High-pay housing director resigns
Governor Deval Patrick demanded the resignation of the Chelsea Housing Authority’s executive director after reports that he makes $360,000 a year.
Governor Deval Patrick demanded the resignation of the Chelsea Housing Authority’s executive director after reports that he makes $360,000 a year.
John Axelrod’s passion for art collecting has led him to acquire, and then give, nearly 700 works to the Museum of Fine Arts.
The hitting coach of the Brewers was at Fenway Park yesterday to interview for the job previously held by his friend Terry Francona.
Filene’s Basement survived two bankruptcies and the loss of its flagship Downtown Crossing store, but the Boston institution is now closing its 21 remaining shops.
Banks have been steadily raising fees to make up for losses from the weak economy, troubled housing market, and tougher regulations since the financial crisis in 2008.
Tech Lab
This latest challenger to the iPad 2 won’t make much of a dent in Apple Inc.’s revenues. It suffers from a rather frumpy design and a painfully high price.
Joshua Green
Of all the scenarios before Romney, his attempting to win Iowa and failing is surely the worst one, since it would shatter the aura of inevitability around him.
“Here’s someone whose publicly funded salary is close to the US President’s for managing 1,415 apartments, while the President manages the leading country of the free world.”
Senator Charles Grassley, on Michael E. McLaughlin
Felix G. Arroyo, 32, now a freshman councilor, is well positioned to keep one of the four at-large seats on the Boston City Council.
State and city leaders are launching a new effort to adorn highway ramps that mar the appearance and physical continuity of the Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy Greenway.
New Hampshire Secretary of State Bill Gardner today set the date of the first-in-the-nation presidential primary.
Senators announced a plan yesterday to help keep the financially ailing Postal Service solvent and continue six-day mail delivery for at least two more years.
When he wasn’t getting grilled about Julian Edelman’s arrest, Bill Belichick was challenged on last Sunday’s play of cornerbacks Antwuan Molden and Phillip Adams.
Charlie Weisman’s office situation was less than ideal. Actually, it was nonexistent.
Mind-boggling ideas about space, time, and work at the frontier of modern physics are presented in tonight’s “The Fabric of the Cosmos,’’ a new NOVA series.
Full coverage of the Globe’s investigation into OUI acquittal rates.
“Whatever happened to meaningful ethics reform? And why, post-DiMasi, is it still the same old depressing business as usual on Beacon Hill?”
Joan Vennochi
“The only thing we may know about education is that inquisitive kids respond to it.”
Paul Nix, on exam schools