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By DAVID E. SULLIVAN
The following was excerpted from a talk given by Northwestern District Attorney David E. Sullivan at the Northampton St. Patrick’s Day Breakfast at the Hotel Northampton on Monday, March 17.
By ALEXANDER MACDOUGALL
NORTHAMPTON — Five activists with the group Demilitarize Western Mass were arrested Wednesday after occupying the lobby of the L3Harris building on Prince Street.
By ALLEN DAVIS AND TOM WEINER
By BILL NEWMAN
Censorship functions as a deadly weapon in the arsenal of authoritarian regimes. Consider this:
By MELISSA KAREN SANCES
Her phone pinged and a grey bubble rose to the surface: “Are you ready to come back?”
By SCOTT MERZBACH
NORTHAMPTON — Many members of the federal delegation from Massachusetts, including U.S. Sens. Ed Markey and Elizabeth Warren and U.S. Rep. Jim McGovern, defended the commonwealth and the city of Boston, hours before an address by President Donald Trump before a joint session of Congress they anticipated would serve as an attack on the state.
By JOHN PARADIS
By CAROLYN BROWN
The roots music festival Back Porch Festival, which takes place in downtown Northampton, will return for its 11th year from Friday, March 7, through Sunday, March 9, with more than 60 performers.
By CARRIE N. BAKER
By RICHARD FEIN
A recent article in the journal Environmental Science & Technology relates colon cancer, lung cancer and human infertility to microplastics. These are tiny particles of plastic that come from the manufacture, use and disposal of plastic products. A story in the Boston Globe reports that people with microplastics in major arteries are more likely to have heart attacks and strokes.
By ALEXA LEWIS
NORTHAMPTON — Commemorating the third anniversary of the war in Ukraine, a handful of activists with Massachusetts Peace Action stood outside U.S. Rep. Jim McGovern’s Northampton office on Monday afternoon to demand peace negotiations. This standout mirrored another held by the organization at the same time in Boston.
By SCOTT MERZBACH
The Massachusetts Teachers Association is removing links to potentially offensive images from a members-only section of its website, as well as any materials posted there that don’t aid students and teachers in better understanding the conflict in the Middle East.
By SAMUEL GELINAS
NORTHAMPTON — It wasn’t the coffee that had the people inside the First Churches of Northampton energetic and on edge Saturday morning. Some 500 people crowded into the church shoulder to shoulder, mutually distressed about national politics, and voiced those concerns in a coffee hour town hall with U.S. Rep. Jim McGovern that lasted close to two hours.
By BILL NEWMAN
By JOANNA BUONICONTI
By ANTHONY CAMMALLERI
GREENFIELD — Grove Street resident Wendy Robinson, 82, bought her two-story home for $116,000 five years ago. As she plans to downsize, she’s participating in a new pilot program run by the housing nonprofit Leo’s Home to make repairs so the house can be sold to a first-time homebuyer.
By EMILEE KLEIN
NORTHAMPTON — Nothing could knock down Claudia Quintero on the day she received her green card and work permit at 17 years old — she was too elated to notice anything else.
In an era of massive uncertainty about what the future holds and immense fear about what’s in store during Donald Trump’s presidency, I’m writing in support of Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s nomination as head of Health and Human Services, which could be a silver lining in several ways.
By SUZANNE STILLINGER
By ALEXANDER MACDOUGALL
NORTHAMPTON — After nearly six months of searching, Cooley Dickinson Hospital has found a new president.
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