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Flash flood watch in effect for most of Massachusetts, parts of Connecticut, Rhode Island, New Hampshire

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A flash flood watch remains in effect for most of Massachusetts, much of Rhode Island, parts of northern Connecticut and southern New Hampshire until 11 p.m. Monday.

The National Weather Service issued an advisory Monday stating that the chance for flash flooding in the aforementioned locations is a distinct possibility based upon anticipated weather conditions moving through New England on Labor Day.

"Another day of scattered showers is expected today as a slow-moving frontal system drags itself through the Northeast. Just like yesterday, a few towns may see a lighter shower, while other towns get caught under a longer-lasting heavy downpour," wrote CBS-3 meteorologist Mike Skurko in his morning weather report. "Today's chance of rain will be a little higher than the last couple of days, as this system becomes a little better-defined. Most locations across the region should prepare for a half-inch to a full inch of rain, with isolated higher amounts possible."

In Massachusetts, the watch excludes Cape Cod and the islands. Block Island in Rhode Island is also excluded



Interactive Live Weather Map


Situation in Syria: Nations around the world react with caution

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President Barack Obama said he has decided that the United States should take military action against Syria but is seeking congressional authorization for the use of force in a vote expected after Congress returns to work Sept. 9.

The United States is considering launching a punitive strike against the regime of Syrian President Bashar Assad, blamed by the U.S. and the Syrian opposition for an Aug. 21 alleged chemical weapons attack in a rebel-held suburb of the Syrian capital of Damascus. The U.S. said the attack killed 1,429 people, including at least 426 children. Those numbers are significantly higher than the death toll of 355 provided by the aid group Doctors Without Borders.

President Barack Obama said he has decided that the United States should take military action against Syria but is seeking congressional authorization for the use of force in a vote expected after Congress returns to work Sept. 9.

Here's a look at key Syria developments around the world Monday amid heightened tensions over potential military action:

UNITED STATES
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Obama will host Sen. John McCain at the White House, hoping his opponent in the 2008 presidential election will help sell the idea of a U.S. military intervention in Syria to a nation scarred by more than a decade of war. The Obama administration is trying to rally support for the strike among Americans and their congressman and senators.

RUSSIA:

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said the information the U.S. showed Moscow to prove that Syrian regime was behind an alleged chemical weapons attack was "absolutely unconvincing." He said Monday "there was nothing specific" in the evidence: "no geographic coordinates, no names, no proof that the tests were carried out by the professionals." He did not say what tests he was referring to.

SYRIA:

The head of the U.N. refugee agency in Syria said 7 million Syrians, or almost one-third of the population, have been displaced by the country's civil war. Tarik Kurdi told The Associated Press on Monday that 5 million of the displaced are still in Syria while about 2 million have fled to neighboring countries. More Syrian refugees crossed the border at Cilvegozu in southern Turkey. Before the outbreak of the conflict, Syria had a population of about 23 million people.

FRANCE:

French Prime Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault is scheduled to meet with the leaders of Parliament's defense and foreign affairs committees. The prime minister's office said Ayrault will give the lawmakers an update on Syria and show them a declassified report on Syria's chemical weapons to back up France's claim that the Assad regime was responsible for the attack.

CHINA:

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei said his country urged the U.S. not to take unilateral action against Syria in response to last month's chemical weapons attack against civilians. He said Washington briefed Beijing about the matter and that China is concerned about chemical weapons use but that the country opposes the U.S. acting alone. Hong didn't address the possibility of the U.S. acting together with France's government, which supports a strike, although Beijing would almost certainly be opposed to any action.

AUSTRALIA:

Australia offered moral support for a military strike in Syria. Patrick Low, Australian Foreign Minister Bob Carr's spokesman, said U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry called last week and that Australia supports the U.S. taking action. He said Kerry didn't ask for military assistance and Australia didn't offer it. Australian opposition leader Tony Abbott defended his controversial weekend comments on the Syrian civil war. He had described both sides in the conflict as "baddies versus baddies."

NEW ZEALAND:

New Zealand Prime Minister John Key said his country needs more information after Kerry reached out for support in a call to New Zealand Foreign Minister Murray McCully over the weekend. Key said New Zealand wants to assess all steps taken ahead of a strike before stating its position.

GERMANY:

Chancellor Angela Merkel and her challenger in Germany's upcoming election said late Sunday they wouldn't participate in military action against Syria. Merkel said there needs to be "a collective answer by the U.N." to the use of chemical weapons in Syria as she faced center-left rival Peer Steinbrueck in a televised debate. Steinbrueck said he wouldn't participate in military action as chancellor and would "greatly regret it" if the U.S. strikes alone without an international mandate.


Germany puts 92-year-old former Nazi Waffen SS fighter on trial

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Dutch-born Siert Bruins tried on charges of murdering Dutch resistance fighter as member of the Nazi's elite group of paramilitary fights.


HAGEN, Germany (AP) — Germany put a 92-year-old former member of the Nazi Waffen SS on trial Sept. 2 on charges that he murdered a Dutch resistance fighter in 1944.

Dutch-born Siert Bruins, who is now German, entered the Hagen state courtroom using a walker, but appeared alert and attentive as the proceedings opened.

No pleas are made in the German system, and Bruins offered no statement. His attorney, Klaus-Peter Kniffka, said after the short 35-minute opening session that it was unlikely his client would ever address the court personally.

"I will probably deliver a defense declaration, but it depends upon the course of the trial," he told reporters.

The trial comes amid a new phase of German Nazi-era investigations, with federal prosecutors this week expected to announce they are recommending the pursuit of possible charges against about 40 former Auschwitz guards.

The renewed probes of death camp guards come after the case of former Ohio autoworker John Demjanjuk, who died last year while appealing his 2011 conviction for accessory to murder after allegations he served in Sobibor.

His case established that death camp guards could be convicted as accessories to murder, even if there was no specific evidence of atrocities against them.

Bruins, however, had long been on the radar of German legal authorities and already served time in the 1980s for his role in the wartime slaying of two Dutch Jews.

Bruins was also already convicted and sentenced to death in absentia in the Netherlands in 1949 in a case that involved the killing of the resistance fighter. The sentence was later commuted to life in prison, but attempts to extradite him were unsuccessful because he had obtained German citizenship through a policy instituted by Adolf Hitler to confer citizenship on foreigners who served the Nazi military.

Ulrich Sander, spokesman for an organization representing the victims of Nazi crimes, told the dpa news agency that the decision to bring Bruins to trial again, even at his advanced age, was a good one.

"We must make it clear for the future that such crimes are always prosecuted, that murderers never get away," he said.

Despite his age, Bruins was found medically fit to stand trial, though Kniffka said the stress of the proceedings against him has weakened him.

Trial sessions are being limited to a maximum of three hours in deference to his age and health.

Bruins volunteered for the Waffen SS, the combat arm of the Nazis' fanatical paramilitary organization, in 1941 after the Nazis conquered and occupied his homeland. He eventually rose to the rank of Unterscharfuehrer — roughly equivalent to sergeant.

He fought on the eastern front in Russia until 1943 when he became ill and no longer fit for combat duty.

Transferred back to the Netherlands, he served first in the Sicherheitsdienst — the Nazi internal intelligence agency — and then the Sicherheitspolizei, or Security Police, in a unit tasked to find resistance fighters and Jews.

As part of that unit, he is accused of killing resistance fighter Aldert Klaas Dijkema in September 1944 in the town of Appingedam, near the German border in the northern Netherlands.

If convicted, he faces a possible life sentence.

Dijkema was apprehended by the Nazis on Sept. 9, 1944, on suspicion he was involved in the Dutch resistance.

According to prosecutors, Bruins and alleged accomplice August Neuhaeuser, who has since died, drove Dijkema to an isolated industrial area where they stopped and told him to "go take a leak."

As he walked away from the car, they fired at least four shots into him, including into the back of his head, killing him instantly, according to the indictment.

Bruins and Neuhaeuser reported that Dijkema was shot while trying to escape.

Though it is not clear who fired the fatal shots, under German law if both suspects were there with the intent to kill, it does not matter who pulled the trigger, according to prosecutors.

The trial is scheduled until the end of September but it could be extended.

Massachusetts Legislature facing no shortage of priorities in fall session

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State lawmakers will have plenty on their plates when they ramp up activity after Labor Day.

BOSTON (AP) — State lawmakers will have plenty on their plates when they ramp up activity after Labor Day.

The House and Senate have not met formally since the end of July.

Among the high-profile issues the Legislature is likely to grapple with in the fall are gun control, welfare reform and proposals to increase the minimum wage.

A bill calling for stronger oversight of compounding pharmacies could also face a vote in the coming weeks. A fungal meningitis outbreak traced to tainted steroids produced by a now-defunct compounding pharmacy in Framingham last year killed 63 people and sickened hundreds more.

Also still pending before lawmakers is a revised compact Gov. Deval Patrick signed in March with the Mashpee Wampanoag tribe that hopes to build a resort casino in Taunton.


Politics Links: Republican Ari Fleisher praises Obama decision to consult Congress on Syria; Labor unions frustrated with lack of presidential attention to Obamacare complaints; and more

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Obituaries today: Kenneth Tenney worked at Stephens Paper Mill, Advance Offset Printing; was Holyoke Veteran of the Year

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Obituaries from The Republican.

 
090213-kenneth-tenney.jpgKenneth Tenney 

Kenneth E. Tenney, 87, of Holyoke, passed away on Friday. He was born in Holyoke, and was a graduate of Holyoke High School. He was a U.S. Army veteran of World War II, and was active in many local veterans groups, including American Legion Post 25, VFW Post 801 and DAV Chapter 41. He was honored by the City of Holyoke as Veteran of the Year in 2012. He was a retired machine operator at Stephens Paper Mill and Advance Offset Printing in Holyoke.

Obituaries from The Republican:


Planned gun-buyback program a first for Hampshire, Franklin counties

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A broad coalition of local agencies, police departments and citizens groups are gearing up for the first gun buyback program to be held in Hampshire and Franklin counties.

NORTHAMPTON — A broad coalition of local agencies, police departments and citizens groups are gearing up for the first gun buyback program to be held in Hampshire and Franklin counties.

The Oct. 5 buyback program is designed to remove unwanted guns from circulation and prevent them from ending up stolen and subsequently sold on the streets, becoming part of a burgeoning black market of weapons.

"Old guns are kept in basements and closets, and when somebody breaks in they are looking for money first and guns second," said Springfield Police Sgt. John Delaney, aide to Commissioner William Fitchett.

Springfield has successfully held several gun buyback programs over the years.

The Northwestern District Attorney's Office said getting unwanted guns out of homes also reduces the risk of those weapons falling into the hands of impressionable youth.

"The social, economic and human costs associated with gun violence are immeasurable," Northwestern District Attorney David Sullivan said.

Event coordinator Christy A. Geffin said the initial request for the buyback effort came at the suggestion of the Amherst chapter of Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense.

"The Moms approached us on May 6, asking for a buyback," she said. "The district attorney then spoke to Northampton Police Chief (Russell) Sienkiewicz and Chief (Joseph) Birge, of Greenfield. They both agreed to take it on."

On Oct. 5, unwanted firearms will be accepted at two locations. Between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m., officers at the Northampton and Greenfield police headquarters will accept unwanted but working guns in exchange for electronic gift cards. Handguns, shotguns and rifles are worth a $50 card, while so-called assault weapons in working order will bring two cards for a $100 value.

Police will dispose of unwanted ammunition at the same time, but no payment will be made for bullets. All firearms to be relinquished must be in working order, unloaded and in a bag.

People line up inside Springfield police headquarters to exchange guns for gift cards during a March 2013 gun buyback program. (Republican staff photo by Michael S. Gordon) 

Springfield police say their March 2 buyback effort surpassed all expectations when citizens turned in 333 guns, Delaney said.

"I'm not sure if it is because of the economy or because of Sandy Hook and other examples of gun violence are so much on people's mind," he said.

Geffin said the money needed to buy the weapons came from an ad hoc group of volunteer fundraisers from many of the participating organizations. Group members solicited donations to fund the purchases and that money was funneled through a 501(c)(3) tax deductible charity. The Hampshire and Franklin County Deputy Sheriffs Association accepted the donations, and converted the funds into gift cards for the program.

Citing statistics compiled by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Sullivan's office said more than 30,000 people are killed each year by firearms in the United States. That works out to more than 30 people each day, and half of those are between the ages of 18 and 35.

Homicide by firearms is only one facet of a complex problem, however. Suicide by gun remains one of the most likely scenarios for gun-related deaths. The CDC said homes that keep firearms are five times as likely to experience a firearm-related suicide by a household member than homes with no guns. More than two-thirds of suicides by young people between the ages of 15 and 24 are committed with guns.

"The number of homicides pales in comparison to the number of suicides by gun," the CDC noted in a report.

The Northampton Police Department is located at 29 Center St., while the address for the Greenfield Police Department is 312 High St.


Traffic accident on Massachusetts turnpike near Sturbridge causes significant westbound delays

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A traffic accident in the westbound lanes of the Massachusetts Turnpike Monday morning caused a significant delay for drivers on one of the busiest travel days of the year.

A traffic accident in the westbound lanes of the Massachusetts Turnpike Monday morning caused a significant delay for drivers on one of the busiest travel days of the year.

The Massachusetts State Police reported that an accident near mile marker 75 caused an approximately 20-mile back-up just before noon. The Massachusetts Department of Transportation also sent out a tweet notifying drivers of the delay.

Trooper Ronald Ramos stationed at the Charlton barracks said heavy rain was to blame for the collision, which slowed travelers all the way to Exit 11 which leads to I-84.

The accident on the I-90 was cleared without delay, he said, although it was expected to take some time for 20 miles of heavy traffic to begin flowing again at highway speeds.



Longmeadow police: Phony tree-trimming worker distracts woman as thieves steal jewelery from her home

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Police are warning the public after an incident where a team of thieves apparently worked in concert to get away with a significant amount of jewelery from a Western Drive homeowner on Saturday.

LONGMEADOW— Police are warning the public after an incident where a team of thieves apparently worked in concert to get away with a significant amount of jewelery from a Western Drive homeowner on Saturday.

Longmeadow police Capt. John Stankiewicz said that one man distracted a homeowner long enough for others to gain access to her bedroom and steal her jewelry.

"We want to alert the public and at the same time ask for their help in catching these individuals," he said. "We want to make sure this is a one-time event."

Stankiewicz said the Western Drive homeowner was approached by a man claiming to work for a tree service. He told the woman that he needed to check property boundaries before doing some work for a neighbor.

The woman accompanied the suspect into the backyard of the home to look for property markers, distracting her while the other suspects reportedly searched her home. Suddenly, the phony tree worker's phone rang, and he abruptly excused himself and left the property.

It was only later in the day that the woman discovered that her jewelry was missing from the bedroom. Police believe that once the accomplice secured the jewelery, he phoned the suspect and they left the scene.

The suspect the woman interacted with is described as a dark-skinned Hispanic male with black hair, standing approximately 5-feet, 7-inches tall. He was seen driving an older-style beige or grey sedan.

Stankiewicz asked that anyone approached by someone fitting the description or approached in a similar manner to call 911 to report it. He also said if anyone has already been approached, to check their homes for possible theft and to call police with information.

Longmeadow police can be reached at (413) 567-3311.


About 150 people turn out in Holyoke for 5K race to benefit Boston Marathon bombing victim Jeff Bauman

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Costco volunteers and runners and walkers gathered at Ashley Pond in Holyoke to raise funds for Boston Marathon bombing victim Jeff Bauman.

HOLYOKE – Approximately 150 walkers and runners could not think of a better way to start Labor Day then taking part in a 5K race to benefit Jeff Bauman, a Costco employee severely injured in the Boston Marathon bombing.

Costco Wholesale employees, shoppers and the general public took part in the fundraiser at Ashely Reservoir, starting and ending at the Holyoke Lodge of Elks. Bauman lost both his legs in the bombing, and was not able to attend the race, as he recuperates, organizers said.

The runners came from as far away as the Costco store in Nashua, N.H. where Bauman worked, and one runner drove to Holyoke from a Costco in Pentagon City, Maryland.

“I am overwhelmed,” said Mary Loy Smith, one of the organizers who works as administration manager for the Costco store in West Springfield. “Western Mass. just really comes out when we need you. Today it shows.”

All proceeds from registration went directly to benefit Bauman. Participants paid $30 in advance, or $35 on the day of the race.

Jeff BaumanBoston Marathon bombing survivor Jeff Bauman acknowledges cheering fans before throwing out the ceremonial first pitch at Fenway Park prior to a baseball between the Boston Red Sox and the Philadelphia Phillies on May 28, 2013, in Boston. On Labor Day, 150 people took part in a 5K race in Holyoke to benefit Bauman. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola)  

The race was won by Brenden Repack of Merrimack, N.H., a Costco employee who knows Bauman. Cristian Rivera of Springfield, a student at Sabis International Charter School, came in second place, and Maura McDonald of Springfield came in third.

Repack said he worked in the merchandizing department in Nashua, and frequently walked by the deli where Bauman worked, talking about everything from sports to news to what plans they had for the weekend.

“Winning is fun but I’m really here to support Jeff and all the other Boston Marathon victims,” Repack said. “It’s just a great cause, a great thing to do, get out on Labor Day and just have some fun.”

The bombing and Jeff’s injuries “stunned” everyone at Costco, Repack said.

“But we knew Jeff would pull through,” Repack said. “He is a strong guy, a great personality. He’s just awesome.”


The story will be updated at reporting continues.

Worcester police investigating possible homicide of 18-year-old male after house party altercation

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Police have yet to release the identity of a teenager found dead outside Crestwood Arms, a condo complex at 121 Bailey St. The teen had been attending a house party at the complex, according to Worcester police.

WORCESTER — Police are investigating a possible homicide involving an 18-year-old man who died after an assault outside a city condominium complex early Sunday morning.

Police were called to Crestwood Arms, 121 Bailey St., at about 4:45 a.m. for a report of a man injured in an altercation outside the condo complex.

Officers tried to resuscitate the unresponsive teenager as they waited for an ambulance to take him to UMass Memorial Medical Center, where he was later pronounced dead. An official cause of death won't be known until an autopsy is performed, according to police.

Investigators so far have determined that the victim and several others were at a party inside an apartment, where the victim and another man apparently got into an argument that continued outside. The altercation ended after the teen was struck by an unknown object and ran off. He later was found by his friends on property outside the condos, police said.

Members of the Worcester Police Detective Bureau and Crime Scene Unit secured the area, processed evidence and conducted numerous interviews. But authorities have yet to indicate if they have a suspect in connection with the incident, which is being treated as a homicide.

"There were several people attending the party. An altercation between the victim and another member within the apartment occurred. The argument between the two men continued outside the apartment," Worcester police said in a news release.

Neighbors at Crestwood Arms, which is near Worcester State University, characterized the condo complex as a quiet place with mostly older residents, though some area students do rent apartments there.

Police are asking anyone with information about the case to call detectives at (508) 799-8651. Anonymous online tips can be forwarded to worcesterma.gov/police. Anonymous text-message tips can be sent to 274637 TIPWPD, followed by the sender's message.


Material from the Worcester Telegram & Gazette was used in this report.
MAP showing area where 18-year-old was found dead early Sunday:


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3rd trial in 1969 Tewksbury slaying to start

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The trial of the third defendant in the 1969 slaying of a 15-year-old Tewksbury boy is scheduled to start.

LOWELL, Mass. (AP) — The trial of the third defendant in the 1969 slaying of a 15-year-old Tewksbury boy is scheduled to start.

The Sun reports that opening statements in the murder trial of 61-year-old Walter Shelley are expected to begin Tuesday in Lowell Superior Court.

Prosecutors say Shelley was one of three men, all teenagers at the time, who kidnapped, beat and then bound John McCabe in September 1969 after a dance. His dead body was found in an empty lot in Lowell.

Prosecutors say the defendants wanted to teach McCabe a lesson for flirting with Shelley's girlfriend.

Shelley has denied the charge.

One of the other men was acquitted of murder, while the second pleaded guilty to manslaughter in exchange for no jail time and cooperation with authorities.

Two hurt when lightning hits Spencer neighborhood

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Lightning struck a Spencer neighborhood Monday afternoon, rattling residents and sending a teenager to the hospital as a precaution.

 

Lightning struck a Spencer neighborhood Monday afternoon, rattling residents and sending a teenager to the hospital as a precaution.

The Telegram & Gazette reported that the strike hit behind four houses on Bay Path Road shortly after 12:30 p.m. Fire Capt. Robert A. Churchey told the Telegram that no houses took a direct hit.

Irish nanny accused in Cambridge baby's death has court date

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An Irish nanny accused of killing a 1-year-old Cambridge girl is due in court for a hearing on her lawyer's request to dismiss the charges.

nanny.jpgThis undated booking photograph provided by the Middlesex District Attorney's office shows Aisling McCarthy Brady.  

WOBURN, Mass. (AP) — An Irish nanny accused of killing a 1-year-old Cambridge girl is due in court for a hearing on her lawyer's request to dismiss the charges.

Aisling McCarthy Brady of Quincy is charged with murder and assault and battery on a child in the death of Rehma Sabir in January. She was hospitalized on her first birthday with severe head injuries and died two days later.

McCarthy's lawyer has accused prosecutors of impairing the integrity of the grand jury. The defense also claims prosecutors did not have enough evidence to charge McCarthy.

The defense has said previously that the baby returned home malnourished after traveling overseas with her parents.

McCarthy is due in Woburn Superior Court Tuesday.

Immigration officials have said McCarthy is living in the United States illegally after entering in 2002.

Man apparently falls four stories from Quality Inn in West Springfield

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The victim was found lying on the ground on the north side of the building, closest to traffic as it exited from I-91.

UPDATE, 12:15 p.m.: Police said the man apparently fell in a suicide attempt.
» Read the story


WEST SPRINGFIELD — West Springfield police are investigating an apparent fall from the fourth floor of the Quality Inn Tuesday morning.

Police and fire rescue personnel responded to a 911 call describing a man bleeding profusely at the rear of the hotel at 1150 Riverdale St. shortly before 10 a.m.

The apparent victim was found lying on the ground on the north side of the building, closest to traffic as it exited from I-91.

photo (1).JPGPolice search a Vermont-registered BMW seeking the identity of a man who apparently fell from the fourth floor of the Quality Inn on Riverdale Street in West Springfield Tuesday morning.  

West Springfield Police Capt. John Ferrarini said at the scene that the victim was taken by ambulance to the Baystate Medical Center. Ferrarini said the man's injuries appeared serious and included an obvious compound fracture of his arm, leading to the bleeding noted by those who discovered him.

After the victim was transported from the scene, Ferrarini and a detective began searching the victim's belongings and a Vermont-registered BMW convertible seeking an identify.

This story will be updated as information becomes available.


Meningitis victim's death, attributed to outbreak at Framingham pharmacy, may not be recorded

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One of the Tennessee victims of last year's fungal meningitis outbreak may not have been recorded among the official death records.

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -€” One of the Tennessee victims of last year's fungal meningitis outbreak may not have been recorded among the official death records.

The Tennessean reports (http://tnne.ws/1fwsJkS) federal court filings show Gokulbhai Patel of Goodlettsville died Jan. 13. He had received spinal injections at the Saint Thomas Outpatient Neurosurgical Center in Nashville. But records from the outbreak kept by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention show no deaths in January.

The outbreak is blamed on contaminated steroids from the New England Compounding Center in Massachusetts.

Attorneys for several of the victims said they believe other deaths may have gone unrecorded as well.

The official death count in Tennessee is 15, with 153 patients sickened. Nationwide, 63 deaths have been recorded with 749 patients sickened.

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Information from: The Tennessean, http://www.tennessean.com

With eye on Syria, Israel tests missiles with US

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Israel and the U.S. conducted a joint missile test over the Mediterranean on Tuesday, in a display of military prowess as the Obama administration seeks congressional support for strikes against the regime of Syrian President Bashar Assad.

JERUSALEM (AP) — Israel and the U.S. conducted a joint missile test over the Mediterranean on Tuesday, in a display of military prowess as the Obama administration seeks congressional support for strikes against the regime of Syrian President Bashar Assad.

Any U.S. strikes, in retaliation for alleged chemical weapons use by the Assad regime, are not expected before next week when Congress returns from summer recess.

The Israeli Defense Ministry said the test of its Arrow 3 missile-defense system was performed together with the U.S. Defense Department.

The system successfully detected and tracked a medium-range decoy missile that was not carrying a warhead, the ministry said, but did not intercept it.

"A successful test was held to check our systems," Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Yaalon said. "We will continue to develop and research and equip the Israeli military with the best systems in the world."

In Washington, there was no immediate White House comment.

Experts and defense officials said the test had been scheduled weeks ago and was not directly connected to the current tensions in the region.

Uzi Rubin, former head of the Arrow system, said the test was "completely technical. Nothing connected to Syria." He said the "only message" it would send was that Israel has "good missile defense systems."

Nonetheless, it served as a reminder to Syria and its patron, Iran, that Israel is pressing forward with development of a "multilayered" missile-defense system. Both Syria and Iran, and their Lebanese ally Hezbollah, possess vast arsenals of rockets and missiles.

The Arrow 3, expected to be operational around 2016, would be the first such "multilayer" missile-defense system, designed to intercept long-range missiles such the Iranian Shahab before they re-enter the atmosphere.

Last year, Israel also successfully tested a system designed to intercept missiles with ranges of up to 300 kilometers (180 miles) which is expected to be operational by early 2015.

Another system for short-range rockets successfully shot down hundreds fired from the Gaza Strip during eight days of fighting in November, and more recently intercepted a rocket fired from Lebanon.

Meanwhile in Syria, regime troops recaptured the town of Ariha, a busy commercial center in the restive northern province of Idlib following days of heavy bombardment, according to the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. The group obtains information from a network of anti-regime activists.

Ariha has changed hands several times in the past two years. Rebels had succeeded in wrestling it from government control late last month.

Since the outbreak of the Syria conflict in March 2011, the two sides have fought to a stalemate, though the Assad regime has retaken the offensive in recent months. Rebel fighters control large rural stretches in northern and eastern Syria, while Assad is holding on to most of the main urban areas.

Also Tuesday, rebels detonated a bomb along a gas pipeline near the northeastern town of Deir el-Zour, the state-run Syrian news agency SANA reported.

The Observatory confirmed that a fire had broken out along the pipeline, but said it had no details on the reporting bombing.

The eastern province of Deir el-Zour, along Syria's border with Iraq, is one of the two main centers of the country's oil production. The rebels have been seizing oil fields there since late 2012. It is not clear how much of the fields they control. Activists and state media say most of Syria's fields are no longer under direct government control.

The Syrian conflict, which began as a popular uprising against Assad in March 2011, later degenerated into a civil war that has killed more than 100,000 people.

The U.N. refugee agency announced Tuesday that the number of Syrians who have fled the country has surpassed the 2 million mark.

Along with more than four million people displaced inside Syria, this means more than six million Syrians have been uprooted, out of an estimated population of 23 million.

Antonio Guterres, the head of the Office for the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees, said Syria is hemorrhaging an average of almost 5,000 citizens a day across its borders, many of them with little more than the clothes they are wearing. Nearly 1.8 million refugees have fled in the past 12 months alone, he said.

The agency's special envoy, actress Angelina Jolie, said "some neighboring countries could be brought to the point of collapse" if the situation keeps deteriorating at its current pace. Most Syrian refugees have fled to Jordan, Lebanon and Turkey.

Despite the grim toll, Assad has not shown any signs of backing down.

Assad and some in his inner circle are from Syria's minority Alawites, or followers of an offshoot of Shiite Islam, who believe they would not have a place in Syria if the rebels win. Most of those trying to topple Assad are Sunni Muslims, with Islamic militants, including those linked to the al-Qaida terror network, increasingly dominant among the rebels.

The missile test came at a time of heightened tensions as Washington weighs sea-launched strikes against Syria. Israel has been increasingly concerned that it could be drawn into Syria's brutal civil war.

Since the weekend, the Obama administration has been lobbying for congressional support for military action against the Assad regime.

The administration says it has evidence that Assad's forces launched attacks with chemical weapons on rebel-held suburbs of the Syrian capital of Damascus on Aug. 21. The U.S. has alleged that the nerve agent sarin was used and that at least 1,429 people were killed, including more than 400 children.

Last week, President Barack Obama appeared poised to authorize military strikes, but unexpectedly stepped back over the weekend to first seek approval from Congress, which returns from summer recess next week.

On Monday, the U.S. administration won backing from French intelligence and reportedly also from Germany's spy agency for its claim that Assad's forces were responsible for the suspected chemical weapons attacks.

The Assad regime has denied using chemical weapons, blaming rebels instead. Neither the U.S. nor Syria and its allies have presented conclusive proof in public.

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Karin Laub in Beirut contributed to this report.

Best-selling Amherst writer Holly Black celebrates 1st vampire novel with book release party in South Hadley

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Holly Black kicks off her book launch at a party at the Odyssey Bookshop in South Hadley.

AMHERST — Holly Black has loved vampires ever since she was a wee one setting up her Barbies to defend against a visit from the villainous Dracula after her mother told her about a scene in the novel that scared her.

But the author of best-selling works including “The Spiderwick Chronicles” on which she collaborated with Amherst artist Tony DiTerlizzi, had never written a book about them until now.

Tonight at 7, Black will celebrate the release of “The Coldest Girl in Coldtown” at the Odyssey Bookshop in South Hadley before she sets out on a national tour. She even colored her hair blue for the event at which she will dispense vampire candies.

The novel grew from a short story of the same name she wrote a couple of years ago for “The Eternal Kiss,” a vampire anthology.

She shied from the genre because the world “is full of great vampire (books).
What did I have to add to the conversation?” For her, writing a vampire book was “about adding to the conversation.”

Black is known more for her fantasies both for children and young adults.
But with the novel at 432 pages, she said, “I guess I have a lot to say. Once I started writing, I couldn’t stop.”

The description of the novel for readers 15 and older is in part this: “Tana lives in a world where walled cities called Coldtowns exist. In them, quarantined monsters and humans mingle in a decadently bloody mix of predator and prey. The only problem is, once you pass through Coldtown’s gates, you can never leave.”

"You may be ready to put a stake in vampire lit, but read this first: It’s dark and dangerous, bloody and brilliant,” according to a starred Kirkus review.

A reviewer at the Huffington Post wrote this “Between the fantasy realism, the realistic look at vampires existing today and the sizzling romance, I was sold. This is a YA vampire book unlike one you’ve ever read. 'The Coldest Girl' in Coldtown is dark, interesting and surprising – excellent.”

Black, who is also author of “The Modern Faerie Tale” series, “The Good Neighbors” graphic novel trilogy with Ted Naifeh, the “Curse Workers” series and “Doll Bones,” said she writes what she wants to read.

Beside vampire stories, she grew up reading fantasy and a “writer writes more for themselves,” she said.

But fantasy and vampire stories offer a platform for metaphor.
“Fantasy can’t be just metaphor…then it’s not fantasy.”

With vampires, they represent “our best and worst self, our hungriest self, our eternal, ageless most beautiful, powerful" self.

“There’s a lot of room for metaphor.”

To write a vampire novel, she reread novels she loved and revisited folklore and “Vampires and Vampirism” to create a rich and believable world.

She wanted that world filled with images of forest and earth, blood and teeth.

black2.JPGAmherst writer Holly Black outside her Tudor-style home.  

Black has lived in town since 2004. She bought her Tudor home on a hill sight unseen on the recommendation of DiTerlizzi’s wife and it looks with its arches and furnishings as if it was a set in a fantasy novel she wrote. There’s even a secret door of books that leads into a secret library that she and her husband put in when they renovated.

Her writing studio is filled with props and toys, posters and books and a director’s chair with her name, the back of which came after the “The Spiderwick Chronicles” film was released in 2008.

Black, though, is not the only best-selling Amherst writer of fantasy and vampires. Her friend Cassandra Clare is the author of the “Mortal Instrument” series. “The City of Bones” based on one of the books in the series, has just been released in theaters.

The event at the Odyssey is at 7, but participants need to buy the book in advance of the event to attend. For more information, visit the store’s website .


Massachusetts gas prices rise 3 cents per gallon

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The cost of a gallon of gas in Massachusetts rose 3 cents in the past week to an average of $3.65.

 
BOSTON (AP) — The cost of a gallon of gas in Massachusetts rose 3 cents in the past week to an average of $3.65.

AAA Southern New England reports Tuesday that the average cost of self-serve, regular in the state is now 6 cents per gallon above the national average.

Current prices are now 11 cents lower than at the same time last year and 4 cents lower than a month ago.

AAA found self-serve, regular selling for as low as $3.51 per gallon and as high as $3.89.

West Springfield police: Man's fall from 4th floor of hotel was apparent suicide attempt

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A West Springfield police captain said the man apparently fell into bushes, which broke his fall, and he was coherent when rescue personnel arrived on the scene.

Updates a story posted Tuesday at 10:28 a.m.


WEST SPRINGFIELD — Police on Tuesday said a man who fell four stories from the top floor of the Quality Inn at 1150 Riverdale St. was apparently trying to commit suicide.

West Springfield Police Capt. John Farrarini said the unidentified man had missed the check out time and a hotel employee went to the room to check on him. The employee found the room vacant and the slider to the balcony open. When he looked down from the balcony, the employee saw the victim sitting on the ground, bleeding from a compound fracture to his arm.

Farrarini said the man apparently fell into bushes, which broke his fall, and was coherent when rescue personnel arrived on the scene.

The victim was taken to the Baystate Medical Center in Springfield with what Farrarini described as serious but non-life-threatening injuries.

Police searched a BMW convertible bearing Vermont registration plates in the hotel parking lot. Farrarini said the car was reported stolen from Rutland, Vt.


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