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Family of missing Hadley man thanks Tibetan community

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The office of Northwestern District Attorney David Sullivan confirmed on Wednesday night that the body found last weekend in the Connecticut River in Holyoke was that of Tsering Choephel.

tsering choephel 5311.jpgTsering Choephel

HADLEY - The family of Tsering Choephel is having visiting hours for friends and family Saturday night at 5 p.m. at the family’s 112 Bay Road home.

The office of Northwestern District Attorney David Sullivan confirmed on Wednesday night that the body found last weekend in the Connecticut River in Holyoke was that of Choephel. He was last seen leaving his Bay Road home on the morning of April 28. His car was later found in the parking lot of the Hampton Inn, and his wallet was in the front seat.

A statement issued by First Assistant Northwestern District Attorney Steven E. Gagne said Choephel’s identity was confirmed by the state Office of the Chief Medical Examiner through an examination of dental records. No other information was available.

Choephel, 46, a native of Tibet, lived in Hadley for the last several years with his family and worked at Whole Foods. His family issued a statement thanking the local Tibetan community -- many of whom had been searching for Choephel since his disappearance -- and Whole Foods Market management team leaders and members “for their outpouring of love and support."

“The family and the local Tibetan community are deeply saddened by the sudden disappearance and demise of Tsering Choephel,” the release reads.

The family is asking that the larger community be respectful of the family’s privacy, according to family spokesperson Thondup Tsering.

“The local Tibetan community members have been conducting community prayers at the family’s home for the last three weeks to offer collective prayers and support to the family,” the release said.


Tim Pawlenty running for president, according to advisor

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Advisers acknowledge that Pawlenty turn in a strong showing in Iowa to have any chance at the GOP nomination.

tim pawlenty, APIn this April 14, 2011 file photo, former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty appears at the Nashua Area Republican Committee meeting in Nashua, N.H.

ST. PAUL, Minn. — Former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty, a laid-back Midwestern Republican who governed a Democratic-leaning state, is running for president and will declare his candidacy on Monday in the leadoff caucus state of Iowa, an adviser told The Associated Press.

The adviser, who disclosed the plans on the condition of anonymity in advance of next week's announcement, said Pawlenty will formally enter the race during a town hall-style event in Des Moines, Iowa.

He's choosing to make his long-expected bid official in a critical state in his path to the GOP nomination. Advisers acknowledge that Pawlenty, 50, must win or turn in a strong showing during next winter's caucuses in the neighboring state of Iowa to have any chance of becoming the Republican who will challenge President Barack Obama, a Democrat, next November.

After Monday's announcement, he will head to Florida, New Hampshire, New York and Washington, D.C.

The move is no surprise.

Pawlenty been laying the groundwork for a national campaign since John McCain passed him over in 2008 as his vice presidential nominee. He has worked to boost his national profile, assemble a staff, travel the country and build a fundraising network, all while positioning himself as a Republican with a record of resisting increases in taxes and government spending. He left the governor's post in January and he took the first step toward the presidency two months later by setting up an exploratory committee.

In the early stages of the campaign, he has struggled to raise his standing in polls or attract a niche constituency as Republicans with more star power — former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee and celebrity businessman Donald Trump — dangled themselves as possible candidates, only to opt out of bids.

Pawlenty has some big obstacles as he seeks the GOP nomination in a wide-open field.

He is not nearly as well known nationally as former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, ex-House Speaker Newt Gingrich and even libertarian-leaning Texas Rep. Ron Paul. And others with even bigger names — Sarah Palin — still may enter the fray. So too may a fellow Minnesotan, Rep. Michele Bachmann, who is a darling of the tea party and has indicated she's likely to launch a campaign soon.

The low-key Pawlenty also is fighting an impression at least within the GOP establishment that he's too bland to excite voters. He also has no personal wealth and isn't uniquely aligned with any one Republican faction — like social conservatives or fiscal Republicans — as are other candidates.

But in a GOP field with no clear favorite, Pawlenty hopes that he can cobble together a winning coalition of voters by attracting a wide array of Republicans, from religious conservatives to tea party adherents to establishment figures. As he travels the country, he boasts of reining in state spending and blocking tax hikes during two terms as Minnesota's governor, as well as stressing his working-class roots and evangelical Christian faith.

"I'm the only candidate in the field who can unite the whole Republican Party, not just one part of it, in a genuine and authentic way, and then go out an appeal to the whole country," Pawlenty said this week before a fundraiser in Minnesota.

He points to his record in Minnesota as proof that he can have appeal across the ideological spectrum.

Pawlenty, who passed up an opportunity to run for a third term as governor to seek the presidency, won the governors' office twice without a majority of the vote in races that included third-party candidates. During his tenure, Pawlenty had to contend with a Legislature that was partly or fully controlled by Democrats the eight years he was governor.

Minnesota's divided government led to repeated legislative battles and a partial government shutdown one year. Pawlenty also frequently vetoed tax and spending bills, earning a reputation in the GOP as a fiscal conservative. He pleased social conservatives as well by signing new abortion restrictions and laws favored by pro-gun groups.

But some of his past actions also have drawn tea party skepticism.

Even some Republicans flinched when he used billions in federal stimulus dollars and once agreed to hike state cigarette charges to balance Minnesota's budget. And Democrats pound him frequently over the $5 billion deficit his Minnesota successor is coping with for the upcoming state budget, although the state will turn a small surplus this summer when the last fiscal year under Pawlenty's direct control ends.

Pawlenty's former embrace of energy policies scorned by conservatives — such as a cap-and-trade system to limit emissions of greenhouse gases — have also been problematic. Pawlenty has disavowed his former stance and apologized for the "clunker" in his record.

Even so, it's not his record that's likely to be his biggest challenge. It's being heard in a crowded field.

Part of the reason: unlike others, he typically shies from the caustic comments and headline-grabbing issues. It's part of a strategy to come off as a serious-minded candidate in sober times. But his approach has also played into the characterization of him as dull.

Advisers hope that Pawlenty's ability to connect with small crowds in diners and living rooms will help him win over skeptics in the places where he needs to shine — Iowa and New Hampshire, where voters demand their candidates engage in that type of retail politics. He's somewhat of a natural at it. He's good with small talk, often makes goofy poses in keepsake photos and sticks around to shake all hands, helping explain why he's notoriously behind schedule.

In those settings, he discusses not just what he'd do for the country but also much about his personal story: his boyhood in a blue-collar household in a meatpacking town, his mother's death of cancer in his teen years. As an adult, he went on to a white-collar job as a lawyer and set down a political path took him from a suburban city hall to a seat in the state Legislature to, eventually, the governor's post.

"He is doing the soft sell and the soft sell works in the long run," said Andy Brehm, a Republican strategist in Minnesota. "This is an entirely self-made guy. I don't think you could ask for a better spokesman for the free market ideas. He's worked himself up really from nothing."

Pawlenty and his wife, Mary, a former judge. They have two teenage daughters, Anna and Mara.

Romney: Obama 'threw Israel under the bus'

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Republicans looking to unseat President Obama charged that he undermined the sensitive negotiations for Middle East peace.

mitt romney, 2011 apRepublican Presidential hopeful Mitt Romney, center, speaks during a stop at Rudy's Country Store and Bar-B-Q, Thursday, May 19, 2011, in Arlington, Texas.

HANOVER, N.H. — Republicans looking to unseat President Barack Obama charged that he undermined the sensitive and delicate negotiations for Middle East peace with his outline for resumed talks between Israelis and Palestinians.

Former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman said Obama, whom he served as U.S. ambassador to China until last month, undercut an opportunity for Israelis and Palestinians to build trust. Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney said Obama "threw Israel under the bus" and handed the Palestinians a victory even before negotiations between the parties could resume. Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich called it "the most dangerous speech ever made by an American president for the survival of Israel."

Foreign policy has hardly been the center of the debate among the still-forming GOP presidential field. Instead, the candidates and potential candidates have kept their focus — like the country's — on domestic issues that are weighing on voters and their pocketbooks. Obama's speech Thursday provided one of the first opportunities for Republicans to assert their foreign policy differences with Obama and his Democratic administration.

Obama endorsed Palestinians' demands for the borders of its future state based on 1967 borders — before the Six Day War in which Israel occupied East Jerusalem, the West Bank and Gaza. That was a significant shift in U.S. foreign policy.

Campaigning here in the state that hosts the first presidential nominating primary, Huntsman also said the United States should respect Israel and work to foster trust between Israelis and Palestinians.

"If we respect and recognize Israel as the ally that it is, we probably ought to listen to what they think is best," said Huntsman, who served in the administrations of Presidents Ronald Reagan, George H.W. Bush and George W. Bush before surprising his party and serving Obama, a Democrat.

He acknowledged he didn't watch Obama's speech and was reacting to news coverage — or, as he called it, "the aftermath."

"It is disrespectful of Israel for America to dictate negotiating terms to our ally," Romney said in an interview with The Associated Press. "It is not appropriate for the president to dictate the terms."

Instead, the United States should work with Israel to push for peace without acceding to the Palestinians, he said.

Gingrich said Israel simply cannot go back to the 1967 borders and expect to remain secure, given technological advancements that would allow its enemies to fire rockets deeper into the state.

"Get a map of the region and look at what Hamas does in firing missiles into Israel," Gingrich told The Associated Press. "The president should have said that Hamas has to abandon its determination to destroy Israel."

Obama urged Israel to accept that it can never have a truly peaceful nation based on "permanent occupation." That follows what other Republicans have painted as hostility from this administration toward a stalwart ally in the Middle East.

"The current administration needs to come to terms with its confused and dangerous foreign policy soon, as clarity and security are the necessary conditions of any serious and coherent American set of policies," Rick Santorum of Pennsylvania said in a statement.

Obama's speech at the State Department addressed the uprisings sweeping the Arab world. Speaking to audiences abroad and at home, he sought to leave no doubt that the U.S. stands behind the protesters who have swelled from nation to nation across the Middle East and North Africa.

"We know that our own future is bound to this region by the forces of economics and security; history and faith," the president said.

But the remarks only muddied things, especially on the dicey issue of Jerusalem, said former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty.

"The city of Jerusalem must never be re-divided," Pawlenty said. "At this time of upheaval in the Middle East, it's never been more important for America to stand strong for Israel and for a united Jerusalem."

Rep. Michele Bachmann of Minnesota, a tea party favorite who is leaning toward a run, called the border suggestions "a shocking display of betrayal" to Israel.

"Today President Barack Obama has again indicated that his policy towards Israel is to blame Israel first," she said in a statement.

On Twitter, former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin didn't directly address the speech but urged Obama to publicly welcome Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu instead of ushering him into private meetings away from reporters, as has occurred on Netanyahu's previous visits. The two leaders will talk Friday at the White House.

"Dear Mr. President, please allow our ally, PM Netanyahu, to respectfully arrive through the front door this time. Thanks, Concerned Americans," she tweeted.

Electrical fire displaces 2 families in Springfield's Forest Park neighborhood

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The Pioneer Valley Chapter of the American Red Cross is aiding those displaced.

@.jpgAn electrical fire at 64 West Alvord Street in Springfield early Friday displaced 2 families.

SPRINGFIELD – An electrical fire that started in the basement of a two-family home in Forest Park neighborhood caused some $50,000 in damage and displaced nine residents.

No injuries were reported in the blaze at 64 West Alvord St. and firefighters rescued a rabbit named Cocoa from a porch on the second floor, Fire Department spokesman Dennis G. Leger said.

Fire damage was limited to the cellar and first floor and there was smoke damage throughout the building, Leger said.

The Pioneer Valley of the American Red Cross is assisting those displaced with food and clothing, said Dawn Leaks, assistant director for chapter support. In all, nine people were displaced, she said.

Grandmother of Camden Hughes, found dead on remote road in Maine, thanks community for support

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The boy’s mother, Julianne McCrery of Texas, is accused of killing him in New Hampshire.

Maine vigil 52011.jpgJay Wilcox of Sanford, Maine, shares a moment with his son, Travis, 7, Tuesday, as they keep candles burning at a vigil in South Berwick, Maine, for Camden Hughes, of Irving, Texas, whose unidentified dead body was found along the side of a road last weekend.

CONCORD, N.H. – The grandmother of the little boy found dead along a dirt road in Maine is thanking the strangers who held a vigil in his honor.

LuRae McCrery of Curtis, Neb., sent a letter to several media outlets saying she is heartbroken over the death of her grandson, 6-year-old Camden Hughes, but was touched by the outpouring of concern that followed the discovery of his body in South Berwick, Maine, on Saturday.

The boy’s mother, 42-year-old Julianne McCrery of Irving, Texas, is accused of killing him in New Hampshire and is charged with second-degree murder. She was arrested in Massachusetts.

LuRae McCrery says Camden was a very bright kindergartener who liked to practice writing his letters. She says her birthday, which she shared with Camden, will never be the same.

Update: State Police press release on arrest of Blandford selectman Robert Nichols following head-on collision with school bus

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A state trooper investigating the crash found two pill bottles containing various pills and tablets in the vehicle NIchols was driving.

robert nichols.jpgRobert R. Nichols

BLANDFORD - State Police this morning issued a press release on the arrest of selectman Robert R. Nichols following a collision with a school bus Thursday morning.

A state trooper investigating the crash found two pill bottles containing various pills and tablets in the vehicle Nichols was driving, the release says. A trooper trained to recognize the physiological effects of drug use participated in interviewing Nichols.

The full text of the press release is included below.

Nichols is scheduled to be arraigned in Westfield District Court today. MassLive.com will carry an update on the arraignment when information is available. Nichols was released yesterday on personal recognizance after being held in custody at Nobel Hospital, where he was taken following the crash.



State Police Charge Drugged Driver in Crash Involving School Bus

Massachusetts State Police Troopers from the Russell Barracks yesterday arrested a Blandford man with drugged driving and other charges related to a head-on crash between his sport utility vehicle and a school bus.

Troopers charged ROBERT R. NICHOLS, 50, with operating under the influence of drugs, negligent operation of a motor vehicle, and speeding following an investigation into the crash, which occurred at 8:05 a.m. on the northbound side of South Street, near Route 23, in Blandford.

Preliminary investigation by Trooper Mark Rogers indicates that NICHOLS was operating a 2005 Land Rover southbound on South Street in the opposing direction of the school bus, which is owned by Lecrenski Brothers, Inc. bus company of Westfield. The bus was being driven by a 56-year-old Southwick man and carried as passengers four Blandford students.

Evidence indicates that NICHOLS’ Land Rover traveled down South Street at an excessive rate of speed, crossing and re-crossing the center median, and eventually swerved into the path of the bus. The bus driver braked and turned to the right in an attempt to avoid a collision but could not avoid the Land Rover.

Four Chester Elementary School students showed no apparent injuries when examined at the scene by Hilltown EMS. The parent of one of the children arrived on scene and took custody of that student. The other three students were transported to Noble Hospital for precautionary reasons in Westfield and later released to the custody of their parents. The bus driver was also transported to Noble for precautionary examination.

Troopers, meanwhile, observed NICHOLAS sitting behind the wheel of the Land Rover appearing sleepy and showing signs of impairment. NICHOLS suffered minor injuries and was transported to Noble Hospital.

During a subsequent inventory of the Land Rover, Trooper Rogers found two pill bottles containing various pills and tablets. State Trooper Jamie Magarian, a drug recognition expert – a trooper trained to recognize the physiological effects of drug use – assisted Trooper Rogers in interviewing NICHOLS. After that interview, and as a result of all investigative measures, Troopers formed the opinion that NICHOLS was under the influence of narcotics, placed him under arrest at the hospital and provided him his Miranda Rights. Troopers booked NICHOLS and kept him in custody at the hospital until a Westfield District Court clerk set his bail at personal recognizance. NICHOLS was discharged from the hospital at approximately 4 p.m. yesterday.

John Lundy of Pittsfield arrested following desecration of 209 cemetery headstones

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Police put damage estimates at $15,000.

PITTSFIELD – A Pittsfield man has been arrested in connection with desecrating of more than 200 headstones and monuments at Pittsfield Cemetery.

Pittsfield Police Capt. John Mullin says that John Lundy was arrested Thursday and charged with 209 counts of gravestone vandalism. The 18-year-old is scheduled to be arraigned Friday in Central Berkshire County Court.

Mullin says police were close to making two more arrests.

According to authorities, most of the toppled stones, some of which weigh upward of 3,000 pounds, were located along a half-mile swath of the cemetery’s East Lawn and Forest Mountain sections.

Police said the vandalism of the headstones, mostly from the 19th and early 20th centuries, took place late last month. Officials say damage estimates are around $15,000.

It was not immediately clear if Lundy had an attorney.

PM News Links: Hotel manager took pity on Camden Hughes before he died, al-Qaeda planned to hit oil rigs and more

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The words in President Obama's speech about Israel were stirring, the emotions powerful and the intentions seemingly sincere. But why, wondered those watching the televised speech in the region to which his comments were aimed, couldn’the have said that before?

U S Israel demonstration 52011.jpgView full sizePeople demonstrate in front of the White House Friday as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu arrives in Washington to meet with President Obama. Click on the link, above left, for a report from the Washington Post that deccribes how the president's speech Thursday on Israeli-Palestinian relations failed to impress many Arabs.

NOTE: Users of modern browsers can open each link in a new tab by holding 'control' ('command' on a Mac) and clicking each link.


Obituaries today: Patricia Kane taught in Chicopee and Holyoke schools

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Obituaries from The Republican.

052011_partricia_kane.jpegPatricia A. Kane

Patricia A. (Dougherty) Kane, 74, of Holyoke, died on Wednesday. She was born in Holyoke, and graduated from Chicopee High School in 1953 and Westfield State College in 1957. Kane was a retired 38-year teacher, having taught in Chicopee at Fairview Elementary School and Memorial Elementary School, and in Holyoke at McMahon School, from which she retired in 1998 after 30 years. She held membership, and was active in, Holyoke Senior Citizens. She was a member of the Elmwood Towers Tenants Association and the Retired State, County, and Municipal Employees Association.

Obituaries from The Republican:

Franch finance minister Christine Lagarde calls off visit to Amherst

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Lagarde, Frances minister for finance and industry, was to have spoken at forum Saturday afternoon and receive an honorary degree at Amherst’s commencement on Sunday. She informed the college Friday that she was not attending.

Christine LagardeFrance's Finance and Economy Minister Christine Lagarde visits a Parisian supermarket and goods retailer in Paris Thursday May 19, 2011. Lagarde has emerged as a potential candidate to replace IMF chief, Frenchman Dominique Strauss-Kahn who resigned Wednesday, saying he wants to devote "all his energy" to fighting sexual assault charges in New York. (AP Photo/Jacques Brinon)

AMHERST – Christine Lagarde, the cabinet member who is in the running to take over the International Monetary Fund, has canceled her visit to Amherst College this weekend.

Lagarde, Frances minister for finance and industry, was to have spoken at forum Saturday afternoon and receive an honorary degree at Amherst’s commencement on Sunday. She informed the college Friday that she was not attending.

The former head of the IMF, Frenchman Dominique Strauss-Kahn, was forced to resign this week after he was accused of sexually assaulting a hotel worker in New York City.

Professional wrestler Randy 'Macho Man' Savage dies at age 58

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He reportedly suffered a heart attack while driving in Tampa.

_randysavage.jpg"Macho Man" Randy Savage (AP file photo)

Professional wrestler Randy "Macho Man" Savage has died in an automobile accident in Tampa after suffering a heart attack, according to msnbc.com. He was 58.

The one-time minor league baseball player, whose real name was Randall Mario Poffo, was a huge draw for what was then known as the WWF in the 1980s. He was known for his "Oooooh yeaaaaah!" catch phrase and signature finishing move - an elbow drop from the top rope. He also wrestled for World Championship Wrestling before retiring in 1999.

WWE CEO Vince McMahon issued a statement: "Poffo was under contract with WWE from 1985 to 1993 and held both the WWE and Intercontinental Championships. Our sincerest condolences go out to his family and friends. We wish a speedy recovery to his wife Lynn. Poffo will be greatly missed by WWE and his fans."

The Florida Highway Patrol reported that Savage's vehicle, a 2009 Jeep Wrangler, was traveling west on SR-694 when it went out of control just west of the intersection of 113th Street North.The Jeep went over the raised concrete median divider, crossed over the eastbound lanes and hit a tree head-on, the report said, adding that a woman passenger suffered minor injuries.

Word of his death traveled swiftly on Twitter. Said wrestling superstar Hulk Hogan: "He had so much life in his eyes & his spirit, I just pray that he's happy and in a better place and we miss him."

"You were one of my childhood inspirations and heroes," tweeted Duane "The Rock" Johnson. "Strength, love and prayers to the Savage/Poffo family."

Added "Rowdy" Roddy Piper: "Too sad to tweet."

The New York Daily News reported that Savage had just celebrated his first anniversary with his new wife, Lynn. He was previously married to wrestling manager Elizabeth Heulette, who died in 2003 from a lethal combination of drugs and booze.

Amherst College to honor World War II veterans who dropped out of school at ceremonies this weekend

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Four former Amherst students will receive honorary bachelor’s degrees in recognition of the sacrifices they made for their country more than 65 years ago.

Amherst commencement 2009.jpg

BOSTON – When the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor in December 1941, Amherst College student J. Bruce Duncan wanted to do his patriotic duty for his country.

So he left school and joined the Navy. He spent time in ports around the U.S. and went to Hiroshima just weeks after the atomic bomb was dropped on the city as part of American occupation forces in postwar Japan.

He left the Navy as a lieutenant junior grade and went to Harvard Law School, pursued a successful legal career, and raised a family.

But he never went back to Amherst to complete his undergraduate degree.

Duncan and three other former Amherst students – Richard Hunter, Frank Egloff and C. Burns Roehrig – are receiving honorary bachelor’s degrees at the Massachusetts liberal arts college’s commencement Sunday in recognition of the sacrifices they made for their country more than 65 years ago.

“It’s just what we had to do,” said Duncan, a chemistry major who played for the Lord Jeffs freshman football team and was editor of the school newspaper. “It seemed to make sense to me.”

“My first reaction when they told me about this was that I had not earned it,” said Duncan, 87, who grew up in East Orange, N.J. and now lives in New Canaan, Conn., where he still practices law part time. “My second reaction was ‘What the heck.’ “

His reaction is typical of the World War II generation, Amherst President Anthony Marx said. They rarely boast about the sacrifices they made when the country needed them.

“We had no idea these people were even out there,” Marx said.

It was Hunter’s daughter-in-law who first brought up the idea of honoring those who had left school in the 1940s to fight for their country.

Sara Hunter sent an email to Marx early this year, describing her father-in-law’s fondness for his time at Amherst and his regret at never having completed his degree, even though he went on the earn an MBA from Harvard Business School that helped him run the family textile machinery business.

“Do you think there would be any way to award an honorary degree (or a genuine one) at graduation this year?” she wrote.

Marx didn’t hesitate. In fact, he initiated a search for other alumni who had left school early for military service during World War II who were still alive, and that’s how they found Egloff, Duncan and Roehrig.

“Of course we wanted to honor these men who gave so much to the nation,” Marx said. “It’s a statement of pride and an acknowledgment of service.”

Only Duncan and Egloff are scheduled to attend the commencement ceremony, where they will wear mortar boards and gowns just like the other roughly 480 undergraduates being awarded degrees Sunday.

Hunter, 89, and Roehrig, 88, cannot travel, but their degrees will be mailed to them.

The honor caught Egloff by surprise.

“You usually think of people getting honorary degrees for accomplishing something, but this is for not doing something,” Egloff, 85, said with a chuckle.

Like the others, the interruption to his education did not appear to hamper his career. A pre-med major at Amherst, the Army sent him to Harvard Medical School. He splits his time now between homes in the Woods Hole section of Falmouth and Westwood, and still practices psychiatry part time.

“The war hung over all of us,” during his days at Amherst, Egloff said. Dozens of students at the then all-men’s college left school and joined the military, as did men from colleges across the nation.

Hunter, a native of North Adams who now lives in Naples, Fla., lost his Amherst roommate, David Cosgrove, in combat in the Philippines. Hunter was involved in frontline military campaigns in New Guinea and Luzon, Philippines, and like Duncan, was a member of the postwar occupation force in Japan.

Roehrig, a Brookline native who now lives in Hilton Head Island, S.C., joined the U.S. Army Air Corps. Leaving Amherst was tough, because attending the school was somewhat of a family tradition. Two of his older brothers went to Amherst. His son-in-law and two of his nephews continued that tradition.

He completed his undergraduate education at The Citadel in South Carolina and Vanderbilt University in Tennessee before attending medical school at the University of Maryland. But he never got over leaving Amherst early.

“He has always felt the absence of a diploma from Amherst, and this degree means a great deal to him,” his daughter, Jennifer Munn, wrote to Marx.

Sunday’s ceremony also is a chance to help repair what Marx calls the “divorce” between the military and American colleges that occurred after the Vietnam War. It was only in recent years that Amherst started allowing military recruiters back on campus and students joined the ROTC program at the University of Massachusetts across town.

“No matter what your views, we all have to be respectful of veterans,” he said.

French finance minister Christine Lagarde calls off visit to Amherst College

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Lagarde, France's minister for finance and industry, was to have spoken at forum and receive an honorary degree at Amherst’s commencement.

Christine LagardeFrance's Finance and Economy Minister Christine Lagarde, seen here at a Parisian supermarket Wednesday, has called off her planned visit to Amherst this weekend.

AMHERST – Christine Lagarde, the cabinet member who is in the running to take over the International Monetary Fund, has canceled her visit to Amherst College this weekend.

Lagarde, Frances minister for finance and industry, was to have spoken at forum Saturday afternoon and receive an honorary degree at Amherst’s commencement on Sunday. She informed the college Friday that she was not attending.

The former head of the IMF, Frenchman Dominique Strauss-Kahn, was forced to resign this week after he was accused of sexually assaulting a hotel worker in New York City.

Northampton city council approves Community Development Block Grant plan

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The federal money can be used to repair streets and sidewalks in neighborhoods with low income housing.

HFP_CENTER_8_4631111.JPGNorthampton Senior Center.

NORTHAMPTON – The City Council has signed off on the mayor’s plan to use the city's 2011 Community Development Block Grant money, and there’s nothing to do now but wait to see if Northampton will win the projected amount.

The $686,263 in federal money posted by the Department of Housing and Urban Development is already 16 percent less than the previous year’s allocation, according to Community and Economic Development Coordinator Teri A. Anderson. The city is concerned that this year’s final number might turn out to be even lower. Northampton has come to depend on the annual federal grants for a variety of housing-related needs, including payment of a loan to build the $4 million Senior Center on Conz Street.

Republicans in Congress have targeted the Housing and Urban Development money as part of their plan to trim the federal budget. They were unsuccessful in eliminating those funds this year, but communities remain anxious about the fate of the grants. In the meantime, the federal funds have been shrinking.

As in recent years, the biggest beneficiary in Mayor Mary Clare Higgins’ proposal is the Senior Center, which would absorb $328,101 of the block grant money. Another $137,252 will go towards supplementing the salaries of Anderson and other staff in the Community and Economic Development Office. As has been its practice, Northampton plans to distribute most of the remaining money among human service agencies and organizations dedicated to addressing the housing needs of low income people.

The plan offers $65,000 to Valley Community Development Corporation to make improvements in an apartment complex it owns on New South Street. In exchange, the agency would keep the units affordable for an additional 25 years. On a smaller scale, $6,000 would be used to improve the kitchen at Grace House, a program for women in recovery and their children.

Casa Latina, Big Brothers & Big Sisters and the Center for new Americans are among other organizations that will receive Community Development Block Grant funding. Because of budget constructions, however, no federal money is targeted for public infrastructure improvement in 2011, Anderson said.

The federal money can be used to repair streets and sidewalks in neighborhoods with low income housing. Last year, the city dedicated $92,000 to reconstruct Conz Street, where the Walter Salvo House is located. Those funds have carried over to this year and the project is no tap for this summer. Other carry-over funds will be used to make improvements at the Three County Fairgrounds, Forbes Library and James House, a city-owned building on Gothic Street that has been converted into an adult learning center.

Resolution CDBG FY2012 Yr28

Blandford Selectman Robert Nichols released after denying operating a motor vehicle under the influence of drugs

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State police charged Nichols with negligent operation following a school bus accident in town.

This is an updated version of a story posted at 11:54 this morning.


robert nichols.jpgRobert R. Nichols

BLANDFORD – Selectman Robert R. Nichols denied operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of drugs, the result of a school bus crash Thursday morning, at his arraignment in Westfield District Court Friday.

Nichols, 50, of Main Street, also denied a charge of negligent operation of a motor vehicle before Judge Philip A. Contant.

Contant ordered Nichols to return to court July 15 for a pre-trial conference. The selectman was released on personal recognizance pending his next court appearance.

The accident happened at about 8 a.m. on South Street when Nichols allegedly crashed his 2005 Landrover into a school bus carrying four Chester Elementary School students.

No injuries were reported.

State police investigating the accident said they found two pill bottles containing various pills and tablets in Nichols’ vehicle.


2011 Valley Food championship Pizza Playoffs Round 1: See the complete field of 64 contenders and vote for your favorites

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The Field of 64 is set. Let the voting begin!

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We've gathered your nominations and tallied your preliminary votes, and we can now reveal the Field of 64 contenders in the 2011 Valley Food Championship Pizza Playoffs.

According to your votes, these are your favorite 64 places for pizza in the Pioneer Valley. The field was completed over the past two days with play-in voting for the "bubble" pizza shops in each region. The regional winners of the play-in voting – Napoli (South), Aurora’s Pizzeria (East), West Springfield Village Pizza (West), and Big Y Northampton (North) – complete our Field of 64.

In Round 1, your votes will narrow the field of contenders from 64 down to 32. In each region, vote for up to 8 restaurants. The top 8 in each region will advance to Round 2. The bottom 8 in each region will be eliminated.

Round 1 voting is open until Wednesday, May 25 at noon. Don't let your favorite pizza place be eliminated!

Without further ado, let's start voting!

South:


West of the River:



East of the River:



North:



The complete list of restaurants appears below:

South

De Nardo's Family Restaurant (East Longmeadow)
Fazio's Ristorante & Pizzeria (East Longmeadow)
Family Pizzeria & Restaurant (Springfield)
Frankie & Johnnie's Pizza (Springfield)
Leone's Restaurant (Springfield)'
Napoli Restaurant & Pizzeria (Springfield)
Peppa's Pizza / Peppa's Express (East Longmeadow / Springfield)
Pizza Makers (Springfield)
Pizza Shoppe (East Longmeadow)
Primos Pizza (Springfield)
Red Rose Pizzeria (Springfield)
Rinaldi’s Italian Specialties (Enfield, CT)
Rinaldi’s Italian Specialties (Longmeadow)
Salerno Pizzeria (Springfield)
Tony's Pizza (Springfield)
2 Guys Pizzeria (Springfield)


North

A-1 Pizza House (Florence)
Antonio's (Amherst / Easthampton)
Big Y (Northampton)
Countrypie Pizza Company (Ashfield)
Easthampton Village Pizza (Easthampton)
Hillside Pizza (Hadley / Deerfield)
Joe's (Northampton)
La Trattoria (Belchertown)
Magpie Woodfired Pizzeria (Greenfield)
Nini's Ristorante (Easthampton)
Pinocchio's Pizzeria (Northampton)
Pizza Paradiso (Northampton)
Roberto's Restaurant (Northampton)
Sam's Pizzeria and Cafe (Northampton)
Sibies Pizza (Amherst)
Village Pizza Shop (Greenfield)


East

Aurora's Pizzeria (Chicopee)
Boston Bay Pizza (Chicopee)
Doogan's Deli Mart (Chicopee Falls)
Dugout Cafe & Pizza Shop (Chicopee)
Falls Pizza & Grinders (Chicopee)
Family Pizza (South Hadley)
Giovanni's Pizza Shop (Chicopee)
Gregory's Pizza Pub & Restaurant (Wilbraham)
John's Pizzeria & Restaurant (Chicopee)
La Cucina di Hampden House / La Cucina Express (Hampden)
Milano's Pizzaria & Restaurant (Chicopee)
Pinocchio's On the Go (Ludlow)
Pizza Corner (Ludlow)
Poppi's Pizza (Ludlow)
Route 33 Pizza House (South Hadley)
Teresa's Restaurant (Ware)


West

Amadeo's Restaurant & Pizzeria (Holyoke)
Bella Napoli Pizzeria (West Springfield)
Bertucci's (West Springfield)
Bruno Pizzeria (Feeding Hills)
Capri Pizza (Holyoke)
Family Pizza (Westfield)
Italian Friendly Pizza-Grinder (Holyoke)
Liquori's Pizza (West Springfield)
Paisano's Restaurant & Pizzeria (Southampton)
Pasquale's Italian Family Restaurant (Westfield)
Pic's Pub (Holyoke)
Pizza d'Action (Holyoke)
Pizza Guy (Agawam)
Roma Restaurant (Southwick)
Sorrento Pizza (West Springfield)
Village Pizza (West Springfield)

Palmer police investigating break-in at Palmer Restaurant; break-ins up compared to last year

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The police chief advises residents to keep their doors and windows locked, and to report suspicious activity immediately.

PALMER – Police are investigating a break-in at the Palmer Restaurant on Main Street that was reported early Thursday morning.

Someone forced open the back door of the downtown restaurant and stole cash. State police crime scene services also were called to investigate and to see if any evidence could be recovered at the scene, according to Police Chief Robert P. Frydryk.

Frydryk said break-ins are up compared to last year, and advises residents to make sure their doors and windows are locked.

“We recommend security systems if they can afford them. Neighbors should also be conscious of suspicious vehicles in the area and report them,” Frydryk said.

He said residents sometimes say that they do not want to bother police by calling about perceived suspicious activity. But Frydryk said residents should always call if they suspect something amiss in their neighborhood.

There have been approximately 30 break-ins to residences and businesses since the start of the year, as well as approximately 25 break-ins to motor vehicles, according to Police Department data.

The break-ins have been reported all over town, in all the villages. In March, thieves stole copper from the National Grid substation on Blanchard Street.

Streets hit include Mason; Springfield, High and Main streets in Three Rivers; Crawford and Second in Bondsville, Riverview Parkway, Overlook Drive, Rondeau Road, Cross, Rockview, Wilbraham, South Main, Harvey and High in Thorndike, Boston Road, Fox, Lawrence, Ware, and Breckenridge.

Items taken range from jewelry and cash, to a girl’s piggy bank, a Sony Playstation and tools. In one incident this month, a woman was asleep when someone broke into the house and stole a GPS and camera. Also this month, someone stole laptop computers and a flat screen television from an unlocked house.

In addition to Palmer Restaurant, businesses that have been broken into since the start of the year include Steaming Tender, Tenczar’s Food Town and Cement Well Concrete Products in Three Rivers.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu tells President Obama his country will not withdraw to 1967 borders as asked

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The Israeli leader said he would make some concessions but such a move would be “indefensible.”

Netanyahu Obama 52011.jpgPresident Barack Obama meets with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, left, of Israel in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington, Friday.

WASHINGTON – Indicating no progress toward peace, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu sat alongside President Barack Obama on Friday and declared that Israel would not withdraw to 1967 borders to help make way for an adjacent Palestinian state. Obama had called on Israel to be willing to do just that a day earlier.

The Israeli leader said he would make some concessions but Israel would not go back to the lines from decades earlier because they would be “indefensible.”

For his part, Obama said that there were differences of formulations and language but that such disputes are going to happen “between friends.”

The president never mentioned the 1967 borders as the two men talked with reporters. The leaders spoke after a lengthy meeting in the Oval Office, amid tense times.

Obama said in his speech on Thursday that the United States supports creation of a Palestinian state based on the border lines that existed before the 1967 Six Day War in which Israel forces occupied east Jerusalem, the West Bank and Gaza – along with mutually agreed-to land swaps that could accommodate existing Israeli settlements. The comment on 1967 borders drew angry criticism in Israel, and Netanyahu made clear after meeting with Obama that the idea was unacceptable.

“We cannot go back to those indefensible lines,” Netanyahus aid The prime minister made no mention of Obama’s stipulation that there would be land swaps – an omission that seemed to present Obama’s proposal as more onerous.

Both Obama and Netanyahu said they shared a desire to get to peace and downplayed disagreements. “We may have differences here and there,” Netanyahu said.

But there was no sign of resolution of the many barriers that stand between Israel and the Palestinians, more now than last September when Obama brought the two parties together to call for a peace deal within a year – a deadline that now looks unattainable.

Netanyahu said his nation could not negotiate with a newly constituted Palestinian unity government that includes the radical Hamas movement, which refuses to recognize Israel’s right to exist. He said that Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas had to choose between continuing the deal with Hamas and making peace with Israel.

Obama agreed that Hamas “is not a partner for a significant realistic peace process” and said Palestinians would have to resolve that issue among themselves.

Yet both Obama and Netanyahu emphasized a need to make some kind of progress, against all obstacles, as changes sweep the Arab world.

“History will not give the Jewish people another chance,” Netanyahu said.

Another major stumbling block is how to resolve the issue of Palestinian refugees. Palestinians demands a “right of return” of large numbers of refugees and descendants to Israel, but Israeli leaders say this would dilute the Jewish presence in Israel so that it would no longer be the Jewish state that Netanyahu demands and Obama supports.

“That’s not going to happen,” Netanyahu said. He said Palestinians need to recognize that, and also said that Israel would not budge on its need for troops on the border with Jordan.

Palestinians reacted angrily.

Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat said Netanyahu’s comments were tantamount to a “total rejection of the Obama vision and speech.”

“Without Mr. Netanyahu committing to two states on the 1967 lines, with mutually agreed swaps, he is not a partner to the peace process, and, I think, when President Obama gave him a choice between dictation and negotiations, he chose dictation, and when he gave him a choice between settlements and peace, he chose settlements.”

“I don’t think we can talk about a peace process with a man who says the 1967 lines are an illusion,” Erekat said.

Indeed, the comments from Netanyahu and Obama, after a longer-than-scheduled meeting that lasted over an hour-and-a-half, sounded more like a recitation of the many barriers to peace than an explanation of why there should be any reason for optimism.

The two leaders did not take questions from the press, and White House Press Secretary Jay Carney was unable in a subsequent briefing to point to any concrete signs of progress.

That left the way forward as cloudy as ever. Netanyahu is to address the U.S. Congress on Tuesday to press Israel’s position.

International pressure is growing on both Netanyahu and Obama to answer the demands of the Palestinian people as revolts sweeping the Arab world crest against Israel itself. Palestinian protesters marched on the Jewish state’s borders this week, and at least 15 people were killed.

Netanyahu was informed shortly before Obama’s speech of its contents by Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, according to U.S. officials. Netanyahu sought in vain to get the border language removed from the speech, the officials said, and was incensed when he was told it was staying in. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss a sensitive diplomatic exchange.

Obama’s stance on the 1967 borders was not a major policy change, since the U.S – along with the international community and even past Israeli governments – previously had agreed to building on the 1967 lines.

But it was the first time he’d explicitly endorsed those borders as a starting point, while also embracing land swaps, and was viewed by Israelis as a concession to Palestinian demands.

In the face of Israeli anger, Carney argued Friday that Obama’s articulation of the 1967 borders didn’t amount to a new position.

Obama Thursday repudiated the Palestinians’ pursuit of unilateral statehood through the United Nations, but it was unclear whether his statement on the 1967 borders as the basis for negotiations would be sufficient to persuade the Palestinians to drop their quest for U.N. recognition.

Mayor Sarno suspends Center Stage entertainment license for 10 days as result of underage brawl that injured a police officer

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It is the second time in a week Mayor Sarno has come down hard on a downtown bar for violations.

Center Stage02-05-10-Springfield-Staff Photo by Dave Roback-The exterior of Center Stage on Dwight Street in Springfield. See Story.


Updated to include comments from Peter Sygnator, chairman of the Springfield License Commission.

SPRINGFIELD – Mayor Domenic J. Sarno on Friday announced a 10-day suspension of the entertainment license for Center Stage, a downtown topless bar, as a result of a recent fight involving two underage patrons that left a police officer with a broken jaw.

Sarno said the decision comes based on a recommendation from the city Law Department which conducted a hearing on the March 20 incident.

With a suspended entertainment license, a bar can still serve alcohol, but cannot provide music, televisions, video games, and, in the case of Center Stage, topless dancers, according to Peter Sygnator, chairman of the license commission.

“It doesn’t sound like much fun to me but they could potentially remain open and serve drinks in silence,” he said. “Under those circumstances, it is not likely they will open but there is nothing to stop them from doing so.”

But, according to the mayor’s office, the 10-day suspension is not immediate, and only 5 of the days, between Tuesday, June 7 and Saturday, June 11, are consecutive.

The remaining five days will be held in abeyance for a period of one year beginning Sunday. Sarno spokesman Thomas Walsh said if the bar keeps out of trouble for the next year, the remaining 5 days will not have to be served. If there are any
additional problems, the 5 days will be added onto future discipline handed down by the city, he said.

Sarno’s action was the result of a March 20 fight inside the bar. Two underage patrons were let inside the bar and allowed to drink without anyone verifying their age.

One of the two, identified as Miguel Sosa, 20, of 769 Union St., struck a police officer who was trying to break up the fight and broke his jaw.

Sosa was charged with assault and battery of a police officer, resisting arrest, threatening to commit a crime and giving a false name to a police officer.

Sarno said the city has an obligation to maintain order in downtown bars as a way of protecting patrons, employees and police. By allowing two underage patrons inside to drink initiated a chain of events that created a public nuisance and injured a police officer, he said.

It is the second such action Sarno has taken in a week involving a downtown bar.

Last week, Sarno rejected an application from the Worthington Street bar Sinners & Saints for a Sunday entertainment license, meaning the bar may remain open until 2 a.m. on Sundays, but all forms of entertainment will have to shut down at midnight Saturday. That action followed a large disturbance in January that required police to break up.

Two arrested after Holyoke and state police stop car on Interstate 91; one man caught after foot chase

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The stop was made in relation to an investigation into an armed robbery, police said.

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HOLYOKE – State and city police caught two people after a car was stopped on Interstate 91 north about 5 p.m. Friday in relation to an investigation into an armed robbery, a state police officer said.

A passenger in the car was caught after a brief foot pursuit just before Exit 16, state Trooper Jonathan P. Bray said.

Both people in the car were arrested, but Bray said city police were handling the arrests. A Holyoke police official wasn’t immediately available for comment.


This is a developing story and will be updated as details become available.

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