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California Chrome wins Preakness, keeping alive bid for Triple Crown

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California Chrome won the Preakness in dramatic fashion Saturday to keep alive his bid for horse racing's first Triple Crown since 1978.

By BETH HARRIS, AP Racing Writer

BALTIMORE (AP) — California Chrome won the Preakness in dramatic fashion Saturday to keep alive his bid for horse racing's first Triple Crown since 1978.

As a follow-up to his victory in the Kentucky Derby, trainer Art Sherman's horse justified his stature as the overwhelming favorite by outrunning Ride On Curlin to the finish Saturday.

It was the first Preakness victory for the 77-year-old trainer. California Chrome has won six straight races.

The chestnut colt covered the 1 3-16th mile course in 1:54.84.

With Victor Espinoza in the saddle, California Chrome stayed off the pace in third place before kicking into another gear to storm in front.

"It's an awesome feeling," Espinoza said. "Today it was just a crazy race. I got more tired mentally than physically. I see another horse go to the front. I was going to sit second. .. I sit back, as soon as the other horse got clear of me, it worked out perfect."

Although Ride On Curlin was strong at the finish, he didn't have enough to catch the winner.

California Chrome paid $3 and $2.40. Ride On Curlin returned $5.60 and $3.80. Social Inclusion, who went off as the second favorite at 5-1, returned $3.40.

General a Rod was fourth and Ring Weekend took fifth.

California Chrome is the first California-bred horse to win the Preakness since Snow Chief in 1986.

With a victory in the Belmont on June 7, California Chrome will become the 12th Triple Crown winner in history and the first since Affirmed. Since 1978, 11 horses have won the Kentucky Derby and the Preakness, but failed to win Belmont.


Amesbury's restored Doughboy statue to be rededicated

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The Doughboy statue of the World War I U.S. soldier and the accompanying veterans' memorial were originally dedicated in 1929, but had fallen into disrepair.

AMESBURY, Mass. — Amesbury's famous Doughboy statue is being rededicated after a $20,000 restoration project.

The ceremony is scheduled for Sunday at the middle school.

The statue of the World War I U.S. soldier and the accompanying veterans' memorial were originally dedicated in 1929, but had fallen into disrepair.

The Newburyport Daily News reports that the Amesbury Veterans' Memorials Restoration Committee's efforts to fix it up were boosted by an anonymous $7,000 donation and two $3,000 donations from local banks.

The Doughboy was sculpted by Leonard Craske, who is also known for sculpting the Gloucester Fishermen's Memorial, more popularly known as "The Man at the Wheel."

Mayor Ken Gray and state lawmakers who represent the area are among those scheduled to attend.

Susan Bunnell, Peter Salerno and Patricia Gordon among winners in Wilbraham town election

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A small percentage of registered voters in Wilbraham took to Minnechaug Regional High School on Saturday to elect several people to positions within town government.

WILBRAHAM — Although few of the registered voters in Wilbraham headed to Minnechaug Regional High School on Saturday to vote, the election still had its share of winners and losers.

Wilbraham town Hall sign

In the town selectman race between Susan Bunnell, Will Caruana, Mary McCarthy, and Stephen Bacon, Bunnell emerged victorious with 623 votes. Caruna came close with 507 votes, followed by McCarthy with 207 and Bacon with 104, according to Assistant Town clerk Carole Tardif.

A message left on Bunnell's cell phone seeking reaction to her win wasn't immediately returned on Saturday.

In the competition for two seats on the Hampden-Wilbraham School Committee, incumbent Peter Salerno (740 votes) and challenger Patricia Gordon (873) won, leaving incumbent Dennis John McCarthy in last with 541 votes.

For a three-year term on the Wilbraham Housing Authority, Jason Burkins, a Democratic Caucus nominee won with 749 votes over Republican Caucus nominee Michael Dane who tallied 452 votes.

In the race for two library trustee seats, Republican Caucus nominee Linda F. Moriarty, an incumbent, and Democratic Caucus nominee Gloria C. Russell won with 911 and 786 votes, respectively. William R. Dane lost with 438 votes.

The town also had several uncontested races with the incumbents winning another term. Among those are:

  • Town Assessor: Don Wesolowski

  • Water Commission: Thomas Pilarzik

  • Cemetery Commission: William Renaue & Paul Zinakas

  • Planning Board: Adam Busch

Holyoke Mayor Alex Morse officiates 1st same-sex wedding ceremony at city's United Congregational Church on 10th anniversary of court decision legalizing gay marriage

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The United Congregational Church, the city's first “open and affirming” place of worship, hosted the ceremony which was officiated by Holyoke Mayor Alex Morse. In front of a crowd of parishioners, friends, family and media, city residents Juan Burgos and Jeffery Anderson exchanged vows and became a legally married couple.

HOLYOKE — Exactly ten years after the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court issued a landmark ruling that allowed same-sex couples to wed in the Bay State, a church in the Paper City has hosted its first wedding between two grooms.

The United Congregational Church, the city's first “open and affirming” place of worship, hosted the ceremony which was officiated by Holyoke Mayor Alex Morse. In front of a crowd of parishioners, friends, family and media, city residents Juan Burgos and Jeffery Anderson exchanged vows and became a legally married couple.

"Although we didn't initially realize that we had planned our wedding on the same day as this historic milestone, we couldn't be happier to spend this special day with our friends and family, celebrating our love for each other in a state that legalized gay marriage long before the rest of the country," the couple said in reflection of having their wedding on the anniversary of the court's ruling in the Goodridge v. Dept. of Public Health case.

Pastor Charles Morkin of the United Congregational Church of Holyoke said that the decision to allow same-sex ceremonies in the church wasn't easily reached but one that was eventually agreed upon by the congregation.

"Our congregation spent a year and a half talking about the issue, reading books, seeing videos talking to people. We decided that we want to make a warm welcome to everybody," Morkin said. "We're delighted to have them here. They are a wonderful couple. A marriage is a marriage."

Morse, the city's first openly gay mayor, said he was humbled being asked to play a part in Burgos and Anderson's special day.

"This is a significant milestone that should truly be celebrated as we continue to see states across the country recognize same-sex marriages as legal, and what better way to celebrate than with a ceremony that celebrates the love and commitment of two people," Morse said. "I wish Juan and Jeff a lifetime of happiness."


Assistant Managing Editor Greg Saulmon contributed to this report.

Longmeadow police continue to investigate series of vehicle break-ins after arrest of 1 suspect

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Derrick Shattuck, 20, of 32 Reed Ave., Chicopee, was charged with six counts of breaking and entering a vehicle at night to commit a felony and one count of receiving stolen property valued at more than $250, according to Longmeadow police.

LONGMEADOW — Police here continue to investigate a series of vehicle vehicle break-ins following the arrest of a 20-year-old Chicopee man early Saturday.

Derrick Shattuck, of 32 Reed Ave., was found inside a car on Viscount Road at about 1:30 a.m., according to police, who believe the Chicopee resident and two accomplices were responsible for the break-ins. Authorities continue to look for those suspects.

Shattuck was charged with one count of receiving stolen property valued at more than $250 and six counts of breaking and entering a vehicle at night to commit a felony. He is expected to be arraigned Monday in Springfield District Court.

Longmeadow police found Shattuck inside a parked car on Viscount Road with various items, including a TV set, laptop computer and golf clubs, among other items.

Viscount Road is off of Williams Street, just west of the Williams Place Shopping Center.

All of the stolen items were taken from unlocked vehicles, according to police, who continue to investigate.

Police are asking anyone with information about the case to call them at (413) 567-3311.


MAP showing street where alleged car burglar was apprehended by Longmeadow police:


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Obituaries today: Robert Flebotte worked 36 years for New England Telephone, AT&T

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Obituaries from The Republican.

 
051814-robert-flebotte.jpgRobert Flebotte 

Robert Henry Flebotte, 85, died on Monday. He was born and raised in Springfield. After graduating from high school, he was employed by Diamond Match Company. He enlisted in the U.S. Air Force, serving as a control tower operator at Hickam Field in Hawaii and in Korea during the Korean War. After leaving the service, he went to work as a lineman for the New England Telephone Company and later as a telephone installer, retiring from AT&T in 1989 after 36 years. He retired to Fruitland Park, Fla., where he lived for over 15 years before moving to New Hampshire.

To view all obituaries from The Republican:
» Click here

Northampton police: Man charged with attempted murder after stabbing woman at respite facility

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Darreus Lisenby, 22, is charged with attempted murder and other offenses after allegedly using a pair of scissors to stab a woman at Afiya, a Northampton respite facility for people who are in crisis.

NORTHAMPTON — A man was arrested after allegedly stabbing a woman with a pair of scissors Saturday at a Northampton respite home for people who are in crisis.

Darreus Lisenby, 22, was charged with attempted murder and assault and battery in connection with the 11:30 p.m. attack, Northampton police Detective Patrick Moody said Sunday.

The incident happened at Afiya, a group home for people who are in crisis, according to the organization's website. The 3-bed facility is located at 256 Jackson St.

Lisenby stabbed and punched the woman several times during the attack, Moody said. The victim, who was not publicly identified, was taken to an area hospital for treatment, according to the detective. An update on her condition was not immediately available, but Moody said she was expected to recover.

"She'll be OK," he said.

Lisenby fled the scene after the alleged incident, but police caught up with him on King Street and took him into custody. He was being held at the Hampshire County Jail and House of Correction pending arraignment Monday in Northampton District Court, Moody said.

Authorities did not indicate what relationship, if any, Lisenby had to the group home. They also did not indicate the woman's relationship to the home, though abc40 News reports that she was a staff member.

Afiya is Swahili for "physical, emotional and spiritual health and wholeness," according to the Western Massachusetts Recovery Learning Community, the nonprofit group that runs the Jackson Street facility. The organization's website says the respite home is intended to support people who have experienced "extreme emotional distress, trauma, psychiatric diagnoses, addiction and a variety of other challenges."

A woman who answered the phone at Afiya on Sunday morning said her boss was unavailable and that she was unauthorized to discuss the incident.

Northampton police Detective Michael Briggs is the lead investigator assigned to the case.


MAP showing approximate location of Afiya house:


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Springfield College awards 944 degrees, celebrates 50th anniversary of Martin Luther King Jr. speech at the school

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The Springfield College graduation was held at the MassMutual Center Sunday.


SPRINGFIELD — Springfield College graduates were celebrated for "showing up for life," and told "it's always the right time to do the right thing," by speakers during the school's 128th commencement ceremony Sunday morning.

The ceremony concluded a weekend of activities including the graduate degree ceremony held Saturday on the college campus. Overall 600 master’s degrees, five certificates of advanced graduate study, nine doctor of philosophy degrees, and 30 doctoral of physical therapy degrees were awarded. At the undergraduate commencement on Sunday, 944 bachelor’s degrees were awarded for a two-day total of 1588 degrees, said Springfield College president Mary-Beth A. Cooper.

The commencement address was given by Dr. G. Richard Olds, as part of the 50th anniversary celebration of Martin Luther King Jr.’s commencement speech at Springfield College in 1964. The College has recognized this historic moment with a series of special events honoring Glenn A. Olds and King during the 2013-14 academic year. The senior Olds withstood controversy in inviting King to speak at the 1964 commencement.

“To the Class of 2014, I would point out that the future will often place many obstacles in your way,” said Richard, who spent his childhood, from ages of 7 to 15, growing up on campus. “The road will not always be easy. You will need to find the inner strength to overcome those obstacles and be guided by your own moral compass. Fight for what you believe in with your whole body, mind, and spirit. Let the spirit of Springfield College guide your future as it did for my father.”

He recalled stories told by his father of getting calls from the FBI telling him to cancel King's speech. King was arrested two days before the event and Glenn Olds threatened to broadcast the speech from jail if he was not released. King was quickly released on $900 bail, Richard Olds said.

Joining Olds on stage was Tony King, captain of the 1934 American Legion Post 21 Baseball Team, who accepted the Springfield College Humanics Achievement Award on behalf of his team.

The Springfield College Humanics Achievement Award recognizes an individual or group who has exhibited courage in the face of adversity, demonstrated leadership in service to others, advanced diversity and inclusion, served as a champion for the oppressed, furthered education in spirit, mind, and body, or contributed significantly to the understanding of the universe.

The 1934 American Legion Post 21 Baseball Team took a stand against racial discrimination at a regional baseball championship tournament in Gastonia, N.C. After learning that other participating teams would not compete against the American Legion Post 21 squad because they had an African-American player on the roster by the name of Ernest “Bunny” Taliaferro, the American Legion Post 21 youngsters decided to support their teammate, forfeit the tournament, and head back to Springfield.

Class representative Meredith Barone, a 3.9 GPA graduate from New Haven, Conn., told students that even through rough circumstances every student who made it to graduation "showed up for life."

"Some of us have had days when the world looks so dark and yet we get out of bed and show up for life. Just like the church bombing in Birmingham, some of us have suffered significant loss and yet we get out of bed and show up for life. Just like the marchers on the road from Selma...we show up for life. It proves to me we are the answer, we walk the walk," she said.


8 people hospitalized after MBTA bus crashes through guardrail on MassPike overpass in Newton

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None of the crash victims, including the bus driver, sustained life-threatening injuries, according to a MassDOT spokeswoman.

NEWTON — Eight people were hospitalized after an MBTA bus crashed through a guardrail on an I-90 overpass in Newton shortly after 8 a.m. Sunday, according to authorities, who continue to investigate.

The front end of the bus was seen dangling above the westbound lane of the MassPike near Exit 17 in the vicinity of Washington and Church streets in Newton Corner.

Massachusetts State Police said the vehicle was secured by the Newton Fire Department and posed no risk of falling onto the highway below.

The crash prompted temporary lane closures and led to delays on the Pike. The damaged bus was towed from the scene late Sunday morning.

newton bus crash.jpg 

MBTA spokeswoman Kelly Smith said the victims, including the driver of the bus, sustained non-life-threatening injuries, the Associated Press reports.

MBTA Transit Police detectives are investigating.


Material from the Associated Press, Boston.com, the Massachusetts Department of Transportation via Twitter, the Massachusetts State Police via Twitter and WCVB.com was used in this report.

Smell of burning bread crumbs sends Miami-bound plane back to Boston

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An airlines spokeswoman says Flight 1532 took off from Boston's Logan International Airport at 6:36 a.m. Sunday, but passengers soon began smelling smoke.

BOSTON (AP) -- The smell of burning bread crumbs has forced a Miami-bound American Airlines flight to return to Boston.

An airlines spokeswoman says Flight 1532 took off from Boston's Logan International Airport at 6:36 a.m. Sunday, but passengers soon began smelling smoke.

The plane returned to Boston at 7:10 a.m., and the smell was found to be from bread crumbs burning in an oven. The oven was cleaned, and the flight took off again at 8:20 a.m.

The plane was carrying 150 passengers and five crew members.

Smith College holds 136th commencement; past president Ruth J. Simmons defends free speech

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Former Smith president Ruth J. Simmons delivered Sunday's keynote address, speaking up for the importance of free speech on campus and beyond.

NORTHAMPTON — Smith College held its 136th commencement Sunday, issuing more than 700 diplomas to the the Class of 2014 and bestowing honorary degrees upon four women, including former president Ruth J. Simmons, who delivered the keynote address.

Simmons delivered the commencement address with only days notice, stepping in for International Monetary Fund chief Christine Lagarde, who withdrew last weekend amidst student protests.

At Sunday's ceremony, jubilant students and faculty in academic regalia filed into the campus Quadrangle under sunny skies as parents cheered and the Holyoke Caledonian Pipe and Drum Band played traditional bagpipe marches.

"Let this this sacred moment be bathed in holy light," offered Dean of Religious Life Jennifer L. Walters in issuing her invocation.

Class president and South Korean immigrant Nahee Kwak spoke of Chimamanda Adichie, the Nigerian author who warns of "the dangers of a single story." Smith gives students the opportunity to "move beyond a single narrative" said Kwak, noting that nearly a third of the student body now consists of women of color.

College president Kathleen McCartney bestowed the 2014 Honored Professor Award upon Professor of Government Donald C. Baumer.

Dean of Faculty and Provost Marilyn R. Schuster awarded honorary doctorates to international women's rights activist Ela Bhatt, author and illustrator Eric Carle, MacArthur fellow and scientific historian Evelyn Fox Keller, and Swanee Hunt, founder of the Women and Public Policy program at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government.

Simmons' remarks were widely anticipated because of the Lagarde controversy, which ignited discussion both locally and nationally about the role of free speech on campus versus the power of protest.

Simmons wiped away tears as she stood to the podium, saying her return to Smith was an emotional one.

After telling stories about her own contrary nature and acknowledging the central role protest has played in changing the course of American history, Simmons spoke forcefully about the importance of maintaining free speech on campus and beyond.

"Disagreement (today) abounds on every slight and significant matter," said Simmons. "Protecting free speech brilliantly insulates us from from being silenced for own unpopular views."

While Smith gives young women a platform to confront injustice, including human trafficking, genocide, and civil rights violations, "one's voice grows stronger in encounters with opposing views," said Simmons.

Simmons told of defending a speaker at Brown "whose every assertion was dangerous and deeply offensive to me on a personal level." The speaker believed blacks were better off as slaves, she said.

Simmons drew applause when she opined that skipping the talk, as college president, would be "to choose personal comfort over a freedom whose value is so great, that the hearing of his unwelcome message could hardly be assessed at too great a cost."

Simmons served as Smith's president between 1995 and 2001, when she left to become president of Brown University. The Texas native holds a Doctorate in Romance Literature from Harvard University. She is the first African-American woman to lead an Ivy League institution.

At Sunday's ceremony, the women's college issued 643 bachelor of arts degrees, 29 bachelor of science degrees in engineering, 45 master's degrees, eight diplomas in American studies, and 12 certificates of advanced graduate study. Twenty-nine Ada Comstock scholars, ranging from 24 to 70 years of age, became Smith College alumnae. Students from 45 states and 31 countries were represented in the class of 2014.

4-car pileup on I-90 west in Sturbridge causes lane closures and delays but no injuries

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Even though an SUV ended up on the roof of a sedan, there were no reported injuries in the incident, police said.

STURBRIDGE — A four-car pileup on I-90 Sunday caused lane closures and delays but no injuries, according to Massachusetts State Police.

A lieutenant at the Charlton barracks said the westbound crash was reported at 11:17 a.m. and continued to cause residual delays at 2 p.m., even though the scene had been cleared.

Authorities initially closed two of the three westbound lanes, leading to a roughly 2-mile traffic backup, Trooper Dustin Fitch, a social media specialist at Framingham headquarters, tweeted around 12:45 p.m.

One vehicle, a white SUV, wound up on the roof of a silver sedan, prompting one Twitter commenter to liken the the crash to a NASCAR collision.

The crash occurred near the Sturbridge-Chalrton line.

GOP Benghazi team brings long list of accusations

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Republicans hoping to ride their Benghazi investigation to a November election sweep have entrusted a seven-member team with "getting to the truth," in the words of House Speaker John Boehner, about whether the Obama administration misled Americans about the deadly attack in Libya.

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Republicans hoping to ride their Benghazi investigation to a November election sweep have entrusted a seven-member team with "getting to the truth," in the words of House Speaker John Boehner, about whether the Obama administration misled Americans about the deadly attack in Libya.

They insist the investigation isn't political.

But several GOP members of the new House Select Committee on Benghazi have made claims about administration wrongdoing. Some have participated in previous investigations into how the U.S. ambassador to Libya, Chris Stevens, and three other Americans were killed on Sept. 11, 2012, and how the administration responded.

Democrats have yet to say if they'll participate in what will be the eighth investigation since the attack on the U.S. diplomatic outpost in the eastern Libyan city.

Republicans say they need to find out why security was insufficient, what the president did the night of the attack, why the U.S. military didn't intervene, why initial explanations focused on a protest over a YouTube video and whether the administration deliberately sought to hide evidence about its conduct.

Some of the more contentious arguments made by the GOP members:

CHAIRMAN TREY GOWDY:

The second-term tea partyer and former prosecutor from South Carolina said two weeks ago there is evidence of a "cover-up." He cited a recently released email by White House national security communications aide Ben Rhodes.

He said the email "probably was the straw that broke the camel's back because that memo made it really clear we're going to blame an Internet video and not a broader policy failure in Libya." The White House has said Rhodes was referring to attacks across the Muslim world, not Benghazi specifically.

Gowdy has said former CIA Director Michael Morell "sanitized" a series of talking points used by then-U.N. Ambassador Susan Rice five days after the violence, substituting the term "extremist" for all references to "terrorist," and "demonstration" for "attack." Republicans say this was part of an effort by President Barack Obama's team to play down a major terrorist attack in the final weeks of his re-election campaign.

In April, Morell testified that he made no changes to provide political benefit to Obama or then-Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, who is considering running for president in 2016. He said the CIA considers extremist and terrorist as synonyms, and that references to al-Qaida in the talking points were avoided to protect classified sources.

REP. MARTHA ROBY:

The 37-year-old Alabama congresswoman, attorney and daughter of a federal judge led the House Armed Services Committee's investigation. That panel rejected claims by conservatives that the military failed to respond the night of the attack -- putting her at odds with other Republicans.

Her investigative panel concluded in a report in February that there was no "stand down" order issued to military personnel in Tripoli, the Libyan capital, who wanted to aid Americans in Benghazi. Select committee colleagues Gowdy and Rep. Jim Jordan have suggested otherwise.

"We simply were not postured to respond in time," Roby said seven months ago.

REP. LYNN WESTMORELAND:

The Georgia congressman also is a veteran of a Benghazi investigation, one conducted by the House Intelligence Committee. In April 2013, he issued a news release describing his "two conclusions": that Clinton personally denied much-needed additional security for U.S. diplomats in Libya and that White House officials perpetuated a "lie" about the anti-Muslim film "to protect their own backsides."

Westmoreland pointed to a department cable declining security requests "signed" by Clinton. The conclusion has been widely challenged. The secretary of state's name is routinely attached to State Department correspondence from Washington, most of which he or she never sees or is consulted on. Lower-level department officials have said they were responsible for specific security decisions related to Benghazi.

In recent days, Democrats have targeted Westmoreland for "politicizing" Benghazi because he serves as deputy chairman of the National Republican Congressional Committee, which has begun an election-year fundraising drive linked to the attack.

Westmoreland, 64, has been criticized before as being overly partisan. Democrats disparaged him during the 2008 presidential election for describing candidate Barack Obama and wife Michelle as "uppity" -- a derogatory term for blacks who sought equal treatment in the segregated South.

Jim JordanRep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio 

REP. JIM JORDAN:

The hard-charging conservative and occasional GOP leadership thorn has repeatedly pressed witnesses on Benghazi as a member of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee.

Jordan has accused Clinton personally of trying to obstruct Congress' investigation of Benghazi after a top aide asked for a department lawyer to be present when members of Congress spoke with U.S. diplomats in Tripoli after the attack.

According to the Columbus Dispatch, the Ohio Republican said at a Heritage Foundation event this month that the State Department rejected more than 200 requests for additional security. And when the attack happened, he said there was little effort to fight back. "Why weren't we running to the sound of the guns?" Jordan reportedly asked.

Jordan, 50, said he wanted to know who started the narrative that Benghazi wasn't a terrorist attack and has said in the past Republicans would like to have Rice testify about the matter.

REP. MIKE POMPEO:

The 50-year-old Kansas congressman similarly has focused on the talking points. In May 2013, he said the State Department and White House produced a document that "didn't reflect the reality on the ground as they knew it at the time." He accused "political" actors of withholding intelligence from the public.

"Were we misled?" Pompeo asked Morell at the hearing. "No," Morell responded. "I have a different view," Pompeo shot back.

Peter RoskamRep. Peter Roskam, R-Ill. 

REP. PETER ROSKAM

A confidant of Boehner, the congressman from Illinois has been less vocal about Benghazi than many of his colleagues. He may have less motivation to criticize the administration for the wording of its unclassified Benghazi talking points. Two days before the talking points were drafted, Roskam issued his own statement condemning the attacks. Roskam, 52, blamed "violent extremists" and not "terrorists" for the anti-American unrest in Libya, Egypt and elsewhere.

REP. SUSAN BROOKS:

The Indiana freshman also has been among the more reserved on Benghazi. The 53-year-old former Bush administration appointee who served six years as U.S. attorney for the Southern District of Indiana has said of the attack: "Until we have all the facts, we don't believe that justice has really been served."

Bosnia flooding triggers landslides, unearths mines

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Floodwaters triggered more than 3,000 landslides across the Balkans on Sunday, laying waste to entire towns and villages and disturbing land mines leftover from the region's 1990s war, along with warning signs that marked the unexploded weapons.

BRCKO, Bosnia-Herzegovina -- Floodwaters triggered more than 3,000 landslides across the Balkans on Sunday, laying waste to entire towns and villages and disturbing land mines leftover from the region's 1990s war, along with warning signs that marked the unexploded weapons.

The Balkans' worst flooding since record keeping began forced tens of thousands of people from their homes and threatened to inundate Serbia's main power plant, which supplies electricity to a third of the country and most of the capital, Belgrade.

Authorities organized a frenzied helicopter airlift to get terrified families to safety before the water swallowed up their homes. Many were plucked from rooftops.

Floodwaters receded Sunday in some locations, laying bare the full scale of the damage. Elsewhere, emergency management officials warned that the water would keep rising into Sunday night.

"The situation is catastrophic," said Bosnia's refugee minister, Adil Osmanovic.

Three months' worth of rain fell on the region in three days, producing the worst floods since rainfall measurements began 120 years ago. At least two dozen people have died, with more casualties expected.

The rain caused an estimated 2,100 landslides that covered roads, homes and whole villages throughout hilly Bosnia. Another 1,000 landslides were reported in neighboring Serbia.

The cities of Orasje and Brcko in northeast Bosnia, where the Sava River forms the natural border with Croatia, were in danger of being overwhelmed. Officials in Brcko ordered six villages to be evacuated.

Rescuers urged people to go to the balconies or rooftops of their houses with bright fabric to make themselves visible.

Brcko Mayor Anto Domic said that unless the Bosnian Army is able to reinforce from the air, the city will be flooded completely. He called for the Defense Ministry to use helicopters to lower steel barriers that could be backed by sandbags to contain the water.

"It is a very demanding task," he said, acknowledging that officials would have no other way to protect the port city of more than 70,000.

Civil protection commander Fahrudin Solak said the Sava River was spilling over another portion of the flood barrier in Orasje while emergency workers tried desperately to reinforce it with sandbags.

In Serbia, where floods have inundated towns and villages, authorities braced for high water that could last for several more days.

Serbian Prime Minister Aleksandar Vucic said Sunday that 12 bodies have been found so far in Obrenovac, site of the coal-fired Nikola Tesla power plant, Serbia's biggest.

Parts of the plant and a nearby mine that provides its fuel were underwater.

Serbia's state power company, EPS, said crews were doing all they could to prevent any further damage to the plant. Damage to the mine alone is estimated at more than 100 million euros ($137 million).

Serbia's energy minister, Aleksandar Antic, appealed to people to conserve power, calling the threat to the plant "very serious."

The floods and landslides raised fears about the estimated 1 million land mines planted during Bosnia's 1992-95 war. Nearly 120,000 of the unexploded devices remain in more than 9,400 carefully marked minefields. But the weather toppled warning signs and, in many cases, dislodged the mines themselves.

Beyond the immediate danger to Bosnians, any loose mines could also create an international problem if floodwaters carry the explosives downstream. Experts warned that mines could travel through half of southeast Europe or get stuck in the turbines of a hydroelectric dam.

From the air, the northeastern third of Bosnia resembled a huge muddy lake, with houses, roads and rail lines submerged. Officials say about a million people -- more than a quarter of the country's population -- live in the worst-affected areas.

The hillside village of Horozovina, close to the northeastern town of Tuzla, was practically split in two by a landslide that swallowed eight houses. More than 100 other houses were under threat from the restless earth. Residents told stories of narrow escapes from injury or death.

"I am homeless. I have nothing left, not even a toothpick," Mesan Ikanovic said. "I ran out of the house barefoot, carrying children in my arms."

Ikanovic said 10 minutes separated him and his family from likely death. He carried his 7-year-old daughter and 4-year-old son to safety.

He said he had secured a mortgage and moved in only last year. "Now I have nothing," he said. "Where will I go now? Where will we live?"

Semid Ivilic's house in the lower part of the village was still standing. But looking up at the mass of earth and rubble that engulfed his neighbors' homes, he said he was worried.

"Nobody is coming to help us," he said.

The final person to evacuate a village near Brcko said he had lost everything he valued.

"I was the last one to leave," said 72-year-old Anto Zuparic. "I left everything behind, my cattle and everything else. I do not know what to do. I am glad I won't live much longer anyway."

More than 10,000 people have already been rescued from the town of Bijeljina in northeast Bosnia. Trucks, buses and private cars were heading north with volunteers and tons of aid collected by people in cities outside the disaster zone.

The Bosnian Army said it had 1,500 troops helping on the ground. But many bridges have been washed away, leaving communities dependent on airlifts.

Helicopters from the European Union, Slovenia and Croatia were also aiding rescue efforts.

Large parts of eastern Croatia were underwater too, with several villages cut off and hundreds still fleeing the flooded zone in boats and trucks. Refugees were being housed in sports halls and schools, and aid centers were set up to distribute medicine, food, blankets and clothing.

In Serbia, more than 20,000 people have been forced from their homes.

Oven fire damages kitchen on Island Pond Road in Springfield

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Springfield firefighters responded to the fire at the single-family home.

SPRINGFIELD — An oven fire damaged a single-family home Sunday afternoon, said Dennis Leger, executive aide to Fire Commissioner Joseph Conant.

Firefighters responded to 178 Island Pond Road at 1:59 p.m. for an oven fire.

The fire caused about $5,000 in damage to the house, Leger said.

There were no injuries.


In Yale Class Day speech, Secretary of State John Kerry urges faith in institutions

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Kerry, a 1966 graduate of Yale, told students and their families, faculty and staff at the Ivy League school's 313th commencement that some people don't believe they can make a difference "and the sum difference of all of this is that we do not believe we can make a difference . we remain gridlocked."

NEW HAVEN, Conn. — Secretary of State John Kerry urged Yale University graduates on Sunday to keep faith in government's ability to break gridlock, even as many problems remain unsolved.

Kerry, a 1966 graduate of Yale, told students and their families, faculty and staff at the Ivy League school's 313th commencement that some people don't believe they can make a difference "and the sum difference of all of this is that we do not believe we can make a difference . we remain gridlocked."

Over the years, Congress has enacted broad legislation protecting the environment and civil rights, said Kerry, a former U.S. senator from Massachusetts. But, he said, the need to reform immigration and grapple with climate change now remain undone.

"This daring journey of progress played out over years or decades," he said. "Today, the felt needs are piling up while legislatures or foreign capitals seem frozen."

Kerry told graduates to remain hopeful and be active participants in finding ways to bring about change.

"None of our problems are without solutions, but neither will they solve themselves," he said. "It's a matter of willpower, not capacity. It requires keeping faith with the ability of institutions to do big things when demanded."

Kerry spoke at Yale Class Day 48 years ago, when he graduated. Then, he spoke about his impending service in the military and on the U.S. military presence around the world.

"In 1966, I suggested an excess of isolation has led to an excess of interventionism," he said.

Now, he said America's worldwide presence will not be diminished.

"If we can't galvanize action . we invite instability, and I promise you, radical extremism is all-too-ready to fill the vacuum left behind," Kerry said.

Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick urges Boston University graduates to be wary of e-gadgets

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Gov. Deval Patrick advised graduating Boston University students on Sunday to put down their tablets, smart phones and other electronic devices and connect with others using instead human feelings of empathy and kindness.

BOSTON — Gov. Deval Patrick advised graduating Boston University students on Sunday to put down their tablets, smart phones and other electronic devices and connect with others using instead human feelings of empathy and kindness.

He said too many people text, tweet, surf the Internet and email while barely acknowledging the presence of others.

"Real human connection, the nuance of empathy and understanding is often more gradual and elongated than Twitter," Patrick said. "It requires intimacy. And I worry that the demands of constant communication and infinite information through social media are crowding out intimacy."

For example, comforting the survivors of the Boston marathon bombing last year required a human touch, he said.

"That wouldn't work by text or tweet," Patrick said. "It demands intimacy. Whether healing an individual or healing the world, healing itself requires being present."

Patrick, who received an honorary doctor of laws degree, said social media can start a revolution.

"But can it bring peace," he asked. "You can break up on Facebook or text but can you also fall in love?"

"Sometime today, put your tablet and your smart phone aside, look your mom and dad in the eye and tell them you love them," Patrick said.

Ruth J. Simmons speaks at Smith College's 136th commencement: audio

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Former Smith College president Simmons has gone to bat for free speech in her commencement remarks. (Audio)

NORTHAMPTON — Former Smith College president Ruth J. Simmons has gone to bat for free speech in remarks delivered at the institution's 136th commencement, returning Sunday to a college she led for six years before leaving in 2001 to become president of Brown University.

It was only last weekend Simmons agreed to serve as Smith's commencement speaker, after International Monetary Fund chief Christine Lagarde withdrew amidst student protests.

The former college president's remarks had been widely anticipated because of local and national controversy ignited by Lagarde's withdrawal.

Protesters had argued in an online petition that Lagarde's appearance on campus would amount to an endorsement of the "patriarchal" development policies of the IMF. That analysis was rejected last week by college president Kathleen McCartney and by a group of more than 120 professors.

Speaking from the outdoor stage Sunday, Simmons acknowledged the role protest has played in shaping the course of American history, and told stories of her own defiant nature. But the core of her talk focused on honoring and protecting the free expression of ideas on campus and beyond.

While Smith gives young women a platform to confront injustice, including human trafficking, genocide, and civil rights violations, "one's voice grows stronger in encounters with opposing views," said Simmons.

Simmons told of defending a speaker at Brown "whose every assertion was dangerous and deeply offensive to me on a personal level." The speaker believed blacks were better off as slaves, she said.

Simmons drew applause when she opined that skipping the talk, as college president, would be "to choose personal comfort over a freedom whose value is so great, that the hearing of his unwelcome message could hardly be assessed at too great a cost."

"Protecting free speech brilliantly insulates us from from being silenced for own unpopular views," she said.

Simmons holds a Doctorate in Romance Literature from Harvard University. She is the first African-American woman to lead an Ivy League institution.

Man injured in Springfield home invasion

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Police are currently investigating the crime.

SPRINGFIELD - A resident who lives on Robert Dyer Circle was injured in a home invasion Sunday.

Two masked men broke into the home at 115 Robert Dyer Circle at about 7:20 p.m. and beat up one of the residents, police said.

The man was treated at the scene. Police are currently on scene investigating the crime, police said.

Masslive will update when more information becomes available.

Boston bar to pay $100,000 for allegedly denying admission to minorities

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A Dorchester bar accused of refusing to serve minorities has agreed to pay $100,000 to settle a civil rights lawsuit.

BOSTON — A Dorchester bar accused of refusing to serve minorities has agreed to settle a civil rights lawsuit.

The ownership of the Dorchester dive bar Peggy O'Neil's will pay $100,000 as the result of a 2011 lawsuit that accused the establishment of violating the state's public accommodations law by refusing to allow African-Americans, Hispanics and Cape Verdeans into the bar.

The suit filed against Limerick Co. Inc and bar owner Caron O'Neil stated that this occurred multiple times over the course of 2011.

Staff at the bar, including O'Neil, reportedly told potential customers of color that they were not allowed in because they did not know O'Neil and that "they did not want any trouble." This occurred while white customers were allowed in.

"Massachusetts businesses should not subject individuals to discrimination of any kind, including decisions that are based on prejudice or stereotypes," said Attorney General Martha Coakley in a statement.

Part of the terms of the settlement include a permanent injunction that prohibits the establishment from violating the Massachusetts Public Accommodations Law. The state law makes it illegal to discriminate at place of public accommodation based on religion, creed, class, race, color, denomination, sex, sexual orientation, nationality, or because of deafness or blindness, or any physical or mental disability.

The $100,000 settlement will be split between $80,000 going to the victims of discrimination and the cost of the litigation. The additional $20,000 will be held until the establishment complies with the terms of the judgement.

The lawsuit was scheduled to go to trial later this month.

Efforts to contact the bar for comment were unsuccessful.

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