vs. Atlanta and 2008 vs. San Diego. ... Seattle placed CF Franklin Gutierrez on the seven-day concussion DL on Friday. Gutierrez was hit in the side of the face with an errant pick-off attempt in Thursday's 1-0 win over Boston and spent the night in a hospital for observation. ... Seattle is 0-3 this season when the Safeco Field roof has been closed during the game.


Plan B Burger Bar, specializing in humane beef, coming to Basketball Hall of Fame

$
0
0

Plan B is now the second burger joint with intentions to open on West Columbus Ave.

SPRINGFIELD - A better burger is coming to the Basketball Hall of Fame.

Plan B Burger Bar, an eatery offering a menu that includes humane beef, is moving into a vacant 6,500-square-foot space at the Hall of Fame that was formerly the home of Pazzo Ristorante.

Plan B is based in Connecticut, where it has four locations; a fifth is slated to open in Stamford, Conn. this summer, according to its website. Future locations also include Boston, Atlanta, Chicago and Washington, D.C.

"We will be their first Massachusetts location,” Kevin Morin, vice president of Colebrook Property Management, told abc 40/Fox 6.

Outside seating is planned.

Another burger joint is in the works for the former Springfield Visitor Information Center, where there are plans to open a Luxe Burger Bar.

The Springfield Redevelopment Authority finalized the sale of the center for $450,001 earlier this month.

Construction is expected to begin the summer and take six months to complete.

The visitor center property, located at 1200 Hall of Fame Ave., also known as West Columbus Ave., has been vacant since the center moved to the nearby Hall of Fame in 2009.

Tractor trailer gets stuck under railroad bridge in Springfield

$
0
0

The New England Motor Freight tractor trailer was traveling south on Main Street.

tractor trailor under bridge.jpgA tractor trailer sits jammed under the railroad bridge on Main Street in Springfield early Saturday morning. No injures were reported.
It appears the tractor trailer got about halfway under the bridge before getting stuck.

Update: All lanes of Main Street have reopened as of 6:30 a.m.

SPRINGFIELD - A tractor trailer from New Jersey carrying various food products was damaged when it failed to make the clearance under the railroad bridge on Main Street around 1:50 a.m.

The New England Motor Freight tractor trailer was traveling south on Main Street.

"I heard this loud bang," said eyewitness John Boyd of Springfield, who was across the street at the time of the accident.

Police were nearby when the accident happened, Boyd said.

There were no reported injuries.

A yellow sign visible from the southbound approach to the bridge gives a posted height of 13 feet at the center of the arch, but notes that the height falls to 10 feet at the curb side of the arch.

The trailer has a 13-foot, 6-inch clearance.

Such accidents have happened before.


View Larger Map

Storms knock out power to 2M across eastern US

$
0
0

The storms that converged on Maryland, Virginia, West Virginia, Washington, D.C., Indiana and Ohio packed winds topping 70 mph in some places, uprooting trees and damaging numerous homes. They came after a day of sweltering heat across the region.

Summer StormsAn OhioHealth billboard was mangled from Friday afternoon's severe storm, June 29, 2012. A wave of violent storms sweeping through the mid-Atlantic following a day of record-setting heat in Washington, D.C., has knocked out power to nearly 2 million people. The storms converged Friday night on Washington, D.C., Maryland, Virginia and West Virginia. West Virginia Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin declared a state of emergency after more than 500,000 customers in 27 counties were left without electricity. (The Columbus Dispatch /Eamon Queeney)

Violent storms swept through the eastern part of the United States Friday night, killing a northern Virginia woman when a tree fell onto her home, damaging subway cars in Washington, D.C., and knocking out power to more than 2 million people in the middle of a heat wave.

The storms that converged on Maryland, Virginia, West Virginia, Washington, D.C., Indiana and Ohio packed winds topping 70 mph in some places, uprooting trees and damaging numerous homes. They came after a day of sweltering heat across the region.

The nation's capital reached 104 degrees just before 3 p.m., according to the National Weather Service, beating a record of 101 set in 1934.

Fairfax County police spokeswoman Mary Ann Jennings said the woman in the Springfield, Va., area was killed during the height of the storm. Authorities were at the scene of the home but weren't able to immediately get inside, she said.

Jennings said police also were responding elsewhere to reports of a park police officer injured when his car was hit by a tree and an 18-year-old man struck by a downed power line.

As of 1 a.m. Saturday, Pepco was reporting 406,000 outages in the District of Columbia and Montgomery and Prince George's counties, Md.

"We have more than half our system down," said Pepco spokeswoman Myra Oppel. "This is definitely going to be a multi-day outage."

West Virginia Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin declared a state of emergency after more than 500,000 customers in 27 counties were left without electricity.

Several elderly residents from an Indianapolis apartment home were displaced when a tree fell onto a power line, knocking out electricity to the facility, the fire department said. More than 20 residents were taken by bus to a Red Cross facility to spend the night, and others who depend on oxygen assistance were given other accommodations.

In the Washington, D.C., area, Metrorail trains were returned to their endpoints due to the storms and related damage, officials said.

"It has had a widespread effect on the region," Metro spokesman Dan Stessel said early Saturday. He said about 17 train stations were operating on backup power due to local power outages, but that he didn't anticipate service being disrupted on Saturday.

In Ohio, the State Highway Patrol said three tractor trailers blew over on Interstate 75 near Findlay, but no one was injured.

___

Associated Press writer Norman Gomlak in Atlanta contributed to this report.


Massachusetts woman wins day with Brown campaign

$
0
0

The Brown campaign says Jacqueline Burke won a "Win a Day with Scott" contest among his campaign donors and will shadow the senator Saturday at events in the Boston area. To participate in the contest, individuals had to donate a minimum of $25.

BOSTON — An East Falmouth woman will be spending a day on the campaign trail with Massachusetts Republican Sen. Scott Brown, who is running for re-election against Democratic challenger Elizabeth Warren.

The Brown campaign says Jacqueline Burke won a "Win a Day with Scott" contest among his campaign donors and will shadow the senator Saturday at events in the Boston area. To participate in the contest, individuals had to donate a minimum of $25.

Burke, who has two children in the military, will march with Brown in Braintree's July 4th parade, bowl at South Boston Bowlarama and eat clam chowder. They will travel in Brown's famous pick-up truck.

Remains of 2nd person found in Colo. fire wreckage

$
0
0

As crews on the front lines made slow but steady progress against the flames, Police Chief Pete Carey said fewer than 10 people altogether were unaccounted for. The remains of one person were found Thursday in what was left of one home. He confirmed that the remains of a second person who lived there were found Friday.

Western Wildfires ObamaA secret service agent looks over the burnt homes in the Mountain Shadows neighborhood damaged by the Waldo Canyon Fire in Colorado Springs, Colo., Friday, June 29, 2012. After declaring a "major disaster" in the state early Friday and promising federal aid, President Barack Obama got a firsthand view of the wildfires and their toll on residential communities. More than 30,000 people have been evacuated in what is now the most destructive wildfire in state history. (AP Photo/The Denver Post, Joe Amon) MAGS OUT; TV OUT; INTERNET OUT

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. — Firefighters searching for bodies in the roughly 350 homes burned by the most destructive wildfire in Colorado history found a second body Friday at a residence where earlier another person was discovered dead.

As crews on the front lines made slow but steady progress against the flames, Police Chief Pete Carey said fewer than 10 people altogether were unaccounted for. The remains of one person were found Thursday in what was left of one home. He confirmed that the remains of a second person who lived there were found Friday.

The 26-square-mile blaze — one of several wildfires burning across the tinder-dry West — was reported to be 25 percent contained, and authorities began lifting some of the evacuation orders for the more than 30,000 people who fled their homes a few days ago.

After growing explosively earlier in the week, the fire gained no ground overnight, authorities reported Friday. And the weather was clear and mostly calm, a welcome break from the lightning and high wind that drove the flames.

"The focus for today is to hold what we got," extend the fire lines to contain more of the blaze, and bring in more heavy equipment, said Rich Harvey, incident commander for the fire.

Exhausted firefighters fresh off the front lines described the devastation in some neighborhoods and the challenges of battling such a huge blaze.

"It looks like hell. I would imagine it felt like a nuclear bomb went off. There was fire everywhere. Everything had a square shape to it because it was foundations," said Rich Rexach, who had been working 12-hour days since Tuesday, when flames swept through neighborhoods in the northwest part of the city of more than 400,000 people 60 miles south of Denver.

"Everything you put water on, it was just swallowing it," he said.

President Barack Obama toured the stricken areas Friday after issuing a disaster declaration for Colorado that frees up federal funds. He thanked firefighters and other emergency workers, saying: "The country is grateful for your work. The country's got your back."

As residents waited anxiously to see what was left of their homes, police reported several burglaries in evacuated areas, along with break-ins of cars packed with evacuees' possessions outside hotels.

Carey said Friday a person wearing protective fire gear in an evacuated area was arrested on charges of impersonating a firefighter and influencing a public official.

"We were able to stop him and identify that person as somebody that probably wasn't someone who belonged on that scene," Carey said. He didn't have the person's name.

This month, authorities accused a man of impersonating a firefighter at two other Colorado wildfires.

Community leaders began notifying residents Thursday that their homes were destroyed. Lists of the heavily damaged streets were posted at a high school, and residents scanned the sheets, but for many, the notification was a formality. They had already recognized their streets on the aerial pictures that appeared in the news.

"The blanket that was on my bed when I grew up, a bunch of things my mother had made," said Rick Spraycar, listing what he lost when his house in the hard-hit Mountain Shadows subdivision burned down. "It's hard to put it into words. Everything I owned. Memories."

For Ernie Storti the pain of knowing that his was one of a handful of homes spared in his neighborhood was hard.

"Our home was standing, and everything south of us was gone," he said as tears streamed down his face outside a Red Cross Shelter where he had met with insurance agents.

Authorities were still trying to figure out what caused the fire. They said conditions were too dangerous to allow them in to start their investigation.

More than 1,000 personnel and six helicopters were fighting the fire.

All eight Air Force firefighting planes from four states will be at Colorado Springs' Peterson Air Force Base Saturday and available to fight the fire, marking the first time the entire fleet has been activated since 2008, Col. Jerry Champlin said.

Among the fires elsewhere in the West:

— At least 60 homes near Pocatello, Idaho, burned in a fast-moving wildfire that started Thursday evening. The blaze covered more than 1½ square miles. Officials said it was human-caused but gave no details.

— A 70-square-mile wildfire in Utah destroyed at least 160 structures, more than 50 of them primary homes. Another blaze in Utah doubled in size to 70 square miles and was threatening about 75 structures. And a wildfire that erupted Friday in a foothills community near Salt Lake City destroyed at least three homes and was threatening 200 others.

Blazes also burned in Wyoming and Montana.

Authorities battling six wildfires in Utah said Colorado was taking most of the available fire crews, leaving them short-handed.

Fire commander Cheto Olais said leaders at one Utah blaze had requested about 200 additional firefighters but will probably get no more than 20. "A lot of assets are going to Colorado," Olais said.

___

Associated Press writers Thomas Peipert in Colorado Springs, Dan Elliott, Rema Rahman and Catherine Tsai in Denver, Brian Skoloff in Salt Lake City, Paul Foy in Price, Utah, Matthew Brown in Roundup, Mont., and Matt Volz in Helena, Mont., contributed to this report.

Sharpton set to eulogize Rodney King at LA funeral

$
0
0

Sharpton, who says in a statement that King was "a symbol of civil rights" who "represented the anti-police brutality and anti-racial profiling movement of our time," will deliver the eulogy Saturday at Forest Lawn Hollywood Hills.

LOS ANGELES — The Rev. Al Sharpton and other civil rights leaders will join family and friends in Los Angeles at a public funeral service for Rodney King.

Sharpton, who says in a statement that King was "a symbol of civil rights" who "represented the anti-police brutality and anti-racial profiling movement of our time," will deliver the eulogy Saturday at Forest Lawn Hollywood Hills.

The funeral comes nearly two weeks after King was found dead at the bottom of the swimming pool at his Rialto, Calif. home on June 17. He was 47.

King's death is being treated as an accidental drowning but authorities are awaiting autopsy results to determine the official cause of death.

King became famous after his beating by Los Angeles police in 1991 was captured on videotape and broadcast worldwide.

Supreme Court's health care ruling is a victory for Obama -- but galvanizes Republicans

$
0
0

While the court's decision gave Obama a major policy victory, upholding the Democratic president’s signature legislation, the political ramifications are less clear.

romney health care.jpgWith the Capitol in the background, Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney speaks about the Supreme Court's health care ruling, Thursday, June 28, 2012, in Washington.

In the first 24 hours after the U.S. Supreme Court decided that President Obama’s health care overhaul was constitutional, the Romney campaign said it raised $4.6 million from 47,000 online donors. The Obama campaign said it outraised Romney.

While the court's decision gave Obama a major policy victory, upholding the Democratic president’s signature legislation, the political ramifications are less clear. For Democrats, the decision avoided what could have been political catastrophe, and gave them another reason to tout the benefits of the overhaul to voters. For Republicans, the decision could galvanize conservatives who now acknowledge that the only way to repeal the overhaul is through electing a Republican Congress and president.

The decision could also change the political narrative surrounding the policy. The court ruled 5-4 that the core of Obama’s health care overhaul – the individual mandate requiring that people buy insurance or pay a penalty – is constitutional on the grounds that it is a tax, and Congress has taxing power.

“Short-term, it’s a win for the Democrats obviously because it validates the constitutionality of the bill,” said David Paleologos, director of the Suffolk University Political Research Center. “Long-term I think it probably benefits the Republicans, because in addition to a fragile economy it reminds voters of another government program that will cost a lot of money. And the definition of tax has now been stamped on the verdict.”

Obama portrayed the decision as a “victory for people all over this country.” At a press conference, Obama touted popular benefits of the Affordable Care Act that have already gone into effect: allowing young adults to stay on their parents’ health insurance and forbidding insurance companies from imposing caps on coverage, discriminating against children with preexisting conditions or dropping care when a person gets sick.

Obama spokesman Michael Czin said, “Our supporters are more committed than ever to ensuring that insurance companies can't drop coverage for people who get sick or discriminate against people with preexisting conditions, by reelecting the President.”

Romney reiterated that he plans to repeal Obama’s health care reform. “Our mission is clear: If we want to get rid of Obamacare, we're going to have to replace President Obama,” Romney said after the ruling. Romney argued that the overhaul will raise taxes, cut Medicare, hurt hiring and drive up the debt.

“This decision has energized the base of the Republican Party and independents who overwhelmingly have opposed Obamacare and opposed the process in which this law was forced down the throats of the American public,” said Romney spokesman Ryan Williams. “In many key swing states Obamacare has always been and remains wildly unpopular, and this decision will serve a reminder to voters in those states that the president continues to stand by this disastrous legislation.”

Linda Fowler, professor of government at Dartmouth College, said the bottom line of the decision was that the discussion should take place in the political arena. “That’s pretty much what (Chief Justice John) Roberts was saying,” Fowler said. “The court doesn’t have any business making policy just because it disagrees with the merits of what elected officials have done.”

Fowler said for Republicans, “This is one more reason they can argue voters should show the Democratic majority out of the Senate, return a Republican majority to Congress and elect Mitt Romney.”

On the other hand, Fowler said, “The Democrats can now speak to the different groups of voters that will benefit from the law having been upheld.” Fowler said polls show voters dislike the law overall, but like specific provisions in it.

Peter Ubertaccio, director of the Martin Institute at Stonehill College, agreed that Democrats must focus on messaging. While the decision cements Obama’s legacy as the president who implemented universal health care, Ubertaccio said the law remains unpopular. “He’s got to find a way to communicate the benefits of the law, which he failed to do when it was under consideration two years ago,” he said.

One challenge for Romney will be the health care reform he passed in Massachusetts, which is similar to the one Obama passed nationally. The Democratic research group American Bridge 21st Century on Thursday released a video of Romney in 2006 praising the individual mandate as an essential part of the Massachusetts reform. Romney has said he supports the reforms on a state, not federal level.

Ubertaccio said Romney is “essentially having to criticize the court for upholding the constitutionality of a law that looks a lot like law he passed in Massachusetts.”

But Ubertaccio said he was impressed by Romney’s fundraising haul and initial response. “We may be watching somewhat of a replay of 2010 where conservative activists are energized by this decision, because they recognize that the only way to repeal the law is deny the president reelection and send more Republicans to Congress,” he said.

Tim Buckley, spokesman for the Massachusetts Republican Party, said Republicans will use the court decision to frame Obama’s overhaul as a tax. Republicans will point out that Obama originally said the law was not a tax, only to argue before the Supreme Court that it was.

“The Supreme Court’s decision was definitely a shot in the arm for Republicans across the country,” Buckley said. “It gave voters a tangible issue to get excited about.”

Democrats have been focused on the specific benefits to individuals – things like guaranteed insurance coverage for individuals with pre-existing conditions and access to preventive care without co-pays. They have been warning of the consequences of repeal. “Instead of moving forward, what Governor Romney and his Republican allies are talking about is re-fighting old battles and frankly trying to preserve the status quo – a status quo we know…is not serving the needs of the American people,” said Gov. Deval Patrick in a conference call organized by the Obama campaign.

Wayne Lesperance, professor of political science at New England College, said the issue could have the most impact in congressional races, since changes to the law will be made at a congressional level. “Presumably, those folks will not have same issue Romney has – a conflicted history on health care,” Lesperance said.

In Massachusetts, both Republican Sen. Scott Brown and Democratic challenger Elizabeth Warren quickly sent out fundraising emails based on the court’s decision, highlighting their contrasting views. Warren supports Obama’s overhaul, while Brown would repeal it.

Paleologos said voters’ antipathy toward the health care law helped Brown win his Senate seat in 2010. Paleologos said he has not done polling this year on how Massachusetts residents view the law. But depending on those views, he said for voters who are otherwise ambivalent about the Senate candidates, “The health care issue potentially could be a deal breaker.”

AM News Links: Chimps attack American student in South Africa, White House pulls ambassador-nominee after drunk driving charge, and more

$
0
0

The White House announced Thursday night that it had withdrawn the president's nomination of Washington attorney and big Democratic fundraiser Timothy M. Broas after he was pulled over in suburban Maryland earlier this month and charged with driving under the influence of alcohol and resisting arrest. Broas was also ticketed for speeding.

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

Obituaries today: Mary L. Shanahan taught kindergarten, first grade in South Hadley for 35 years

$
0
0

Obituaries from The Republican.

Mary L. Shanahan

Mary L. (Scollard) Shanahan, 65, of Holyoke died Tuesday in Boston. A lifelong resident of Holyoke, Shanahan was born Jan. 20, 1947. She attended Blessed Sacrament School before graduating from Holyoke Catholic High School and earned a bachelor's degree in elementary education from St. Joseph College in West Hartford, Conn. She taught kindergarten and first grade in the South Hadley school system for 35 years until her retirement in 2004. She also taught preschool at St. Paul's Nursery School in Holyoke and enjoyed her years seeing the world as a chaperone with the People to People student ambassador program.

Obituaries from The Republican:

Kumble Subbaswamy officially takes over as UMass Amherst chancellor

$
0
0

The new chancellor will be meeting with community and business leaders as he settles into campus.

Subbaswamy and friends 2012.jpgKumble R. Subbaswamy, second from left, incoming chancellor at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, greets Springfield Mayor Domenic J. Sarno last month as Henry M. Thomas, left, UMass Board of Trustees member and Robert L. Caret, UMass President, look on. Subbaswamy takes over the Amherst campus this weekend. It was announced this week that Thomas will be the next chairman of the UMass Board of Trustees.

AMHERST – This weekend marks the changing of the guard at the University of Massachusetts with the departure of Chancellor Robert C. Holub and the arrival of Chancellor Kumble R. Subbaswamy.

The physicist and former provost at the University of Kentucky was hired as chancellor in March. While not officially taking over until Sunday, he has been to campus and the region in recent weeks, said UMass spokesman Edward F. Blaguszewski.

He was unavailable for an interview.

“He has met with a range of individuals and campus groups, including sessions with each member of his senior management team, the UMass Amherst Foundation board and the faculty union,” Blaguszewski said in an email.

The new chancellor will be meeting with the Faculty Senate Rules Committee, a joint meeting with senior administrators and campus deans, and a calendar planning session with his staff.

He also plans to be meeting with community and business leaders, legislators and alumni. He will speak at the Annual Community Breakfast Aug. 29.
“We are greatly looking forward to his official arrival and his leadership of the UMass Amherst campus,” Blaguszewski wrote.

The future of Holub, who has served the campus for four years, is unclear.
Calls and emails to Holub were not returned.

Holub’s three-year contract was not extended in 2011, but he agreed to remain for the year.

The evaluation committee never issued its report but unnamed sources at the time said the committee would not be recommending that Holub be rehired. Since then Robert L. Caret became UMass president replacing Jack M. Wilson.

A party that had been scheduled to honor the chancellor was cancelled this year because of a scheduling conflict and never rescheduled.

In the spring, Holub was one of four finalists for the chancellorship at the University of Hawaii Manoa but Tom Apple, provost from the University of Delaware, was selected for that position.

In a campus memo this spring, Holub thanked the greater community for all its work. “These campus records, national recognitions, and achievements could not have been accomplished without the dedicated work of hundreds of individuals across the campus, as well as many individuals from the community and from our wonderful and loyal alumni.”

Holub wrote that he came here in 2008 “to help move the Amherst campus into the top tier of public research institutions in the country… while we may not have achieved everything we set out to do, we certainly made tremendous progress.”


Construction of new HealthSouth rehabilitation hospital to begin at Ludlow Mills site

$
0
0

A site plan for the project has been approved by the town's administrative review committee, Town Planner Douglas Stefancik said.

Gallery preview

LUDLOW - The U.S. Department of Environmental Protection has awarded Westmass Area Development Corporation, the owner and developer of the Ludlow Mills project, a $200,000 brownfields clean-up grant, another step in the continuing redevelopment of the 1.4 million square-foot redevelopment project.

Kenn W. Delude, president and CEO of Westmass, said he wished to acknowledge the strong support of U.S. Rep. Richard E. Neal, D-Springfield, in helping to secure the EPA cleanup grant.

The grant award was part of a competitive process and Ludlow Mills is one of 18 projects in Massachusetts to receive EPA Region One grants in this round.

Westmass will use the funding to immediately begin removing asbestos from old mill buildings on the site.

Delude said the funds will augment state funding from the Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs for environmental remediation work that did not cover the removal of asbestos.

Delude said, “This is another significant step forward in the redevelopment of the largest brownfield mill redevelopment project in New England. Without this kind of remediation and the securing of essential state grants through the administration of Gov. Deval Patrick and our local legislative delegation, Westmass would not have been able to attract and retain HealthSouth, which will be relocating to the Ludlow Mills in the next year,” Delude said.

HealthSouth is investing $27 million to build a new rehabilitation hospital to relocate 53 beds and 240 employees to the Ludlow Mills site by the end of 2013.

A site plan for the new rehabilitative hospital was approved June 6 by an administrative review committee appointed by the Planning Board, Town Planner Douglas Stefancik said.

A comprehensive special permit for the entire Ludlow Mills project already has been approved by the Planning Board, Stefancik said.

Individual projects still need approval of site plans by an administrative review committee, he said.

HealthSouth has purchased 10 acres along State Street from Westmass. Demolition of some existing buildings on the site will take place in July.

Groundbreaking for the HealthSouth project will be in August and completion is expected at the end of 2013.

HealthSouth is planning to expand its 53-bed hospital to 70 beds.

Kevin Garnett returning to Boston Celtics, Boston Herald reports

$
0
0

At 36 years of age, the future Hall of Famer remains a key to Boston's future.

Game 3: Boston Celtics 101, Miami Heat 91Boston Celtics forward Kevin Garnett does push-ups after hitting the floor hard while vying for a rebound against the Miami Heat during the NBA basketball playoffs Eastern Conference finals.

Kevin Garnett is choosing the green of the Boston Celtics over the green pastures of retirement, according to the Boston Herald.

The Herald reported Saturday that the future Hall of Famer has informed the team that he would like to return for an 18th NBA season. One of the major questions the Celtics faced headed into the off-season was whether Garnett, 36, would re-sign, retire or entertain offers from other teams.

The Herald, citing "an NBA source and a source close to Garnett," said the player and team are working on a two- or three-year deal. Said one source:

“The decision came down to whether KG wanted to keep playing. And once he decided that he did, it was going to be Boston. He wasn’t going to leave (head coach) Doc (Rivers) and those guys and play anywhere else.”

The news comes days after a false Twitter report that Garnett would retire. It also comes following the NBA draft, where the Celtics chose Jared Sullinger and Fab Melo - two big men that could benefit from a mentor like Garnett while also allowing him to play fewer minutes.

Child custody, public image at stake in Tom Cruise - Katie Holmes divorce

$
0
0

The blockbuster star might have the most to lose.

CRUISE_HOLMES_DIVORCE_10801403.JPGTom Cruise and Katie Holmes arrive at the Vanity Fair Oscar party, in West Hollywood, Calif. on Feb. 26, 2012.

When Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes first got together, he jumped on a couch, she gushed girlishly, and many of their fans said, "Huh?"

Their split could cause just as much drama.

Not only are the images of two Hollywood stars at stake, so is the future of 6-year-old Suri, with some speculating that Holmes' decision to file for divorce in New York might mean she's seeking sole custody of their daughter.

Ultimately, Cruise might have the most to lose.

"There's no question this divorce is going to hurt his public image," said Dorie Clark, author of the forthcoming "Reinventing You: Define Your Brand, Imagine Your Future."

"His brand was already tarnished significantly when he first got together with Holmes five years ago and was infamously jumping up and down on Oprah's couch, and shortly afterward the videos of him praising Scientology were leaked," she continued. "This divorce is another opportunity for questions to be raised about his personal life, his religious beliefs — which many consider outside the mainstream — and that's not what a box-office star really wants."

California divorce attorney Michael Kelly, who is not involved with the Cruise-Holmes case, called Holmes' East Coast filing "a tactical move" that signifies "there will be an attempt to gain an advantage."

New York's comparative-fault divorce laws could be advantageous for Holmes, he said. The couple lived in Los Angeles.

Cruise and Holmes married in 2006 after a whirlwind love affair. He proposed at the Eiffel Tower. Their wedding was held at a 15th-century Italian castle.

She filed for divorce Thursday, ending her first marriage. This will be Cruise's third divorce. He was previously married to actresses Mimi Rogers and Nicole Kidman, with whom he has two children.

Cruise showed up alone at the recent Los Angeles and London premieres of his latest film, "Rock of Ages." Holmes also was absent earlier this month when Cruise received the Friars Club Entertainment Icon Award in New York. But he did bring Suri with him, allowing her to stay up late for the raunchy proceedings.

"Divorce will actually help Katie Holmes' brand," Clark said. "More people are going to be thinking about her and aware of her. This is generating a lot of sympathy and interest from people."

Holmes, 33, rose to fame on the teen soap "Dawson's Creek." She went on to appear in "Batman Begins," and earned raves for her roles in independent films such as 2003's "Pieces of April" and 2005's "Thank You for Smoking." She took a break after giving birth to Suri in April 2006 and marrying Cruise that November.

She did just a handful of roles until stepping things up in 2011. Holmes played Jackie Kennedy in the Emmy-winning miniseries "The Kennedys," appeared in Adam Sandler's "Jack and Jill" and just wrapped up a film with William Hurt. She said she's set to start another project in July.

Meanwhile, Cruise, who turns 50 on Tuesday, has remained a megastar. His latest role, as an Axl Rose-style rock star in "Rock of Ages," has won him strong reviews (though not corresponding box-office results), and his most recent "Mission Impossible" installment, "Mission Impossible: Ghost Protocol," has made more than $690 million worldwide.

"Tom Cruise's brand has always been the dynamic, likable hero — the `Mission Impossible' star that you're rooting for — and it becomes harder for the public to get behind someone as a hero and want to go to the box office and cheer them on when there are serious questions about what kind of husband and father he is," Clark said.

Holmes' attorney, Jonathan Wolfe, said Friday that "Katie's primary concern remains, as it always has been, her daughter's best interest."

Chicopee adopts Fredette Street as a public way so former Navy housing may be developed

$
0
0

The property has gone out to bid but in December and a contractor is working on purchasing the homes for $250,000.

westover housingMayor Michael D. Bissonnette speaks during a ceremony last year marking Chicopee's acquisition of five homes abutting Westover Air Reserve Base on Fredette Street that used to be Navy housing. On the left is U.S. Rep. Richard E. Neal and in the center is Gen. Robert R. Swain Jr., the former commander of the Air Force Reserve's 439th Airlift Wing, Air Force Reserve Command, Westover Air Reserve Base.

CHICOPEE – The City Council has accepted Fredette Street as a public way as the final step to sell five homes, frequently known as general’s row, that were once owned by the U.S. Navy.

“This will allow us to go forward to sell the property on general’s row to a contractor,” Councilor John L. Vieau said.

A year ago the city acquired nearly 30 acres of land and 133 units of housing next to Westover Air Reserve Base, after 13 years of working out the deal. The buildings have been vacant for at least 15 years.

Part of the acquisition is five colonials that sit on four acres on Fredette Street that were known as General’s Row. That property was put out to bid in December and a contractor was expected to purchase them for $250,000 and then renovate and sell them.

The sale has been delayed because of problems with zoning issues. The street, which was once part of the base property, had never been accepted as a city street and without that, the developer could not create curb cuts and make driveways for each house, Mayor Michael D. Bissonnette said.

The property was also never divided into individual lots which must be done to sell the individual houses, he said.

“I don’t believe the developer can sell the five houses until we do this,” Councilor James K. Tillotson said.

The council voted 11-0 to adopt the street and also took two other similar votes that will allow the purchase to happen.

“This will allow them to make curb cuts so we can sell it and get it on the tax roles,” Councilor Timothy S. McLellen said.

City officials have not decided what to do with the remaining about 25 acres, which has 128 homes which are mainly duplexes, and includes several streets off Kelly Drive. They have met with neighbors several times to discuss the future of the property.

Bissonnette said ideally he would like it renovated and marketed as over-55 housing to prevent adding a large number of students to the schools.

West Springfield officials at odds over legal opinion on Town Council vote

$
0
0

Officials have parted over a legal opinion by the town attorney on a Town Council vote Monday overriding a mayoral veto.

Bourque vs. Brighenti 2012.jpgWest Springfield City Council president Kathleen A. Bourque is seen with town lawyer Simon J. Brighenti Jr.

WEST SPRINGFIELD – A brouhaha over a legal opinion has led to the mayor and town attorney siding against the Town Council president in what has led to a he-said, she-said situation about threats to file a complaint with the State Ethics Commission.

At issue is Town Council President Kathleen A. Bourque's disregard of a legal opinion by Town Attorney Simon J. Brighenti Jr. He had written that certain councilors should not have taken part in a vote Monday to override a mayoral veto of a $1.5 million cut the council had made to the health insurance account. Because Bourque invoked the so-called rule of necessity, the council was able to muster enough votes to override the veto 7-2.

Bourque has said she does not have to abide by Brighenti’s opinion and that she was on firm legal ground calling for the vote.

However, Town Councilor Bryan J. Griffin indicated hostilities about the issue escalated into threats by Mayor Gregory C. Neffinger and Town Councilor George D. Condon III to file a complaint with the Ethics Commission over the vote.

That resulted in the council setting a special meeting for 3 p.m. Friday to look into tapping the $10,000 left its legal account to hire an attorney to defend itself.

However, the meeting was canceled mid-day Friday by Bourque, who explained her action by saying, “We are no longer under litigation attack and we want to move forward with the town’s business.”

Bourque said threats to file a complaint with the State Ethics Commission have been dropped. She told a reporter seeking information about the issue to speak with the mayor and Condon.

Neffinger denied ever having said he would bring the matter to the State Ethics Commission.

The mayor did allow that he may have said what Bourque did was illegal and that someone should bring it to the attention of the commission.

“At the moment, I have no intention of doing that,” Neffinger said of filing a complaint with the Ethics Commission. “I’m moving forward. I’m not looking back to Monday.”

Condon acknowledged that he had threatened to go to the Ethics Commission first about the vote and then a second time should the council tap city funds to hire its own attorney. Now that Friday’s meeting has been canceled, Condon said he, too, just wants to move forward.

As for Brighenti’s legal opinion, Griffin said the council is under no obligation to adhere to it.

“An opinion is an opinion. That is why they call it an opinion,” Griffin said. “We want to move forward. That is why we canceled the meeting today.”

Viewing all 62489 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images