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Teen to be tried as adult in Fall River robbery and pistol whipping

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Bristol District Attorney Sam Sutter said Joshua Burgos of Fall River was indicted on charges including armed robbery, assault and battery and firearms violations under the state's youthful offender law.

 

NEW BEDFORD — A 14-year-old boy accused of robbing a Fall River McDonald's restaurant at gunpoint and pistol whipping the manager will face charges as an adult.

Bristol District Attorney Sam Sutter said Friday that Joshua Burgos of Fall River was indicted on charges including armed robbery, assault and battery and firearms violations under the state's youthful offender law. His case will be tried in open juvenile court under adult rules.

Police say the masked boy entered the restaurant at about 5:30 a.m. Wednesday brandishing a gun. He allegedly struck the manager in the face with the gun and ordered the manager to take him to the safe. Police said he placed money from the safe in a duffel bag and ran down the street, where officers arrested him.

He is scheduled for a March 21 dangerousness hearing in Fall River.



Belchertown's Jesse Columbo joins other students being matched with medical centers

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Indeed, given his background, Columbo, the son of a carpenter and stay-at-home mom, seemed more likely to wield a nail gun than a scalpel. Watch video

 

WORCESTER – Jesse Columbo, registered nurse, ripped open the envelope and read the letter.

“Yessss! It’s Dartmouth,” he said.

The hugging, hand-shaking and high-fiving started moments later as friends, family and teachers congratulated the 28-year-old Belchertown resident on the start of his career as a vascular surgeon.

At the University of Massachusetts Medical School Friday, Columbo was one of 118 graduating students receiving appointments for their hospital training programs.

In a ritual known as "match day", envelopes are passed out to each student, then opened all at once to heighten the drama.

Columbo won the only residency for vascular surgery offered by the prestigious Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center in New Hampshire, the best possible outcome for him.

Conveniently, his girlfriend, Shannon Campbell, works as a nurse there.

She was the first to hug Columbo, followed by his sister Julie and two nieces; meanwhile, dozens of other celebrations swirled around them.

“You have no idea how happy I am right now,” he said.

“This is a culmination of everything I’ve been working for; exactly what I wanted to do, exactly where I wanted to do it; I couldn’t be happier.”

For Columbo – who was homeshcooled and the first in his family to attend college – the very idea of becoming a vascular surgeon seemed far-fetched growing up.

Indeed, given his background, Columbo, the son of a carpenter and stay-at-home mom, seemed more likely to wield a nail gun than a scalpel.

From ages 8 to 16, he spent summers helping his father Joseph build houses. He was a quick learner, with a flair for carpentry, his father recalled.

But while shingling a roof one afternoon, Columbo made his first career decision .

“It was a 100 degrees. I came down and told my dad: I can’t do this anymore,” he said.

“He said it was the best news he’d ever heard,” Columbo said.

Several years later, Columbo embarked on a medical career – immersing himself in a nurse training program at Springfield Technical Community College. After earning a nursing degree, he landed a job at Baystate Medical Center, working with patients before and after surgery.

The idea of becoming a surgeon eventually appealed to him, leading to his enrollment at Elms College in Chicopee for a pre-med degree.

Still working as a nurse at Baystate, he was accepted at University of Massachusetts Medical School, and began splitting his time between hospitals.

As his parents recall it, the traits that were so obvious in their son growing up – discipline, test-taking skills and a near photographic memory – paid off in medical school.

By noon Friday, Columbo’s poise was being severely tested as the suspense built.

“I want to know where I’m going. I want to know where I have to move to,” he said.

When he finally opened the letter, there was a short message: “Congratulations, vascular surgery at Dartmouth-Hitchcock, New Hampshire.”

“This is just the start,” a jubilant Columbo said as his niece, Heather Columbo, 12, draped herself around him.

“But I couldn’t be happier,” he added.

Later, as he posed for photos, someone asked the Columbo where he was going.

“I’m going to Disney World,” he said.

“I’ve always wanted to say that; that was awesome.”

Westfield home under renovation by new owner catches fire; damage estimated at $30K

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WESTFIELD - A Westfield homeowner, less than a week after acquiring the property on Summit Drive, caused $30,000 damage when a fire he started in the fireplace spread to nearby walls, a fire official said. Firefighters were called to the home at 27 Summit Drive Friday evening for a reported house fire, said Deputy Mark Devine of the Westfield...

MW_FIRE_1_12145741.JPG A Westfield firefighter walks back inside the house at 27 Summit Drive, which was the scene of a fire Friday evening. The house sustained $30,000 in damage, officials said.  

WESTFIELD - A Westfield homeowner, less than a week after acquiring the property on Summit Drive, caused $30,000 damage when a fire he started in the fireplace spread to nearby walls, a fire official said.

Firefighters were called to the home at 27 Summit Drive Friday evening for a reported house fire, said Deputy Mark Devine of the Westfield Fire Department.

Firefighters contained the fire quickly but they had to tear down walls around the fireplace to make sure there were no remaining hot spots, he said.

The house had been unoccupied for the last five years or so until it's recent purchase, he said. It was in the process of being renovated.

The new owner was present and working on the interior when he started a fire in the fireplace. Some time afterward, he notices the fire in the walls outside the fireplace.

Devine said there may have been cracks in the chimney flue which allowed the flames to get into the walls.

No one was injured.


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Reputed Massachusetts crime boss sentenced to 12 years

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Mark Rossetti of Boston was sentenced in Suffolk Superior Court; he pleaded guilty to loaning money at high rates to a gambler and making threats to collect gambling debts.

 

BOSTON — A reputed Massachusetts crime boss has been sentenced to 12 years in prison after pleading guilty to loan sharking and extortion.

Mark Rossetti of Boston was sentenced Friday in Suffolk Superior Court. He pleaded guilty to loaning money at high rates to a gambler and making threats to collect gambling debts.

The sentence will be served concurrently with a 12-year Essex County drug trafficking sentence from Janurary and a seven-to-nine-year breaking and entering sentence from Boston last year.

In October 2010, prosecutors including Attorney General Martha Coakley announced the indictment of 31 people in a highly organized criminal enterprise allegedly operating under Rossetti's direction.

Coakley said Friday's sentence "is an important step in our efforts to combat organized crime."

Rossetti's lawyer said outside court Friday his client is glad to get the case behind him.


Milford teachers get training for school shootings

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By DENISE LAVOIE MILFORD — Milford High School teacher Amy Allegrezza is used to doing school safety drills, but this one was different. For one thing, she heard the sounds of real gunshots coming from a police officer running down the hallways firing blanks from a .38-caliber handgun. And, instead of simply practicing the school's traditional, stay-in-place lockdown, Allegrezza and...

By DENISE LAVOIE

MILFORD — Milford High School teacher Amy Allegrezza is used to doing school safety drills, but this one was different.

For one thing, she heard the sounds of real gunshots coming from a police officer running down the hallways firing blanks from a .38-caliber handgun.

And, instead of simply practicing the school's traditional, stay-in-place lockdown, Allegrezza and more than 500 other teachers, administrators, cafeteria and school custodians on Friday were told to consider new options, including breaking windows to escape, running zigzag through the school parking lot and, as a last resort, fighting back if the intruder makes it into their classroom.

"That was something to get us thinking. It got my heart racing — definitely," said Allegrezza, who led about two dozen other teachers and school employees during one practice scenario in her classroom, as the sounds of gunshots rang out in the hallway. She ordered them to barricade the classroom doors with filing cabinets, pull down the blinds and keep quiet.

031513-milford-school-shooter-training.jpg View full size 03.15.2013 | MILFORD -- Franklin police detective Eric Copeland walks with a pistol while playing the part of a shooter during a lockdown exercise at Milford High School. More than 500 teachers, administrators, cafeteria workers and school custodians participated in the training program that taught about alternatives to staying in lockdown during a school shooting, including fighting back  

In another scenario acted out in the school cafeteria, the 500 participants ran in all different directions when the sounds of gunshots thundered just outside the room. Most ran outside through the cafeteria's four doors, while about two dozen people fled through a side door into an adjoining teachers' lounge, then barricaded the doors with long tables and chairs. One woman rolled her body over a lunch table in a mad scramble to get out of the cafeteria.

School Superintendent Robert Tremblay said he decided to expand the school staff's safety training after a gunman killed 20 children and six educators at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., in December.

"Staying in place and hiding under a desk may not be the best solution at all. The best solution may be to get out," Tremblay said.

The training, given to the school employees during professional development time, was conducted by Synergy Solutions Inc., a Franklin-based company that offers active shooter and incident management workshops to law enforcement and other groups.

Jay Brennan, the company's co-founder and a police sergeant in Medway, said the program only advocates fighting back as a last resort.

"If you are confronted with an aggressor, he's coming into your room, you may have to take action," he told the group.

"Study your surroundings for a possible weapon."

Northampton police investigating man found with critical injuries on Old South Street

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Police were not disclosing the nature of his injuries or commenting on how he came to be injured.

NORTHAMPTON - A man found injured Friday night on a section of Old South Street near Herrell's Ice Cream and the E. John Gare parking garage was rushed to Baystate Medical Center in Springfield, police said.

The man, whose name was not released, was listed in critical condition, said Northampton police Lt. Jody Kasper.

Police were not disclosing the nature of his injuries or commenting on how he came to be injured.

His injuries resulted in police closing Old South Street between Main and Hampton Avenue for some time but it has since reopened, she said.


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Vatican criticizes campaign against pope

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The honeymoon that Pope Francis has enjoyed since his remarkable election hit a bump Friday, with the Vatican lashing out at what it called a defamatory and "anti-clerical left-wing" media campaign questioning his actions during Argentina's murderous military dictatorship.

316pope.JPG Pope Francis is greeted by Cardinal Angelo Sodano as meets the Cardinals for the first time after his election, at the Vatican, Friday, March 15, 2013.  

By MICHAEL WARREN and NICOLE WINFIELD

VATICAN CITY — The honeymoon that Pope Francis has enjoyed since his remarkable election hit a bump Friday, with the Vatican lashing out at what it called a defamatory and "anti-clerical left-wing" media campaign questioning his actions during Argentina's murderous military dictatorship.

On Day 2 of the Francis pontificate, the Vatican denounced news reports in Argentina and beyond resurrecting allegations that the former Jorge Mario Bergoglio failed to openly confront the junta responsible for kidnapping and killing thousands of people in a "dirty war" to eliminate leftist opponents.

Bergoglio, like most Argentines, didn't publicly confront the dictators who ruled from 1976-83, while he was the leader of the country's Jesuits. And human rights activists differ on how much blame he personally deserves.

Top church leaders had endorsed the junta and some priests even worked alongside torturers inside secret prisons. Nobody has produced any evidence suggesting Bergoglio had anything to do with such crimes. But many activists are angry that as archbishop of Buenos Aires for more than a decade, he didn't do more to support investigations into the atrocities.

On Thursday, the old ghosts resurfaced.

A group of 44 former military and police officers on trial for torture, rape and murder in a concentration camp in Cordoba province in the 1970s wore the yellow-and-white ribbons of the papal flag in Francis' honor. Many Argentine newspapers ran the photo Friday.

The Vatican spokesman the Rev. Federico Lombardi noted that Argentine courts had never accused Bergoglio of any crime, that he had denied all accusations against him and that on the contrary "there have been many declarations demonstrating how much Bergoglio did to protect many persons at the time."

He said the accusations against the new pope were made long ago "by anti-clerical left-wing elements to attack the church. They must be firmly rejected."

The harsh denunciation was typical of a Vatican that often reacts defensively when it feels under attack, even though its response served to give the story legs for another day.

It interrupted the generally positive reception Francis has enjoyed since his election as pope on Wednesday, when even his choice of footwear — his old black shoes rather than the typical papal red — was noted as a sign of his simplicity and humility.

There was one clearly unscripted moment Friday, when the 76-year-old Francis stumbled briefly during an audience with the cardinals, but he quickly recovered. And for the second day in a row, Francis slipped out of the Vatican walls, this time to visit an ailing Argentine cardinal, Jorge Mejia, who suffered a heart attack Wednesday and was in the hospital.

This upbeat narrative of a people's pope who named himself after the nature-loving St. Francis of Assisi has clashed with accusations stemming from Bergoglio's past.

The worst allegation is that as the military junta took over in 1976, he withdrew support for two Jesuit priests whose work in the slums of Buenos Aires had put them in direct contact with the leftist guerrilla movement advocating armed revolution. The priests were then kidnapped and interrogated inside a clandestine torture center at the Navy Mechanics School.

Bergoglio said he had told the priests — Orlando Yorio and Francisco Jalics — to give up their slum work for their own safety, and they refused. Yorio later accused Bergoglio of effectively delivering them to the death squads by declining to publicly endorse their work. Yorio died in Uruguay in 2000.

Jalics, who had maintained silence about the events, issued a statement Friday saying he spoke with Bergoglio years later and the two celebrated Mass together and hugged "solemnly."

"I am reconciled to the events and consider the matter to be closed," he said.

Bergoglio told his official biographer, Sergio Rubin, in 2010, that he had gone to extraordinary, behind-the-scenes lengths to save the men.

The Jesuit leader persuaded the family priest of feared dictator Jorge Videla to call in sick so Bergoglio could say Mass instead and take the opportunity to successfully appeal for their release, Rubin wrote.

Lombardi said the airing of the accusations following Francis' election was "characterized by a campaign that's often slanderous and defamatory."

Earlier this week, Lombardi issued a similar denunciation of an advocacy group for victims of sexual abuse, accusing it of using the media spotlight on the conclave to try to publicize old accusations against cardinals. The accusations, Lombardi said, are baseless and the cardinals deserve everyone's "esteem."

The accusations against Bergoglio were fanned by Horacio Verbitzky, an investigative journalist who was a leftist militant in the 1970s and is now closely aligned with the government. He has written extensively about the accusations in Argentina's Pagina12 newspaper, a left-wing daily known for advocacy journalism.

Adolfo Perez Esquivel, who won the 1980 Nobel Peace Prize for documenting the junta's atrocities, said this week that "Bergoglio was no accomplice of the dictatorship."

"Perhaps he didn't have the courage of other priests, but he never collaborated with the dictatorship," Esquivel said on Buenos Aires' Radio de la Red.

Argentine political analyst Ignacio Fidanza concurred.

"What they're demanding is that during the dictatorship he should have planted himself in the Plaza de Mayo and shouted against it," he told The Associated Press. "It was probably more effective to speak in silence, since it was an extreme situation."

Human rights investigators in Argentina have been unable to make any other cases against Bergoglio from the junta years, other than the allegations concerning the two Jesuits and that he failed to help a family find their murdered daughter's illegally adopted baby.

But activists are also angry that as leader of the Argentine church, he has never acknowledged or apologized for what they describe as the church's active institutional support of the military government, said Gaston Chillier, who tracks the country's human rights cases as director of the Center for Legal and Social Studies.

The church was so deeply in league with the dictators that when the Inter-American Human Rights Commission came for an inspection in 1979, the Argentine navy moved many detainees to an island owned by the diocese during the visit.

"He is responsible during Argentina's period of democracy for continuing a cover-up," Chillier told the AP. "His knowledge of these cases clearly shows that he cannot deny the torture and the systematic theft of babies."

Bergoglio testified in 2010 that he didn't know anything about baby thefts until well after the dictatorship.

Since Bergoglio became archbishop in 1998, his church has issued several apologies for failing to do more to protect people from violence that came from both the right and the left. The latest, in October 2012, was the most forceful, and it also, for the first time, asked Catholics to come forward with whatever evidence they may have to support Argentina's human rights trials.

But Chillier says Bergoglio could have done more to make the church help identify children and the bodies of detainees as well as identify those responsible for atrocities.

"It's one thing to acknowledge what you failed to do, but another entirely to apologize for what you actually did," Chillier said.

Warren and Almudena Calatrava contributed from Buenos Aires. David Rising in Berlin contributed.

Biblical satire by Pioneer Valley Performing Arts Charter Public School - 'The Most Fabulous Story Ever Told' - prompts demonstrations in Northampton

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Objectors said the play mocks Christianity. Watch video

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NORTHAMPTON - A performance of “The Most Fabulous Story Ever Told,” a satire on the Book of Genesis with gay characters by the Pioneer Valley Performing Arts Charter Public School, brought out demonstrators for and against the performance Friday night.

Some of the demonstrators said they would be back for Saturday’s and Sunday’s performances at the Academy of Music on Main Street.

Promotional material for the satirical comedy by Paul Rudnick asks “What if Adam’s partner in the Garden of Eden wasn’t Eve, but Steve?” The promotional material says that not only Adam and Steve, but also Jane and Mabel experience life’s joys and perils from the biblical world to the modern day.

Noreen Beebe, of Northampton, who said she is a Roman Catholic, said she is “insulted” that taxpayer money is being used “to change the words in the Bible.”  “It breaks my heart to see a public school doing a parody of the Bible,” Beebe said.

Michael McCaulley, of Northampton, held a sign which said, “You wouldn’t do a parody of Muslims.”

Meanwhile, a message on the sign outside Edwards Church across the street, read "God loves us all, gay and straight." Edwards Church is affiliated with the United Church of Christ, the first protestant denomination nationally to embrace gay marriage.

"It's not a play that bashes religion but it does make fun of some religious attitudes," director Chris Rohman said earlier this month during a rehearsal. Although it's full of jokes - some of them at the expense of religious fundamentalism - the play, is, at its heart, a thoughtful investigation of the meaning of faith and family."

Pat James, of Williamsburg, said that when she called to buy a ticket for the performance she was told that the Pioneer Valley Performing Arts Charter School had received 3,500 emails from people opposed to the performance.

James said that she and her spouse, Karin McGowan, who attend the Haydenville Congregational Church, another UCC affiliated church, bought tickets for each night.

“The Haydenville Congregational Church is supportive all the way,” James said. “We are an open and affirming congregation.”

Richard Ballon, of Amherst, said, “Controversy creates dialogue.”

“Adam and Eve is a fairy tale,” he said. “What if I said Hansel and Steve?”

Savanna Ouellette, of Shutesbury, said she planned to attend the performance with her spouse, Katie Tolles. She said their church, the First Congregational Church of Amherst, welcomes gays and lesbians and is open to fresh interpretations of the Bible.

A man who identified himself as Mike of Holyoke held a sign which said, “Shame on you. This is a good case for home schooling.”

He added that he objects to “tax dollars being used to mock my faith.”

Pam Rys, of Ludlow, said she considers the play “hate speech in the form of art.”

“They are making fun of Christians,” she said, “and indoctrinating children.”

“They should leave the Bible alone,” she added.

At a March 12 meeting of the Pioneer Valley Performing Arts Charter Public School Board of Trustees, parent and president Ralph Tropeano questioned the process by which the play was chosen. He said he seconded a student opinion that the play is disrespectful to a specific faith community.

Student Anju Diggs told the trustees that in her view the play is disrespectful of Christianity. She questioned whether PVPA’s commitment to diversity included members of a faith community who would be offended by the play’s content.

Tropeano first said he did not intend to attend the play, but he said he changed his mind and decided to attend to be able to discuss the performance at a future meeting.

The choice of the play was approved by Head of School Scott Goldman, who said earlier that the school would not bow to criticism of the play and cancel performances.

According to the trustees’ minutes, there will be more discussion of the play at a future meeting and about the ways plays are selected to be performed by the students.

About 50 people joined in the demonstrations.


Veteran who saved many in Iraq couldn't escape demons

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Capt. Peter Linnerooth, an Army psychologist, Bronze Star recipient and devoted father, was the guy who could help everybody — everybody but himself.


By SHARON COHEN

He had a knack for soothing soldiers who'd just seen their buddies killed by bombs. He knew how to comfort medics sickened by the smell of blood and troops haunted by the screams of horribly burned Iraqi children.

Capt. Peter Linnerooth was an Army psychologist. He counseled soldiers during some of the fiercest fighting in Iraq. Hundreds upon hundreds sought his help. For nightmares and insomnia. For shock and grief. And for reaching that point where they just wanted to end it all.

Linnerooth did such a good job his Army comrades dubbed him The Wizard. His "magic" was deceptively simple: an instant rapport with soldiers, an empathetic manner, a big heart.

For a year during one of the bloodiest stretches of the Iraq war, Linnerooth met with soldiers 60, 70 hours a week. Sometimes he'd hop on helicopters or join convoys, risking mortars and roadside bombs. Often, though, the soldiers came to his shoebox-sized "office" at Camp Liberty in Baghdad.

There they'd encounter a raspy-voiced, broad-shouldered guy who blasted Motorhead, Iron Maiden and other ear-shattering heavy metal, favored four-letter words and inhaled Marlboro Reds — once even while conducting a "stop smoking" class. He was THAT persuasive.

Linnerooth knew when to be a friend and when to be a professional Army officer. He could be tough, even gruff at times, but he also was a gentle soul, a born storyteller, a proud dad who decorated his quarters with his kids' drawings and photos. He carried his newborn daughter's shoes on his ruck sack for good luck.

Linnerooth left Iraq in 2007, a few months short of the end of his 15-month tour. He couldn't take it anymore. He'd heard enough terrible stories. He'd seen enough dead and dying.

He became a college professor in Minnesota, then counseled vets in California and Nevada. He'd done much to help the troops, but in his mind, it wasn't enough. He worried about veteran suicides. He wrote about professional burnout. He grappled with PTSD, depression and anger, his despair spiraling into an overdose. He divorced and married again. He fought valiantly to get his life in order.

But he couldn't make it happen.

As the new year dawned, Pete Linnerooth, Bronze Star recipient, admired Army captain, devoted father, turned his gun on himself. He was 42.

He was, as one buddy says, the guy who could help everybody — everybody but himself.

___

He liked to jokingly compare himself to an intrepid explorer stranded in one of the most remote corners of the earth.

Linnerooth's best buddy, Brock McNabb, recalls how they'd laugh and find parallels to the plight of Ernest Shackleton, whose ship, Endurance, became trapped in the Antarctic during an early 20th-century expedition. The crew ended up on an ice floe, scrambling to survive.

This was the 100-degree desert, of course, but for them, the analogy was apt: Both were impossible missions — Linnerooth and two teammates were responsible for the mental stability and psychological care of thousands — and both groups leaned on one another for emotional sustenance.

"There's no cavalry to save the day," McNabb explains. "You ARE the cavalry. There was no relief."

McNabb and a third soldier, Travis Landchild, were the tight-knit mental health crew in charge of the 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Infantry Division in the Baghdad area. They were there when the surge began, rocket attacks increased and the death toll mounted.

Landchild says the three dubbed themselves "a dysfunctional tripod." Translation: One of the three "legs" was always broken, or stressed out, and without fail, "the other two would step up and support that person."

A few months into their tour, McNabb says, both he and Linnerooth — with the approval of on-site doctors — began taking antidepressants. "He had to have training wheels," McNabb says. "We all did."

They worked non-stop, even overnight sometimes. They listened so intently, their nightmares were not their own.

They saw guys who'd witnessed Humvees vaporize before them, medics barely out of high school dealing with double amputations, women sexually assaulted in combat zones. There were soldiers suffering from paranoia, bipolar disorder, anxiety — one was wetting his bed. And then there were those escorted under guard after threatening suicide.

"People are in rough, rough shape ... it's misery all the time and it does affect you," McNabb says.

Linnerooth — the only trained psychologist of the three — was frustrated by what he regarded as the Army's view of mental health as a second-class problem that can be minimized or overlooked during deployment, McNabb says. At times, he also felt powerless — stabilizing soldiers, then having to return them to missions, knowing they'd be traumatized again.

"Sometimes he felt he was putting a Band-Aid over a bullet hole," McNabb says. "It would be 'I got you to where you can sleep through the night ... but guess what? You have seven months left in your deployment.'"

For about half his tour, Linnerooth's office was a 12-by-12 trailer. His heavy-metal soundtrack — he banned the Beatles and Pink Floyd, deeming them too sad — provided a sound buffer. A thermal blanket serving as a makeshift room divider also provided a modicum of privacy.

Linnerooth brought hope to those gripped by hopelessness. In a desert, he could always find the glass half full.

He turned tragedies into cathartic moments: When a platoon lost a member, he'd encourage the survivors to deal with their grief by writing letters to the children of the fallen soldier, recounting the great things about their father.

He used irreverence as a balm: When he met with troops in a chapel after a suicide bomb intended for them instead struck a group of Iraqi schoolgirls, he punctuated his remarks with a four-letter word. God, he insisted, surely wouldn't mind him cussing in a religious sanctuary, all things considered. Then he offered comfort.

"It IS horrible," McNabb quotes him as saying. "'There are bad guys out there ... 'You're brave soldiers. You're being asked to do a job no one could do.'"

But Linnerooth wasn't just dealing with emotional trauma. He was in the same complex as the busy Riva Ridge Troop Medical Clinic. When mass casualties arrived, he was there squeezing IV bags, handling bandages.

Later on, talking with family, he'd hint of the horror in sketchy details, describing how a blocked drain once left the soldiers ankle-deep in blood, or the agony of Iraqi kids dying slowly.

Linnerooth did elaborate in one essay. In words both graphic and incredibly tender, he described a female soldier brought in with mortal wounds. Her Humvee, while on a rescue mission, had been struck by an armor-penetrating explosive.

"I stood at her head and considered her hair, for Christsakes!" he wrote. "The blast had mussed her hair. Removed her foot, cleaved her abdomen, but mussed her hair. For whatever reason I looked at it and longed to smooth it back from her forehead. Like I do for my children. It was reddish-blond, curly, almost kinky, and in disarray. I looked around me to see if anyone would notice this gesture, if anyone would mind. Hell, I don't know what to do in an abattoir of human suffering, it's not my job. I deal with easy things, like the paranoid, the personality disordered, and those without hope. All I wanted to do was smooth her hair, perhaps compose her for the next stage of her journey. But I never did it, and regret it to this day."

___

Even as he continued to comfort others, Linnerooth was showing signs of strain.

Ray Nixon, then a medic at Riva Ridge, remembers anguishing over critical decisions — assigning soldiers to what could be life-and-death missions — and talking with Linnerooth.

"Pete would always tell me, 'You're doing the best job you can. You're well trained,'" Nixon says. "He always made me feel better. He knew exactly what to say, exactly what direction to guide you in — but Pete was very bad at taking care of himself. Any time he was having problems or getting overwhelmed, instead of asking for help, he'd lock himself in his room and try to deal with it alone."

He had always been this way. His mother, Gayle McMullen, who adopted Pete when he was 9½ weeks old, recalls a loving little boy who adored animals, talked up a storm at 18 months old and was very sensitive. He clammed up when upset. "You could see something was bothering him, but he kept a lot inside," she says.

In Iraq, Linnerooth avoided socializing. Friends, he'd say, were potential patients.

His buddies gave him space, but they noticed he wasn't bouncing back as he had before.

A year into the tour, McNabb says, Linnerooth walked in a doctor's office and said: "'I can't stand it. This is too much. How much more misery and torture are these kids going to go through?'"

The doctor, McNabb says, asked if he might hurt himself. Linnerooth replied he wasn't sure.

As he was evacuated, he told McNabb he was crushed having to abandon his teammates. They saw it otherwise.

"We didn't know if any of us were going to get out alive. You never do in war," Landchild says. "We kind of had this hope that one of us made it. Yeah, he's broken as heck and he has a lot of healing to do but he got OUT."

___

He wasn't the same. His family noticed it when they met him in Schweinfurt, Germany.

"He came home burdened," says his younger sister, Mary Linnerooth Gonzalez. "He was disappointed that he couldn't affect the wheels of change. ... I think he was defeated."

Amy, Linnerooth's wife at the time — they'd met as teens in Rochester, Minn. — says they had trouble resuming their lives. He didn't discuss what he'd seen while in Iraq, and didn't open up at home.

"I think it was just kind of like a wall that he put up," she says. "I asked him about that later and he said if he let that guard down, then it would be like a dam flooding and it would just all come out and he couldn't be that way."

There were some early warning signs, she says, including jokes about suicide. She dismissed it as gallows humor.

In 2008, after nearly six years in the Army, Linnerooth was a civilian again, returning to an academic world where he'd thrived.

He was the kind of student professors rave about for years, describing him as "brilliant" and "amazing."

Patrick Friman, who was in charge of Linnerooth's doctoral dissertation at the University of Nevada-Reno, remembers a day when his then-student joined him for training at an out-patient psychological clinic. A mother was struggling with her 3-year-old: The girl wouldn't sleep in her own bed, wasn't toilet trained and refused to do what her mother asked.

It soon became clear that Linnerooth, the novice, was much better at relating to the mother than the trained professor. "I marveled at how well he described the problem, the solution and the steps that need to be taken to achieve it," Friman says. "She was hanging on his every word. She couldn't wait to go home to try it."

Linnerooth recommended the mother set reasonable bed times, be affectionate when her child was behaving and make other adjustments. The plan succeeded. "He wanted to learn how to work with kids and he was just a natural at it," Friman says.

Linnerooth also had made an impression at Minnesota State University-Mankato, where he earned his master's degree. Professor Daniel Houlihan, who was his adviser, remembers an enormously gifted writer who was prescient about the war — years before, he had warned of a high military suicide rate.

He was hired to teach psychology at the school in 2008. Still raw from Iraq, he quickly became annoyed with 19 year olds griping about tough grading standards. He'd just come from a place where 19 year olds worried about their very survival.

Linnerooth began missing meetings. He seemed paranoid, spending a lot of time in his office shredding papers, Houlihan recalls.

Jeffrey Buchanan, another professor in Mankato who'd been friends with Linnerooth and his wife since grad school, says the confident, self-assured Pete was gone. "It seemed like he was questioning every decision he was making," he says.

Things were also bad at home. Amy Linnerooth says they tried marital counseling.

Her husband seemed two people, she says. "It would be like the guy you knew ... then a little thing would set him off," she recalls. "I remember telling him 'I just want to blend in with the wallpaper. I don't want to be in your way.' It was like walking on eggshells."

In early 2009, Linnerooth's depression took a disastrous turn. He nearly died from an overdose of pills.

His buddy, McNabb, phoned.

"Jesus, man you can't even kill yourself right," he teased. Linnerooth laughed.

But he also confided: "I just hated where my life was going. Here, I'm arguing with my wife. ... I want to be normal for my kids. ... I was tired of being here.'"

Amy Linnerooth says her husband was very remorseful. "He thought that was a really stupid thing to do to the kids and us," she says. She was convinced he'd never try to harm himself again.

By late 2009, though, his marriage was failing and his job was in jeopardy.

Houlihan, his colleague, approached him. "This just isn't working well," he said. "We've got to figure out how we can salvage your career."

The professor expected Linnerooth to be defensive. Instead, he was relieved to confront the problems.

He was given an extended leave and headed west to start a new life.

____

McNabb had invited his pal to him join him at the Santa Cruz County Vet Center in California.

He arrived looking terrible, but soon shed 50 pounds and shaved his long beard. He moved in across the street from McNabb. They spent nights chatting over beers.

Linnerooth liked his new surroundings but his ongoing divorce and separation from his kids weighed on him. Still, he remained an attentive, loving father. He'd fly to Minnesota often and while in California, he'd call his children, Jack, 9, and Whitney, 6, every night. He'd read to his son; he created a cartoon series for his daughter featuring a spider they called Gigerenzer. He'd Skype with his kids, too, content just to watch them watch TV.

Linnerooth also felt his work as a veterans' readjustment counselor was helping people. He spoke at symposiums about the emotional trauma of war. With McNabb, he conducted a suicide prevention class for an Army Reserve unit, even as he himself was being treated for his own PTSD.

He became more vocal about the strains on military psychologists. Linnerooth talked about the pressures to The New York Times and Time. He told the magazine in 2010 "the Army has been criminally negligent," in not having enough mental health experts to serve combat vets, putting a bigger burden on those trying to do the job.

He joined Bret Moore, another former Army psychologist he befriended before Iraq, to produce an academic paper about professional burnout. "He wanted to write and get the word out," Moore says. "It was therapeutic for him. ... He really was putting his heart and soul into it."

For a time, Linnerooth seemed happy, telling Moore about his budding relationship with Melanie Walsh, a social worker. They'd met a decade earlier when she was an undergraduate assistant at Reno. Moore was invited to their July 2011 wedding in Lake Tahoe.

As the months wore on, though, he reported marital strains. He also was missing deadlines for their paper.

Moore says he eventually toned down Linnerooth's work to make it more academic and less emotional. "You could really see the anger," he says, noting it reflected both his attitude toward the military and his disintegrating personal life. The paper was published in 2011 in an American Psychological Association journal.

Linnerooth moved to Reno to be with his new wife. He was hired by the Department of Veterans Affairs to work with vets struggling with PTSD and substance abuse.

There was a hitch, though. He was approaching a two-year deadline to get a state license required by the VA.

McNabb urged him to take the test. Whether it was depression or another reason, he didn't. The VA let him go. (The agency said in a January statement that it was forced to terminate Linnerooth because of the lack of licensing but offered to take him back once he finished the requirements.)

"He felt betrayed," his widow says. "He deteriorated after that and he deteriorated quickly."

"It broke him yet again," his sister says. "He felt let down by the system."

Even for "a fairly resilient guy," Moore says, "there was just one letdown right after the other. He never got any breathing room."

___

At the end of last summer, Linnerooth returned home to Minnesota so he could see his children daily. He did travel back to California, though, for a joyous occasion — the birth of his son, David.

He spoke often with his buddy, McNabb, and seemed optimistic, considering new careers outside psychology But he kept his distance, too, not telling former university colleagues he was back.

Linnerooth was busy with family during the holidays: He sent his mother a text thanking her for the kids' Christmas gifts, traveled west to see his baby and sent photos of the infant in a green monster outfit to his sister, Mary. On Jan. 1, he spent a happy day with his son, Jack, and was planning another visit with David.

The next day, though, McNabb says, a fight with his wife, alcohol and a loaded gun proved a tragic combination.

He left a note with instructions, but no explanation of why he'd taken his life.

"For the record, Pete Linnerooth did not want to die," McNabb says. "He just wanted the pain to end. Big difference."

For all those who loved and admired him, for all those who saw him at his best and worst, these past weeks have been filled with sorrow, regret and inescapable irony.

"He didn't like to burden other people," his widow says. "He liked to take care of other people. I don't know anyone who knew how to comfort people like he did. ... He was very kind. He was sincere. He was generous. He was patient. He was forgiving. It's such a tragedy. He had the skill, he genuinely cared and he could have helped so many people. And now he's gone."

___

His family and friends gathered on a bitter cold January day in Minnesota to bid farewell.

The night before, his Army pals flew in from around the country and toasted their buddy with prodigious amounts of scotch and rum. They shared favorite Pete stories and placed his urn on the table, covering it with a Motorhead T-shirt.

Later in the hotel room near Fort Snelling National Cemetery, McNabb mulled over how to leave a legacy for his friend's kids — a memorial that would give them peace and make them proud. But he was limited to 30 characters for the message on Pete's headstone. How do you honor a life in a handful of words?

McNabb then remembered something Linnerooth had once told him: "Maybe we're all meant for just one great deed and we're done."

That gave him an idea.

The next day, on a 4-degree, cloudless morning, Capt. Peter J.N. Linnerooth was laid to rest with taps and a 21-gun salute.

McNabb presented Linnerooth's son, Jack, with his father's Bronze Star, telling him: "Don't forget your dad was so very proud of you."

After the mourners met for lunch and more reminiscences, a small group of Army friends who'd served with him in Iraq returned to the unmarked stone as the sun lowered in the winter sky.

McNabb leaned over a long arm, tapped the marble and addressed Pete:

"You owe me a ---- ton of beers when I see you next," he said with a smile.

Then he surveyed the surrounding graves, calling out to Pete those buried nearby, when they served and in what branch of military. These were now his neighbors.

"You're with all these people who'll love you for all time," he said.

It was finally time to go.

On a February day, the engraved headstone arrived. It's etched with Peter Linnerooth's name, his military service and a tribute to his great deed, summed up in this spare epitaph:

HE SAVED MANY

NOW HE'S HOME.

Sharon Cohen is a Chicago-based national writer. She can be reached at scohen@ap.org.

With trip to Middle East looming, President Barack Obama seeks to ease tensions

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The president's goal will be to try and keep trouble from boiling over, whether it be discord between the Israelis and Palestinians or Iran's suspected pursuit of nuclear weapons, when his Mideast trip begins Wednesday.

31613 egypt Mohammed ElBaradei.jpg Leading democracy advocate Mohamed ElBaradei speaks to a handful of journalists in Cairo back in November. Finding ways to contain the political tumult in Egypt will be one of many issues on President Obama's plate when his Middle East trip begins Wednesday.  

By JULIE PACE

WASHINGTON – When President Barack Obama steps into the Middle East’s political cauldron this coming week, he won’t be seeking any grand resolution for the region’s vexing problems.

His goal will be trying to keep the troubles, from Iran’s suspected pursuit of a nuclear weapon to the bitter discord between Israelis and Palestinians, from boiling over on his watch.

Obama arrives in Jerusalem on Wednesday for his first trip to Israel as president. His first priority will be resetting his oft-troubled relationship with now-weakened Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and evaluating the new coalition government Netanyahu laboriously cobbled together.

The president also will look to boost his appeal to a skeptical Israeli public, as well as to frustrated Palestinians.

“This is not about accomplishing anything now. This is what I call a down-payment trip,” said Aaron David Miller, an adviser on Mideast peace to six secretaries of state who is now at the Woodrow Wilson International Center.

For much of Obama’s first term, White House officials saw little reason for him to go to the region without a realistic chance for a peace accord between the Israelis and Palestinians. But with the president’s one attempt at a U.S.-brokered deal thwarted in his first term and the two sides even more at odds, the White House has shifted thinking.

Officials now see the lowered expectations as a chance to create space for frank conversations between Obama and both sides about what it will take to get back to the negotiating table. The president will use his face-to-face meetings to “persuade both sides to refrain from taking provocative unilateral actions that could be self-defeating,” said Haim Malka, a senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

The trip gives Obama the opportunity to meet Netanyahu on his own turf, and that could help ease the tension that has at times defined their relationship.

The leaders have tangled over Israeli settlements and how to contain Iran’s nuclear ambitions. Netanyahu also famously lectured the president in front of the media during a 2011 meeting in the Oval Office, and later made no secret of his fondness for Republican challenger Mitt Romney in last year’s presidential campaign.

Beyond Mideast peace, the two leaders have similar regional goals, including ending the violence in Syria and containing the political tumult in Egypt, which has a decades-old peace treaty with Israel.

The president’s trip comes at a time of political change for Israel.

Netanyahu’s power was diminished in January elections and he struggled to form a government. He finally reached a deal on Friday with rival parties, creating a coalition that brings the centrist Yesh Atid and pro-settler Jewish Home parties into the government and excludes the ultra-Orthodox Jewish parties for the first time in a decade.

Ben Rhodes, Obama’s deputy national security adviser, acknowledged that with a new government, “you don’t expect to close the deal on any one major initiative.” But he said starting those conversations now “can frame those decisions that ultimately will come down the line.”

Among those decisions will be next steps in dealing with Iran’s disputed nuclear program.

Israel repeatedly has threatened to take military action should Iran appear to be on the verge of obtaining a bomb. The U.S. has pushed for more time to allow diplomacy and economic penalties to run their course, though Obama insists military action is an option.

The West says Iran’s program is aimed at developing weapons technology. Iran says its program is for peaceful energy purposes.

Another central difference between the allies on Iran is the timeline for possible military action.

Netanyahu, in a speech to the United Nations in September, said Iran was about six months away from being able to build a bomb. Obama told an Israeli television station this past week that the U.S. thinks it would take “over a year or so for Iran to actually develop a nuclear weapon.”

Michael Oren, the Israeli ambassador to the U.S., tried to play down any division on the Iranian issue ahead of Obama’s trip. He said Friday that “the United States and Israel see many of the same facts about the Iranian nuclear program and draw many similar conclusions.”

Obama’s visit to Israel may quiet critics in the U.S. who interpreted his failure to travel there in his first term as a sign that he was less supportive of the Jewish state than his predecessors. Republican lawmakers levied that criticism frequently during last year’s presidential campaign, despite the fact that GOP President George W. Bush did not visit Israel until his final year in office.

The centerpiece of Obama’s visit will be a speech in Jerusalem to an audience mainly of Israeli students. It’s part of the president’s effort to appeal to the Israeli public, particularly young people.

He will make several cultural stops, all steeped in symbolism, in the region. They include the Holocaust memorial Yad Vashem; Mount Herzl, where he’ll lay wreaths at the graves of Theodor Herzl, the founder of modern political Zionism, and Yitzhak Rabin, the prime minister who was assassinated in 1995 by a Jewish extremist who opposed Rabin’s policy of trading land with the Palestinians for peace; and the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem, a revered site for Christians.

In a sign of the close military ties between the U.S. and Israel, Obama will view an Iron Dome battery, part of the missile defense system the U.S. has helped pay for.

Traveling to the West Bank, Obama will meet with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and Prime Minister Salam Fayyad in Ramallah. Obama and Fayyad will visit a Palestinian youth center, another attempt to reach the region’s young people.

Obama will make a 24-hour stop in Jordan, an important U.S. ally, where the president’s focus will be on the violence in neighboring Syria. More than 450,000 Syrians have fled to Jordan, crowding refugee camps and overwhelming aid organizations.

The White House said Obama had no plans to visit a refugee camp while in Jordan, though he will be discussing with government officials how the U.S. can increase its assistance.

In his talks with Jordan’s King Abdullah, Obama also will try to shore up the country’s fledgling attempts to liberalize its government and stave off an Arab Spring-style movement similar to the ones that have taken down leaders elsewhere in the region.

The president’s final stop will be in Petra, Jordan’s fabled ancient city.

MGM begins environmental review; reaching out to surrounding communities

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SPRINGFIELD - MGM Resorts International announced that is has completed required paperwork to begin an environmental review for its proposed downtown casino. Under state law, environmental reviews are required for developments of certain scopes, sizes and locations. The proposed $800 million MGM Springfield in the city's South End falls within that. The company notes in a statement that it...

MGM and Penn National Jan 2013 Renderings of the competing proposals for a possible Springfield casino: MGM Springfield, proposed by MGM Resorts International, left, and Hollywood Springfield, proposed by Penn National Gaming.  


SPRINGFIELD - MGM Resorts International announced that is has completed required paperwork to begin an environmental review for its proposed downtown casino.

Under state law, environmental reviews are required for developments of certain scopes, sizes and locations. The proposed $800 million MGM Springfield in the city's South End falls within that. The company notes in a statement that it is the first applicant in Western Massachusetts to take the step. Penn National Gaming is proposing a casino in the North End of the city.

Developers are required to send copies of the Environmental Notification Form to potentially affected communities. The form details the potential environmental impacts of the projects.

The seven local communities that will receive notice are Agawam, Chicopee, East Longmeadow, Longmeadow, Ludlow, West Springfield and Wilbraham.

Mike Mathis, vice president of Global Gaming Development, said company officials hope to meet with local officials soon. A letter sent to officials in those communities made the distinction between the environmental review and the Massachusetts Gaming Law's requirement around "surrounding community agreements."

"Although MGM looks forward to sitting down with surrounding communities to get their perspective and priorities moving forward but we are not yet at that stage of the process," Mathis said in a statement.

Urban League commemorates 100 years of success, looks forward to future at centennial celebration

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The Urban League of Springfield Inc. held the centennial celebration Saturday night at the MassMutual Center. Local politicians and community figures were on hand to congratulate the organization.

Gallery preview

SPRINGFIELD – The Urban League of Springfield Inc. held its centennial celebration Saturday night at the MassMutual Center, commemorating 100 years of promoting education and career aspiration, as well as looking forward to the future.

The Urban League focuses on development in four key areas: educational development, health and wellness, financial knowledge and wealth access, and civic engagement.

“The goal of Urban League is building strong communities by developing the people within them. We execute on that goal by providing services and initiatives in critical areas that impact the quality of life of any given community, but particularly the communities our constituents live in,” said Urban League Springfield Inc. President Henry Thomas III.

The celebration consisted of a dinner, ceremony, entertainment and dancing, and featured celebrities such as R&B recording artist Phil Perry and Grammy-nominated flutist Sherry Winston.

Gov. Deval Patrick and Sen. Elizabeth Warren both sent videos congratulating Urban League on its success. Massachusetts politicians, such as senatorial hopeful Edward Markey and Sen. William “Mo” Cowan, were also in attendance.

“I congratulate the Urban League on 100 years of building the community and serving people. … We are the Bay State, but we’re also the Brain State; we invest in the brains of our children and our people,” said Markey.

Other community leaders and sponsors were on hand, congratulating the Urban League on its years of success.

“Your organization continues to thrive and remain relevant and able to face today’s challenges,” said Greg Deavens, senior vice president and comptroller for MassMutual.

Two scholarships were awarded to students showing outstanding academic success and community service initiatives.

“We’re celebrating the past, the legacy that has been established by the Urban League, because it is certainly a significant milestone to have a century of service. We’ve served over a million people in those hundred years, so that’s something to be proud of and celebrate. However, the past is not sufficient to guarantee the future, so we are going to talk about and share what our plans are for the future,” said Thomas.

In the past, the Urban League has played a key role in getting minorities into the work force. The first black police officer in Springfield was hired as a result of the efforts of the Urban League, Thomas said.

“We have opened up an enormous amount of doors for the first time to access employment and career opportunities. We have provided thousands of youth opportunities to receive education or remediation to support their academic progress in school,” said Thomas.

“I think that we have created an atmosphere of possibility within the African-American community when often times, because of disenfranchisement, people can get discouraged and feel that there is little hope for change or progress. But there is hope, and things can change. So we think that there’s been a lot of progress around race relations and social development. There’s a lot more to do, but the progress unarguably can be attributed to the kind of work that the Urban League has done in collaboration with many other great organizations like the NAACP,” Thomas said.

Jews in Greece mark WWII Nazi deportation

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Jewish residents of the northern Greek city of Thessaloniki on Saturday marked the 70th anniversary of the roundup and deportation of its Jews to Nazi extermination camps during World War II.


By COSTAS KANTOURIS

THESSALONIKI, Greece — Jewish residents of this northern Greek city on Saturday marked the 70th anniversary of the roundup and deportation of its Jews to Nazi extermination camps during World War II.

Several hundred people gathered at Thessaloniki's Freedom Square, where the first group of Jews was rounded up by the occupying German forces on March 15, 1943.

The crowd held a moment of silence, then marched to the city's old railway station, where the first trains departed for the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp complex. A short ceremony was held at the station and flowers laid on the tracks.

Speakers included the city's mayor, Yannis Boutaris, and Holocaust survivors.

"The commemoration is an honor for the city of Thessaloniki. But some people look upon this era nostalgically and are bringing back the old Nazi symbols," said David Saltiel, leader of the city's Jewish community. He was referring to the emergence of the extreme right-wing Golden Dawn, a party with neo-Nazi roots that swept into Parliament for the first time in June on an anti-immigrant platform.

On March 15, 1943, 2,800 Jews departed for the concentration camp.

"We were packed 80 to each train wagon ... When we arrived, they sent a number straight to the crematoriums and kept some of us for work. We were beaten often by the guards," recalled Holocaust survivor Moshe Haelion.

Another survivor of the camps, Zana Santicario-Saatsoglou, described how for many years she was unable to tell her story. "My children used to ask me what that number on my arm was," she said, referring to the identification number tattooed on Auschwitz-Birkenau prisoners. "I told them it was my old phone number in Thessaloniki."

By August 1943, 46,091 Jews had been deported to Auschwitz-Birkenau. Of those, 1,950 survived. Fewer than 5,000 of the 80,000 Jews living in Greece survived. The majority, after returning from the camps, emigrated to Israel.

Today, the Jewish community in Thessaloniki, which until the early 20th century formed a slight majority of the city's inhabitants, numbers fewer than 1,000.

The Jews of Thessaloniki were mostly Sephardic ones, who immigrated to the city, then part of the Ottoman Empire, after 1492 to escape persecution in Spain.

Associated Press writer Demetris Nellas contributed from Athens, Greece.

Suspect in Syracuse slaying, child rape beaten in jail

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A man accused of killing a Syracuse woman and raping her 10-year-old daughter during a carjacking was beaten and suffered a broken nose on his first day in jail, authorities said.

317carjack.JPG New York State Police lead David Renz out of the North Syracuse state police barracks Friday, March 15, 2013. Renz, 29, abducted a school librarian and her daughter as they left a gymnastics class at a mall in the Syracuse suburb of Clay at about 9 p.m. Thursday, according to state police.  


SYRACUSE, N.Y. — A man accused of killing a Syracuse woman and raping her 10-year-old daughter during a carjacking was beaten and suffered a broken nose on his first day in jail, authorities said.

David Renz had a swollen face and tissues stuffed up both nostrils when he appeared in federal court Friday to face a probation violation charge.

"I have a broken nose," he told his lawyer, according to The Post-Standard in Syracuse.

His attorneys, James Greenwald and Kenneth Moynihan, said Renz was assaulted by other inmates at the Onondaga County Justice Center, where he was taken following his arrest Thursday night.

Sheriff Kevin Walsh told the newspaper he was looking into why Renz was put into a holding area with other prisoners — not the usual practice in holding someone facing such accusations.

317carjack2.JPG David Renz  

Walsh said Renz has been segregated from other prisoners and is being watched around the clock.

"We're dealing with a man who is innocent until proven guilty," he said. "He's got to be protected."

Renz was arraigned Friday morning at a court in East Syracuse on charges that he abducted the mother and daughter as they left a gymnastics class in the Syracuse suburb of Clay.

Police said Renz raped the girl and stabbed the mother to death before fleeing into some woods. The 10-year-old girl escaped and was found by a passing motorist, who dialed 911. Renz was captured a short time later.

At the time of the attack, Renz was awaiting trial on federal child pornography charges and was supposed to be wearing an electronic monitoring bracelet tracking his whereabouts.

Authorities said they believe Renz cut the device off before the attack. Tampering attempts with those devices are supposed to sound an alarm. Probation officials are investigating what went wrong, said Executive Assistant U.S. Attorney John Duncan.

The Associated Press generally doesn't publish information that could identify potential sex crime victims and isn't naming the slain woman to protect the girl's identity.

Swiss tourist gang-raped in central India

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A Swiss woman who was on a cycling trip in central India with her husband has been gang-raped by eight men, police said Saturday.

317india.JPG A Swiss woman, center, who, according to police, was gang-raped by a group of eight men while touring by bicycle with her husband, is escorted by policewomen for a medical examination at a hospital in Gwalior, in the central Indian state of Madhya Pradesh, Saturday, March 16, 2013. Thirteen men were detained and questioned in connection with the attack, which occurred Friday night as the couple camped out in a forest after bicycling from the temple town of Orchha, local police officer R.K. Gurjar said. The men beat the couple and gang-raped the woman, he said. They also stole the couple's mobile phone, a laptop computer and 10,000 rupees ($185), Gurjar said. The woman's face was concealed with a hood, a common practice in India, where law does not allow rape victims to be identified publicly to protect them from the stigma attached to rape in the conservative country.  


NEW DELHI — A Swiss woman who was on a cycling trip in central India with her husband has been gang-raped by eight men, police said Saturday. The attack comes three months after the fatal gang-rape of a woman aboard a New Delhi bus outraged Indians.

Authorities detained and questioned 13 men in connection with the latest attack, which occurred Friday night as the couple camped out in a forest in Madhya Pradesh state after bicycling from the temple town of Orchha, local police officer R.K. Gurjar said.

The men beat the couple and gang-raped the woman, he said. They also stole the couple's mobile phone, a laptop computer and 10,000 rupees ($185).

The woman, 39, was treated at a hospital in the nearby city of Gwalior, Gurjar said.

A photo showed the woman walking while being escorted by police to the hospital. Her face was concealed with a hood, a common practice in India, where law does not allow rape victims to be identified publicly to protect them from the stigma attached to rape in the conservative country.

Police detained 13 men and questioned them, Gurjar said. Six of the men were released after questioning. No other details were immediately available.

Indian television stations showed scores of police searching the forest where the attack occurred.

Swiss Foreign Ministry spokesman Tilman Renz described the case as "deeply disturbing" and said Swiss diplomats were assisting the couple.

The diplomats called on Indian authorities "to do everything to quickly find the perpetrators so that they can be held accountable," Renz said in a statement.

Last month, the Swiss government issued a travel notice for India that included a warning about "increasing numbers of rapes and other sexual offenses" in the South Asian nation.

India has seen outrage and widespread protests against attacks on women since December's fatal gang-rape of a young woman on a moving bus in New Delhi, the capital. The crime horrified Indians and set off nationwide protests about India's treatment of women and spurred the government to hurry through a new package of laws to protect them.

One of six suspects in the December attack was found dead in a New Delhi jail this past week. Authorities said he hanged himself, but his family and lawyer insisted foul play was involved. A magistrate is investigating. Four other men and a juvenile remain on trial for the attack.

Associated Press writer Frank Jordans in Berlin contributed to this report.


Pochassic Street Bridge demolition begins in Westfield

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WESTFIELD – Construction crews began the demolition of the Pochassic Street Bridge Saturday, and officials said the $2.7 million project to build the long-awaited new one will likely be complete by next year. Mayor Daniel M. Knapik said the Massachusetts Department of Transportation gave the contractor approval to work up until midnight Saturday on the demolition phase of the...

031613_pochassic_street_bridge_demolition.JPG Construction crews Saturday began the demolition of the Pochassic Street Bridge to make way for the long-awaited new one. The demolition work is expected to be complete by the end of the weekend.  

WESTFIELD – Construction crews began the demolition of the Pochassic Street Bridge Saturday, and officials said the $2.7 million project to build the long-awaited new one will likely be complete by next year.

Mayor Daniel M. Knapik said the Massachusetts Department of Transportation gave the contractor approval to work up until midnight Saturday on the demolition phase of the project, and City Engineer Mark S. Cressotti added that the work should be done by Sunday night.

“They’re trying to get a significant amount of work done this weekend and next weekend,” Cressotti said. “We’re shooting to have it done for the end of the season. That’s a desire of mine, but there are no assurances.”

The mayor noted that the quicker this phase of the project goes, the sooner the overall project will be complete.

“MassDOT has allowed for the contractor to extend their work hour until midnight on Saturday in order to expedite the demolition of the Pochassic Street Bridge,” Knapik said. “I am hopeful time saved on this phase of the project will allow for a quicker construction schedule and early completion.”

The temporary wooden walkway that was erected to allow for pedestrian access will be dismantled after the new bridge project is complete.

“It’s a state project, and the commonwealth allowed the continued use of the walkway,” Cressotti said.

The bridge, located immediately north of the $57 million Great River Bridge construction and reconstruction project that took four years to complete, has been closed since 2010 when DOT officials determined structural deterioration made it unsafe for travel.

The closing of the Pochassic Street Bridge, a main artery to the Drug Store Hill neighborhoods, severed direct traffic flow to the that area of the city, forcing residents and motorists to detour to Notre Dame Street off North Elm Street to access Montgomery Road.

R. Bates & Sons of Clinton is the contractor for the project, which is being financed with federal and state funding, 80 percent of which is federal and 20 percent coming from the state as allocated in the Pioneer Valley Region’s 2011 Transportation Improvement Plan.

13 dead, dozens hurt in Mexico fireworks explosion

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A truck loaded with fireworks exploded during a religious procession in a rural village in central Mexico, killing at least 13 people and injuring 154, authorities said.

317fireworks.JPG Soldiers guard the area as forensic workers gather evidence after a truck loaded with fireworks exploded during a religious procession in the town of Nativitas, Mexico, Friday March 15, 2013. A truck loaded with fireworks exploded during a religious procession in a rural village in central Mexico on Friday, killing at least nine people and injuring dozens more, authorities said.  

By ADRIANA GOMEZ LICON and OLGA R. RODRIGUEZ

MEXICO CITY — A truck loaded with fireworks exploded during a religious procession in a rural village in central Mexico, killing at least 13 people and injuring 154, authorities said.

The blast Friday was set off when a firework malfunctioned and landed on the truck, igniting the fireworks it carried, officials said

"They were in a procession, they were shooting off rockets and it exploded and fell onto the other ones," said Jose Mateo Morales, director of the Tlaxcala state civil protection department. "It was very serious."

Human remains and burned clothes were spread around a 100-yard (100-meter) radius, including on rooftops, a photographer at the scene said.

The victims were marching in an annual procession in honor of Jesus Christ, the patron of Jesus Tepactepec, a village of about 1,000 people, Mateo Morales said.

At least one child was among the victims, Tlaxcala Gov. Mariano Gonzalez said.

Helicopters, dozens of ambulances and soldiers from the area's military base rushed to the village, about 70 miles (112 kilometers) east of Mexico City.

Tlaxcala Bishop Francisco Moreno said he toured the scene of the blast and went to hospitals to visit the wounded. "I blessed all who died and said a prayer for them," the bishop said in his Twitter account.

Fireworks are a typical feature of Mexican holidays and religious celebrations but they often are manufactured, stored and transported under unsafe conditions, and the country sees periodic fatal explosions.

Jesus Tepactepec is known for its handicrafts manufacturing, including baskets and wood figures, and its annual religious celebration draws artisans from nearby towns who come to sell their wares.

Pulitzer Prize-winning historian Doris Kearns Goodwin and Irish history professor Christine Kinealy honored by Holyoke St. Patrick's Parade Committee at pre-parade event

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The rest of the region is still shaking off the gray of winter. But things in Holyoke are already looking mighty green, which can mean only one thing: Irish-Americans from all over the region will gather to honor their heritage for the annual St. Patrick's Parade.

kearns kinealy.JPG Ambassador of Ireland Award recipient Dr. Christine Kinealy, left, and John F. Kennedy Award recipient Doris Kearns Goodwin, both of whom are being honored for their professional accomplishments as people of Irish heritage, were among those who attended a luncheon Saturday at The Delaney House in Holyoke prior to Sunday's parade. Michael Beswick  

HOLYOKE — The Paper City will be awash in a sea of green come Sunday, when the annual St. Patrick's Parade kicks off at 11:30 a.m. But activities honoring the patron saint of Ireland got underway Saturday with the 38th annual St. Patrick's Road Race and a special lunch celebrating two heavy-hitter historians of Irish descent: Pulitzer Prize-winning author Doris Kearns Goodwin and Irish history professor Christine Kinealy.

Kearns Goodwin, a presidential historian and author of numerous New York Times bestsellers, including "The Fitzgeralds and the Kennedys: An American Saga," is this year's recipient of the John F. Kennedy Award. The annual honor is presented by the Holyoke St. Patrick's Parade Committee to an American of Irish descent who is distinguished in his or her chosen field or profession.

The Liverpool-born Kinealy, an expert on the Irish famine or "great hunger" ("an gorta mora" in Irish), is this year's recipient of the Ambassador of Ireland Award. The annual honor, which must be approved by the Irish government, is presented by the committee to a person "responsible for promoting and fostering relationships between Ireland and the U.S." Kinealy is professor of Irish history at the Caspersen Graduate School of Drew University in New Jersey.

"This is a great honor. It was very unexpected," Kinealy said at an awards lunch Saturday afternoon at Holyoke's Delaney House. She was joined there by Kearns Goodwin, members of the parade committee and other prominent Irish-Americans.

"I can tell already what's so special about this," Kearns-Goodwin said, referring to St. Patrick's Day festivities in Holyoke. "For a small period of time, you feel a part of it. ... The people here are just so wonderful," she said.

Kinealy, named one of Irish America magazine's most influential Irish-Americans in 2011, has a forthcoming book, "The Kindness of Strangers," which focuses on charity given to Ireland during the famine.

Abraham Lincoln was among those who tried to help the native Irish during a wave of successive famines in the mid-19th century that killed 1 million people, mostly poor Catholics, and forced about another million to emigrate. Lincoln, an up-and-coming American political leader who would go on to become the nation's 16th president, sent $10 to help feed the starving Irish, according to Kinealy.

Kearns Goodwin's latest book, "Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln," was not only a best-seller, but it served as the basis for Steven Spielberg's award-winning film, "Lincoln," for which Daniel Day Lewis received the Oscar Award for best actor.

On Saturday morning, as the running race was about to start, a flock of geese looking like a flyover appeared overhead, “When Irish Eyes are Smiling” came over the loudspeaker, and the sun came out just in time to warm the 6,000 runners entered in the 10-kilometer event.

Olympians Alistair Cragg and Amy Hastings finished first among male and female competitors, with times of 29:17 and 33:32, respectively. Cragg, a South Africa native with Irish heritage, now runs for Ireland. He participated in the 2008 Olympics in Beijing. Hastings, an American who lives in Rhode Island, finished 11th in the 10,000-meter race at last summer’s London Olympics.

Longmeadow resident Matt Wilson, who ran his first St. Patrick’s Road Race on Saturday, summed up the experience like this: "I had a blast. The course was lined with spectators, music, and the festive atmosphere made me realize why this race is so special."

Sunday's St. Patrick's Parade is Holyoke's 62nd, an annual event that draws hundreds of thousands of people to a city that was once among the most Irish in the commonwealth.

Slow changes at the Vatican: A stroll through 4 papacies

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Change comes slowly, hesitantly and inconsistently at the Vatican.

317vatican_slow.JPG In this March 12, 1939 file photo, Pope Pius XII is being borne on his portable throne, the Sedia gestatoria, on his way to St. Peter's Basilica at the Vatican. Watching Pope Francis in his first papal appearances, he too doesn't look the type to be carried on a portable throne. After all, he used to take the bus to work as a cardinal back in Buenos Aires, and he eschewed the chauffeur-driven Vatican limousine when he made his first outing, using a simple Vatican car. Change comes slowly, hesitantly and inconsistently at the Vatican.  

By VICTOR L. SIMPSON

VATICAN CITY — In one of his last major public appearances before his death, Pope Paul VI sat on a throne atop a platform carried on the shoulders of 12 men as he was brought into the funeral of assassinated Italian politician Aldo Moro at St. John Lateran Cathedral in 1978.

The basilica was crammed with Italian dignitaries shaken by the kidnapping and death of Moro at the hands of the Red Brigades terrorist gang, and I thought the frail pope looked uncomfortable as he was held aloft.

It was already an awkward situation for him.

He was under fire from the family who thought he didn't do enough to save Moro despite having made a public plea "on my knees" for Moro's freedom.

The royal trappings earned him no points.

During his 15-year pontificate, Paul had sought to modernize the Vatican, including getting rid of scores of Italian nobles from the papal "court" who had privileges dating back centuries, but he never did away with the portable ceremonial throne that was used by popes for special occasions for at least a millennium.

Change comes slowly, hesitantly and inconsistently at the Vatican.

Upon Paul's death that August, the Venetian cardinal who succeeded him, Pope John Paul I, declined to use the throne at his installation, also eschewing the papal tiara.

But the new pope was later persuaded by advisers that he needed to be seen above the crowds. And in subsequent events he used the "sedia gestatoria," as the throne is called.

It took the athletic 58-year-old Pope John Paul II to definitively get rid of the throne when he took over after John Paul I died after only 33 days as pope.

Watching Pope Francis in his first papal appearances, he, too, doesn't look the type to be carried around on a fancy chair. After all, he used to take the bus to work as a cardinal back in Buenos Aires, and he declined the chauffeur-driven Vatican limousine when he made his first outing, using a simple Vatican car.

Until John Paul II, popes used what is known as the "royal we." They never spoke publicly in the first person, using "Noi" (We) or "the pope" instead.

Initially, Vatican bureaucrats edited published versions of his speeches and spontaneous remarks to eradicate the offending "I."

But eventually they gave in and stopped censoring their boss.

Pope Francis, in the very brief blessing to the world after his election Wednesday, used "Io" ("I'') six times.

Relations with the press have also been a tricky issue with the Vatican.

When I first started covering the Vatican in the 1970s, information was particularly scarce: The official spokesman was an Italian cleric, Monsignor Romeo Panciroli, who was nicknamed "Monsignore non mi risulta" ("Monsignor I have nothing on that.")

Yet a new pope's agenda always includes an audience with the media — and Francis is keeping up with the tradition.

John Paul I's audience took place in one of the frescoed halls in the papal palace. After a brief speech by the pope only a chosen few — mainly Italians — were brought up to the pope for the "bacia mano," the formal greeting during which Catholics kiss the pope's hand.

After the audience was over, as the pope walked down the center aisle, other journalists reached out to shake his hand. Some even hoped to ask him a question. But Vatican aides and security whisked him away, never to officially meet with the press again. (Weeks later he was found dead by a nun in his bedroom.)

John Paul II was different. As soon as the speeches were over, he freed himself from his "protectors" and began shaking hands, randomly picking out members of the press.

Benedict held his first media audience in the modern Paul VI audience hall. The pope gave a perfunctory thank you to all the journalists in English, French and German, but failed to do so in Spanish, something for which the Spanish-speaking journalists never forgave him. A pre-arranged "bacio mano" with selected media notables followed. Next the pope turned his back on the hundreds of disappointed reporters and television operators — and was gone through a side-door of the audience hall.

It was the first sign that Benedict would never be comfortable with the press.

To Benedict, it turned out, the press was an unfortunate means for a necessary end — getting the church's message out. Even then it was not always clear that he was sending out the right message: Early in his papacy, Benedict caused an uproar by quoting a Medieval Byzantine emperor saying that in Islam, "you will find things only evil and inhuman."

By contrast, John Paul II, in his first years as pope, made the savvy step of bringing in Joaquin Navarro-Valls, then a Spanish newspaper correspondent, as his spokesman.

Things changed dramatically, even for a papacy that was good from the start at managing its message.

Navarro-Valls was always available, often willing to give inside information (In 1989, he hinted to me strongly that the pope would receive Mikhail Gorbachev — and the encounter happened in December of that year) and knew how to "spin" a story.

He even arranged a meeting with the pope at Rome's foreign press club — something that's impossible to imagine Benedict doing.

John Paul showed he had a mind of his own: At the press club, the pope glanced at the speech his Vatican handlers had prepared for him and said he wouldn't give it because it was not want what he wanted to say.

Years later, Navarro-Valls tripped up on his own spin.

In 1996, John Paul was visiting Central America and was due to meet with Nobel Peace Prize laureate Rigoberta Menchu over breakfast before boarding a flight to Venezuela. Once on the plane, Navarro-Valls told reporters aboard that it was a fruitful meeting despite reports that she was hostile to the church.

He went through a list of the topics they discussed.

An hour into the flight, Navarro-Valls sent an aide to inform the press to forget Navarro's briefing because the meeting never took place.

No explanation was ever given.

Francis showed he could work a crowd in his own first meeting with the media.

"Dear friends," he began. "I'm delighted ... to meet you."

He then won the hearts of all of us journalists by referring to the grinding slog of covering a papal resignation followed by a papal conclave.

"You worked hard, eh?" with a charming laugh. "You worked hard!"

The audience went wild with applause.

Judge rules secret FBI letters unconstitutional

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On Friday, a federal judge in San Francisco declared unconstitutional the FBI's national security letters seeking customer information from businesses, saying the secretive demands for customer data violate the First Amendment.

317fbi.JPG This Feb. 3, 2012 file photo shows the Federal Bureau of Investigation headquarters in Washington. On Friday, a federal judge in San Francisco declared unconstitutional the FBI's national security letters seeking customer information from businesses, saying the secretive demands for customer data violate the First Amendment.  

By PAUL ELIAS

SAN FRANCISCO — They're called national security letters and the FBI issues thousands of them a year to banks, phone companies and other businesses demanding customer information. They're sent without judicial review and recipients are barred from disclosing them.

On Friday, a federal judge in San Francisco declared the letters unconstitutional, saying the secretive demands for customer data violate the First Amendment.

The government has failed to show that the letters and the blanket non-disclosure policy "serve the compelling need of national security," and the gag order creates "too large a danger that speech is being unnecessarily restricted," U.S. District Judge Susan Illston wrote.

She ordered the FBI to stop issuing the letters, but put that order on hold for 90 days so the U.S. Department of Justice can pursue an appeal to the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

The DOJ said it is reviewing the decision.

FBI counter-terrorism agents began issuing the letters after Congress passed the USA Patriot Act in the wake of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

The case arises from a lawsuit that lawyers with the Electronic Frontier Foundation filed in 2011 on behalf of an unnamed telecommunications company that received an FBI demand for customer information.

"We are very pleased that the court recognized the fatal constitutional shortcomings of the NSL statute," EFF lawyer Matt Zimmerman said. "The government's gags have truncated the public debate on these controversial surveillance tools. Our client looks forward to the day when it can publicly discuss its experience."

Illston wrote that she was also troubled by the limited powers judges have to lift the gag orders.

Judges can eliminate the gag order only if they have "no reason to believe that disclosure may endanger the national security of the United States, interfere with a criminal counter-terrorism, or counterintelligence investigation, interfere with diplomatic relations, or endanger the life or physical safety of any person."

That provision also violated the Constitution because it blocks meaningful judicial review.

Illston isn't the first federal judge to find the letters troubling. The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New York also found the gag order unconstitutional, but allowed the FBI to continue issuing them if it made changes to its system such as notifying recipients they can ask federal judges to review the letters.

Illston ruled Friday that it's up to Congress, and not the courts, to tinker with the letters.

In 2007, the Justice Department's inspector general found widespread violations in the FBI's use of the letters, including demands without proper authorization and information obtained in non-emergency circumstances. The FBI has tightened oversight of the system.

The FBI made 16,511 national security letter requests for information regarding 7,201 people in 2011, the latest data available. The FBI uses the letters to collect unlimited kinds of sensitive, private information like financial and phone records.

The DOJ didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.

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