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Madonna's corset, Elvis Presley's Rolex featured in London sale

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LONDON — A watch which was one of Elvis Presley's last Christmas presents and a corset worn by Madonna on her 1990 "Blond Ambition" tour will be featured at a London auction. The watch, estimated to sell for $9,500 or more, is a diamond-set Rolex given to Presley in 1976 by his longtime manager, Tom Parker. It is engraved,...

11-23-12-elvis-watch.jpg A Christie's specialist displays a watch showing the engraving, given to Elvis Presley by his manager for Christmas in 1976, at the auction rooms in London on Friday. The watch estimated at $9,500 to $12,750 will go on sale in the Pop Culture auction on Nov. 29 in London.


LONDON — A watch which was one of Elvis Presley's last Christmas presents and a corset worn by Madonna on her 1990 "Blond Ambition" tour will be featured at a London auction.

The watch, estimated to sell for $9,500 or more, is a diamond-set Rolex given to Presley in 1976 by his longtime manager, Tom Parker. It is engraved, "Elvis Merry Christmas your pal Col. Tom Parker." It was the last Christmas for Presley, who died the following year.

Madonna's corset by Jean-Paul Gaultier is of green silk with conical cups and beaded fringe, embroidered with candy stripes of opalescent sequins and peppermint bugle beads.

Christie's estimates that the corset will sell for at least $16,000.

Christie's previewed the sale on Friday. The auction will be next Thursday.


'Downton Abbey' returning for fourth season

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Filming of eight new episodes for the award-winning period series will begin in southern England's Highclere Castle and London's Ealing Studios early next year.

11-23-12-downton-abbey.JPG In this image released by PBS, from left, Elizabeth McGovern as Lady Cora, Hugh Bonneville as Lord Grantham, Maggie Smith as the Dowager Countess and Michelle Dockery as Lady Mary are shown in a scene from the second season of "Downton Abbey."


LONDON — British television channel ITV has confirmed that hit drama "Downton Abbey" will return for a fourth season.

Filming of eight new episodes for the award-winning period series will begin in southern England's Highclere Castle and London's Ealing Studios early next year.

ITV said Friday that as before, the opening and closing episodes will be feature-length, and that the series will continue the story of the Crawley family and their servants in the 1920s.

The channel said that an extended special episode for next Christmas is also planned.

"Downton Abbey" has won fans worldwide and an average of 11.9 million viewers in Britain watched its third season, which will premiere in the U.S. on PBS in January.

'Propoganda of perversion' lawsuit against Madonna dismissed in Russia

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During Friday's court hearing, plaintiffs claimed that Madonna's gay rights propaganda would negatively affect Russia's birthrate.

11-23-12-madonna.jpg Madonna performs during her concert at concert Hall in St. Petersburg, Russia, in this Aug. 9 file photo. A Russian court has dismissed a lawsuit that sought millions of dollars in damages from Madonna for allegedly traumatizing minors by speaking up for gay rights during a concert in St. Petersburg.


By IRINA TITOVA and MAX SEDDON

ST. PETERSBURG, Russia — A Russian court on Thursday dismissed a lawsuit that sought millions of dollars in damages from Madonna for allegedly traumatizing minors by speaking up for gay rights during a concert in St. Petersburg.

The ruling came after a one-day hearing that bordered on the farcical. During it, plaintiffs claimed that Madonna's so-called "propaganda of perversion" would negatively affect Russia's birthrate and erode the nation's defense capability by depriving the country of future soldiers. At one point, the judge threatened to expel journalists from the courtroom if they laughed too much.

In the end, the Moskovsky district court in St. Petersburg threw out the Trade Union of Russian Citizens' lawsuit and the 333 million rubles ($10.7 million) it sought from the singer for allegedly exposing youths to "homosexual propaganda."

Madonna did not attend the trial, and her publicist Liz Rosenberg said Thursday the star wouldn't comment about it.

Anti-gay sentiment is strong in Russia, particularly in St. Petersburg, where local legislators passed a law in February that made it illegal to promote homosexuality to minors. Six months later, Madonna criticized the law on Facebook, then stood up for gay rights during a concert in St. Petersburg that drew fans as young as 12.

"Who will children grow up to be if they hear about the equal rights of the lesbian lobby and manly love with traditional sexual relations?" one of the plaintiffs, Darya Dedova, testified Thursday. "The death rate prevails over the birth rate in the West; young guys are becoming gender neutral."

The plaintiffs submitted evidence about gay culture drawn from Wikipedia pages, claiming that a real encyclopedia could not have articles about homosexuality.

"We aren't against homosexual people, but we are against the propaganda of perversion among minors," Dedova told the court. "We want to defend the values of a traditional family, which are currently in crisis in this country. Madonna violated our laws and she should be punished."

Madonna, who performed in Moscow and St. Petersburg in August as part of her world tour, also angered Russian officials by supporting jailed members of the Russian punk band Pussy Riot. The American said during her Moscow concert that she would "pray for them," then turned around so the audience could see the words "Pussy Riot" written on her back. The singer also donned a ski mask similar to those worn by Pussy Riot.

Despite international outrage, three of that band's members were sentenced to two years in jail on hooliganism charges for performing a "punk prayer" at Moscow's main cathedral, during which they pleaded with the Virgin Mary to deliver Russia from President Vladimir Putin. One of the Pussy Riot members was later released from jail on appeal, but the other two were sent to prison camps to serve their sentences.

Springfield explosion ruins entertainment district's busiest nights

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Police were ordering crowds out of the entertainment district on the night after Thanksgiving, one of the busiest nights of the year.

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SPRINGFIELD — On Worthington Street, bricks were scattered like fallen leaves. Parked cars were caked with debris, their windows blown out. A dancer’s red, stiletto-heeled shoe was two blocks away, resting in the gutter.

Moments after an explosion ripped through the Scores Gentleman’s Club late Friday afternoon, the downtown club district was transformed into a blast zone, with ambulances, police cruisers and fire trucks racing to the scene.

By 6 p.m., police were ordering crowds out of the entertainment distinct on the night after Thanksgiving, one of the busiest nights of the year.

“My job just blew up,” said Megan LaBombard, 21, of Springfield, who was dancing at Scores when the club was evacuated after reports of a gas leak.

Twenty minutes later, LaBombard was sitting in the nearby Mardi Gras Gentleman’s Club with other Scores employees, waiting to go back to work. The explosion rocked the club and shattered windows in a five-block radius.

“We were only out for 20 minutes; our manager had told us, “I don’t care what you’re wearing; just get out,” LaBombard recalled, her voice barely audible over the police and ambulance sirens.

By then, Scores was rubble and police - warning that a second explosion was possible - began herding people back down Worthington Street, away from the blast scene. One by one, the clubs began to close; by 7 p.m, most of lower Worthington was deserted, with only police, firefighters and emergency personnel on the scene.

At the 350 Grill Steakhouse on Worthington St., an automatic voice alarm kept warning staff and customers to evacuate the building long after most of them had left.

The restaurant’s dishwasher, Keith Alessandroni, has been watching utility crews check out the building when the blast hit.

“There was a big cloud, just an explosion...and then I heard screaming,” he said. “There was a fire, too (a few seconds) later.’

Larry Hagman , 81, dies at Dallas hospital

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The actor died from complications from throast cancer.

Larry Hagman.jpeg Larry Hagman

Larry Hagman, 81, who starred as the iconic J.R. Ewing on TV's "Dallas," died Friday at Medical City in Dallas, of complications from his recent battle with cancer, according to the Dallas Morning News.

“Larry was back in his beloved Dallas re-enacting the iconic role he loved most,” his family said in a written statement. “Larry’s family and close friends had joined him in Dallas for the Thanksgiving holiday. When he passed, he was surrounded by loved ones. It was a peaceful passing, just as he had wished for. The family requests privacy at this time.”

Hagman starred on CBS' "Dallas" from 1978 to 1991. He reprised the role of J.R. Ewing on three subsequent TV movies and earlier this year on a successful revival series on TNT. Hagman had begun filming season 2 of the TNT series.

The son of acclaimed actress Mary Martin, Hagman starred in the popular 1960s TV series "I Dream of Jeannie" with Barbara Eden.

The father of two, Hagman married Maj Axelsson in 1954.

He was diagnosed with stage 2 throat cancer in June 2011. He told OK! magazine, "As J.R. I could get away with anything — bribery, blackmail and adultery. But I got caught by cancer. I do want everyone to know that it is a very common and treatable form of cancer. I will be receiving treatment while working on the new 'Dallas' series. I could not think of a better place to be than working on a show I love, with people I love."[


Springfield gas explosion injures at least 18, officials call no loss of life 'a miracle on Worthington Street'

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The blast leveled 1 downtown business, heavily damaged a dozen nearby buildings and blew out windows in dozens of others in a blast and shock wave that was felt as far as 10 miles away.

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SPRINGFIELD — A natural gas explosion on Worthington Street leveled one downtown business, heavily damaged a dozen nearby buildings and blew out windows in dozens of others in a blast and shock wave that was felt as far as 10 miles away.

The explosion at Scores Gentlemen’s Club, 453 Worthington St., injured as many as 18 people, including 12 city workers, but there were no fatalities. As of late Friday night, only two civilians were hurt, and the extent of their injuries was not known. The city was setting up an emergency shelter at Central High School for an unknown number of people residing in damaged buildings within the blast zone.

Lt. Gov. Timothy Murray, speaking at a press conference Friday night, spoke for many in the city when he said “this was a miracle on Worthington Street that no one was killed.”

People reported feeling the explosion as far away as South Hadley, Chicopee, East Longmeadow and Wilbraham.

Springfield Mayor Domenic Sarno said the city is still trying to gauge the amount of damage and the economic impact to downtown businesses that will be forced to close or even relocate. “We are trying to wrap our arms around this as we move forward,” he said.

The explosion at about 5:20 p.m. flattened Scores. City Building Inspector Steven Desilets said the two-story brick building, is now “a hole in the ground.”

Springfield firefighters and workers with Columbia Gas had been on scene for about an hour prior to the explosion for a report of a large gas leak. Scores, one of the city’s many strip clubs, had been evacuated, as had several other businesses, as officials searched for the source of the leak.

State Fire Marshal Stephen Coan credited this decision by city fire and police with the low death and injury numbers. “They took a call for what could have been a routine call for odor of gas and they took precautions.”

Because the area had been evacuated, most of those injured were city and gas company workers at the scene to investigate the gas leak. The injured included nine firefighters, four Columbia Gas workers, two police officers, one Water Department worker “and at least two civilians that we are aware of,” Sarno said. “But there were no fatalities, thank God.”

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Desilets said inspection teams would head out Saturday morning to assess the damage to buildings in the area of the blast zone. The Scores building was clearly demolished, and as many as 12 buildings in the immediate vicinity sustained serious structural damage. Perhaps another dozen or more sustained broken windows, he said.

If people have concerns about damaged buildings, they can call Desilets' office at 413-787-6031 or 413-787-6032. The office will be staffed beginning at 7 a.m. Saturday, and someone will be sent out to make an inspection.

More information on the extent of the damage will come once the inspections are done, he said.

Much of the damage was to high-rise buildings in the area of Worthington and Chestnut streets. Firefighters on aerial platforms could be seen removing broken glass from the upper floors of buildings in the vicinity.

“We got a lot of debris hanging off buildings. The fire department is working to pull it down,” he said.

Springfield police cordoned off an area several blocks in every direction from the former Scores, which Sarno and others termed “ground zero.” Sarno advised people to stay out of the area until further notice, saying emergency workers on the scene did not need any gawkers getting in the way.

The blast zone includes much of the downtown Entertainment District, and in the aftermath, the district was depopulated and its many bars, clubs and restaurants closed. Asked how long he expected it to be shut down, Sarno replied “the Entertainment District will be shut down for as long as it needs to be shut down. It’s not really on my mind right now.”

For blocks in every direction, shards of glass from plate glass windows blown out by the shock wave littered sidewalks. Friday evening, work was being done to secure buildings that sustained broken glass. David W. Roy of ABC Glass was seen at Chestnut and Lyman streets placing boards over broken windows.

Acting Fire Commissioner Joseph Conant said investigators with his office will work with the city Arson and Bomb Squad and Columbia Gas to determine the cause and source of the leak and the cause of ignition.

Springfield natural gas explosion destroys building, causes widespread damage downtown.JPG This building at 453 Worthington St. in Springfield was destroyed by an explosion caused by a natural gas leak. The building housed the Scores Gentlemen's Club at the time of the explosion.

Columbia Gas spokeswoman Sheila Doiron said company officials will work with city and state officials to find answers. She said the company has no record dating back to 2001 to indicate any prior complaints of gas leaks in that area of the city.

Following the explosion, gas crews with detection equipment searched several blocks in all directions but found no traces of natural gas.

The explosion rocked the city’s downtown on what had been a quiet afternoon on the day after Thanksgiving. Just hours earlier, thousands lined the streets blocks away as part of the annual Parade of the Big Balloons.

Murray and Sarno were at a tree lighting ceremony at the Quadrangle when the explosion occurred. Sarno said some people at the ceremony saw the flash and heard the explosion and thought it was part of the ceremony.

The Square One daycare next door was heavily damaged, as was a five-story building at Worthington and Chestnut streets. The daycare was closed for the day due to the holiday.

Dave Cutter, who owns a tattoo parlor at 378 Dwight St., about a block and a half away, said his front windows were blown out, and that the ceiling in his cellar was blown down.

At Theodore's, about two blocks away from the blast, the crowd was startled, said Stephanie Simmons, a waitress.

"It rocked us so hard the windows smashed. It felt like an earthquake or a large explosion. There was pretty much chaos."

She said about 30 to 40 people were at the bar, all on their feet, and many went out side to see what happened.

Albert fuster.jpg Albert Fuster stands with his dogs, Moochie and Papi, on Worthington Street following Friday's explosion. His apartment at Taylor and Chestnut streets was damaged and he was told to evaculate.

Albert Fuster was in his apartment at the corner of Chestnut and Taylor streets, a block away, with his two dogs, Moochie and Papi.

“All of a sudden I hear the boom and all my windows blow out. All the smoke started filling up the place,” Fuster said, standing with a crowd of people after the blast in the parking lot of the Mardi Gras. “I thought someone set off a bomb.”

He and the dogs were the only ones home at the time. “So I grabbed my babies and got the hell out,” he said.

Megan Labombard, 21, who works as a dancer at the Scores, said her employer gave her about 20 minutes notice to get out of the club where she had been working.
“I went across the street to the Mardi Gras Champagne Room, where we were having a drink, and the building where I work blew up,” she said.

She said she watched her livelihood go up before her eyes. “My job just exploded.”

Another dancer, who would identify herself only as Debbie, said she was on stage when the club’s “house mom,” came up and told her everyone had to leave the building.

She went upstairs to get her clothes, and she saw smoke coming out of the ladies room.
Seconds later, the manager ran in and yelled ““I don’t care if you’re (expletive) naked or not, get out,” Debbie said.

She said she left the building not fully dressed, pulling her pants on in the parking lot. Everyone at Scores went diagonally across the street to the Mardi Gras for a drink until Scores reopened. A few minutes later, there was an explosion.

“I feel lucky we got out,” Debbie said.

She said Scores workers had been smelling gas for a while, and the gas company came in during the week to check, but didn’t find anything.

She said the smell of gas was especially bad Friday morning, and that she would go upstairs and feel light-headed.

Lawyer Daniel D. Kelly, representing Scores, said those who own and work at the business were still assessing what happened. But, he said, three months or so ago, the gas company was at 453 Worthington St. taking readings. He was unsure why that was being done, such as if someone had complained of a smell of gas, or exactly when that occurred, because he said employees who told him of that were unsure of the date, he said.

Kelly said he didn't know who placed a call bringing gas company and fire officials there on Friday.

A gas company crew member was taking readings Friday when he shouted for people to evacuate, he said.

"To say it happened quickly was an understatement," Kelly said.

Also, Kelly said, "I want to wish a speedy recovery to all the first-responders who were injured in the blast, as well as the civilians (who were hurt)."

Nestor Torres, of 61 Pearl St., said “The whole place shook, and then the explosion.” His son’s bedroom window smashed in, but no one was in the room. Other people who lived in the apartment buildings known as Armoury Commons on Pearl Street were cleaning up glass from the outside stairs and reporting that it felt and sounded like a bomb going off.

Alexis Atkins, 16, of Springfield, was walking down Worthington Street going to meet some friends downtown. Right at the vicinity of Worthington and Spring she saw the explosion.

“I saw this big explosion out of nowhere. There were flames and glass flying everywhere and people screaming,” she said.

Various storefronts, ranging from a mini-mart to a church, have smashed windows.

Eladio Torres, a part-time worker at J.J. Mini Mart on Pearl Street, said the glass blew in and then blew out of the building as he and others were at the counter. He said it felt like an earthquake.

Judith Matt, who lives on Mattoon Street, said she saw something on TV about a gas leak, and suddenly she felt "as if the third floor of the house was falling on the second floor.

"I was putting ornaments on the tree and it was absolutely like a bomb went off," said Matt

"One of my windows was blown out. The entire house shook like you wouldn't believe. Up and down Pearl Street, all the windows are blown out. You would not believe the damage.

"We're all fine on Mattoon Street, but lots of people are going to be displaced tonight."

Maribel Rivera was sweeping glass outside the Brothers In Christ Church on Chestnut Street, about two blocks from the site of the explosion, following the blast. Her husband, Angel, is pastor.

Maribel said she saw the news of the explosion on TV and saw the church’s storefront window blown out.

“I was crying, nervous. I could not believe it,” she said. She and family members, including children, rushed to the church from the home in the South End.

Staff reporters Patricia Cahill, Jack Flynn, Peter Goonan and Mike Plaisance contributed to this story

Stay with MassLive.com for continuing coverage on Saturday of the aftermath of the downtown Springfield explosion.

Lindsey Vonn struggles in return to World Cup skiing in Aspen, finishes 21st

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Tina Maze of Slovenia won the giant slalom race, her second World Cup GS win this season.

11-23-12-lindsey-vonn.JPG Lindsey Vonn of the United States, speeds down the course during the women's World Cup giant slalom ski race in Aspen, Colo., on Saturday.


By PAT GRAHAM

ASPEN, Colo. – Immediately after crossing the finish line, Lindsey Vonn collapsed to the snow in complete exhaustion.

Her stamina gone, Vonn simply couldn’t make up ground on winner Tina Maze of Slovenia in a World Cup giant slalom race Saturday. Vonn finished 21st in her return after missing time with an intestinal illness.

Then again, given the way Maze has been racing of late, no one was going to catch her. She used a blazing final run to finish in a combined time of 1 minute, 59.39 seconds to hold off Kathrin Zettel of Austria by nearly a second. Viktoria Rebensburg of Germany was third.

The 29-year-old Maze also won the season-opening GS race in Soelden, Austria, last month, with Zettel taking second there, too.

“I feel like people are watching me now, more than before,” said Maze, who did a cartwheel after the win. “I’d like it to continue this way.”

All eyes were on Vonn, too, just to see how she performed after a bad stomach bug recently landed her in the hospital.

Vonn was 10th after the first run, but didn’t have anything left in the tank for the second pass through the challenging course. The more the four-time overall champion tried to attack the hill, the more snow she sent flying in every direction and the more speed she lost.

“I didn’t have the energy I needed to really be competitive,” said Vonn, who earned her first World Cup points of the season. “It’s been a real fight to even be able to race today. I didn’t have it.

“I’m a competitor. This isn’t exactly the kind of result I was hoping for. But I have to still keep things in perspective and realize that I was very sick just a few days ago. I’m just happy to be racing again.”

Her strength has been completely wiped out by the virus, which is finally responding to antibiotics. Until Saturday, she hadn’t made it through a full GS run since the bug hit without pulling off to the side out of breath.

This definitely helps with her confidence.

“Eventually, on a course like this, it’s all going to catch up with you,” said Vonn, who will skip the slalom Sunday to conserve energy. “Your whole body is going to shut down at some point. I just have to stay positive and keep building.”

Maze is showing just how determined she is to take Vonn’s overall title. She switched ski technicians before the season and they’ve instantly been in tune. Maze also finished fourth in a slalom race in Levi, Finland, two weeks ago.

“It’s natural, the way I’m skiing,” she said. “Everything is under control. I don’t risk too much.”

Although Maze finished runner-up to Vonn in the overall standings last season, she still thought of it as a “hard” year.

“It was not a perfect season for me,” Maze said. “Even though I was second in the end, I had many troubles and many mistakes. I wasn’t happy at all. It was tough. I didn’t win any races last year.”

She might not have ended up No. 1 on the slopes last season, but Maze has recently occupied the top spot on the musical charts in Slovenia.

She sang on a music video entitled, “My way is my decision,” a catchy pop tune. The music video has already generated nearly 800,000 hits on Youtube.

Maze also plays a pretty mean air guitar in the video with her skis.

A budding singer?

“I’m a skier. I don’t want to be a singer,” Maze said. “But I do like to have fun besides skiing. It was fun to make the video. I’m proud of this.”

Teenager Mikaela Shiffrin had the best finish for the Americans as she wound up in ninth place. The 17-year-old was actually on the final step of the podium for quite a while, before finally being bumped off.

“That’s a big breakthrough,” Shiffrin said.

Julia Mancuso couldn’t agree more – for not only Shiffrin, but the rest of the young U.S. skiers.

“Sometimes, it can be daunting with people like me and Lindsey doing well,” said Mancuso, who finished 15th. “It’s good to show the rest of the team that you just have to go for it. Don’t set sights too low because me and Lindsey are both beatable by the young ones – just like today.”

The day didn’t go quite as well for Maria Hoefl-Riesch of Germany. She caught an edge that knocked her off balance and straight toward a gate. Just before crashing into the obstacle, she stuck up her left arm, saving her face but bruising her arm.

“It hurts pretty bad,” said Hoefl-Riesch, whose day was done but still – arm willing, of course – plans to ski in the slalom race. “I’m really disappointed because I had good training the last two weeks. I was really fast in the training. Obviously, I can’t bring it down in the race. It’s really sad.”

9 more Iraq, Afghan war veterans joining Congress

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Veterans' groups say the influx of Iraq and Afghanistan veterans is welcome because it comes at a time when the overall number of veterans in Congress is on a steep and steady decline. In the mid-1970s, the vast majority of lawmakers tended to be veterans.

tammy.jpg his Nov. 15, 2012 file photo shows Iraq war veteran, Rep.-elect Tammy Duckworth, D-Ill., who lost both legs in combat before turning to politics, arriving for a group photo on the East steps of the Capitol in Washington. Veterans groups say the influx of Iraq and Afghanistan veterans in Congress is welcome because it comes at a time when the overall number of veterans in Congress is on a steep and steady decline. In the mid-1970s, the vast majority of lawmakers tended to be veterans.


KEVIN FREKING
Associated Press

WASHINGTON — As Tammy Duckworth sees it, her path to Congress began when she awoke in the fall of 2004 at Walter Reed Army Medical Center. She was missing both of her legs and faced the prospect of losing her right arm.

Months of agonizing therapy lay ahead. As the highest-ranking double amputee in the ward, Maj. Duckworth became the go-to person for soldiers complaining of substandard care and bureaucratic ambivalence.

Soon, she was pleading their cases to federal lawmakers, including her state's two U.S. senators at the time — Democrats Dick Durbin and Barack Obama of Illinois. Obama arranged for her to testify at congressional hearings. Durbin encouraged her to run for office.

She lost her first election, but six years later gave it another try and now is one of nine veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars who will serve in next year's freshman class in the of House of Representatives.

Veterans' groups say the influx of Iraq and Afghanistan veterans is welcome because it comes at a time when the overall number of veterans in Congress is on a steep and steady decline. In the mid-1970s, the vast majority of lawmakers tended to be veterans.

For example, the 95th Congress, which served in 1977-78, had more than 400 veterans among its 535 members, according to the American Legion. The number of veterans next year in Congress will come to just more than 100. Most served during the Vietnam War era. In all, 16 served in Iraq or Afghanistan, not all in a combat role.

"We're losing about a half a million veterans a year in this country," said Tom Tarantino, chief policy officer at Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans for America. "We are not going to be in a world where a significant plurality of people spent some time in the military, so to have 16 men and women who fought in this current Congress is incredibly significant."

Tarantino said he recognizes that the 16 Iraq and Afghanistan vets have wide-ranging political views. But at the end of the day, he said, their shared experiences make it more likely they'll put political differences aside on issues like high unemployment and suicide rates among returning veterans, or in ensuring that veterans get a quality education through the post-9/11 GI bill.

Their election victories also provide a sense of assurance to veterans.

"The biggest fear we have as veterans is that the America people are going to forget us," Tarantino said. "When you have an 11-year sustained war, the fight doesn't end when you pull out."

Duckworth carries the highest profile of the incoming vets. She was co-piloting a Black Hawk helicopter in Iraq when a rocket-propelled grenade landed in her lap, ripping off one leg and crushing the other. At Walter Reed, she worried about what life as a double amputee had in store. But during her recovery, she found a new mission — taking care of those she describes as her military brothers and sisters. That mission led her to a job as an assistant secretary at the Department of Veterans Affairs during Obama's first term.

"Had I not been in combat, my life would have never taken this path. You take the path that comes in front of you," Duckworth said from a wheelchair last week as she and her fellow freshmen went through orientation at the Capitol. "For me, I try to live every day honoring the men who carried me out of that field because they could have left me behind, and they didn't."

Duckworth is one of two freshmen Democrats who served in Iraq or Afghanistan. The other is Tulsi Gabbard of Hawaii, who served near Baghdad for a year and was a medical operations specialist. Gabbard said she hopes the two of them can be a voice for female veterans and the unique challenges they face.

About 8 percent of veterans are women. They tend to be younger on average. Nearly one in five seen by the Department of Veterans Affairs responds yes when screened for military sexual trauma.

Seven Republicans served in Iraq or Afghanistan. Most had backing from tea party supporters who share their views that the size and scope of the federal government should be curtailed.

—Ron DeSantis of Florida was a judge advocate officer in the Navy who deployed to Iraq as a legal adviser during the 2007 troop surge.

—Brad Wenstrup of Ohio was as a combat surgeon in Iraq.

—Kerry Bentivolio of Michigan served in an administrative capacity with an artillery unit in Iraq and retired after suffering a neck injury. He also served as an infantry rifleman in Vietnam.

—Jim Bridenstine of Oklahoma was a combat pilot in Iraq and Afghanistan.

—Scott Perry of Pennsylvania commanded an aviation battalion in Iraq in 2009 and 2010.

—Doug Collins of Georgia was a chaplain in Iraq.

—Tom Cotton of Arkansas, a Harvard Law School graduate, was an infantry platoon leader in Iraq and then was on a reconstruction team in Afghanistan. In between, he was a platoon leader at Arlington National Cemetery.

Cotton said the reason he ran for Congress is the same one that led him to enter the Army after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

"I felt we had been attacked for who we are — the home of freedom," Cotton said. "And I worry now our liberty is threatened at home by the debt crisis we face, which in the long term will mean less prosperity and less opportunity, and therefore less liberty."

Cotton said he could easily see himself working with Duckworth and Gabbard on veteran's issues. "They've carried a heavy load and we owe them a great debt," he said.

At the same time, it's clear the freshmen veterans have clear differences of opinion over policy matters. For example, Gabbard is a strong critic of the war in Afghanistan. She says the United States needs to get out as quickly and safely as possible. Cotton opposes setting timetables for withdrawal.

"We're trying to win a counter-insurgency war where we can put a friendly, allied, stable government in place," Cotton said. "It's certainly been a long and somewhat winding road, but on the whole, America and our interests in the world are much better off for having waged the war in Afghanistan."

There also will be differences over spending priorities. Cotton is reluctant to trim spending on defense as a way to deal with the deficit.

Duckworth said certain programs need close examination, particularly in the area of government contracts. She said she "can actually stand up and talk about defense spending in a way that will be realistic without being attacked for lack of patriotism or not being strong on defense."


Editorial: Toy For Joy fund -- 90 years of giving

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Last year, about 20,000 children received gifts through the holiday giving campaign.

toy for joy 2012 coupon.jpg

Along with Americans across the country, Western Massachusetts residents jammed stores and malls as Black Friday retail promotions kicked off the official holiday gift-buying season.

It was a day for consumers to treat themselves to bargain-priced items like the TVs and smart phones they had been eyeing for weeks. And it was a day to stock up on gifts and toys for family and loved ones.

But if Black Friday – the day after Thanksgiving – is about “me” and “mine,” the days that follow should be about our fellow citizens who are less fortunate than ourselves.

So, just in time to save us from a flurry of self-indulgence, The Republican along with the Salvation Army is proud to sponsor the 90th annual Toy for Joy campaign.

With the help of campaign partner Hasbro, the Toy for Joy fund aims to provide toys and gifts to needy families in Franklin, Hampshire and Hampden counties. The campaign hopes to raise $150,000 in donations by Christmas Eve. Last year, with the help of thousands of people across the valley, the fund exceeded that goal by raising $167,000.

The money donated adds up to a lot of toys and a lot of happy children across the region. Last year, about 20,000 children – from infants through 16-year-olds – received gifts through Toy for Joy, with about $35,000 families receiving donations.

“We kick off our 90th year of Toy for Joy against a backdrop of high unemployment, especially among our most vulnerable residents, said Wayne E. Phaneuf, executive editor of The Republican. In this climate of need our local citizens have consistently come through year after year to add joy to the holidays for area children.”

We have no doubt, they will again.

Egypt reformist warns of turmoil from Morsi decree

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In an interview with a handful of journalists, including The Associated Press, Nobel Peace laureate ElBaradei raised alarm over the impact of Morsi's rulings, saying he had become "a new pharaoh."

mohammed.jpg Leading democracy advocate Mohammed ElBaradei speaks to a handful of journalists including the Associated Press saying dialogue with Egypt's Islamist president is not possible until he rescinds his decrees giving himself near absolute powers, at his home on the outskirts of Cairo, Egypt, Saturday, Nov. 24, 2012. ElBaradei, a Nobel Peace laureate for his past work as the head of the U.N. nuclear watchdog, has formed a "National Salvation Front" with other liberal and secular leaders, trying to unify the opposition against Morsi.


AYA BATRAWY
and HAMZA HENDAWI
Associated Press

CAIRO — Prominent Egyptian democracy advocate Mohammed ElBaradei warned Saturday of increasing turmoil that could potentially lead to the military stepping in unless the Islamist president rescinds his new, near absolute powers, as the country's long fragmented opposition sought to unite and rally new protests.

Egypt's liberal and secular forces — long divided, weakened and uncertain amid the rise of Islamist parties to power — are seeking to rally themselves in response to the decrees issued this week by President Mohammed Morsi. The president granted himself sweeping powers to "protect the revolution" and made himself immune to judicial oversight.

The judiciary, which was the main target of Morsi's edicts, pushed back Saturday. The country's highest body of judges, the Supreme Judical Council, called his decrees an "unprecedented assault." Courts in the Mediterranean city of Alexandria announced a work suspension until the decrees are lifted.

Outside the high court building in Cairo, several hundred demonstrators rallied against Morsi, chanting, "Leave! Leave!" echoing the slogan used against former leader Hosni Mubarak in last year's uprising that ousted him. Police fired tear gas to disperse a crowd of young men who were shooting flares outside the court.

The edicts issued Wednesday have galvanized anger brewing against Morsi and the Muslim Brotherhood, from which he hails, ever since he took office in June as Egypt's first freely elected president. Critics accuse the Brotherhood — which has dominated elections the past year — and other Islamists of monopolizing power and doing little to bring real reform or address Egypt's mounting economic and security woes.

Oppositon groups have called for new nationwide rallies Tuesday — and the Muslim Brotherhood has called for rallies supporting Morsi the same day, setting the stage for new violence.

Morsi supporters counter that the edicts were necessary to prevent the courts, which already dissolved the elected lower house of parliament, from further holding up moves to stability by disbanding the assembly writing the new constitution, as judges were considering doing. Like parliament was, the assembly is dominated by Islamists. Morsi accuses Mubarak loyalists in the judiciary of seeking to thwart the revolution's goals and barred the judiciary from disbanding the constitutional assembly or parliament's upper house.

In an interview with a handful of journalists, including The Associated Press, Nobel Peace laureate ElBaradei raised alarm over the impact of Morsi's rulings, saying he had become "a new pharaoh."

"There is a good deal of anger, chaos, confusion. Violence is spreading to many places and state authority is starting to erode slowly," he said. "We hope that we can manage to do a smooth transition without plunging the country into a cycle of violence. But I don't see this happening without Mr. Morsi rescinding all of this."

Speaking of Egypt's powerful military, ElBaradei said, "I am sure they are as worried as everyone else. You cannot exclude that the army will intervene to restore law and order" if the situation gets out of hand.

But anti-Morsi factions are chronically divided, with revolutionary youth activists, new liberal political parties that have struggled to build a public base and figures from the Mubarak era, all of whom distrust each other. The judiciary is also an uncomfortable cause for some to back, since it includes many Mubarak appointees who even Morsi opponents criticize as too tied to the old regime.

Opponents say the edicts gave Morsi near dictatorial powers, neutering the judiciary when he already holds both executive and legislative powers. One of his most controversial edicts gave him the right to take any steps to stop "threats to the revolution," vague wording that activists say harkens back to Mubarak-era emergency laws.

Tens of thousands of people took to the streets in nationwide protests on Friday, sparking clashes between anti-and pro-Morsi crowds in several cities that left more than 200 people wounded.

On Saturday, new clashed broke out in the southern city of Assiut. Morsi opponents and members of the Muslim Brotherhood swung sticks and threw stones at each other outside the offices of the Brotherhood's political party, leaving at least seven injured.

ElBaradei and a six other prominent liberal leaders have announced the formation of a National Salvation Front aimed at rallying all non-Islamist groups together to force Morsi to rescind his edicts.

The National Salvation Front leadership includes several who ran against Morsi in this year's presidential race — Hamdeen Sabahi, who finished a close third, former foreign minister Amr Moussa and moderate Islamist Abdel-Moneim Aboul-Fotouh. ElBaradei says the group is also pushing for the creation of a new constitutional assembly and a unity government.

ElBaradei said it would be a long process to persuade Morsi that he "cannot get away with murder."

"There is no middle ground, no dialogue before he rescinds this declaration. There is no room for dialogue until then."

The grouping seems to represent a newly assertive political foray by ElBaradei, the former chief of the U.N. nuclear watchdog agency. ElBaradei returned to Egypt in the year before Mubarak's fall, speaking out against his rule, and was influential with many of the youth groups that launched the anti-Mubarak revolution.

But since Mubarak's fall, he has been criticized by some as too Westernized, elite and Hamlet-ish, reluctant to fully assert himself as an opposition leader.

The Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice political party, once headed by Morsi, said Saturday in a statement that the president's decision protects the revolution against former regime figures who have tried to erode elected institutions and were threatening to dissolve the constitutional assembly.

The Brotherhood warned in another statement that there were forces trying to overthrow the elected president in order to return to power. It said Morsi has a mandate to lead, having defeated one of Mubarak's former prime ministers this summer in a closely contested election.

Morsi's edicts also removed Abdel-Meguid Mahmoud, the prosecutor general first appointed by Mubarak, who many Egyptians accused of not prosecuting former regime figures strongly enough.

Speaking to a gathering of judges cheering support for him at the high court building in Cairo, Mahmoud warned of a "vicious campaign" against state institutions. He also said judicial authorities are looking into the legality of the decision to remove him — setting up a Catch-22 of legitimacy, since under Morsi's decree, the courts cannot overturn any of his decisions.

"I thank you for your support of judicial independence," he told the judges.

"Morsi will have to reverse his decision to avoid the anger of the people," said Ahmed Badrawy, a labor ministry employee protesting at the courthouse. "We do not want to have an Iranian system here," he added, referring to fears that hardcore Islamists may try to turn Egypt into a theocracy.

Several hundred protesters remained in Cairo's Tahrir Square Saturday, where a number of tents have been erected in a sit-in following nearly a week of clashes with riot police.

Brian Rohan contributed to this report from Cairo.

Springfield gas leak, explosion source under investigation

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None of the 21 injured suffered life-threatening wounds, but acting Fire Commissioner Joseph Conant said 11 firefighters were hospitalized - some with facial burns. Watch video

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SPRINGFIELD — A massive blast that leveled a strip club and caused heavy damage to nearby buildings at Chestnut and Worthington streets on Friday evening occurred as alarmingly high natural gas levels dissipated and ignited by a yet unknown trigger, according to a spokeswoman for Columbia Gas.

Sheila Doiron, spokeswoman for the utility company, said at a press conference on Saturday that as the Scores Gentleman's Club at 453 Worthington St. was ventilated on Friday, the ratio of gas to air reached "explosive levels" and the blast could have been caused by the most benign thing.

"At that point an ignition source that can (prompt) detonation could be a spark, a phone ringing or a doorbell," she said, after telling reporters that the technician who responded to a 911 call by the club's property manager for a strong gas odor "did exactly the right thing."

According to Doiron, the company responded to the call at the strip club within 25 minutes, evacuated up to 20 dancers and other employees and called police and fire officials. Other technicians who responded to the scene shut off the gas source, but the levels had already climbed to a dangerous extent.

The blast shook the downtown and utility employees, police and fire officials, and civilians were injured by the resulting inferno and the impact. Many closest to the blast site took cover behind a Columbia Gas truck parked across the street.

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None of the 21 injured suffered life-threatening wounds, but acting Fire Commissioner Joseph Conant said 11 firefighters were hospitalized - some with facial burns.

All had been released from the hospital by Saturday afternoon, officials said.

"They'll heal from the physical injuries soon enough but the emotional injuries will be there for a while," Conant said. "These firefighters thought they lost themselves and their fellow firefighters."

The department has called in state experts to help personnel with post-traumatic stress, Conant said.

In addition, two police officers were injured, but treated and released from a local hospital and were back at work on Saturday, according to a spokesman for that department. Four gas company employees were injured; two civilians were hurt, a city Water and Sewer Department employee was injured and a photojournalist from ABC40-Fox was injured, though none remained in the hospital later on Saturday.

Several city blocks looked like a war zone on Saturday with emergency personnel and building inspectors roaming the blast site with glass, bricks and other debris a ragged carpet beneath their feet.

The strip club was completely reduced to rubble with the odd broken wine glass and orphaned platform women's show heel peeking out among the wreckage. The business owner is listed as Helesant Inc., with Helen Santaniello of Longmeadow listed as the sole officer, according to corporate records, and the property owner is listed as Russell E. Shaddock of Springfield, according to city records.

Daniel D. Kelly, a lawyer for Scores and numerous other downtown establishments, said restaurants and bars were reopening Saturday including the Mardi Gras strip club and adjacent 350 Grille Restaurant. A police/fire command center mobile unit remained in the large back parking lot.

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“Obviously, we wish a speedy recovery to all the first responders and everyone who was injured or displaced,” Kelly said. “We are still piecing together what happened.”

Scores had 20 to 30 employees including dancers, bartenders and security. Employees had called the gas company several months ago about a distinct odor of gas and deemed the site safe, and on Friday the property manager called the gas company, he said.

The prelude to the blast sent strippers fleeing from the bar after warnings from emergency personnel. But nearby residents said they were not warned of the danger.

"I knew something was going on. I saw the fire trucks and their sirens weren't on," said Peter Hakes, 56, a 10-year resident of the efficiency apartments at 501 Worthington St. "I was just lying down on my bed and all of a sudden you heard a boom and the window sashes all blew in. My window fan landed on me."

That building has 18 units atop a drop-in center run by the Friends of the Homeless shelter farther up Worthington. The main facility was undamaged and men and women displaced from the efficiency apartments spent the night at the agency's other shelters on Friday.

"At the moment it looks like that's all we can offer," said William J. Miller, executive director of the shelter and homeless resource center, adding that the units likely will not be habitable for six to eight weeks.

Of the residents at 501 Worthington - most of whom could be categorized as down on their luck - Miller called them resilient and said they will likely overcome the challenge posed by the explosion as well.

Standing at a temporary shelter at Springfield Central High School on Saturday afternoon, Hakes considered his history in the neighborhood.

"I've gone through a tornado, an earthquake and two hurricanes and a gas explosion finally kicked me out of my room. It's bizarre," Hakes said.

He and others in that building were among hundreds displaced by the blast, according to city officials.

Springfield Building Commissioner Steven Desilets said 62 buildings around the blast site and 150 residential units were damaged. The buildings are in the so-called "impact zone" that spans several city blocks.

Streets affected were portions of Worthington, Chestnut, Spring, Lyman, Pearl and Taylor. Police and fire officials said it will take days to make the area central to the explosion safe.

Desilets said buildings have been color-coded based on their damage and the risk the buildings pose to residents. Fifteen have been tagged with green labels, indicating that they are safe to enter; 24 have been tagged yellow, indicating residents should proceed with caution and seek out an escort from a building inspector; and three buildings closest to the blast were tagged red, indicating they are still extremely unsafe.

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Police cordoned off several city blocks on Worthington, Chestnut, Spring, Dwight, Lyman and Taylor streets. Mayor Domenic J. Sarno said police will maintain safety and anti-looting details.

"Looters will be dealt with very harshly," he told reporters, also warning gawkers to stay away.

Dozens of homes and businesses were left with exposed windows and glass shards still dangling from the frames on Saturday as brisk winds whipped through the buildings. All the windows were blown out in Tyre Trak, an auto repair shop at the corners of Worthington and Chestnut streets and several cars in its lot were wrecked. Across Worthington, Square One early child care center was heavily damaged and had at least four cars that appeared totaled in the parking lot.

Fire Department spokesman Dennis Leger said it would be several days until the area was cleaned up and deemed safe for traffic.

Some businesses on that reopened on Saturday had smaller than usual crowds in the early evening, downtown workers said.

Theodore’s Restaurant on Worthington Street had approximately 50 customers at approximately 6 p.m., less than would be expected on typically one of the busiest weekends of the year, co-owner Keith Weppler said.

The crowd at Adolfo’s Restaurant, also on Worthington St., was small, and would typically be a full house, employees said.

At least one business more than a mile away was impacted by the blast. The Sav A Lot discount grocery store at 665 Liberty St. had a single window blown in by the blast.

Mariely Collazo, a cashier, said the glass shattered and one woman hit the floor with her children in the immediate aftermath.

"She was scared. I guess she thought we were under attack," Collazo said on Saturday.

The window was boarded up and Collazo said the store remained open throughout the ordeal.

The press briefing by city, state and federal officials on Saturday afternoon took place at Fire Department headquarters on Spring Street - which had its own garage windows blown out.

The press briefing included an address from U.S. Rep. Richard E. Neal, of Springfield, who focused on potential sources of federal aid for businesses and residents hobbled by the blast.

Kevin Kennedy, chief development officer for the city, said a team will begin canvassing downtown businesses on Monday.

"Fortunately or unfortunately we've done this before, so we're becoming good at it," Kennedy said, referring to the widespread structural and economic carnage after the 2011 tornado that ripped through downtown. "They'll canvass the whole area - block to block, business to business."

William Hurley, owner of a plumbing supply company at 523 Worthington St., said his windows were similarly destroyed and the ceiling in his reception area came down after the explosion.

Neither he nor his employees were hurt, but he experienced a minor heartbreak when he came out to check his gleaming white Cadillac parked out back. Three bricks had come through the rear window, landing on his back seat.

"It was only three months old," he said ruefully.

The numbers offered by public officials to aid those affected by the blast included:

787-6031, for housing issues;
737-4306, ext. 6, or 733-1518 for clothing needs
787-6020 for business-related questions (starting on Monday)

AP Interview: Hamas No. 2 rejects Gaza arms halt; Gaza's ruling Hamas will not stop arming itself because only a strong arsenal, not negotiations, can extract concessions from Israel

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The group is believed to have amassed a large arsenal of thousands of rockets since Israel's last military offensive in Gaza four years ago. Hamas has been smuggling weapons through tunnels under the border with Egypt, but also claims to have begun manufacturing longer-range rockets in Gaza.

hamas.jpg Hamas militants of the Izzedine al-Qassam Brigades attend the funeral of Hamas member Joudeh Shamallah in Gaza City, Saturday, Nov. 24, 2012. According to family members, Shamallah was badly injured during the latest Israeli-Hamas fight and died from wounds Saturday.


MOHAMMED DARAGHMEH
and SARAH EL DEEB
Associated Press

CAIRO — Gaza's ruling Hamas will not stop arming itself because only a strong arsenal, not negotiations, can extract concessions from Israel, the No. 2 in the Islamic militant group told The Associated Press in an interview Saturday.

The comments by Moussa Abu Marzouk, just three days after the worst bout of Israel-Hamas fighting in four years, signaled trouble ahead for Egyptian-brokered talks between the hostile neighbors on a new border deal.

Hamas demands that Israel and Egypt lift all restrictions on the movement of goods and people in and out of the Palestinian territory, which has been buckling under a border blockade since the Islamists seized the territory in 2007. The restrictions have been eased somewhat in recent years, but not enough to allow Gaza's battered economy to develop.

Israeli officials were not immediately available for comment Saturday, the Jewish Sabbath. However, an Israeli security official said this week that Israel would likely link a significant easing of the blockade to Hamas's willingness to stop smuggling weapons into Gaza and producing them there.

Abu Marzouk said Saturday that the group would not disarm, arguing that recent Palestinian history has shown that negotiations with Israel lead nowhere unless backed by force.

"There is no way to relinquish weapons," Abu Marzouk said in his office on the outskirts of Cairo. "These weapons protected us and there is no way to stop obtaining and manufacturing them."

Hamas' founding charter calls for Israel's destruction, but leaders of the group have also said they are ready for a long-term cease-fire with the Jewish state.

The group is believed to have amassed a large arsenal of thousands of rockets since Israel's last military offensive in Gaza four years ago. Hamas has been smuggling weapons through tunnels under the border with Egypt, but also claims to have begun manufacturing longer-range rockets in Gaza.

During the latest round of fighting, Hamas fired Iranian-made Fajr-5 rockets that came close to Israel's heartland, including the cities of Tel Aviv and Jerusalem for the first time. Israel warplanes pounded the tunnel area during the offensive to disrupt smuggling, and tunnel operators reported serious damage, but in the past were able to rebuild quickly.

Hamas used to be evasive about Iranian weapons support, but in recent days senior officials in the group have openly thanked Tehran. Gaza strongman Mahmoud Zahar told reporters on Saturday that he is confident that Iran will increase military and financial support to Hamas and the smaller militant group Islamic Jihad.

Iran and its regional rivals, the Sunni Muslim-led states in the Gulf, have been competing in recent months to lure Hamas into their respective camps. The top Hamas leader in exile, Khaled Mashaal, is being hosted by the Gulf state of Qatar, which has promised hundreds of millions of dollars for Gaza reconstruction.

Zahar said Saturday that Hamas is not beholden to anyone, but defended the group's ties with Iran. "If they don't like it, let them compete with Iran in giving us weapons and money," he said in an apparent jab at the Gulf states.

Abu Marzouk, meanwhile, said Hamas would not stand in the way of a bid by its main political rival, internationally backed Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, to seek U.N. recognition for a state of Palestine next week.

Abbas will ask the U.N. General Assembly to approve "Palestine" — made up of the West Bank, Gaza and east Jerusalem, areas Israel captured in 1967 — as a non-member observer state.

Such a state is far from being established, but Palestinians hope U.N. recognition would affirm its future borders, to be used as a baseline once negotiations with Israel resume. Israel, while willing to cede some land, refuses with withdraw to the 1967 lines and opposes Abbas' U.N. move as an attempt to bypass negotiations. Israel has moved half a million Israelis into settlements on war-won land.

Abu Marzouk suggested that Abbas is wasting his time at the U.N. "Hamas believes the General Assembly is not the one to create states," he said. "Occupation needs resistance, not negotiations."

Israel and the West have shunned Hamas, which has killed hundreds of Israelis in shootings and bombings over the years, as a terror organization. However, Hamas officials believe the boycott is slowly eroding, pointing to U.S. support for the cease-fire deal brokered by Egypt and the ongoing indirect negotiations between Israel and Hamas.

Overall, Hamas leaders have claimed the group has emerged victorious from this round, noting that Israel did not make good on threats to send ground troops into Gaza. Israel says it has achieved its goal of halting rocket fire on Israel.

Abu Marzouk said the next round of indirect talks will take place in Cairo on Monday. He has not met his Israeli interlocutors, he said, but said they are security officials and experts on border arrangements.

Until late last year, most top Hamas leaders in exile were based in Syria, the Islamists' main foreign backer in addition to Iran. However, Syrian President Bashar Assad's brutal crackdown on a popular uprising there made Hamas' alliance with the Damascus regime untenable.

Abu Marzouk, who has settled in a quiet Cairo suburb, said the follow-up talks with Israel were going well so far.

In Gaza, residents said Saturday that Israel has already eased some restrictions.

Fishermen were able to sail six nautical miles out to sea, or double the previous limit, said Mahfouz Kabariti, head of the local fishermen's association. "This is an opportunity and a chance for a better catch, though it is still a limited area," said Kabariti, who represents some 3,500 fishermen.

Israeli navy boats have been enforcing a sea blockade in an attempt to prevent weapons smuggling to Gaza. The restrictions on fishermen have fluctuated over the years, linked to the ups and downs in Israeli-Palestinian relations.

Meanwhile, some Gaza residents said they were able to enter an Israeli-enforced buffer zone on the Gaza side of the border Saturday with Israel without fear of being fired on.

Israel's military had carved out a 300-meter-wide (300-yard-wide) zone several years to try to prevent militants from sneaking into Israel. The zone gobbled up scarce farmland in one of the most densely populated areas in the world.

On Saturday, 42-year-old farmer Nidal Abu Dakka said soldiers stood and watched as he and others moved close to the fence. In other border areas, residents said Hamas police kept them away from the fence.

An Israeli government spokesman said he was unaware restrictions had been eased. A defense official said the Israeli military was no longer enforcing the no-go zone, but reserved the right to act against suspicious people. Both spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not allowed to discuss the issue with reporters.

El Deeb reported from Gaza City. Associated Press writer Karin Laub in Gaza City contributed reporting.

Report: Disabled parents face bias, loss of kids

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Child-welfare experts, responding to the report, said they shared its goals of expanding supports for disabled parents and striving to keep their families together. But they said removals of children from their parents — notably in cases of significant intellectual disabilities — are sometimes necessary even if wrenching.

disabled.jpg In this Nov. 14, 2012 photo, Brooke Croteau, an assistant to Carrie Ann Lucas, a disabled mother of four disabled adopted children, helps Adrianne, 13, one of Lucas' children, into a vehicle as the family leaves their home in Windsor, Colo., to attend an adoption hearing. Anthony, 11, the intellectually-disabled adopted son of Lucas, is pictured at right.


DAVID CRARY
Associated Press

Millions of Americans with disabilities have gained innumerable rights and opportunities since Congress passed landmark legislation on their behalf in 1990. And yet advocates say barriers and bias still abound when it comes to one basic human right: To be a parent.

A Kansas City, Mo., couple had their daughter taken into custody by the state two days after her birth because both parents were blind. A Chicago mother, because she is quadriplegic, endured an 18-month legal battle to keep custody of her young son. A California woman paid an advance fee to an adoption agency, then was told she might be unfit to adopt because she has cerebral palsy.

Such cases are found nationwide, according to a new report by the National Council on Disability, an independent federal agency. The 445-page document is viewed by the disability-rights community as by far the most comprehensive ever on the topic — simultaneously an encyclopedic accounting of the status quo and an emotional plea for change.

"Parents with disabilities continue to be the only distinct community that has to fight to retain — and sometimes gain — custody of their own children," said autism-rights activist Ari Ne'eman, a member of the council. "The need to correct this unfair bias could not be more urgent or clear."

The U.S. legal system is not adequately protecting the rights of parents with disabilities, the report says, citing child welfare laws in most states allowing courts to determine that a parent is unfit on the basis of a disability. Terminating parental rights on such grounds "clearly violates" the intent of the 1990 Americans with Disabilities Act, the report contends.

Child-welfare experts, responding to the report, said they shared its goals of expanding supports for disabled parents and striving to keep their families together. But they said removals of children from their parents — notably in cases of significant intellectual disabilities — are sometimes necessary even if wrenching.

"At the end of the day, the child's interest in having permanence and stability has to be the priority over the interests of their parents," said Judith Schagrin, a veteran child-welfare administrator in Maryland.

In the bulk of difficult cases, ensuring vital support for disabled parents may be all that's needed to eliminate risks or lessen problems, many advocates say.

The new report, titled "Rocking the Cradle: Ensuring the Rights of Parents with Disabilities and Their Children," estimates that 6.1 million U.S. children have disabled parents. It says these parents are more at risk than other parents of losing custody of their children, including removal rates as high as 80 percent for parents with psychiatric or intellectual disabilities.

Parents with all types of disabilities — physical or mental — are more likely to lose custody of their children after divorce, have more difficulty accessing assisted-reproductive treatments to bear children, and face significant barriers to adopting children, the report says.

One of the cases it details involved Erika Johnson and Blake Sinnett of Kansas City, whose 2-day-old daughter, Mikaela, was taken into custody by Missouri authorities because both parents were blind. The action occurred after a hospital nurse reported that Johnson seemed to be having trouble with her first attempts at breast-feeding — which Johnson said happens with many first-time mothers.

During a 57-day legal battle, before the couple regained custody, they were allowed to visit Mikaela only two to three times a week, for an hour at a time, with a foster parent monitoring.

Since then, the family has been left in peace, said Johnson, who tries to offer support to other disabled parents facing similar challenges.

"Some parents just give up or don't have the resources," she said in a telephone interview.

A Windsor, Colo., woman with disabilities says the prejudice she encountered prompted her to go to law school, to better defend her own rights and those of other disabled parents.

Carrie Ann Lucas uses a power wheelchair and is reliant on a ventilator due to a form of muscular dystrophy. She is a single mother of four adopted children, ages 22, 17, 13 and 11, all of whom also have disabilities, including two who use wheelchairs and three with intellectual disabilities.

Lucas says she's been the subject of several investigations by child welfare officials that she attributed to bias linked to her disabilities.

"Each one of these referrals that gets accepted for investigation causes a great deal of stress, not only for me, but for my children," Lucas wrote in an email.

She said the investigations dated back to her first efforts to adopt Heather, her biological niece, in 1999, after the girl was placed in foster care. At one point in a long procedural struggle, a social worker told a judge that "there was no way that handicapped woman could care for that handicapped child."

"We are nearly 13 years later, and Heather is still doing very well," Lucas wrote.

As a lawyer, Lucas has represented many other parents with disabilities.

"I have had parents with paralysis be threatened with removal of their children, deaf parents punished for using sign language with their hearing children, and blind parents told that a social worker can't possibly fathom how they could parent a newborn," Lucas said. "When families do need intervention, it is often because the services they need are not available outside a punitive social services case."

The lead author of the new report, disability-rights lawyer Robyn Powell, says her goal was to challenge presumptions that disabled people can't be effective parents.

"Of course there are going to be some parents with disabilities who would be lousy parents — that's the same with parents without disabilities," she said. "If there is neglect, is it due to the disability? And can it be rectified by providing the necessary support?"

Ella Callow, a lawyer with the National Center for Parents with Disabilities and their Families, said the report raises fundamental questions about America's social priorities — given that state and federal laws value both the well-being of children and the rights of disabled people. The ultimate goal, she said, would be to promote both values by expanding support for disabled parents.

"If we really believe that families are the key unit on which society is built, then we have to enable these families to be healthy and functioning, even at public expense," Callow said. "We know foster care isn't a good place for children to be — they do better with their own parents, at their own home."

Callow, who is based in Berkeley, Calif., said child welfare agencies need to provide more funding and specialized training with the aim of improving services for disabled parents.

"Child welfare is so incredibly underfunded, and the workers are so incredibly overwhelmed, their attitude is, 'Really, you want my attention on this?'" Callow said. "There's a tendency to think these families aren't the same as our families. But these children, when they lose their families, have the same type of grief."

Schagrin, the Maryland child-welfare official, said she found parts of the report troubling because they seemed to suggest children were sometimes removed from their families only on account of parental disabilities.

"That's not why they are taken away," she said. "They are taken away because the disability has continued to the point where there's an episode of maltreatment or neglect."

She said one recourse is to find members of the extended family — or other types of support — to help a parent with psychiatric or intellectual disabilities care for a child. But she said this approach could be taken too far, for example if a mother with intellectual disabilities was placed in a group home with other disabled parents.

"What kind of way is that for a child to live — being raised by a shift of caregivers in a mom-and-child group home?" she asked. "Is that really better than an open-adoption agreement?"

Andrea Bartolo, a senior consultant at the Child Welfare League of America, said there is no question that some disabled parents encounter discrimination in the child welfare system, "sometimes inadvertently, sometimes very overtly."

Under current practices, Bartolo said, an expert assessment of a child's home life and the possible provision of services to the disabled parents might occur only after the child has been removed and "the damage has been done." Going forward, she hopes child-welfare agencies will try harder to provide support before a problem worsens, potentially reducing the need for foster-care placements.

The report praises a few states — including Idaho, Kansas and California — for modifying child-custody laws to the benefit of disabled parents. It urges Congress to amend the Americans with Disabilities Act to add protections for parents, and it calls on state lawmakers to eliminate disability as a distinct ground for terminating parental rights.

Christine Waters, an attorney with Legal Services of Central New York, based in Syracuse, worked with colleagues in 2008-09 in a bid to change the state law specifying that parental rights can be terminated if a parent has psychiatric problems or is intellectually impaired. Some legislators expressed support, Waters said, but the effort ultimately failed.

"Everything would look like it was going fine ... and then there would be some well-publicized, awful incident where someone who had a mental illness — without support — did something shocking and horrible, and a child was seriously harmed or died and we'd be back to square one," Waters said.

Waters said some child-welfare officials resisted any change, wary of being held responsible if something went wrong.

The assumption that people with disabilities can't parent "is bad for society and heartbreaking for families," Waters said. "The easy thing is to terminate the parental rights. We need to do the right thing, not the easy thing."

Disabled parents whose parenting ability comes into question often are placed at a disadvantage by parenting assessments that are inappropriate or unfair, the report says. It calls for better research to improve assessment standards and gain more knowledge about how various disabilities affect the ability to be an effective parent.

One topic worth further study, it said, is "parentification" — the phenomenon in which children of disabled parents take on various caregiving responsibilities, even at a young age.

In Arlington Heights, Ill., Jenn Thomas, a 36-year-old mom who has cerebral palsy, says her 8-year-old twins occasionally complain about having to do a few extra chores around the house to help her.

Her daughter, Abigail, nods and smiles upon hearing this, but says for the most part, their lives are "kind of normal." For her, having a mom with a disability is just how it is, she says, shrugging.

Sometimes, they ride on the chair with her — especially son Noah because he, like his father, D.J., is a "little person," the term used by the family and others for someone genetically predisposed to having unusually short stature. When activities are farther away, the couple has created a support network to help when D.J. is working. He drives, but Jenn does not.

"I want them to enjoy activities and not be limited because I am limited," she says. So she coordinates with neighbors to help get the kids to swimming, cello lessons or basketball practice. Or she arranges for "paratransit," a bus service for riders with disabilities and their families.

Friends also helped redesign their kitchen to make it more accessible.

The new report stresses that improved networks of support for disabled parents — encompassing transportation, housing, health care, and outside intervention when appropriate — should be welcomed, and not viewed as evidence that the parents on their own are incapable.

When children do face removal from their disabled parents, those parents may encounter barriers to meaningful participation in their legal cases, the report says. For example, financially struggling parents may have to rely on a court-appointed attorney with no special knowledge about the effects of disability.

Kaney O'Neill of Des Plaines, Ill., a quadriplegic Navy veteran, endured an 18-month legal battle to keep custody of her young son. Her ex-boyfriend filed for custody in 2009, when the boy was 10 weeks old, alleging that O'Neill was "not a fit and proper person" to care for the child because of her disability.

Refuting the allegation, with legal help from Ella Callow, Kaney demonstrated how she had prepared for motherhood by working with an occupational therapy program, adapting her house, securing specialized baby-care equipment, and using personal assistants to help her as needed.

"I lived in fear every single day that my son would be taken away from me," said O'Neill, 36. "In a lot of ways it made me a better mother because I felt that I had a lot to prove."

She says her son, who taught himself to climb up his mother's wheel chair into her lap, is now going to preschool twice a week and is thriving.

"If you are a parent with a disability, you don't have a role model — you have to figure out how you're going to be a mother and overcome challenges," she said.

For disabled women who either cannot bear children or choose not to, the possible option of adoption often can be complicated. Some foreign countries, notably China, rule out disabled people as potential adoptive parents.

Elizabeth Pazdral of Davis, Calif., who wears a brace and uses crutches to walk because of cerebral palsy, said she encountered discrimination several years ago when she and her husband sought to adopt a child. She said one local adoption agency billed her an advance fee of $3,400, then advised that there were "serious reservations" about her ability to be a parent.

"I think it was dishonest to take my money and then tell me they were worried," said the 4-foot-tall Pazdral, 42, who is executive director of the California State Independent Living Council.

Initially distraught, Pazdral obtained legal help, paid for an occupational therapist to come to her house to assess her capabilities, and researched how other parents with disabilities had succeeded in raising children. The efforts paid off: The adoption agency dropped its objections, and in May 2008, Pazdral and her husband, a Stanford University physicist, adopted a baby girl named Madeleine.

"It was a huge life change — but that's true for any new parent," Pazdral said, recounting sleep-deprived nights, higher levels of chronic pain, and the challenge of maintaining one's energy level.

"But I start with the joy I get from being her mother — the rightness I feel," Pazdral said. "It's the best thing I have ever done with my life."

AP National Writer Martha Irvine in Chicago contributed to this report.

Will US role at climate talks change after Supertorm Sandy?

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A recent World Bank report found the world is on track toward 4 degrees C (6.2 F) of warming, which would entail "extreme heat-waves, declining global food stocks, loss of ecosystems and biodiversity, and life-threatening sea level rise."

climate.jpg In this Wednesday, Nov. 20, 2012 file photo, conference flags are displayed ahead of the Doha Climate Change Conference, in Doha, Qatar, Wednesday, Nov. 20, 2012. The eighteenth session of the Conference of the Parties (COP 18) will take place from Monday, Nov. 26 to Friday, Dec. 6, 2012.


KARL RITTER
Associated Press

DOHA, Qatar — During a year with a monster storm and scorching heat waves, Americans have experienced the kind of freakish weather that many scientists say will occur more often on a warming planet.

And as a re-elected president talks about global warming again, climate activists are cautiously optimistic that the U.S. will be more than a disinterested bystander when the U.N. climate talks resume Monday with a two-week conference in Qatar.

"I think there will be expectations from countries to hear a new voice from the United States," said Jennifer Morgan, director of the climate and energy program at the World Resources Institute in Washington.

The climate officials and environment ministers meeting in the Qatari capital of Doha will not come up with an answer to the global temperature rise that is already melting Arctic sea ice and permafrost, raising and acidifying the seas, and shifting rainfall patterns, which has an impact on floods and droughts.

They will focus on side issues, like extending the Kyoto protocol — an expiring emissions pact with a dwindling number of members — and ramping up climate financing for poor nations.

They will also try to structure the talks for a new global climate deal that is supposed to be adopted in 2015, a process in which American leadership is considered crucial.

Many were disappointed that Obama didn't put more emphasis on climate change during his first term. He took some steps to rein in emissions of heat-trapping gases, such as sharply increasing fuel efficiency standards for cars and trucks. But a climate bill that would have capped U.S. emissions stalled in the Senate.

"We need the U.S. to engage even more," European Union Climate Commissioner Connie Hedegaard told The Associated Press. "Because that can change the dynamic of the talks."

The world tried to move forward without the U.S. after the Bush Administration abandoned the Kyoto Protocol, a 1997 pact limiting greenhouse emissions from industrialized nations. As that agreement expires this year, the climate curves are still pointing in the wrong direction.

The concentration of heat-trapping gases like carbon dioxide has jumped 20 percent since 2000, primarily from the burning of fossil fuels like coal and oil, according to a U.N. report released this week. And each year, the gap between what researchers say must be done to reverse this trend, and what's actually being done, gets wider.

Bridging that gap, through clean technology and renewable energy, is not just up to the U.S., but to countries like India and China, whose carbon emissions are growing the fastest as their economies expand.

But Obama raised hopes of a more robust U.S. role in the talks when he called for a national "conversation" on climate change after winning re-election. The issue had been virtually absent in the presidential campaigning until Hurricane Sandy slammed into the East Coast.

The president still faces domestic political constraints, and there's little hope of the U.S. increasing its voluntary pledge in the U.N. talks of cutting emissions by 17 percent by 2020, compared to 2005 levels.

Still, just a signal that Washington has faith in the international process would go a long way, analysts said.

"The perception of many negotiators and countries is that the U.S. is not really interested in increasing action on climate change in general," said Bill Hare, senior scientist at Climate Analytics, a nonprofit organization based in Berlin.

For example, Hare said, the U.S. could stop "talking down" the stated goal of the U.N. talks to keep the temperature rise below 2 degrees C (3.6 F) compared to pre-industrial levels.

Todd Stern, the U.S. special envoy on climate change, caused alarm among climate activists in August when he said that "insisting on a structure that would guarantee such a goal will only lead to deadlock." He later clarified that the U.S. still supports the 2-degree target, but favors a more flexible way to reach it than dividing up carbon rights to the atmosphere.

Countries adopted the 2-degree target in 2009, reasoning that a warming world is a dangerous world, with flooding of coastal cities and island nations, disruptions to agriculture and drinking water, and the spread of diseases and the extinction of species.

A recent World Bank report found the world is on track toward 4 degrees C (6.2 F) of warming, which would entail "extreme heat-waves, declining global food stocks, loss of ecosystems and biodiversity, and life-threatening sea level rise."

The U.S., alone among industrialized countries, didn't ratify the Kyoto Protocol because it found it unfair that China and other emerging economies, as developing countries, were not covered by any binding emissions targets. The U.S. and other rich countries say that firewall must be removed as the talks enter a new phase aimed at adopting a new climate treaty by 2015 that applies to all countries.

China — now the world's top carbon emitter — wants to keep a clear dividing line between developed and developing countries, noting that historically, the former bear the brunt of the responsibility for man-made climate change.

The issue is unlikely to be resolved in Doha, where talks will focus on extending Kyoto as a stopgap measure while negotiators work on the wider deal, which would take effect in 2020.

The 27-nation EU, Switzerland, Norway and Australia are on board but New Zealand, Canada and Japan don't want to be part of a second commitment period of Kyoto. That means the extended treaty would cover only about 15 percent of global emissions.

Delegates in Doha will also try to finalize the rules of the Green Climate Fund, which is supposed to raise $100 billion a year by 2020. Financed by richer nations, the fund would support poorer nations in converting to cleaner energy sources and in adapting to a shifting climate that may damage people's health, agriculture and economies in general.

In addition, countries need to agree on a work plan to guide the negotiations on a new treaty. Without a timeframe with clear mileposts, there's a risk of a repeat in 2015 of the hyped-up but ultimately disappointing climate summit in Copenhagen in 2009.

Judging by previous conferences, the negotiations in Doha will ebb and flow, with progress one day being replaced by bitter discord the next. And in the end, after an all-night session, bleary-eyed delegates will emerge with some kind of face-saving "accord" or "action plan" that keeps the talks alive another year, but does little to address the core problem.

"It shows that leaders and also the public in these countries — the U.S. certainly is one of them — don't yet understand the full implications of the costs associated with the path that we're on," said Alden Meyer, of the U.S.-based Union of Concerned Scientists.

Thanksgiving steals sales from Black Friday; ShopperTrak finds consumers spent $11.2 billion, down 1.8 percent from last year's total

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While consumer confidence has been improving, many people are still worried about the slow economic recovery, high unemployment and whether a gridlocked Congress can avert tax increases and government spending cuts — the so-called "fiscal cliff" — set to occur automatically in January.

shop.jpg Doris Leyva (from left), Midory Leyva and Lilia Castro rest, surrounded by shopping bags, in a seating area at Wolfchase Galleria on Black Friday in Memphis, Tenn. Friday Nov. 23, 2112.. They had driven from Oxford, Miss. on Thursday night to be at the mall in time for early-opening sales. For the first time many retailers opened as early as 8 p.m. on Thursday sparking some criticism for shortening their employees' Thanksgiving holiday.


LINDA A. JOHNSON
Associated Press

Thanksgiving shopping took a noticeable bite out of Black Friday's start to the holiday season, as the latest survey found retail sales in stores fell slightly from last year.

Saturday's report from retail technology company ShopperTrak finds consumers spent $11.2 billion at stores across the U.S. That is down 1.8 percent from last year's total.

This year's Friday results appear to have been tempered by hundreds of thousands of shoppers hitting sales Thursday evening while still full of Thanksgiving dinner. Retailers including Sears, Target and Wal-Mart got their deals rolling as early as 8 p.m. on Turkey Day.

Online shopping also may have cut into the take at brick-and-mortar stores: IBM said online sales rose 17.4 percent on Thanksgiving and 20.7 percent on Black Friday, compared with 2011.

Yet ShopperTrak said retail foot traffic increased 3.5 percent, to more than 307.67 million store visits, indicating at least some shoppers were browsing but not spending freely.

"Black Friday continues to be an important day in retail," said ShopperTrak founder Bill Martin. "This year, though, more retailers than last year began their doorbuster deals on Thursday, Thanksgiving itself. So while foot traffic did increase on Friday, those Thursday deals attracted some of the spending that's usually meant for Friday."

The company estimated that shopper foot traffic rose the most in the Midwest, up 12.9 percent compared with last year. Traffic rose the least, 7.6 percent, in the Northeast, parts of which are still recovering from Superstorm Sandy.

ShopperTrak, which counts foot traffic and its own proprietary sales numbers from 25,000 retail outlets across the U.S., had forecast Black Friday sales would grow 3.8 percent this year, to $11.4 billion.

While consumer confidence has been improving, many people are still worried about the slow economic recovery, high unemployment and whether a gridlocked Congress can avert tax increases and government spending cuts — the so-called "fiscal cliff" — set to occur automatically in January.

And some would-be shoppers said they weren't impressed with the discounts, or that there wasn't enough inventory of the big door-busters.

"As far as deals, they weren't there," said Tammy Stempel, 48, of Gladstone, Ore. "But business have to be successful, too. I'm hoping they extend the deals through December."

She was waiting in line outside an Ikea in Portland on Saturday to buy pots and pans for her 18-year old daughter — as a hint that it was time to move out. Stemple and her husband went shopping at two Targets, Michaels and other stores Friday, but failed to find any amazing deals, even on a flat-screen TV they wanted for themselves.

Target, Best Buy and other stores near the Ikea seemed to have few customers, and traffic at the nearby Lloyd Center Mall also was light, even for a normal weekend.

Many shoppers around the country were armed with iPads and smart phones, to check prices as well as buy.

Online auction and shoppping site eBay reported more the 2.5 times the number of mobile transactions as last year.

Online retailers worked as hard as brick-and-mortar stores to draw customers, sending each of their subscribers an average of 5.9 promotional emails during the 7 days through Black Friday. That's an all-time high, according to marketing software company Responsys.

IBM, which tracks more than 1 million transactions at 500 online retailers each day, said its data showed 24 percent of online shoppers used a mobile device to check out a retailer's site and about 16 percent of online purchases were made on a mobile device. But while total online spending rose sharply, the value of the average online order dipped about 5 percent to $181.22.

In spite of all the TV reports showing shoppers carting away laptops and giant flat-screen TVs, IBM said combined sales of consumer electronics, printers and other office supplies were up only 8 percent, with average order prices of $326.05.

Sales of appliances and other home goods rose the most, up about 28 percent from Black Friday last year. Clothing sales rose 17.5 percent, department store sales grew just under 17 percent and sales of health and beauty products rose 11 percent.

Despite the throngs in stores Thursday night and Friday, many shoppers held off until Saturday, hoping for shorter lines and less drama.

"I can't deal with all that craziness," said Miguel Garcia, a 40-year-old office coordinator who was at a Target in the Bronx, New York, on Saturday. "Compared to what I saw on TV yesterday, this is so much more comfortable and relaxed. I can actually think straight and compare prices."

Garcia was checking prices for phones and tablets at various stores, and planned to delay any purchases until Cyber Monday when he'd have a better sense of the best deals. As money has gotten tighter over the years, Garcia said he comparison shops more.

"It forces you to become a good consumer," he said.

Tanya Dunham, a 32-year-old patient coordinator representative, likewise avoided the crowds on Black Friday and was shopping at the same Target Saturday.

"I don't like to wait (in line) just to save $15 or $20," said Dunham.

For the entire holiday sales season of November and December, ShopperTrak has predicted sales should rise 3.3 percent over last year. Those two months are crucial for retailers and can account for up to 40 percent of stores' annual revenue.

AP Business Writers Candice Choi in New York and Sarah Skidmore in Portland, Ore., contributed to this report.


It's back to square one for Square One Children's Center: Springfield explosion prompts condemnation of nonprofit's Chestnut Street facility

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Kimberly Lee, Square One's vice president, said officials of the nonprofit organization are still trying to come up with a plan for the 100 or so toddlers and preschoolers who attended the heavily damaged Chestnut Street facility, which has been condemned by city officials.

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SPRINGFIELD — Administrators of Square One, a nonprofit childcare organization with facilities in Springfield and Holyoke, are pretty thick-skinned by now.

They were tested by the June 2011 tornado that wiped out their operations in Springfield's South End. Now, they're staring another crisis in the face after a powerful natural gas explosion destroyed the Square One Children's Center at 155 Chestnut St. on Friday.

Ground zero for the blast was Scores Gentlemen's Club, a strip club just east of the daycare center. The strip club's gone, but the badly damaged center is still standing – though just barely, according to Kimberly A. Lee, Square One's vice president.

"From what we're being told, it's being condemned," Lee said of the Chestnut Street building.

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Dennis H. Cotter, Springfield's deputy director of code enforcement, confirmed that the building has been condemned as a result of the blast. "It's structurally unsound. It's got stress cracks on the outside, and we're not allowing it to be occupied," Cotter said late Saturday afternoon.

Lee said she and her colleagues were still discussing where they might place the 100 or so toddlers and preschoolers who had attended the Chestnut Street facility prior to Friday's blast, which injured 21 people and damaged multiple buildings in the city's entertainment district. No one was injured at Square One because the daycare facility was closed for the Thanksgiving holiday, Lee said.

Childcare officials met Saturday to discuss short-term options and were expected to meet again Monday to "further assess the situation," Lee said. "We've not yet identified openings at other centers."

In addition to the Chestnut Street location, Square One has facilities at 1 Clough St., 255 King St. and 40 Wilbraham Ave. in Springfield. They also have a Holyoke facility at 233-243 High St.

Meanwhile, other area nonprofits, including the YMCA on Chestnut Street, have offered temporary space to Square One, Lee said.

"We have, once again, endured a significant loss," she said, referring to the June 1, 2011, tornado that "took out two of our buildings." The organization's childcare center and administrative offices on Main Street in the South End were destroyed by the tornado that ripped through the neighborhood, Lee said.

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If the Chestnut Street daycare center had been open on Friday, about 100 children and 30 staff members would have been at risk, according to Lee. "Thank goodness, thank goodness we were off," she said. "When it comes to serving children, our first and foremost thought was, thank goodness we were closed."

Founded in 1883, Square One is a private, nonprofit organization that receives financial support from public agencies and private donations from individuals and businesses.

"We know we're resilient, but we're going to need financial help, and lots of it," Lee said.

Anyone interested in learning more about Square One can go online at www.startatsquareone.org.

Sheriff: Man opened fire on 2 Alabama deputies; 1 dead, 1 critical

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Associated Press FAIRHOPE, Ala. — The shootout that left one Alabama deputy sheriff dead and another in critical condition on Saturday began when they checked on a man at his mobile home and he opened fire on them, authorities said. Baldwin County Sheriff Huey Mack told AL.com that gunfire erupted Friday after Michael Jansen pulled a handgun on Deputy...

shot2x.jpg These photos provided by the Baldwin County Sheriffs Department show Michael Jansen, right, of Fairhope, Ala., and Baldwin County Sheriff Deputy Scott Ward. Jansen was shot and killed during an armed confrontation with police Friday in Fairhope. Authorities say Ward was fatally shot and another deputy has been critically wounded while checking on Jansen at his mobile home.


Associated Press

FAIRHOPE, Ala. — The shootout that left one Alabama deputy sheriff dead and another in critical condition on Saturday began when they checked on a man at his mobile home and he opened fire on them, authorities said.

Baldwin County Sheriff Huey Mack told AL.com that gunfire erupted Friday after Michael Jansen pulled a handgun on Deputy Scott Ward and his colleagues outside of Jansen's Fairhope-area home.

Ward was fatally wounded after responding about 4 p.m. with two other deputies to a family disturbance call at the residence. Deputies returned fire, killing Jansen.

Ward, 47, was transported by helicopter to University of South Alabama Medical Center in Mobile, where he was pronounced dead. The second deputy remained in critical condition at the same hospital Saturday afternoon. The third deputy was not hurt.

Mack did not release the names of the two surviving deputies.

Jansen, 53, was pronounced dead at the scene.

The county's Major Crimes Task Force was investigating the shooting, as was the department's internal affairs office. That is standard procedure when any officer is involved in a shooting.

Mack said the initial inquiry suggests deputies followed procedure.

The sheriff told AL.com that deputies approached Jansen on his porch to find out what prompted the initial call.

"That individual produced a handgun and began to fire at the deputies," Mack said. "Two of the deputies were struck by multiple gunshots."

Mack said the deputies, all of whom were wearing bullet-resistant vests, fired back.

Ward had been a Baldwin County deputy for more than 15 years, working on patrol, in the investigations unit and on the SWAT team. Before joining the Baldwin force, he was an officer for the city of Prichard, near Mobile. He was in the U.S. Coast Guard Reserve. Mack said he had recently returned from a deployment to Afghanistan. He is survived by his wife.

"Scott stood up ... and he did his job and in the course of the job he made the ultimate sacrifice," Mack said. "Tomorrow we will continue to grieve Scott, but we will have to move on. That's what Scott would want us to do because our mission does not stop."

UMass hockey ties Quinnipiac 2-2 in sloppy affair

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Quinnipiac scored a third-period goal to tie the game.

Gallery previewAMHERST – When University of Massachusetts hockey coach John Micheletto said Friday he didn’t expect Saturday’s matchup with Quinnipiac to be a “feel good” game, he didn’t know how right he would be.

After the Minutemen carried play for much of the second period and took a one-goal lead, defenseman Mike Dalhuisen’s third-period tally gave No. 18 Quinnipiac a 2-2 tie in front of 2,163 at the Mullins Center.

“I just wish we had played better from start to finish,” Micheletto said. “It was a sloppy game for both teams. It wasn’t real crisp; there weren’t a lot of great passing plays.”

The teams traded goals in a first period neither coach was particularly happy with.

The Bobcats struck first, catching the Minutemen napping in transition just over three minutes in. Ben Arnt slid a feed to a streaking Bryce Van Brabant, who made one move to beat UMass goalie Kevin Boyle cleanly in front, depositing a backhand to give the Bobcats a 1-0 lead.

The Minutemen answered on a great hustle play by Kevin Czepiel late in the first. On the ice killing an Anthony Raiola holding penalty, Czepiel battled for – and eventually won – the puck on the left boards near the Quinnipiac blue line. He found Conor Sheary flying down the middle, and Sheary put it past Quinnipiac’s Eric Hartzell for the short-handed goal to tie it at 15:47.

The second period saw UMass up its pressure, and the results showed, the Minutemen outshooting the Bobcats 17-7.

“Second period, I thought we were atrocious,” said Quinnipiac coach Rand Pecknold, who was rumored in June to have been offered the job that eventually went to Micheletto. “That’s one of our worst periods of the year.”

The Minutemen got a power-play goal to take the lead when Rocco Carzo slammed home a rebound with 10:27 remaining in the second. It marked the second time this season UMass scored both a short-handed and power-play goal.

“(Special-teams play) is a huge influence in the game, the way the game is called today,” Micheletto said. “It’s been a huge boost to us. Five-on-five goals are very difficult to come by in this league.”

But Quinnipiac rallied in the third, outshooting the Minutemen 11-7 and netting the tying goal on what looked like an innocent shot from Dalhuisen.

The 6-foot-3 Dutchman collected the puck at the point, saw teammate Cory Hibbeler creating traffic in front and flung it toward the net. It turned out to be a well-directed fling that found its way into the top left corner, surprising everyone, including Dalhuisen.

“I guess I was surprised, but when you throw the puck on the net, good things happen,” Dalhuisen said.

The Minutemen are 4-5-2 and play a home-and-home with Northeastern next weekend, beginning with a 7 p.m. faceoff in Amherst Friday.

Notre Dame beats USC 22-13, earns shot at National Championship

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Everett Golson passed for 217 yards as the Fighting Irish (12-0) completed their first perfect regular season since 1988, earning a trip to Miami on Jan. 7 to play for the storied program's first national title in 24 years.

11-24-12-notre-dame.JPG Notre Dame running back Theo Riddick, right, and wide receiver Luke Massa, left, celebrate after Notre Dame defeated Southern California 22-13 in an NCAA college football game, Saturday in Los Angeles.

By GREG BEACHAM

LOS ANGELES — The Fighting Irish punched their ticket to Miami.

Theo Riddick rushed for 146 yards and a touchdown, Kyle Brindza kicked five field goals, and No. 1 Notre Dame secured a spot in the BCS championship game with a 22-13 victory over Southern California on Saturday night.

Everett Golson passed for 217 yards as the Fighting Irish (12-0) completed their first perfect regular season since 1988, earning a trip to south Florida on Jan. 7 to play for the storied program's first national title in 24 years.

Although they did little with flash on an electric night at the Coliseum, the Irish woke up more echoes of past Notre Dame greats with a grinding effort in this dynamic intersectional rivalry with USC (7-5), which has lost four of five.

Notre Dame's hard-nosed defense appropriately made the decisive stand in the final minutes, keeping USC out of the end zone on four plays from the Irish 1 with 2:33 to play.

After spending more than a decade looking up at the Trojans, the Irish are back on top of this rivalry with two straight wins in Los Angeles. The school of Knute Rockne, the Four Horsemen and Paul Hornung has new heroes now, from inspirational linebacker Manti Te'o to coach Brian Kelly, who took the Irish from unranked to start the season to No. 1 in the AP Top 25 for the first time in 19 years.

Te'o, the Heisman Trophy hopeful, had a key interception against USC and became the second Irish defender with three 100-tackle seasons.

The grind-it-out win highlighted an unforgettable season for the Irish, who began the year with questions about their relevancy and survived some uninspiring performances and nail-biting finishes with their unbeaten record intact.

Notre Dame is likely to face an SEC opponent in Miami, but won't know for another week.

With the Irish offense repeatedly stalling in the red zone against the Trojans, Brindza went five for six on field goals, even hitting a 52-yarder at the halftime gun.

After Brindza's school record-tying fifth field goal put the Irish up by nine points with 5:58 left, Marqise Lee caught a 53-yard pass from USC freshman Max Wittek at the Notre Dame 2.

But after USC failed on three straight runs at a defense that has allowed just 11 rushing TDs in 30 games, Wittek threw incomplete to fullback Soma Vainuku, setting off a leaping, chest-bumping celebration on the Notre Dame sideline and in the Irish sections of the sold-out Coliseum.

Lee caught just five passes for 75 yards, yet still broke the Pac-12 single-season receptions record established last year by teammate Robert Woods, who had seven catches for 92 yards.

Wittek passed for 186 yards with two interceptions in his first career start for the Trojans, who completed their tumble from the preseason No. 1 ranking with four losses in five games in an enormously disappointing season. Wittek filled in capably for injured Matt Barkley, but USC is headed to a lower-tier bowl in the first year after its NCAA-mandated two-year postseason ban ended.

Barkley watched from the sideline in a grey hoodie with a sling on his right arm after spraining his shoulder in last week's loss at UCLA. The senior and Pac-12 career passing leader won twice in South Bend during his career, but never got to face the Irish at the Coliseum, sidelined by injuries for both visits.

Barkley still ran down the Coliseum tunnel with the rest of the USC seniors for their final home game. He participated in the coin toss, but could only watch while the Irish opened the game with three clock-consuming drives resulting in 13 points.

USC's much-criticized defensive caution under assistant head coach Monte Kiffin was exploited by the Irish, with Golson patiently finding the sags in the Trojans' pass coverage for 181 yards passing in the first half. Riddick went 9 yards for a TD in the first quarter, but USC also stiffened to hold Notre Dame to field goals twice in the red zone.

Notre Dame held its 12th straight opponent without a first-quarter touchdown, but Wittek found Woods for a 9-yard score on the first play of the second quarter — just the ninth touchdown allowed by Notre Dame all season long. The Irish took a 16-10 lead to halftime when Brindza hit the second-longest field goal in Notre Dame history.

Te'o made the seventh interception of his phenomenal season when Wittek threw directly to him on USC's second play of the second half. Both teams struggled to move the ball in the third quarter, and USC settled for a field goal with 9:20 to play just a few moments after USC coach Lane Kiffin called a timeout right before a play that ended with Lee catching a pass on the goal line.

112 dead in fire at Bangladesh garment factory

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By Sunday morning, firefighters had recovered 100 bodies, fire department officials said.

11-24-12-bangladesh-fire.jpg Bangladeshis and firefighters battle a fire at a garment factory in the Savar neighborhood in Dhaka, Bangladesh, late Saturday. An official said firefighters have recovered more than 100 bodies after a fire raced through the multi-story garment factory just outside Bangladesh's capital.

DHAKA, Bangladesh — At least 112 people were killed in a fire that raced through a multi-story garment factory just outside of Bangladesh's capital, an official said Sunday.

The blaze broke out at the seven-story factory operated by Tazreen Fashions late Saturday. By Sunday morning, firefighters had recovered 100 bodies, fire department Operations Director Maj. Mohammad Mahbub told The Associated Press.

He said another 12 people who had suffered injuries after jumping from the building to escape the fire later died at hospitals.

The death toll could rise as the search for victims was continuing, he said.

Mahbub said army soldiers and border guards had been deployed to help police keep the situation under control as thousands of anxious relatives of the factory workers gathered at the scene.

He would not say how many people were still missing.

Bangladesh has some 4,000 garment factories, many without proper safety measures. The country annually earns about $20 billion from exports of garment products, mainly to the United States and Europe.

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