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Greenfield resident Robert Sweeney identified as victim of fatal crash on I-91 in Whately

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Massachusetts State Police identified the victim of a fatal car crash on Interstate 91 Saturday morning as Robert E. Sweeney, 56, of Greenfield.

This updates stories posted at 9 a.m. and 10:42 a.m. Saturday.


WHATELY — Massachusetts State Police identified the victim of a fatal car crash on Interstate 91 Saturday morning as Robert E. Sweeney, 56, of Greenfield.

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According to Trooper Dustin Fitch, the one-vehicle crash happened around 8:04 a.m. when Sweeney rolled his 1999 Chevrolet Tracker near Exit 24. Troopers say Sweeney, who was alone in the vehicle, became trapped in the car after the crash and was pronounced dead at the scene.

The southbound lanes remained closed until around noon Saturday as troopers processed the scene and investigated the crash. Traffic was re-routed onto Route 5 around the area of Exit 24, and Whately and Deerfield police assisted with the detour.

Troopers from the Northampton barracks, detectives assigned to Hampshire County District Attorney’s Office, State Police Collision Analysis Reconstruction Section, State Police Crime Scene Services Section, Whately Fire/EMS Department, Northampton EMS Department, Massachusetts Department of Transportation assisted on scene.

The Franklin County crash was the second fatal accident troopers investigated in less than 24 hours. Around 2:15 a.m. on I-95 in Needham, a single-car crash claimed the life of Sally White, 22, of Wapole.



Fire at Parkedge Drive home in Feeding Hills section of Agawam displaces family

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According to Inspector Jacob Dushane of the Agawam Fire Department, firefighters were called to a single-family home at 167 Park Edge around 12:26 p.m. Saturday

AGAWAM — A small fire at a home in the Feeding Hills section of Agawam Saturday displaced a family for at least a couple of days.

030911 Agawam Fire Department Patch 

According to Inspector Jacob Dushane of the Agawam Fire Department, firefighters were called to a single-family home at 167 Parkedge Drive around 12:26 p.m. Saturday to investigate a reported structure fire. Upon arrival, he said crews found a small fire burning on the first floor of the home.

Dushane said the blaze was quickly extinguished and that there were no injuries reported in the incident. When asked where the fire started or was confined to, Dushane declined to elaborate citing the ongoing investigation.

He said the damage was not significant enough to destroy the home, but the family is expected to be displaced for at least the weekend.



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Vigil held in Springfield for slain New Britain man Julian Cartie

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The family of Julian Carter is offering a $10,000 reward for information that leads to the arrest and conviction of the person responsible for his murder.

SPRINGFIELD – Five years after his death, family members and friends continue to mourn for Julian Cartie, and hope that the public will come forward with information to help catch his killer.

“I’m begging, I’m pleading for help, I’m pleading for mercy,” said Selwyn Cartie of New Britain, Julian’s father, attending a vigil Saturday night on the fifth anniversary of his son’s death. “We are here trying to get justice.”

Approximately 30 people gathered at the vigil at State and Main Streets in the downtown, near the site where Julian Cartie, 25, of New Britain, was gunned down on Feb. 22, 2009. His killer was never caught, and the family continues to have a $10,000 reward for information that leads to his arrest.

“Nobody knows what I go through every day because I live this every day,” Selwyn Cartie said. “He was everything. He was the greatest kid. He was no gang-related person. He loved sports. He loved people. He do everything by the book. I live this grief every single day of my life.”

Those attending the vigil held candles and some passed out fliers to passersby’s and motorists. The fliers note the reward being offered and urge people with any information about the murder to contact the Springfield Detective Bureau at (413) 787-6355.

Julian Cartie, was a Connecticut National Guard, and was scheduled to be deployed oversees to Iraq. He was buried with full military honors at Fairview Cemetery in New Britain, where the family also visited on Saturday.

According to police, the shooter and three women were in a blue Hyundai sedan, and Julian was walking toward the Crown Fried Chicken restaurant at the intersection with a brother and friend. Words were exchanged, and Julian was shot, police said.

Deidra Cartie, Julian’s sister, said the family returns every year to Springfield to honor Julian, and “we don’t want the person who did this to think that we just fell asleep on everything and let it go.”

“He didn’t deserve what he got,” Deidra Cartie said.

There were females in the car of the shooter, who could give information to the police, even anonymously, Deidra Cartie said. How would they feel if it happened to someone in their family, she said.

Michael Peterson, Julian’s brother, said it has been an emotional roller coaster.

‘It’s my brother, he’s an uncle, he’s a cousin, he’s a son,” Peterson said. “It’s not just an inner city tragedy, a random act of violence. This is very personal to us. We can’t let it go by the wayside. We got to keep it in the public eye and hope someone, anyone, speaks up and says something.”

The family has received a tremendous amount of support since Julian’s death, Peterson said.

He described his brother as “a loving soul.. a great guy all around.”

“The weight is very heavy on our hearts,” Peterson said. “There is no real closure. Bringing this person to justice would give my family a sense of comfort.”

Maria von Trapp, 99, dies in Vermont; basis for 'Sound of Music'

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Maria von Trapp was the last surviving member of the seven original Trapp Family Singers made famous in "The Sound of Music." Their story was turned into the film and Broadway musical.

maria.jpgThis July 25, 2008 file photo shows Maria von Trapp, daughter of Austrian Baron Georg von Trapp, smiling during a press conference at the Villa Trapp in Salzburg, Austria. The last surviving member of the famous Trapp Family Singers made famous in “The Sound of Music” died this week at her home in Vermont. She was 99. 

STOWE, Vt. — Maria von Trapp, a member of the musical family whose escape from Nazi-occupied Austria was the basis for "The Sound of Music," has died, her brother said Saturday.

Von Trapp, 99, died at her home in Vermont on Tuesday, Johannes von Trapp said.

"She was a lovely woman who was one of the few truly good people," he said. "There wasn't a mean or miserable bone in her body. I think everyone who knew her would agree with that."

Maria von Trapp was the last surviving member of the seven original Trapp Family Singers made famous in "The Sound of Music." Their story was turned into the film and Broadway musical.

She was the third child and second-oldest daughter of Austrian Naval Capt. Georg von Trapp and his first wife, Agathe Whitehead von Trapp. Their seven children were the basis for the singing family in the 1959 Broadway musical and 1965 film, which won the Oscar for best picture. Maria von Trapp was portrayed as Louisa in the film and musical.

"The Sound of Music" was based loosely on a 1949 book by von Trapp's second wife, also Maria von Trapp, who died in 1987. It tells the story of an Austrian woman who married a widower with seven children and teaches them music.

In 1938, the family escaped from Nazi-occupied Austria. After they arrived in New York, the family became popular with concert audiences. The family eventually settled in Vermont, where they opened a ski lodge in Stowe.

Von Trapp played accordion and taught Austrian dance with sister Rosmarie at the lodge.

Rosmarie von Trapp, Johannes von Trapp and Eleonore Von Trapp Campbell were born to Georg von Trapp and Maria von Trapp.

Following traffic stop in Holyoke, Massachusetts State Police confiscate gun and drugs including cocaine, heroin and Percocet pills

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A routine traffic stop in the Paper City on Friday netted Massachusetts State Police a variety of weapons and illegal drugs.

HOLYOKE — A routine traffic stop in the Paper City on Friday netted Massachusetts State Police a variety of weapons and illegal drugs.

Holyoke drugs and gunView full sizeState police say after stopping the SUV, they found a Llama Minimax II .45 caliber 1911 style handgun, a stun gun, 368 bags of powder believed to be heroin, approximately 102 grams of cocaine, a bag with Percocet pills and an unspecified amount of marijuana. (Massachusetts State Police photo) 

According to a press release, Trooper Felipe Martinez of the Troop B Community Action Team in Western Massachusetts was patrolling on Adams Street in the city around 6:13 p.m. Friday when he pulled over a 2002 GMC Yukon for a traffic violation.

It is unclear what circumstances led the trooper to searching the SUV, which was driven by 28-year-old Juan Pacheco Jr. of Holyoke, but according to state police, Martinez found a significant amount of contraband inside.

Police say inside the SUV was a Llama Minimax II .45 caliber 1911-style handgun, a stun gun, 368 bags of powder believed to be heroin, approximately 102 grams of cocaine, a bag with Percocet pills and an unspecified amount of marijuana. Percocet is a prescription drug consisting of Acetaminophen and the addictive opiate Oxycodone.

Pacheco was charged with trafficking cocaine, possession of heroin with the intent to distribute, illegal possession of a loaded firearm and ammunition, illegal possession of a stun gun, possession of marijuana with the intent to distribute, possession of Oxycodone with the intent to distribute and he as cited for having excessive window tint and a license plate violation.

And considering the location of the traffic stop, Pacheco was also charged with violating the drug-free school zone due law, thanks to the proximity of the William G. Morgan School on South Bridge Street.

Troopers say Pacheco was taken into custody and held at the Northampton barracks in lieu of $100,000 bail. He is to be arraigned in Northampton District Court on Monday.


Sheraton Springfield honored by Jewish Family Service of Western Massachusetts for supporting refugees

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The Sheraton allows new Americans to obtain essential work skills on their path to becoming economically self-sufficient. Many refugees are grateful and credit the hotel for giving them their first employment opportunity in the United States.

SPRINGFIELD – Sheraton Springfield Monarch Place hotel was recently recognized by Jewish Family Service of Western Massachusetts as the Employer of the Year and a leader in the employment of refugees.

Over the last several years, the Sheraton has hired more than 30 refugees resettled by JFS. A refugee is someone who has been forced to flee his or her country because of persecution, war, or violence and is approved to enter the U.S. by the Departments of State and Homeland Security.

The Springfield Sheraton has been an outstanding community partner offering a welcoming and supportive work environment to newly employed refugees, JFS said. This business leader allows new Americans to obtain essential work skills on their path to becoming economically self-sufficient. Many refugees are grateful and credit the hotel for giving them their first employment opportunity in the United States.

KC Jones, Springfield Sheraton director of human resources, works with Tatyana Abashina, JFS employment coordinator, to successfully recruit and retain refugees in employment positions. JFS provides placement and post-employment support services. The two businesses have a long-standing mutually beneficial relationship.

Jones believes there is value in hiring refugees.

"I am always impressed with the work ethic and drive of our refugee employees. We have built a good solid team," Jones said in a release.

"Because of that, it’s been phenomenal in terms of longevity, in terms of consistency and delivering our service. It’s a great additional workforce that we have and can count on and to have that kind of resource is certainly beneficial especially in the hospitality business. So, we’re very appreciative of our relationship with JFS. ”

The Sheraton knows that they can count on JFS clients because of their commitment to work and determination to succeed in their new home country.

Obituaries today: Doreen Longtin was founder and president of Accounting & Tax Associates Inc.

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Obituaries from The Republican.

 
022314-doreen-longtin.jpgDoreen Longtin 

Doreen Duncan Longtin, 82, passed away on Thursday. Born in Springfield, she was a resident of East Longmeadow for 34 years. "Senior," as she was often referred to, was founder and president of Accounting & Tax Associates Inc., started in her home in Springfield 40 years ago. Previously, she and her husband owned and managed several successful small businesses in the Springfield area. She was a longtime committee member of the Western New England University Tax Symposium.

To view all obituaries from The Republican:
» Click here

State police seek witnesses in fatal crash in Harwich

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Police have arrested Adrian Sterling,18, of Hyannis, in connection with a fatal crash in Harwich.

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HARWICH — State police are seeking possible witnesses to a fatal crash that occurred Sunday morning.

Troopers from the South Yarmouth barracks and troop headquarters in Middleboro responded to a single vehicle crash on Rt. 6 Eastbound, between Exits 9 and 10 in Harwich at approximately 12:40 a.m., police said.

Upon arrival, troopers encountered a 2002, black, BMW X5 sport utility vehicle, which had rolled over and struck a tree along the right side of the roadway.

The sole occupant of the vehicle, 18 year-old Michael Lawrence of Osterville, was pronounced dead at the scene of the crash.

Police said the vehicle operated by Lawrence and a second vehicle were racing prior to the crash. As a result, the operator of the second vehicle, Adrian Sterling,18, of Hyannis, was issued a criminal complaint. He has been charged with reckless operation of a motor vehicle, speeding, and racing a motor vehicle. He was operating a 2000, white, Toyota Camry Solara coupe at the time of the crash.

Police believe there may have been a third vehicle in the area that was not involved in the crash, but may have witnessed the circumstances leading up to it. Anyone who was traveling this section of the road during this time frame and may have seen either of these vehicles, or the crash itself, is asked to call the South Yarmouth Barracks at (508) 398-2323.

The crash remains under investigation with the assistance of troopers assigned to the Collision Analysis Reconstruction Section, Crime Scene Services Section and Cape and Islands State Police Detective Unit assigned to the Barnstable County District Attorneys Office.


Body found in the woods at Stanley Park in Westfield

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Police are investigating the death of a body found at Stanely Park.

UPDATE, 6:20 p.m.: The man found dead in the woods behind Stanley Park Sunday morning is believed to have committed suicide, Westfield police said.
A new story has been posted »


WESTFIELD — Police are investigating the death of a person found in the woods at Stanley Park on Sunday morning.

Police Sgt. Paul Beebe said a skier and another person riding a bike both called police at around 11 a.m. on Sunday after finding the body deep in the woods.

Beebe said no information is being released including the identity of the body or the circumstances of the death.

"Police are still on scene investigating," he said.

More information will be provided on www.MassLive.com as it becomes available.

Bills seek to tackle backlog of untested rape kits

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With possibly hundreds of thousands of rape kits untested across the country, a number of states are proposing legislation to address backlogs that in at least one case dates back nearly three decades.

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — With possibly hundreds of thousands of rape kits untested across the country, a number of states are proposing legislation to address backlogs that in at least one case dates back nearly three decades.

In Memphis, Tenn., alone, there are more than 12,000 untested rape kits going back to the 1980s, according to the New York-based Rape Kit Action Project, which has been tracking the backlogs nationwide. In the entire state of Texas, there are about 16,000 untested kits collecting dust in police evidence rooms.

Tennessee is among at least 17 states with proposals that range from requiring law enforcement agencies to inventory their rape kits to analyzing them in a certain amount of time. Three states — Colorado, Illinois and Texas — have passed laws that mandate a statewide accounting of untested rape kits.

Most of the other states' proposals favor the inventory measure that would require all law enforcement agencies that store rape kits to count the number of untested kits. Rape Project spokeswoman Natasha Alexenko estimates there are about 400,000 nationwide that fall into that category.

"Until we enact this kind of legislation where we're counting them, we really have no idea," said Alexenko, a rape victim whose rape kit was finally tested after nearly 10 years, and her attacker arrested after a match was found.

Rape victim Meaghan Ybos of Memphis has been crusading for legislation to address the backlogs for several years. The 27-year-old was 16 when she was sexually assaulted in her suburban home in 2003. She underwent a forensic rape exam, but never heard anything else about her kit.

In 2012, she was watching the local news and learned police had arrested a suspected serial rapist in the same neighborhood where she lived.

"I just knew it was the same person," recalled Ybos, who called police, told them about her assault and persuaded them to reopen her case. Her rape kit was eventually examined and the suspect's DNA and that in her kit matched. The suspect pleaded guilty in her case and is currently incarcerated.

But Ybos, who is also supporting a proposal to lift Tennessee's eight-year statute of limitation on rapes, said it shouldn't have taken her that long to get justice.

"They never tried to process it until I called ... and asked them," Ybos said of her rape kit.

A spokeswoman for the Memphis Police Department recently told The Associated Press that she couldn't comment about the backlog because the department is in the middle of litigation concerning a class action lawsuit filed on behalf of women whose rape kits haven't been tested.

But when asked about the situation at an event earlier this month, Memphis Mayor A C Wharton didn't mince words.

"We had a systemic failure here," he said of the backlog.

Last year, Congress officially recognized the backlog of untested rape kits as a national problem in passing the Sexual Assault Forensic Evidence Reporting Act, or SAFER, which seeks to provide data on the number of unsolved rape cases awaiting testing and establish better standards for the tracking, storage and use of DNA evidence in sexual assault cases.

The federal government is also providing funding to help cover the costs for testing the kits, which usually contain swabs, evidence envelopes and information sheets detailing the examination. They cost at least $500 to test, a process that involves several steps, including determining whether there's sufficient material from which a subsequent DNA test may derive a reliable sample.

In 2003, the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation received a grant for more than $3 million to test rape kits. TBI spokeswoman Illana Tate said the agency solicited kits from all law enforcement agencies in Tennessee, but she doesn't know exactly how many were submitted.

Wharton has asked the Memphis City Council for a million dollars to help with the backlog. He said a little over 2,000 of the kits have been sent to laboratories, and that it could take up to five years for all the kits to be tested.

Memphis, like other cities, is operating on a tight budget. Its police and fire officials haven't been able to get new training classes due to the city's strapped finances. But Wharton said he's determined to get the money needed to address the city's backlog, even if it means reaching out to philanthropic groups for donations.

"Every day that a sexual assault kit sits untested represents justice delayed," he said.

Senate Majority Leader Mark Norris, a Collierville Republican and chairman of the Council of State Governments, is the sponsor of the inventory measure in Tennessee. He believes there are other municipalities within the state experiencing backlogs.

"We've got to quantify the magnitude of this problem," Norris said. "We know that Memphis has somewhere in excess of 12,000 untested forensic evidence kits, but we need to know how many other local law enforcement authorities may have similar backlogs."

Another Tennessee proposal would require law enforcement agencies to submit rape kits to the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation within 10 days of receipt and that they be analyzed within six months. However, that measure could be costly and is unlikely to pass.

"If the proposal is passed where TBI has to return kits in six months, we would need to double our manpower and require new buildings to accommodate new hires and equipment," Tate said.

Rep. Antonio Parkinson, a co-sponsor of the TBI proposal, said some type of legislation needs to be passed to address the backlogs because besides rape victims there are individuals who have been falsely accused of rape and need the kits tested to be exonerated.

"They could have been incarcerated while waiting for the evidence to clear them, or maybe they pled down to a lesser charge just to get out of jail," said the Memphis Democrat.

Alexenko said the inventory proposal is more likely to pass in Tennessee and other states because it "creates a dialogue" between law enforcement agencies and city officials to begin to try to address the problem.

"Each rape kit represents a human being whose body was a crime scene," she said.

Five tycoons who want to close the wealth gap

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As the middle class struggles to make gains and President Barack Obama strives to shine a spotlight on the issue of income inequality, an unlikely constituency is looking for ways to close the nation's growing wealth gap: A handful of top U.S. business tycoons.

As the middle class struggles to make gains and President Barack Obama strives to shine a spotlight on the issue of income inequality, an unlikely constituency is looking for ways to close the nation's growing wealth gap: A handful of top U.S. business tycoons.

These advocates point to notions of fairness and admit to twinges of guilt, but the core concern driving all of them — left, right and libertarian — is a belief that the economy doesn't function efficiently when the wealth gap is wide. They are proposing solutions that range from pressuring fellow entrepreneurs to pay workers more to simply giving their money back to the government to redistribute.

Since roughly 1980, the wealthy have been prospering while the middle class stagnates or falls behind. Members of the 0.1 percent now make at least $1.7 million a year and grab 10 percent of the national income, while the median annual household income has dropped, landing at $51,017.

The gap is growing wider. Income for the highest-earning 1 percent of Americans soared 31 percent from 2009 through 2012, after adjusting for inflation. For everyone else, it inched up an average of 0.4 percent.

As U.S. society has grown more unequal, rich men and women have set up clubs and foundations to encourage economic parity, and they are actively lobbying for change.

The figure of the fairness-conscious billionaire has a precedent, said Harvard Business School professor Michael Norton. During the Gilded Age, at the end of the 1800s, tycoons took steps to increase equality and help the working class.

"Names like Carnegie, Mellon and Rockefeller — the (Warren) Buffet and (Bill) Gates of their days — grace universities, museums and medical centers in part because the originators of those fortunes gave back," Norton said. "In the same way that some businesspeople are now taking steps to address climate change due to its effects on costs and revenues ... the notion that inequality can be bad not just for ethical reasons, but for financial reasons, is one that is increasingly embraced by businesspeople."

Here's a look at some of these opponents of the widening gap between the poor and, well, themselves.

BUFFETT: THE BILLIONAIRE PIED PIPER

Warren Buffett, Bill GatesFILE - In this May 6, 2012 file photo, Warren Buffett, chairman and CEO of Berkshire Hathaway, right, watches Bill Gates use an oversize paddle as they play doubles against table tennis prodigy Ariel Hsing in Omaha, Neb. Buffet advocated for a progressive estate tax before members of Congress, saying in 2007, "Dynastic wealth, the enemy of a meritocracy, is on the rise. Equality of opportunity has been on the decline. A progressive and meaningful estate tax is needed to curb the movement of a democracy toward plutocracy." (AP Photo/Nati Harnik, File)

The most visible of the superrich Robin Hoods is investor Warren Buffett, who has persuaded dozens of billionaires to give away large portions of their fortunes. Buffett, 83, is the second-richest American, according to Forbes magazine, with a net worth of $58.5 billion. He heads Berkshire Hathaway Inc., which owns everything from the insurance company GEICO and Dairy Queen to underwear maker Fruit of the Loom.

For years, he has advocated policies to close the wealth gap, saying reforms are necessary for the nation's continued prosperity. Buffett has famously complained that he pays a lower tax rate than some of his most menial-wage employees. That's because, like many moguls, much of his income comes from capital gains and dividend payments, which are taxed at a lower rate than ordinary wages. His activism gave rise to Obama's proposed "Buffet rule," which would ensure that anyone making more than $1 million per year pay at least the same rate as middle-income taxpayers.

The self-made Omaha, Neb., magnate has also for years targeted unequal wealth accumulation. Buffet advocated for a progressive estate tax before members of Congress, saying in 2007, "Dynastic wealth, the enemy of a meritocracy, is on the rise. Equality of opportunity has been on the decline. A progressive and meaningful estate tax is needed to curb the movement of a democracy toward plutocracy."

Buffett, who did not immediately respond to questions submitted via his assistant, has played a key role in encouraging his peers to redistribute their wealth by choice. In 2010, he launched the Giving Pledge program in which wealthy entrepreneurs publicly promise to donate at least half of their riches to charity. Adherents including Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, oil tycoon T. Boone Pickens and former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg.

UNZ: THE REPUBLICAN WHO FAVORS A RAISE

Not all members of the super-rich taking up the issue of inequality are progressives. Ron Unz, a Silicon Valley millionaire and registered Republican who once ran for California governor, is advocating the highest minimum wage in the country for his home state. Unz rose to fame when he spearheaded a 1998 ballot proposal that dismantled California's bilingual education system. He later became publisher of The American Conservative, a libertarian-leaning magazine.

Lately, he has become obsessed with the idea that a wage hike is the best way to advance the conservative ideal of reducing dependence on government programs. Frustrated with the gridlock in Congress, Unz is pouring his own money into a November ballot measure that would increase the minimum wage in California to $12 an hour in 2016.

At that level, he said in an interview with The Associated Press, "every full-time worker would be earning almost exactly $25,000 and every full-time worker couple $50,000. Under normal family circumstances, those income levels are sufficiently above the poverty threshold that households would lose their eligibility for a substantial fraction of the various social welfare payments they currently receive, including earned-income tax credit checks, food stamps and housing subsidies."

Unz, whose fortune comes from founding Wall Street Analytics Inc., argues that by not paying a living wage, companies are forcing the government to subsidize them through massive welfare spending. An advocate for the free market, Unz opposes any kind of subsidy. The wage proposal has led him to work with strange bedfellows, including Ralph Nader, the consumer advocate and former independent presidential candidate, and progressive economist James Galbraith.

Unz, 52, trained as a theoretical physicist, has an IQ of 214 and has written scholarly papers on the Spartan naval empire. His political rivals and allies alike have made much of his nerdy demeanor. But his unorthodox background seems to have given him the confidence to go against the conventional wisdom of his party.

"The thing that's really shocking is that the Republican response to the problem is to call for increased welfare spending. From a free-market perspective, businesses should compete without subsidies," Unz said. "If they can't compete, then maybe they should go out of business."

HANAUER: HELPING PEOPLE BUY WHAT AMAZON SELLS

Seattle venture capitalist Nick Hanauer believes the growing wealth gap threatens the economic system that has given him his wealth. One of the early investors in Amazon, Hanauer started the Internet company aQuantive Inc., which was acquired by Microsoft Corp. in 2007 for $6.4 billion.

But Hanauer said he doesn't consider himself a "job creator." If no one can afford to buy what he's selling, the jobs his companies create will evaporate, he reasons. In his view, what the nation needs is more money in the hands of regular consumers.

"A higher minimum wage is a very simple and elegant solution to the death spiral of falling demand that is the signature feature of our economy," he said in an interview with the AP last summer.

Hanauer, 54, advocates raising taxes for the rich and hiking the minimum wage to the unheard-of heights of $15 an hour. He has co-authored a book and launched an organization called The True Patriot Network to help push such proposals. In 2012, he advanced his ideas in a TED talk — one of the wonky, provocative lectures that have become a required feather in the cap of web-savvy thought leaders. But TED organizers refused to post Hanauer's lecture on the web, because they said it was too partisan.

SILBERSTEIN: THE QUIET ADVOCATE

Steve Silberstein made his fortune in the early days of computers by co-founding Innovative Interfaces, a software company that creates technology for hundreds of college and university libraries. He sold the company, settled in a secluded town in Marin County, Calif., and became a philanthropist.

Now, at 70, he is a low-profile member of a movement to organize institutional investors in opposing what he and others say are exorbitant executive salaries.

Silberstein advocates a policy that would tie corporate tax rates to the difference in compensation between the CEO and an average worker. A company with a CEO-to-worker-compensation ratio at the 1980 level of 50-to-1 would pay tax at the current rate of 35 percent; companies with a larger pay gap would be taxed at a higher level, and those with a narrower gap would pay a lower rate.

Silberstein took a step into the spotlight when he produced the documentary "Inequality for All," featuring former U.S. Labor Secretary Robert Reich. It premiered last year at the Sundance Film Festival.

"He's one of the quiet leaders of the entire movement toward wider prosperity," Reich said. "An increasing number of wealthy businesspeople are becoming concerned that the economy can't function without a strong middle class to keep it going."

Silberstein told the AP his views are not so different from that original American industrialist, Henry Ford, who famously paid his factory workers enough to purchase one of the cars that came off his assembly line.

"As a result he became rich," Silberstein said. "If the economy goes well, everybody does well, including the wealthy."

Like many left-leaning executives troubled by the wealth gap, Silberstein insists that his ideological views play only a small part in his concerns.

"It's a problem, and everybody is losing as a result. It's self-interest and the interest in my country, too," he said.

HINDERY: THE TITAN WHO WANTS TO PAY MORE TAXES

Leo Hindrey JrFILE - In this March 31, 2003 file photo, Leo Hindrey Jr., chairman and CEO of the YES Network speaks after a media conference in New York. Hindery, who wrote a book that attempts to use CEO know-how to resolve U.S. policy problems, advocates for progressive mainstays, including stronger labor protections, fewer tax loopholes and more transparency in political spending. (AP Photo/Louis Lanzano, File)

Leo Hindery Jr., the New York City media and investing mogul, is one of hundreds of wealthy people directly asking Congress to raise their taxes as a member of Patriotic Millionaires. The group was formed in 2010 to advocate for the end of Bush-era tax cuts for people making more than $1 million a year. Hindery is also a member of Smart Capitalists for American Prosperity, and he was among a group of entrepreneurs who went door-to-door in the halls of Congress in early February asking for a higher minimum wage.

A managing partner of the media industry private equity fund InterMedia Partners, Hindery was previously chief executive of AT&T Broadband and of the YES Network, the cable channel of the Yankees. He says he's turned down raises to ensure that he never makes more than 20 times the salary of his employees. He is also one of the biggest Democratic fundraisers in the nation.

The 66-year-old argues that giving rich people tax breaks makes no economic sense because people like him don't put their extra dollars back into the economy.

"Do you think I don't own every piece of clothing, every automobile? I already have it. You spend money. Rich people just get richer," he told the AP.

Hindery credits his Jesuit upbringing with giving him the tools to look beyond his own economic advantages.

"How can we believe in the American dream when 10 percent of the people have half the nation's income? It's immoral, I think it's unethical, but I also think that it's bad economics," Hindery said. "The only people who can take exception to this argument are people who want to get super rich and don't care what happens to the nation as a whole."

Connecticut State Police issue Silver Alert for missing Sprague man Steven Fortier

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Connecticut State Police are asking the public for help locating a missing Sprague resident who hasn't been seen since late last week.

SPRAGUE, Conn. — Connecticut State Police are asking the public for help locating a missing Sprague resident who hasn't been seen since late last week.

Steven FortierView full sizeSteven Fortier as seen in his Facebook profile picture from Aug. 2013.  

Troopers say Steven Fortier, 25, was last seen on Feb. 21 wearing jeans and a tan Carhartt jacket. A Silver Alert was issued for Fortier on Saturday evening as his family is growing increasingly concerned.

Connecticut's silver alert system is commonly used to spread the word about runaways and endangered runaways, as well as missing persons with dementia and other cognitive impairments.

Police describe Fortier as a white male, standing just over 6-feet tall and weighing approximately 160 pounds. He has blond hair and hazel eyes.

Anyone with information about Fortier's disappearance or whereabouts is asked to call the Connecticut State Police at the Uncasville barracks at (860) 848-6500.


Missing Bates College student John Durkin found dead in rail tunnel in Italy

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A Bates College student who went missing while studying abroad in Italy has been found dead, according to the U.S. Embassy in that country.

This updates a story posted at 10 p.m. Friday.


A Bates College student who went missing while studying abroad in Italy has been found dead, according to the U.S. Embassy in that country.

John DurkinView full sizeJohn Durkin 

The body of John Durkin, a 21-year-old student from Rye Beach, N.H., was found in a rail tunnel outside Rome, according to officials there. Friends reported Durkin missing after he went out to a bar and never returned, sparking an international scramble to locate the linebacker, who was participating in a study-abroad program through the Connecticut-based Trinity College.

"The U.S. Embassy extends its condolences to the family of John Durkin, an American student participating in a study abroad program in Rome whose body was recovered today by Italian authorities," the U.S. Embassy in Italy said in a statement posted online this weekend.

New Hampshire Gov. Maggie Hassan also extended her sympathies to Durkin's family.

"Deeply saddened to learn of the loss of John Durkin," Hassan posted on Twitter. "Thoughts & prayers are with his parents, friends and loved ones in this difficult time."

Administrators and professors from Bates College, where Durkin was an economics major and Asian studies minor, also released statements offering their condolences via the college's news website. It was there Durkin's family offered appreciation for the outpouring of support after the young man went missing.

Durkin had last been seen around 2:30 a.m. Thursday in Campo de' Fiori, a historic square lined with pubs popular with students. Police said someone aboard a passing train spotted the body a few hours later in the tunnel running under a large park between stations near the Vatican and the Trastevere neighborhood.

Italian Railway Police said the case was under investigation and could give no other details.


Material from the Associated Press was used in this report.

Casino gambling key to survival for tracks at Suffolk Downs, Plainridge Racecourse

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Now, two upcoming votes — one by residents in Revere and the other by the Massachusetts Gaming Commission — could ultimately determine whether thoroughbred racing at Suffolk Downs and harness racing at the Plainridge Racecourse enjoy a resurgence or grind to permanent halts.

BOSTON — By any measure, horse racing has been in marked decline for years in Massachusetts, leaving operators of the state's two tracks eyeing casino gambling as their last, best hope for survival.

Now, two upcoming votes — one by residents in Revere and the other by the Massachusetts Gaming Commission — could ultimately determine whether thoroughbred racing at Suffolk Downs and harness racing at the Plainridge Racecourse enjoy a resurgence or grind to permanent halts.

A yes vote in Tuesday's referendum would allow Mohegan Sun to continue with a bid for a resort casino on land owned by Suffolk Downs in Revere.

On Friday, the commission is scheduled to award the single slots parlor license in Massachusetts, with Plainridge among three contenders.

Both tracks are likely to close, their owners concede, if the votes don't go their way. And for the estimated 4500 people in Massachusetts who derive income from racing — from horse owners to breeders, jockeys, trainers and track workers — the stakes are also high.

"This is a one and done deal," said Billy Abdelnour, president of the New England Amateur Harness Drivers Club. "This will literally end, finish harness racing, because there is no one waiting in line to build a racetrack in Massachusetts."

According to figures from the state racing commission and a report prepared for Suffolk Downs by Christiansen Capital Advisors, operating losses at the track ranged from $11.8 million to $26.4 million over a five-year period from 2007-2011. The track's handle — the amount wagered on live races — has fallen nearly every year since 2000, from $27.6 million to 6.5 million in 2012, and its purse — the money paid out to horse owners — tumbled from $16 million in 2003 to $9.4 million in 2012.

Plainridge's live handle fell from $2.4 million in 2007 to $1.5 million in 2011 and purses decreased from $3.1 million to $2.5 million during that period, according to a 2012 consultants' report for the racing commission.

The travails of horse racing are not unique to Massachusetts, with comparable declines seen elsewhere in the U.S. and blamed largely on increased competition for gambling dollars from casinos and state lotteries. The "racino," a facility that marries racing and casino gambling, has been one response around the country.

Legislators who crafted Massachusetts' 2011 expanded gambling law clearly saw potential for casinos to help bail out the racing industry. The law requires tracks that win gaming licenses to continue racing, and directs a small percentage of casino proceeds toward boosting purses.

The law, however, does not specifically direct the gambling commission to favor racinos or consider the survival of racing when making casino licensing decisions. The five-member panel has promised to weigh several factors, including potential economic development.

Penn National Gaming, which has applied to operate Plainridge, says the introduction of slot machines revived racing at other facilities the company owns, including its Hollywood Casino brand in Charles Town, W. Va., and Bangor, Maine.

"We don't look at racing as an afterthought," said Eric Schippers, Penn National's vice president for public affairs. "Racing is a critical added amenity that adds to the entertainment value of our customers."

Penn National is competing for the slots parlor license with Raynham Park, a former dog track, and Cordish Cos., which has proposed a facility in Leominster. Raynham's application throws a slim lifeline to the harness industry by proposing up to 40 days of racing at Brockton Fairgrounds, the company said.

The Leominster plan does not include racing but takes a different approach, offering at least $1 million a year in gambling revenue to boost startup medical device technology firms in the region, according to Cordish's president, Joseph Weinberg.

Suffolk Downs originally proposed a combined racetrack and casino on the Boston-Revere border, but that plan was rejected by voters in the East Boston neighborhood, where the track is located. The current plan calls for Mohegan Sun to operate the casino as a separate entity in Revere, but Suffolk Downs has pledged to maintain racing for at least 15 years.

"Our ability to continue racing is very much dependent on the success of Mohegan Sun," said Chip Tuttle, chief operating officer of the 78-year-old track that boasts of hosting some of the sport's most famous jockeys and helping launch the career of the legendary Seabiscuit.

Even with a favorable vote Tuesday, Mohegan Sun would still face competition for the eastern Massachusetts resort casino license from Wynn Resorts in Everett, with a decision from the commission expected by May 30.


Supreme Court climate case looks at EPA's power

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Industry groups and Republican-led states are heading an attack at the Supreme Court against the Obama administration's sole means of trying to limit power-plant and factory emissions of gases blamed for global warming.

WASHINGTON — Industry groups and Republican-led states are heading an attack at the Supreme Court against the Obama administration's sole means of trying to limit power-plant and factory emissions of gases blamed for global warming.

As President Barack Obama pledges to act on environmental and other matters when Congress doesn't, or won't, opponents of regulating carbon dioxide and other heat-trapping gases cast the rule as a power grab of historic proportions.

The court is hearing arguments Monday about a small but important piece of the Environmental Protection Agency's plans to cut the emissions — a requirement that companies expanding industrial facilities or building new ones that would increase overall pollution must also evaluate ways to reduce the carbon they release.

Environmental groups and even some of their opponents say that whatever the court decides, EPA still will be able to move forward with broader plans to set emission standards for greenhouse gases for new and existing power plants.

But a court ruling against EPA almost undoubtedly would be used to challenge every step of the agency's effort to deal with climate change, said Jacob Hollinger, a partner with the McDermott Will and Emery law firm in New York and a former EPA lawyer.

"Will they be successful? We don't know yet," Hollinger said. "But it would be an important victory in a political sense and, potentially, a practical sense."

Republicans have objected strenuously to the administration's decision to push ahead with the regulations after Congress failed to pass climate legislation, and after the administration of President George W. Bush resisted such steps. Both sides agree that it would have been better to deal with climate change through legislation than regulation.

In 2012, a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit concluded that the EPA was "unambiguously correct" in using existing federal law to address global warming.

Monday's case, for which the court has expanded argument time to 90 minutes from the usual 60, stems from the high court's 2007 ruling in Massachusetts v. EPA, which said the agency has the authority under the Clean Air Act to limit emissions of greenhouse gases from vehicles.

Two years later, with Obama in office, the EPA concluded that the release of carbon dioxide and other heat-trapping gases endangered human health and welfare. The administration used that finding to extend its regulatory reach beyond automobiles and develop national standards for large stationary sources. Of those, electric plants are the largest source of emissions.

The administration has proposed first-time national standards for new power plants and expects to propose regulations for existing plants this summer. It will then move on to other large stationary sources such as factories.

In the meantime, the only way EPA can compel companies to address global warming pollution is through a permitting program that requires them to analyze the best available technologies to reduce carbon dioxide, the chief greenhouse gas.

The utility industry, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and 13 states led by Texas are asking the court to rule that the EPA overstepped its authority by trying to regulate greenhouse gas emissions through the permitting program.

The EPA's actions "represent one of the boldest seizures of legislative authority by an executive agency in history," Peter Keisler, representing the American Chemistry Council among two dozen manufacturing and industry groups that want the court to throw out the rule, said in court papers.

When the Supreme Court considered the appeals in October, the justices declined requests to consider overruling the court's 2007 decision, review the EPA's conclusion about the health effects of greenhouse gas emissions or question limits on vehicle emissions.

Instead, the court focused on the permitting program, which EPA has said it would apply for the time being only to the largest emitters of greenhouse gases.

The relatively narrow question framed by the court has led environmental advocates to minimize the case's significance.

"Twice, the Supreme Court has affirmed the EPA's authority to regulate climate pollution," said Vickie Patton, general counsel for the Environmental Defense Fund. Patton was referring to the 2007 decision and the court's 2011 decision that said only EPA, not states and conservation groups, could seek cuts in power plant emissions.

In addition to environmental groups, New York, California, Illinois and a dozen other states are supporting the administration, along with the American Thoracic Society, which filed a brief detailing the health costs of climate change.

Also in support of the regulation is Calpine Corp., which operates natural gas and geothermal power plants around the nation. Calpine said it has gone through the permitting program six times and found it "neither overly burdensome nor unworkable."

Looking at the same program, the Chamber of Commerce said it "may be the costliest, most intrusive regulatory program the nation has yet seen."

Like most environmental disputes, the current case is certainly complicated, if not bewildering.

Confusion figured in one of the court's most significant decisions, written by Justice John Paul Stevens in 1984, giving EPA and other federal agencies wide latitude to come up with rules that put meat on the bones of congressional enactments.

"When I am so confused, I go with the agency," Stevens told his colleagues, according to notes taken by Justice Harry Blackmun and contained in the papers that were made public a few years after Blackmun's death.


Holyoke Police searching for shoplifters from Macy's store

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The theft is believed to have happened at around 6 p.m., Feb. 16 in the Macy's store at the Holyoke Mall.

HOLYOKE – City Police are investigating the shoplifting theft of several comforter sets worth a total of more than $750.

A man and a woman seen on a security camera are wanted for questioning in the theft of bedding from the Macy's store in the Holyoke Mall at Ingleside, Lt. James Albert said.

The theft happened at about 6 p.m., Feb. 16. Police are asking anyone who recognizes the people caught on camera or may have seen anything in the store around that time to contact the police Holyoke Police Department's Criminal Investigations Bureau at 413-322-6940.

Sheila Fallon crowned 2014 Holyoke Grand Colleen

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Sheila Fallon’s pride in her Irish heritage and growing up watching the colleen and her court ride by on their float during the parade, she added, contributed to “making me the young woman I am today.”

HOLYOKE — Sheila S. Fallon’s proudest moment of her 20 years was standing before 275 people competing for the grand colleen title that she would win by the end of the contest.

“This very moment on this stage,” she responded when she was asked to share her proudest achievement. “I cannot think of a greater honor than to represent Holyoke in the St. Patrick’s Parade.”

Fallon’s pride in her Irish heritage and growing up watching the colleen and her court ride by on their float during the parade, she added, contributed to “making me the young woman I am today.”

“The colleens have been a role model for me my whole life,” Fallon said. “I’m very excited to be an ambassador for Holyoke and see all those little girls along the parade route who were me not that long ago.”

Her advice to any girl with dreams of becoming the grand colleen, Fallon added, is to simply “be yourself.”

“You don’t have to be perfect to be the grand colleen,” she said.

g2.22.14| HOLYOKE| Photo by Manon L. Mirabelli| Holyoke 2014 Grand Colleen Sheila S. Fallon, of Holyoke, at the 60th Annual Grand Colleen Coronation Ball held Feb. 22 at the Log Cabin Banquet and Meeting House. 

Fallon, a 2011 graduate of Holyoke High School, is presently attending Elms College in Chicopee where she is a double major in English and education

An avid volunteer, Fallon has donated her time to St. Jerome’s parish, the Holyoke girls’ softball team, the city’s “Adopt an Island” program, the Department of Children and Families' toy drive and is a regular blood donor.

“Following graduation, I hope to obtain an English teaching position in Holyoke,” she said.

Fallon will be joined on that St. Patrick’s Parade float by her court, composed of Elizabeth A. Hurley, Meghan R. Kennedy, Sarah M. LaRochelle and Abigail J. Scanlon.

As the grand colleen, Fallon received gifts that include a trip to Ireland for two and a $500 scholarship, a grand colleen portrait, a book on Ireland travel, a 60th anniversary claddagh ring, a tartan necklace, and a floral arrangement.

The court members, as well as Fallon, also receive shamrock afghans, a tartan scarf and parade blanket and a Celtic cross and gift certificates.

Hanna K. Homan, 19, of Holyoke, who was selected as the 2014 Miss Congeniality during the Jan. 4 Colleen Pageant, also celebrated the evening with Fallon, the newly crowned colleen, and her court.

The 60th Annual Grand Colleen Coronation Ball also paid homage to the grand colleens of the past, all of whom were invited to share the evening at The Log Cabin Banquet and Meeting House.

Those who attended the event were Abby Woods Mahoney - 1999, Kate Quirk Hebert - 1978, Ann Burke Lowe - 1959, Katy Brunelle - 2006, Sheila Murphy Gould - 2004, Sherry L. McFadden McLeavy - 1973, Kara Shanahan - 1994, and Ashley M. Reidy - 2008.

Also recognized were Parade President Jane Coughlin Chevalier, Grand Marshal Roger Donoghue, JFK Award winners Dick and Rick Hoyt, Citizenship Award winner Bob Cameron, Rohan Award winner, Ken Collins, O’Connell Award winner Fred Glidden and Gallivan Award winner Karen Casey.

Oldest-known Holocaust survivor dies at 110

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Alice Herz-Sommer, believed to be the oldest Holocaust survivor, died at age 110 on Sunday, a family member said. The accomplished pianist's death came just a week before her extraordinary story of surviving two years in a Nazi prison camp through devotion to music and her son is up for an Oscar.

LONDON — Alice Herz-Sommer, believed to be the oldest Holocaust survivor, died at age 110 on Sunday, a family member said. The accomplished pianist's death came just a week before her extraordinary story of surviving two years in a Nazi prison camp through devotion to music and her son is up for an Oscar.

Herz-Sommer died in a hospital after being admitted Friday with health problems, daughter-in-law Genevieve Sommer said.

"We all came to believe that she would just never die," said Frederic Bohbot, a producer of the documentary "The Lady in Number 6: Music Saved My Life." ''There was no question in my mind, 'would she ever see the Oscars.'"

The film, directed by Oscar-winning filmmaker Malcolm Clarke, has been nominated for best short documentary at the Academy Awards next Sunday.

Another producer on the film, Nick Reed, said telling her story was a "life-changing experience."

"Even as her energy slowly diminished, her bright spirit never faltered," she said. "Her life force was so strong we could never imagine her not being around."

Herz-Sommer, her husband and her son were sent from Prague in 1943 to a concentration camp in the Czech city of Terezin — Theresienstadt in German — where inmates were allowed to stage concerts in which she frequently starred.

An estimated 140,000 Jews were sent to Terezin and 33,430 died there. About 88,000 were moved on to Auschwitz and other death camps, where most of them were killed. Herz-Sommer and her son, Stephan, were among fewer than 20,000 who were freed when the notorious camp was liberated by the Soviet army in May 1945.

Yet she remembered herself as "always laughing" during her time in Terezin, where the joy of making music kept them going.

"These concerts, the people are sitting there, old people, desolated and ill, and they came to the concerts and this music was for them our food. Music was our food. Through making music we were kept alive," she once recalled.

"When we can play it cannot be so terrible."

Though she never learned where her mother died after being rounded up, and her husband died of typhus at Dachau, in her old age she expressed little bitterness.

"We are all the same," she said. "Good, and bad."

Caroline Stoessinger, a New York concert pianist who wrote a book about Herz-Sommer, said she interviewed numerous people who were at the concerts who said "for that hour they were transported back to their homes and they could have hope."

"Many people espouse certain credos, but they don't live them. She did," said Stoessinger, author of "A Century of Wisdom: Lessons from the Life of Alice Herz-Sommer, the World's Oldest Living Holocaust Survivor."

"She understood truly that music is a language and she understood how to communicate through this language of music."

Herz-Sommer was born on Nov. 26, 1903, in Prague, and started learning the piano from her sister at age 5.

As a girl, she met the author Franz Kafka, a friend of her brother-in-law, and delighted in the stories that he told.

She also remembered Kafka saying, "In this world to bring up children: in this world?"

Alice married Leopold Sommer in 1931. Their son was born in 1937, two years before the Nazi invasion of Czechoslovakia.

"This was especially for Jews a very, very hard time. I didn't mind, because I enjoyed to be a mother and I was full of enthusiasm about being a mother, so I didn't mind so much," she said.

Jews were allowed to shop for only half an hour in the afternoon, by which time the shops were empty. Most Jewish families were forced to leave their family apartments and were crammed into one apartment with other families, but her family was allowed to keep its home.

"We were poor, and we knew that they will send us away, and we knew already in this time that it was our end," she said.

In 1942, her 73-year-old mother was transported to Terezin, then a few months later to Treblinka, an extermination camp.

"And I went with her of course till the last moment. This was the lowest point in my life. She was sent away. Till now I don't know where she was, till now I don't know when she died, nothing.

"When I went home from bringing her to this place I remember I had to stop in the middle of the street and I listened to a voice, an inner voice: 'Now, nobody can help you, not your husband, not your little child, not the doctor.'"

From then on, she took refuge in the 24 Etudes of Frederic Chopin, a dauntingly difficult monument of the repertoire. She labored at them for up to eight hours a day.

She recalled an awkward conversation on the night before her departure to the concentration camp with a Nazi who lived upstairs and called to say that he would miss her playing.

She remembered him saying: "'I hope you will come back. What I want to tell you is that I admire you, your playing, hours and hours, the patience and the beauty of the music.'"

Other neighbors, she said, stopped by only to take whatever the family wasn't able to bring to the camp.

"So the Nazi was a human, the only human. The Nazi, he thanked me," she said.

The camp's artistic side was a blessing; young Stephan, then 6, was recruited to play a sparrow in an opera.

"My boy was full of enthusiasm," she recalled. "I was so happy because I knew my little boy was happy there."

The opera was "Brundibar," a 40-minute piece for children composed by Hans Krasa, a Czech who was also imprisoned in the camp. It was first performed in Prague but got only one other performance before he was interned.

"Brundibar" became a showpiece for the camp, performed at least 55 times including once when Terezin, which had been extensively spruced up for the occasion, was inspected by a Red Cross delegation in June 1944.

The opera featured in a 1944 propaganda film which shows more than 40 young performers filling the small stage during the finale.

In 1949, she left Czechoslovakia to join her twin sister Mizzi in Jerusalem. She taught at the Jerusalem Conservatory until 1986, when she moved to London.

Her son, who changed his first name to Raphael after the war, made a career as a concert cellist. He died in 2001.

Anita Lasker-Wallfish, a friend and fellow concentration camp survivor, said Herz-Sommer was still lively during a visit last week.

"She was a real optimist," she said, adding that the pair used to play Scrabble together frequently until Herz-Sommer's eyes failed her. "She was feeling very unwell and she went to the hospital last Friday. I think she had enough."

She added that Herz-Sommer lived a modest life, and would probably balk at the media attention directed at her death.

"She didn't think of herself as anybody very special," she said. "She would hate any fuss to be made."

Massachusetts State Police arrest alleged New Hampshire bank robber Eric Lord in Leominster

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A man wanted for allegedly robbing a New Hampshire bank on Friday was arrested in central Massachusetts early Sunday morning.

LEOMINSTER — A man wanted for allegedly robbing a New Hampshire bank on Friday was arrested in central Massachusetts early Sunday morning.

According to Massachusetts State Police, 43-year-old Greenville, N.H. resident Eric Lord was arrested after 2 a.m. Sunday when troopers developed information that Lord, who police say robbed a TD Bank in New Ipswich, N.H. Friday, was planning on robbing another location in the greater Leominster-Fitchburg area.

State police along with Leominster and Fitchburg police officers worked together to take Lord into custody at an undisclosed commercial property in Leominster, according to troopers. According to WMUR-TV, the Manchester, N.H. ABC affiliate, Lord allegedly passed a teller at the aforementioned TD bank a note Friday implying he had a gun.

He made off with an undisclosed amount of cash but was identified quickly, WMUR reported, because he had recently been discharged from prison and was on parole.

His intentions in the Bay State, according to troopers here, was to rob another location. Police say he never got the chance, however, as he was arrested without incident.

Lord was held without bail awaiting arraignment in Leominster District Court on fugitive from justice charges due to the pending case in New Hampshire. State police in Massachusetts say although Lord is facing no fresh charges in the Bay State, they are still investigating to determine if further charges are warranted.


Car accident closes Route 159 in Suffield, Conn.

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The road has been closed for five hours and it is not known when it will reopen.

SUFFIELD – At least one person was injured in a car accident that closed Route 159 for nearly five hours Sunday.

The two-car accident happened just before 4 p.m. on Route 159. Limited information was immediately available on the cause of the crash or the severity of injuries, police officials said.

Officers are still at the accident scene investigating the crash. It is not know when the road may be opened again.



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