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Agawam water exceeded maximum contaminant level; DPW chief says situation not an emergency

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The situation with the contaminates in the water is not an emergency, according to Department of Public Works Superintendent Christopher J. Golba.

Town of Agawam Seal 



AGAWAM – The Water Department reports that water during the period from April 1, 2012 to March 31, 2013 exceeded the maximum contaminant level of 60 micrograms per liter for five haloacetic acids.

However, Department of Public Works Superintendent Christopher J. Golba stated in a recently issued press release that the situation was not an emergency. Some people who drink water containing haloacetic acids in excess of the maximum contaminant level over many years may have an increased risk of getting cancer.

The Water Department is working with the Springfield Water and Sewer Commission to resolve the problem, according to Golba. The commission is modifying the treatment method used at the West Parish Filters Water Treatment Plant to remove organic matter from the source water before it is chlorinated, which will reduce disinfection byproducts such as haloacetic acids.

For more information, call DPW Deputy Superintendent Water/Sewer John Decker at (413) 821-0600.


Ludlow event to benefit 'One Fund Boston,' set up in wake of marathon bombings

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Checks can be made payable to One Fund Boston.

LUDLOW - “Ludlow Lends a Hand” will sponsor a fund-raiser for “One Fund Boston” to aide the marathon victims and first responders who suffered as a result of the Boston Marathon bombings.

Officials from town will be collecting donations for this cause Saturday between 9 a.m. and 1 p.m. at the following intersections and businesses: West and Holyoke Streets; Cherry and Center Streets; Center and Chapin Streets; Chapin and East Streets; Fuller and Chapin Streets; the Ludlow Post Office; Our Town Variety; Uncle Bob’s; Randall’s Farm; the Town Hall; Big Y Plaza.

Checks may be made payable to One Fund Boston, care of the Board of Selectmen’s Office, 488 Chapin Street, Ludlow, MA 01056.

Anyone interested in volunteering should contact the selectmen’s office at 583-5600, ext. 1202.

Photos: Springfield Democratic Senate debate brings out supporters of Steve Lynch and Ed Markey

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Exactly one week before the primary in the special election to fill the remaining U.S. Senate term of Secretary of State John Kerry, Western Massachusetts was at the center of the campaign.

SPRINGFIELD — Exactly one week before the primary in the special election to fill the remaining U.S. Senate term of Secretary of State John Kerry, Western Massachusetts was at the center of the campaign on Tuesday as Democratic candidates Stephen Lynch and Edward Markey debated at WGBY-TV57 studios.

The debate drew supporters of both candidates and other people interested in the political process, from Agawam to Shutesbury and other communities in the commonwealth.

Photographers for The Republican/MassLive.com were there before, during and after the debate, and put together a slideshow, seen above, of people who came to Springfield for the debate.


West Springfield attracts 18 applications for job of marketing coordinator

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The mayor expects to hire a marketing coordinator in the next couple of weeks.

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neffinger environmental.JPGWest Springfield Mayor Gregory C. Neffinger 

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WEST SPRINGFIELD – The city has gotten 18 applications for the recently advertised post of marketing coordinator and the mayor is in the process of interviewing the candidates.

Mayor Gregory C. Neffinger said Tuesday that he will likely fill the position in the next couple of weeks. Human Resources Director Sandra MacFadyen the job was originally advertised as being an economic development assistant, but did not attract many applications. Since then the position has been revamped to emphasize marketing.

Neffinger said the salary for the job will be in the high $30,000s or low $40,000s. The city is still working out the mechanics of advertising for a part-time economic development director, according to Neffinger.

The city has been without an economic development director since Michele M. Cabral quit that post in mid-January. At that time, Cabral denied comment.

Cabral, who also served as emergency management director, had a salary of $75,000 a year. The mayor had said that Cabral did a good job while working for the municipality.

Resident injured, home heavily damaged in South Hadley fire

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Firefighters knocked down the flames within 10 minutes, but the home sustained heavy structural damage.


This is an update of a story originally posted at 8:30 p.m.

SOUTH HADLEY - A home at 335 Granby Road sustained heavy damage and a resident was injured in a Tuesday evening fire, a fire official said.

Capt. James Pula of Fire District 1 said the resident was taken by ambulance to the hospital for treatment of injuries suffered in the fire. He declined to identify the resident or specify the nature of the injuries, citing federal medical privacy laws.

A pet cat perished in the fire, he said.

The fire was reported just after 6 p.m. Firefighters knocked down the fire within 10 minutes after arrival on the scene, he said, but the house, a single-story ranch, sustained heavy structural damage.

The living room area was significantly burned with the fire eating through the floor and causing damage to the cellar. The rest of the house received heat and smoke damage.

The cause of the fire has not been determined. Officials with the state Fire Marshal's Office were on scene to investigate, he said.

Firefighters from Fire District 1 and Fire District 2 responded to the scene.

According to the Hampshire District of Register of Deeds website, the property is owned by John Halama.


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Boston Bruins lose 5-2 as Philadelphia Flyers score 7 seconds apart

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The Bruins are second in the Eastern Conference and lead the Northeast Division.

By DAN GELSTON

PHILADELPHIA — Matt Read and Oliver Lauridsen scored goals 7 seconds apart to lead the Philadelphia Flyers to a 5-2 victory over the Boston Bruins on Tuesday night.

Scott Hartnell, Jakub Voracek and Simon Gagne also scored for the Flyers, who failed to make the playoffs this season.

Wade Redden and David Krejci had goals for the Bruins. The Bruins are second in the Eastern Conference and lead the Northeast Division. But the Bruins and Montreal both have 59 points. New Jersey beat Montreal 3-2 on Tuesday night.

The Flyers paid tribute to Boston in the Bruins' first road game since the Boston Marathon bombings. The Flyers showed a message on the video board that read, "From One Tough Town to Another." They also had video images of four blue-yellow ribbons that said, "Boston Strong," on each faceoff circle.

There was a pregame video set to "Carry On" by Fun that included clips of marathon first responders and other rescue personnel.

Flyers fans stood and cheered, and players from both teams banged their sticks against the boards when the pregame tribute ended.

Then Philadelphia pitched in with its wallets. The 50/50 raffle that usually supports Philadelphia charities went to onefundboston.org. The Flyers ended the 50-50 with $85,595 last shown on the board. Also, the Flyers were set to put their jerseys up for auction at meigray.com, with proceeds also benefiting onefundboston.org.

With fans still on their feet from a stirring rendition of "God Bless America," Hartnell kept them there with a goal only 1:40 into the game. Hartnell, who missed a month with a broken foot, scored his eighth goal of the season.

Hartnell's injury was just one of dozens suffered by the Flyers and a big reason why the team missed the playoffs. The Flyers had 11 players scratched for the game, with defenseman Kimmo Timonen joining the list Tuesday. Timonen has a compression fracture in his right foot.

General manager Paul Holmgren said before the game the Flyers could not use injuries as an excuse for underachieving.

"Good teams fight through stuff like this," Holmgren said. "We just didn't find a way to fight through it. Is it a factor? Probably. But at the same time, you need to fight through these things. We didn't."

Redden tied it late in the first period when he flipped the puck over Steve Mason's left shoulder. He knocked in Jaromir Jagr's rebound for his third goal of the season. Jagr played his first game in Philadelphia since he left the team as a free agent over the summer.

Jagr said he had the most fun of his career with the Flyers and wished a deal could have worked out. Holmgren said Jagr rejected a deal in February 2012. By the time free agency started, the Flyers had moved on to other free agents, including an ill-fated pursuit of Nashville defenseman Shea Weber.

The Flyers broke through for good in the second when Read and Lauridsen chased goalie Anton Khudobin.

Read struck first with his 11th goal when he batted in a rebound off Khudobin's kick save with his left skate. Lauridsen didn't do much to earn his first NHL goal. Bruins defenseman Zdeno Chara tried to clear the puck deep in the zone but somehow the puck slipped past Khudobin and into the net.

Khudobin slammed his stick against the post in anger and was yanked for Tuukka Rask.

Voracek scored his team-best 21st goal early in the third for a 4-1 lead.

Krejci beat Mason to make it 4-2 and Boston seemingly still had time to rally. But as the goal was still being announced to the fans, Gagne took a perfect cross-ice pass from Claude Giroux and scored for his fifth goal.

Notes: Flyers coach Peter Laviolette told Boston, "We stand with you," in a videotaped message. ... The Bruins have one win in their last six games. ... The ECHL's Trenton Titans have ceased operations and the team will not compete in the 2013-2014 season. The Titans were a Flyers' affiliate.

France approves gay marriage, protests turns violent 

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Justice Minister Christiane Taubira told lawmakers that the first weddings could be as soon as June. 

id="asset-12622836" class="entry_widget_large entry_widget_left">France gay marriage Anti-gay marriage demonstrators gather in Paris Tuesday France legalized gay marriage on Tuesday after a wrenching national debate that exposed deep conservatism in the nation's heartland and triggered huge demonstrations that tapped into intense discontent with the Socialist government. Within hours, fiery clashes broke out between protesters and riot police.&nbsp> PARIS – France legalized gay marriage on Tuesday after a wrenching national debate that exposed deep conservatism in the nation’s heartland and triggered huge demonstrations that tapped into intense discontent with the Socialist government. Within hours, fiery clashes broke out between protesters and riot police.


Legions of officers stayed late into the night, and a protest against the measure turned violent near the Invalides complex of museums and monuments. Protesters threw glass bottles, cans and metal bars at police, who responded with tear gas.

It was an issue that galvanized the country’s faltering right, which had been decimated by infighting and their election loss to President Francois Hollande. France is the 14th country to legalize gay marriagee nationwide –and the most populous.

The measure passed easily in the Socialist-majority Assembly, 331-225, just after the president of the legislative body expelled a disruptive protester in pink, the color adopted by French opponents of gay marriage.

Justice Minister Christiane Taubira told lawmakers that the first weddings could be as soon as June.

“We believe that the first weddings will be beautiful and that they’ll bring a breeze of joy, and that those who are opposed to them today will surely be confounded when they are overcome with the happiness of the newlyweds and the families,” she said.

Earlier in the day, there appeared to be more police than protesters outside the Parliament building on Paris’ Left Bank, but that calculation soon shifted as night fell and thousands gathered to protest the bill. The protest dwindled to a few stalwarts shortly before midnight, when the violence began among a few hundred demonstrators including some who carried signs saying “Socialist dictatorship.”

Claire Baron, 41, a mother of two, said that she “will oppose the bill until the end.”

“I’ll keep going to the protests, I don’t give in. The bill is not effective yet, the president of the Republic must listen to our voices. We are here to defend family values. Children need a mom and a dad,” Baron said.

In recent weeks, violent attacks against gay couples have spiked and some legislators have received threats – including Claude Bartelone, the Assembly president, who got a gunpowder-filled envelope on Monday.

One of the biggest protests against same-sex marriage drew together hundreds of thousands of people bused in from the French provinces – conservative activists, schoolchildren with their parents, retirees, priests and others. That demonstration ended in blasts of tear gas, as right-wing rabble-rousers, some in masks and hoods, led the charge against police, damaging cars along the Champs-Elysees avenue and making a break for the presidential palace.

Following the vote members of the gay and lesbian community flocked to a square in central Paris, just behind City Hall, to celebrate the vote.

“I feel immense joy, gigantic joy,” said 39-year old Sylvain Rouzel. “At last, everyone has the same rights. This is huge! France was lagging behind. We had to wait 14 years after the civil union to finally obtain the right to get married, with equal rights for everyone. I feel great!”

Paris’ openly gay mayor, Bertrand Delanoe, was among the crowd of hundreds gathered for the street celebration in the Marais, the city’s historic gay neighborhood.

When Hollande promised to legalize gay marriage, it was seen as relatively uncontroversial. The issue has become a touchstone as his popularity has sunk to unprecedented lows, largely over France’s ailing economy.

“The opposition is in a weakened position, but they know which buttons to press in order to get a reaction in society, in a country as liberal as France, where nobody thought it was an issue,” said Hossein Alizadeh, a coordinator with the U.S.-based International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission who has followed the issue.

But the most visible face in the fight against gay marriage – a former comedienne who goes by the name of Frigide Barjot – said the movement named “A Protest for Everyone” will continue beyond the law’s passage and possibly field candidates in 2014 municipal elections. She said anyone involved in protest violence would be marginalized, but blamed the government for its failure to listen.

“The violence comes from the way in which this was imposed,” Barjot told France Info radio.

French conservatives, demoralized and divided by the election loss of standard-bearer Nicolas Sarkozy, found common cause in opposing same-sex marriage. Hoping to keep the issue alive, the conservative UMP party planned to challenge the law in the Constitutional Council.

“The controversy that we’ve seen has been a stoked and manipulated controversy that’s really kind of a last-ditch attempt to block the tide of history,” said Evan Wolfson, president of the American activist group Freedom to Marry, which he said worked with the French on the bill. “I don’t think it spoke to a deep or wide opposition among the French people.”

French civil unions, allowed since 1999, are at least as popular among heterosexuals as among gay and lesbian couples. But that law has no provisions for adoption, and the strongest opposition in France as far as same-sex couples goes comes when children are involved. According to recent polls, just over half of French are opposed to adoption by same-sex couples – about the same number who said they favored same-sex marriage.

Christophe Crepin, spokesman for the police union UNSA, says the extraordinary security Tuesday included a total of about 4,000 officers in the area near the National Assembly building and water cannon positioned nearby.

On the cover of Tuesday’s Liberation newspaper, the famed gay photographers Pierre and Gilles took over the front page and several of the inside pages, splashing them with some of their most provocative photos, including one of three soccer players – nude but for the footwear – facing the camera.

In New Zealand, where gay marriage enjoys popular support, people gathered outside Parliament and joined in singing a traditional Maori love ballad after a vote last week making it legal. Nine states and the District of Columbia in the U.S. also recognize such marriages, but the federal government does not.

Yesterday's top stories: Talented artist married to bombing suspect, Adam Landry found dead in Easthampton gazebo, and more

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A husband and wife were seriously injured when a woman backing out of her driveway struck their motorcycle, police said.

These were the most read stories on MassLive.com yesterday. If you missed any of them, click on the links below to read them now.

1) Talented Rhode Island artist married to bombing suspect Tamerlan Tsarnaev [Associated Press] Photo above.

2) Adam Landry, 33, of Easthampton ID'd as man found dead in downtown Easthampton gazebo [The Republican Newsroom]

3) West Springfield couple injured in Easthampton motorcycle accident [George Graham]

Ryan McMahon environmental 42313.jpgRyan McMahon 

4) Ryan McMahon released from hospital after being injured in chaos that followed Boston bombings [Dan Ring] Photo at right.

5) More details sought on mute Boston bomb suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev [Associated Press]


Holyoke Mayor Alex Morse, City Council willing to discuss disputes about $28 million plan to renovate Victory Theatre

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The beginning of construction, itself a project that could take 20 months, is two years away.

mural.jpgThe Victory Theatre's 28-foot-tall murals by New York artist Vincent Maragliotti are being preserved. Renovation of the showhouse in Holyoke is a few years away at least. 

HOLYOKE -- City councilors and Mayor Alex B. Morse are willing to talk about the $28 million plan to renovate theVictory Theatre, a project that has prompted disputes recently.

"I think it'd be a good time to air this stuff out," Councilor at Large Joseph M. McGiverin said last week.

McGiverin's comments came after an April 16 council discussion that was about the project and the Massachusetts International Festival of the Arts (MIFA), the nonprofit group that owns the theater.

Morse said he was open to a meeting with councilors about the theater, at 81-89 Suffolk St., which opened in 1919 and closed in 1979.

"I am willing to meet with any city councilors to discuss the project. Over the past couple weeks I have been in conversations with representatives from MiFA to discuss our options moving forward," Morse said.

Clashes have occurred between Morse's administration, on one side, and MIFA and some councilors, on the other, about the project's progress and funding.

The beginning of construction is nearly two years away and construction itself will take 18 to 20 months, MIFA's Donald T. Sanders has said.

The city sold the theater to MIFA in 2009 for $1,500. But a condition of the sale included a "reverter clause," a step that lets the city resume control of the property for a nominal fee June 30 if adequate progress has not been achieved.

Morse is considering options that include extending the reverter, which would let MIFA continue, or exercising the reverter, which would have the city seize the property and find another developer.

Exercising the reverter would require City Council approval because the step involves an acquisition of property.

But extending the reverter is a decision of the mayor alone. The council on April 2 voted 8-5 to give MIFA the extension, a vote that was advisory because only the mayor can grant such an extension.

Morse vetoed the council's vote on the reverter, and that's what the council discussed April 16. The council opted to table the matter, which means it can be raised again for discussion.

Sanders, MIFA's executive artistic director, has explained the project has a complicated funding mechanism. Of the $28 million project cost, MIFA has commitments for nearly $20 million. That consists of $10 million in state and federal historical tax credits, $8 million in new market tax credits and the rest in cash donations, he said.

Tax credits generate funding like this: In return for providing money for projects in distressed, low-income areas, investors get tax credits based on a percentage of their investment over a period of years.

Sanders said such a means of funding and delays like the Victory Theatre plan has faced are common for such major arts-related projects, but critics question whether the project is viable.

Engineers have said the structure of the 94-year-old building is sound, owing to the building’s steel-reinforced underpinnings.The problem is the decades of deterioration wrought by roof leaks, mold and neglect, leaving the floor and seating areas a mess of plaster and broken seats. MIFA has fixed the roof and the two giant murals that flank the stage and depict allegorical images are being preserved.

Democratic Senate hopeful Edward Markey talks auto bailout votes, national security

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U.S. Rep. and Senate candidate Edward Markey addressed the media after sparring with fellow Rep. and candidate Stephen Lynch in Springfield's Democratic Senate debate.

Ex-Lowell officer sentenced for extorting sexual favors from prostitutes

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A former Lowell police officer has been sentenced to two years in jail for using his badge to extort sexual favors from prostitutes.

LOWELL, Mass. (AP) — A former Lowell police officer has been sentenced to two years in jail for using his badge to extort sexual favors from prostitutes.

Aravanh Lakmany of Dracut pleaded guilty Wednesday in Lowell Superior Court to charges of extortion by threat and three counts of solicitation of prostitutes.

The Middlesex district attorney's office dropped three counts of rape against Lakmany.

The Sun (http://bit.ly/ZuZJae) reports that in addition to the jail sentence, a judge gave him three years of probation.

Lakmany, who worked for the department for six years, was suspended without pay in June 2011 after his indictment. He resigned in November 2011.

Lakmany said he had sex with prostitutes about 20 times while on duty in his cruiser and numerous other times in his personal car.

Longmeadow police seek 'creepy' van driver who approached 16-year-old girl on Frank Smith Road

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A similar van was spotted earlier in the day at Glenbrook Middle School and at the Big Y World Class Market.

LONGMEADOW -- Police want to speak to a white male driving a white or cream-colored van who allegedly approached a 16-year-old girl on Frank Smith Road Wednesday night and asked if she needed a ride.

After declining, the male persisted, asking her to “hop in,” according to a release issued by police Thursday. Frightened, the girl ran to a friend’s house.

Police say the van was oversized, possibly a Dodge Sprinter or Ford Transit.

After the information was posted on the department’s Facebook account, police received a report of a van matching the description parked at the entrance of Glenbrook Middle School earlier that night, around 7:30 p.m.

According to witnesses, it appeared the occupant of the van was watching the children on the fields engaged in lacrosse games.

Police also received a report of white van being sighted in the Big Y parking lot around 4 p.m. According to a witness, the van had a Texas license plate and the operator looked “disheveled and creepy”.

Police have no additional information regarding the driver and cannot confirm if the reported sightings are related.

Earlier this month two girls in South Hadley were approached by a man who asked them to get into his vehicle. The man involved in that incident, though, was described as driving a black Jeep Wrangler.

Ed Markey to visit Springfield as candidates plan their final tours before the Senate primary

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Markey will meet supporters at Theodore’s in Springfield.

Democratic U.S. Rep. Edward Markey will visit Springfield on Monday evening, as all of the U.S. Senate candidates kick off their final “get out the vote” pushes before Tuesday’s primary.

Markey will hold a 4:30 p.m. event at the American Legion Hall in Dalton with the National Organization for Women’s Terry O’Neill, followed by a 7:10 p.m. event with supporters at Theodore’s in Springfield and an 8:30 p.m. event with O’Neill at JFK Middle School in Northampton.

Markey will continue to criss-cross the state through the weekend, culminating with a pre-primary rally Monday night in his hometown of Malden. The rally will be held at the Malden YMCA, the same place Markey kicked off his campaign.

Democratic U.S. Rep. Lynch, of South Boston, is holding his pre-election rally Thursday evening in Dorchester, a largely working-class section of South Boston. The rally will cap eight public events on Thursday, which will take Lynch from Boston to Lawrence, Peabody, Lynn and Brockton.

On the Republican side, former U.S. Attorney Michael Sullivan is kicking off a tour he calls his "Tested and Trusted Tour." He has announced five public events on Thursday, in Lowell, Andover and Beverly. The tour continues Friday on the Cape and in the South Shore and Saturday in Worcester and the Metro West area.

Private equity investor Gabriel Gomez is holding public events in Wenham and Quincy on Thursday. He is holding a pre-primary fundraising event Thursday evening at the Seaport Hotel in Boston. Gomez also plans to announce a final “barnstorming” tour on Thursday. (Gomez has already been crossing the state this week, holding six events Wednesday, mostly around Framingham.)

State Rep. Daniel Winslow is holding public events in West Boylston and Lynnfield on Thursday. Winslow has several stops planned Saturday, Sunday and Monday, including events in Springfield and Worcester on Sunday. The State House has been in session this week, forcing Winslow to balance his campaign with his official responsibilities.

Amherst police charge 23-year-old Ryan Rasys with unarmed robbery of drugs from 2 pharmacies

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Police have reached out to other area police departments to see if the suspect can be linked to similar robberies in their communities.

rasyscrop.jpgRyan Edward Rasys 

AMHERST -- Police have arrested a 23-year-old Northeast Street man suspected of stealing drugs from two town pharmacies this week.

Lt. Ronald Young said police have since contacted other Western Massachusetts police departments, including Northampton, and Springfield, in an attempt to determine if the suspect, who was wearing a ski mask, can be linked to similar robberies in their communities.

Police arrested the suspect Wednesday night after he allegedly entered the Amherst Pharmacy at 381 College St., demanded narcotics and fled on foot.

No injuries were reported and no weapon was shown.

The method of robbery and the description of the suspect were similar to a robbery that occurred at the CVS Pharmacy at 76 North Pleasant St. on Monday.

Police arrested the suspect, Ryan Edward Rasys at 58 Northeast St. at about 5:45 p.m. Police listed his address as Apartment 3 in that building.

Rasys was held overnight at the Hampshire County House of Correction in Northampton in lieu of $10,000 cash bail. He is slated to be arraigned Thursday at Eastern Hampshire District Court in Belchertown.

Police continue to probe the robberies. Those with information are asked to contact Amherst police at (413) 259-3000.

A masked robber, dressed in black from head-to-toe, stole a quantity of Oxycodone from a Florence pharmacy on Oct. 3 after he handed over a note implying that he had a gun.

That same pharmacy was robbed several weeks later when a man, wearing a white mask and dark hooded sweatshirt, entered the pharmacy, held a plastic bag out over the counter and demanded a quantity of OxyContin. Oxycodone is the active ingredient in OxyContin.

No weapon was shown or implied in that second Florence robbery, Northampton police said.

Springfield police, meanwhile, continue to probe the gunpoint robbery of some 600 Oxycodone tablets from a Walgreen’s pharmacy on Sept. 22 at the “X” in the Forest Park neighborhood of the city.

The suspect in that case was also dressed in black. His face, however, was not covered.

Sen. Elizabeth Warren pledges 'inch by inch' review of intelligence on suspected Boston Marathon bomber Tamerlan Tsarnaev

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Sen. Elizabeth Warren is not satisfied with her level of knowledge about what the federal government knew about suspected marathon bomber Tamerlan Tsarnaev and how it acted on that information.

By Michael P. Norton, STATE HOUSE NEWS SERVICE

BOSTON -- Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., is not satisfied with her level of knowledge about what the federal government knew about suspected marathon bomber Tamerlan Tsarnaev and how it acted on that information.

While federal intelligence authorities have said little publicly about their knowledge of Tsarnaev, media outlets citing government sources have reported that Russian authorities had alerted the FBI and the CIA about concerns regarding Tsarnaev, in part stemming from his six-month trip to Russia in 2012.

Tsarnaev, 26, lived with his family in Cambridge and Patrick administration officials have confirmed he had received public assistance benefits from Massachusetts. State Police Col. Tim Alben has said the ongoing investigation into the bombings would include a focus on how the alleged bombers financed their plan, which appears to have involved crude pressure cooker bombs reportedly assembled at a low cost.

After allegedly exploding two bombs at the April 15 Boston Marathon that killed three people and injured more than 180, Tamerlan Tsarnaev was killed during an early morning gunfight in Watertown on April 19 and Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, 19, was captured April 19 following a daylong manhunt during which activity in Boston and many communities around it slowed to a standstill.

“Of course not at this point Charlie,” Warren told Charlie Rose of CBS in a televised interview Thursday morning when Rose asked if she was satisfied. “I mean this is what we do. There’s been a terrible event and we’re going to go back painstakingly, inch by inch, and find out how this came to be. And what were going to do in part is we’re going to see if we made mistakes. We’re going to find out how we can do things better to keep ourselves safer.”

The unpeeling of information about what the federal government knew and when about Tsarnaev and his younger brother, suspected bomber Dzhokhar, will likely be a focus for Warren in the foreseeable future as she settles into her first year representing Massachusetts in the U.S Senate.

Warren said concerns about federal anti-terrorism efforts should not alter how people act.

“We are not going to change who we are,” she said. “We are a strong people. We are a free people We’re still going to have picnics and we’re still going to have outings and we’re still going to go lots of public places and we’re still going to have that marathon next year and we’re going to have lots of people there. That’s what it’s about. We will not be cowed in the face of terrorism. We won’t.”




George W. Bush Presidential Center opens in Texas: All 5 living Presidents converge for dedication

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Take a video tour of the George W. Bush Presidential Center.

By JAMIE STENGLE & JOSH LEDERMAN
Associated Press

DALLAS (AP) — In a rare reunion, the five living American presidents gathered in Dallas Thursday to honor one of their own at the dedication of the George W. Bush Presidential Center.

The presidents — Bush, Barack Obama, Bill Clinton, George H.W. Bush and Jimmy Carter — were cheered by a crowd of former White House officials and world leaders as they took the stage together to open the dedication. They were joined on stage by their wives — the nation's current and former first ladies — for the outdoor ceremony on a sun-splashed Texas morning.

The leaders were putting aside the profound ideological differences that have divided them for years for a day of pomp and pleasantries. For Bush, 66, the ceremony also marked his unofficial return to the public eye four years after the end of his deeply polarizing presidency.

Each of the presidents was to make brief remarks at the ceremony.

In a reminder of his duties as the current Oval Office inhabitant, Obama planned to travel to Waco in the afternoon for a memorial for victims of last week's deadly fertilizer plant explosion.

Presidential politics also hung over the event. Ahead of the ceremony, former first lady Barbara Bush made waves by brushing aside talk of her son, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, running for the White House in 2016.

"We've had enough Bushes," said Mrs. Bush, the wife of George H.W. Bush and mother of George W. Bush. She spoke in an interview with NBC's "Today" show.

Yet George W. Bush talked up the presidential prospects of his brother in an interview that aired Wednesday on ABC.

"He doesn't need my counsel, because he knows what it is, which is, 'Run,'" Bush said.

Key moments and themes from George W. Bush's presidency — the harrowing, the controversial and the inspiring — would not be far removed from the minds of the presidents and guests assembled to dedicate the center, where interactive exhibits invite scrutiny of Bush's major choices as president, such as the financial bailout, the Iraq War and the international focus on HIV and AIDS.

Gallery preview

On display is the bullhorn that Bush, near the start of his presidency, used to punctuate the chaos at ground zero three days after 9/11. Addressing a crowd of rescue workers amid the ruins of the World Trade Center, Bush said: "I can hear you. The rest of the world hears you. And the people who knocked these buildings down will hear all of us soon."

"Memories are fading rapidly, and the profound impact of that attack is becoming dim with time," Bush told The Associated Press earlier this month. "We want to make sure people remember not only the lives lost and the courage shown, but the lesson that the human condition overseas matters to the national security of our country."

More than 70 million pages of paper records. Two hundred million emails. Four million digital photos. About 43,000 artifacts. Bush's library will feature the largest digital holdings of any of the 13 presidential libraries under the auspices of the National Archives and Records Administration, officials said. Situated in a 15-acre urban park at Southern Methodist University, the center includes 226,000 square feet of indoor space.

A full-scale replica of the Oval Office as it looked during Bush's tenure sits on the campus, as does a piece of steel from the World Trade Center. In the museum, visitors can gaze at a container of chads — the remnants of the famous Florida punch card ballots that played a pivotal role in the contested 2000 election that sent Bush to Washington.

Former first lady Laura Bush led the design committee, officials said, with a keen eye toward ensuring that her family's Texas roots were conspicuously reflected. Architects used local materials, including Texas Cordova cream limestone and trees from the central part of the state, in its construction.

From El Salvador to Ghana, Bush contemporaries and former heads of state made their way to Texas to lionize the American leader they served alongside on the world stage. Among the foreign leaders set to attend were former British Prime Minister Tony Blair, former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and former Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi.

The public look back on the tenure of the nation's 43rd president comes as Bush is undergoing a coming-out of sorts after years spent in relative seclusion, away from the prying eyes of cameras and reporters that characterized his two terms in the White House and his years in the Texas governor's mansion before that. As the library's opening approached, Bush and his wife embarked on a round-robin of interviews with all the major television networks, likely aware that history's appraisal of his legacy and years in office will soon be solidifying.

An erroneous conclusion that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction, a bungling of the federal government's response to Hurricane Katrina and a national debt that grew much larger under his watch stain the memory of his presidency for many, including Obama, who won two terms in the White House after lambasting the choices of its previous resident. But on Wednesday, Obama staunchly defended Bush's commitment to America's well-being while addressing Democratic donors.

"Whatever our political differences, President Bush loves this country and loves his people and shared that same concern, and is concerned about all people in America," Obama said. "Not just some. Not just those who voted Republican."

There's at least some evidence that Americans are warming to Bush four years after he returned to his ranch in Crawford, even if they still question his judgment on Iraq and other issues. While Bush left office with an approval rating of 33 percent, that figure has climbed to 47 percent — about equal to Obama's own approval rating, according to a Washington Post-ABC News poll released ahead of the library opening.

Bush pushed forcefully but unsuccessfully for the type of sweeping immigration overhaul that Congress, with Obama's blessing, is now pursuing. And his aggressive approach to counterterrorism may be viewed with different eyes as the U.S. continues to be touched by acts of terrorism.

Although museums and libraries, by their nature, look back on history, the dedication of Bush's library also offers a few hints about the future, with much of the nation's top political brass gathered in the same state.

Clinton's wife, Hillary Rodham Clinton, stoked speculation about her own political future Wednesday in a Dallas suburb when she delivered her first paid speech since stepping down as secretary of state earlier this year. Republican Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey, another potential 2016 contender, flew to Texas to take part in the library dedication.

Obama, too, may have his own legacy in mind. He's just a few years out from making his own decision about where to house his presidential library and the monument to his legacy.

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Associated Press writer Nomaan Merchant contributed to this report.

A.M. News Links: Thomas Herndon, UMass-Amherst Economics edition

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Herndon recently published a paper that challenges research fundamental to the global austerity movement.

On April 15, UMass-Amherst graduate student Thomas Herndon published a paper titled "Does High Public Debt Consistently Stifle Economic Growth? A Critique of Reinhart and Rogoff" [pdf].

The paper, which Herndon co-authored with professors Michael Ash and Robert Pollin, questions the conclusions set forth in the 2010 paper "Growth in a Time of Debt" [pdf] by Harvard University economists Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff. In that paper, Reinhart and Rogoff presented data tying slow or negative economic growth to periods when gross government debt exceeds 90 percent of the country's GDP. Proponents of austerity measures around the world have cited the study to support calls for cuts in government spending.

Seeking to replicate Reinhart and Rogoff's results, Herndon discovered an Excel spreadsheet coding error that led to miscalculations in the pair's analysis. While Reinhart and Rogoff calculated a negative 0.1 percent annual change in GDP in countries where government debt was at or higher than 90 percent of the country's GDP, Herndon's calculations show annual growth of 2.2 percent under those circumstances.

Reinhart and Rogoff have acknowledged the coding error, but have argued that several other calculations they presented are in line with the numbers Herndon arrived at.

Herndon and the economics department at UMass, Amherst have received international coverage in the week-and-a-half since the paper was published online. Here's a roundup of some of the articles about Herndon's work:

  • Do you have News Links? Send them our way or tweet them to @masslivenews
  • NOTE: Users of modern browsers can open each link in a new tab by holding 'control' ('command' on a Mac) and clicking each link.

    Longmeadow police: Scammers seal elderly Bliss Road resident's driveway with waste oil, demand and receive $1,200

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    The suspects cashed a $1,200 check at a local bank a short time later.

    LONGMEADOW -- An elderly Bliss Road resident was scammed yesterday by two suspects who demanded $1,200 after sealing his driveway with what investigators later determined to be waste oil, police said.

    Police Capt. John Stankiewicz said the victim was approached by the two suspects who offered to seal his driveway with materials left over from another job. They coated the driveway with waste oil and then cashed the victim’s check for $1,200 at a local bank a short time later.

    The vehicle used by the suspects was a newer, green-colored Chevrolet pickup with a container in the bed. Police and investigators with the Longmeadow Fire Department’s hazardous materials team determined the material in question was waste oil.

    Stankiewicz said police urge homeowners, before having any work done on their properties, to check references and have a contract which includes a description of materials used and a price. All door-to-door solicitors or canvassers are required to register with the police department and must carry the registration card on them at all times, he said.

    GOP Senate hopeful Michael Sullivan opposes path to citizenship for adults in country illegally, has mixed feelings on children

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    Sullivan said that allowing a path to citizenship for those in the country illegally, something currently being debated a a compromise in Washington, is a slap in the face to everyone who immigrated through the proper channels.

    When it comes to people caught residing in the United States illegally, Republican U.S. Senate hopeful Michael Sullivan says adults should be deported without question.

    During an editorial board pitch to The Republican newspaper in Springfield this week, Sullivan discussed his thoughts on the debate over immigration reform.

    "I understand and appreciate that we are a nation of immigrants and I believe we should always be welcoming to legal immigration. We should always be respectful of immigrants coming here for a better opportunities but I'm against amnesty," Sullivan said. "I just think citizenship is the greatest gift our country can give to someone who's foreign born. There's hundreds of thousands who've traveled the legal proper path to citizenship. We should recognize and reward those people; not those who chose to come here illegally or stay past the time they were allowed."

    Sullivan said that allowing a path to citizenship for those in the country illegally, something currently being debated in a compromise in Washington, is a slap in the face to everyone who immigrated through the proper channels. But when it comes to children who may have ended up here without any fault of their own, his hard line blurs.

    "We should not be offering amnesty to people who are in the country illegally. But children are different, to be honest. If you think about a small child, that's been brought here- we've never once punished children for the sins of their parents and I don't think we should start doing that," Sullivan said. "Children wouldn't come knowingly violating the nation's immigration laws or wouldn't know, necessarily, that their parents' continued residence in the Unites States is in violation of the law."

    When asked if his stance in relation to children here illegally means he would support the DREAM Act, which allows a path to citizenship for young undocumented people, Sullivan said that he would thoroughly read through any bill before giving it his stamp of approval.

    A recent poll conducted by the Western New England University Polling Institute for The Republican/MassLive.com and CBS-3 Springfield concluded that Democratic U.S. Rep. Ed Markey is leading over his primary competitor U.S. Rep. Stephen Lynch by a 10-point margin, although Lynch fares better against a Republican in hypothetical general election match-ups. GOP political newcomer Gabriel Gomez has a slight lead over Sullivan, according to the poll, but both Republicans were holding a significant lead over Republican State Rep. Daniel Winslow.

    The primary election is scheduled for April 30 with the general election coming on June 25.


    Obituaries today: Irene Bednarz worked at Buxton, Forbes and Wallace, Dick Barker School of Dance

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    Obituaries from The Republican.

     
    042513-Bednarz-Irene.jpgIrene Bednarz 

    Irene J. (Grondalski) Bednarz, 89, of Springfield, passed away on Tuesday. She was born in the Indian Orchard section of Springfield. She was a secretary at the Dick Barker School of Dance of Ludlow, and previously worked at Buxton Manufacturing and as a buyer at the former Forbes and Wallace stores. She was a communicant of St. Catherine of Siena Church and a member of the Polish Women's Auxiliary Club.

    Obituaries from The Republican:


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