Keyword search: hadley ma
By SCOTT MERZBACH
HADLEY — A hotel that has been a fixture of Route 9 for almost 60 years is being converted into extended-stay lodging under new ownership.
By ERIKA HEYER-WATTS
In case you missed it, this year is the 50th anniversary of Steven Spielberg’s summer blockbuster, Jaws. Jaws is one of my favorite movies and I have seen it at least 30 times over the last 30 years or so. But I’ve never seen Jaws on the big screen until this year. The music was louder, Bruce was bigger and the theater was packed. I usually watch Jaws with family or a small group of friends, so watching it with a large group of strangers made the viewing experience new to me. We all laughed at the fisherman on the dock when he said “A what?” after Hooper explains the shark they caught is, indeed, a tiger shark. We all lifted our Narragansett cans and crushed them in unison with Quint. And we all jumped when Ben Gardner’s head popped out of his sunken vessel even though we all knew it was coming.
By SCOTT MERZBACH
NORTHAMPTON — Boaters on the Connecticut River between the Coolidge Bridge and the Holyoke Dam have for decades depended on channel markers and buoys as navigational aids while traveling along the waterway, protecting them from dangers, like rocks lurking below the surface, as well as alerting them to no-wake areas where they must move at slower speeds.
By EMILEE KLEIN
SOUTH HADLEY — Since July 2015, the Rev. James Nolte has led the St. Patrick’s parish as a “gentle giant,” according to Deacon David Bergeron.
By LUKAS DUNFORD
HADLEY — The Gardener’s Supply store along Route 9, originally called Hadley Garden Supply, will continue to operate for the foreseeable future, despite the Burlington, Vermont-based company filing for bankruptcy last week.
By EMILEE KLEIN
SOUTH HADLEY — In an effort to slow down cars speeding along thickly settled residential roads, South Hadley joins other Hampshire County cities and towns in lowering the statutory speed limit on roads from 30 mph to 25 mph.
By ALEXANDER MACDOUGALL
SPRINGFIELD — A federal judge on Wednesday denied a motion to reconsider pretrial detention for a Hadley man who allegedly sold plutonium and possessed numerous other explosive and hazardous materials in his home before being indicted two months ago.
By SCOTT MERZBACH
HADLEY — A May 2 vote by trustees for the Pioneer Valley Chinese Immersion Charter School to add two new members is being temporarily nullified by the state Department of Elementary and Secondary Education.
By CLAIRE MORENON
The Barstow family has been producing milk in Hadley since the 1920s – and after nearly 90 years, they knew they had to make some changes if they wanted to stay in the dairy business.
By SCOTT MERZBACH
HADLEY — All homes, businesses and farms using municipal water will be paying significantly higher rates after the Select Board this week agreed to adjustments aimed at generating enough money to cover the cost of water department operations and to build up reserves.
By EMILEE KLEIN
BELCHERTOWN — Dwight Day returns on Saturday for a second year to celebrate Belchertown’s historic village with conservation and wildlife activities, a cemetery tour and a portrayal of Emily Dickinson’s friendship with famous Dwight author Josiah Gilbert Holland.
By Staff Report
HADLEY — A continued decline in the number of households connected to Charter Spectrum cable is a major factor in a push by Hadley Media’s director to get both residents and others interested in public meetings and town events to subscribe to its YouTube channel.
By EMILEE KLEIN
SOUTH HADLEY — Mount Holyoke College will indefinitely pause construction of its geothermal pump hub — the heart of its $180 million effort to build a carbon-neutral heating and cooling system — due to uncertainties with potential tariffs and economic downturn.
A good-sized group of people attended the informational session on Mount Holyoke College’s proposed Geothermal Hub/Energy Center/Power Plant, held June 5 at Gamble Auditorium, though the college did not appear to engage in widespread publicity. Citizens from the community used other methods to alert the public to this meeting. Except for one speaker, all attendees who either ventured to the microphone or spoke from their seats, praised the concept of geothermal energy, and requested that MHC relocate its Energy Center elsewhere on their vast campus. Speaker after speaker raised the following concerns: noise from this “electric power plant” with air handlers outside the building and on the roof would disturb abutters, neighbors, and patrons of nearby restaurants; air pollution from the gasoline still compacted into the soil beneath the site, which had long ago been a gasoline station, would damage the health of abutters and neighbors.
By Staff Report
HADLEY — The New England Public Media Asparagus Festival will not reschedule its event this year after weather forced organizers to cancel the popular event last Saturday.
By SCOTT MERZBACH
HADLEY — A used car business that can display up to 10 vehicles for sale at a time will be allowed to set up at a 1.4-acre parcel at the corner of Route 9 and Goffe Street.
By SCOTT MERZBACH
HADLEY — A new two-year contract with a private ambulance service, with an option for a third year, will mean emergency medical care at the Advanced Life Support level for Hadley residents will continue to be provided by Action EMS Ambulance.
There has been, since Ivan the Terrible, in Russia a philosophy of brutalism. Its justification might be understood in terms of two approaches to taking a band-aid off of a wound: A slow removal produces somewhat less pain over a longer period of time than follows from ripping it off quickly. In this way, I imagine state-sponsored brutality is not supposed to be about being cruel per se, and there may be a certain reasoning around it. While Russians are targeting civilians in Ukraine to hurt or kill, the theory would go that this is to hasten an end to the war, after which survivors will go on to have many children.
By SCOTT MERZBACH
HADLEY — Among the ways Hadley officials recognize farming as the backbone of the town is by charging much lower rates for water used for agricultural purposes than municipal water provided to homes and businesses.
By ALEXANDER MACDOUGALL
HADLEY — Workers at the Hadley Barnes & Noble approved their first-ever union contract on Monday, capping off nearly two years of negotiating efforts with the national bookstore chain.
By using this site, you agree with our use of cookies to personalize your experience, measure ads and monitor how our site works to improve it for our users
Copyright © 2016 to 2025 by H.S. Gere & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved.