As published on page one of the August 30, 2011 edition of the Keene Sentinel, and online.
BRATTLEBORO, Vt. -- A trail of muddy footprints led up the stairs of the town's municipal center Monday afternoon, as residents and business owners from flood-ravaged Brattleboro neighborhoods gathered hoping to learn when, and how, they will be able to rebuild their lives.
Every year, US Immigration and Customs Enforcement detains hundreds of thousands of men and women found living and working in the United States in violation of immigration and visa laws. Detainees are confined as if prison even though they have not been charged with any crime. Conditions in I.C.E.'s over 300 detention centers have been criticized by national and international watchdog groups, including Amnesty International and the American Civil Liberties Union.
On a bitterly cold evening this December, human rights activists and religious believers from a variety of traditions gathered outside a federal detention facility in New York City. They held candles and called for the US government to release the people locked up inside.
Opponents of amnesty for illegal immigrants say that no violation of US law should be tolerated, but these protesters see a larger moral issue at stake. They say that the detention centers, where people are held without charge and dozens have died of medical neglect, violate detainees' fundamental human rights.
As published on page one of the Jan. 3, 2012 edition of the Keene Sentinel, and online.
The sidewalks are cracked and uneven, and many of the display windows open onto dark and empty rooms.
More than a year has passed since a change of management offered hope for a new future for The Center at Keene. But the number of tenants in the shopping center has continued to decline -- leaving one in three storefronts vacant, and prompting remaining businesses to wonder what the future holds.
As published on page one of the Dec. 8, 2011 edition of the Keene Sentinel, and online.
Grace A. Smart has lived in Central Square Terrace, a 90-unit housing facility for seniors and people with disabilities on Central Square, for 15 years.
She says she's noticed a change since Keene police moved from downtown to Marlboro Street.
As published on page one of the Nov. 30, 2011 edition of the Keene Sentinel, and online.
William Lonardo estimates he stuck almost 100 campaign signs in the ground around Cheshire County on Sunday -- from his home in Rindge up to Alstead and over to Westmoreland -- all supporting Republican presidential candidate and former U.S. House Speaker Newt Gingrich.
As published on page one of the Nov. 6, 2011 edition of The Keene Sentinel, and online.
A musical fan group with a local following that was thrown into the spotlight following a killing this summer has been identified by the FBI as a possible criminal gang.
As published on page one of the Oct. 28, 2011 edition of The Keene Sentinel, and online.
The economy may be offering more tricks than treats lately, but that isn't stopping some Monadnock Region residents from investing in a little Halloween fun this year.
As published on page one of the Oct. 27 edition of The Keene Sentinel, and online.
A Keene police substation downtown is the first priority, but a range of other ideas for mitigating bad behavior in the heart of the city should be considered, a City Council committee suggested Wednesday night.
As published in the Oct. 24, 2011 edition of The Keene Sentinel, and online.
WINCHESTER -- The town's planning board faces a legal challenge to its handling of a new asphalt plant operating on Route 10 near the Winchester-Swanzey border.
As published on page one of the Oct. 22, 2011 edition of The Keene Sentinel, and online.
It was all fun and games at the start.
But as the turn-of-the-century toy maker grew and evolved into a company that shipped customized manufacturing equipment around the world, it also became one of the pillars of Keene and its economic life.
As published in the Oct. 22 edition of The Keene Sentinel, and online.
The story of Kingsbury Corp.'s early years, told repeatedly in marketing brochures and historical pamphlets and by proud employees, is the stuff of legend.
As published in the Oct. 21, 2011 edition of The Keene Sentinel, and online.
WINCHESTER -- A statewide preservation organization has thrown its weight behind local efforts to save a dilapidated 200-year-old house on Winchester's Main Street from demolition.
As published on page one of the Oct. 21, 2011 edition of The Keene Sentinel, and online.
They're coming.
In less than 24 hours, Keene's population will swell as pumpkin peepers from near and far descend on downtown for the city's 21st annual Pumpkin Festival.
WINCHESTER -- A statewide preservation organization has thrown its weight behind local efforts to save a dilapidated 200-year-old house on Winchester's Main Street from demolition.
It's a small piece of the federal budget, but the $5 billion program that helps people with low incomes purchase home heating oil is a big deal to those struggling to make ends meet through a New England winter.
As published in the Oct. 5, 2011 edition of The Keene Sentinel and online.
Before the legislative committee charged with re-dividing New Hampshire's 400 House seats among it 1.3 million people gets started, residents have a chance to weigh in on how they think the pie should be cut.
As published on page one of the Oct. 4, 2011 edition of The Keene Sentinel and online.
A struggling local manufacturer filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection Friday -- part of an ongoing effort to resurrect the company from beneath mounting debts and resume operations at what was once one of Keene's largest employers.
As published in the Oct. 2, 2011 edition of The Keene Sentinel and online.
STODDARD -- With a federal lawsuit hanging over its head, the town's zoning board is poised to resume operation after a spate of resignations that left it out of commission back in July.
As published on page one of the Sept. 29, 2011 edition of The Keene Sentinel, and online.
A Massachusetts accountant has been charged with stealing more than $250,000 from a trust fund he supervised on behalf of the employees of a Peterborough company and with falsifying documents to hide that he had previously taken even more money.
As published in the Sept. 29, 2011 edition of The Keene Sentinel, and online.
Keene voters go to the polls on Tuesday for the municipal primary -- even though none of the races for city officials has enough candidates for anyone to be eliminated.
As published on page one of the Sept. 27 edition of The Keene Sentinel, and online.
All kinds of conflicts are resolved in courtrooms, from the aftermath of murder and embezzlement to loans that can't be repaid and marriages that haven't worked out.
Judges -- the people with the training and authority to make legal decisions -- are essential to the functioning of the court. And in New Hampshire these days, judges are in short supply.
As published on page one of the September 23, 2011 edition of The Keene Sentinel, and online.
The city may not drain Robin Hood Pond after all.
Instead of replacing Robin Hood Dam, the almost 120-year-old earthen dam that creates the pond in a park on the eastern side of Keene, officials now say they can reinforce the structure -- a solution that should cause less disruption in the park.
As published on page one of the September 20, 2011 edition of The Keene Sentinel, and online.
WINCHESTER -- An asphalt plant that drew vocal protests in the spring went online late last month, and neighbors say it's just as they expected: It stinks.
As published on page one of the September 17, 2011 edition of The Keene Sentinel, and online.
BRATTLEBORO -- Stanley Lynde sat in a folding chair outside of Lynde Motorsports on Flat Street Friday afternoon, enjoying the sunny, crisp weather and the company of a half-dozen friends.
"I haven't done any work to get paid for since the flood," he said, sounding unexpectedly cheerful.
As published on page one of the September 15, 2011 edition of The Keene Sentinel, and online.
The Keene-based Kingsbury Corp. is down but not out, according to owner Iris A. Mitropoulis, who speaks with confidence of a recovery by the 117-year-old manufacturing firm.
As published in the September 15, 2011 edition of The Keene Sentinel, and online.
The Swanzey factory and Keene storefront of Trikeenan Tileworks will be closed by the end of October, according to the attorney representing the company's new owners.
As published on page one of the August 29, 2011 edition of the Keene Sentinel, and online.
BRATTLEBORO, Vt. -- Flooding from rains caused by Tropical Storm Irene wreaked havoc on Brattleboro Sunday.
Many West Brattleboro residents remain evacuated from their homes, and roads in the area were decimated. The flooding extended into the heart of the downtown central business district.
"At this point it's overwhelming. We have so many areas of concern we're trying to prioritize -- where do we go first?" Selectboard Chairman Richard A. DeGray told reporters this morning.
As published in the August 25, 2011 edition of the Keene Sentinel, and online.
An assortment of young people took to Keene's Central Square with brooms, rakes and a bucket of soapy water Wednesday afternoon in an effort to help clean up their image.
As published on page one of the August 16, 2011 edition of The Keene Sentinel, and online.
Starting in the 2012 election, individual Keene voters will be choosing fewer members of the N.H. House -- a change that some representatives say may challenge Democratic control of the city's seven-member delegation.
As published on page three of the August 3, 2011 edition of The Keene Sentinel, and online.
A little over a week after the stabbing death of a Keene High School student in downtown Keene, some area residents are searching for a way to permanently memorialize the slain youth as an alternative to the graffiti that has appeared since he died.
As published on page one of the August 2, 2011 edition of The Keene Sentinel, and online.
MARLBOROUGH -- Flashes of green peeked out among the more formal black funeral attire at the graveside memorial service for a slain Keene High School student Monday morning.
Hundreds of friends, family and classmates of Craig Metivier clustered around a red and black urn to pay their last respects to the 17-year-old, who died from a stab wound on Dunbar Street in Keene on July 24.
As published on page one of the July 27, 2011 edition of The Keene Sentinel, and online.
The stabbing death of a Keene High School student has triggered a time of public mourning by the victim's friends in Keene, raising some eyebrows among downtown residents and property owners.
As published on page 13 of the July 23, 2011 edition of The Keene Sentinel, and online.
SWANZEY -- The ABTech crew is floating on air.
The Swanzey company designs and manufactures machinery with moving parts separated by pressurized air -- air bearings -- for use in high-tech applications, including jet engines and machines for making optical lenses.
The 13-year-old firm is handling twice as many orders as it had this time last year, according to Kenneth D. Abbott, company president.
As published on page one of the June 29, 2011 edition of The Keene Sentinel, and online.
Personal stories told with passion are the mark of fathers who decry the role the legal system has played in their families' lives.
Fathers' rights activists make headlines from time to time. Their actions can be silly, as in the case of British activists who periodically dress as comic book superheroes and scale public buildings. Or, they can be tragic, as in Thomas J. Ball's recent public suicide outside the Cheshire County Court House in Keene.
But the questions these activists raise touch on fundamental social issues of family, justice and the roles that men and women play in the world.
As published on page one of the June 17, 2011 edition of The Keene Sentinel, and online.
For a time Wednesday evening, Thomas Ball's death outside the Cheshire County Court House transformed a familiar spot in the heart of Keene into a landscape of grim-faced first responders, sobbing witnesses, emergency vehicles parked at odd angles and passers-by who held cell phones tight to their ears.
Twenty-four hours later, little evidence remained that Ball, at 5:30 p.m., took his life by setting himself on fire.
As published on page one of the June 4, 2011 edition of The Keene Sentinel, and online.
WESTMORELAND -- Ernest Hebert's ninth novel will be published in September. Titled "Never Back Down" and set in Keene, it chronicles 40 years in the life of a French-Canadian member of southern New Hampshire's working class.
"It's my life if I hadn't gone to college," Hebert says.
Hebert, who turned 70 in May, is a tenured professor at Dartmouth College in Hanover, where he heads the creative writing program. But his road to the Ivy League was long -- and it ran almost entirely through the Monadnock Region.
As published in the May 5, 2011 edition of The Keene Sentinel, and online.
Among the bright decorations on the door to the Monadnock Community Early Learning Center in Peterborough is a yellow sign reminding visitors of the clothing collection bin in the center parking lot.
"We get $$ for every pound of clothing and shoes," it reads.
As published on page one of the April 6, 2011 edition of the Keene Sentinel, and online.
Republican leaders in the U.S. House unveiled a budget plan Tuesday that took aim at two of the biggest recipients of federal dollars: Medicare and Medicaid.
What are these programs -- with their confusingly similar names -- and how are they used here in the Monadnock Region?
As published on page 13 of the April 2, 2011 edition of The Keene Sentinel, and online.
Six men sat down to share a lunch of pizza and Pepsi at Structal Bridges in Claremont on Monday. Three were experienced metal workers with between two years and more than a decade of experience with the company, shaping and assembling metal beams into bridges and overpasses for installation around the Northeast.
As published on page 13 of the February 26, 2011 edition of The Keene Sentinel, and online.
The banner across the website of the Westmoreland-based company Polyonics reads: "Polyonics ... means high quality and high performance in any language."
As published on page one of the Feb 13, 2011 edition of The Keene Sentinel, and online.
WALPOLE -- When George L. Hooper looked out over his estate a century ago, he pictured an educational institution dedicated to training the youth of Walpole for careers in agriculture and forestry. Nothing in his last will and testament indicates he pictured a golf course.
As published on page 13 of the January 31, 2011 edition of The Keene Sentinel, and online.
Standing on a bale of hay at Stonewall Farm on a recent afternoon, 4-year-old Sara Dafeldecker laced small pieces of hay into her father's hair as he talked about his family's relationship with the farm.
Sara has been drinking fresh-from-the-cow, unpasteurized milk from Stonewall Farm for her entire life, Kai Dafeldecker said. The Swanzey family picks up the milk from a refrigerator in a room attached to the cattle barn each week. Sara knows the cows by name.
But these regular visits will come to an end on March 31, when the farm stops selling raw milk to consumers. Dafeldecker and his wife, Jenn, say they will continue to visit for events, but it won't be the same.
As published on page 13 of the December 31, 2010 edition of The Keene Sentinel, and online.
Tweet. Follow. Friend.
Internet-based social media has been adding new shades of meaning to old words for years. But what once may have seemed a frivolous pastime for the young and idle has become a daily part of doing business in a range of local industries, from retail to manufacturing and hospitality to professional development.
As published on page one of the November 13, 2010 edition of The Keene Sentinel, and online.
Professor James Waller paces as he lectures. His hands jump around in front of his torso, spatially acting out ideas as he speaks. He makes eye contact with his students and calls on them by name.
The projector screen displays the flow charts and bullet points of a social psychologist, and deals in abstract academic language of group identity, cultural constructions and socialization. Speaking to this roomful of undergraduates, however, Waller alternates between lighthearted anecdotes and calm, detailed scenes from some of the most violent and heartbreaking events in human history.
Sedgwick Avenue residents got an unwelcome holiday surprise on a recent morning when they discovered their neighborhood had become a construction site.
"One day we came out and all of a sudden there are signs saying 'tow away zone,'" said Danalyn Velez, who lives near the winding stretch of road between Giles Place and Stevenson Place.
This is a small sampling of comments from the 97th, 98th, 99th, 100th and 101st plenary meetings of the 63rd General Assembly. A total of 94 delegations spoke during the debate and expressed a range of reactions to the multifaceted political philosophy described in the Secretary-General's report on implementing the responsibility to protect.
In West Africa, a new United Nations initiative aims to organize crime fighters against organized crime.
In addition to the flow of cocaine passing though West African coastal ports en route from Latin America to Europe, the region is home to black-market trades in counterfeit medicine, stolen oil, human beings and small arms, as well as the dumping of toxic and electronic wastes, according to a regional report released by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime this month.
It's a sunny spring afternoon, and a handful of residents are spending time on the stoop of Jasmine Court, on the corner of 138th Street and Bruckner Boulevard. Trucks rumble on and off the expressway. Pedestrians hurry past.
Laura Barksdale, 52, says she sits outside because she likes to watch the people go by. But she acknowledges Port Morris is not the most comfortable place to hang out outdoors.
"There's nowhere to relax and sit around," she said. "There's nowhere to go."
The United States on Friday, June 19 became a full member of the United Nations Human Rights Council, having previously shunned the three-year-old body.
The world now waits to see what this change of course will mean for international dialogue on human rights.
President Omar al-Bashir of Sudan may be a wanted man, but his day in court could be years away.
The International Criminal Court issued an arrest warrant for Bashir in March 2009, charging that his government has been promoting widespread killing and rape among millions of civilians displaced by the ongoing civil war in Darfur and preventing food and medicine from reaching those civilians. Since then, Bashir has defied the warrant and remained in power in Sudan.
Brooklyn - The stained glass windows, pipe organ and varnished wood could be taken for any U.S. church, at any time. So could the cheery, sing-along hymns - at least until hundreds of voices rise up to praise the lord in Mandarin.
Tian Fu Church started in Sunset Park only five years ago, sharing space with a small Latino congregation in a church built a century ago for a Norwegian parish. Tian Fu's founder, the Rev. Zhaodeng Peng, said his flock in New York City's third Chinatown has grown to include more than a thousand believers.
Sri Lanka's decades-old civil war is drawing to a close amid a dense media blackout. But for immigrants and refugees in North America, communication from family and loved ones trapped in the conflict zone have been an increasingly dire call to action.
It sounds like something your mother told you to never do in public, but the little-understood Uniform Land Use Review Procedure is a powerful force in the world of New York real estate.
Every inch of New York City, both public and private land, is granted a municipal identity through city rules that dictate what can be done where.
If you want the rules on a section of land waived or modified you have to ask permission - from just about everyone. The procedure is outlined in the city charter, and the details are fleshed out in the City Planning Commission's own set of rules.
Local non-profits, government agencies and environmental activists provided hands-on activities and information on everything from paddling the Bronx River to conserving energy in your home at the second annual South Bronx Earth Fest on April 25 in St. Mary's Park.
Ozzie Brown looks at the oil-drenched industrial stretch of Webster Avenue and sees a completely different future for this wide corridor that runs parallel to the Bronx River.
"We want to see bookstores, museums and cafés, so that it has a village feel," said Brown, the chair of Community Board 7's Land Use Committee. "We want to see nightlife, cuisine and culture."
The Department of City Planning, working closely with Brown's committee and the whole board, have drafted a plan designed to bring in new apartment buildings, stores and businesses on Webster, between Fordham Road and Gun Hill Road.
The MTA needs a bailout. The agency plans to make up it's budget deficit by increasing user fees and cutting back on services. Some bus and subway lines are slated to be eliminated entirely.
Fernando Tirado, the Community District Manager for Bronx Dixtrict 7, which includes the neighborhoods of Fordham, Norwood and Bedford Park, is concerned that reductions in MTA services will hit his community particularly hard.
"There's already such an economic divide as it is. People have to travel farther to go to work and do their shopping," Tirado said. "Increasing the cost of the only means these people have to travel outside their communities just isn't fair."
Before I took up reporting, I spent a lot of time thinking about what goes on in the unsourceable confines of our individual brains.
For a generation of psychologists, neuroscientists and philosophers of mind, one man had more influence on our understanding of the human mind than anyone else. And most of us never knew his name.
H.M. died yesterday, and the initials with which the scientific community respectfully - and affectionately - maintained his privacy are no longer required. they might stay in use for a while, though. Patient H.M. was a research subject for over fifty years, and old nicknames can be hard to shake.
H.M.'s amnesia was the opposite of the amnesia in daytime soaps. He knew the name the textbooks always concealed. He could tell stories and ask after people from the life he lived before the experimental brain surgery he underwent as a young man. After that surgery, for the rest of his 82 years, he never formed a memory of another event. He could carry on a conversation until you left the room; if you came back in, he had no idea you'd ever met. It's like that folk trivia about goldfish, only in a person, not a fish.
What's amazing, though, is that though he didn't remember events or names, he did remember. He recognized the patterns, voices and feelings of his post-surgery life, he just never knew where he recognized them from. I've heard his experience compared to a permanent state of déjàvu.
He must have known the spaces around M.I.T. where he lived out his life like the back of his hand. He must have learned, without knowing when he learned it, to accept acting on knowledge he couldn't explain.
In one study he solved the same puzzle repeatedly over subsequent days. He found the solution faster every day until he had the steps memorized. But he still approached each attempt unsure if he'd be able to figure it out.
Studying H.M. was a career-long commitment. He knew which researchers he liked and which he didn't, and would confidently state made-up histories explaining how he knew the people he considered his friends. Those scientists must be experiencing a unique and complicated feeling of loss.
There have been other cases of amnesia like H.M.'s, but it's usually brought about by alcoholism or an infection that visits indiscriminate damage around the brain. H.M. was removed from the stream of time with a surgeon's scalpel - personality and crossword puzzle fondness intact.
The Times' obit is here. This is good if you like your history of science from primary sources. If you're really intrigued you can put this book on your list. The next few days will surely produce some thoughtful eulogies from the people who think hardest about thought.
Memory research - and, by definition, H.M. - haven't been part of my life for years. Reminded of him now, there's something comforting in his bittersweet story. We all do the most amazing things without knowing what's going on.
On a Sunday last month, in a temporarily converted funeral home in Bedford Park, the Rev. Doug Cunningham preached about change. Standing without a podium or pulpit and speaking without notes, he talked about changing unhealthy lifestyles, government, public schools, the church’s attitudes toward homosexuality and the changes God can make in your life.
This was the first ever worship service of New Day United Methodist Church, a small but passionate group of Christians in search of a permanent home, an open-minded congregation and every opportunity to bring their justice-based message to the north Bronx.
South Street Seaport Museum’s scrappy W.O. Decker is the Tug of the Year.
The 52-foot-long, 78-year-old vessel owned by the Seaport Museum headed to Waterford, N.Y. Sept. 5 to claim her title at the tenth annual Waterford Tugboat Roundup.
Hyat Tarnikov likes to spend his afternoons in the Arslanbob teahouse talking to the foreign visitors. The teahouse extends over the narrow, rumbling rapids of a mountain stream, and the other patrons are all elderly men with long white beards, tall, embroidered felt hats and long coats. They remove their scuffed and muddy outer boots to expose soft leather shoes before pulling their legs onto the teahouse’s carpeted divans. The crowd changes very little from day to day.
Arslanbob is a home to 12,000 people, high in the mountains of southern Kyrgyzstan. There’s no cell phone reception, and everyone shares the one satellite phone in Hyat’s house. In Soviet days it was a popular resort, but now the economy relies on the surrounding walnut forests. When the harvest is bad, Hyat says, the long mountain winter is particularly bitter and sometimes people starve.
Photos from an afternoon bike ride out of the city of Hanzhong, in Shaanxi province. Coal is China's primary source of energy, from power plants to the cooking stoves in individual homes. Environmental destruction is widespread, even in the countryside. Yet rural families who make their livelihoods through grueling traditional agriculture continue to live "close to the earth."