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Obama visits Oklahoma tornado victims

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President Barack Obama visited tornado-devastated Moore, Okla., Sunday, consoling people staggered by the loss of life and property and promising that the government will be behind them "every step of the way."


By NEDRA PICKLER

MOORE, Okla. — President Barack Obama visited tornado-devastated Moore, Okla., Sunday, consoling people staggered by the loss of life and property and promising that the government will be behind them "every step of the way."

"I'm just a messenger here," the president said, saying "folks are behind you" across America. He offered moral and monetary support in the wake of the monstrous EF5 tornado that killed 24 people, including 10 children, last Monday afternoon.

Standing with Gov. Mary Fallin and other state and federal officials, Obama noted a substantial rebuilding job ahead and said that "our hearts go out to you."

"This is a strong community with strong character. There's no doubt they will bounce back," he said. "But they need help."

The White House said the Federal Emergency Management Agency has already provided $57 million in rebates and incentives to help build about 12,000 storm shelters in Oklahoma. "These storm shelters can be the difference between life and death," presidential spokesman Josh Earnest told reporters accompanying Obama to Oklahoma on Air Force One.

For Obama, Sunday's visit had an all-too-familiar ring.

Only five months into his second term, he has traveled to the northeast to console people in the wake of the Boston Marathon bombing, and visited Connecticut and Arizona to comfort people traumatized by shooting rampages. He also has undertaken his consoler-in-chief role at the site of plant explosions and mine disasters, not to mention a series of natural disasters including Joplin, Mo., and the Jersey Shore, which was heavily damaged by Superstorm Sandy last year.

Once on the ground, Obama urged the American people to make contributions, saying the damage was "pretty hard to comprehend."

Shortly after his arrival on a partly cloudy day, Obama rode past grassy fields strewn with scattered debris, witnessing devastation so awesome that it appeared as if garbage had literally rained from the sky. His first stop was the demolished site of the Plaza Towers Elementary School, where seven students were killed when the tornado turned the one-story building into a heap of bricks, broken concrete and twisted metal.

"I know this is tough," he told superintendent Susie Pierce as he gripped her hand. As he walked, the demolished school was on his left and on his right, homes as far as the eye could see were reduced to piles of rubble. Vehicles were turned upside down and toys like a pink doll carriage and children's books were strewn with furniture and ripped out wall insulation. Every tree had been stripped of its leaves and bark.

Obama at one point joined the Lewis family, which lost their home behind the school. He said the important thing was that they survived and could replace their things.

"What a mess," he told their son Zack, a third grader at the shattered school. Zack's father, Scott, ran into the school just before the storm hit and ran with his terrified son back to their home's storm shelter.

"You've got some story to tell," Obama told the boy. "This is something you'll remember all your life."

Obama later met privately with victims' families at Moore Fire Department Station (hash)1, which has turned into a command center with dozens of first responders sitting at folding tables where fire trucks are normally parked. Obama marveled that they saved so many lives "given the devastation."

"I know this is tough," he told superintendent Susie Pierce as he gripped her hand.

As he descended the stairs upon landing at Tinker Air Base near here, Obama was greeted first by Fallin, who had said earlier she appreciated the visit, but that her state also needed quick action from FEMA.

The Republican governor said that so far, the agency has done a great job of speeding relief and cash assistance to affected families, but said she's concerned about the long run.

"There's going to come a time when there's going to be a tremendous amount of need once we begin the debris clearing, which we already have, but really get it cleared off to where we need to start rebuilding these homes, rebuilding these businesses," she said on CBS' "Face the Nation." ''And we know at different times in the past, money hasn't come always as quickly as it should."

Fallin said the money is particularly vital for the victims. "A lot of people lose their checkbooks, they lose their credit cards, they lose their driver's license, their birth certificates, their insurance papers, they lose everything, and they have no cash. And some of the banks were even hit, the ATM machines, so people need cash to get immediate needs," she said on CBS.

Earnest touted the federal contributions so far, including Obama's signing of a disaster declaration within hours of the storm to speed aid from the Federal Emergency Management Agency. Earnest said that 450 FEMA personnel were working on the ground in Oklahoma and have delivered 43,000 meals, 150,000 liters of water and thousands of cots, blankets and tarps. He said 4,200 people have applied for disaster assistance, and $3.4 million in payments have been approved.

Among the tornado victims were 10 children, including two sisters pulled by the strong winds out of their mother's grasp, an infant who died along with his mother trying to ride out the storm in a convenience store and seven students at Plaza Towers. Many students were pulled from the rubble after the school was destroyed.

After Obama departed, Fallin hosted an interdenominational religious service that drew 2,000 people.

"God will give us the ability to mend our broken hearts," Fallin said at the end of the 80-minute service. "We may be knocked down, but we will rise up again, and for that we thank God."

Associated Press Writer Justin Juozapavicius contributed to this report.


Amherst bicycle accident kills 22-year-old

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The victim, Livingston Pangburn, was struck by a truck that was turning into the Amherst College campus, police said.

AMHERST — A 22-year-old was killed while riding a bicycle near the Amherst College campus Sunday.

Livingston Pangburn, of Newton, was struck by a truck at about 4 p.m. Pangburn was brought to Baystate Medical Center in Springfield and was pronounced dead, said Mary Carey, communications director for the Northwestern District Attorney's office.

An initial police investigation indicated the collision involved Pangburn, who was traveling east on College Street, and a truck turning into the Amherst College campus, Carey said.

The driver of the truck was unharmed and remained at the scene. No charges were immediately filed against him.

The Amherst Police Department, the Massachusetts State Police Collision Analysis and Reconstruction Section and the Massachusetts State Police detectives unit attached to the district attorney's office are investigating the collision, Carey said.

Voices of the Valley: Maria Ferrer, owner of MD Beauty Salon and Supplies, Holyoke

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Salon owner Maria Ferrer said the key to her business is treating customers well.

maria.JPGMaria Ferrer is the owner MD Beauty Salon and Supplies 

Maria Ferrer
Owner
MD Beauty Salon and Supplies
396 High St.
Holyoke

I began in the year 2000. Basically, we do all kinds of hair styling, coloring, relaxing. We do 100 percent hair extensions from a company in Italy. The big thing about them is we don't use glue, we use gel, so it doesn't damage people's hair.

More than doing all kinds of stuff for people's hair, we really take care of people. In order to do that, we condition the customer's hair. It's the same as if you go to a doctor you don't know, there's questions you ask of the customer.

We have good customer service. We treat our customers good. ... We offer coffee and (sometimes) food to our customers. Particularly myself, we're very careful that we treat customers well. We meet one time a month to see what we can do better.

Right now, I have four full-time (employees) and two part time. It's 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, and most of the time on Friday and Saturday, we start at 8:30 a.m. (and work) to 6 or 7 p.m.

(The poor economy) impacted every business in town. Most people say women like to look pretty. Particularly, we want our hair to look good. We want our nails to look good. (But) I'm OK with the economy, I don't see a big impact.

The future? It looks good. You know, business depends on how good you manage your business and the passion that you feel. It's based on what you can offer to people and the best you can do.

Holyoke Public Library renovations likely done in time for new school year

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Construction began in January 2012. The library has been moved to a temporary space, a City Hall auditorium at High and Dwight streets, in the interim.

052113-holyoke-public-library-front.JPGRenovations continue at the Holyoke Public Library, as seen from the corner of Maple and Essex streets.  

HOLYOKE — A $14.5-million project to renovate the Holyoke Public Library should be copmpleted in time for school to start in the fall, said Library Director Maria G. Pagan.

Holyoke Public Library was originally constructed in 1902 with approximately 25,064 square feet. The renovation and expansion project will add 19,000 square feet, bringing the library to a total of 38,000 square feet.

The project will address a wide range of needs related to customer service and amenities, Pagan said. That work will include accessibility, collections and technology, including public computer space, and a larger children's library.

Construction began in January 2012. The library has been moved to a temporary space, a City Hall auditorium at High and Dwight streets, in the interim.

MGM Resorts confident it will pass Massachusetts background investigation in pursuit of Springfield casino

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MGM is paying $75,000 to reimburse the city for the costs of mailing a letter to about 60,000 households to educate voters that a ballot question is being held before the state completes background checks.

When people in Springfield cast ballots on a proposed MGM casino on July 16, the vote will take place before an important decision by the state.

Even if voters approve the casino project, Las Vegas-based MGM will still need to pass a background check by the investigations and enforcement bureau of the Massachusetts Gaming Commission before it can apply for an operating license. Under the commission's two-step licensing process, MGM first needs to clear the investigation on finances and ethics in order to then seek the lone license in Western Massachusetts to operate a resort casino.

mathis2.JPG Michael Mathis, vice president of global gaming development for MGM, met with the Indian Orchard Citizens Council in early January.  

MGM, as required under state regulations, is paying $75,000 to reimburse the city for the costs of mailing a letter to 59,702 households to educate voters that the ballot question is being held before the commission completes background checks. It cost about $36,000 just for postage.

The letters were sent on Friday and should have started to arrive at mailboxes on Saturday, said Springfield Election Commissioner Gladys Oyola.

The mayor of Springfield and the City Council both approved holding the ballot question before completion of the investigation. Both also approved a host community agreement with MGM that is mentioned in the letter.

Michael Mathis, vice president of global development for MGM, said he is confident the company will pass the background checks.

"We're not concerned about the ultimate result of the background check," Mathis said. "It's a very comprehensive process and one that we have went through in a number of other jurisdictions."

MGM is planning a $851 million casino on 14.5 acres in the South End of Springfield's downtown. MGM needs approval of city voters before it can apply to the commission for a license to operate the resort.

The letter, signed by Springfield Mayor Domenic J. Sarno, says in part: "As part of the background checks, the commission reviews such things as the integrity, honesty, good character and reputation of the applicant; the financial stability, integrity and background of the applicant; the business practices and the business ability of the applicant to establish and maintain a successful gaming establishment; and whether the applicant has a history of compliance with gaming licensing requirements in other jurisdictions."

sarno.JPGSpringfield Mayor Domenic J. Sarno 

Stephen P. Crosby, chairman of the gaming commission, said it is possible MGM could fail the background check, but he said it is more likely a partner would be found unsuitable and would have to be replaced.

Crosby said the gaming commission is looking at every area where MGM does business, but he does not comment on investigations.

A spokeswoman for the commission said background investigations on casino resorts should be complete by the end of August or early September.

The commission would award the Western Massachusetts casino license around February of next year.

One possible issue for MGM could be in New Jersey.

MGM, which is proposing a casino in Springfield, agreed to divest its part ownership of a New Jersey casino in 2010, after New Jersey's Division of Gaming Enforcement found a co-owner of MGM's casino in Macau, Pansy Ho, to be an "unsuitable" partner for MGM because of her financial ties to her father, Stanley Ho, who had connections to organized crime, according to 2009 report by the New Jersey division.

In February, MGM petitioned New Jersey for the right to reapply for its license in New Jersey. The New Jersey Casino Control Commission voted to approve MGM's request to again seek the license. MGM is seeking to reacquire its interest in the Borgata, an Atlantic City casino.

In its filing in New Jersey, MGM said it now controls 51 percent of MGM China Holdings, which is the parent of MGM Macau, cutting Pansy Ho's ownership to 27 percent.

Stanley Ho no longer has ownership in his daughter's company, and is having health problems, according to MGM.

Lisa Spengler, a spokeswoman for the New Jersey Division of Gaming Enforcement, said there is no timetable for when an investigation into MGM's petition needs to be completed. It will take as long as necessary to complete a thorough investigation, she said by e-mail.

Once the investigation is completed, a report is prepared by the division, then the state Casino Control Commission will vote on whether to actually grant MGM's request to again hold a license in New Jersey.

Mathis said he was not concerned about how the review in New Jersey might affect the ultimate determination on the company's suitability in Massachusetts.

"In terms of MGM Springfield, none of our Asian relationships are an issue," Mathis added. "They are not partners (in the Springfield project) It's not an issue for Springfield."

Kevin E. Kennedy, chief development officer in Springfield, said city officials feel good about holding the ballot question before the commission completes background checks. Kennedy said he is confident that MGM will pass the background checks.

MGM would compete with two other operators for the Western Massachusetts license. The Mohegan Sun is planning a casino in Palmer and Hard Rock International is proposing a casino on property at the Eastern States Exposition in West Springfield.

Staff writer Suzanne McLaughlin contributed.

Notice to Springfield Voters on MGM Referendum by masslive

Many in North Amherst hoping to stop student housing development

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Amherst Town Meeting will consider a proposal from a group hoping to block development of 190 units of student housing.

ret.JPG"Stop the Retreat" signs are everywhere in the Cushman neighborhood in North Amherst. 

AMHERST – Driving along the streets of the Cushman neighborhood in North Amherst, it’s hard to find a lawn that doesn’t bear a red and white “Stop the Retreat” sign.

Georgia-based Landmark Properties is hoping to develop and manage The Retreat, a gated community of about 190 cottage-style units of student housing on154 acres.

It's a major development proposal in this multi-college town where conflicts abound between students and their neighbors.

“We’ll put in as much of a buffer as we possibly can,” said Landmark Properties Vice President Jason Doornbos.

Landmark has an option to buy the property, which is owned by W.D. Cowls Co., for $6.5 million. The homes would be clustered there.

The property is now under Chapter 61A development restrictions, which provide a reduced tax rate for the owner.

Having the right of first refusal before the land can be sold, the town is waiting to hear whether a bona fide offer has been made before deciding what to do.

On Wednesday night, Town Meeting will be asked to consider taking over the conservation restriction either by eminent domain or by paying as much as $1.2 million for it. The money would come from grants, gifts and about 30 percent from the town.

Members of an ad hoc group called Save Historic Cushman offered the Town Meeting article to block The Retreat.

“We certainly want to stop this development,” said Norman Ford, treasurer of the group.

“We feel it’s an inappropriate use of the land. It’s wooded now and it’s fairly steep. There are a lot of hills and gullies and whatnot. It will take a lot of blasting to put in infrastructure,” he said

The land is off of Henry Street, Flat Hills Road, and Market Hill.

Neighbors are concerned about the concentration of that many units and the parties and noise that could come with so many students living together.

“We (already) have a couple a trouble spots. Hobart Lane is one of them. The Townhouse on Meadow Street is another," Ford said.

But others say the development is proper and needed.

Town Meeting member Andrew Churchill, along with members Baer Tierkal and Claire Bertrand, wrote a letter to the Amherst Bulletin citing the need to develop taxable student housing.

“We have a pattern where Amherst is about saying no. When are we going to say yes,” Churchill said. “Here’s somebody (Landmark) who wants to develop something that we need. A group of people said no before the process could play itself out.”

MAP1.JPGThis is the site of the proposed 191-unit student housing project in North Amherst.  

Churchill said he has not taken a stand on this particular project but said, “let it go through the process, it may not be the same scope (when it’s finished.)

“We need more student housing, taxable student housing,” he said. “We have a problem fiscally, we have a housing problem. It isn’t going to get better.”

“It's like we're sitting on top of a huge oil well, but we can't figure out where to put the refinery. We miss out on revenues, everyone's cranky, and meanwhile the stuff is seeping out in inappropriate places, when it could be liquid gold,” he said.

Landmark said it understands neighbors' concerns. “Frankly, if I was in their shoes, I’d be suspicious as well,” Doornbos said.

Landmark has more than a dozen student projects of various sizes in such places as Columbia, S.C, Tallahassee, Fla., and Athens, Ga., and is completing other new projects, including a 138-unit project at Penn State University.

Landmark had to abandon a proposal to build in Chapel Hill, N.C., however, because amid heavy opposition it was unable to get a special permit. For the most part, the company is able to work with officials and neighbors to address concerns and proceed, he said.

Landmark has its own management company and will be on site with a manager on call 24 hours, seven days a week, he said. It offers one unit to police for free and will have its own security on during the warmer weekends.

Plus he said the community would be gated, requiring an identification card for entry. If there is a breach and people were crashing a party, for example, management would respond. He said the problem sites in town don't have on-site management.

“We put our money where are mouths are,” he said.

“We have been looking in Amherst for a while,” he said.

While the market is attractive, the amenities of on-site management, police apartment and gated entry are expensive, requiring the project to be "large enough," Doornbos said.

Ford believes the promise to control the unruly behavior is unrealistic. “They’re interested in making money,” he said.

Doornbos said neighbors would be able to call management with problems. In the projects they have, about 90 percent of the noise complaints are made by residents of the projects.

The Conservation Commission, meanwhile, has voted to take no position on the warrant article, said David Ziomek, director of Conservation and Development and assistant town manager.

He said the commission needed more information on this article and would offer an opinion if the offer to purchase the property is bona fide.

The Finance Committee, meanwhile, voted against it.

The $1.2 million price “is based upon the price for a similar restriction in another town. That amount is not realistic for land that is in Amherst, accessible to roads and utilities, and proximate to the University,” the board wrote.

Further, the committee wrote, “it is not realistic to assume that the current owner would agree to sell a restriction on the development of this property for the amount specified in the Article or that an appraisal would place that value on a restriction for an eminent domain proceeding.”





Springfield police continue to investigate back-to-back killings in Forest Park neighborhood

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The back-to-back slayings happened within a mile of each other about 26 hours apart, but they are unrelated, police said.

belmont homicide memorial scene.jpgA memorial shrine in honor of 22-year-old Angel Llorens continues to bloom at the corner of Hollywood Street and Belmont Avenue, the corner where the 22-year-old Forest Park resident was shot dead late on the night of Wednesday, May 22. His death was the second killing in just over 24 hours in the Springfield neighborhood, but police say the crimes are unrelated. (Conor Berry I The Republican) 

SPRINGFIELD — He was quick with a joke and made people smile. His name was Angel Llorens, and he became the city's latest homicide statistic when he was shot to death in the Forest Park neighborhood last week.

But behind that statistic was a burgeoning tattoo artist and young father who'll be sorely missed, according to friends and loved ones, who've created a memorial with candles, messages and even a smiley face balloon at the corner of Hollywood Street and Belmont Avenue, where the 22-year-old's life came to an end Wednesday night.

Police continue to investigate back-to-back shootings that claimed the lives of Llorens and 30-year-old Fabian Pacheco, both of whom were apparently targeted in unrelated crimes that occurred about 26 hours apart.

Both men were shot multiple times in familiar territory – either inside or just outside their homes – but authorities have not indicated if they have any suspects in mind. The homicides are being investigated by Springfield police detectives, who couldn't immediately be reached regarding any possible breaks in the cases.

Tuesday evening, a little more than 26 hours before Llorens was killed, Pacheco died in what appears to be a drug-related shooting at his home at 273 Orange St., according to police.

Llorens was killed the next night outside his home at 73 Hollywood St., police said. Investigators said they believe an argument between Llorens and some other men turned ugly. Someone pulled out a gun and opened fire on Llorens, hitting him in the chest and elsewhere, police said.

belmont homicide sazon sign.jpgThis sign is among the items adorning the corner of Hollywood Street and Belmont Avenue, where Angel "Sazon" Llorens was shot dead Wednesday night. His killing was the second in as many days in Springfield's Forest Park neighborhood. (Conor Berry I The Republican) 

Initial reports suggested police might be looking for three Hispanic men, but investigators have yet to update that information to include physical descriptions or any other details.

Friends described Llorens as a "great guy" with a great sense of humor who avoided trouble. But trouble found him, unfortunately, leaving his young son fatherless and a neighborhood wondering who killed Llorens, also known as "Sazon."

The shrine in his honor at the corner of Hollywood and Belmont continues to grow, and now includes a sign offering "much respect and love" to Angel and his grieving family.

"Mi mas sentido pésame para tu familia," Melitza Perez wrote in a message on Llorens' Facebook page, offering condolences to his family.

"RIP to my bro sazon!!" Gregory Dillard said in another post.

Eve Kastango Kinne, an apparent fan of Llorens' tattooing skills, wrote: "My heart is so heavy with your loss. You were a wonderful, gifted, bright individual who saw people as they were and managed to be very engaging and made others very comfortable in spite of your beautiful but intimidating tats."

Springfield police spokesman Sgt. John Delaney emphasized that the shootings were unrelated and that area residents could rest easy knowing the crimes weren't random. "Residents of this Forest Park neighborhood should not be alarmed in regards to these two recent shootings," Delaney said. "The murders are not related and they are not random. The victims were the intended targets."

Llorens' death was the city's eighth homicide this year. Springfield had a dozen murders last year.

Anyone with information about these latest homicides is asked to call detectives at (413) 787-6355. Anonymous text-message tips may be sent to 274637 (CRIMES ) and should begin with the word SOLVE, police said.


MAP showing locations of Springfield's latest two homicides, both of which occurred in the Forest Park neighborhood:


View 273 Orange St in a larger map

Man walks away unscathed from Colrain truck rollover

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The truck crashed on Shearer Road, but the driver did not require hospitalization, according to a Massachusetts State Police trooper stationed at the Shelburne barracks.

COLRAIN — A driver walked away unscathed after rolling his pickup truck on Shearer Road around 9:30 p.m. Sunday, according to the Massachusetts State Police.

The driver did not require hospitalization after receiving only minimal injuries, a trooper at the Shelburne barracks said Monday. The trooper said the man was not immediately cited in connection with the crash, which happened about 2 miles north of the Mohawk Trail and remains under investigation.

It was unclear if a recent batch of turbulent weather, which has caused flooding and other problems elsewhere in the region, contributed to the crash, which left the pickup upside down on its roof.

About two hours before the incident, authorities were called to West Leyden Road, where a tree and power lines had fallen into the road, according to Fireground360, a website maintain by area first responders.

There were no reported injuries in the incident, which Fireground tweeted at 7:27 p.m. Sunday:



MAP showing approximate location of crash on Shearer Road:


View Larger Map


Report card grades Massachusetts beaches as season starts

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A clean harbor advocacy group is giving strong grades to most Boston Harbor beaches in its second annual report card, but it's also highlighting some problems.

527harbor.JPGSailboats cross paths in Boston Harbor in Boston on May 20, 2013. A clean harbor advocacy group is giving strong grades to most Boston Harbor beaches in its second annual report card, but it's also highlighting some problems. 

By JAY LINDSAY

BOSTON — A clean harbor advocacy group is giving strong grades to most Boston Harbor beaches in its second annual report card, but it's also highlighting some problems.

More than half of the 15 beaches graded by Save the Harbor/Save the Bay scored either an A or A-plus in the report released Sunday. That means they were open at least nine out of 10 days last year.

Three beaches, two in Revere and one in Winthrop, didn't shut down once.

But King's Beach, which straddles Swampscott and Lynn, and Tenean Beach in Boston filled out the bottom of the list, with Tenean Beach closed once every five days because of high fecal bacterial levels, which can cause illness. Still, those two beaches both improved from the previous year.

Bruce Berman of Save the Harbor/Save the Bay said last year's dry weather, which reduced the flow of dirty storm water runoff, as well as pipe repairs helped continue a turnaround for Boston Harbor beaches.

The foul conditions in Boston Harbor were once famous enough to be the focus of The Standells' Boston tribute song, "Dirty Water." But years of extensive cleanup, costing billions, has produced years of cleaner beaches.

"Just 25 years ago, these beaches were awash with human waste," Berman said. "We should be proud of what we've done and be prepared to finish the job."

This year's report card, based on analysis of thousands of state water samples taken in 2012, said Winthrop Beach and Revere Beach and Short Beach in Revere were open every day of the beach season, between Memorial Day and Labor Day.

State Rep. Kathi Reinstein of Revere said the perfect scores boost tourism and development and are important in a community where everyone calls their local beach "my beach."

"There is incredible personal ownership of the beaches you grew up on," she said. "And when it doesn't look good ... we hear about it."

Nantasket Beach in Hull, which had a perfect score in 2011, dropped slightly in 2012, as it passed 98.3 percent of the bacteria tests.

Three South Boston beaches passed 99 percent of their bacteria tests, after a massive project completed in 2011 routed storm water into a treatment plant instead of letting it empty onto the beaches.

The lowest grades went to Tenean Beach in the Dorchester section of Boston, which was open about 81 percent of the time in 2012. Next lowest was King's Beach, which passed 86 percent of its tests.

Both results were better than in 2011, but Berman said improvement is needed.

John Sullivan, chief engineer of the Boston Water and Sewer Commission, said steady progress at Tenean Beach should follow an ongoing effort to ferret out illegal sewer connections that can drain into the ocean.

That tedious and difficult job should be done by next year, he said. He added that some waste can't be controlled, such as what is produced by birds, squirrels and other critters and carried by rainwater to the beach.

"There's no assurances ever that nature doesn't cause a violation," Sullivan said.

Dan O'Neill, director of the Lynn Water & Sewer Commission, said illicit sewer connections are a problem for King's Beach, too. But he also said correcting flaws in testing will help. For instance, eliminating improper sampling at the mouths of pipes at King's Beach — which skews results toward higher concentrations of pollution — should lead to major improvements, he said.

"The results are going to be significant," he said.

The report card also looked at the effectiveness of a warning system in which posted red flags indicate the beach is unsafe for swimming and blue flags signal all is well. It found the flags too frequently lag behind actual conditions on several beaches, mainly because the water tests take 24 hours to process.

Berman said state officials are phasing in a new system that uses scientific modeling to close beaches immediately, based on historical data of when certain amounts of rainfall have caused that beach to close in the past.

Sen. John McCain makes surprise trip to visit Syrian rebels

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Leaders of Syria's opposition forces got a chance to make their case for increased U.S. support directly with Sen. John McCain when he slipped into that country for a surprise visit.

mccainsyria.jpgIn this Monday, May 27, 2013 photo provided by Mouaz Moustafa and the Syrian Emergency Task Force, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., center, accompanied by Moustafa, right, visits rebels in Syria. McCain, who slipped into the country for a surprise visit, favors providing arms to rebel forces in Syria.  
SUZANNE GAMBOA Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — Leaders of Syria's opposition forces got a chance to make their case for increased U.S. support directly with Sen. John McCain when he slipped into that country for a surprise visit.

McCain, R-Ariz., favors providing arms to rebel forces in Syria.

A State Department official said the department was aware of McCain crossing into Syrian territory Monday, but referred further questions to McCain's office. McCain spokeswoman Rachel Dean confirmed the Monday trip, but declined further comment.

The visit took place at the same time as meetings in Paris involving efforts to secure participation of Syria's fractured opposition in an international peace conference in Geneva.

And in Brussels, the European Union decided late Monday to lift the arms embargo on the Syrian opposition while maintaining all other sanctions against President Bashar Assad's regime after June 1, British Foreign Secretary William Hague said.

Two years of violence in Syria have killed more than 70,000 people, according to the United Nations. President Barack Obama has demanded that Assad leave power, while Russia has stood by Syria, its closest ally in the Arab world.

McCain has been a fierce critic of Obama administration policy there while stopping short of backing U.S. ground troops in Syria, but he supports aggressive military steps against the Assad regime.

Gen. Salem Idris, chief of the Supreme Military Council of the Free Syrian Army, accompanied McCain across the Turkey-Syria border. McCain met with leaders of the Free Syrian Army from across the country, who asked him for increased U.S. support, including heavy weapons, a no-fly zone, and airstrikes on Syrian government and Hezbollah forces, according to The Daily Beast, which first reported the senator's visit.

Such unannounced trips to world hotspots by U.S. politicians are not common.

The White House declined to comment late Monday.

Last week, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee voted to provide weapons to rebels in Syria, as well as military training to vetted rebel groups and sanctions against anyone who sells oil or transfers arms to the Assad regime. McCain is a member of the committee.

___

Associated Press writer Bradley Klapper in Paris contributed to this report.

Leominster man falls while fishing in Rhode Island, drowns

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A 22-year-old Massachusetts man has died after falling from the rocks while fishing in Jamestown.


JAMESTOWN, R.I. (AP) — A 22-year-old Massachusetts man has died after falling from the rocks while fishing in Jamestown.

The Coast Guard says 22-year-old Toua Thao of Leominster, Mass. may have been swept into the water by a wave on Monday. He was pulled away from shore by the tide.

They say witnesses spotted him waving for help near Hull Cove. He was unconscious when Coast Guard rescuers pulled him from the water.

They performed CPR at the scene, but he was pronounced dead at Newport Hospital.

Humpback whale spotted in Boston Harbor

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A juvenile and possibly injured humpback whale was spotted swimming in Boston Harbor on Memorial Day before making its way back to the open ocean.


BOSTON (AP) — A juvenile and possibly injured humpback whale was spotted swimming in Boston Harbor on Memorial Day before making its way back to the open ocean.

The whale was spotted Monday morning by a whale watch boat about a half mile off Logan International Airport.

The Coast Guard and state Environmental Police set up a buffer zone around the whale to prevent boat strikes.

The whale, estimated at between 20 and 30 feet at length, eventually left on its own.

Experts say seeing a whale in the harbor is highly unusual. The last whale spotted in the harbor was 2005.

Agawam police: Traffic being directed around water main break reported on Lealand Avenue

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The break was reported shortly after 3:30 a.m. on Tuesday.

AGAWAM -- Traffic is being directed around an early morning water main break reported on Lealand Avenue early Tuesday.

Police said the break was reported shortly after 3:30 a.m. and that work to repair the break was ongoing as the morning commute got underway.

Lealand Avenue is a dead-end street off Route 159, about a quarter mile south of Route 57.

Additional information was not immediately available.

Worcester Police seize heroin and firearms from apartment on Stockholm Street

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Police seized approximately 370 grams of heroin, drug paraphernalia and a firearm and ammunition from an apartment on Stockholm Street on Thursday.

WORCESTER - Police seized approximately 370 grams of heroin, drug paraphernalia and a firearm with ammunition from an apartment on Stockholm Street on Thursday.

According to police, the Vice Squad was doing surveillance of the apartment on Stockholm Street as part of an investigation into a heroin distribution network in the city and witnessed a drug deal between two men. Officers approached the men, identified as Yunardo Nunez-Hidalgo, 29, off 19 Lakewood Street, Apt. 3, Worcester, and James Yanczewski, 40, of 70 Richland Street, Apt. 3, Worcester, after the deal was finished and found the men were in possession of more than 50 knotted bags of heroin.

According to police, officers obtained a search warrant for the apartment on Stockholm Street. Officers found around 370 grams of heroin in the apartment along with a 9mm semi-automatic weapon, three bags of ammunition and a semi-automatic magazine as well as packaging materials and drug paraphernalia.

Yanczewski was charged with trafficking in heroin and conspiracy to violate controlled substance laws.

Nunez-Hidalgo was charged with trafficking in heroin, conspiracy to violate controlled substance laws, two counts of possession of firearm and ammunition without an Firearms Identification Card, distribution of Class A substance, and use of a firearm in a felony.

Passengers returning to U.S. after cruise ship fire

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For the second time this year, a fire at sea has aborted a cruise ship's voyage. This time, aboard Royal Caribbean's Grandeur of the Seas and the ship's 2,200 passengers were expected back in Baltimore on Tuesday after being flown on charter flights from the Bahamas.


KASEY JONES
Associated Press


BALTIMORE (AP) — For the second time this year, a fire at sea has aborted a cruise ship's voyage. This time, aboard Royal Caribbean's Grandeur of the Seas and the ship's 2,200 passengers were expected back in Baltimore on Tuesday after being flown on charter flights from the Bahamas.

The fire that began at 2:50 a.m. Monday was extinguished about two hours later with no injuries reported. A cause wasn't immediately known but the U.S. Coast Guard and the National Transportation Safety Board planned to investigate.

The ship, which left Baltimore on Friday for a seven-night cruise, was headed originally to CocoCay, Bahamas. Royal Caribbean said the ship never lost power and was able to sail into port in Freeport, Bahamas, Monday afternoon. The ship launched in 1996 and was refurbished last year.

Royal Caribbean said on its website and through social media that executives met with passengers in port and that the cruise line was arranging flights for all 2,224 guests. Also, passengers will get a full refund of their fare and a certificate for a future cruise.

Aboard ship, the captain announced that passengers needed to go to their muster stations, said passenger Mark J. Ormesher in an email to The Associated Press. Immediately after, his room attendant knocked on the door and told him and his girlfriend to grab their flotation devices. The attendant said it wasn't a drill.

Ormesher, a native of England, who lives in Manassas, Va., said he and his girlfriend smelled acrid smoke as they went to their muster station, the ship's casino. The crew quickly provided instruction.

"This encouraged calm amongst the passengers," he said. Passengers were required to remain at their stations for four hours, he said, and the captain "provided us as much information as we needed to stay safe."

Ormesher, who is 25 and on his first cruise, said the air conditioner had been shut off, and as the hours passed and the ship got hot, bottled water was distributed. The crew and passengers remained calm, and helped those who needed it. Crying babies were given formula and held while their parents used the bathrooms.

Photos show a substantial area of the stern burned on several decks of the ship the length of about three football fields.

Royal Caribbean said all guests and 796 crew were safe and accounted for. Royal Caribbean spokeswoman Cynthia Martinez said in an email that the company was arranging 11 different charter flights.

The company in a statement on its website said it is "deeply sorry for this unexpected development in our guests' vacation. We understand that this may have been a very stressful time for them. We appreciate their patience and cooperation in dealing with this unfortunate situation."

Carnival Corp. also had trouble with fire aboard ship earlier this year.

The 900-foot Triumph was disabled during a February cruise by an engine room fire in the Gulf of Mexico, leaving thousands of passengers to endure cold food, unsanitary conditions and power outages while the ship was towed to Mobile, Ala. It remained there for repairs until early May when it headed back to sea under its own power.

On the Royal Caribbean ship, after passengers were allowed to leave their stations, Ormesher said he saw water on the outside of deck 5 and in the hallways. The mooring lines were destroyed he said; crew members brought new lines from storage.

The damage at the rear of the ship "looks bad," Ormesher said; burned out equipment was visible.

Martinez said in a news release that a cruise scheduled aboard the Grandeur of the Seas for May 31 has been canceled so the ship can be repaired.


Oil rises to above $95 a barrel after US holiday

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The price of oil rose to above $95 a barrel Tuesday, supported by gains on global stock markets as traders awaited U.S. economic indicators following a long holiday weekend.


PABLO GORONDI
Associated Press


The price of oil rose to above $95 a barrel Tuesday, supported by gains on global stock markets as traders awaited U.S. economic indicators following a long holiday weekend.

By early afternoon in Europe, benchmark oil for July delivery was up 90 cents to $95.05 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract fell 10 cents on Friday. Monday was a public holiday in the U.S. and Britain.

Tuesday's rise was set to break a four-day streak of losses for oil prices on the Nymex.

"A bullish tone across the global equity markets supported crude oil prices higher," said a report from Sucden Financial Research in London.

It noted that an OPEC meeting in Vienna later this week will draw investors' attention to the issue of oil supplies, which have been ample in recent months. The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries has an official production quota of 30 million barrels a day, but has been regularly overshooting that aim since last year.

Experts think global energy demand could weaken after a survey by HSBC Corp. released last week showed a decline in China's manufacturing for May. An official report on factory production in the world's second-largest economy will be released later in the week.

Meanwhile, data releases later Tuesday in Washington, including indexes of home prices and consumer confidence, should help clarify the state of the recovery in the world's biggest economy. First-quarter U.S. growth figures will be issued Thursday.

Brent crude, a benchmark for many international oil varieties, was up $1.47 to $104.11 a barrel on the ICE Futures exchange in London.

In other energy futures trading on Nymex:

— Wholesale gasoline rose 2.69 cents to $2.855 a gallon.

— Heating oil climbed 4.75 cents to $2.9019 per gallon.

— Natural gas shed 0.1 cent to $4.236 per 1,000 cubic feet.

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Pamela Sampson in Bangkok contributed to this report.

Worcester Police investigating Monday morning stabbing incident

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A 19-year-old Worcester man was attacked on Dewey Street early Monday morning, suffering a large cut to his face.

WORCESTER - A 19-year-old Worcester man was attacked on Dewey Street early Monday, suffering a large cut to his face.

Police report that officers responded to a local hospital at 2 a.m. after being informed there was a male victim at the hospital being treated for stab wounds.

According to police, the victim told officers he was walking on Dewey Street when a vehicle drove by him and stopped. Three men exited the vehicle and began to fight him. The victim told police he did not recognize the men and did not know why they attacked him.

The Worcester Police Detective Bureau was called to the hospital where the victim was being treated, and investigators interviewed him. According to police, there is no clear motive. Investigators are attempting to locate witnesses and trying to find out if security cameras recorded the incident.

If anyone has information about this incident they can send an anonymous text to 274637 TIPWPD with a message or send an anonymous web based message at worcesterma.gov/police. Calls can also be made to the Worcester Police Detective Bureau at (508) 799-8651.

Court delay puts Boston police promotions on hold

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Hundreds of Boston police officers hoping to take promotion exams are putting their careers on hold while they await a ruling in a federal court case. The department is holding off on promotions until a judge rules on the fairness of a promotion test.

BOSTON (AP) — Hundreds of Boston police officers hoping to take promotion exams are putting their careers on hold while they await a ruling in a federal court case.
The department is holding off on promotions until a judge rules on the fairness of a promotion test.

Several minority officers sued the department alleging that the test discriminates against them.

The department has been waiting for a ruling on the case for two years. Twice a city attorney has written the federal judge asking him to rule, to no avail. Even Commissioner Ed Davis has urged a ruling.

A clerk for the judge says they cannot comment on pending cases.

A vice president of the Boston Police Superior Officers Federation tells The Boston Globe (http://b.globe.com/15eRJJR ) the wait is affecting morale.

Information from: The Boston Globe, http://www.boston.com/globe

Restaurant customers settle bills after Boston Marathon blasts

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Amid the chaos and fear in the moments after the Boston Marathon explosions, customers at the Rattlesnake Bar and Grill evacuated the restaurant without settling their tabs.


BOSTON (AP) — Amid the chaos and fear in the moments after the Boston Marathon explosions, customers at the Rattlesnake Bar and Grill evacuated the restaurant without settling their tabs.

Owner Tony Castagnozzi, while understanding the gravity of the situation, figures the unpaid bills totaled about $3,000.

Since the April 15 blasts, he says about a dozen customers in the Boylston Street restaurant at the time have made good on their bills, and included tips, helping him recoup about $1,200.

The honest customers come from Colorado, Florida, Virginia, and across New England.

Castagnozzi tells the Boston Herald (http://bit.ly/130ljTn ) "there are so many good people out there."

Customer David Christmas of Acton says he paid his $35 tab and added a $15 tip because "it's the right thing to do."

Other restaurants reports similar experiences.

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Information from: Boston Herald, http://www.bostonherald.com

AM News Links: Massachusetts budget debate heading behind closed doors, Hartford doctors hatch plan to help cities prepare for mass shootings, and more

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In other news, 7 million students are bracing for a surge in loan rates.

Boston Mayor Thomas MeninoBoston Mayor Thomas M. Menino will undergo surgery for an enlarged prostate. 
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