DiMasi ordered to jail during appeal
Former House Speaker Salvatore DiMasi today lost his bid to stay out of prison while appealing his conviction on federal corruption charges.
Former House Speaker Salvatore DiMasi today lost his bid to stay out of prison while appealing his conviction on federal corruption charges.
Mass. retailers with midnight sales are amending plans because 17th-century rules prohibit employees from working until 12 a.m. after Thanksgiving.
Opinion
The Occupy movement’s problem is what’s happening once the marching starts. The modern left has never excelled at mounting a cohesive protest movement, writes Paul McMorrow.
By passing the final compromise that eliminates the proposal for happy hours at bars, lawmakers may vote on the bill sometime today.
Once-struggling Magic Mountain is approaching a milestone in its effort to become a skier-owned cooperative: nearly $1 million raised from the sale of shares to patrons.
Since 1896, runners in the Northfield Mount Hermon School’s annual Bemis-Forslund Pie Race who finish in “pie time’’ is awarded one of the prized apple pies.
In her first public interview since being shot on Jan. 8, Representative Gabrielle Giffords last night appeared confident and determined, but still far from able to carry on a detailed conversation.
“The blue laws are clear as mud in Massachusetts.”
Jon Hurst, Retailers Association of Mass. president
Two sisters were found fatally shot inside a Dorchester apartment yesterday morning, a double homicide that has unsettled police and horrified the neighborhood.
The developer building a mini-city on the former South Weymouth naval air base has reached a deal to buy the remaining 830 acres of the sprawling station from the Navy.
GOP presidential candidate Newt Gingrich will visit Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government Friday to screen his film, “A City Upon a Hill.”
The move by the Supreme Court could salvage or doom Obama’s signature domestic initiative just months before voters go to the polls to consider his reelection.
The players rejected the owners’ latest proposal and chose to disband their union, which could set up a lengthy work stoppage.
The TV celebrity and writer offers random rants in the third of his “tri-pendium’’ of knowledge books.
The quest for the historically correct William Shakespeare, Homer and Jesus Christ is so much sound and fury, signifying nothing.
Full coverage of the Globe’s investigation into OUI acquittal rates.
“It may seem intimidating when we say you are going to help transcribe ancient Greek papyri, but it’s all about pattern recognition, and the brain excels at pattern recognition.”
James Brusuelas, an Oxford classicist who is part of the Ancient Lives team