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Gov. Deval Patrick to campaign for President Obama in North Carolina, Virginia

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Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick is hitting the road again in support of President Barack Obama's re-election campaign.

DevalDNC.JPGMassachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick addresses the Democratic National Convention in Charlotte, N.C., on Tuesday, Sept. 4, 2012.


BOSTON (AP) — Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick is hitting the road again in support of President Barack Obama's re-election campaign.

Patrick plans appearances in two key southern states, North Carolina and Virginia, over the next two days.

Patrick has appearances scheduled in Charlotte, and Raleigh, N.C. on Friday.

A spokesman for the governor's political committee says he will be visiting the Virginia campuses of Old Domininion University, Hampton University and the College of William & Mary on Saturday in support of get-out-the-vote efforts.

Patrick last year formed a political action committee, called Together PAC, to finance his travels and activities on behalf of Obama's re-election effort. The PAC had raised nearly $1.3 million through June 30, according to filings with the Federal Election Commission.


From the Press Box podcast: Central-Longmeadow highlights high school football Week 6

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The Republican's Russ Held and MassLive.com's Jay King are joined by Republican correspondent Jimmy Kelley to discuss the upcoming Week 6 in high school football.




The Republican's Russ Held and MassLive.com's Jay King are joined by Republican correspondent Jimmy Kelley to discuss the upcoming Week 6 in high school football.

Quick hits: High school highlights from Thursday, Oct. 11

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The Republican staff compiles Thursday's high school sports highlights.













East Longmeadow's (4) Gavin Ashe tips the ball away from Northampton's Emily Poehlein during first half girls field hockey at East Longmeadow on Thursday.



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(Staff Photo by Dave Roback)









The Republican’s high school sports staff picked its top highlights from Thursday’s action.

Indian Orchard resident Bruno Ramos, 30, seriously injured in Ludlow pedestrian accident, in good condition at Baystate Medical Center

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Ludlow and state police continue to probe the accident.

LUDLOW - A 30-year-old Indian Orchard man, seriously injured when he was hit by a car on West Avenue Sunday night, continues to recuperate at Baystate Medical Center in Springfield were he was listed in good condition Friday.

Police have identified the victim, who suffered a head injury, as Bruno Ramos. He was initially listed in critical condition at Baystate.

Ramos was crossing the street at about 6:45 p.m. when he was struck by a car driven by a 57-year-old male near the intersection of Stebbins Street.

Lt. Paul Madera said Friday that the Ludlow police and investigators from the Massachusetts State Police Collision Analysis & Reconstruction Section continue to probe the accident.

“We have no charges forthcoming at this time,” said Madera, adding that the driver’s name will not be released until the investigation is complete.

Madera said there is no evidence that the driver was impaired in any way.

Despite debt crisis, European Union wins Nobel Peace Prize

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The EU grew out of the devastation of World War II and is now made up of 500 million people in 27 nations, with other nations lined up, waiting to join.

nobel peace prize EUIn this Friday, Dec. 9, 2011 file photo European Council President Herman Van Rompuy, right, and European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso participate in a media conference at an EU summit in Brussels. The European Union was awarded on Friday Oct. 12, 2012 the Nobel Peace Prize for its efforts to promote peace and democracy in Europe, in the midst of the union's biggest crisis since its creation in the 1950s. The Norwegian prize committee said the EU received the award for six decades of contributions "to the advancement of peace and reconciliation, democracy and human rights in Europe.

JULIA GRONNEVET
KARL RITTER
Associated Press

OSLO, Norway — The European Union won the Nobel Peace Prize for fostering peace on a continent ravaged by war, yet the Norwegian prize jury warned Friday that the financial crisis challenging the bloc's unity could lead to a return to "extremism and nationalism."

The award was hailed at the EU headquarters in Brussels and by pro-EU government leaders across Europe, but derided by "euroskeptics" who consider the EU an elitist superstate that strips citizens of their rights and erodes national identities.

The EU grew out of the tremendous devastation of World War II, fueled by the conviction that ever-closer economic ties would make sure that century-old enemies never turned on each other again. It's now made up of 500 million people in 27 nations, with other nations lined up, waiting to join.

But European unity is being threatened by the debt crisis that has stirred deep tensions between north and south, caused unemployment to soar and sent hundreds of thousands of its citizens into the streets to protest tax hikes and job cuts.

The bloc's financial disarray is threatening the euro — the common currency used by 17 of its members — and even the structure of the union itself. The debt crisis is also fueling the rise of extremist movements such as Golden Dawn in Greece. The party, which opponents brand as neo-Nazi, has soared in popularity as Greece sinks deeper into a debt-fueled morass.

"We do not have a position on how to solve these problems, but we send a very strong message that we should keep in mind why we got this Europe after World War II," Nobel committee chairman Thorbjoern Jagland told The Associated Press.

"And that we should do everything we can to safeguard it, not let it disintegrate and let the extremism and nationalism grow again, because we know what catastrophes that all this leads to," he said. "If the euro starts falling apart, then I believe that the internal market will also start falling apart. And then obviously we get new nationalism in Europe. ... This is not a good scenario."

German Chancellor Angela Merkel said the Nobel committee had made a "wonderful decision," and linked it to efforts to salvage the euro even though the judges didn't mention the common currency, specifically.

"I often say the euro is more than only a currency. We shouldn't forget this in these weeks and months in which we work for the strengthening of the euro," Merkel told reporters at the Chancellery in Berlin. She said the euro "has always and primarily been about the original idea of Europe as a community of peace and values."

Strong reactions to the choice for the $1.2 million award crackled Friday over social media.

"The EU is an unique project that replaced war with peace, hate with solidarity. Overwhelming emotion for awarding of (hash)Nobel prize to EU," Martin Schulz, president of the European Parliament, wrote in a tweet.

"Nobel prize for the EU. At a time Brussels and all of Europe is collapsing in misery. What next? An Oscar for Van Rompuy?" said Dutch euro-skeptic lawmaker Geert Wilders, referring to Herman Van Rompuy, president of the European Council.

Normally, the prize committee either honors lifetime achievement, like when longtime peace mediator Martti Ahtisaari won in 2008, or promotes a work in progress, such as the 1994 award to Yasser Arafat, Shimon Peres and Yitzhak Rabin, which was meant to boost Mideast peace efforts.

This year's award does both. Jagland told AP it "looks backward as well as forward" by recognizing the EU's historical role in building peace, but it does so at a time when nationalist forces that once tore the continent apart are again on the rise.

European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso welcomed the award as a "great honor" for all Europeans.

"It is justified recognition for a unique project that works for the benefit of its citizens and also for the benefit of the world," he said.

The idea of a united Europe began to take a more defined shape when, on May 9, 1950, French Foreign Minister Robert Schuman proposed that France and the Federal Republic of Germany pool their coal and steel resources in a new organization that other European countries could join.

Over time, the EU has grown from six countries to 27, absorbing countries in Eastern Europe as they emerged from decades under communist rule.

"Today war between Germany and France is unthinkable. This shows how, through well-aimed efforts and by building up mutual confidence, historical enemies can become close partners," the committee said.

The citation also noted the democratic reforms the EU demands of nations waiting to join. It referred to Greece, Spain and Portugal when they joined the EU in the 1980's after emerging from dictatorships and to the talks with Balkan nations seeking membership following the bloody wars there in the 1990s.

Jagland said it was up to the EU to decide who should come to the prize ceremony in Oslo on Dec. 10, the anniversary of prize founder Alfred Nobel's death in 1896.

While there have never been wars inside EU territory, the confederation has not been able to prevent European wars outside its borders. When the deadly Balkans wars erupted in the 1990s, the EU was unable by itself to stop them. It was only with the help of the United States and after over 100,000 lives were lost in Bosnia was peace eventually restored there, and several years later, to Kosovo.

However, the EU's success in making war between Germany and France unthinkable is beyond dispute, Those two countries tend now to be the EU's dominant players, with the French president and the German chancellor often getting together to, in effect, hash out EU policy.

Britain has always been a half-hearted member since joining in the 1970s, and is not part of the 17-nation eurozone that shares a common currency.

Right now, Europe is stuck in a three-year financial crisis caused by too much government debt. To combat this, governments across the region have imposed harsh tax and spending measures to bring their deficits under control. However a fall in government spending has had a damping effect on Europe's economy — in the second quarter of this year, the EU's gross domestic product shrank 0.2 percent compared to the previous quarter. A wide variety of indicators are pointing to a further slump in the third quarter.

The austerity measures have also hit jobs —the EU's unemployment rate is currently 10.5 percent. But some countries such as Spain and Greece have rates as high as 25 percent. In Spain, every other person under 25 is unemployed.

Europe's stumbling economy is making it harder for other economies around the world to recover and policymakers from all round the world are urging more decisive action from the region's governments to deal with the crippling debt crisis to restore confidence to the global economy.

The region is the U.S.'s largest export customer and any fall-off in demand will hurt U.S. businesses — as well as President Barack Obama's election prospects.

The EU has been seen as possible candidate for the Nobel for many years, and the members of the committee had previously praised the community's significance as a promoter of peace and democracy in Europe. Jagland is also the secretary-general of the Council of Europe, a human rights group.

Ironically, skepticism against the EU runs high in oil-rich Norway, which is not a member and where popular opinion is firmly against membership. Norwegian voters rejected joining the EU twice, in 1972 and 1994.

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Ritter reported from Stockholm. AP reporter Louise Nordstrom in Stockholm and Don Melvin in Brussels and David Rising in Berlin contributed to this report.

Top 10 high school football players: Minnechaug's Ben Sheehan making a strong case for Dagenais Award as sophomore

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Greenfield's Zach Bartak remains in the No. 1 spot, but Sheehan is charging.













Minnechaug's Ben Sheehan is tough to tackle and even tougher to chase down.



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(Staff photo by David Molnar)









Greenfield's Zach Bartak remains in the No. 1 spot, but Sheehan is charging.

Family of missing New Hampshire college student to distribute flyers

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Marriott drives a 2001 gold Mazda Tribute with New Hampshire plate number 304-5397.

DOVER, N.H. (AP) — The family of a missing University of New Hampshire student plan to be in Dover distributing flyers in hopes of gaining information on her whereabouts.

Nineteen-year-old Elizabeth "Lizzi" Marriott was last heard from Tuesday night, when she texted a friend in Dover while she was in class at UNH just before 9 p.m. But she never arrived in Dover and WMUR-TV reports (http://bit.ly/SUWVtJ ) that investigators say there has been no activity on her cell phone, credit cards and Facebook page since.

Marriott is a marine biology major and lives in Chester. She is a 2011 graduate of Westborough High School in Massachusetts.

She drives a 2001 gold Mazda Tribute with New Hampshire plate number 304-5397.

The family is offering a $10,000 reward for information leading to her safe return.

Woman taken to hospital for treatment of minor injuries following single-vehicle crash in Southampton near Easthampton line

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Emergency personnel shut off power parts of both communities in order to get the woman out of her vehicle.


SOUTHAMPTON
– A section of County North Road in Southampton and Line Street in Easthampton remained closed late Friday morning in the aftermath of a single-vehicle accident that took down a utility pole.

CBS3. media partner to The Republican, reported that the crash was reported about 9:30 a.m. and that a woman was taken to a hospital for treatment of minor injuries.

Emergency personnel shut off power to parts of Easthampton and Southampton in order to get the woman out of her vehicle, CBS3 reported.

Western Massachusetts Electric Co. reported 43 outages in Southampton and 22 in Easthampton as of about 11:30 a.m.

Police were not available to comment.


New York Yankees need C.C. Sabathia to be an ace like Justin Verlander

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The pressure in on C.C. Sabathia to come through for the Yankees in Friday night's winner-take-all Game 5 in the Bronx.

ALDS Yankees Orioles _Kubo-1.jpgThe Yankees will look to C.C. Sabathia to come through in Friday Night's winner-take-all Game 5 in the Bronx against the Baltimore Orioles.

The "ace."

It's what every team wants, but there are 30 major league baseball teams and not nearly that many aces.

The Detroit Tigers have one.

Thursday night Justin Verlander turned in a performance for the ages in a winner-take-all Game 5 in Oakland against the American League's feel-good story of 2012, the Oakland A's.

Verlander was the definition of dominant. Nine innings, four hits, one walk, zero earned runs, and 11 strikeouts. The 11 strikeouts were a major league record in a winner-take-all playoff game. The Tigers took a 2-0 lead in the third inning, and the game felt over.

It wasn't, of course. Those who have watched this Oakland A's team all season know that until the final out is recorded, the A's are never truly done. Yet Thursday night Verlander sure made it tough for a fan to see how the A's were going to mount a rally.

That became increasingly impossible to envision as the Tigers increased their lead to 6-0 as the game wore on. In the end, the A's lost to a better team with a much better pitcher. There's no shame in that. Verlander is as good as any pitcher in baseball right now.

Thursday night's performance was one for the record books, and Friday night the New York Yankees will be looking to C.C. Sabathia for a similar performance.

The Yankees and the Baltimore Orioles are major league baseball's two premier power-hitting teams. Yet through four games in the ALDS the two teams have combined to score a total of 22 runs. In the last three games they've scored only 13 runs. These are not the offenses you're looking for.

Of course the potential exists that Friday night's Game 5 will serve as a reminder that these are in fact two potent offenses. Maybe the final score will be 13-12, but it seems more likely that this game will be another low-scoring, one-run nail-biter.

If you were going to stack baseball's starting pitchers and separate them by tiers of talent and accomplishments, Verlander would be in the top tier. Sabathia would be on the next one down. He's a number one starter, there's no debating that. He's not quite Verlander, though.

Friday night the Yankees might need him to be. Those no-name Orioles starters have been tough to hit for the Yankees. Through four games, Orioles starting pitchers have allowed a total of five earned runs. Yankees starters haven't been much worse. They've allowed eight.

The Yankees don't just need Sabathia to be dominant. They also need him to be efficient.

That's because the Orioles and Yankees have just concluded back-to-back extra inning games in the Bronx.

Wednesday's Game 3 went 12 innings, Thursday's Game 4 went 13. Over the course of those two marathons the Orioles and Yankees bullpens have each used seven different pitchers. The Yankees pen has thrown 10 innings, and the Orioles have thrown 11.1.

Both teams need big performances out of their starting pitchers Friday night, but the Yankees have a lot more reasons to expect one.

The Orioles have been winning baseball games with their bullpen all season. The Baltimore pen led the American League in wins with 32 and was third in innings with 545.1. Normally teams with a lot of bullpen innings aren't that successful. The other four teams that finished at the top of bullpen innings in the AL this season all missed the playoffs.

By contrast, no team in the American League had fewer bullpen innings than the Yankees. New York's pen threw a total of 444 innings in 2012, fewer than all but two other major league teams, the Phillies and Reds.

If Orioles starter Jason Hammel goes out and can't make it through seven innings, that's business as usual for the 2012 Baltimore Orioles. That's not the case for the Yankees. If Sabathia can't make it through six innings then Yankees manager Joe Girardi will be forced to rely on a bullpen that is not used to being worked in the manner they've been used this week.

Sabathia is in the middle of an eight-year, $182 million contract. Jason Hammel is finishing up the first year of a two-year, $7.75 million deal.

Both teams would love to get great performances from their starting pitchers tonight, but the Yankees are paying C.C. Sabathia to come through on nights like Friday. The Orioles? They're playing with house money.

Fact check: Slips in Joe Biden, Paul Ryan vice presidential debate

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Anyone who paid attention to a hearing in Congress this week knew that the administration had been implored to beef up security at the U.S. Consulate in Libya before the deadly terrorist attack there. But in the vice presidential debate Thursday night, Joe Biden seemed unaware.

Joe Biden Paul RyanRepublican vice presidential nominee Rep. Paul Ryan, of Wisconsin, right, watches as Vice President Joe Biden, speaks during the vice presidential debate at Centre College, Thursday, Oct. 11, 2012, in Danville, Ky. (AP Photo/David Goldman)

By CALVIN WOODWARD, Associated Press

Editors' Notes: An occasional look at political claims that take shortcuts with the facts or don't tell the full story

WASHINGTON (AP) — Anyone who paid attention to a hearing in Congress this week knew that the administration had been implored to beef up security at the U.S. Consulate in Libya before the deadly terrorist attack there. But in the vice presidential debate Thursday night, Joe Biden seemed unaware.

"We weren't told they wanted more security there," the vice president asserted flatly. During a night in which Biden and Republican rival Paul Ryan both drifted from the facts on a range of domestic and foreign issues, that was a standout.

A look at some of their claims:

BIDEN: "Well, we weren't told they wanted more security there. We did not know they wanted more security again. And by the way, at the time we were told exactly — we said exactly what the intelligence community told us that they knew. That was the assessment. And as the intelligence community changed their view, we made it clear they changed their view."

RYAN: "There were requests for more security."

THE FACTS: Ryan is right, judging by testimony from Obama administration officials at the hearing a day earlier.

Charlene R. Lamb, a deputy assistant secretary for diplomatic security, told lawmakers she refused requests for more security in Benghazi, saying the department wanted to train Libyans to protect the consulate. "Yes, sir, I said personally I would not support it," she said.

Eric Nordstrom, who was the top security official in Libya earlier this year, testified he was criticized for seeking more security. He said conversations he had with people in Washington led him to believe that it was "abundantly clear we were not going to get resources until the aftermath of an incident. How thin does the ice have to get before someone falls through?"

He said his exasperation reached a point where he told a colleague that "for me the Taliban is on the inside of the building."

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RYAN: "Look at just the $90 billion in stimulus the vice president was in charge of overseeing — this $90 billion in green pork to campaign contributors and special interest groups."

THE FACTS: Dismissing an entire package of energy stimulus grants and loans as "green pork" ignores the help that was given to people to make their homes more energy efficient, grants to public entities constructing high speed rail lines and tax credits to manufacturers to install equipment fostering cleaner energy.

To be sure, there were notable failed investments, such as $528 million to the politically connected and now-bankrupt solar power company Solyndra. But Ryan's claim made it sound like every penny went down the drain.

More broadly, economists are nearly universal in saying Obama's $800 billion-plus stimulus passed in early 2009 helped create both public-sector and private-sector jobs, even if they fell short of what sponsors had hoped. Douglas Elmendorf, director of the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office, estimated the stimulus saved or created more than 3 million jobs.

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BIDEN: "We went out and rescued General Motors."

THE FACTS: Actually, the auto bailout of General Motors and Chrysler began under President George W. Bush. The Obama administration continued and expanded it.

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RYAN: "And then they put this new Obamacare board in charge of cutting Medicare each and every year in ways that will lead to denied care for current seniors. This board, by the way, it's 15 people, the president's supposed to appoint them next year. And not one of them even has to have medical training."

THE FACTS: Ryan is referring to the Independent Payment Advisory Board, created under President Barack Obama's health care overhaul law. It has the power to force cuts in Medicare payments to service providers if costs rise above certain levels and Congress fails to act. But it doesn't look like the board will be cutting Medicare "each and every year," as Ryan asserts. Medicare costs are currently rising modestly and the government's own experts project the board's intervention will not be needed until 2018 and 2019 at the earliest — after Obama leaves office if re-elected to a second term.

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BIDEN, when asked who would pay more taxes in Obama's second term: "People making a million dollars or more."

THE FACTS: Obama's proposed tax increase reaches farther down the income ladder than millionaires. He wants to roll back Bush-era tax cuts for individuals making over $200,000 and couples making more than $250,000.

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RYAN: "We cannot allow Iran to gain a nuclear weapons capability. Now, let's take a look at where we've gone — come from. When Barack Obama was elected, they had enough fissile material — nuclear material — to make one bomb. Now they have enough for five. They're racing toward a nuclear weapon. They're four years closer toward a nuclear weapons capability."

THE FACTS: Ryan's claim is misleading. Iran isn't believed to have produced any of the highly enriched uranium needed to produce even one nuclear weapon, let alone five. That point isn't even disputed by Israel, whose Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu implored the world at the United Nations last month to create a "red line" at enrichment above 20 percent. Iran would have to enrich uranium at much higher levels to produce a weapon. There is intelligence suggesting that Iran has worked on weapon designs, but not that it has developed a delivery system for any potential nuclear warhead.

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BIDEN: "What we did is, we saved $716 billion and put it back, applied it to Medicare."

THE FACTS: Contrary to Biden's assertion, not all the money cut from Medicare is going back into the program in some other way. The administration is cutting $716 billion over 10 years in Medicare payments to providers and using some of the money to improve benefits under the program. But most of the money is being used to expand health care coverage outside of Medicare.

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RYAN: "What troubles me more is how this administration has handled all of these issues. Look at what they're doing through Obamacare with respect to assaulting the religious liberties of this country. They're infringing upon our first freedom, the freedom of religion, by infringing on Catholic charities, Catholic churches, Catholic hospitals."

THE FACTS: The requirement under the health care law that most employers cover birth control free of charge to female employees does not apply to churches, houses of worship, or other institutions directly involved in propagating a religious faith. It does apply to church-affiliated institutions such as hospitals and charities that serve the general public.

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BIDEN: "Romney said 'No, let Detroit go bankrupt.'"

THE FACTS: GOP presidential candidate Mitt Romney has gotten endless grief through the campaign for the headline put on his November 2008 opinion essay that he wrote for The New York Times. But his point was never that he wanted the auto industry to go down the tubes.

Romney opposed using government money to bail out Chrysler and General Motors, instead favoring privately financed bankruptcy restructuring. His prescription seemed improbable. Automakers were hemorrhaging cash and the banking system was in crisis, so private money wasn't available. Without the government money, it's likely both companies would have gone out of business. Romney did propose government-guaranteed private loans for both companies after bankruptcy.

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RYAN: "We should have spoken out right away when the green revolution was up and starting, when the mullahs in Iran were attacking their people. We should not have called Bashar Assad a reformer when he was turning his Russian-provided guns on his own people.

THE FACTS: Neither President Barack Obama nor anyone else in his administration ever considered the Syrian leader a "reformer." The oft-repeated charge stems from an interview Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton gave in March 2011 noting that "many of the members of Congress of both parties who have gone to Syria in recent months have said they believe he's a reformer." She did not endorse that view. The comment was widely perceived to be a knock at senators such as John Kerry of Massachusetts who maintained cordial relations with Assad in the months leading up to his crackdown on protesters.

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RYAN: "This one tax would actually tax about 53 percent of small-business income."

BIDEN: "Ninety-seven percent of the small businesses in America pay less — make less than $250,000."

THE FACTS: Both are correct, but incomplete, when sizing up the effect on small business of raising taxes for individuals making more than $200,000 and married couples making more than $250,000, as Obama wants to do. Republicans say that would hit small-business owners who report business income on their individual income tax; Democrats say the overwhelming majority of small businesses would not be affected.

According to a 2010 report by the Joint Committee on Taxation, the official scorekeeper for Congress, about 3 percent of people who report business income would face a tax increase under Obama's plan. That support's Biden's point.

The same report says those business owners account for about half of all business income. That supports Ryan.

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RYAN: Notes that there have been four rounds of U.N. sanctions on Iran to deter its nuclear program, three during the Bush administration and one under Obama. "And the only reason we got it is because Russia watered it down and prevented the sanctions from hitting the central bank. Mitt Romney proposed these sanctions in 2007. In Congress, I've been fighting for these sanctions since 2009. The administration was blocking us every step of the way." He also noted the administration has granted 20 waivers to the sanctions.

THE FACTS: The argument that the administration was watering down or delaying sanctions is misleading. For sanctions to work, they need maximum global agreement and cooperation. Russia watered down U.N. sanctions not only under Obama, but also under Bush. And it's highly unlikely that a Romney administration, particularly led by a candidate who says Russia is the biggest geostrategic threat to the U.S., would be able to get Russia completely on board with what the U.S. wants to — either in Iran or Syria.

The more absolute U.S. sanctions that Ryan and others have pushed in Congress would have punished U.S. allies, including most countries in Europe as well as Japan and South Korea, along with good friends like India and Singapore — without the exemptions that were put in place.

The administration has indeed granted 20 waivers, to countries that made significant reductions in Iranian oil imports. And the sanctions are pinching; Iran has been convulsed over the past week with protests over the collapse of its currency, which most people say is a direct result of the sanctions that the U.S. and others have imposed.

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Associated Press writers Bradley Klapper, Tom Raum, Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar, Stephen Ohlemacher, Tom Krisher and Matthew Lee contributed to this report.

UMass team doctor, alumnus, using 'Henry' to raise childhood obesity awareness

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Dr. Pierre Rouzier has spearheaded a project intended to fight a nationwide epidemic.

HenryGetsMoving.JPGLaura Porter of Haydenville reads the storyboards of the book "Harry Gets Moving," set up as a "story walk" at the Envision Depot Square Holyoke Block Party.

HOLYOKE – Pierre Rouzier’s original plan was to buy property in Miami.

Rouzier, a staff physician at the University of Massachusetts who works with the athletic department; his son Anthony, a former UMass football player now in law school at Florida International University; and Anthony’s friend Jack Odell were walking in the area surrounding the new Marlins Stadium last October.

Pierre was about to refinance his Amherst home and was looking to invest money in a new project.

“Then we saw how much the property costs,” he said.

Anthony Rouzier had a better idea. Odell used to call him “Henry T. Hamster” because of the way he ate. The duo always thought it would be funny to have a fat character with that name in a book, a character that would eventually become skinny.

“Dad, let’s write a children’s book about childhood obesity” Anthony said.

And thus, Henry was born.

Twelve months later, “Henry Gets Moving” was launching Saturday with the help of a handful of UMass football players as part of an event in Holyoke promoting the development of Depot Square.

The goal book of the book is to fight childhood obesity, an ever-increasing epidemic sweeping the nation.

“Up to one-third of adults are obese,” Pierre Rouzier said. “Up to 17 percent of children are obese, and in general, obese children become obese adults and die early.”

The book features a chubby hamster, Henry, who moves to a new community and struggles to make friends. Henry meets Jasmine, who encourages him to trade junk food for salads and video games for playground time.

By the end of his 32-page journey, our hamster hero is a lean, mean fighting machine inspiring others to get fit.

“We want Henry to become a symbol for fighting childhood obesity across the country,” Anthony Rouzier said. “Right now, we lack a symbol for kids to live an active, healthy lifestyle.”

The business plan for the book is as creative as its illustrations. Hatched by the Rouziers and Odell, the idea for marketing Henry wasn’t to sell him one at a time – it was to sell in bulk.

The group’s goal is to find individuals and organizations willing to donate books in bulk to schools and community centers. Already, Team Henry has found a donor for the Holyoke-Springfield-Chicopee Head Start program, and there were 200 books available at Saturday’s event in Holyoke.

Pierre Rouzier used his experience self-publishing "The Sports Medicine Patient Advisor" to do the same with Henry.

Though the book’s mission is to fight childhood obesity, it’s serving as a building block for several young careers, another reason Pierre Rouzier hasn’t minded investing tens of thousands of dollars of his own money.

Anthony Rouzier and Odell are getting much-needed business experience.

Odell’s sister Catherine, an artist in Portland, Ore, will now have an illustrating credit on her resume.

Chaz Nielsen, the son of a longtime family friend, had been considering medical school as a career option after graduating from UMass with a degree in journalism. His writing background, combined with an interest in public health, made Nielsen a perfect co-author.

“When I broke it down, I asked, ‘What do I want to fund?’” Pierre Rouzier said. “I want to fund a great project, but I also want to fund four kids in their twenties.”

Of course, like any family affair, Team Henry wasn’t without its bickering, but with Pierre Rouzier’s publishing experience, easy-going management style and true passion for the project, he served as father not just to his own kids, but to the team.

“It kind of felt like he was a father sometimes, but that’s not unique to this project,” Nielsen said. “I’ve often referred to Pierre and (his wife) Arlene as my ‘backup parents.’"

Now, as the project moves forward, it comes down to finding angels to donate books and organizations that want to accept them. To help promote the book locally, UMass athletes will read it to children in schools next week.

The book is available for purchase at Amazon.com, and more information can be found at henrygetsmoving.com.

Tropical Storm Rafael dumps rain in east Caribbean

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Puerto Rico was under a tropical storm watch.

The Associated Press

CHARLOTTE AMALIE, U.S. Virgin Islands — Tropical Storm Rafael lashed the eastern Caribbean Saturday with heavy rains that are expected to unleash floods on islands around the region.

The storm was located about 105 miles east-southeast of St. Croix in the U.S. Virgin Islands late Saturday afternoon. It had top sustained winds of 50 mph and was moving north at 12 mph.

The U.S. National Hurricane Center said the storm will gain some strength and will pass near or over the Virgin Islands Saturday night.

As a result of the storm, Cape Air and regional carrier LIAT canceled flights Saturday scheduled to leave from Puerto Rico's main international airport. The Carnival Victory cruise ship also canceled a stop in St. Maarten on Saturday.

Flooding was reported in the eastern Caribbean island of Trinidad, where the storm caused a brief power outage at the island's main international airport late Friday. At least one flight was canceled.

A tropical storm warning was in effect for the U.S. Virgin Islands, the British Virgin Islands, Anguilla, Barbuda, St. Kitts, Nevis, Antigua, Montserrat, St. Maartin and Guadeloupe.

Puerto Rico was under a tropical storm watch.

Meanwhile, tropical depression Patty disintegrated east-northeast of the central Bahamas.

Palmer firefighters at structure fire on Ware Street

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The call came in just before 7 p.m. on Saturday.

This story has been updated. Read it here.

2007 palmer fire truck

PALMER - Palmer firefighters are at the scene of a structure fire at a mobile home at 249 Ware St. (Route 32).

The call came in just before 7 p.m. Saturday. A resident of the area reported that several explosions could be heard.

More details will be published as they become available.


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Doc Rivers calls Atlantic Division improved, but Courtney Lee admits Boston Celtics still focus largely on Miami Heat

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Despite several offseason moves that have made the division a more dangerous place, the Celtics' sights remain set on the Heat.

doc rivers hands out.JPG

HARTFORD – The Atlantic Division is strengthened. Celtics coach Doc Rivers knows it.

But despite several offseason moves that have made its division a more dangerous place, Boston's sights remain set on a Southeast Division team.

"We just feel like all the other teams are going to be just opponents – we're going to beat and handle them. But (the) Miami (Heat), we need to run through them," guard Courtney Lee said.

Lee arrived in Boston Sept. 4 and was surprised to see film of last season's Game 7 against the Heat playing in the practice facilities every day. Ironically, Lee sounded a bit like Heat forward LeBron James when discussing how many times Rivers mentions Miami each practice.

"Not once, not twice, not three times, but more," Lee said before the Celtics met the New York Knicks in a preseason contest at the XL Center Saturday night. "It's non-stop. Practice situations, it's like, 'What are you going to do? This is LeBron, this is (Dwyane) Wade.' We feel like we're going to play against them tonight."

Despite his obvious focus on Miami, Rivers did admit the Atlantic Division, which the Celtics have won for five straight years, has improved and shouldn't be as easy for the Celtics to dominate.

The Knicks made the playoffs last season, added several veterans and could benefit from a full year of chemistry between Amar'e Stoudemire and Carmelo Anthony, assuming the pair's problems can be mended with a few game-plan changes and several Stoudemire sessions with Hakeem Olajuwon.

The Brooklyn Nets may or may not be able to defend the perimeter and likely won't have cap space for the foreseeable future, but they boosted their offensive firepower significantly and should be much more competitive.

The Philadelphia 76ers took the Celtics to seven games last season and could be more formidable with Andrew Bynum, especially against the chronically rebound-challenged Celtics.

When asked whether he considers the Knicks to be Boston's top competition in the Atlantic, Rivers said, "I think it's a deep division. I think obviously New York's one of them. Philly is improved. When you add a Bynum to your team, you're a better basketball team. New Jersey has improved – er, Brooklyn has improved. So it's going to be a hard division. We preferred it the way it was two or three years ago. Now, listen, you have to fight to win this division."

Rivers joked about not being considered such an old team when compared to the Knicks, who added four players at least 35 during the offseason – Pablo Prigioni (35), former Celtic Rasheed Wallace (38), Jason Kidd (39) and Kurt Thomas (40).

"They've surpassed us as being the oldest team. We enjoyed being called the new kids on the block, the young kids," Rivers quipped before turning serious. "But all of (their additions) can play. I think they'll help them."

The streak of division titles has been nice, but Lee didn't leave money on the table to join the Celtics just for a chance to log a better regular-season record than the Knicks.

"It feels good to have those conversations again, about winning a championship and really having that confidence and believing that we can get back to the Finals and win it," he said.

Editorial: 'Transaction Man' article helps explain what makes Mitt Romney tick

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For all the national exposure Romney has garnered in his quest for the presidency, many find him unknowable.

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Will the real Mitt Romney please stand up?

Just like the celebrity panel on the 1950s television show, “To Tell the Truth,” tried to identify a contestant who had an unusual occupation or experience, voters are trying to figure out who the GOP presidential candidate really is.

It’s a question voters ask every time they cast a ballot for any candidate – and it’s especially pertinent question to ask when someone is aspiring to the highest office in the land.

It was, and continues to be, a question voters have about President Barack Obama, who has been commander in chief for the last four years. We know a lot about the president from his autobiography and we’ve had a chance to size up his performance in tough times for Americans both at home and abroad.

For all the national exposure Romney has garnered in his quest for the presidency – this time and back in 2008 – many find him unknowable.

Is he the moderate Republican he appeared to be when he defeated Democrat Shannon O’Brien to become governor of Massachusetts? Is he the more conservative man be became near the end of his first and only term as governor of the Bay State? Or is he someone different today?

We know that President Obama’s early life experiences as the son of a white woman from Kansas and a black man from Africa, and his work as a community organizer and law professor helped shape his world view.

What makes Romney tick?

In an effort to delve further into the question of who Mitt Romney is, tomorrow’s issue of the Sunday Republican offers readers a reprint of an 11,000-word article, which appeared this month in The New Yorker magazine, telling the story of Romney from birth to the present.

“Transaction Man,” by Nicholas Lemann, not only maps Romney’s career, but also delves into how the nation’s business culture has changed since the candidate’s father, George Romney, made his mark as an auto industry executive in the heyday of American manufacturing.

It’s interesting reading – offering an insight to a man who could become our next president.


Power plant opponents begin march from Westfield to Boston

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Marchers want to prevent construction of a 431 mega-watt, gas-fired power plant.

trek.JPGMary Ann Babinski, of Westfield Concerned Citizens, delivers a speech Saturday morning before embarking on a 100-mile walk from Westfield to Boston in opposition to the construction of a proposed 431 mega-watt power plant on Ampad Road, where she began her walk.

WESTFIELD – The head of a grass roots group opposing cembarked Saturday on a 100-mile walk from Westfield to Boston in an effort to persuade Energy Management executive James Gordon to “Walk the talk.”

Mary Ann Babinski gathered with other members of Westfield Concerned Citizens at the site of the proposed power plant on Ampad Road Saturday morning and vowed to continue the fight against the facility until the company abandons its plan for the plant.

“For almost five years now,” Babinski said, “Westfield Concerned Citizens have been working to stop the construction of a dirty, gas-fired plant in our city,” she said before beginning her 100-mile walk. We are here today because we still believe, as we did five years ago, that this proposed power plant, if built, will unnecessarily put public health and the environment at risk.”

The six-day walk began Saturday morning on Ampad Road, followed Routes 10 and 202 and stopped for the day in Ludlow. Day two will take Babinski from Ludlow to West Brookfield along Route 9, and on days three, four, five and six she will continue along Route 9 from West Brookfield to Worcester, Worcester to Framingham, Framingham to Newton, and Newton to Boston Commons and Park Plaza in Boston.

The walk in protest of the power plant, Babinski said, signifies the need to continue moving forward in the fight against the plant and an effort to find clean sources of energy that will not endanger the environment.

“We need to continue moving forward in a direction that will promote green energy solutions, energy efficiency, energy conservation and environmental justice,” she said. “Fossil fuel plants are a giant step backward.”

While in Boston, members of the group plan to deliver more petitions and endorsements to Gordon, the chief executive officer of Energy Management, Inc. and Cape Wind, urging him once again to abandon his plan to build the power plant in Westfield.

Western Mass. Warriors win NEFL playoff squeaker, 35-28

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Quarterback Shawn Brady connected with Travis Poole for the winning touchdown with 35 seconds left.

Warriors_football_101312.JPGThe Western Mass Warriors' Vitaly Dzhenzherrukha takes down Connecticut's Akeem Wright in the first half of Saturday's game at AIC in Springfield.

By JOHN FORD

SPRINGFIELD – Travis Poole pulled in a 10-yard Shawn Brady pass with 35 seconds left to lead the Western Mass. Warriors to a 35-28 win over the Connecticut Bearcats in a NEFL AAA Division first round playoff game Saturday at Ronald J. Abdow Field.

The Warriors built a 27-0 lead late in the first half and appeared to be cruising, but Connecticut used a furious second-half surge to take a 28-27 lead with 3:11 remaining.

Quarterback Richard Snowden scored the go-ahead touchdown on a 22-yard run.

With 2 minutes remaining, the Warriors were pinned on their own 25-yard line when Connecticut was called for a roughing the passer penalty on third down. From there Brady was 4 of 4 passing for 54 yards, all to Poole, to set up the winning score.

“I think I had a heart attack,” said Williams. “They (the Bearcats) always play us very tough.”

The Warriors host a semifinal game against a yet-to-be-decided opponent Saturday at Central High School. The winner advances to the AAA Super Bowl Oct. 27.

The theme of the game was “Tough enough to wear pink” as the Warriors, in collaboration with the Springfield Stone Soul Festival Inc., recognized the day as part of Breast Cancer Awareness Month and Woman’s Health.

Under the leadership of coach and owner Junior Williams, the Warriors’ team initiative for 2012 was “Warriors Giveback.” The team sponsored special nights all through their perfect 10-0 season, including biker awareness, youth education and domestic violence awareness. Springfield Stone Soul Festival Inc. collaborated with the team to add even more of a sense of community to Saturday’s event by sponsoring family oriented tailgating activities.

Williams’ players have followed his lead both on and off the field. The roster of 54 is made up mostly of Springfield-area players from a hodgepodge of backgrounds. “The Warriors are not only made up of dedicated athletes on the field, but community educators, U.S. military veterans, city firefighters, state correctional officers and educational scholars off the field,” said Renee Mari Stewart, who doubles as the team’s business manager and community relations director.

Rain, mainly after 3 a.m., low 40

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Rain through tomorrow morning. Staying seasonally mild next week.

A quick system diving into the region has brought a return to the clouds, with a cold rain on the way overnight...mainly after 3 a.m. Low temperatures will be a more seasonal 40 degrees because of the cloud cover.

Expect rain to linger around western Massachusetts on Sunday morning. The day should not be a total washout, but clouds will stick around through most of the afternoon. Highs will fair much better than today, jumping into the mid-60s tomorrow.

Another quick system will deliver a few showers for Monday and then a pretty quiet weather pattern evolves for mid-week. An area of high pressure coming into the region should keep us partly cloudy and seasonal through at least Wednesday, then it becomes a little more unsettled with an area of low pressure coming in with some showers late-week.

Tonight: Rain after 3 a.m., steady at times, low 40.

Sunday: Morning showers, mostly cloudy, milder, high 65.

Monday: Mostly cloudy, scattered afternoon showers, breezy, high 71.

Tuesday: Mostly sunny, cooler and breezy, high 59.

Fire destroys mobile home in Palmer

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Investigators are still trying to determine the cause of the fire.

This is an update of a story posted at 6:59 p.m.

2007 palmer fire truck

PALMER - Fire destroyed a mobile home at 249 Ware St. (Route 32) and sent two of the occupants to the hospital.

The fire was reported just after 6:30 p.m. Saturday, and Palmer firefighters were assisted by Three Rivers, Bondsville and Ware fire departments at the scene. Monson firefighters provided station coverage.

Palmer Fire Chief Alan J. Roy said the mobile home was "fully involved" when firefighters arrived, and said explosions could be heard. Trooper Michael Mazza, of the state fire marshal's office, also arrived at the scene to investigate.

"It was a pretty stubborn fire. It took about a half hour to knock it down. There were a lot of contents in that building," Roy said.

Police and Roy said the tenants, Donald Brooke and his wife, were brought to Wing Memorial Hospital for treatment of possible smoke inhalation and burns. According to town property records, the home is owned by Robert Boucher of Florida.

Roy said it is unknown what caused the fire.


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Massachusetts pharmacy founder had background in recycling

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The pharmacy linked to the nation's deadly outbreak of meningitis is owned by two brothers-in-law who brought different but complementary skills to the venture: One's a pharmacist, the other a risk-taking businessman who made his mark recycling old computers, fishing rope and mattresses.

1014necc.JPGA sign requesting "No Soliciting" hangs on the door of New England Compounding in Framingham, Mass. The New England Compounding Center and its practices are under scrutiny as investigators try to determine how a steroid solution supplied by the pharmacy apparently became contaminated with a fungus.

JAY LINDSAY

BOSTON — The pharmacy linked to the nation's deadly outbreak of meningitis is owned by two brothers-in-law who brought different but complementary skills to the venture: One's a pharmacist, the other a risk-taking businessman who made his mark recycling old computers, fishing rope and mattresses.

Now the New England Compounding Center and its practices are under scrutiny as investigators try to determine how a steroid solution supplied by the pharmacy apparently became contaminated with a fungus. The drug has sickened nearly 200 people in 12 states, killing 15. Most of the patients had received spinal injections of the steroid for back pain.

NECC was founded in 1998 by Barry Cadden and Gregory Conigliaro as a compounding pharmacy, a laboratory that custom-mixes solution, creams and other medicines in dosages and forms that often are unavailable from pharmaceutical companies.

Cadden, who is married to Conigliaro's sister, Lisa, had the medical know-how behind NECC, earning a pharmacy degree from the University of Rhode Island. In a 2002 newsletter, he wrote that compounding had rebounded, after falling off when pharmaceutical companies began manufacturing drugs in the 1950s and '60s, and could help patients with painful conditions that demand "novel approaches."

Cadden, 45, backed his belief in compounding with a 2005 donation of between $2,500 and $5,000 to the legal defense fund of the International Academy of Compounding Pharmacists. The group wrote in a 2009 brochure: "To continue to champion the cause of pharmacy compounding and contend with entities such as FDA, we must not only be equipped with fighting words, but fighting dollars as well."

Conigliaro, 46, is a Tufts University-educated engineer and a member of the Air National Guard, from which he retired as a lieutenant colonel in 2007. He started Conigliaro Industries in 1991.

The company contended that pretty much anything could be recycled, and it did so in creative ways.

Conigliaro and his father, also an engineer, developed Boston's Best Patch, a pothole-filling mix that included the plastic housing from discarded computers. The company's Plas Crete Wall Blocks combine cement, sand, water and recycled plastic. Conigliaro Industries also boasts that it figured out how to recycle up to 90 percent of a discarded mattress.

And when regulators ordered that lobster traps be fitted with ropes that sink to the bottom so that endangered whales would not become entangled, Conigliaro took the discarded plastic lines and resold them to recycling plants, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

(Cadden's wife is also an entrepreneur, having received a patent in 2002 for a "pillow feeding sleeve" to aid breastfeeding mothers by lifting their babies' heads.)

Conigliaro's success at the recycling company was repeated at the compounding pharmacy, and in 2006, the partners started another pharmacy, Ameridose, which would eventually report annual revenue of $100 million — more than 10 times NECC's. Ameridose products haven't been linked to any problems, but the pharmacy in Westborough has ceased operations while state and federal authorities inspect it.

Cadden has surrendered his pharmacy license and resigned from Ameridose. Neither man responded to requests for comment; a company spokesman said they are focused on helping investigators in the meningitis outbreak.

Some pharmacists who have done business with NECC said they were blindsided by the crisis.

"A great company to work with, very responsive to our needs," said Joe Allessandrini, assistant vice president of clinical services at South Jersey Healthcare. "This is, as I'm sure you're hearing from other people, a shock to us."

State officials have inspected NECC at various times, most recently last March, following a complaint about the potency of a product used in eye surgery. The results of that inspection have not been released, and state officials said the complaint appears unrelated to the meningitis outbreak.

However, NECC was licensed only to fill individual patients' prescriptions, state officials said. Authorities said it may have been operating beyond its legal boundaries by shipping products for broad use around the country. Compounding pharmacies are more lightly regulated than pharmaceutical makers, and their products are not subject to Food and Drug Administration approval.

"The New England Compounding Center was masquerading as a compounding pharmacy so it could escape federal regulation when it was actually operating as a drug manufacturer," said Rep. Edward Markey, D-Mass., who sits on the Energy and Commerce Committee, which has jurisdiction over the FDA.

Ameridose is regulated by the FDA, and in 2008 an FDA investigator found problems with its records, procedures and testing of drug products. Among the issues: Finished drug products were shipped before the company received results of a 14-day sterility test, according to Inspection Monitor, a trade newsletter that covers FDA inspections. Representatives of Ameridose and FDA did not return calls for comment.

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Associated Press writers Holbrook Mohr in Jackson, Miss., Linda Johnson in Trenton, N.J., and Rodrique Ngowi in Boston contributed to this report.

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