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January publication of Jesus' wife research unlikely

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Harvard's divinity school says research purportedly showing some early Christians believed Jesus was married likely won't be published by its scholarly journal next month, as originally announced.

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) — Harvard's divinity school says research purportedly showing some early Christians believed Jesus was married likely won't be published by its scholarly journal next month, as originally announced.

A spokesman says that tests aren't completed to authenticate a papyrus fragment contain Coptic text, in which Jesus is quoted using the words "my wife." The spokesman said Monday he didn't know when the tests would be done.

In September, Harvard said Professor Karen King's research would be published in January's Harvard Theological Review, the divinity school's quarterly, peer-reviewed journal.

But the journal's co-editors later said they'd committed to January publication only pending further verification of the fragment, including scientific dating.

King announced the research in Rome in September. But several scholars immediately expressed doubts.

The Smithsonian Channel later delayed broadcasting a documentary on the fragment, pending the further testing.


Navy: No U.S. drones missing after Iran claim

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Iran claimed Tuesday it had captured a U.S. drone after it entered Iranian airspace over the Persian Gulf— even showing an image of a purportedly downed craft on state TV — but the U.S. Navy said all its unmanned aircraft in the region were "fully accounted for."

drone.jpg In this Jan. 31, 2010 file photo an unmanned U.S. Predator drone flies over Kandahar Air Field, southern Afghanistan, on a moon-lit night.

ALI AKBAR DAREINI,Associated Press
BRIAN MURPHY,Associated Press


TEHRAN, Iran (AP) — Iran claimed Tuesday it had captured a U.S. drone after it entered Iranian airspace over the Persian Gulf— even showing an image of a purportedly downed craft on state TV — but the U.S. Navy said all its unmanned aircraft in the region were "fully accounted for."

The conflicting accounts still leave the possibility that the drone claimed by Iran, a Boeing-designed ScanEagle, could have been plucked from the sea in the past and unveiled for maximum effect following escalating tensions over U.S. surveillance missions in the Gulf.

Other countries in the region — such as the United Arab Emirates — also have ScanEagle drones in their fleets.

Cmdr. Jason Salata, a spokesman for the U.S. Navy's 5th Fleet in Bahrain, said ScanEagles operated by the Navy "have been lost into the water" over the years, but there is no "record of that occurring most recently."

The Iranian announcement did not give details on the time or location of the claimed drone capture.

It's certain, however, to be portrayed by Tehran as another bold challenge to U.S. reconnaissance efforts in the region. Last month, the Pentagon said a drone came under Iranian fire in the Gulf but was not harmed. A year ago, Iran managed to bring down an unmanned CIA spy drone possibly coming from Afghanistan.

Iran also has recently alleged repeated airspace violations by U.S. drones, which Washington denies.

"The U.S. Navy has fully accounted for all unmanned air vehicles operating in the Middle East region," said Salata. "Our operations in the Gulf are confined to internationally recognized waters and airspace."

Iran claimed it captured the drone after it entered Iranian airspace. A report on state TV quoted the navy chief of Iran's powerful Revolutionary Guard, Gen. Ali Fadavi, as saying the Iranian forces caught the "intruding" drone, which had apparently taken off from a U.S. aircraft carrier.

"The U.S. drone, which was conducting a reconnaissance flight and gathering data over the Persian Gulf in the past few days, was captured by the Guard's navy air defense unit as soon as it entered Iranian airspace," Fadavi said. "Such drones usually take off from large warships."

Al-Alam, the Iranian state TV's Arabic-language channel, showed two Guard commanders examining what appeared to be an intact ScanEagle drone. It was not immediately clear if that was the same drone Iran claimed to have captured.

In the footage, the two men then point to a huge map of the Persian Gulf in the background, showing the drone's alleged path of entry into Iranian airspace.

"We shall trample on the U.S," was printed over the map in Farsi and English next to the Guard's emblem.

If true, the seizure of the drone would be the third reported incident involving Iran and U.S. drones in the past two years.

Last month, Iran claimed that a U.S. drone had violated its airspace. Pentagon said the unmanned aircraft came under fire — at least twice but was not hit — and that the Predator was over international waters.

The Nov. 1 shooting in the Gulf was unprecedented, and further escalated tensions between the United States and Iran, which is under international sanctions over its suspect nuclear program. Tehran denies it's pursuing a nuclear weapon and insists its program is for peaceful purposes only.

In late 2011, Iran claimed it brought down a CIA spy drone after it entered Iranian airspace from its eastern borders with Afghanistan and Pakistan. The RQ-170 Sentinel drone, which is equipped with stealth technology, was captured almost intact. Tehran later said it recovered data from the top-secret drone.

In the case of the Sentinel, after initially saying only that a drone had been lost near the Afghan-Iran border, American officials eventually confirmed it had been monitoring Iran's military and nuclear facilities. Washington asked for it back but Iran refused, and instead released photos of Iranian officials studying the aircraft.

The U.S and its allies believe Iran is pursuing a nuclear weapon. Iran denies the charge, saying its nuclear activities are for peaceful purposes only, such as power generation and cancer treatment.

Iran meanwhile, has claimed advanced in drone technology.

In November, Iranian media reported that the country had produced a domestically-made drone capable of hovering. Earlier, Iran said it obtained images of sensitive Israeli bases taken by a drone that was launched by Lebanon's Hezbollah and downed by Israel.

Iran also claimed other drones made dozens of apparently undetected flights into Israeli airspace from Lebanon in recent years. Israel has rejected the Iranian assertions.

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Murphy reported from Dubai, United Arab Emirates.

Northampton City Council to take up charter changes including increasing length of mayor's term from 2 to 4 years

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The council will also have to figure out the mayor’s status on the Finance Committee and even where he may sit during meetings.

William Dwight horiz mug 2011.jpg William H. Dwight

NORTHAMPTON – The City Council will renew its efforts to conform its rules and procedures to the changes in the city’s charter when it meets on Thursday.

Voters approved a number of changes in the 19th-century document last month after a committee spent more than a year holding public hearings about modernizing it. Among the major changes: the term of the mayor will expand from two to four years and chairmanship of the council meetings will pass from the mayor to the council president. The council must also elect a vice president to run meetings in the absence of the council president.

It was agreed at the last council meeting, however, to continue some of these matters because councilors were unclear about details. Specifically, it put off electing a vice president pending further discussion on the duties and responsibilities of that office.

Several councilors have expressed interest in being vice president, but Council President William H. Dwight pointed out that the post could result in restrictions as well. If the vice president were to chair a meeting, for example, he or she would be prohibited from participating in the discussion of the topic at hand.

“They wouldn’t be able to represent their ward in the debate,” Dwight said.

The council will also have to figure out the mayor’s status on the Finance Committee and even where he may sit during meetings. According to the charter changes, the mayor may no longer be a voting member of any committee. Narkewicz, the current mayor, has said he would be content to sit in the audience with other members of the public during council meetings, but some councilors prefer that he remain at the table.

The council must also appoint members to two commissions, one that will review all city ordinances and bring them into compliance with the revised charter, and one that will make recommendations about how to compensate elected officials. Currently, city councilors and school committee members receive stipends in the amount of $5,000 per year.

Back to budgets, Paul Ryan returns to comfortable topic

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Paul Ryan is getting his groove back.

By PHILIP ELLIOTT, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — Paul Ryan is getting his groove back.

A month after the GOP's presidential ticket lost an election, the party's vice presidential nominee finds himself comfortably back in his political wheelhouse on Capitol Hill and in the thick of a debate over how to avert automatic tax increases and spending cuts that many economists fear could cripple the economy if Congress doesn't head them off by Jan. 1.

The Wisconsin congressman isn't technically a member of the House Republican leadership. But he's viewed by GOP colleagues as an expert on economic and tax policy and entitlement programs. He's a good gauge of how far the party's most conservative lawmakers will bend, if at all, as House Speaker John Boehner negotiates with the White House and Democratic-controlled Senate over the "fiscal cliff."

That explains why Ryan has become a new addition to what previously was a four-person, 30-minute morning meeting led each day by Boehner and Majority Leader Eric Cantor, R-Va.

The GOP leaders want his views in planning strategy for dodging a budget meltdown and coming out on top politically. As an informal liaison to rank-and-file members, he's in a position to test what policy changes these members may be willing to support and sell them on what they should accept or reject. Ryan's imprint on any deal could be enough to satisfy some of the party's most conservative constituencies that otherwise might balk at any notion of tax increases.

"Congressman Ryan finds himself at a near-perfect meeting of preparation and opportunity," said Joe Brettell, a Republican strategist and former Capitol Hill aide. "His credibility with both Republican leadership and the conservative establishment will make his support a crucial element to any fiscal cliff agreement."

According to House GOP officials, whatever top Republicans need from Ryan — from policy advice to political cover — they're getting it.

Ryan plays down his role, saying people should focus on Boehner and President Barack Obama.

"Speaker Boehner has outlined a bipartisan way forward to avoid the fiscal cliff and get our economy growing: commonsense entitlement reform coupled with pro-growth tax reform," he said last week. "We can find common ground on responsible spending restraint and greater revenue, but we have yet to see real, specific spending cuts from President Obama."

Nevertheless, Ryan's deep involvement in the debate suggests his reputation within the GOP as a conservative leader against tax increases and advocate for reining in spending, particularly on programs like Social Security and Medicare, hasn't been hurt by his failed stint as Mitt Romney's running mate.

To a certain extent, the fiscal policy negotiations playing out on Capitol Hill give him an opportunity to reshape his profile on his own terms for a potential 2016 run at the presidency after a 2012 campaign in which allies say he often was muzzled and had to defer to Romney.

"He knows this stuff. He's been battle tested," said Rep. Cory Gardner of Colorado, a Ryan friend who often joined him during the campaign. "It gives the members more confidence in what they're doing, knowing that we've got someone on our side who is an incredible player, somebody who knows how to execute and knows he can win on a message that is right."

Romney chose Ryan, a former Hill staffer and self-professed budget geek, as his running mate largely because of his fiscal policy credentials, doubling down on the notion that voters would above all else cast their ballots on who could spark the nation's then-sputtering economy. Ryan was front-and-center those first weeks, blitzing local television stations in swing states with more than 100 interviews.

But Romney soon found himself getting hammered over Ryan's earlier budget proposals for deep spending cuts to programs for seniors and the poor. Democratic critics ran ads assailing the Ryan budget, and Republican candidates across the country were put on the defensive over it.

Ryan eventually faded back into the traditional role of a vice presidential candidate, assailing the opponent and validating the top of the ticket's credentials with a carefully scripted daily speech — and above all, not making any unnecessary waves. His last interview before Election Day was on Oct. 8.

The day after the election, he told reporters he would be returning to his home in Janesville, Wis., to spend time with his family before going back to his job in Congress, for which he won re-election on Nov. 6.

While some advisers urged him to give up his House seat and focus solely on a potential 2016 presidential bid, Ryan decided his budget experience was needed in Washington to help dodge the fiscal cliff crisis. But he also likely realized that a debate in his area of expertise could provide a huge political payoff and solid footing well ahead of the next race for the White House.

Northeast Utilities officials dispute breaking Connecticut deal

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Hartford-based Northeast Utilities is disputing allegations by Connecticut officials that the company broke a requirement to notify the state of any layoffs.

NU.jpg

NStar Chairman, President and CEO Thomas J. May, left, and Northeast Utilities Chairman, President and CEO Charles W. Shivery speak to a reporter in Boston, Monday, Oct. 18, 2010.






HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) — Hartford-based Northeast Utilities is disputing allegations by Connecticut officials that the company broke a requirement to notify the state of any layoffs.

New England's largest utility company issued a statement Monday saying its interpretation of the reporting requirement is different than the one by state Attorney General George Jepsen and Consumer Counsel Elin Swanson Katz, and it will be filing a response with state regulators. Jepsen and Katz say NU broke the reporting rule and are demanding information about NU layoffs and staffing levels.

State officials say 319 employees have left NU since its $5 billion purchase of Boston's NStar was completed in April.

Jepsen says a settlement agreement with the state over the NStar deal requires NU to give 30 days advance notice to the state about any layoffs.

Springfield police arrest 19-year-old Dyanasia Rivera after stabbing in Indian Orchard sends woman to hospital for treatment

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The victim is believed to have suffered non-life-threatening injuries.

SPRINGFIELD -- A woman, stabbed several times with an unknown weapon in Indian Orchard early Tuesday, was taken to Baystate Medical Center for treatment of injuries believed to be non-life-threatening.

Police arrested a 19-year-old Dyanasia Rivera after the attack and charged her with assault and battery with a dangerous weapon and assault and battery, Capt. Larry Brown said.

The stabbing was reported to police about 12:15 a.m. and police later arrested Rivera at 15 Hampden St. in Indian Orchard, Brown said.

Additional information, including Rivera’s address, was not immediately available.

AM News Links: Water therapy helps give dogs relief from pain, U.S. Rep. John Olver nears end of 44 years in politics, and more

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Top news stories from this morning.

120412olver.JPG 11-19-12 - Amherst- Republican staff photo by Don Treeger- Congressman John Olver reacts to remarks during a symposium at UMass held in his honor.



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

Afghan soldiers, not Taliban, responsible for 2011 attack that killed 2 U.S. soldiers

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It was a sneak attack, but not by the enemy they feared.

By ROBERT BURNS, AP National Security Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) — It was a sneak attack, but not by the enemy they feared.

U.S. Army Capts. Joshua Lawrence and Drew Russell were inside a small command post on an Afghan army base, wrapping up a long day of coordinating the safe arrival of nearly 100 Afghan religious and tribal leaders for a peace conference at a nearby palace.

Darkness had fallen.

Some of their fellow soldiers had retired for the evening. Two stood guard.

All seemed well.

But as several soldiers sprawled on nearby cots, playing cards, the calm collapsed catastrophically at 9:27 p.m.

An exploding grenade shattered the stillness, followed in seconds by bursts of gunfire. Before any of the Americans could raise a hand to defend themselves, Lawrence was dead from a bullet to the head, and Russell was dying, shot three times in the back.

They were not killed by the Taliban, as the U.S.-led military coalition indicated the day after the Oct. 8, 2011, assault. Lawrence, 29, of Nashville, Tenn., and Russell, 25, of Scotts, Mich., were killed in what U.S. investigators later called a "calculated and coordinated" attack by Afghan soldiers entrusted to work alongside their U.S. partners.

This is the first published account of the attack and is based on internal Army records and interviews in the U.S. and Afghanistan.



Drew Russell

This family photo provided via The Kalamazoo Gazette shows Army Capt. Drew E. Russell, left, with his brother James, in Colorado, just before being deployed to Afghanistan in the summer of 2011. Russell and Army Capt. Joshua Lawrence were inside a small command post on an Afghan army base, when an exploding grenade was followed in seconds by bursts of gunfire. Before any of the Americans could raise a hand to defend themselves, Lawrence was dead, one 5.56mm bullet to the head, and Russell was dying, shot three times in the back. (AP Photo/Russell Family via The Kalamazoo Gazette)




For Russell's family, the anguish is still fresh. His father, Jim, said the loss was even harder to accept after learning from the Army's investigation report early this year that it was a supposed ally, not the Taliban, who killed his son.

"It wasn't like a battle, you know. He pretty much got ambushed," he said, pausing at length to settle his emotions. "That makes it difficult."

On that moonlit Saturday evening, Russell was the designated "battle captain," or duty officer, in the command center. Lawrence worked beside him as a plans officer. Both were members of the 4th Infantry Division's 2nd "Warhorse" Brigade. They deployed to Afghanistan in June 2011. Lawrence had married just one week before leaving; the honeymoon was to wait until he returned home.

The Associated Press learned details of the attack from formerly secret Army investigation records obtained through the Freedom of Information Act. The Army removed substantial portions of the documents to protect what it called properly classified information as well as the identities of most people involved. The AP established some identities on its own.

The investigation — a standard process in a war zone — found that security at the U.S.-Afghan command post was so relaxed that guards were not told to check anyone entering. Potential Afghan thievery, not treachery, was judged the chief threat. Thus the killers had unfettered access and moved about without arousing suspicion.

Only 10 designated Afghan security personnel were supposed to be in the compound, but U.S. guards were given no access roster. Unknown numbers "freely entered and exited the compound unchecked," an Army investigator found.

The Americans had been told to treat the Afghans as if they were mingling in Iron Horse Park, a recreation area on their home base, Fort Carson, Colo., according to a staff sergeant who was present but whose name is blacked out on his sworn statement to investigators.

The Americans had convinced themselves, 10 years into a war whose successful outcome depended on empowering local security forces, that they could trust their Afghan colleagues. That was a deadly miscalculation in this instance and dozens more in the months that followed as growing numbers of Afghan troops turned their guns on their coalition partners.

As the attacks mounted this year, U.S. officials in Kabul and Washington insisted these were "isolated incidents." They routinely withheld details and, until pressed by the AP, did not publicly disclose attacks in which coalition troops were wounded but not killed.



Joshua Lawrence

This undated photo provided by Fort Carson (Colo.) shows Army Capt. Joshua Lawrence. U.S. Army Capts. Lawrence and Drew Russell were inside a small command post on an Afghan army base, when an exploding grenade was followed in seconds by bursts of gunfire. Before any of the Americans could raise a hand to defend themselves, Lawrence was dead, one 5.56mm bullet to the head, and Russell was dying, shot three times in the back. (AP Photo/Fort Carson)




At least 63 coalition troops — mostly Americans — have been killed, by the AP's count, and more than 85 wounded in at least 46 insider attacks so far this year. That's an average of nearly one attack a week. In 2011, 21 insider attacks killed 35.

The attack that killed Lawrence and Russell in the southern city of Kandahar was the 17th of 2011. Breaking it down in detail shows how easily it can be done.

The two officers and five other U.S. soldiers were inside a soft-skinned, tan-colored tent that served as a temporary "tactical command post" on an Afghan army base known as Old Corps Headquarters. Their task was to coordinate a security plan for the three-day peace conference at nearby Mandigak Palace. Their body armor was stacked in one corner, their weapons in another.

Their partners that day included liaison officers from Afghan security services, including the national intelligence agency and the army. The four liaisons excused themselves for the night and left the compound shortly before the attack. They had been working inside the tent and would have been in the line of fire had they stayed.

The Army investigator called this circumstance "worth noting," but he established no proof of complicity by the Afghan security officers.

An Afghan investigation concluded that only one soldier, a sergeant identified as Enayut (Afghans often use just one name) fired on the Americans, according to a summary of the probe, while the U.S. Army concluded there were two shooters.

Several U.S. soldiers recalled noticing two, possibly three, Afghans enter the compound about 9 p.m. They stood out because they were armed with one rocket-propelled grenade and at least one M16 rifle. At least one was wearing an Afghan army uniform, the report said. No one questioned them, since there was no screening requirement in place.

"They just walked in like they owned the place," a U.S. sentry at the compound's barricaded entrance told investigators afterward. Like others, his name was blacked out of the report.

In the moments that followed, hints of trouble were obscured by the appearance of normalcy.

At 9:02 p.m., just a few minutes after taking up his guard position at the front entrance of the command post tent, Spc. Paul A. LeVan was told he was being repositioned to a guard tower overlooking the compound. He was not replaced at the tent. There was no explanation as to why.

LeVan's sergeant led him to the empty guard tower, where, as a standard precaution, they discussed the locations of friendly forces in LeVan's line of fire. He was armed with an M249 light machine gun.

Soon, two of the Afghans who had entered the compound at 9 p.m. joined them in the tower. One was in military garb and, rather curiously, armed with a grenade launcher and one grenade. The other was unarmed and spoke English. LeVan's sergeant then left the tower and, upon entering the command tent, mentioned the grenade launcher to those inside, including an enlisted soldier who recalled later that the weapon seemed "out of the ordinary."

"But since (Afghan soldiers) were allowed to carry RPGs (rocket-propelled grenades), we did not give it much thought," the enlisted soldier, whose name was blacked out of the report, told investigators.

Another unidentified soldier said in the report that he, too, noticed the RPG and thought it "seemed reckless" to permit it inside the compound.

In his final report, the Army investigator found it curious that neither LeVan nor his sergeant challenged or questioned the two Afghans about "why a tower guard would have an RPG and no rifle."

LeVan, 21 at the time and a member of the 209th Military Police Company, said he assumed the Afghans were a properly assigned guard and his interpreter, although he noticed that the armed Afghan was avoiding eye contact and closely tracking movements inside the compound. LeVan shook hands with both men, but the veneer of friendliness soon vanished.

"I had a gut feeling that something was out of place," he told the AP in a telephone interview. He was the only American to witness the attack from start to finish.

Suddenly and without explanation the Afghans descended from the tower.

"I got nervous, so I kept a very close eye on the two men," LeVan told an Army investigator two days later.

LeVan said he watched through his night vision goggles as the Afghan armed his grenade launcher and took aim at several Army medics playing cards on cots they had set up at the rear of their armored ambulance. A medic recalled spotting the gunman pointing the RPG at them from point blank range. "I stood up and shouted, 'Hey! What the f--- are you doing?'" she told investigators.

His rocket missed the soldiers and slammed into a nearby concrete barrier. Shrapnel wounded the medic in her stomach and back. A piece of shrapnel also penetrated the nearby command tent, wounding the U.S. sergeant who had just left LeVan in the guard tower.

By several accounts, bullets began flying about five seconds after the grenade exploded.

"The timing was perfect," LeVan recalled. He watched from the tower as another gunman — not the one who launched the rocket, and not the English-speaking Afghan, either — advanced swiftly on the command tent, firing bursts from an M16 semi-automatic rifle.

Inside the tent, which was ringed with sandbags but filled with dust from the grenade blast, Lawrence and Russell hit the ground and began low-crawling side-by-side toward their body armor.

Neither would get back to his feet. The M16 shooter fired a total of 14 bullets into the tent, the last few from the front entrance. None of the Americans inside saw their attacker well enough to identify him.

"I saw someone standing in the entrance to the tent shooting at all of us," said the sergeant who had been hit in the leg by shrapnel. "I put my head down. I believe I heard five or six rounds fired, and then the shooting stopped."

Maj. Keith Walters, who was in the tent and suffered a severe leg wound from the M16 fire, said that by the time the gunman vanished it was too late.

"As the firing stopped, I remember yelling out to hold fire as I knew we had friendly U.S. and Afghan forces somewhere in the compound and that by then they would probably be approaching the tent. We did not return a single shot," Walters wrote in an email to investigators three weeks later from his hospital bed in Washington, where he underwent surgery.

The Army denied an AP request to interview Walters, saying the matter was too sensitive; later it said Walters had decided on his own not to be interviewed.

Lawrence apparently died instantly of his head wound. Russell was declared dead a short time later at a nearby helicopter landing zone as colleagues prepared to evacuate him and three seriously wounded soldiers to medical facilities at Kandahar Air Field.

Four other soldiers were wounded less severely.

The killers escaped — apparently with inside help. They remain at large.

Gen. Jallaad Rahimi, who was the chief military prosecutor in Kandahar at the time, told the AP in a recent interview that the father and brother of Sgt. Enayut, plus three of his fellow soldiers, are in detention. The three soldiers are not accused of shooting anyone but are charged with neglecting their duties or assisting Enayut, Rahimi said. For example, the rocket-propelled grenade fired by Enayut was assigned to a member of his unit who told investigators that Enayut had taken it from him that evening when he was not looking, Rahimi said.

Rahimi said two of the detained soldiers are accused of helping Enayut escape the compound.

Enayut's father and brother were arrested after authorities found evidence at their home that Enayut had been in contact with insurgents, Rahimi said. The brother and the father knew about this contact, Rahimi said, but didn't tell authorities and may have covered up for Enayut. The U.S. investigation found no links to insurgents.

Enayut, 23 at the time of the shooting, joined the Afghan army in 2006. An expert in disarming bombs, he had a history of going AWOL and receiving no punishment for it. U.S. investigators found that he had slipped away for an unauthorized visit to Pakistan just weeks before the attack.

Investigators were unable to pin down identifying information about the other shooter, although it appeared he also was a soldier and was probably a member of Enayut's unit, the 4th Battalion, 1st Brigade, 205th Corps. LeVan said both wore Afghan army uniforms in the attack.

In a two-sentence statement the next day, the U.S.-led military command in Kabul said two service members had been killed in an "insurgent attack." A day later, in identifying Lawrence and Russell as the casualties, the Pentagon reported that "enemy forces" killed them.

The Army's investigation records show that U.S. officials in Afghanistan were told immediately after the assault that it was perpetrated by one or more Afghan soldiers — not insurgents.

"Yes, we know the shooter," the Afghan army liaison officer told Lt. Col. John Cook, the commander of Lawrence's and Russell's unit, after being summoned back to the compound just moments after the killings. The Afghan officer named Enayut without hesitation.

Asked why its Oct. 9 report was never corrected, the international military command in Kabul said it knew that at least one of the shooters was wearing an Afghan army uniform, "but as that information was unconfirmed, a correction to the original (press) release was not appropriate."

In April the AP was alerted to the attack's true circumstances by an American soldier who knew the real story. The U.S. military in Kabul acknowledged to the AP in May that it had added the incident to its 2011 list of insider attacks. But it refused to provide any details of what happened.

The story of the killing of Lawrence and Russell raises hard questions about the insider attack problem, starting with this: How can it happen to arguably the world's best-trained, best-equipped army? The answer, in this case, is that the Americans designed their security with external threats in mind — known Taliban tactics like suicide car bombings, for example — rather than threats from their Afghan allies.

Was that reasonable?

Yes, says Maj. Gen. James L. Huggins, who ordered the internal Army investigation in his capacity as the senior U.S. commander in southern Afghanistan at the time. In rejecting the investigation's central finding — that U.S. officers had failed to take necessary security precautions — Huggins wrote that the security arrangements were "appropriate responses" to available intelligence.

"Only (in) hindsight do we now understand the insider threat present at the time of the attack," he wrote on Dec. 17, 2011.

In making that judgment, Huggins overruled the colonel who conducted the investigation. The colonel, whose name was removed from the copy of the report provided to the AP, wrote in his account that the U.S. chain of command in Kandahar "failed to use the appropriate security and force protection measures to secure the compound and safeguard their soldiers."

The colonel faulted the Kandahar commanders for "unchecked reliance" on the Afghans to "police their own ranks." He recommended action be taken against those leaders, but Huggins rejected the advice, saying he believed they had taken reasonable precautions, given that there was "no known insider threat at the time."

Of the 16 insider attacks that preceded this one in 2011, none had occurred in Kandahar province, but two took place in adjacent provinces within Huggins' area of responsibility, according to U.S. records.

Huggins, who now works for the director of the Army staff at the Pentagon and has been selected for promotion to lieutenant general, declined through a spokesman to be interviewed for this story. In a brief encounter last week, Huggins told the AP he could not remember enough about the case to discuss it.

The U.S. military never established a clear motive for the attack in Kandahar. In its aftermath numerous Afghans told U.S. officers they felt shamed by the killings and were sorry for any mistrust it created. But that sentiment apparently was not universal.

LeVan told investigators that the day after the attack he and other soldiers encountered an Afghan soldier who "gave us a vibe that he wished we were killed."

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Associated Press writer Rahim Faiez in Kabul contributed to this report.


U.S. reacts with joy to Duchess Kate, Prince William's royal baby news

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An heir to the British throne is on the way — and Americans may be as enthralled as the Brits.

By GREGORY KATZ, Associated Press

WESTPORT, Connecticut (AP) — An heir to the British throne is on the way — and Americans may be as enthralled as the Brits.

This former colony has been riveted by the royal news that the former Kate Middleton is pregnant — perhaps as much as Britain, where such regal developments are taken in stride.

"We don't really have a princess here," said Kathy Gitlin, an elementary school teacher in Connecticut who was thrilled to hear that Kate is with child. "I'm an Anglophile, I love England, and I think it's wonderful that two people in love wanted to get married and start a family. It's great."

There are several reasons for the American public's pleasure in Kate's news, manifested not only by the good wishes sent by President Obama but also by the breathless news coverage and the general good will toward the actually not-so-young young couple, who have both now reached 30.

First, and least complicated, is the fact that Kate seems a likeable and sensible young woman who married one of the world's most eligible bachelors without letting the power, prestige and A-plus jewelry go to her head.

Then there are the long ties between the two countries, so alike and so maddeningly different.

When Americans proudly declared their independence, they swore off sovereign kings and queens forever, yet several centuries later they find themselves drawn to the royals' pomp and pageantry, embracing the more colorful aspects of a system whose substance they had eagerly overthrown.

Finally, hardest to quantify, is the fading, almost ghostly, image of Princess Diana, who died so young. Americans want Diana's sons to flourish, and Kate seems to have made William very, very happy.

"I remember when Diana died, it was such a shock," said Gitlin, 52. "No one can ever take her place, but it's nice to have another person, someone this generation can look up to, and someone who William can love."

There's no doubt that many Britons are thrilled as well, and the country's embattled tabloid press certainly views a royal pregnancy (at Christmastime no less!) as a surefire circulation booster and a welcome diversion from a series of press scandals.

But some on Monday expressed a rather blasé attitude to the prospect of a new generation of Windsors seemingly bound for the throne. In the chill of early evening in north London's Camden market, young couples strolling among the stalls received the news of Kate's pregnancy with a shrug.

"I'm happy for them, but I don't really care," said Enya Lonergan, 19, who was visiting from Canterbury, south of London, with her friend Will Nichols, 20.



Kate Middleton Prince William

British police officers stand guard outside the King Edward VII hospital where the Duchess of Cambridge has been admitted with a severe form of morning sickness, in London, Monday, Dec. 3, 2012. St. James's Palace announced on Monday that Britain's Duchess of Cambridge — formerly known as Kate Middleton — is pregnant and has a severe form of morning sickness for which she is being treated at a London hospital. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant)




They could muster little enthusiasm for the news, noting that they had little in common with the royals, particularly in these bleak economic times.

"I don't think about them," Nichols said, adding that — naturally — he'd send them a gift. Or not.

Others said they were not interested and questioned the need for a royal family in the 21st century.

"I don't think it's a good thing," said Stephen Jowitt, 63, as he ambled down Camden High Street. "It reinforces a class system."

The news did provide a boost to one of Britain's national pastimes — finding new ways to wager money. Bookmakers are now taking bets on the gender of Kate's child, what the infant will be named and the color of his/her hair.

Joe Crilly, a spokesman for the William Hill bookmaker, said a high level of betting interest is expected, with favored names including Diana, Philip, Elizabeth and Sarah.

In America, ABC News even offered a poll, asking people to rate likely baby names.

Baby thoughts have been found in some less-than-fully-credible supermarket tabloids for months. They've been trumpeting "stories" about Kate's pregnancies for months, without any apparent basis in fact.

But that didn't keep the public from gobbling them up — the British royals, with their haughty glamour and slightly tragic air, have long captivated Americans.

"I'm always looking for any news of William and Kate," said 19-year-old Stacy McFacken, a clerk at a grocery store in Mentor, Ohio, in August when a number of tabloids offered screaming headlines about Kate's purported pregnancy.

"There's nothing like this in the States," she said. "It's just like all the fairy tales we read about as kids. We all want to be Kate."

Word of Kate's condition, including her hospitalization for complications, was top news on websites throughout the world. Her condition requires specialist treatment but if diagnosed early, it is unlikely to have long-term consequences for the mother or baby, and does not raise the risk of a miscarriage.

But while the parents might be anxious, world leaders stepped in to wish her well. The news was featured prominently on front pages in Argentina, India, France, South Africa and other countries. It sent Twitter into a tizzy, with the hashtag "royalbaby" trending worldwide and used more than 28,000 times in the first few hours following the official announcement. U.S. media websites such as People, Vanity Fair and the Daily Beast provided extensive coverage, with the Huffington Post launching a live blog to track developments.

"The whole wide world is excited," said Shao Hua Huang, a surgical nurse who practices in New York and Connecticut. "We're really happy for her. It's because of England and all the tradition. We Americans followed in their footsteps."

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Associated Press writers Paisley Dodds, Danica Kirka and Cassandra Vinograd in London contributed to this report.

Worcester mother sues police over 'confession'

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A Worcester woman charged four years ago with suffocating her 13-month-old son with a teddy bear has filed a federal lawsuit against the police department and officers she says coerced her into confessing.


WORCESTER, Mass. (AP) — A Worcester woman charged four years ago with suffocating her 13-month-old son with a teddy bear has filed a federal lawsuit against the police department and officers she says coerced her into confessing.

Nga Truong alleges malicious prosecution, false arrest and false imprisonment, intentional infliction of emotional distress and civil rights violations in her complaint.

Truong was 16 when she was accused of killing her son, Khyle, in 2008. She was held for almost three years before prosecutors dismissed a murder charge after a judge ruled her confession to police was obtained illegally.

Her lawyer said the interrogation was "psychological torture" and the now 21-year-old Truong was not given the option of consulting her mother or a lawyer.

Police Chief Gary Gemme tells The Telegram & Gazette (http://bit.ly/VtgYqR ) the lawsuit lacks merit.

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Information from: Telegram & Gazette (Worcester, Mass.), http://www.telegram.com

West Springfield Mayor Neffinger proposes tax breaks for volunteer work for seniors, veterans

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The mayor has proposed that veterans be able to reduce their property tax bills by as much as $1,000.

050812 gregory neffinger mug horz.JPG Gregory Neffinger

WEST SPRINGFIELD - Mayor Gregory C. Neffinger has submitted proposals to the Town Council that, if approved, would allow seniors and veterans to reduce their property tax bills by as much as $1,000 in some cases by doing volunteer work for the city.

The mayor has asked that the council receive his two proposals at its meeting set for 7 p.m. Monday.

“In these difficult economic times we are again looking for ways to relieve the tax burden on our citizens,” Neffinger stated in a press release issued earlier this week.

In 2000, the city voted at Town Meeting to adopt a section of state law allowing a program for seniors but it was never incorporated into ordinances, Neffinger said. He has proposed an ordinance that would take effect starting July 1, 2013 that would limit the number of seniors allowed to take part in the program to 40 peole a year. To be eligible, seniors would have to be 65 years old or older and be the owner of or deeded life tenant of the property for which the abatement would be allowed.

They would also have to occupy the premises for which the abatement would apply and possess the minimum qualifications for the volunteer positions with preference given to the most qualified seniors as determined by the city’s human resources director. Eligible seniors would not be employed by the town, but could be a retired municipal employees.

Seniors would be paid at the rate of the current minimum wage up to 100 hours a year. The human resources director would adopt rules and regulations to implement the program that would include the type of work, hours performed, procedures for overseeing volunteers and establishing record-keeping. The work would be required to be completed by Nov. 30 of each year.

As for veterans, the mayor has asked that the council to facilitate a program for them by adopting Chapter 59 5N of Massachusetts General Laws. That section of the law would allow veterans to reduce their property tax bills by a maximum of $1,000 by working for the city at no more than the minimum wage.

Neil Young and Crazy Horse storm Bridgeport

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Neil Young and Crazy Horse played a sold-out show at the Webster Bank Arena on Tuesday night.

Neil Young.JPG Frank Sampedro, Billy Talbot of Crazy Horse and Neil Young.

REVIEW

BRIDGEPORT, Conn. – The warning showed up on the website for The Webster Bank Arena early on Tuesday afternoon; …we expect heavy volume reaching (the arena). We recommend arriving early or taking public transportation so you can see every minute of the show.

The occasion was the sold out performance of Neil Young and his band Crazy Horse, featuring guitarist Frank "Pancho" Sampedro, drummer Ralph Molina and bass player Billy Talbot.

Rock legends tend to have an impact on highway exits, parking queues, and concession lines.

It seemed that most heeded the advice as the seats and the general admission floor spaces were filled by the time Young’s lab technicians (roadies in white coats) finished constructing the stage, with a giant microphone as the centerpiece, to the tune of the Beatles’ “A Day In The Life.”

After a rousing rendition of “The Star Spangled Banner,” (during which the band saluted the aforementioned microphone with their backs to the flag), Young lit into a scalding, 14 minute version of “Love and Only Love,” proving why he is revered as the godfather of grunge and progenitor of all noise-heavy rock.

“Powderfinger” sounded almost wistful in the face of that guitar onslaught and both paled in comparison to the rock giant’s “Walk Like a Giant,” an epic guitar jam finished off with a marathon feedback battle between Young and Sampedro.

Sensing the sensory overload, Young plucked an acoustic guitar and blared through his harmonica on a solo acoustic version of “The Needle and the Damage Done,” and remained the lone performer for “Twisted Road.”

He moved to piano for “Singer Without A Song,” as a young woman meandered around the stage with a guitar case, part of the show theatrics that included the opening skit and wind-swept (via a large fan) trash being strewn around the stage.

Having had enough of the ballads (three in a row!), Young delved into “Ramada Inn,” unleashing another furious guitar charge filled with enough angst to fuel yet another generation of disenfranchised souls.

He broke out “the time machine” verbally tracing his rock lineage back through album titles before landing on the 1969 release “Everybody Knows This is Nowhere,” and ripping through its signature song “Cinnamon Girl.”

Young continued to shred guitar strings to the very end, ending up on his back and kicking at air as he rolled through to “My My Hey Hey (Out of the Blue).”

Patti Smith thrashed through an opening set of vintage punk-tinged rock, and ended by dedicating a song to her mother who was born in Bridgeport in 1920.

Letters to the Editor: Mayor Sarno missing in City2City trip, Pastor Scott Lively's view distasteful, and more

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Letter writer: What a magnificent evening in Holyoke! Saturday’s concert, “From La Montana to Main Street,” featured the cuatro, the national instrument of Puerto Rico. Performers included Jeff Kust, from Chicago, and the Pioneer Valley’s own, Jose Gonzalez, and his Criolo Clasico.

Mayor Sarno MIA in City2City trip

City2city trip 12412.jpg A group of community leaders from Springfield tours the Sands Resort in Bethlehem, Pa., last week as part of the City2City Greater Springfield initiative.

In a remarkably concise and prescient article in the Sunday Republican, we learned how Lehigh Valley, PA. specifically Allentown and Bethlehem – joined at the hip with the flagging domestic steel industry – were able to intelligently and successfully leverage a casino operation to help resuscitate their economy.

Additionally, a notable takeaway was the apparent trust and visionary approach employed by both Mayors John Callahan of Bethlehem and Ed Pawlowski of Allentown. Reading further, my optimism was slowly building until I hit a speed-bump.....our fair City of Springfield did not have any of its employees in attendance at the City2City forum hosted by the successful business venture anchored by Allentown and Bethlehem....What?

We are in the early stages of the casino vetting process, this is true but to not have our Mayor or at least, his Chief Economic Development Officer on point at a meeting like this is puzzling.

When asked if Ameristar was going to ante up the $400K application fee, the response from Springfield was “They have 16 million good reasons to do so.”

This cheeky arrogance I’m sure, impressed Ameristar to the point where they hit the “eject” button from Springfield.

Suddenly, this reader has the twinge of worry that in a foreign territory such as this, we already have all the answers we need to make this billion-dollar venture work effectively for Springfield. Really?

– WILLIAM L. COLLINS, Jr., Springfield


Pastor Lively’s view on blast distasteful

Many have shared how appalled they were at Pastor Scott Lively’s take on the blast around the strip club on Worthington Street, and so am I. (City pastor: Gold blasted strip club,” Nov. 29, The Republican).

Then to write that his imprecatory prayers to God were answered is a further distortion of who God is and how God responds to our prayers. Pastor Lively would do well to consider living by the simple and powerful call from Jesus in Luke’s Gospel chapter 6:36 : “Be compassionate as your Heavenly Father is compassionate.”

– MAURICE J. PROULX, Springfield


Holyoke celebrates Latinos in concert

What a magnificent evening in Holyoke! Saturday’s concert, “From La Montana to Main Street,” featured the cuatro, the national instrument of Puerto Rico. Performers included Jeff Kust, from Chicago, and the Pioneer Valley’s own, Jose Gonzalez, and his Criolo Clasico.

Kudos to the Puerto Rican Cultural Project and the Holyoke Public Library, who conceived of the concert and promoted it, and to Baystate Health, who sponsored it. By the end of the evening, the place was rocking!

– TOM SCHWAB, Holyoke


Tax tale of 2 cities in Pioneer Valley

A tale of two cities and a Christmas Carol (with apologies to Charles Dickens): Springfield and Chicopee.

Both cities have over 20 percent of the tax levy in surplus funds, including Free Cash. Springfield’s total tax levy will probably decrease from the prior year and Springfield residents and businesses will receive a much needed decrease in their average tax bills. Not bad for a city being run by state officials just a few short years ago.

Although Chicopee municipal departments underspent their prior year’s budget by nearly $3 million, Chicopee has over $6 million in free cash. And over $16 million in total surplus dollars. But Chicopee residents and businesses received another increase in average tax bills. Chicopee officials are singing their favorite carol: “Here we go a spending again, a spending again, budgeted or not again.”

Springfield taxpayers received a timely holiday gift. Chicopee taxpayers received their annual untimely gift of another lump of coal. As Ebenezer Scrooge once said, “Bah, humbug!” But Ebenezer changed. Chicopee officials haven’t. Chicopee taxpayers remain haunted by the past and present. Hopefully, the ghost of Chicopee’s future has many new elected officials.

– JIM RASCHILLA, Chicopee

Yesterday's top stories: Freshman's death prompts AIC to cancel classes, East Longmeadow stand-off ends with police taking man into custody, and more

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An 18-year woman, slashed multiple times by another woman as she walked down the street in Indian Orchard, received stitches for her wounds at Baystate Medical Center and was released.

Stephen Powell 12412.jpg Stephen Powell, of East Longmeadow, is seen in this Police Department booking photo.

These were the most read stories on MassLive.com yesterday. If you missed any of them, click on the links below to read them now.

1) On-campus death of freshman prompts American International College to cancel day classes, offer counseling to students [George Graham]

2) East Longmeadow stand-off on Roderick Avenue ends with police taking man into custody Photo above. [Mike Plaisance]

3) Springfield police arrest 19-year-old Dyanasia Rivera after stabbing in Indian Orchard sends woman to hospital for treatment [George Graham]

4) Obituaries today: Amanda Croisetiere was sophomore at Agawam High School [The Republican]

5) Boston Red Sox rumors 2012: Josh Hamilton, Shane Victorino, Nick Swisher linked to Red Sox as they look for outfielder [Ben Shapiro]

Holyoke St. Patrick's Parade Committee sets application deadline for Colleen Pageant

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To compete in the pageant, entrants must be female and single and never have had a child. They must be between 17 and 22 by March 17, 2013, residents of Holyoke or South Hadley and of Irish ancestry.

colleen.JPG The five finalists at the 2012 Holyoke Colleen Pageant were, from left, Brianna M. Fitz, 20, Kelli A. Laramee, 21, Allison B. Lapointe, 18, Juliette R. Chenier, 17, and Kelly W. Donahoe, 22, all of Holyoke. Applications will be accepted until Dec. 24 for the 2013 contest.

HOLYOKE - Applications will be accepted until Dec. 24 for young ladies who want to compete in the 2013 Holyoke St Patrick's Colleen Pageant.

The pageant will be Jan. 5 at 7 p.m. at Holyoke High School, 500 Beech St.

To compete in the pageant, entrants must be female and single and never have had a child. They must be between 17 and 22 by March 17, 2013, residents of Holyoke or South Hadley and of Irish ancestry. They must complete the application and resume available at www.holyokestpatricksparade.com

Holyoke firefighters will escort contestants. Five finalists will be selected at the pageant. They will be honored at the Grand Colleen Ball Feb. 16, where one will be chosen grand colleen, according to the Parade Committee website.

The grand colleen will get numerous gifts from local donors, a scholarship and a trip to Ireland for two presented by the St. Patrick’s Committee of Holyoke, the website said.

Tickets to the pageant are $15 general admission, $10 for senior citizens and free for children 12 and younger.

Kathy Tobin, former anchorwoman for abc40 News and FOX6 and now development director at Friends of the Homeless in Springfield, will be mistress of ceremonies.

Entertainment will be provided by the McDermott Academy of Irish Dancing, the Holyoke Caledonians and the Holyoke High School Madrigal Choir.

For information call (413) 592-4945.


Holyoke councilors will consider whether to discipline assessors over tax dispute with Macy's that cost $956,420

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The meeting about public employees and a tax-dispute payment using taxpayer funds probably will be in executive session.

dulude.jpg Holyoke Chief Assessor Anthony Dulude

HOLYOKE — City councilors Wednesday will begin deliberating whether to discipline Chief Assessor Anthony Dulude and Assessor Deborah J. Brunelle regarding the over-taxing of Macy's that forced the city to refund the department store nearly $960,000.

The council Public Service Committee will discuss the matter at 6:30 p.m. in City Council Chambers at City Hall.

The discussion will include Dulude's taking of a $1,000-a-year stipend from the city for eight years for a certification from a trade group that he actually didn’t have. Dulude is repaying the city with deductions from his paycheck, officials have said.

Chairman Peter R. Tallman has said the committee probably will go into executive session, meaning the public and media will have to leave the room and the door will be closed.

The state Open Meeting Law requires that the City Council, committees and other municipal boards meet in open session so the public has access to decisions about use of taxpayer funds and other matters.

The law allows for 10 exceptions in which municipal boards can hold closed-door meetings. These include: "To discuss the reputation, character, physical condition or mental health, rather than professional competence, of an individual, or to discuss the discipline or dismissal of, or complaints or charges brought against, a public officer, employee, staff member or individual."

Other exceptions to the Open Meeting Law that boards can cite to meet behind closed doors are if the topic involves strategy with respect to collective bargaining or litigation if an open meeting may have a detrimental effect, deployment of security personnel or criminal investigations.

The City Council appoints the assessors.

The city had to pay Macy’s in August to settle a complaint it had been over-taxed the past three years.

The issue was the city and Macy’s disagreed on how its 201,000 square feet at the Holyoke Mall at Ingleside should be valued, officials said.

Macy’s sought an abatement, which the Board of Assessors denied. Macy’s appealed to the state Appellate Tax Board in a case involving three years worth of values. Assessors and Macy’s lawyers settled the case in August.

An abatement is paid from a part of the budget known as the overlay account.

The abatement paid to Macy’s is $332,740 for fiscal year 2010, $367,321 for fiscal year 2011 and $256,359 for fiscal year 2012.

Assessors determine property values based on sales of similar properties in the past year. Dulude previously said assessors thought the assessment of Macy’s property should be based on the square-footage rate used to determine the mall’s value, which was $97 a square foot.

This raised the value of Macy’s to $27 million and increased its tax bill to $990,000 a year from the previous $535,000 a year.

But Macy’s argued it should be treated as a store independent from the mall, at a square footage price of $37.

Under the agreement, Macy’s assessed value dropped from $27 million to $18 million for fiscal year 2010, $17.2 million for fiscal year 2011 and $16.2 million for fiscal year 2012.

Dulude was paid the stipend for supposedly having yearly certification from the Massachusetts Association of Assessing Officers, of Marlborough. But Dulude hadn’t had the certification from the group since May 2004, according to online records.

The association is a statewide professional association whose primary function is to help assessors learn about the profession and stay trained. It is unaffiliated with the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.

Editorial: Cascading over the fiscal cliff can't be an option

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Some conservatives and liberals have suggested that it might make sense to fall over the cliff.

Governors meeting 12412.jpg National Governors Association Vice Chair, Oklahoma Gov. Mary Fallin, center, talks to reporters outside the White House in Washington Tuesday following a meeting between the NGA executive committee and President Obama regarding the fiscal cliff. From left are, Utah Gov. Gary Herbert, Minnesota Gov. Mark Dayton, Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, Fallin, Arkansas Gov. Mike Beebe, and NGA Chairman, Delaware Gov. Jack Markell.

Let’s just plunge over the cliff – and then blame the other guys. C’mon, there might well be gain from the pain.”

There was a time when no one was talking such nonsense about the so-called fiscal cliff– the broad tax increases and deep spending cuts coming at year’s end. All the discussion was of compromise – and how best to attain it.

But of late, there have been those on the extremes – some commentators on the far right and on the far left – who’ve started to suggest that the cliff presents not peril, but possibility.

Rather than endeavoring to work with the White House, some conservatives have been suggesting, it would make more political sense to just drop right off the cliff and then blame President Barack Obama for the ensuing recession.

At the other end of the spectrum, there are those among the liberal set who want the same thing – except that they’d then blame Republicans, especially those in the House of Representatives, for the financial fiasco that would follow.

What’s wrong with these pictures?

The answer, of course, is obvious: You don’t ruin the economy, playing havoc with the people’s financial well-being, for political gain. Especially when no one knows exactly what would come from crashing headlong over the cliff.

In Bill Clinton’s acceptance speech at the 1996 Democratic National Convention, he pledged to build “a bridge to the 21st century” in his second term.

What’s needed now is nothing so bold. If a grand bargain isn’t possible, then a path leading down from the edge, or a makeshift parachute to soften the landing, would do.

The president made a proposal last week. Republicans countered on Monday. Let’s hope for more still, for talk of compromise – and that neither side starts to listen to the drivel coming from the fringes.

Easthampton furniture maker Silas Kopf donates marquetry art of Pleasant Street Theater to raise money for the Amherst Cinema

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The auction on eBay will begin Dec. 9. Kopf has valued the marquetry panel at about $10,000.

kopf.JPG Furniture maker Silas Kopf stands in front of a piece of marquetry at his Easthampton studio. He is donating a work depicting the Pleasant Street Theater to the Amherst Cinema for an eBay auction.

EASTHAMPTON – In 2007, when it looked as if the Pleasant Street Theater would close, furniture maker Silas Knopf helped lead a fund-raising drive to save it.

Kopf, his wife, Linda, and Rita M. and Bruce S. Bleiman raised enough money for the Amherst Cinema Arts Center to take over. That organization ran the theater until this past summer, whenit had to close.

And while the closing was a loss for Northampton and the area, Kopf has captured the theater in his marquetry and that panel will be auctioned off on eBay as fund-raiser for the Amherst Cinema beginning Dec. 9.

Losing the Pleasant Street Theater created a void, he said. But he said, “losing the Amherst Cinema that would be a huge hole,” They’re doing a good job and “I want to see it thrive.”

Kopf, who lives in Northampton but has his studio in the former fire station here, is an internationally known furniture maker renowned for his marquetry, the art of inlaying different woods to create a picture.

He was approached by the theater about a year or so ago to donate something as a fund-raiser. He thought, “What’s my skill set. I couldn’t think of anything obvious (to donate.)”

But then he said was thinking “I love the building (the old theater) and the big red awning. I did a little bit of fiddling” and came up with the theater panel.

Knopf said he likes movies but got involved to save the Pleasant Street Theater because he supports the arts community in the valley. Film, art, theater “are all these parts that fit together in a puzzle. Each one accentuates the rest. If we have good music, it enhances the art galleries. If it (one form) disappears, it leaves a hole in our arts community.”

For the panel, he said he used about 50 different kinds of wood. He has valued it at $10,000.

Carol Johnson, Amherst Cinema executive director, said this is the first time the center has been involved in an auction on eBay. They felt it was the best way to offer the work.

“It’s a trusted source. Many fine works of art are sold there. It makes it accessible to not only our patrons but people who are collectors of Silas’ work.

pleasant st theater_1.jpg Silas Kopf created this panel depicting the former Pleasant Street Theater. It will be auctioned to raise money for the Amherst Cinema.

“There are some people that watch and wait to see what he has created. This is really a unique piece. It was thrilling to see him put it together,” she said.

The money raised will be used to support the theater’s annual fund. She said they’re converting to digital, which is an expensive technology, and they also will use it to help a program that teaches third graders visual literacy.

The theater, meanwhile, is slated to open a fourth screen in space once occupied by M&M Links, a retail shop in the original Amherst Cinema building that connects to the cinema building. The opening expected in January will be in time for the Oscar season, she said. “It will allow us to show small gems.”

Anyone wishing to bid on the panel can find more information at the cinema website. Also the original art will be on display at the R. Michelson Galleries, 132 Main St., in Northampton, from Dec. 10 to Dec. 16.

Public hearing scheduled to solicit ideas about future uses for Monson Developmental Center

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Monson residents are again being asked to chime in regarding possible future uses for the closed center, which is located on more than 600 rolling acres near the Palmer town line.

MONSON — The future of the Monson Developmental Center, the sprawling campus that once served the severely disabled, is the subject of a public forum Thursday at 7 p.m. at Hillside School, 29 Thompson St.

Town Administrator Gretchen E. Neggers said the forum is "a chance for people to say what they want, and what they don't want" to see happen at the closed state facility, which is located on more than 600 rolling acres near Monson's border with Palmer.

The former state-run facility had catered to people with developmental disabilities since 1854, but it was shuttered in 2008 by the Patrick administration, which hopes to save up to $42 million over a four-year period. Center residents were moved to community-based group homes, a process that was completed in the summer.

Thursday's session will be held in the Selectmen's Conference Room at Hillside School. The second public forum is scheduled for Jan. 17, also at 7 p.m. at Hillside School. Both sessions are expected to provide a public platform for citizens to voice their "concerns, interests and hopes for the reuse of this state-owned property," Neggers said Tuesday.

Besides the town administrator, members of the Monson Developmental Center Reuse Committee and the state Division of Capital Asset Management (DCAM) are expected to be on hand. Neggers and Monson Selectman Edward S. Harrison are among the town officials who serve on the reuse committee, which also includes DCAM's Dana Harrell, among others.

Palmer Town Manager Charles T. Blanchard has sat in on recent reuse committee meetings because the former developmental center was a major employer in Palmer, and many people in that town are also interested in the future of the campus.

Meetings were held three years ago about potential uses, but no plans were ever finalized. Because of the lapse in time since those meetings, the reuse committee decided to hold a new round of hearings "out of respect (for) the community," Neggers said.

"Opinions may have changed," she told The Republican in October. "I think people have a lot of ideas on what they would like to see there. I think the state is very interested in hearing people's ideas," she said.

Previous ideas have ranged from converting the site into a mall to creating a solar wind farm or community college. Neggers has said that any development will depend on interest and funding.

Plan for reuse of Street Barn in Agawam to be topic of public meeting

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The 1880s-era School Street Barn was used by Hampden County jail inmates for many years when they grew food for themselves as well as for the needy.

092407 school street barn agawam barn.JPG The School Street Barn is seen in Agawam in 2007.

AGAWAM – Crosskey Architects Inc. of Hartford will unveil its proposals for restoring the School Street Barn Dec.12 at 7 p.m. at the Senior Center.

Public opinion will be sought at the meeting.

“I would really encourage people to attend the meeting,” Planning and Community Development Director Deborah S. Dachos said Monday. “The presentation is going to be excellent. We have a lot of people who are interested in hearing about what’s going on with the barn.”

City officials hope to tap Agawam’s Community Preservation Act money to refurbish the 1880s-era barn. Plans have centered around reuse of the structure by the community. However, the city’ School Street Barn Advisory Committee will solicit residents' specific ideas for reuse at the meeting.

The advisory committee has recommended the structure be restored and opened to the public for civic, cultural and recreational use, and the private Friends of the School Street Barn supports those uses. The barn is on the grounds of School Street Park.

Once public input has been given, architect William Crosskey will prepare his final plans and cost estimates for restoring the barn. Dachos said Crosskey will outline plans during the Dec. 12 meeting for stabilizing the structure so it will continue to stand over the next decades as well as plans to use it for three seasons each year and for four seasons. Crosskey is being paid $61,750 for the work.

The building, which is listed on the National Register of Historic Places, is a double-ramp structure. It is only one of two barns of that type in Western Massachusetts. A double-ramp barn allows for passage straight through the building.

The barn is known in the area for its use from 1930 to 2002 as the Hampden County Prison Farm. During that time, inmates raised produce on the farm’s 50 acres to help feed the needy in Springfield and Holyoke as well as fellow inmates at the former York Street Jail in Springfield

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