Boston Herald Obituary Notices
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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 -
Courts Strip Elders of Their Independence Within Minutes, Judges Send Seniors to Supervised Care
Courts strip elders of their independence Within minutes, judges send seniors to supervised care By Jeff Kelly, Maggie Kowalski, and Candice Novak Globe Correspondents / January 13, 2008 Dawn Cromwell dares not leave her building. If she tried, a device girding her ankle would sound an alarm. For over a year, she has had to use store-bought reading glasses because her pleas for a prescription pair have gone for naught. She is given medications, but, she says, no one will tell her what they are. For 20 months now, Cromwell's life has been defined by a 10.5-by-12.5-foot living space at North End Rehabilitation and Nursing Center. In her tiny closet, there are virtually no clothes, and she has no idea what's become of the cherished possessions in the Boylston Street apartment where she lived for years. At 73, Cromwell is one of hundreds of forgotten docket numbers in Massachusetts probate and family courts, where judges routinely fast-track infirm elders into the care of guardians, often with little evidence to justify such wrenching decisions. Cromwell, after a broken ankle and a brief rehab in early 2006, had expected to go home. But on the say-so from the nursing home's doctor - a short, nearly illegible diagnosis - a judge decreed that Cromwell was mentally ill and handed all of her decision-making to a guardian. Cromwell lost all power over her own life, with no opportunity to object, no right to have a lawyer represent her, no chance to even be in the courtroom. -
SANOMA OSAKEYHTIÖÖN LIITTYVÄ ARKISTO Arkistoluettelo SISÄLLYSLUETTELO
ELJAS ERKKO – SANOMA OSAKEYHTIÖÖN LIITTYVÄ ARKISTO Arkistoluettelo SISÄLLYSLUETTELO A TOIMITUSJOHTAJAKAUDEN KIRJEENVAIHTO Aa Saapuneet kirjeet ja lähetettyjen kirjeiden toisteet 1927-1965 A 1 B 8 C 15 D 18 E 22 F 26 G 30 H 34 I 46 J 50 K 53 L 63 M 70 N 77 O 83 P-Q 86 R 94 S 99 T 118 U 125 V,W 131 Y-Ö 140 Nimimerkit, nimettömät kirjeet 141 Paikanhakijat 1930-luvulla 145 Ab Lähetettyjen sähkeiden toisteet 1958-1965 149 B SANOMA OSAKEYHTIÖN SISÄISEEN TOIMINTAAN LIITTYVÄT ASIAKIRJAT Ba Yleishallinto 169 Bb Henkilöstöhallinto ja kirjeenvaihto henkilökunnan kanssa 178 Asiamiesten kanssa käyty kirjeenvaihto 200 Muu asiamiehiin liittyvä aineisto 202 Kotimaiset kirjeenvaihtajat 203 Suomalaiset kirjeenvaihtajat ulkomailla 205 Ulkomaiset kirjeenvaihtajat 206 LIITTEET Eri toimintojen asiatunnukset 208 Eljas Erkon elämäkerta 212 Eljas Erkko ja Sanoma Osakeyhtiö, tärkeitä vuosilukuja 215 ELJAS ERKON SANOMA OSAKEYHTIÖÖN LIITTYVÄ ARKISTO Arkistonmuodostaja Eljas Erkko, ks. tarkempi elämäkerta luettelon lopussa olevasta liitteestä. Rajavuodet 1920-1965 Päävuodet 1927-1962 Määrä (hm) 5,6 Järjestämistyöt Alkuperäiset arkistoluettelotiedot päivätty seuraavasti: lokakuu-marraskuu 1993, tammikuu-joulukuu 1994, tammikuu-lokakuu 1995, lokakuu 1996, huhtikuu 1999, helmikuu 2002, huhtikuu 2002, heinäkuu 2003, tammikuu 2005, maaliskuu 2007. Arkistoluettelon ulkoasua päivitetty joulukuussa 2011, Petri Marjeta Järjestämisperiaate Asiakirjojen alkuperäinen järjestys on pyritty säilyttämään. Mahdolliset poikkeukset on mainittu sarjakohtaisesti luettelossa. Huomautus Säilytysyksikkö Ab1 on musta vaakasuuntainen kortistolaatikko. Käyttörajoitukset Käyttö vain arkistonjohtajan luvalla Eljas Erkko – Sanoma Osakeyhtiöön liittyvä arkisto 1 Saapuneet kirjeet ja lähetettyjen kirjeiden toisteet 1927-1965 Aa Kukin yksikkö yksi nippu, jollei muuta S: saapuneet kirjeet mainita. Kirjeenvaihdon aihepiiriä kuvaavat T: Eljas Erkon tai Helsingin kirjaintunnukset liitteenä Sanomien kirjeiden toisteet Aa_01_01 Aa1 ko 1958 Aaku, Eero, T: 1 kpl Bga päiväämät. -
Albanian Catholic Bulletin Buletini Katholik Shqiptar
ISSN 0272 -7250 ALBANIAN CATHOLIC BULLETIN PUBLISHED PERIODICALLY BY THE ALBANIAN CATHOLIC INFORMATION CENTER Vol.3, No. 1&2 P.O. BOX 1217, SANTA CLARA, CA 95053, U.S.A. 1982 BULETINI d^M. jpu. &CU& #*- <gP KATHOLIK Mother Teresa's message to all Albanians SHQIPTAR San Francisco, June 4, 1982 ALBANIAN CATHOLIC PUBLISHING COUNCIL: ZEF V. NEKAJ, JAK GARDIN, S.J., PJETER PAL VANI, NDOC KELMENDI, S.J., BAR BULLETIN BARA KAY (Assoc. Editor), PALOK PLAKU, RAYMOND FROST (Assoc. Editor), GJON SINISHTA (Editor), JULIO FERNANDEZ Volume III No.l&2 1982 (Secretary), and LEO GABRIEL NEAL, O.F.M., CONV. (President). In the past our Bulletin (and other material of information, in cluding the book "The Fulfilled Promise" about religious perse This issue has been prepared with the help of: STELLA PILGRIM, TENNANT C. cution in Albania) has been sent free to a considerable number WRIGHT, S.J., DAVE PREVITALE, JAMES of people, institutions and organizations in the U.S. and abroad. TORRENS, S.J., Sr. HENRY JOSEPH and Not affiliated with any Church or other religious or political or DANIEL GERMANN, S.J. ganization, we depend entirely on your donations and gifts. Please help us to continue this apostolate on behalf of the op pressed Albanians. STRANGERS ARE FRIENDS News, articles and photos of general interest, 100-1200 words WE HAVEN'T MET of length, on religious, cultural, historical and political topics about Albania and its people, may be submitted for considera tion. No payments are made for the published material. God knows Please enclose self-addressed envelope for return. -
“Extracts from Some Rebel Papers”: Patriots, Loyalists, and the Perils of Wartime Printing
1 “Extracts from some Rebel Papers”: Patriots, Loyalists, and the Perils of Wartime Printing Joseph M. Adelman National Endowment for the Humanities Fellow American Antiquarian Society Presented to the Joint Seminar of the McNeil Center for Early American Studies And the Program in Early American Economy and Society, LCP Library Company of Philadelphia, 1314 Locust Street, Philadelphia 24 February 2012 3-5 p.m. *** DRAFT: Please do not cite, quote, or distribute without permission of the author. *** 2 The eight years of the Revolutionary War were difficult for the printing trade. After over a decade of growth and increasing entanglement among printers as their networks evolved from commercial lifelines to the pathways of political protest, the fissures of the war dispersed printers geographically and cut them off from their peers. Maintaining commercial success became increasingly complicated as demand for printed matter dropped, except for government printing, and supply shortages crippled communications networks and hampered printers’ ability to produce and distribute anything that came off their presses. Yet even in their diminished state, printers and their networks remained central not only to keeping open lines of communication among governments, armies, and civilians, but also in shaping public opinion about the central ideological issues of the war, the outcomes of battles, and the meaning of events affecting the war in North America and throughout the Atlantic world. What happened to printers and their networks is of vital importance for understanding the Revolution. The texts that historians rely on, from Common Sense and The Crisis to rural newspapers, almanacs, and even diaries and correspondence, were shaped by the commercial and political forces that printers navigated as they produced printed matter that defined the scope of debate and the nature of the discussion about the war. -
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. -
International Press and Diplomatic Circumstances in Kosovo in the Years 1988-1990
ISSN 2039-2117 (online) Mediterranean Journal of Social Sciences Vol 5 No 19 ISSN 2039-9340 (print) MCSER Publishing, Rome-Italy August 2014 International press and diplomatic circumstances in Kosovo in the years 1988-1990 Dr.Sc. Isak Sherifi Albanian /Macedonia [email protected] DOI:10.5901/mjss.2014.v5n19p274 Abstract The dramatic events of 1988 and 1989 years in Kosovo, followed by strikes, protests and demonstrations in defense of the autonomy of Kosovo began with "Trepca" miner’s incarceration in seven-day strikes in the depths of the mine galleries. Students and Kosovo people continued strikes, affected agencies and the strongest international newspaper journalists to come in Kosovo and inform their readers what actually was happening in Kosovo. Events in Kosovo undertaken by internal affairs organs of the Yugoslav Federation caused numerous reactions in domestic opinion as well as in the international. CNN, BBC, France Press, DPA, Corriere della Sera, ANSA and many other mediums were giving a completely true situation in front of other official state propaganda then. These media correspondents were reporting on the continuing violence arrests and killings of Kosovo citizens by these state bodies. These were brave journalists who disseminated in public the appearance of intellectuals isolated in Kosovo that were being held in prisons without the right decision and the question of: What would happen to them if they do not come on the front pages of news in these media? As a merit of their work, Kosovo came on the front pages of all prestigious international journals which set in motion the intellectual elite of their countries and official reactions to the states. -
The Newspapers of the British Empire As a Matrix for The
Warner.communicating.liberty-1 Communicating Liberty: the Newspapers of the British Empire as a Matrix for the American Revolution William B. Warner “I beg your lordship’s permission to observe, and I do it with great concern, that this spirit of opposition to taxation and its consequences is so violent and so universal throughout America that I am apprehensive it will not be soon or easily appeased. The general voice speaks discontent… determined to stop all exports to and imports from Great Britain and even to silence the courts of law…foreseeing but regardless of the ruin that must attend themselves in that case, content to change a comfortable, for a parsimonious life,…” Lieutenant-Governor of South Carolina, Wm. Bull to Earl of Dartmouth, July 31, 1774. [Documents of the American Revolution, 1770-1783, Ed. K. G. Davies. (Dublin: Irish University Press, 1975) VIII: 1774, 154.] Momentous historical events often issue from a nexus of violence and communication. While American independence from Britain ultimately depended upon the spilling of blood on the battlefields of Bunker Hill, Saratoga and Yorktown, the successful challenge to the legitimacy of British rule in America was the culmination of an earlier communications war waged by American Whigs between the Stamp Act agitation of 1764-5 and the Coercive Acts of 1774. In response to the first of the Coercive acts--the Boston Port Bill--Boston Whigs secured a tidal wave of political and material support from throughout the colonies of British America. By the end of 1774, the American Secretary at Whitehall, Lord Dartmouth, was receiving reports from colonial Governors of North America, like the passage quoted above from the Lieutenant-Governor of South Caroline, William Bull. -
Kennedy Assassination Newspaper Collection : a Finding Aid
University of South Florida Scholar Commons Special Collections and University Archives Finding Aids and Research Guides for Finding Aids: All Items Manuscript and Special Collections 5-1-1994 Kennedy Assassination Newspaper Collection : A Finding Aid Nelson Poynter Memorial Library. Special Collections and University Archives. James Anthony Schnur Hugh W. Cunningham Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/scua_finding_aid_all Part of the Archival Science Commons Scholar Commons Citation Nelson Poynter Memorial Library. Special Collections and University Archives.; Schnur, James Anthony; and Cunningham, Hugh W., "Kennedy Assassination Newspaper Collection : A Finding Aid" (1994). Special Collections and University Archives Finding Aids: All Items. 19. https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/scua_finding_aid_all/19 This Other is brought to you for free and open access by the Finding Aids and Research Guides for Manuscript and Special Collections at Scholar Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Special Collections and University Archives Finding Aids: All Items by an authorized administrator of Scholar Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Kennedy Assassination Newspaper Collection A Finding Aid by Jim Schnur May 1994 Special Collections Nelson Poynter Memorial Library University of South Florida St. Petersburg 1. Introduction and Provenance In December 1993, Dr. Hugh W. Cunningham, a former professor of journalism at the University of Florida, donated two distinct newspaper collections to the Special Collections room of the USF St. Petersburg library. The bulk of the newspapers document events following the November 1963 assassination of John F. Kennedy. A second component of the newspapers examine the reaction to Richard M. Nixon's resignation in August 1974. -
Table 7: Non-Responders
Table 7, Non-responders: newspapapers not replying to the ASNE newsroom survey, ranked by circulation Rank Newspaper, State Circulation Ownership Community minority 1 New York Post, New York 590,061 46.0% 2 Chicago Sun-Times, Illinois 479,584 Hollinger 44.9% 3 The Columbus Dispatch, Ohio 251,557 15.8% 4 Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, Little Rock, Arkansas 185,709 Wehco Media 22.6% 5 The Providence Journal, Rhode Island 165,880 Belo 16.3% 6 Las Vegas Review-Journal, Nevada 164,848 Stephens (Donrey) 39.2% 7 Journal Newspapers, Alexandria, Virginia 139,077 39.6% 8 The Post and Courier, Charleston, South Carolina 101,288 Evening Post 35.9% 9 The Washington Times, D.C. 101,038 46.7% 10 The Press Democrat, Santa Rosa, California 87,261 New York Times 25.0% 11 The Times Herald Record, Middletown, New York 84,277 Dow Jones 23.6% 12 The Times, Munster, Indiana 84,176 Lee 26.2% 13 Chattanooga Times Free Press, Tennessee 74,521 Wehco Media 16.4% 14 Daily Breeze, Torrance, California 73,209 Copley 66.5% 15 South Bend Tribune, Indiana 72,186 Schurz 13.9% 16 The Bakersfield Californian, California 71,495 51.2% 17 Anchorage Daily News, Alaska 69,607 McClatchy 29.0% 18 Vindicator, Youngstown, Ohio 68,137 13.3% 19 The Oakland Press, Pontiac, Michigan 66,645 21st Century 18.4% 20 Inland Valley Daily Bulletin, Ontairo, California 65,584 MediaNews 65.0% 21 Honolulu Star-Bulletin, Hawaii 64,305 80.0% 22 The Union Leader, Manchester, New Hampshire 62,677 5.1% 23 The Columbian, Vancouver, Washington 51,263 13.1% 24 The Daily Gazette, Schenectady, New York 51,126 -
Table 10: Newspapers Not Responding to the ASNE Survey, Ranked By
Table 10 Papers not responding to the ASNE survey, 2005 Ranked by circulation Source: Report to the Knight Foundation, June 2005, by Bill Dedman and Stephen K. Doig The full report is at http://www.asu.edu/cronkite/asne (DNR = did not report to ASNE last year, too.) Rank Newspaper, State Weekday Ownership Circulation Staff non-white circulation area non- % for previous white % survey, if paper responded 1 New York Post, New York 686,207 40.3 DNR 2 Chicago Sun-Times, Illinois 410,000 Hollinger International (Ill.) 50.3 DNR 3 The Columbus Dispatch, Ohio 251,045 17.8 DNR 4 Boston Herald, Massachusetts 240,759 Herald Media (Mass.) 24.1 DNR 5 Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, Little Rock, 182,391 Wehco Media (Ark.) 21.7 DNR Arkansas 6 The Providence Journal, Rhode Island 168,021 Belo (Texas) 17.3 DNR 7 The Florida Times-Union, Jacksonville, 165,425 Morris Communications (Ga.) 29.6 10.4 Florida 8 Las Vegas Review-Journal, Nevada 159,507 Stephens Media Group (Donrey) 39.3 DNR (Nev.) 9 Scripps Treasure Coast Newspapers, 101,705 Scripps (Ohio) 20.7 8.1 Stuart, Florida 10 The Washington Times, District of 100,603 64.3 DNR Columbia 11 Press-Telegram, Long Beach, California 96,967 MediaNews Group (Colo.) 76.8 16.4 Page 1 Rank Newspaper, State Weekday Ownership Circulation Staff non-white circulation area non- % for previous white % survey, if paper responded 12 The Post and Courier, Charleston, South 95,588 Evening Post Publishing (S.C.) 35.9 DNR Carolina 13 Mobile Register, Alabama 94,045 Advance (Newhouse) (N.Y.) 32.8 DNR 14 New Haven Register, Connecticut 92,098 Journal Register (N.J.) 22.7 DNR 15 Daily Press, Newport News, Virginia 91,307 Tribune Co.