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BERKSHIRE GAS Rate Case Notice Requirements and Communications Plan
BERKSHIRE GAS Rate Case Notice Requirements and Communications Plan Communication AudienceNehicle Issue Date Newspaper Publication • The Berkshire Eagle, The Greenfield 21 days and 7 days prior to of Legal Notice Recorder, Daily Hampshire Gazette, The first scheduled public Boston Globe or Boston Herald hearing Legal Notices • Mayors, City/Town Managers and 21 days prior to first Administrators, City/Town Clerks, Select scheduled public hearing; Board Chairs - Mailing website posting through date • General Public - Website of last scheduled public • Other Requesting Parties hearing Public Viewing Copies of • General Public - Berkshire Athenaeum, 21 days prior to first Filing, Legal Notice and Central Library, Pittsfield, MA scheduled public hearing Attorney General's • General Public - Greenfield Public Library, through date of last Notice of Retention of Greenfield, MA scheduled public hearing Experts and Consultants • General Public - Jones Library, Amherst, MA General Public Outreach • Press Release on Website May17, 2018 to Customers and • Employees - Talking Points for Employees May 16, 2018 External Stakeholders to Respond to Inquiries • Customers - Bill Message/Bill Insert Draft filed May 17, 2018, issued following DPU approval Media Release to Print, • Media - Press Release Issued May17, 2018 Radio and Television • Field media calls Ongoing Public Officials Outreach • State legislative Delegation - Delegation May 17, 2018 Meeting • Mayors, City/Town Administrators, May 17, 2018 City/Town Clerks - Mail Letter with Copy of Press Release Ongoing • Field Calls Other Outreach • Economic Development Organizations - Posted May 17, 2018 Meetings/Briefings WMAEDC, AIM • Chambers of Commerce - Letter, Press Posted May 17, 2018 Release, Legal Notice • Fuel Assistance Agencies - Letter, Press Posted Ma y 17, 2018 Release, Legal Notice 5654990.F . -
Talking Information Center Temporary Schedule UPDATED 7-6-20 TIC's
The Talking Information Center Daily Program Schedule The Talking Information Center 130 Enterprise Drive PO Box 519 Marshfield, MA 02050 781-834-4400 SUNDAY Time Program Time Program 12:00AM Winthrop Transcript 12:00PM Medical Hour 2 12:30AM Duxbury Clipper 12:30PM * 1:00AM News Block 1 1:00PM Economist 2 1:30AM News Block 2 1:30PM * 2:00AM News Block 3 2:00PM Businessweek 2 2:30AM News Block 4 2:30PM * 3:00AM News Block 5 3:00PM New Yorker 2 3:30AM News Block 6 3:30PM * 4:00AM News Block 7 4:00PM Washington Examiner 2 4:30AM News Block 8 4:30PM * 5:00AM News Block 9 5:00PM CSM Weekly Edition 2 5:30AM News Block 10 5:30PM * 6:00AM News Block 11 6:00PM Op-Ed Hour 6:30AM News Block 12 6:30PM * 7:00AM News Block [13] 7:00PM Reason 7:30AM News Block [14] 7:30PM * 8:00AM Kiplinger Personal Finance 8:00PM Wired 8:30AM Consumer Reports 8:30PM * 9:00AM Boston Globe 9:00PM Harper’s 9:30AM * 9:30PM * 10:00AM Boston Herald 10:00PM Short Stories 10:30AM * 10:30PM * 11:00AM New York Times 11:00PM Tales of Mystery 11:30AM * 11:30PM * MONDAY Time Program Time Program 12:00AM Late Night Book Hour 12:00PM New York Times 12:30AM * 12:30PM * 1:00AM Boston Magazine 1:00PM Patriot Ledger 1:30AM * 1:30PM Brockton Enterprise 2:00AM NY Times Magazine 2:00PM Taunton Daily Gazette 2:30AM * 2:30PM Attleboro Sun Chronicle 3:00AM Time 3:00PM Metro West News 3:30AM * 3:30PM Lynn Daily Item 4:00AM El Mundo/El Planeta 4:00PM Salem News 4:30AM * 4:30PM Gloucester Daily Times 5:00AM NY Times Book Review 5:00PM Daily News of Newburyport 5:30AM * 5:30PM Providence Journal -
In Defence of the Court's Integrity
In Defence of the Court’s Integrity 17 In Defence of the Court’s Integrity: The Role of Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes in the Defeat of the Court-Packing Plan of 1937 Ryan Coates Honours, Durham University ‘No greater mistake can be made than to think that our institutions are fixed or may not be changed for the worse. We are a young nation and nothing can be taken for granted. If our institutions are maintained in their integrity, and if change shall mean improvement, it will be because the intelligent and the worthy constantly generate the motive power which, distributed over a thousand lines of communication, develops that appreciation of the standards of decency and justice which we have delighted to call the common sense of the American people.’ Hughes in 1909 ‘Our institutions were not designed to bring about uniformity of opinion; if they had been, we might well abandon hope.’ Hughes in 1925 ‘While what I am about to say would ordinarily be held in confidence, I feel that I am justified in revealing it in defence of the Court’s integrity.’ Hughes in the 1940s In early 1927, ten years before his intervention against the court-packing plan, Charles Evans Hughes, former Governor of New York, former Republican presidential candidate, former Secretary of State, and most significantly, former Associate Justice of the Supreme Court, delivered a series 18 history in the making vol. 3 no. 2 of lectures at his alma mater, Columbia University, on the subject of the Supreme Court.1 These lectures were published the following year as The Supreme Court: Its Foundation, Methods and Achievements (New York: Columbia University Press, 1928). -
Medford, Massachusetts City Council Minutes
January 8, 2008 Medford City Council The First Regular Meeting Medford, Massachusetts January 8, 2008 Qualifying of Oath Alfred Pompeo, School Committee Paul Camuso, Council Michael Marks, Council Robert Penta, Council Stephanie M. Burke, Council Breanna Lungo-Koehn, Council City Council President Stephanie Muccini Burke Vice President Breanna Lungo-Koehn Paul A. Camuso Frederick N. Dello Russo, Jr. Robert A. Maiocco Michael J. Marks Robert M. Penta City Clerk Edward P. Finn the First Meeting of the Medford City Council at 7:00 P.M. at the Howard F. Alden Memorial Auditorium, Medford City Hall. ROLL CALL 7 Members Present SALUTE TO THE FLAG RECORDS The records of the meeting of December 18, 2007 were passed to Councillor Lungo-Koehn Those present and seated inside the rail were Dorothy Donehey, Asst. City Clerk and Lawrence Lepore, City Messenger Televised by Channel 16-Government Access 08-001- Election of a Council President for 2008 Councillor Lungo-Koehn nominated Stephanie Muccini Burke, seconded by Councillor Penta. Councillor Maiocco motioned that nominations be closed Roll Call Vote 7 in the affirmative for Stephanie Muccini Burke and 0 for no one else City Clerk/Justice of the Peace Edward P. Finn administered the Oath of Office to Elected President Stephanie Muccini Burke President Burke at this time assumed the chair 08-002-Election of a Council Vice President for 2008 Councillor Penta nominated Breanna Lungo-Koehn, seconded by Councillor Camuso, Councillor Camuso motioned that nominations be closed. Roll Call Vote 7 in the affirmative for Breanna Lungo-Koehn and 0 for no one else. -
Felipe Angeles| Military Intellectual of the Mexican Revolution, 1913--1915
University of Montana ScholarWorks at University of Montana Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers Graduate School 1988 Felipe Angeles| Military intellectual of the Mexican Revolution, 1913--1915 Ronald E. Craig The University of Montana Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.umt.edu/etd Let us know how access to this document benefits ou.y Recommended Citation Craig, Ronald E., "Felipe Angeles| Military intellectual of the Mexican Revolution, 1913--1915" (1988). Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers. 2333. https://scholarworks.umt.edu/etd/2333 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at ScholarWorks at University of Montana. It has been accepted for inclusion in Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks at University of Montana. For more information, please contact [email protected]. COPYRIGHT ACT OF 1976 THIS IS AN UNPUBLISHED MANUSCRIPT IN WHICH COPYRIGHT SUBSISTS, ANY FURTHER REPRINTING OF ITS CONTENTS MUST BE APPROVED BY THE AUTHOR, MANSFIELD LIBRARY UNIVERSITY OF MONTANA DATE198ft FELIPE ANGELES: MILITARY INTELLECTUAL OF THE MEXICAN REVOLUTION 1913-1915 by Ronald E. Craig B.A., University of Montana, 1985 Presented in partial fulfillment of requirements for the degree of Master of Arts University of Montana 1988 Chairman^ Bagprd—of—Examiners Dean, Graduate School / & t / Date UMI Number: EP36373 All rights reserved INFORMATION TO ALL USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. In the unlikely event that the author did not send a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. -
The Musical Antiquary (1909-1913) Copyright © 2003 RIPM Consortium Ltd Répertoire International De La Presse Musicale (
Introduction to: Richard Kitson, The Musical Antiquary (1909-1913) Copyright © 2003 RIPM Consortium Ltd Répertoire international de la presse musicale (www.ripm.org) The Musical Antiquary (1909-1913) The Musical Antiquary [MUA] was published in Oxford from October 1909 to July 1913 by Oxford University Press. The quarterly issues of each volume1-which contain between sixty and eighty pages in a single-column format-are paginated consecutively (each beginning with page one) and dated but not individually numbered. The price of each issue was two shillings and sixpence. Publication ceased without explanation. The Musical Antiquary was among the first British music journals to deal with musicological subjects, and contained articles of historical inquiry dealing mainly with "ancient music": the Elizabethan, the British Commonwealth and Restoration periods, and eighteenth-century musicians and musical life. In addition, several articles deal with early manifestations of Christian chant, the techniques of Renaissance polyphony and topics dealing with Anglican and Roman Catholic liturgical practices. The journal's founder and editor was Godfrey Edward Pellew Arkwright (1864-1944), a tireless scholar deeply involved with the study of music history. Educated at the University of Oxford, Arkwright prepared the catalogue of music in the Library of Christ Church, Oxford, and edited several important publications: English vocal music in twenty-five volumes of the Old English Edition, and Purcell's Birthday Odes for Queen Mary and his Odes to St. Cecilia, both published by the Purcell Society.2 The main contribiitors to The Musical Antiquary are well-known scholars in the field of British musicology, all born in about the middle of the nineteenth century and all active through the first quarter of the twentieth. -
Records of the Immigration and Naturalization Service, 1891-1957, Record Group 85 New Orleans, Louisiana Crew Lists of Vessels Arriving at New Orleans, LA, 1910-1945
Records of the Immigration and Naturalization Service, 1891-1957, Record Group 85 New Orleans, Louisiana Crew Lists of Vessels Arriving at New Orleans, LA, 1910-1945. T939. 311 rolls. (~A complete list of rolls has been added.) Roll Volumes Dates 1 1-3 January-June, 1910 2 4-5 July-October, 1910 3 6-7 November, 1910-February, 1911 4 8-9 March-June, 1911 5 10-11 July-October, 1911 6 12-13 November, 1911-February, 1912 7 14-15 March-June, 1912 8 16-17 July-October, 1912 9 18-19 November, 1912-February, 1913 10 20-21 March-June, 1913 11 22-23 July-October, 1913 12 24-25 November, 1913-February, 1914 13 26 March-April, 1914 14 27 May-June, 1914 15 28-29 July-October, 1914 16 30-31 November, 1914-February, 1915 17 32 March-April, 1915 18 33 May-June, 1915 19 34-35 July-October, 1915 20 36-37 November, 1915-February, 1916 21 38-39 March-June, 1916 22 40-41 July-October, 1916 23 42-43 November, 1916-February, 1917 24 44 March-April, 1917 25 45 May-June, 1917 26 46 July-August, 1917 27 47 September-October, 1917 28 48 November-December, 1917 29 49-50 Jan. 1-Mar. 15, 1918 30 51-53 Mar. 16-Apr. 30, 1918 31 56-59 June 1-Aug. 15, 1918 32 60-64 Aug. 16-0ct. 31, 1918 33 65-69 Nov. 1', 1918-Jan. 15, 1919 34 70-73 Jan. 16-Mar. 31, 1919 35 74-77 April-May, 1919 36 78-79 June-July, 1919 37 80-81 August-September, 1919 38 82-83 October-November, 1919 39 84-85 December, 1919-January, 1920 40 86-87 February-March, 1920 41 88-89 April-May, 1920 42 90 June, 1920 43 91 July, 1920 44 92 August, 1920 45 93 September, 1920 46 94 October, 1920 47 95-96 November, 1920 48 97-98 December, 1920 49 99-100 Jan. -
The Boston Police Strike in the Context of American Labor
Nineteen Nineteen: The Boston Police Strike in the Context of American Labor An Essay Presented by Zachary Moses Schrag to The Committee on Degrees in Social Studies in partial fulfillment of the requirements for a degree with honors of Bachelor of Arts Harvard College March 1992 Author’s note, 2002 This portion of my website presents "Nineteen Nineteen: The Boston Police Strike in the Context of American Labor." I wrote this essay in the spring of 1992 as my undergraduate honors thesis. I hope that the intervening ten years and my graduate education have helped me produce more sophisticated, better written works of history. But since I posted this thesis on-line several years ago, several websites have linked to the essay as a useful resource on the strike, labor history, and Calvin Coolidge. I therefore intend to keep it on the Web indefinitely. Aside from some minor corrections, this version is identical to the one I submitted, now on file at the Harvard Depository. The suggested citation is, Zachary Moses Schrag, “Nineteen Nineteen: The Boston Police Strike in the Context of American Labor” (A.B. thesis, Harvard University, 1992). Author’s note, March 2012 In the spring of 2011, my website, www.schrag.info, was maliciously hacked, leading me to reorganize that site as historyprofessor.org and zacharyschrag.com. As part of the reorganization, and in honor of the twentieth anniversary of this document’s completion, I have replaced the HTML version of the thesis—created in 1997—with the PDF you are now reading, which I hope is a more convenient format. -
The South Vs Leo Frank
Kentucky Journal of Undergraduate Scholarship Volume 1 | Issue 1 Article 3 May 2017 The outhS vs Leo Frank: Effects of Southern Culture on the Leo Frank Case 1913-1915 Kellye Cole Eastern Kentucky University, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://encompass.eku.edu/kjus Part of the United States History Commons Recommended Citation Cole, Kellye (2017) "The outhS vs Leo Frank: Effects of Southern Culture on the Leo Frank Case 1913-1915," Kentucky Journal of Undergraduate Scholarship: Vol. 1 : Iss. 1 , Article 3. Available at: https://encompass.eku.edu/kjus/vol1/iss1/3 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Journals at Encompass. It has been accepted for inclusion in Kentucky Journal of Undergraduate Scholarship by an authorized editor of Encompass. For more information, please contact [email protected]. PRISM: A Journal of Regional Engagement The South vs Leo Frank: Effects of Southern Culture on the Leo Frank Case 1913-1915 Kellye Cole Carolyn Dupont, PhD Eastern Kentucky Eastern Kentucky University University Abstract: In 1915, a young man from New York became the only Jewish person ever lynched in America. This paper analyzes primary and secondary sources including newspapers, magazines and personal accounts to consider the events that led to Leo Frank’s death in Georgia. Anti-Semitism, populism, racism, and newspaper coverage all infected the case. Despite extensive analysis in historical and popular works, the culture of Southern honor has typically been relegated to a minor role in the case. This study challenges the widely held assumption that anti-Semitism was the main impetus for the lynching and instead focuses on the culture of Southern honor as the ultimate cause. -
Special Libraries, June 1913 Special Libraries Association
San Jose State University SJSU ScholarWorks Special Libraries, 1913 Special Libraries, 1910s 6-1-1913 Special Libraries, June 1913 Special Libraries Association Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/sla_sl_1913 Part of the Cataloging and Metadata Commons, Collection Development and Management Commons, Information Literacy Commons, and the Scholarly Communication Commons Recommended Citation Special Libraries Association, "Special Libraries, June 1913" (1913). Special Libraries, 1913. Book 6. http://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/sla_sl_1913/6 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Special Libraries, 1910s at SJSU ScholarWorks. It has been accepted for inclusion in Special Libraries, 1913 by an authorized administrator of SJSU ScholarWorks. For more information, please contact [email protected]. - Special...... ..... -..... ---Libraries .......... - . - .- -- Vole 4 JUNE 1813 No. 6 - - - - - . - - -- ---- ___ PUBLISHED I3Y THE Kunlcipsl rererence work in New Yorlc City SPECIAL LIBRARTES ASSOCIATION .....................Mrs. Von Hohofl: I.ibrarian, New York City. Monthly except July nnd Aiuwst. Insurance Libraries Edltorlrl nod I'ubllcntlo!~ Olflcc, stnte Llbr-nry. ...................... Indlunnpolls, Ind. .............Dr. Frederick 11. Hoffman. Subscrll)tlons, 03 Itrond street, Boston, hfIIs~. Stat~stician, Prudcntitll Life Ins. Co., ICntered nt the l'ostoftlce nt Indlarinpolls, Ind., Newark, N. J. as second-clnsa matter. - - 2nd Meeting, Wednesday afternoon, June 25 Subscription.. .$2.00 a year (10 numbers) Address on Methods of the Luce Clipping Single coplee .................... .26 cents I3ureao ............Hon. Robert I~uce, formerly Lieut. Governor of Mass. I'renldent .......................D. N. Hnntl~ Iusurnnce Llbrary Assoclation, Iloston, Mnss. Report of Committee on Clippings.. ...... Vlce-President .................R. El. Johnston ..................Jesse Cunningham, Bureau of Rnllwny IZconomlcs, Wn~hington,D. -
The Commonwealth of Massachusetts —— DEPARTMENT of PUBLIC UTILITIES
The Commonwealth of Massachusetts —— DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC UTILITIES ORDER OF NOTICE D.P.U. 20-120 November 24, 2020 Petition of Boston Gas Company, doing business as National Grid, pursuant to G.L. c. 164, § 94 and 220 CMR 5.00, for Approval of a General Increase in Base Distribution Rates for Gas Service and a Performance-Based Ratemaking Plan. Boston Gas Company (“Boston Gas”), doing business as National Grid (“Company”), is required to publish the attached English version of the Notice of Filing, Public Hearings, and Procedural Conference (“Notice”) in the Worcester Telegram, Sentinel & Enterprise, The Daily Item, The Patriot Ledger, The Lowell Sun, The Salem News, The Cape Cod Times, the Eagle-Tribune, and either The Boston Globe or the Boston Herald, and the Spanish version of the attached Notice in El Mundo, no later than December 4, 2020, and again approximately seven (7) days prior to January 26, 2021. The Company also is required to publish the Spanish version of the attached Notice in El Planeta no later than December 12, 2020, and again approximately seven (7) days prior to January 26, 2021. In addition, the Company shall serve the attached Notices by email or mail no later than December 4, 2020 to the mayors, the chairs of the boards of selectmen, and the city and town clerks of the cities and towns in Boston Gas’ and the former Colonial Gas Company’s service areas; (2) the service list in Boston Gas Company/Colonial Gas Company, D.P.U. 17-170 (2018); and (3) any person who has filed a request for notice with the Company. -
Book Review: the Brandeis/Frankfurter Connection
BOOK REVIEW THE BRANDEIS/FRANKFURTER CONNECTION; by Bruce Allen Murphy. New York: Oxford University Press, 1982. 473 pp. $18.95. Reviewed by Judith Resnikt Shouldl be more serviceableto the State, ifI took an employment, where function would be wholly bounded in my person, and take up all my time, than I am by instructing everyone, as I do, andin furnishing the Republic with a great number of citizens who are capable to serve her? XENoHON'S M EMORABIL bk. 1, ch. 6, para. 15 (ed 1903), as quoted in a letter by Louis . Brandeis to Felix Frankfurter(Jan. 28, 1928).' I THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN JUSTICE BRANDEIS AND PROFESSOR FRANKFURTER From the same bits of information-letters, fragmentary notes, in- dividuals' recollections, newspaper and historical accounts-several different stories can emerge, as the storyteller brings to the materials his or her own personal concerns and hypotheses. From reading some of the correspondence between Justices Brandeis and Frankfurter,2 biog- raphies of each,3 and assorted articles about them and the times in which they lived,4 I envision the following exchanges between Brandeis and Frankfurter: The year was 1914. A young law professor, Felix Frankfurter, went to t Associate Professor of Law, University of Southern California Law Center. B.A. 1972, Bryn Mawr College; J.D. 1975, New York University School of Law. I wish to thank Dennis E. Curtis, William J. Genego, and Daoud Awad for their helpful comments. 1. 5 LETTERS OF Louis D. BRANDEIS 319 (M. Urofsky & D. Levy eds. 1978) [hereinafter cited as LETTERS]. 2. E.g., 1-5 LETTERs, supra note 1.