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Report: Private group exploring possibility of 2024 Olympic bid for Boston

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The Boston Globe reports today that a private group called the Boston Olympic Exploratory Committee is looking to bring the 2024 Summer Olympics to the city.

olympicrnigs.jpg In this Wednesday, June, 8, 2011 file photo Sebastian Coe Chairman of the London Organizing Committee for the 2012 Olympic games hold up the relay torch as it is unveiled in St Pancras Station below the Olympic rings in central London.  


The Boston Globe reports today that a private group called the Boston Olympic Exploratory Committee is looking to bring the 2024 Summer Olympics to the city. The group is hoping to get Mayor Thomas Menino's approval to reach out to local businesses for support.


Committee chairman Eric Reddy of West Boylston told the Globe that the group had been working behind the scenes for several months, reserving a domain name (http://www.boston-2024.org) and setting up social media accounts.

The United States Olympic Committee solicited bids from Boston and 34 other municipalities in a letter in mid-February, the Globe reported. The letter informed hopefuls that the 2024 host city would need "a reliable public transit system, an Olympic village that can accommodate 16,500 athletes, technical support for more than 15,000 media members, and 45,000 hotel rooms to house visitors from around the world." There are only about 30,000 hotel rooms in all of Greater Boston, according to the Greater Boston Convention & Visitors Bureau.

The United States has not hosted a Summer Olympics since the Atlanta Games in 1996. The International Olympic Committee is set to choose the host city for the 2020 Games in September, with Istanbul, Tokyo and Madrid as the three finalists.


Missing Medford teen found alive at Maine's Sugarloaf ski resort

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A 17-year-old boy has been found alive at western Maine's Sugarloaf ski resort two days after going missing while skiing with his father.

Sugarloaf mountain Sugarloaf mountain is seen on Tuesday, Dec. 28, 2010 in Carrabasset Valley, Maine. (AP Photo/Pat Wellenbach)  
CARRABASSETT VALLEY, Maine (AP) — A 17-year-old boy has been found alive at western Maine's Sugarloaf ski resort two days after going missing while skiing with his father.

Officials said searchers found Nicholas Joy, of Medford, Mass., Tuesday morning near Caribou Pond Road off the western side of Sugarloaf Mountain.

The Maine Warden Service, the Sugarloaf ski patrol and others had been searching for Joy on skis, snowshoes and snowmobiles since Sunday afternoon, when he was reported missing after failing to meet up with his father.

Authorities say Joy and his father split up and took separate trails from the top on Sunday, and the father called for help when his son later failed to meet with him.

AM News Links: BU frat shut down; Winter storm pummels Midwest, heads east and more

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In other headlines, a Harvard Professor challenges the objectivity of media coverage in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Sir Vincent Fean Palestinians students block the British consul general Sir Vincent Fean, center wearing glasses, from giving a speech at the Birzeit University, near Ramallah, Tuesday, March. 5, 2013. Activist Saed Qasrawi says the Palestinian students had intended to organize a peaceful protest against British policy toward Palestinians, but their rally quickly turned into the incident with the diplomat. (AP Photo/Majdi Mohammed)

  • Pittsfield assisted living facility head says he didn't know sex offender was living there [The Berkshire Eagle]

  • Kenya sees huge election turnout but violence mostly limited to separatists [The Guardian]

  • BU frat shut down [Boston Herald]

  • World's biggest mall a China 'ghost town' [CNN]

  • Professor Challenges Objectivity of Media Coverage in Israeli-Palestinian Conflict [The Harvard Crimson]

  • Winter storm pummels Midwest, heads east [USA Today]

  • Despite free treatment, Britain lags others on health [Hartford Courant]

  • Twitter posts tagged #westernma in Western Mass. [MassLive.com]

  • Read more News Links »

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    Worcester County weather forecast: Snow expected Wednesday, Thursday though total accumulation uncertain

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    Meteorologists forecast the Worcester area will likely see snow Wednesday and Thursday.

    Worcester forecast:

    Today: Partly sunny, with a high near 40. North wind 6 to 10 mph.

    Tonight: A chance of snow showers, mainly after 2am. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 29. North wind 3 to 7 mph. Chance of precipitation is 30%. Little or no snow accumulation expected.

    Wednesday: A chance of snow showers before noon, then a chance of rain showers. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 40. Northeast wind 10 to 15 mph, with gusts as high as 34 mph. Chance of precipitation is 50%. New snow accumulation of less than a half inch possible.

    Wednesday Night: Snow likely, mainly after 7pm. Cloudy, with a low around 29. Northeast wind 14 to 16 mph, with gusts as high as 26 mph. Chance of precipitation is 70%.

    Thursday: Snow likely. Cloudy, with a high near 34. Northeast wind around 17 mph, with gusts as high as 28 mph. Chance of precipitation is 70%.

    Thursday Night: A chance of snow. Cloudy, with a low around 29. Chance of precipitation is 40%.

    Friday: A chance of snow before noon, then a chance of rain. Cloudy, with a high near 40. Chance of precipitation is 30%.

    Friday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 28.

    Saturday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 46.

    Poll by environmental and abortion rights groups gives Ed Markey 14-point lead in Democratic Senate primary

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    The poll commissioned by the League of Conservation Voters and NARAL Pro-Choice America found Markey with a 14-point lead over U.S. Rep. Stephen Lynch, 42 percent to 28 percent among likely primary voters.

    jan2013 stephen lynch vs edward markey.jpg U.S. Rep. Stephen Lynch, D-South Boston; and U.S. Rep. Ed Markey, D-Malden, will square off in a Democratic primary on April 30 in the special election to replace John Kerry.  

    Two groups that have endorsed Democratic Senate candidate and U.S. Rep. Edward Markey have released a new poll showing Markey in the lead over his Democratic primary opponent, U.S. Rep. Stephen Lynch.

    The poll commissioned by the League of Conservation Voters and NARAL Pro-Choice America, which support Markey, found Markey with a 14-point lead over Lynch, 42 percent to 28 percent among likely primary voters.

    The poll found Markey with slightly higher name recognition – 66 percent to 57 percent. Feelings toward Markey were 40 percent positive and 5 percent negative, compared to 27 percent positive and 8 percent negative for Lynch.

    The poll also asked about some of the differences between Lynch and Markey. While both Democratic Congressmen have consistently voted with their party leadership, Lynch has a few notable dissents. He is pro-life and voted against Democratic President Barack Obama’s health care reform law, though he says he agrees with the goals of the reform. The poll found that 81 percent of likely Democratic primary voters prefer a candidate who supports abortion rights and three-quarters prefer a candidate who voted for the Affordable Care Act.

    The poll also found close to 70 percent of voters were supportive of Markey’s efforts relating to oil and environmental issues.

    Markey, the ranking member of the House Natural Resources Committee, was the lead congressional investigator on the BP oil spill, and pushed BP to make various disclosures. He has pushed Congress to close a tax loophole that allows companies importing tar sands oil to avoid paying a tax paid by other crude oil companies. He has tried to forbid Wall Street speculators from investing in energy commodities, a move he says drives up energy prices. His leadership on various environmental issues, including addressing climate change, has earned him endorsements from the League of Conservation Voters and the Sierra Club.

    However, there is not a significant difference between Lynch and Markey’s voting records on environmental issues. According to the League of Conservation Voters, Lynch voted in favor the group’s positions 94 percent of the time throughout his career – the same “lifetime score” as Markey.

    The poll of 613 likely Democratic primary voters was conducted by the Garin-Hart-Yang Research Group Feb. 26-27 and has a margin of error of 4 percentage points.

    Sen. Mo Cowan co-sponsors bill asking for pardon of black boxing legend Jack Johnson

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    Johnson was sent to prison based on a racially motivated conviction in 1913.

    cowan.jpg William "Mo" Cowan, left, smiles as he is introduced by Mass. Gov. Deval Patrick during a news conference where he was named interim U.S. Senator for the seat vacated by U.S. Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., at the Statehouse in Boston, Wednesday, Jan. 30, 2013. Kerry was confirmed by the Senate on Tuesday to be the nation's next secretary of state.

    Massachusetts Sen. William “Mo” Cowan has co-sponsored a bill seeking a posthumous presidential pardon for boxing legend John Arthur “Jack” Johnson, who was sent to prison based on a racially motivated conviction in 1913.

    Cowan, a black Democrat, joined Republican Sen. John McCain of Arizona, Democratic House Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada and Republican Rep. Peter King of New York in asking Democratic President Barack Obama to pardon Johnson.

    Johnson, the first black heavyweight boxing champion, was born in Texas in 1878. He won the title in 1908, beating boxer Tommy Burns in a match in Australia. Racial animosity was high at that time, and white boxing fans searched for a “Great White Hope” to beat Johnson. In 1910, former heavyweight champion James Jeffries came out of retirement to fight Johnson, and Johnson’s victory in the celebrated match sparked race riots around the country. Johnson would hold onto his title until 1915.

    In 1913, Johnson was convicted of violating the Mann Act, which prohibited taking women across state lines for “immoral purposes.” The act was meant to prevent human trafficking of prostitutes. Johnson took the white woman he was dating – and would later marry – across state lines.

    After his conviction, Johnson fled the country for seven years, before returning in 1920 to serve a year in federal prison. The conviction hurt his career and his reputation.

    Johnson has since become the subject of a play and film, “The Great White Hope,” as well as a documentary by filmmaker Ken Burns.

    McCain and King have been introducing legislation asking for a presidential pardon of Johnson since 2004. Congress has previously passed a resolution calling for a pardon. Neither President George W. Bush nor Obama, the country’s first black president, has granted one. Obama last week announced 17 pardons.

    “We can never completely right the wrong perpetrated against Jack Johnson during his lifetime, but this pardon is a small, meaningful step toward acknowledging his mistreatment before the law and celebrating his legacy of athletic greatness and historical significance,” McCain said in a statement.

    Cowan said, “Jack Johnson was one of the great African-American athletes. His skill and perseverance to get back up every time he was knocked down made him a champion in the eyes of the sports world and for those who, like him, pursued their dreams despite racial intolerance.”

    Cowan is Massachusetts’ second black senator. He was appointed by Gov. Deval Patrick to fill the vacancy after former Democratic Senator John Kerry became Secretary of State.

    Lamborghini unveils $3.9 million Veneno, with all 3 sold out

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    The Veneno is the fastest, most powerful Lamborghini ever built.

    GENEVA (AP) — Who buys a €3 million ($3.9 million) car? Not you.

    Lamborghini's run of the new Veneno is sold out — though it only made three.

    The latest in its tradition of bespoke cars, the Veneno is the fastest, most powerful Lamborghini ever built. At the Geneva Motor Show, where it was revealed Monday night, Lamborghini CEO Stephan Winkelmann made sure to rev the engine as he drove the car out on stage.

    Rest assured, the Veneno, which is named for an infamous fighting bull, sounds like a Lamborghini.

    But why build a car for just three people?

    "It gives you a high degree of freedom in terms of the design, you can test materials and new technologies, it has a halo effect on the other products," said Winkelmann. "Last but not least, you're fulfilling dreams, at least for a few people."

    A carmaker like Lamborghini isn't immune from the travails of the economy, but sales of high-end cars, like many luxury products, have been surprisingly resilient. And a one-off like the Veneno creates a lot of buzz — or a halo — for the rest of the brand. Lamborghini is also part of the highly successful Volkswagen Group, which is weathering the European storm better than others.

    Two of the buyers — both Americans — were in Geneva to get their first look at the car, having signed the contract long ago.

    Antoine Dominic, who is the principal in a Lamborghini dealership on Long Island, and Kris Singh II, a Floridian who is the managing director of investment firm Tequesta Investments, both have collections of exotic cars and both plan to actually use the car.


    UNDER THE HOOD: Powering the Veneno is a 12-cylinder engine and a 7-speed transmission with five different driving modes. Lamborghini says the Veneno can reach speeds of 220 miles per hour (355 kilometers per hour) and accelerates from 0-60 mph in 2.8 seconds.


    OUTSIDE: The body is carbon-fiber to keep the car as light as possible and allow for that quick acceleration. The shape is angular and muscular, with cut-outs sprinkled throughout and a back fin that fades into the roof. The rear looks like the bottom of a rocket ship, and the car nearly kisses the ground it sits so low.


    INSIDE: Scissor doors open up to reveal an interior also clad in carbon-fiber. The feel is suede-like throughout, but the dashboard has a fairly standard look. You don't feel as if you're about to take off.


    CHEERS: The customers are thrilled — though they have yet to actually get behind the wheel. "It's rolling artwork, it's like owning the Mona Lisa," said Singh. "I look forward to driving it."

    Dominic said that can be hard since it turns so many heads. He plans to take it out at 5 a.m. on a Sunday when he finally gets it.


    OPEN QUESTIONS: Lamborghini is billing the Veneno as a race car that just happens to be street legal — but how closely they've hewn to racing technology is unclear. "It sounds like they're trying to use the cache of a racing vehicle but not go the whole way," said Paul Newton, an analyst with I.H.S. Automotive.

    Investigators continue to probe Williamsburg tree-cutting accident that took life of 58-year-old Duane Miller of Vermont

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    Investigatators from OSHA and the state police continue to probe the fall.

    WILLIAMSBURG -- Investigators have identified the man who lost his life in a fall while he was conducting tree-cutting work Monday afternoon in Haydenville as 58-year-old Duane Miller of Vermont.

    Northwestern District Attorney Daniel E. Sullivan stated in a release that Miller was the owner of Team Paint and Tree Service.

    Fire Chief Donald Lawton said the fall was reported at about 1 p.m. on Main Street in the Haydenville section of the town.

    State Police assigned to the Northwestern District Attorney’s Office and the Occupation Safety & Health Administration are investigating the accident.


    MoveOn.org members voting on whether to endorse Ed Markey or Stephen Lynch in special Senate race

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    Members of the progressive activist group MoveOn.org are voting over the next 24 hours to determine if the group will officially endorse a candidate in the Democratic Primary leading up to the special Senate election in Massachusetts.

    Members of the progressive activist group MoveOn.org are voting over the next 24 hours to determine if the group will officially endorse a candidate in the Democratic Primary leading up to the special Senate election in Massachusetts.

    In an email to the group's members, MoveOn explained that in races with two candidates, such as the Democratic contest between U.S. Rep. Edward Markey and U.S. Rep. Stephen Lynch, a candidate must secure two-thirds of the vote to be endorsed. If no candidate hits the required threshold, the group may not officially support a candidate in the primary.

    But even with an endorsement, aside from contributing maximum legal donations to either Democratic candidate, MoveOn, like all third-party groups, have their hands tied to a degree thanks to the People's Pledge signed by Markey and Lynch. The agreement, similar to the one signed by Democrat Elizabeth Warren and Republican Scott Brown in the 2012 Senate contest, penalizes a candidate when an outside group spends cash advertising to their benefit or to their opponent's detriment.

    Still, an endorsement may generate additional support and campaign cash for a candidate considering the group's reported membership of more than 7 million people.

    In the Brown/Warren Senate race, the group contributed more than $1 million to the Democratic challenger and its members volunteered on her behalf across the state. In the end, Warren defeated Brown, a popular incumbent who won his seat in 2010, by an eight-point margin: 54-46 percent.

    On April 30, Markey and Lynch will square off for the Democratic nod to proceed to the general election, as will GOP candidates including former Navy SEAL Gabriel Gomez, U.S. Attorney Michael Sullivan and State Rep. Daniel Winslow.

    Markey, Lynch and Gomez have all submitted their signatures to the Secretary of State's office while Sullivan and Winslow have said they believe they have the 10,000 necessary signatures to make the ballot. The deadline for certification of the signatures by the state is 5 p.m. Wednesday.


    National Guard schedules F-15 night training flights from Westfield

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    The Guard announced the missions to alert residents who may be startled by the increase in military aircraft activity during the evening hours.

    082210 barnes 104th fighter wing f-15 takeoff.JPG An F-15 fighter jet from the 104th Air Wing at Barnes Regional Airport in Westfield takes off.  

    WESTFIELD – The 104th Fighter Wing at Barnes Air National Guard Base is scheduled to conduct night training missions with F-15 aircraft March 11 through March 14.

    The aircraft will launch around 6:30 p.m. and are scheduled to land before 10 p.m. each night.

    The Guard announced the missions to alert residents who may be startled by the increase in military aircraft activity during the evening hours.

    The unit concentrates its evening training missions during the winter months due to the prolonged hours of darkness, which maximizes training opportunities while decreasing the impact on the local area.

    The F-15s stationed at Barnes provide around-the-clock protection to the Northeastern United States, an area encompassing one-quarter of the nation’s population.

    Springfield police: 3 of the 333 firearms turned in during buyback were assault weapons

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    Police are working to determine if any of the firearms were stolen.

    buyback.JPG A line snakes around the lobby of the Springfield Police Department, 130 Pearl St., during a gun buyback program Saturday that drew hundreds and collected more than 330 guns.  

    SPRINGFIELD — Three of the 333 firearms handed over during a seven-hour buyback conducted by Springfield police on Saturday were deemed by officers to be assault weapons.

    Officer Richard Rodrigues said one of the weapons was a Chinese model, another resembled an AR-15 and the third was a Hi-Tec.

    Each one of those weapons netted $100 worth of VISA gift cards for those who turned them in. Information on the specific models was not immediately available.

    The AR-15 has figured prominently in the national debate over firearms in wake of the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting last December in Newtown, Conn. The shooter used such a semiautomatic weapon to take 26 lives at the school, investigators have said.

    Closer to home, an Olympic Arms AR-15 was wielded by a suspect during an April 13, 2012 shootout in Chicopee that left a state trooper and bystander wounded and the shooter dead by his own hand.

    Of the firearms turned in Saturday, 112 were shotguns, 101 were handguns, 117 were rifles and three were black powder guns, Rodrigues said.

    Two additional firearms, deemed by police firearm experts as potentially rare, will be handed over to the museum at the Springfield Armory National Historic Site for further evaluation. One is a so-called pepperbox handgun and the other is a musket, Rodrigues said.

    Police, meanwhile, are continuing to determine whether any of the firearms handed in during the buyback were stolen, Sgt. John M. Delaney said. If so, officers will attempt to contact their rightful owners to give them the opportunity to reclaim them.

    All of the firearms, with the exception of those that may be returned to their owners and potentially the two to be further examined by the museum, will be destroyed, Delaney, aide to Commissioner Fitchet said.

    Those who turned in firearms, other than those deemed to be assault weapons, received $50 VISA gift cards.

    The buyback, initially funded at $7,500, was paid for by private donors, including Convenient Cards at Monarch Place and trauma and pediatric surgeons at Baystate Medical Center.

    Organizers ran out of the $7,500 worth of $50 gift cards within the first two hours and those coming later received vouchers redeemable for gift cards at Convenient Cards, which made up the difference.

    Delaney said nearly 60 people redeemed their gift cards at Convenient Cards on Monday.

    Obituaries today: Carolynne Stevens was physical therapist at Chicopee VNA

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    Obituaries from The Republican.

     
    030513-Carolynne-Stevens.jpg Carolynne Stevens  

    Carolynne S. Stevens, 49, of Ludlow, passed away on Friday. She was born in Molesworth, Huntingdonshire, England. Raised in Hampden, she graduated from Minnechaug Regional High School in 1981 and received a bachelor of science degree from Boston University. Upon graduation, she worked as a physical therapist for 27 years, most recently with the Chicopee VNA.

    Obituaries from The Republican:


    GOP Senate candidates to hold first debate March 12 at Stonehill College

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    The first Republican debate will be held March 12. The Democratic candidates will debate April 1.

    Gomez Sullivan Winslow.jpg Republican Senate candidates Gabriel Gomez, Michael Sullivan and Daniel Winslow.  

    The Republican candidates in the U.S. Senate special election have agreed to hold their first debate at Stonehill College on Tuesday, March 12.

    The Quincy Patriot Ledger reports that State Rep. Daniel Winslow, private equity investor Gabriel Gomez and former U.S. Attorney Michael Sullivan will meet for the first time in an hour-long debate from 7 to 8 p.m. at the Martin Institute for Law & Society at Stonehill College in Easton.

    The event is co-sponsored by WickedLocal/Gatehouse Media, WCVB Channel 5 and WGBH. Chazy Dowaliby, editor of The Patriot Ledger and The Enterprise, will moderate the forum, and panelists include WCBV Channel 5 Senior Political reporter Janet Wu and The Patriot Ledger’s Chris Burrell. The debate will be free and open to the public.

    According to the Martin Institute, the debate will not have a formal or rigid debate format, but will allow the candidates to have a conversation on each question and point out their differences. There will be no questions allowed from the audience.

    Democratic Senate candidates U.S. Reps. Edward Markey and Stephen Lynch will debate at Stonehill College on April 1. Markey and Lynch have agreed to six debates, including debates in Springfield and Worcester.

    Winslow has challenged his Republican opponents to nine debates, one in every congressional district, but the three candidates have not yet agreed on either the total number of debates or their locations.

    The primary will be held April 30 with the general election June 25.

    State police: Ramon Suero of New York City, arrested following vehicle stop in Sturbridge, wore kilo of cocaine bandoleer-style

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    The cocaine has a street value of approximately $24,000 and another $28,050 in cash was found in vehicle.

    P3050143.JPG 03.05.2013 | STURBRIDGE -- 40-year-old New York City resident Ramon Suero, one of three suspects arrested by state police following a motor vehicle stop on Interstate 84, wore these bags of cocaine, worth about $24,000 on the street, strapped like a bandoleer around his body, state police said.  

    STURBRIDGE — A New York City man, one of three suspects arrested following a motor vehicle stop on Interstate 84 early Tuesday, had approximately $24,000 worth of cocaine packed in bags and strapped like a bandoleer around his body, state police said.

    Trooper Dylan Morris stopped the livery van, eastbound on Interstate 84, and determined that the driver, Ferilyn Holguin, 27, also from New York City, had an outstanding warrant for driving without a license, state police said.

    As he was being arrested on that warrant, Holguin requested that a passenger, 40-year-old Ramon Suero from New York City, take control of the van.

    Further investigation revealed that Suero was concealing a kilo of cocaine in six heat-sealed bags strapped around his body, state police said. Suero was arrested and charged with trafficking cocaine.

    A second passenger, Manuel Perez, 44, of Lawrence, also had an outstanding warrant for driving without a license. He was arrested on that warrant.

    During a search of the vehicle, state police found $28,050 in cash hidden in a black plastic bag.

    Hadley police seek public's help as they seek shoplifters who allegedly used children to help steal electronics from Best Buy

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    The suspects entered the Best Buy between 6:30 and 7 p.m. on Friday.

    hadley-shoplifting_4275.jpg 3-5-13 - Hadley - Police seek public's help as they seek two adult suspects who allegedly used three young children to help steal electronics from the Best Buy store in the Hampshire Mall last Friday night.  

    HADLEY - Police seek the public’s help as they seek to identify a man and woman who allegedly used three young children to help steal electronics from the Best Buy in the Hampshire Mall early Friday night.

    Witnesses told police the incident occurred between 6:30 and 7 p.m. when the couple sent a child, approximately 10 years old, into the store to select numerous electronic items and place them in a single location, Officer Mitchell Kuc said.

    When the adult suspects entered the store, two younger children with them started to run around the store, diverting the attention of store employees, Kuc said.

    IMG_4274.JPG  

    While that was going on, the adults collected the items, placed them in a stroller and left the store in what is believed to be a gray Honda Accord or Toyota Camry, Kuc said.

    The suspects are suspected to have made of with several thousand dollars worth of electronics including Nintendo Wiis. “We know it was a lot of stuff,” Kuc said.

    Although it's not uncommon for shoplifting suspects to bring children into a store, it is unusual for them to actually enlist their aid in stealing items, Kuc said

    Surveillance photos release by police show the suspects near the Target store in the same mall.

    Those with information are asked to call Hadley Police at (413) 584-0883.


    Public, private sectors collaborate to help Western Massachusetts homeless with jobs, training with $300,000 Firemen Foundation grant

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    The $300,000 grant from the Paul and Phyllis Fireman Charitable Foundation will link agencies around the region to provide training and aid to 76 families toward stable employment.

    HOLYOKE — A coalition of private and public agencies and officials gathered at Holyoke Community College on Tuesday to praise a $300,000 grant from the Paul and Phyllis Fireman Charitable Foundation under a pilot program aimed at connecting homeless families to training and employment to help get them into permanent housing.

    The grant will aid the Secure Jobs Connect program, working with 76 families over a one-year period to help them obtain employment through an approach that integrates training, community service, work experience, child care and transportation needs, organizers said.

    “We are thrilled to participate in this exciting opportunity to demonstrate how homeless families can become housing stable with stable employment,” said Pamela Schwartz, director of the Western Massachusetts Network to End Homelessness. “We have a model that is already on its way to proving successful.”

    Aaron Gornstein, undersecretary of the state Department of Housing and Community Development, said that an ongoing private-public partnership is already showing success in dealing with homelessness. The number of homeless families in motels and hotels has declined by 45 percent since July 31, in Massachusetts, dropping from 513 families on July 31, to 283 families as of March 1, Gornstein said.

    The Corporation for Public Management is the lead employment and training agency for the foundation-funded pilot program, and is joined by various public and private sector organizations including CareerPoint, ServiceNet, regional housing authorities, regional employment boards, community colleges, business and child care providers across Western Massachusetts.

    This story will be updated later today on MassLive.com; the complete story will be published on Wednesday in The Republican.

    Worker killed by lion at wild animal park in California was female intern

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    The 26-year-old intern was attacked and killed when she entered the lion's enclosure, Cat Haven's founder said, but he refused to answer questions or provide more details.

    By GOSIA WOZNIACKA
    and TRACIE CONE

    DUNLAP, Calif. — A female intern-volunteer was killed Wednesday by a lion at a private wild animal park in Central California, and state and local authorities were trying to determine what might have caused the fatal attack.

    Cat Haven founder and executive director Dale Anderson was crying as he read a one-sentence statement about the fatal mauling at the exotic animal zoo he has operated since 1993.

    The 26-year-old intern was attacked and killed when she entered the lion's enclosure, Anderson said, but he refused to answer questions or provide more details.

    Sheriff's deputies responding to an emergency call from Cat Haven, in the Sierra Nevada foothills about 45 miles east of Fresno, found the woman severely injured and still lying inside the enclosure with the lion nearby, Fresno County sheriff's Lt. Bob Miller said.

    Another park worker had unsuccessfully tried luring the lion away and into a separate pen, so deputies shot and killed it so they could reach the wounded woman, who died at the scene, Miller said.

    Investigators were trying to determine why the intern was inside the enclosure and what might have provoked the attack, sheriff's Sgt. Greg Collins said. The facility is normally closed on Wednesdays, and only one other worker was there when the mauling happened, Collins said.

    The male African lion, a 4-year-old male named Couscous, had been raised at Cat Haven since it was a cub, said Tanya Osegueda, a spokeswoman for Project Survival, the nonprofit that operates the animal park. Osegueda did not know how the park acquired the cub.

    Cat Haven is a 100-acre facility just west of Kings Canyon National Park. Since the property opened in 1993, it has housed numerous big cats, including tigers, leopards and other exotic species. It is permitted to house exotic animals by the California Department of Fish and Wildlife and is regulated as a zoo by the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

    Results of the last 13 inspections by the Department of Agriculture's Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service show no violations dating back to March 2010. The most recent inspection was Feb. 4, USDA records show.

    Despite state regulations that require annual inspections, the California Department of Fish and Wildlife most recently inspected the facility in January 2011.

    "We have to do the best we can with the resources we're provided," said department spokeswoman Jordan Traverso.

    The inspector's written comments were "facility in good condition." The inspector checked gates, enclosures, water supplies, drainage, cleanliness, ventilation and the general health of the animals.

    Department spokeswoman Janice Mackey said she was unaware if any state regulations would prohibit an employee from entering an exotic animal's enclosure.

    She said each species is identified on the permit, and the animals must be used for scientific or educational purposes only.

    "We don't allow them to be used as pets," Mackey said.

    Actress Tippi Hedren, who founded the founded the Shambala Preserve in Southern California, home to 53 seized or abandoned exotic pets, expressed dismay over the killing of the lion.

    "It wasn't the lion's fault. It's the human's fault always. I've got 40 years behind me. I know what I'm talking about," Hedren said.

    A movie was made at Shambala several years ago and several people were injured. "Two were nearly killed," she said.

    "Lions are one of the four most dangerous animals in the world. There is nothing you can do. When they get a thought pattern, there is nothing short of a bullet to the brain that will stop them," Hedren said.

    Nicole Paquette, vice president of the Human Society of the United States, voiced similar concerns.

    "She should have never been in the enclosure with him," Paquette said of the victim. "These are big cats that are extremely dangerous, and they placed a volunteer in the actual cage with a wild animal. That should have never happened."

    Officials at another big cat sanctuary, Big Cat Rescue in Tampa, Fla., told The Associated Press last year that at least 21 people, including five children, have been killed and 246 mauled by exotic cats since 1990. Over that period, 254 cats escaped and 143 were killed.

    Tatiana, a tiger at the San Francisco Zoo, was killed by police after jumping out of its enclosure and fatally mauling a 17-year-old boy and injuring two other people in 2007.

    Cat Haven has housed Bengal tigers, Siberian lynx, caracals, jaguars and leopards of various types as well as bobcats native to the area. Anderson described the private zoo several years ago as one of a handful of facilities across the U.S. that has all of the big cat species in one place.

    The facility's website says it promotes conservation and preservation of wild cats in their native habitats and offers visitors tours and educational outreach.

    Anderson said Project Survival would investigate to see if the intern and the other worker who was on-site followed the group's protocols.

    "We take every precaution to ensure the safety of our staff, animals and guests," he said in a written statement.

    Associated Press writers Garance Burke in San Francisco and Sue Manning in Los Angeles contributed to this report.

    Superintendent internship of Sherri Killins, state commissioner of Early Education and Care, with Ware schools gets review by Massachusetts education officials

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    The Republican and MassLive.com reported last month that Ware School Superintendent Mary-Elizabeth Beach was serving as a mentor to Killins.

    Sherri Killins Mary Beach mugs.jpg State Commissioner of Early Education and Care Sherri Killins, left, is seen in this composite of file photos with Ware Superintendent of Schools Mary Elizabeth Beach.  

    BOSTON – The chairman of the Massachusetts Board of Early Education and Care is asking for more information about Early Education and Care Commissioner Sherri Killins’ internship with the Ware Public Schools.

    An aide to Gov. Deval Patrick said Wednesday that chairman J.D. Chesloff has asked Education Secretary Matt Malone to review the matter, which he is doing.

    The Republican and MassLive.com reported Feb. 16 that Ware School Superintendent Mary-Elizabeth Beach was serving as a mentor to Killins.

    In the February interview, the women said prospective superintendent candidates must complete a tutoring program of at least 300 hours.

    Killins, reached by telephone Wednesday, said the reaction from chairman Chesloff is “disappointing.”

    She said Chesloff knows her, is familiar with her work and of her favorable performance reviews. “He knows better,” she said.

    She said she chose to shadow Beach, whom she has known for four years, because Beach has extensive experience in school administration in Washington, D.C., Springfield and Ware.

    Shadowing Beach allows Killins to see how state and district policies affect early education.

    She said being mentored by Beach counts toward the 300 hours of tutoring should Killins one day choose to seek a superintendent position, but she reiterated that decision is “not on my radar screen.”

    “If I ever wanted to be a superintendent, I have to do 300 hours – and we’re a long way from that.”

    Because of her own busy schedule, Killins said she is only being able to squeeze in a few hours per month shadowing Beach, and said there is no way she could complete the 300-hour requirement by the end of this year.

    Killins has been commissioner since 2009 and earned more than $197,000 last year. She holds a doctorate in counseling psychology from the University of Sarasota in Florida and an MBA from Johns Hopkins University.

    In the February interview she explained her interest in being a school superintendent. She said as a political appointee her job ends once Gov. Deval L. Patrick leaves office. “I’ll be looking for a job.”

    Plus, she said, she believes a superintendent’s job is rewarding.


    Material from the Associated Press was used in this report.

    Rice farm stand in Wilbraham approved to reopen under new ownership

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    Abutter Maureen Margolis questioned whether 25 parking spaces will be sufficient.

    2004 rice fruit farm stand.JPG Dominic Maloni of Agawam wants to reopen the former Rice Fruit Farm agricultural farm stand in Wilbraham and sell the same things that Jesse Rice sold for many years, including apples, ice cream, pies, muffins, cookies and Christmas trees.  

    WILBRAHAM - The Planning Board on Wednesday approved a special permit for Anthony and Cynthia Maloni, of Agawam, and their son, Dominic Maloni, of Wilbraham, to reopen the Rice farm stand at 751-53 Main Street.

    Dominic Maloni said his goal is to have the farm stand up and running by July 1.

    Planning Board Chairman Richard Butler said voters at last May’s annual Town Meeting approved passage of a heritage farm stand bylaw.

    “Tonight we are issuing a special permit under the bylaw,” he said.

    The Rice farm stand has been closed for four years. Jesse Rice, the longtime owner of Rice Fruit Farm died in November 2010 at the age of 91. The Rice family owned Rice Fruit Farm for more than 100 years. A large portion of the property has been preserved as Rice Nature Preserve.

    Dominic Maloni said his first order of business once he reopens the farm stand on Main Street is to get an ice cream stand up and running with hard and soft ice cream made on the premises.

    The Maloni family operates Cindy’s Drive In on Route 202 in Granby, which sells burgers and ice cream.

    Maloni said he plans to operate a restaurant for grilled sandwiches and breakfast inside the farm stand, besides selling ice cream, vegetables and refrigerated foods such as milk, cheese, juice and fruit.

    Maloni said he also plans to sell coffee and pastries and local vegetables.

    He said he will have seating for 60, inside and outside, and 25 parking spaces.

    Maureen Margolis, an abutter to the property, said she welcomes the reopening of the farm stand, but she asked the Planning Board whether 25 parking spaces will be enough.

    Maloni said there is a grass area next door where more parking can be added, if needed.

    The farm stand will be open from 6 a.m. to 9 p.m. in the summer and until 10 p.m. on Friday and Saturday, Maloni said.

    Butler said he gets questions from many residents about when the farm stand is reopening.

    He said Rice’s was an institution in Wilbraham that has been missed since it has been closed.

    Easthampton City Council approves overtime spending, seed money for new athletic fields

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    The Easthampton City Council approved $100,000 for police.

    FIELD.JPG Kenneth M. Chapin, of Easthampton, helps lay sod on Daley Field, a new baseball field that was constructed at Nonotuck Park in Easthampton in 2007. The city is hoping to add three new fields to the park.  

    EASTHAMPTON – The City Council approved three funding requests during a public hearing Wednesday night, including $100,000 for an unexpected shortfall in the police department budget.

    The money in part was needed to buy back sick leave for two officers who are forced to retire because of job-related injuries, uniform allowance for a new officer hired to replace one of those officers as well as one-time only education incentive payments that had not be budgeted, said Mayor Michael A. Tautznik.

    The council supported the transfer from reserve funds unanimously.

    Last month, the council unanimously approved a $103,000 request to cover current and expected overtime costs through the remaining fiscal year that ends June 30.

    Two firefighters are currently out of work, one for more than a year and another since last June.

    This was the second year in a row that public safety budgets needed to be augmented.

    The council Wednesday night also voted to appropriate $17,000 for a lawn mower needed for the Parks and Recreation Department.

    With those expenditures, $381,100 remains in the city’s free cash account.

    The council, meanwhile, will be considering another $227,900 in additional funding requests over the next month.

    If approved, the city would have about $153,200 in reserves, according to the latest numbers from Finance Director Melissa Zawadzki.

    The council also approved $27,000 in Community Preservation Act funding for the design of three new athletic fields for Nonotuck Park. That public hearing drew about a dozen people.

    John Mason, director of Park and Recreation, said they would be applying for additional community preservation money for the eventual work but that both baseball and soccer programs would contribute.

    “It’s a great use of CPA money,” said Fire Chief David Mottor, who was speaking as a member of the Easthampton Little League board. He said the park is a city jewel. But he said, “We don’t have enough room for children to play.”

    High school programs also use the soccer and baseball fields.

    Mason said the city currently has seven baseball and three soccer fields. The money requested is for the design of two baseball fields and one soccer field.

    Tautznik said money from the Massachusetts Parkland Acquisitions and Renovations for Communities fund could be available to help fund the fields once they have a better idea of the cost.

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