Caught exception in nneweb::Controller::Root->article "DBD::Pg::st execute failed: ERROR: value "410502864117" is out of range for type integer CONTEXT: unnamed portal parameter $1 = '...' at /home/www-admin/nnemaster/nneweb/script/../lib/nneweb/Controller/Root.pm line 1190, <CONF> line 1195233."

Request

do {
  require Symbol;
  my $a = bless({
    _log                 => bless({
                              _body => "[info] *** Request 62307 (1.674/s) [2774968] [Thu Mar 28 10:21:10 2024] ***\n[debug] Path is \"/\"\n[debug] Arguments are \"eventbrite.com/e/hut-xxxvii-tickets-410502864117\"\n[debug] \"GET\" request for \"eventbrite.com/e/hut-xxxvii-tickets-410502864117\" from \"3.235.139.122\"\n[debug] Request for rawhostname = 'www.gazettenet.com'\n[debug] Last two of provided domain = 'gazettenet.com'\n[debug] handletheme: site count test result: \$VAR1 = 7;\n[error] Caught exception in nneweb::Controller::Root->article \"DBD::Pg::st execute failed: ERROR:  value \"410502864117\" is out of range for type integer\nCONTEXT:  unnamed portal parameter \$1 = '...' at /home/www-admin/nnemaster/nneweb/script/../lib/nneweb/Controller/Root.pm line 1190, <CONF> line 1195233.\"\n",
                              _psgi_errors => \*main::STDERR,
                              abort => undef,
                              autoflush => 0,
                              level => 31,
                            }, "Catalyst::Log"),
    _path                => "eventbrite.com/e/hut-xxxvii-tickets-410502864117",
    _read_length         => 0,
    _read_position       => 0,
    _use_hash_multivalue => 0,
    action               => "/",
    address              => "3.235.139.122",
    arguments            => ["eventbrite.com", "e", "hut-xxxvii-tickets-410502864117"],
    base                 => bless(do{\(my $o = "https://www.gazettenet.com/")}, "URI::https"),
    body_parameters      => {},
    captures             => [],
    cookies              => {},
    data_handlers        => {
                              "application/json" => sub { ... },
                              "application/x-www-form-urlencoded" => sub { ... },
                            },
    env                  => {
                              "Catalyst.Stash.v2"             => sub { ... },
                              "DOCUMENT_ROOT"                 => "/var/www/html",
                              "DOCUMENT_URI"                  => "/eventbrite.com/e/hut-xxxvii-tickets-410502864117",
                              "FCGI_ROLE"                     => "RESPONDER",
                              "GATEWAY_INTERFACE"             => "CGI/1.1",
                              "HTTP_ACCEPT"                   => "*/*",
                              "HTTP_HOST"                     => "www.gazettenet.com",
                              "HTTP_USER_AGENT"               => "claudebot",
                              "HTTPS"                         => "on",
                              "PATH_INFO"                     => "/eventbrite.com/e/hut-xxxvii-tickets-410502864117",
                              "plack.original_request_method" => "GET",
                              "psgi.errors"                   => 'fix',
                              "psgi.input"                    => bless(Symbol::gensym(), "IO::Handle"),
                              "psgi.multiprocess"             => 1,
                              "psgi.multithread"              => "",
                              "psgi.nonblocking"              => "",
                              "psgi.run_once"                 => "",
                              "psgi.streaming"                => 1,
                              "psgi.url_scheme"               => "https",
                              "psgi.version"                  => [1, 1],
                              "psgix.cleanup"                 => 1,
                              "psgix.cleanup.handlers"        => [],
                              "psgix.harakiri"                => 1,
                              "QUERY_STRING"                  => "",
                              "REDIRECT_STATUS"               => 200,
                              "REMOTE_ADDR"                   => "3.235.139.122",
                              "REMOTE_PORT"                   => 57374,
                              "REMOTE_USER"                   => "",
                              "REQUEST_METHOD"                => "GET",
                              "REQUEST_SCHEME"                => "https",
                              "REQUEST_URI"                   => "/eventbrite.com/e/hut-xxxvii-tickets-410502864117",
                              "SCRIPT_FILENAME"               => "/var/www/html/eventbrite.com/e/hut-xxxvii-tickets-410502864117",
                              "SCRIPT_NAME"                   => "",
                              "SERVER_ADDR"                   => "10.0.0.8",
                              "SERVER_NAME"                   => "gazettenet.com",
                              "SERVER_PORT"                   => 443,
                              "SERVER_PROTOCOL"               => "HTTP/1.1",
                              "SERVER_SOFTWARE"               => "nginx/1.18.0",
                            },
    headers              => bless({
                              "::std_case" => { cookie => "Cookie", https => "HTTPS" },
                              "accept"     => "*/*",
                              "host"       => "www.gazettenet.com",
                              "https"      => "on",
                              "user-agent" => "claudebot",
                            }, "HTTP::Headers"),
    match                => "/",
    method               => "GET",
    parameters           => {},
    protocol             => "HTTP/1.1",
    query_parameters     => {},
    remote_user          => "",
    secure               => 1,
    uploads              => {},
    uri                  => bless(do{\(my $o = "https://www.gazettenet.com/eventbrite.com/e/hut-xxxvii-tickets-410502864117")}, "URI::https"),
  }, "Catalyst::Request");
  $a->{env}{"psgi.errors"} = *{$a->{_log}{_psgi_errors}};
  $a;
}

Response

bless({
  _log => bless({
    _body => "[info] *** Request 62307 (1.674/s) [2774968] [Thu Mar 28 10:21:10 2024] ***\n[debug] Path is \"/\"\n[debug] Arguments are \"eventbrite.com/e/hut-xxxvii-tickets-410502864117\"\n[debug] \"GET\" request for \"eventbrite.com/e/hut-xxxvii-tickets-410502864117\" from \"3.235.139.122\"\n[debug] Request for rawhostname = 'www.gazettenet.com'\n[debug] Last two of provided domain = 'gazettenet.com'\n[debug] handletheme: site count test result: \$VAR1 = 7;\n[error] Caught exception in nneweb::Controller::Root->article \"DBD::Pg::st execute failed: ERROR:  value \"410502864117\" is out of range for type integer\nCONTEXT:  unnamed portal parameter \$1 = '...' at /home/www-admin/nnemaster/nneweb/script/../lib/nneweb/Controller/Root.pm line 1190, <CONF> line 1195233.\"\n",
    _psgi_errors => \*main::STDERR,
    abort => undef,
    autoflush => 0,
    level => 31,
  }, "Catalyst::Log"),
  _response_cb => sub { ... },
  body => undef,
  cookies => {},
  encodable_content_type => qr/text|xml$|javascript$/,
  encoding => bless({ Name => "utf-8-strict", strict_utf8 => 1 }, "Encode::utf8"),
  finalized_headers => 0,
  headers => bless({
    "::std_case"   => { "x-catalyst" => "X-Catalyst" },
    "content-type" => "text/html; charset=utf-8",
    "x-catalyst"   => 5.90128,
  }, "HTTP::Headers"),
  status => 200,
}, "Catalyst::Response")

Stash

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  yesterdaysmostreadarticles => [
                                  {
                                    ByCredit                => "Staff Writer",
                                    ByLine                  => "By JAMES PENTLAND",
                                    DocumentPageDescription => "NORTHAMPTON \x{2014} Hundreds of students occupied Smith College\x{2019}s administration building on Wednesday, demanding that the college divest from military contractors and weapons manufacturers they say are aiding in the slaughter of Palestinians in Gaza.The...",
                                    DocumentUrlPath         => "Students-occupy-administration-building-54538815",
                                    GN3EditorialKey         => "GN4_ART_54538815",
                                    Headline                => "Smith students occupy admin building, demand divestment from weapons manufacturers ",
                                    homeboxphoto            => "/attachments/44/43253444.jpg",
                                    InnerBody               => "<body><p>NORTHAMPTON \x{2014} Hundreds of students occupied Smith College\x{2019}s administration building on Wednesday, demanding that the college divest from military contractors and weapons manufacturers they say are aiding in the slaughter of Palestinians in Gaza.</p><p>The students plan to occupy College Hall until their demands are met or until they are arrested and removed. The building was scheduled to close at 5 p.m.</p><p>Around 3:45, Ruby Masters, an organizer with Students for Justice in Palestine, said college officials had already locked all the doors after most of the occupiers left to get supplies for the overnight stay in the building.</p><p>A large crowd then gathered for a rally outside College Hall. After 5, Masters said there were 45 to 50 people planning to stay in the building overnight. Authorities were not allowing anyone or anything into the hall and planned to keep the building closed Thursday, she said.</p><p>Masters said the action followed the college trustees\x{2019} denial of the justice group\x{2019}s request that they pull Smith\x{2019}s investments from weapons contractors such as General Dynamics, Lockheed Martin and Boeing.</p><p>Masters said it took a significant amount of time and effort for the group to draw up its proposal. In an emailed response Tuesday, she said, the board of trustees said its Advisory Committee on Investor Responsibility had determined that \x{201C}the request did not meet the threshold for taking action and also found that the endowment\x{2019}s investment in military contractors and weapons manufacturers is negligible and entirely indirect.\x{201D}</p><p>Wednesday\x{2019}s action began with a walkout at 11:45 a.m., with students gathering at the Campus Center to listen to speakers on the impact of the Smith community on Palestinians in Gaza.</p><p>Afterward, a column of 300 to 400 students marched to College Hall, chanting, \x{201C}From the river to the sea, Palestine must be free!\x{201D} \x{201C}Hey, hey, ho, ho, occupation has got to go!\x{201D} and \x{201C}Shut it down!\x{201D}</p><p>Inside the hall, Masters said most of the internal doors leading to offices were closed, and many employees had left the building.</p><p>She said the walkout and sit-in had drawn almost double the number of people who joined the group\x{2019}s first rally.</p><p>In a statement, college authorities said they support and endorse freedom of thought and expression but warned against disruption.</p><p>\x{201C}Any person at Smith College is free to express opinions and support causes by orderly means that do not disrupt the regular and essential operation of the institution,\x{201D} the statement read.</p><p>Masters, a sophomore from Seattle, linked the sit-in to a tradition of protest at Smith, including an anti-apartheid sit-in at College Hall in 1986 that eventually forced the college to divest from companies that did business with South Africa.</p><p>\x{201C}Unfortunately, justice is disruptive,\x{201D} she said.</p></body>",
                                    ModificationDate        => "2024-03-27 17:33:13+00",
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                                  {
                                    ByCredit                => "Staff Writer",
                                    ByLine                  => "By ALEXANDER MACDOUGALL",
                                    DocumentPageDescription => "NORTHAMPTON \x{2014} On Monday evening, Edwards Church became the site of a more secular sermon on the necessity of a new center to confront the challenges of both climate change and income inequality in Northampton, problems architect Dorrie Brooks said are...",
                                    DocumentUrlPath         => "Community-weighs-in-on-shaping-the-future-of-the-Resilience-Hub-54521835",
                                    GN3EditorialKey         => "GN4_ART_54521835",
                                    Headline                => "A \x{2018}hub\x{2019} blueprint begins: City kicks off planning for new Resilience Hub downtown",
                                    homeboxphoto            => "/attachments/62/43243862.jpg",
                                    InnerBody               => "<body><p>NORTHAMPTON \x{2014} On Monday evening, Edwards Church became the site of a more secular sermon on the necessity of a new center to confront the challenges of both climate change and income inequality in Northampton, problems architect Dorrie Brooks said are inextricably linked.</p><p>\x{201C}We talk a lot about climate change, but what we often don\x{2019}t talk about is the same system and the same thinking that created climate change for us and created this rapidly changing environment around us, also viewed as dispensable whole classes of people,\x{201D} said Brooks, a Florence resident and a manager of the architectural firm Jones Whitsett Architects. \x{201C}So we have to see the relationship of climate change and social equity together and talk about how we\x{2019}re going to solve both of them at the same time. And the notion of resilience hubs is based on that idea.\x{201D}</p><p>Brooks was one of several presenters at Monday\x{2019}s meeting to offer residents a first glimpse at the planned Resilience Hub at 298 Main St., the site of the former First Baptist Church and located across the street from Edwards Church. The meeting was the first of three taking place this spring aimed at sharing updates and gathering community input on the development.</p><p>Once completed sometime in late 2025, the hub will act as a multipurpose center including as a shelter for the homeless population and during climate emergencies. It will also provide a regular meeting space and serve as headquarters to several community services.</p><p>The idea for the resilience hub began in 2016, when the City Council\x{2019}s Committee on Community Resources commissioned a study and held public forums on how to improve the local economy. Finding that several downtown stakeholders held concerns about the city\x{2019}s homeless population, then-mayor David Narkewicz created a task force to look into how to address the issue. That work resulted in a proposed hub that could address the homeless population\x{2019}s needs as well as serve as an emergency shelter during climate-related crises.</p><p>\x{201C}This is something that I have supported and believe in fully and have for many years,\x{201D} said Mayor Gina-Louise Sciarra, who chaired the community resources committee in 2016. \x{201C}I\x{2019}m excited for the community to finally get to experience and appreciate 298 Main St. again after the 30 years that it\x{2019}s been closed to the public.\x{201D}</p><headline>The building</headline><p>The building, first built at the turn of the 20th century as the second iteration of the First Baptist Church, closed down in 1993. It was purchased in 2005 by local real estate mogul Eric Suher, who had envisioned turning it into a banquet hall and performance center, before ultimately abandoning those plans. But several renovations that had taken place under Suher\x{2019}s ownership, such as installation of an elevator shaft, the capacity for a commercial kitchen and proper insulation, made it an attractive option for the city to use for its planned resilience hub.</p><p>\x{201C}This one really, really surprised us in the value of the building, both because of the historical significance of the building that has been sitting dormant for 30 years, but also because it met our downtown requirements,\x{201D} Brooks said. \x{201C}So when the city looked at that and all of these other criteria, they saw a very, very viable project.\x{201D}</p><p>The city established an option to purchase the property from Suher in December 2022, exercising that option the following summer. Jones Whitsett was hired to assess the existing conditions of the building as well as develop a schematic design for the resilience hub.</p><p>At Monday\x{2019}s meeting, an estimated timeline for the completion of the project was also revealed. It shows design development for the project beginning this May and lasting until August, followed by a five-month period of creating construction documents and putting the project out to bid. The construction period for the project, to be completed in two phases, is currently estimated to last throughout all of 2025, finishing sometime near the end of the year.</p><headline>Community feedback</headline><p>Several community members who attended Monday\x{2019}s meeting gave input on some of the current strengths of Northampton, how it can improve its approach to climate change and what they would like to see that would bring them to the resilience hub.</p><p>Residents cited the city\x{2019}s overall walkability, arts scene and the home of Smith College as strengths, and noted concerns regarding flooding and a need for more solar panels. Residents also suggested programs like clinics for vaccines and filing taxes that the hub could provide that could draw residents to use the center.</p><p>The city has taken a coalition approach to the project, working with several organizations such as nonprofits Cooley Dickinson Hospital, Tapestry and Manna Community Kitchen. Alan Wolf, the mayor\x{2019}s chief of staff, said in an interview the city would also seek grant programs to help fund the resilience hub.</p><p>\x{201C}I would say we\x{2019}re actively seeking [fundraising],\x{201D} Wolf said. \x{201C}One of the nice things about having a nonprofit partner is that they can access funding sources available to 501(c)(3)s, and the city can hopefully access those things.\x{201D}</p><p>According to the city, 1% of the city\x{2019}s roughly 30,000 people are considered homeless and unsheltered, with 15% living below the poverty line, rates that are higher than the state of Massachusetts as a whole. Around 40% of the city\x{2019}s population is considered burdened by the cost of housing.</p><p>Monday\x{2019}s meeting at Edwards Church was the first of three planned meetings the city intends to hold to discuss the Resilience Hub with the public. The second will take place on May 1, discussing the public health aspects of the resilience hub, and the third will be on June 5, discussing the integration of existing community services with the project.</p><p><em>Alexander MacDougall can be reached at amacdougall\@gazettenet.com.</em></p></body>",
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                                    rsspubtime              => "Tue, 26 Mar 2024 16:22:52 -0400",
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                                  {
                                    ByCredit                => "Staff Writer",
                                    ByLine                  => "By JAMES PENTLAND",
                                    DocumentPageDescription => "NORTHAMPTON \x{2014} Four years after reports of veterans\x{2019} deaths at the Soldiers\x{2019} Home in Holyoke began to grow in the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic, the legal cases against the home\x{2019}s former superintendent and medical director came to an end at a...",
                                    DocumentUrlPath         => "Ex-superintendent-medical-director-change-plea-on-Soldiers-Home-deaths-54528729",
                                    GN3EditorialKey         => "GN4_ART_54528729",
                                    Headline                => "Ex-super, medical director of Soldiers\x{2019} Home change pleas, upsetting some families of 76 who died during pandemic ",
                                    homeboxphoto            => "/attachments/96/43245096.jpg",
                                    InnerBody               => "<body><p>NORTHAMPTON \x{2014} Four years after reports of veterans\x{2019} deaths at the Soldiers\x{2019} Home in Holyoke began to grow in the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic, the legal cases against the home\x{2019}s former superintendent and medical director came to an end at a change-of-plea hearing Tuesday in Hampshire Superior Court.</p><p>After Bennett Walsh and Dr. David Clinton admitted to sufficient facts on five counts of neglect of an elderly person, exposing them to substantial risk of harm, Judge Edward McDonough, siding with their defense attorneys, continued their cases without a finding for three months, with conditions, and levied a victim/witness fee of \$90 against each defendant.</p><p>\x{201C}It\x{2019}s disgusting,\x{201D} a distraught Susan Kenney of Ware said outside court following Walsh\x{2019}s hearing. \x{201C}It\x{2019}s a slap in the face. A \$90 fine for 76 deaths?\x{201D}</p><p>Kenney\x{2019}s 78-year-old father, Air Force veteran Charles Lowell, died of COVID at the Soldiers\x{2019} Home April 15, 2020. Her mother, Alice Lowell, accompanied her to the hearing, along with more than a dozen other family members of veterans who had lost their lives, they and prosecutors contend, because of Walsh and Clinton\x{2019}s failure to follow basic measures to control infection. By the end of May 2020, 76 veterans had died, making it one of the deadliest virus outbreaks at a long-term care facility in the nation.</p><p>Assistant Attorney General Kevin Lownds, the chief prosecutor on the cases, said in court the facts were that veterans and staff had begun to show symptoms of and test positive for COVID by March 27 when Walsh and Clinton decided to consolidate two dementia floors into one unit at the home. This meant there were now six or seven residents per room, nine beds in the dining room 2 to 3 feet apart and a larger number of vets wandering the common areas \x{2014} some with symptoms, some showing none.</p><p>Lownds said visitors and staff members later described conditions inside the home at that time as a war zone and \x{201C}the worst thing I\x{2019}ve ever seen in 25 years in nursing.\x{201D} A staffing crisis erupted as more and more workers became sick. Veterans who were already at high risk because of their age and co-morbidities were exposed to COVID over and over, he said. The set-up was the opposite of effective control.</p><p>\x{201C}It was effectively an incubator for COVID,\x{201D} Lownds said.</p><p>Witnesses described residents suffering from hunger and dehydration because of the acute staffing shortage. And neither Walsh nor Clinton effectively sounded the alarm over the unfolding catastrophe, leaving state officials unaware of the problems, Lownds said.</p><p>McDonough noted that he had dismissed the entire case against Walsh and Clinton on a defense motion in November 2021 when he was sitting in Hampden Superior Court. The attorney general\x{2019}s office appealed the dismissal to the Supreme Judicial Court, which, in a 5-2 majority, sent five counts of the original indictment back to the lower court for trial.</p><p>Lownds presented the same arguments during Clinton\x{2019}s hearing. Calling for both defendants to plead guilty to the charges, he recommended a sentence of three years probation and 12 months home confinement. He said the sanctions were important, both as punishment and as deterrence.</p><p>Walsh\x{2019}s attorney, Michael Jennings, argued that no one in Massachusetts was prepared for the reality of COVID when it swept into the state in March 2020. Health officials said the threat was low as late as the beginning of the month. The first Soldiers\x{2019} Home patient was tested March 17, and was found to be positive March 21, he said.</p><p>Jennings said Walsh was in constant communication with the Department of Public Health and Veterans Services, and even requested help from the National Guard, but this was never passed \x{201C}up the chain.\x{201D} He quoted a newspaper account illustrating how desperate that time was everywhere, and a grand jury witness who described the options facing Soldiers\x{2019} Home management by March 27 as a \x{201C}Sophie\x{2019}s Choice.\x{201D}</p><p>Walsh, 54, is a Marine Corps veteran who was deployed seven times in war zones, including Iraq and Afghanistan, Jennings said. After retiring to the Springfield area, he was reluctant when friends encouraged him to apply for the job of administrator at the Soldiers\x{2019} Home.</p><p>\x{201C}He didn\x{2019}t think he had the qualifications,\x{201D} Jennings said.</p><p>But being a licensed nursing home administrator was not a requirement for the job, he said, and state officials overseeing his appointment by the board of trustees considered his military service to be qualification enough.</p><p>Walsh and Clinton both admitted that the commonwealth had sufficient facts for a jury to find them guilty of wanton and reckless conduct, though neither would admit that their conduct was wanton and reckless or that their actions had caused harm.</p><p>Clinton\x{2019}s attorney, John Lawler, said his client had been working remotely from March 20-26 and said he was not party to the decision to consolidate the dementia units, although a prosecution witness has testified that he authorized the change.</p><p>Ann Windrum of Chicopee, whose father, World War II veteran Donald Windrum, died during the COVID outbreak at the Soldiers\x{2019} Home, was philosophical at the outcome of Walsh\x{2019}s hearing.</p><p>\x{201C}It\x{2019}s less than a slap on the wrist,\x{201D} she said. \x{201C}I don\x{2019}t wish him or Clinton any harm. I hope they get better care than they gave.\x{201D}</p></body>",
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                                    rsspubtime              => "Tue, 26 Mar 2024 19:33:26 -0400",
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                                    DocumentPageDescription => " AMHERST Justin C. Ching to Yg Pond LLC, 8 Hillcrest Place, \$542,000  Manuel R. Townes and Valerie A. Townes to  Cil Rlty Of Massachusette, 51 Hunters Hill Circle, \$450,000  Jennifer E. Lynn to  Denis R. Bruno, 21 Pine Grove, Lot 21, \$295,000  Robert...",
                                    DocumentUrlPath         => "Area-property-deeds-March-28-54519233",
                                    GN3EditorialKey         => "GN4_ART_54519233",
                                    Headline                => "Area property deed transfers, March 28",
                                    homeboxphoto            => "/attachments/19/43249519.jpg",
                                    InnerBody               => "<body><p><strong> AMHERST</strong> </p><p>Justin C. Ching to Yg Pond LLC, 8 Hillcrest Place, \$542,000 </p><p> </p><p>Manuel R. Townes and Valerie A. Townes to  Cil Rlty Of Massachusette, 51 Hunters Hill Circle, \$450,000 </p><p> </p><p>Jennifer E. Lynn to  Denis R. Bruno, 21 Pine Grove, Lot 21, \$295,000 </p><p> </p><p>Robert D Marx RET and Robert D. Marx to Ana D. Villalobos,  48 Ridgecrest Road, \$516,000 </p><p> </p><p>Lincoln Ave Partners LLC to Fern &amp; Company LLC,  89 S. East St., \$450,000 </p><p> </p><p>Shih Mei-Yau Est and Mei-Shu Shih to Gee H. Kim, 11 Winston Court, Lot 11, \$320,000 </p><p/><p> <strong>BELCHERTOWN</strong> </p><p>Mariah Mccaughey to Robert Jacques Jr. and Elizabeth I. Moody,  786 Franklin St., \$364,000 </p><p/><p><strong> CHESTERFIELD</strong> </p><p> Barbara B. Stasiak to Kris E. Rafferty and Michael P. Rafferty, 19 Don Emerson Road, \$150,000 </p><p/><p><strong> EASTHAMPTON</strong> </p><p>Veteran Stan LLC to Whitney M. Brooks, 23 Mount Tom Ave., \$369,900 </p><p> </p><p>Arthur L. Hill and Patricia L. Hill to Daniel C. Wauczinski,  15 Zabek Dr., \$335,000 </p><p/><p> <strong>HADLEY</strong> </p><p>Rosemund LLC to Michael D. Thomas and Karen A. Thomas,  3 Adare Place, \$865,000 </p><p> </p><p>Perrin Hendirck and Elizabeth Greene to Annabell Lee and Jack Mcdermott, 3 Aqua Vitae Road, \$462,000 </p><p/><p><strong> HATFIELD</strong> </p><p>Center School LLC to Kathryn A. Baker and Kimberly L. Emery, 58 Main St., Lot 7, \$525,000 </p><p> </p><p>Kirit K. Patel and Sobhna Patel to 92 Hatfield LLC,  20 West St., \$1,300,000 </p><p/><p><strong> HOLYOKE</strong> </p><p>Edmund G. Woods Jr. to Latino Tax LLC,  580 Appleton St., \$107,500 </p><p> </p><p>Tarik Clark to Zhiyang Lin, 20 Maple Crest Circle, Lot D, \$200,000 </p><p> </p><p>Alaska Assets LLC to Ma Re Holdings LLC,  130 Middle Water St., \$475,000 </p><p> </p><p> Alfred Shattelroe to Gail L. English, 210 Suffolk St., \$20,000 </p><p/><p> <strong>HUNTINGTON</strong> </p><p> Lawrence E. West and Linda A. West to Stan Properties LLC, 20 Blandford Hill Road, \$53,000 </p><p> </p><p> Donna L. Rowe to Mark S. Hanks, 39 Goss Hill Road, \$130,000 </p><p/><p><strong> NORTHAMPTON</strong> </p><p>John Horton and Anne Horton to John Horton and Anne Horton,  61 Bridge Road, \$425,000</p><p> </p><p> Yao Wu to Walter E. Drenen, 56 Crestview Dr., \$340,000 </p><p> </p><p>Richard R. Korza and Joan G. Korza to Timothy M. Paciorek and Kristen A. Deluco,  Linseed Road, \$25,000 </p><p> </p><p>Heather A. Bell and Alan Schneider to David Ciernia and Emily Chiara, 231-233 Main St., \$469,000 </p><p> </p><p>Emerald City Partners LLC to Denise G. Orestein,  35 New South St., Lot 402, \$425,000 </p><p> </p><p>James Guggina and Fred E. Crisp III to Northampton City Of,  Ryan Road (off), \$10,400 </p><p> </p><p>Sarah R. Bachrach to Matthew Tuck,  30 Village Hill Road, Lot 4, \$294,000 </p><p> </p><p>Sarah R. Bachrach to  Matthew Tuck, 30 Village Hill Road, Lot 203, \$294,000 </p><p/><p><strong> PLAINFIELD</strong> </p><p>Michael T. Chudy and Kathi M. Dimiceli to Brian M. Fay and Charlene M. Negron,  East Main Street, \$59,000 </p><p/><p><strong> SOUTH HADLEY</strong> </p><p>Kristiaan S. Krause to Bryan E. Perlak,  12 Bolton St., \$242,500 </p><p> </p><p>Donald E. Baranowski and Dianne I. Baranowski to Youngbin Kwak and Joonkoo Park,  14 Cedar Rdg, \$646,695 </p><p> </p><p>Kmak LLC to  Joseph W. Blair, 22 Easy St., \$318,000 </p><p> </p><p>People Bank to Francis Re Holdings LLC,  494 Newton St., Lot 494, \$590,000 </p><p> </p><p>Austin O. Harding IV to Hannan T. Crowl, 33 Pine Grove Dr., Lot 33, \$350,000 </p><p/><p><strong> SOUTHAMPTON</strong> </p><p> Alan M. Wine and Nora E. Wine to  Justin J. Brown and Brooke E. Brown,  8 Russellville Road, \$434,000 </p><p> </p><p>Steven Hermanson to Haley R. Pedruczny,  19 Valley Road, \$540,000 </p><p/><p> <strong>WARE</strong> </p><p>Russell N. Bergeron and Roy F. Bergeron to Rocheford Ft and Irving P. Rocheford III,  4 Coffey Hill Road, \$110,000 </p><p> </p><p>Charming Colonials LLC to Akena A. Segovich,  6-10 West St., \$250,000</p><p/><headline>Franklin County</headline><p><strong>DEERFIELD</strong> </p><p>Philip J. Savage and Lisa J. Savage to  Jacob Savage and Nichole L. Savage, 59 Mathews Road, \$334,000</p><p/><p><strong>SUNDERLAND</strong> </p><p>Lesser Family Trust and Alan J. Lesser to Hskim Sea &amp; Salt LLC, 313 Amherst Road, \$620,000</p></body>",
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                                    ByCredit                => "Staff Writer ",
                                    ByLine                  => "By EMILEE KLEIN",
                                    DocumentPageDescription => "EASTHAMPTON \x{2014} Unlike most bar logs, the pages of the small black book found on the homemade bartop at Valley Art Supplies are filled with doodles and scribbles: a cat Statue of Liberty, a skull cocktail glass and platypus gyroscope lily...",
                                    DocumentUrlPath         => "Arts-and-crafts-and-cocktails-Valley-Art-Supplies-marries-art-and-alcohol-with-a-new-bar-54525270",
                                    GN3EditorialKey         => "GN4_ART_54525270",
                                    Headline                => "Valley Art Supplies finds right mix by adding bar to longtime Easthampton business",
                                    homeboxphoto            => "/attachments/29/43252029.jpg",
                                    InnerBody               => "<body><p>EASTHAMPTON \x{2014} Unlike most bar logs, the pages of the small black book found on the homemade bartop at Valley Art Supplies are filled with doodles and scribbles: a cat Statue of Liberty, a skull cocktail glass and platypus gyroscope lily monster.</p><p>Despite the long wall of paints, brushes, pads, pencils, inks, oils and pastel staring at them from behind the bar, Valley Art Supplies owners Edward and Juliette Mooers didn\x{2019}t come up with the idea for a community sketchbook. Credit for that goes to a customer who floated the suggestion after being inspired by the surrounding art supplies. </p><p>The couple immediately plucked a small black booklet from their inventory, slapped a Valley Art Supplies sticker on it and left it on the counter with some pens.</p><p>Less than a year after opening the new bar last July \x{2014} an addition to the 20-year-old art supply store located at 76 Cottage St. \x{2014} patrons inspired by the surrounding art supplies and vividly colored drinks covered an entire booklet with sketches and have already filled about a fourth of a new book.</p><p>Once dark by 5 p.m., Valley Art Supplies now stays open into the evening with the new addition of a fully stocked bar, mixing cocktails and serving snacks for any local artists who ran out of paints during a late-night creative flow or any curious passerby looking for a new bar experience that combines art with alcohol.</p><p>\x{201C}It\x{2019}s a great community space for people to get like a different vibe of a bar,\x{201D} Juliette said. \x{201C}They can have a conversation; they can do art. I have people come here to do book club; people come and just knit. We have a little bar drawing log that people are filling up really quickly. It\x{2019}s just a nice space with creative folks and with creative cocktails.\x{201D} </p><p>Valley Art Supplies opened in 2004, just as the renovations of mills on Pleasant Street and Cottage Street began to turn the old buildings into studio space. Despite the budding art scene, the city had no art supply store. Inspired by his fine arts degree from UMass Lowell and sales work selling office supplies, Edward suggested that he and Juliette fill the gap.</p><p>\x{201C}Once we set up the bar, we started consolidating art supplies to what people came here for and got rid of what wasn\x{2019}t selling. We narrowed everything and squished it over,\x{201D} Edward said.</p><p>The bar is the couple\x{2019}s dream business. </p><p>The two kept a running list of drink ideas for the past 20 years, as the couple loves to cook and mix up new flavors. Juliette bartended while in college until Valley Art Supplies opened, so the vision incorporates both of their passions.</p><p>\x{201C}We thought maybe once my husband retired, we\x{2019}ll do this. But the opportunity came a lot quicker,\x{201D} she said. \x{201C}The state gave the city a couple of extra liquor licenses to use for downtown business, and we found out about it and jumped on it.\x{201D} </p><p>Now, when local artists need to make a late supply run many are enticed to stay for a mai tai, the couple says.</p><p>Edward recalls a customer in the first weeks of bartending who bought a big pad and pastels, ripped the big paper into six smaller pieces, sat at the bartop with a drink and began drawing. Edward walked over to the customer and said, \x{201C}Thanks for making the dream a reality.\x{201D} </p><p>The cocktails at Valley Art Supplies take inspiration from the art supplies lining the walls by using vibrant colors like highlighter green grasshoppertini, orange tropical jungle bird and yellow Peeps-garnished tispy and tweet topped with a yellow peeps. Names for the couple\x{2019}s creations use famous paintings like \x{201C}Still Life with Pears\x{201D} and \x{201C}Moulin Rogue.\x{201D} One drink even pulls from Edward\x{2019}s art school days, honoring his former art professor, Brenda Pinardi, with a cocktail called \x{201C}Needs More Magenta,\x{201D} a pink plant-based elderflower sour.</p><p>\x{201C}She\x{2019}d always say, \x{2018}I like this painting, but it needs more magenta,\x{2019} \x{201D} Edward said, imitating his late teacher\x{2019}s high-pitched voice. \x{201C}She was just so passionate about magenta.\x{201D} </p><p>Juliette\x{2019}s favorite cocktail is the Portland Riley, an elderflower vodka topped with blueberry moonshine and fresh blueberries. The couple crafted the recipe on a trip to Portland, Maine, in 2018, when Storm Riley kept them indoors for the night. Edward and Juliette collected locally distilled gin, elderflower selzer from Trader Joe\x{2019}s, blueberry moonshine and frozen Maine blueberries from the freezer in their AirBnB. </p><p>After the first sip of the concoction, Juliette knew that if she ever opened a bar, this cocktail would be on the menu.</p><p>While Valley Art Supplies limits art at the bar to drawing and small crafts like knitting, the couple does invite patrons to create more material-heavy artwork at the store\x{2019}s seasonal craft workshop. The store transforms into a crafting lounge with large comfortable chairs and fold-out tables. Past crafts include felt trees, mason jar oil lamps, winter wreaths and porcelain pumpkins.</p><p>\x{201C}I know with crafting like for me personally, at home, it\x{2019}s hard to do because in order for me to use [my dining room table] to sew or whatever else, I need to take everything off the dining room table, bring all my sewing stuff, and then that\x{2019}s an hour now,\x{201D} Juliette said. </p><p>\x{201C}Here, you come [and] everything\x{2019}s here for you. You have the space, and it\x{2019}s like an uninterrupted crafter art time. You know, no prep needed; just come in.\x{201D} </p><p>The bar does not serve food made in house, but customers can buy pre-packaged snacks and snacking kits, including vegan or gluten-free options. Mocktails, concocted by Juliette\x{2019}s two children are also available for people looking for alcohol free drinks.</p><p>But the core of the bar is to provide a space for people to relax, grab a drink and get their creative juices flowing.</p><p>\x{201C}I hear it all the time: People say, \x{2018}I\x{2019}m going to have a drink and then it will make me feel like I can make art,\x{2019} \x{201D} Juliette said. \x{201C}It\x{2019}s just a safe space.\x{201D} </p><em>Emilee Klein can be reached at eklein\@gazettenet.com.</em></body>",
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                                    ByCredit                => "Staff Writer ",
                                    ByLine                  => "By SCOTT MERZBACH",
                                    DocumentPageDescription => "AMHERST \x{2014} Three educators, two who work in Massachusetts and the other in the Virgin Islands, are finalists to become the next superintendent for the Amherst, Pelham and Amherst-Pelham Regional schools.The Superintendent Search Committee on Tuesday...",
                                    DocumentUrlPath         => "Three-finalists-announced-for-Amherst-superintendent-54534389",
                                    GN3EditorialKey         => "GN4_ART_54534389",
                                    Headline                => "Three candidates in running for Amherst superintendent",
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                                    InnerBody               => "<body><p>AMHERST \x{2014} Three educators, two who work in Massachusetts and the other in the Virgin Islands, are finalists to become the next superintendent for the Amherst, Pelham and Amherst-Pelham Regional schools.</p><p>The Superintendent Search Committee on Tuesday announced the finalists as Joanne Menard, assistant superintendent for curriculum and instruction in Holliston; Ericilda Herman, insular superintendent in St. Croix, Virgin Islands; and Susan Gilson, assistant superintendent and middle school principal in the King Philip Regional School District in Wrentham.</p><p>Martha Toro, who co-chaired the 19-member Superintendent Search Committee with Amherst School Committee Chairwoman Sarah Marshall, said 10 applications were received, six candidates were interviewed and the committee was instructed to present two to four finalists, based on a directive from the Subcommittee for a New Superintendent. Working with search firm McPherson &amp; Jacobson, a fourth finalist  was going to be presented, but that person opted against continuing the process, Toro said.</p><p>The three finalists were accepted by unanimous votes of both the Regional and Union 26 committees, the entities that will make the decision on the person to hire. The Regional committee is made up of five Amherst representatives, two Pelham representatives, one Leverett representative and one Shutesbury representative. The Union 26 Committee is made up of three Amherst representatives and three Pelham representatives.</p><p>The person hired as the permanent superintendent would succeed Superintendent Michael Morris, who left the district at the end of August after serving as both an interim and permanent superintendent since 2016. Douglas Slaughter has been serving as interim superintendent this school year.</p><p>Amherst representative Jennifer Shiao, who has led the Subcommittee for a New Superintendent, said she is excited about the candidates, but noted that Gilson is also one of three people being considered to become the middle school principal. Shiao explained that the search committee didn\x{2019}t know Gilson was a middle school principal candidate until that was announced publicly. She encouraged Slaughter and the district\x{2019}s human resources team to keep that process separate.</p><p>\x{201C}I think the superintendent should do what he thinks is best for the middle school, and we will continue our search for the superintendent position,\x{201D} Shiao said.</p><p>The Subcommittee for a New Superintendent is tentatively scheduling finalist visits in April, with Shiao suggesting a two-day visit, with the first day virtual forums for both community and staff and the second day including a morning tour of the four elementary schools in Amherst and Pelham, lunch at the high school, tours of the middle and high schools, Amherst area tours, a meet and greet with the public and then a public interview.</p><p>A decision on the next superintendent could come at the end of April.</p><em>Scott Merzbach can be reached at smerzbach\@gazettenet.com.</em></body>",
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