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Ludlow students to combat illegal drug use by celebrating Red Ribbon Week

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Red Ribbon Week seeks to raise awareness of drug use and the problems related to drugs facing the community and encourages parents, educators, business owners and other community organizations to promote drug-free lifestyles.

LUDLOW — Ludlow community members are continuing their effort to combat a problem with illegal use of prescription pain killers.

Detective Sgt. Thomas Foye said that the abuse of prescription pain killers is becoming a suburban epidemic.

Students in Ludlow will celebrate Red Ribbon Week from Oct. 23 to 31.

Red Ribbon Week seeks to raise awareness of drug use and the problems related to drugs facing the community and encourages parents, educators, business owners and other community organizations to promote drug-free lifestyles.

“Red Ribbon Week encourages our community to adopt healthy, drug-free lifestyles,” said Ludlow Cares coalition spokesman Jennifer Fafard. The Ludlow Cares Coalition is combating illegal drug use and underage drinking in the community.

Fafard said the Red Ribbon campaign brings together parents, schools and businesses to seek innovative ways to keep kids and communities drug-free.

“The red ribbon symbolizes a continuing commitment to reducing the demand for illicit drugs in our communities,” Fafard said. She said that in 1985, Drug Enforcement Administration Special Agent Enrique S. “Kiki” Camarena was killed by drug traffickers. After his death, citizens from his hometown of Calexico, California, began wearing red ribbons to remember him and commemorate his sacrifice. Congress established Red Ribbon Week in 1988.

The following activities are planned for Red Ribbon Week in Ludlow:

At Baird Middle School students will participate in making posters, books and other displays around education awareness of the dangers of drugs and alcohol.

The displays will have the theme of CARES – compassion, awareness, respect, education and safety.

Community Service and Student Council Clubs have offered assistance making Red Ribbon Week ribbons.

On Oct. 25 and 26 Baird students will pledge good decision making and healthy life choices and will sell red bands for students to wear in the community.

A pledge wall will be displayed in the main foyer of Baird Middle School.

On Oct. 24, members of the community, the Ludlow Police Department and the Drug Enforcement Agency will go to St. John the Baptist School and view student essays, hand out red ribbons and lead the drug-free pledge with students.

On Oct. 25 and 26, students at Ludlow High School will make posters in health classes and sign the drug-free pledge wall.

On Oct. 26 there will be an informational table at the Ludlow Boys & Girls Club from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. to provide information on efforts to educate the community about the dangers of illegal drug use and underage alcohol use.

On Oct. 29 community members will hand out red ribbons at Veterans Park Elementary School and lead students in a drug-free pledge. Members of the Ludlow Police Department and the Drug Enforcement Agency will attend.


Amherst to try earlier Town Meeting start time

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This is just one of several proposals from the Select Board to improve the meeting's efficiency.

amherst town hall.jpg Amherst Town Hall

AMHERST — When Town Meeting members gather next month, they will do so 30 minutes earlier than in the past in an effort to reduce the number of sessions.

The new start time will be a trial, Town Manager John P. Musante said. “It may make for fewer sessions,” he said.

Meetings typically are scheduled to begin at 7:30 p.m., but this fall sessions will be called to order at 7 p.m.

Both fall and annual town meetings have needed multiple nights for business, and sometimes meetings have not begun until 7:45 p.m. or later.

This is just one of several proposals from the Select Board to improve the meeting’s efficiency.

The Town Meeting Coordinating Committee, however, in response to the Select Board’s memo had some concerns with the earlier start.

The committee conducted a survey last fall, and of 91 responses, 45 favored the earlier time and 45 opposed it. One responder had no preference.

Select Board member Stephanie J. O’Keeffe in an email said this will be a trial and members will be asked about how the time worked after the fall town meeting sessions end.

The board is also encouraging the use of the consent calendar, which would allow for quick voting on recurring articles for which no one has questions.

In the board's memo to the coordinating committee, O’Keeffe wrote, “The Select Board believes that efforts to make Town Meeting shorter and more efficient without compromising its due process are important for attracting and retaining members from all walks of life, and for making the legislative work of the town as accessible as possible to interested members of the community.”

The town has a representative town meeting with 10 members from each of the town’s 10 precincts.

Fall town meeting will begin Nov. 19.

Tim Tebow, running back? New York Jets could try it against New England Patriots

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With depth issues at running back, head coach Rex Ryan is considering using Tebow to help plug the holes.

Tim Tebow already has quarterback and personal punt protector on his resume in New York. Now he may also be adding running to his list of duties.

With a series of injuries robbing the Jets of their running back depth, head coach Rex Ryan was asked about the possibility of plugging Tebow in at the spot.

“That’s a possibility,” Ryan said. “The thing about Tim, with him being a football player like we've always talked about, Tim can -- by playing quarterback he knows all the positions. And so, can you plug him at running back? Can you plug him at tight end? I think the answer is yes."

Joe McKnight (ankle) and Bilal Powell (shoulder) are both battling injuries and could be unavailable for Sunday’s game against the Patriots. That leaves Shonn Greene as the only viable option.

Tebow has averaged 5.2 yards per carry throughout his career.

In New Hampshire, an aggressive President Barack Obama criticizes Mitt Romney's tax and jobs plans

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Obama attacked Romney before 6,000 swing state voters, using many of the same attacks he made in this week’s presidential debate.

obama nh oct.jpgPresident Barack Obama gestures while speaking at a campaign stop, Thursday, Oct. 18, 2012, in Manchester, N.H.

MANCHESTER, N.H. – Democratic President Barack Obama took an aggressive line against Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney at a New Hampshire rally on Thursday, incorporating many of the same attacks he made in this week’s presidential debate into his pitch to swing state voters.

Speaking to a crowd of 6,000 under sunny skies at Veteran’s Memorial Park, with 19 days left before the election, Obama attacked Romney’s economic and social policies.

“He’s got a tax plan that doesn’t add up, he’s got a jobs plan that doesn’t create jobs, he’s got a deficit plan that doesn’t reduce the deficit,” Obama charged.

Romney spokesman Ryan Williams responded that Obama offered Granite State voters “more misleading attacks to distract from his failed record, his reckless spending and his inability to present a discernible vision to move our country forward.”

“The President is out of new ideas, out of time and out of excuses to explain his failed leadership and broken promises,” Williams said. “Mitt Romney has a real plan to create 12 million jobs, and as president he will work with members of both parties to cut spending, restore our AAA credit rating, and get our economy growing again.”

On tax policy, Romney has laid out principles of his tax plan – lowering taxes for the middle class, keeping taxes the same for high-income taxpayers and eliminating deductions and exemptions so the plan will not raise the deficit. But he has not said which deductions he would eliminate, something Obama has criticized him for.

“On Tuesday, Governor Romney took another stab at trying to sell us this $5 trillion tax cut that favors the wealthy. He took another swing at it and he whiffed,” Obama said at the rally. “Instead of telling us how he’d pay for it, he said I’ll let you know after the election….Now I’m going to let you in on a little tip. When a politician tells you he’s going to wait until after the election, it’s not because their plan is so good that they don’t want to spoil the secret.”

(Independent fact checkers have said Romney is not actually proposing a $5 trillion tax cut, since he would also reduce deductions.)

Obama also criticized Romney’s jobs plan, which Romney says would create 12 million jobs in four years through a mix of tax reform and energy independence. Obama referred to a Washington Post fact-check that disputed Romney’s numbers. “When folks started crunching the numbers, his jobs plan fell apart faster than his tax plan,” Obama said.

“Mitt Romney’s trying to sell you a sketchy deal,” Obama said.

Speaking before Obama, Democratic New Hampshire Sen. Jeanne Shaheen referred to Romney’s comment in the debate that when he was looking to staff his cabinet as Massachusetts governor, women’s groups brought him “binders full of women.” “(Obama) doesn’t need a binder to appoint women,” Shaheen said, pointing to Obama’s appointment of Hillary Clinton as secretary of state.

Obama referred to Romney’s comments while speaking about education and the need for boys and girls to excel in math, science and engineering. “We don’t have to order up some binders to find qualified, talented, driven young women who can learn and excel in these fields right now,” Obama said.

While Republicans frequently criticize Obama’s Affordable Care Act for putting more control over health care into the hands of Washington, Obama tried to rebut that criticism, focusing on a debate over Obama’s mandate that insurers cover contraception with no co-pay. Religious groups have opposed the mandate, and Republicans have criticized Obama for infringing on religious freedom. Obama said the Republicans would give employers and insurers the chance to deny coverage to individuals. “Do you think your boss or your insurance company or some politician in Concord or Washington should get control of your health care choices?” Obama said. “The health care law we passed puts those choices in your hands, where they belong.”

Before a cheering audience, Obama touted his work passing health care form, increasing investment in renewable energy, rescuing the U.S. auto industry, repealing the ban on openly gay people serving in the military and cutting taxes for the middle class.

With the next debate on Monday set to focus on foreign policy, Obama offered few specifics, but said he believes ending the war in Iraq and winding down the war in Afghanistan were the right things to do. He committed to sustaining a strong military and helping veterans.

Before the rally, Romney spokesman Tommy Schultz sent out a statement arguing that Obama has “failed the Granite State.” Though the New Hampshire unemployment rate has remained below the national average, the Romney campaign noted that it rose from 5.2 percent when Obama took office to 5.7 percent in September 2012, while median income has declined and the number of people on food stamps has increased. (The Obama campaign counters that Obama took office during a recession and has presided over its recovery.)

Both Obama and Romney have made numerous appearances in New Hampshire, a swing state with four electoral votes. This is Obama’s fifth visit this year. A WMUR Granite State poll released Oct. 9 by the University of New Hampshire Survey Center found Obama leading Romney by six points, 47 percent to 41 percent – though 18 percent of voters said they could still be persuaded to change their minds. A 7News/Suffolk University poll released Oct. 15 found Obama and Romney tied.

Andrew Smith, director of the University of New Hampshire Survey Center, said Republicans have had an advantage in enthusiasm in New Hampshire and nationally. “They’re mad and going to vote,” Smith said. Smith said the challenge for Democrats is energizing Democrats who have been hurt by the economy, and young people who are not supporting Obama with the same enthusiasm as in 2008. Rallies like Thursday’s could help with that goal.

“Turnout is going to be the key here,” Smith said. “Both parties have to make sure those voters are energized and get to the polls.”

Cheryl Beaudry, a farmer from Hollis and Democrat who attended the rally, said she supports Obama because of his health care overhaul. Beaudry said her husband cannot retire because he relies on his employer to pay half the couple’s health insurance costs – and she believes Obama’s reform is a step in the right direction. Beaudry said she came to the rally “just to be reenergized.” “It’s historic to be able to see a president,” she said.

David Bump, a Democrat who works in a restaurant and came from Billerica, also supports Obama for health care-related reasons. “My parents are close to Medicare. I have a little girl at home, who I want to have the right to do whatever she wants,” Bump said. Bump dislikes Republican vice presidential nominee Paul Ryan’s plan to turn Medicare into a voucher program, and he agrees with Obama’s support for abortion rights and mandatory insurance coverage for contraception.

Andy Reid's son, Garrett Reid, died of heroin overdose

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Northampton County Coroner Zachary Lysek announced the findings with investigators, who said numerous syringes and needles were discovered in a gym bag in Garrett Reid's room.

EASTON, Pa. (AP) — A coroner said Thursday that an accidental heroin overdose killed Garrett Reid, the son of Philadelphia Eagles coach Andy Reid.

Northampton County Coroner Zachary Lysek announced the findings with investigators, who said numerous syringes and needles were discovered in a gym bag in Garrett Reid's room.

Garrett Reid was found dead in his dorm room on Aug. 5 at Lehigh University in Easton, where he was assisting the team's strength and conditioning coach during training camp.

He was a recovering drug addict who had seemingly turned his life around. His father, Andy Reid, had indicated that his 29-year-old son may have had a relapse.

Northampton County District Attorney John Morganelli said that investigators found 47 syringes and 65 needles in the younger Reid's gym bag, many of them unopened.

Also found were syringes and spoons, too.

"We are confident today that Mr. Reid's death was the result of a self-injected lethal dose of heroin," he said.

Morganelli said the investigation is now examining from whom Garrett Reid got the narcotics and the drug paraphernalia.

He also said that besides the heroin, investigators found 19 vials of an unknown liquid, but did not say what they contained.

"We're not sure, exactly, what those substances are at this time," he said, adding they were also in the bag but had nothing to do with Garrett Reid's death.

Police reporting accident in Springfield on Interstate 291 near Chicopee line

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The accident is causing some traffic problems.

SPRINGFIELD -- Massachusetts State Police are reporting an accident off Exit 6 on Interstate 291.

The accident, which is near the intersection for the Massachusetts Turnpike and the Chicopee city line, has caused some traffic tie-ups, police said.

As police are responding to the accident now, little information is available. Updates will be provided as more information becomes available.


Sen. Scott Brown grabs endorsement from former Worcester Teamsters president Carl Gentile

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Although labor unions are mobilizing across Massachusetts in support of Democrat Elizabeth Warren, the Republican incumbent Sen. Scott Brown landed a union endorsement of his own on Thursday.

Scott Brown, Gail HuffRepublican Sen. Scott Brown, R-Mass., smiles as he answers a question during a news conference where he was endorsed by the State Police Association of Massachusetts, SPAM, as well at the National Troopers Association as he campaigns for re-election in Boston, Tuesday Oct. 16, 2012. Brown is running against Democratic challenger Elizabeth Warren., Tuesday, Oct. 16, 2012. At rear is Brown's wife Gail Huff. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

WORCESTER - Although labor unions are mobilizing across Massachusetts in support of Democrat Elizabeth Warren, the Republican incumbent Sen. Scott Brown landed a union endorsement of his own on Thursday.

Carl Gentile, the former president of the Teamsters Local 170 in Worcester gave Brown a nod of support at an event in the city, as the senator warned that "union members across Massachusetts are the target of a middle class health care tax that Elizabeth Warren supports."

The tax Brown referred to has been dubbed the "Cadillac Tax," and is part of the president's Affordable Care Act. He has tied Warren to support of the tax for her support of the health care law.

The endorsement from Gentile comes a day after Brown sent out a fundraising letter critical of "big labor bosses" for allegedly fining members for not attending events on Warren's behalf, as one union member present in Springfield for the Senate race debate last week claimed.

Warren's campaign said that the Teamsters International union is among the more than a dozen labor groups already supporting Warren in the race and pointed to an event Warren held at the Teamsters Local 170 office in Worcester back in July.

Michael Hogan
, secretary treasurer and principal officer for the Teamsters Local 170 said that Gentile is retired and "speaks for himself," while affirming the union's support for the Harvard Law School professor.

"Make no mistakes about it, our 4,000 members in Central Massachusetts whole-heartedly support Elizabeth Warren in this race," Hogan said in a phone interview. "We are confident that she is going to make a fantastic Democratic senator who will put the residents of Massachusetts first in Washington."

Brown was endorsed this week by former Mass. Gov. Paul Cellucci and the State Police Association of Massachusetts while Warren got a nod of support from singer Bruce Springsteen and former FDIC Chairwoman Sheila Bair, a Republican.

UMass extends basketball coach Derek Kellogg through 2016-17

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The deal could pay Kellogg upwards of $800,000 per year.

Derek KelloggDerek Kellogg's new extension keeps him in Amherst for the next five seasons.

AMHERST — The ink is finally dry on a contract extension for University of Massachusetts basketball coach Derek Kellogg.

As first reported over a month ago, the new deal keeps Kellogg at UMass through the 2016-17 season. In addition, the extension restructures the final two years of Kellogg’s existing contract (this season and next season), paying him a minimum of $665,000 and could reach over $800,000 with a successful season.

“In Derek we just have really the perfect fit for us,” UMass Athletic Director John McCutcheon said. “Not only the fact that he played here, but he’s from the area, he’s committed to getting this done the right way and making the commitment to the University. We felt we wanted to make a commitment to him to have a stable and long-term relationship.”

You can view the contract here. The details are as follows:

  • $250,000 per year in base salary (compared to $215,000 in Kellogg’s first contract)
  • $415,000 in “other compensation” (compared to the $315,000 he would have made in this year of his original contract)

This “other compensation” is for “various speaking and media appearances” as well as “the broadcast of any television, radio or other media programs related to the University’s men’s basketball program”

Additional bonuses are as follows, but are capped at $135,000 (bringing the “other compensation total to $550,000).

  • $75,000 for an NCAA tournament berth
  • $25,000 for an final season RPI of 60th or better
  • $25,000 for a strength of schedule ranked 75th or better
  • $25,000 for 20 Division I wins
  • $20,000 for an average home attendance of over 5,500
  • $20,000 for an NIT berth
  • $20,000 for finishing in the top four in the conference during the regular season
  • $20,000 for a team Academic Progress Rating of over 940
  • $20,000 for a Graduation Success Rate of 80 percent or higher

The following bonuses are not subject to the cap:

  • $25,000 for each round of the NCAA tournament
  • $5,000 for each round of the NIT
  • 25 percent of all men’s basketball ticket revenue over $700,000 (the school’s 2011 men’s basketball ticket revenue was $577,902)

Finally, Kellogg would owe UMass $500,000 if he leaves early. If he’s fired without legal “just cause” the University owes him the base salary ($250,000 per year) remaining on his contract.

“It’s a good indication of where the program is not just on the court, but academically and socially,” Kellogg said Thursday. “It’s a combination of a lot of things, and it was important to the fan base to know that the program was secure in the next five years.”

McCutcheon said that the academic component of the contract was an important one.

“I think it’s important to us in this program and in all of our sports,” McCutcheon said. “We’ve said that from day one, yes winning is important and being competitive is important, but we want to do it the right way and there aren’t any shortcuts.”

The terms of the contract had been agreed upon weeks ago, but the parties needed legal review and final paperwork to process before going public with the figures.

Kellogg said he does not employ an agent, and that he and UMass athletic director John McCutcheon just sat down and did the deal themselves over a couple of meetings — a relative rarity in big time college athletics these days.

“We just sat down and talked about it,” Kellogg said. “We met on it a couple times, and that was it..”

But while the negotiations were relatively smooth this time around, McCutcheon said he knows that he could be back at the table sooner rather than later if Kellogg’s teams perform on the court.

“I’m glad that we have it done, but as anybody in this business knows, you’re never totally locked up,” McCutechson said. “If we have outrageous success over the next couple years, I am sure that there will be people that would approach Derek with some pretty attractive offers that would put us right back in the conversation situation again.”

For now, though, UMass has its man.

“Where we are right now, I feel very good about it,” McCutcheon said. “I feel very good that Derek is pleased with it, I think both sides are very happy with where we are and we’re in position to keep our relationship moving forward in a very positive way.”


Alex Rodriguez trade rumors 2012: Would Miami Marlins really want A-Rod?

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The New York Yankees may be following in the footsteps of the Boston Red Sox, and that's not a good thing for Yankee fans.

10-17-12-alex-rodriguez.JPGHeading south? Could Alex Rodriguez be dealt to the Miami Marlins?

Only the New York Yankees could make the mistake of signing Alex Rodriguez to a 10-year contract, watch his production go into a rapid tailspin, and then actually find a team to bail them out of their own fiscal irresponsibility.

Or can they?

That's the big question right now.

The Yankees are down 3-0 to the Detroit Tigers in the American League Championship Series. The story of the hour should be whether or not the Yankees can pull off the same type of improbable comeback the 2004 Boston Red Sox did against them eight years ago.

Instead it's whether the 2012 Yankees can pull off the same type of trade the last-place 2012 Boston Red Sox pulled off on Aug. 25.

What team in its right mind would take on Alex Rodriguez? With five full seasons and $114 million of guaranteed money remaining on his contract, it would seem totally ludicrous for any team in any position to want to take on Rodriguez.

Yet there it is, all over the internet. The Miami Marlins. Would the Miami Marlins actually want Rodriguez?

On Wednesday Keith Olbermann of MLB.com reported that the Marlins and Yankees had actually engaged in preliminary discussions about sending Alex Rodriguez to Miami.

Even if you buy into some of the key points made in this rumor which involve the Yankees paying a large portion of Rodriguez's remaining contract while also absorbing the cumbersome contracts of Heath Bell and/or Jose Reyes, or Mark Buehrle, the deal still makes no sense.

For a National League team that can't use a designated hitter, what does Rodriguez bring to the table?

His range at third base has been limited since returning from hip surgery in March of 2009.

That makes Rodriguez a prime candidate to be a designated hitter as his career and contract wind down.

That's not happening in Miami, though, not with the Marlins playing in the National League.

Of course, there is another scenario that does make a deal with Miami seem likely.

If New York is willing to pick up the bulk of the contract, then what prevents Miami from turning around and trading Rodriguez to an American League team?

Nothing, that's what.

That's how it could go down. The Yankees could rid their roster, if not their entire payroll, of Rodriguez. The Marlins would get a Red-Sox-like do-over on their free agent binge of last winter.

The Marlins made three big, splashy, free agent signings this offseason. One, Heath Bell, became the type of complete disaster that Red Sox fans would associate with John Lackey or Carl Crawford. He performed well below expectations, blew saves, and engaged in a public war of words with is manager Ozzie Guillen.

The Marlins also signed Reyes and Buehrle to pricey deals, but a move to bring Reyes to the Yankees would be controversial considering that Derek Jeter has held the shortstop position for over 15 seasons.

Buehrle, on the other hand, could fill one of the open starting pitching spots in their rotation.

Of course, just like the Marlins, the Yankees could acquire Reyes and then try and trade him.

There are a lot of possibilities. If the Yankees end up being swept by the Tigers, they will find themselves in an oddly similar circumstance to the one the Red Sox found themselves in after 2011 -- with a bloated payroll, many past-their-prime players and a farm system failing to produce top talent.

Could the Yankees be on the verge of an organizational house-cleaning similar to what Red Sox fans have witnessed in the last year?

We may find out very shortly.

Belchertown School Committee considers spending $1.2 million to repair Tagdell building

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In the coming months, Belchertown officials will decide whether the Tagdell building is worth spending an estimated $1.2 million to repair

BELCHERTOWN — Is the mammoth one-story Tadgell building – once an integral School Department structure that was also a state emergency command center – worth spending an estimated $1.2 million to repair?

The Belchertown School Committee thinks it is, but wants to hear from the community. In the coming months the board will confer with town officials on the matter.

Alternative education programs take place in sections of the building at present.

2009 eric weiss mug horz.JPG Eric Weiss

School committee vice chairman Eric Weiss said that for the school or a town department to fully reoccupy the Tagdell building, it must be brought up to code.

“We are trying to highlight for the town the costs we are looking at,” should Belchertown decide to give Tagdell a complete refurbishment, Weiss said Monday.

“In the long run we will have another valuable town asset to utilize” if the repairs are completed, he said.

At last week’s school board meeting the panel released a study on what it would cost to rehabilitate the 53-year old building.

The report was prepared by Roy S. Brown Architects of Wilbraham.

Replacing the 25,416-square-foot main roof is estimated to cost $355,000 – “Additionally, steel reinforcements will be required for another $90,000,” the report states.

At 42,648 square feet, the building contains nearly an acre of usable space, including the basement and ground floors.

The structure was built in 1959 and was originally part of the former Belchertown State School.

UMass an 18-point underdog against Bowling Green, and more MAC Lunch Links

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The Falcons are one of six road favorites in the MAC this week.

BGAkron.jpg Bowling Green is favored by 18 over UMass this Saturday.

It's Friday, and you know what that means. Time to take a look at the MAC from Vegas's perspective:

• Bowling Green (-18) at UMass
•Northern Illinois (-16.5) at Akron
• Army (-2) at Eastern Michigan
• Pittsburgh (-9) at Buffalo
• Ball State (-3) at Central Michigan
• Western Michigan at Kent State (-3.5)
• Cincinnati (-5) at Toledo

Road favorites are 5-1 over the past two weeks in the MAC, and we have an astonishing six of them this week... There's been plenty of action on Bowling Green (opened at -16) and Northern Illinois (opened at -13.5)... UMass is 2-4 against the spread in 2012 while Bowling Green is 3-3... Kent State has been the best bet in the league this year at 5-1 ATS, while Northern Illinois is 5-1-1, and Toledo and Ball State are both 5-2.

Alright, on to the links:

Jack Carle of the Bowling Green Sentinel Tribune says the Falcons have to keep focused on what's in front of them.

Hustlebelt previewed the UMass-Bowling Green game with Matt Sussman and Mike Paquette trading barbs.

Toledo running back David Fluellenn didn't know how to work the projector when he arrived in Toledo, but those days are long in the past, writes Ryan Autullo of the Toledo Blade.

Ball State coach Pete Lembo says he likes KeVonn Mabon so much, he'd be willing to adopt him, writes Tom Davis of the Fort Wayne News Sentinel.

Nate Schneider of The Morning Sun and Doug Zaleski of the Muncie Star Press teamed up on a Q&A.

Eastern Michigan is hoping for another offensive output like last week's, writes Matt Durr of AnnArbor.com.

Terry Pluto of the Cleveland Plain Dealer gave his take on Kent State's resurgence under Darrell Hazell.

Bob DiCesare of the Buffalo News writes about the Bulls' challenging schedule. Coach Jeff Quinn is still "bullish" on the Bulls despite a 1-5 start, writes Paul Zeise of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.


Youth isn't being wasted on the young
at Akron, writes George Thomas of the Akron Beacon Journal.

Stevan Ridley, Patriots running backs wear adult onesies to work

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That's right, we said adult onesies.

stevanridley.jpeg Stevan Ridley wears an adult onesie.


FOXBOROUGH -- Stevan Ridley walked through the New England Patriots locker room tugging at the zipper on his adult onesie as he made his way to his stall.

Wait. What?

Yes, we said adult onsie. The Patriots running back recently began coming to work dressed in adult a onesie, the pajama choice of infants across the world, and it's beginning to catch on. He has the "teletubby" outfit, as he calls it, in six different colors and his fellow running backs have started wearing them, too.

Call it team bonding. Call it weird. Call it funny. Ridley's comfortable and he doesn't care. In fact, he's hoping that he can start endorsing the pajamas, made by California Christiania Republic, so the rest of America can know what true comfort feels like.

"If they call, I'd be all over it, man," Ridley said. "We're working on it. We're working on it."

So, maybe we'll start seeing these in the Gillette Stadium stands soon.

Actually, let's hope not.

UMass-Bowling Green football: Game time, ticket information and more

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The Bowling Green Falcons visit Gillette Stadium on UMass Homecoming day.

Bowling Green Falcons (4-3) at UMass Minutemen (0-6)
Saturday, October 20, 12:00 p.m.
Gillette Stadium, Foxborough, Mass.

UMass Homecoming game

Tickets

$25 on Ticketmaster or call 866-UMASS-TIX

How to watch

Streaming video available on UMassAthletics.com

How to listen

UMass Sports Network
105.5 FM WEEI Springfield
1440 AM WVEI Worcester
95.9 FM WATD South Shore

Game previews

Undermanned UMass gets set for homecoming matchup with red-hot Bowling Green

UMass podcast with John Wagner of the Toldeo Blade

UMass offensive line getting used to shuffling

UMass getting contributions from young cornerbacks like Trey Dudley-Giles

Suspended starters Alan Williams, Nick Speller, won't return Saturday

Is there really such a thing as a trap game?

Simulation

Lineups

Bowling Green campus report

Smartphone app

• Install the new UMass football app on your iPhone or Android phone

Undermanned UMass football gets set for homecoming battle with red hot Bowling Green

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The Minutemen face injury and suspension issues headed into a game with a Bowling Green team that's on a three-game winning streak.

UMass Football vs Ohio 9/29/12 UMass gave Ohio all it could handle on Sept. 29 at Gillette Stadium, and will hope for similar success against Bowling Green on Saturday. photo by J. Anthony Roberts

AMHERST — The University of Massachusetts football team is saying all the right things. It’s have put the 0-6 record in the past, used the bye to heal its wounded and moved on to what players and coaches have come to call the “second season.”

Whether or not it can back up the talk is another thing entirely, especially against a visiting Bowling Green team that seems to be hitting full stride as it flies into Gillette Stadium for UMass’ homecoming game Saturday.

The Minutemen say they’ve healed the bumps and bruises on guys that were playing, but of the players that were legitimately injured and held out of games, they’ve only returned one — reserve defensive back Iric Harris. Tight End Rob Blanchflower will sit with a leg injury. Defensive tackle Galen Clemons and offensive lineman Jamie Casselberry are sidelined with concussions. Linebacker Greg Hilliard will miss his fourth straight game because of a shoulder injury.

But it’s the losses of suspended wide receiver Alan Williams and guard Nick Speller that will really curb the Minutemen’s enthusiasm headed into Saturday. The loss of Speller is especially painful because of Bowling Green defensive tackle Chris Jones, who has racked up nine sacks in seven games — an absurd total for an interior lineman.

Instead of Speller, or his replacement Casselberry, UMass will have true freshman Matt Sparks at right guard.

That loss is massive even without the Chris Jones factor. It is not a coincidence that UMass’ best three offensive games — by far — have been with Anthony Dima at right tackle and Speller at right guard.

“That hurts. It doesn’t help obviously, those are great players that we had,” quarterback Mike Wegzyn said. “We have other guys that are going to be able to step up.”

Maybe they do, and maybe they don’t. Against a Bowling Green defense that’s tops in the MAC in both scoring (19.1 points per game) and yardage (330.6 yards per game) defense, coach Charley Molnar’s young offensive line is going to face a massive uphill battle.

“When you’re young, you usually have two things going against you. Number one, you’re not as physically developed as you need to be, number two, you don’t have the experience,” Molnar said. “I hate to use the term patchwork, but at times, it feels that way.”

In case UMass needs a reminder about how physical this Falcons team can be — on both sides of the ball — it can look at the BCS standings. No. 2 Florida, currently sitting pretty at 6-0, was shockingly pushed around by Bowling Green at times in a 28-14 week-one victory that was far closer than score would indicate.

“I know how good they are,” Wegzyn said. “I’ve seen it on film. Against Florida, they played really well.”

The Falcons present a 4-2-5 look on defense, a style popularized and perfected by defensive guru and TCU head coach Gary Patterson that features four defensive linemen, two linebackers and five defensive backs.

Wegzyn said the different look will affect the game plan, but not his preparation.

“Obviously inside the schemes it does, but at the end of the day, it’s 11 vs. 11, there’s only so much you can do,” Wegzyn said. “It’s us vs. them, and we just have to go out and outplay them.”

Offensively, the Falcons have found newfound confidence in a running game led by sophomore Anthon Samuel, a first-team All-Rookie selection in the MAC last year who is averaging over six yards per carry in 2012 and has topped 100 yards in each of Bowling Green’s three consecutive wins over the past three weeks.

Molnar compared the Falcons run attack to another team UMass faced earlier.

“I would say UConn had a powerful run attack, but this group is pretty proficient,” Molnar said. “It would be similar to UConn’s.”

Bowling Green faced similar struggles as the Minutemen did early in the season because of its schedule — the Falcons found themselves staring at an 1-3 record after losses to Florida, Virginia Tech and Toledo and an ugly win over lowly Idaho. But they’ve recovered, something UMass has been unable to do thus far.

Molnar believes that’s going to change Saturday.

“I think our guys have had good energy, good sense of purpose, and they want to win a football game,” he said. “They aren’t out here just practicing to get better, they’re out here to win a football game, and I think our guys are locked in, so I’m excited to see how we pull it all together on Saturday.”

Kickoff is at Noon, and video coverage can be found at www.mac-sports.com.

New England Patriots CB Devin McCourty ready to play safety if needed

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McCourty could be called upon to help the safeties if things continue as they are.

FOXBOROUGH – With injuries and ineffectiveness plaguing the New England Patriots at safety, Devin McCourty knows the call could come at any moment.

Last year when similar problems hit, McCourty, a cornerback by trade, was asked to step back there and help provide depth at the end of the season. He hasn’t heard anything about a potential move yet, but he’s been here long enough to know that playing in New England means being ready for every scenario.

"That's not my call, I'll do whatever coach [Bill Belichick] decides," McCourty said. "We've got some young guys that I think are doing a great job of picking up the defense since they've been here. I think they've done a great job just responding and give them opportunities to show what they know and how they can play."

Rookie safety Tavon Wilson has shown some promise during his time on the field this season, though his inexperience sank the Patriots last week against the Seahawks when he played a part in giving up the game-winning, 46-yard touchdown.

Wilson has been forced into a larger role on defense with safety Steve Gregory battling a hip injury, and fellow rookie Nate Ebner was forced to step up after Patrick Chung suffered a shoulder injury last week.

But even when the starters are on the field, the safeties have struggled with their assignments and have played a key role in New England surrendering 33 passes of 20 or more yards, the highest mark in the league.

It’s doubtful that McCourty will be asked to abandon his role this week, but it is possible.

"On this team, you've got to be ready to go anywhere," McCourty said.


Beirut car bomb kills top official, 7 others

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A car bomb ripped through Beirut on Friday, killing a top security official and seven others, shearing the balconies off apartment buildings and sending bloodied residents staggering into the streets in the most serious blast the Lebanese capital has seen in four years.


This story updates an earlier version posted at 9:52 a.m.

By BASSEM MROUE
Associated Press


BEIRUT (AP) — A car bomb ripped through Beirut on Friday, killing a top security official and seven others, shearing the balconies off apartment buildings and sending bloodied residents staggering into the streets in the most serious blast the Lebanese capital has seen in four years.

Dozens of people were wounded in the attack, which the state-run news agency said targeted the convoy of Brig. Gen. Wissam al-Hassan, a top security official in Lebanon.

Many Lebanese quickly raised the possibility the violence was connected to the civil war in neighboring Syria, which has sent destabilizing ripples through Lebanon for the past 19 months. Al-Hassan was in charge of an investigation that exposed a bomb plot over the summer, leading to the arrest of a pro-Syrian Lebanese politician and charges against a top Syrian regime figure.

"Whenever there is a problem in Syria they want to bring it to us," said Karin Sabaha Gemayel, a secratary at a law firm a block from the bombing site, where the street was transformed into a swath of rubble, twisted metal and charred vehicles.

"But you always hope it will not happen to us. Not again," she said.

The blast ripped through a narrow street at mid-afternoon in Beirut's mainly Christian Achrafieh neighborhood, an area packed with cafes and shops. Doors and windows were shattered for blocks, and several blackened cars appeared to have been catapulted through the air.

Bloodied residents fled their homes while others tried to help the seriously wounded. One little girl, apparently unconscious and bleeding from her head, was carried to an ambulance in the arms of rescue workers, her white sneakers stained with blood.

"I was standing nearby in Sassine Square and I heard a big explosion and I ran straight to it," resident Elie Khalil said. He said he saw at least 15 bloodied people in a nearby parking lot before medics arrived and took them to a hospital.

Lebanese security officials said eight people were killed and 60 wounded, 20 of them critically. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren't authorized to talk to the press. The state-run National News Agency put the number of wounded at 78.

Health Minister Ali Hussein Khalil called on all hospitals to accept the wounded from this "terrorist bombing."

Tensions have been soaring in Lebanon over the conflict next door, and clashes have erupted between supporters of Syrian President Bashar Assad and backers of the rebellion against his regime.

Syria and Lebanon share a complex web of political and sectarian ties and rivalries, often causing events on one side of the border to echo on the other. Lebanon's Sunnis have tended to back Syria's mainly Sunni rebels, while Lebanon's powerful Shiite Hezbollah movement is a key ally of Assad.

Lebanon was hit by a wave of bombings and other attacks that began in 2005 with a massive suicide blast that killed former prime minister Rafik Hariri and more than 20 other people in downtown Beirut. In the following years, a string of anti-Syrian figures were assassinated, several in car bombings. Many Lebanese blamed Damascus for the killings, though Syria denied responsibility.

Al-Hassan, the official targeted Friday, had headed an investigation that led to the Aug. 9 arrest of former Information Minister Michel Samaha, one of Syria's most loyal allies in Lebanon who has long acted as an unofficial media adviser to Assad. According to a senior Lebanese police official, Samaha confessed to having personally transported explosives in his car from Syria to Lebanon with the purpose of killing Lebanese personalities at the behest of Syria.

A military court has since indicted Samaha and Syrian Brig. Gen. Ali Mamlouk of plotting to carry out terrorist attacks inside Lebanon. Mamlouk, who was appointed recently by Assad to head Syria's National Security Bureau, was indicted in absentia.

The last massive serious bombing was in 2008, when a car bomb killed a senior Lebanese anti-terror police official who was investigating dozens of other bombings. Four others were killed and 38 wounded in the blast in the Christian Hazmieh neighborhood.

Since then, Lebanese saw a relative calm in violence. After the uprising against Assad began in March 2011, there have been sporadic gunbattles between pro- and anti-Assad factions, particularly in northern Lebanon. The divisions also tend to fall along sectarian lines, a dangerous element in a country that was torn apart by the 1975-1990 civil war.

"I'm very worried about the country after this explosion," Beirut resident Charbel Khadra said Friday. "I'm worried the explosions will return — and this is just the first one."

___

AP writers Elizabeth A. Kennedy, Ben Hubbard and Barbara Surk contributed to this report from Beirut.

NCAA Football 13 Simulation: Bowling Green 34, UMass 0

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UMass couldn't get anything going on offense in this week's simulation.

Our most recent simulation was off again, making it two straight 24-point misses. Here is a recap of the simulations thus far.

Week one:
Simulation Score: UConn 38, UMass 7
Actual Score: UConn 37, UMass 0
Margin Differential: 6 points

Week two:
Simulation Score: Indiana 37, UMass 0
Actual Score: Indiana 45, UMass 6
Margin Differential: 2 points

Week three:
Simulation Score: Michigan 45, UMass 0
Actual Score: Michigan 63, UMass 13
Margin Differential: 5 points

Week four:
Simulation Score: Miami (Ohio) 27, UMass 10
Actual Score: Miami (Ohio) 27, UMass 16
Margin Differential: 6 points

Week five:
Simulation Score: Ohio 44, UMass 17
Actual Score: Ohio 37, UMass 34
Margin Differential: 24 points

Week six:
Simulation Score: Western Michigan 21, UMass 7
Actual Score: Western Michigan 52, UMass 14
Margin Differential: 24 points

This week, it was a very ugly showing for UMass, as they were blitzed 34-0 by the Falcons.

Matt Schilz threw three first-half touchdown passes to get the Falcons out to a 24-0 halftime lead, while the UMass offense couldn't move the ball at all — netting just five first downs in the contest.

Some relevant stats for UMass:

Mike Wegzyn: 8/37, 79 yards, INT
Michael Cox: 12 carries, 45 yards
Marken Michel: 3 receptions, 33 yards
Brandon Potvin: 6 tackles, 2 sacks
Tom Brandt: Fumble forced, fumble recovered.

Check back next week to see how UMass fares in its trip to the Music City against Vanderbilt.

Massachusetts State Police to conduct sobriety checkpoint in Hampden County

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Col. Timothy P. Alben, superintendent of Massachusetts State Police, announced Friday that a sobriety checkpoint will take place on Friday, Oct. 26, into Saturday, Oct. 27, at an undisclosed location in Hampden County.


Col. Timothy P. Alben, superintendent of the Massachusetts State Police, announced Friday that a sobriety checkpoint will take place on Friday, Oct. 26, into Saturday, Oct. 27, at an undisclosed location in Hampden County.

"It will be operated during varied hours, the selection of vehicles will not be arbitrary, safety will be assured, and any inconveniences to motorists will be minimized with advance notice to reduce fear and anxiety," Alben said in a release.

The checkpoints are funded by grants from the state Executive Office of Public Safety and Security's Highway Safety Division.

Elizabeth Warren is outspending Scott Brown in Massachusetts Senate race

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Though Warren has raised more than Brown, Brown had more left in the bank as of Sept. 30.

brown warren debate.jpgRepublican U.S. Sen. Scott Brown, left, gestures as he answers a question during a debate against Democratic challenger Elizabeth Warren, right, sponsored by the Boston Herald at the University of Massachusetts in Lowell, Mass., Monday, Oct. 1, 2012. At center is moderator David Gregory.

Democratic Senate candidate Elizabeth Warren is raising more money than Republican U.S. Sen. Scott Brown, but she is also spending it at a faster rate.

Filings with the Federal Election Commission show that Warren had $7.28 million cash on hand as of Sept. 30 – after raising $36.3 million this election cycle.

Brown, who raised $25.4 million this election cycle, had more money left in the bank - $10.2 million.

A snapshot of that spending can be seen in the current fundraising report, which covers Aug. 18 through Sept. 30. During that time, Warren spent $13.4 million while Brown spent $8.86 million.

Advertising was driving that gap. According to FEC filings, the Warren campaign spent $10.9 million on television and radio ad buys made through Media Strategies and Research during that time period. Warren also spent $550,000 on Internet advertising, through a Washington, D.C.-based company called Bully Pulpit, which also works for Democratic President Barack Obama’s campaign. Brown paid Multimedia Services Corporation $7.8 million for media buys.

Another difference was in salaries. The Warren campaign paid just under $430,000 in salaries to more than 100 people. The Brown campaign listed just 22 people on its payroll and spent $107,000 on salaries. Neither the Brown campaign nor the Massachusetts Republican Party would say whether Brown was relying on staffers paid by other organizations, like the state party. But state party spokesman Tim Buckley said, "The state party runs a coordinated field operation for candidates up and down the ticket.”

Both campaigns spent money on mailings. Warren spent nearly $650,000 with one direct mail company, Rapid Returns. The Council for a Livable World, which endorsed Warren, has been sending out mailings and fundraising on her behalf. Warren paid more than $4,000 to the council’s candidate fund to cover those expenses. Brown’s biggest single direct mail expenditure was $94,000 to SCM Associates. Brown also spent $25,000 on polling, and both campaigns spent tens of thousands of dollars on consulting services.

Fundraisers and events are also expensive. Warren paid $9,600 to a North Carolina catering company, apparently for events during the Democratic National Convention and $8,500 to the Boston Center for the Arts for a reception. Brown spent mostly smaller sums on catering - $4,100 at Wimpy’s Seafood in Osterville and $4,900 at Max Downtown in Hartford, Conn.

Anthony Cignoli, a political strategist with clients from both parties, said Warren’s extensive spending in the most recent reporting period makes sense since undecided voters are making up their minds now. “It’s wiser to be spending this money now than it is two weeks from now. Undecided’s are making up their minds now. They are influence-able now,” Cignoli said.

Cignoli said Warren is spending on advertising in almost every possible market – including areas like Western Massachusetts, a traditionally Democratic region where Brown made inroads in some towns two years ago. “Elizabeth Warren and the Democrats need to win back some traditionally Democratic towns or make sure they can keep those towns in the traditional fold,” Cignoli said. “You can’t afford to lose Chicopee or do poorly in the hill towns.”

In terms of the higher staffing levels, Cignoli said Warren started from a disadvantage, since Brown was a popular incumbent senator. “I think it is a situation where Warren realized that she had name recognition to overcome, a popular sitting senator who has incumbency to overcome,” he said.

Despite all the expenditures in the race - one of the most expensive in the country - the race remains tight, less than three weeks before the election.

Fewer GOP candidates vie for Mass. Legislature

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The firm grasp Democrats hold on power in the Massachusetts Legislature seems unlikely to be loosened in the Nov. 6 election, with Republicans running fewer candidates than two years ago when the party scored modest gains at the Statehouse.

masslegislature.JPG Senate Minority Leader Richard Tisei, R-Wakefield, left, newly-elected Sen. Gale Candaras, D-Springfield, and Sen. Michael Knapik, R-Westfield, take the oath of office in Senate Chambers at the Statehouse in Boston Wednesday, Jan. 3, 2007, during the swearing-in ceremonies of the new Massachusetts legislature.

By BOB SALSBERG
Associated Press


BOSTON (AP) — The firm grasp Democrats hold on power in the Massachusetts Legislature seems unlikely to be loosened in the Nov. 6 election, with Republicans running fewer candidates than two years ago when the party scored modest gains at the Statehouse.

Still heavily outnumbered in both branches, Republicans are on the ballot in less than half of the 160 House districts and 40 state Senate districts. That could make it a struggle for the party to add clout on Beacon Hill in the two-year session starting in January.

Republicans hold 33 seats in the House and a scant four in the Senate. Their low numbers make it difficult, often impossible, for Republican lawmakers to accomplish tasks such as pushing legislation to the floor, attaching amendments, forcing roll call votes and challenging procedural rulings by Democratic leaders.

Still, GOP leaders see hope for gaining seats, targeting several districts that were redrawn during the latest round of redistricting and that contain sizable numbers of conservative-leaning independent voters. They even hold out the possibility of knocking off one of the state's most powerful Democrats, Senate President Therese Murray, D-Plymouth.

Republicans have pointed to the ongoing patronage scandal in the state probation department as an example of abuses that can arise under one-party domination.

Democrats, conversely, are counting on a strong turnout of their base in a presidential election year and have targeted several freshmen Republicans for defeat.

The GOP doubled its presence in the House two years ago, a bright spot in an otherwise dismal state election for Republicans that saw a Democratic sweep of congressional and statewide races.

"For too long, there's been too much of a dominant one-party system where checks and balances have broken down," said Peter Blute, deputy chairman of the Massachusetts Republican Party. "People are starting to realize in Massachusetts ... you have to have some balance."

This year there are 69 Republicans, including 29 incumbents, vying for seats in the House, down from 79 in 2010. In the Senate, Republicans are on the ballot in only 16 races, including the four with GOP incumbents, a drop from two years ago when the GOP fielded 26 Senate hopefuls.

The state Democratic party has tried to turn the tables on the integrity issue by launching a website that purports to show a variety of ethics violations involving GOP incumbents and candidates around the state. Democratic also have sought to link some freshmen Republicans to the most conservative elements of their party.

"They represent a brand of right-wing, tea party values," said John Walsh, state Democratic party chairman. "You're seeing Democrats in those districts pushing forward on issues such as local aid and issues that people really care about."

Murray, the first woman to preside over the Senate, is again facing a spirited challenge from Tom Keyes, a business consultant and former Sandwich selectmen.

In 2010, Keyes lost to Murray by about 3,600 votes out of more than 76,000 cast in the election.

During a recent debate on WATD-FM, Keyes took Murray to task for sometimes deciding the fate of legislation in closed-door caucuses and for allowing the Legislature to remain exempt from the state's open meeting law.

"When I get up there, I am going to propose a rules change so we can have the transparency that the public is really looking for," he said.

Keyes also tied Murray to the ongoing probation department investigation. Federal indictments returned against three former probation officials referenced Murray as being among the lawmakers sponsoring candidates who were hired over more qualified applicants.

Murray has not been accused of wrongdoing and said during the debate she was surprised Keyes would question her ethics. She also said the Senate always does its work out in the open.

"We are extremely transparent in the Senate. We have passed campaign finance reform, transportation reform, court reform and municipal health care reform, all in the public eye," she said.

For Republicans, electing more members to the Legislature also helps the party groom future candidates for higher office. They point to Republican U.S. Sen. Scott Brown, who served 12 years on Beacon Hill before winning the special election to succeed the late Sen. Edward Kennedy.

Likening it to baseball players in the minor leagues, Blute said legislators learn about fundraising, networking, dealing with the media and other subtleties of politics.

"We have too many first-time candidates for higher office, and they struggle," he said.

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