Sunday baseball notes
The Ortiz case, from both sides of the plate
David Ortiz’s salary for 2012 will be on the docket tomorrow in St. Petersburg, Fla., unless the sides reach an agreement before his arbitration hearing.
Charlie Gilbert, 100, who was born on the day of Fenway Park’s first game, wants to throw out the first pitch April 20 when the Red Sox commemorate the centennial.
Sunday baseball notes
David Ortiz’s salary for 2012 will be on the docket tomorrow in St. Petersburg, Fla., unless the sides reach an agreement before his arbitration hearing.
Jennifer Hudson will offer a tribute at tonight’s Grammys to Whitney Houston, who was found dead yesterday at 48. Hudson is one of a generation of singers who were influenced by Houston’s soaring voice and elegance.
State auditors did nothing about former Chelsea Housing Authority chief Michael E. McLaughlin’s salary until the gap between his disclosed and true paychecks reached $200,000.
Elizabeth Warren grew up amid the infinite expanse of Oklahoma, the finite expectations of her place and time, and financial pain at home. The lessons of those years still drive her.
A battle between policymakers, prosecutors, and public defenders is bound to play out as judges defend their sentences for distribution and possession of child pornography.
Friendly’s, the famed maker of Fribbles, is switching from scoops to supermarkets as a way to boost its struggling ice cream business and expand its brand.
“I couldn’t go off to OU. I couldn’t maintain the fiction anymore, not at OU, not there, not with kids living in dorms and buying formals for dances.”
Elizabeth Warren
Globe Talks | Feb. 15, 6 p.m.
Join the Boston Globe’s movie critics, Ty Burr and Wesley Morris, for a conversation about this year’s Academy Awards.
The French Cruller, with its distinctive twisted ridges and airy interior, disappeared three years ago from North Quincy to Falmouth, and its followers were left bereft.
Charlie Weisman recently opened Oficio, a shared workspace that offers a “home office away from home’’ and a swanky address to put on business cards.
A portrait of a serene Mary Todd Lincoln that hung in the governor’s mansion in Springfield, Ill. was discovered to be a hoax when it was sent to a conservator for cleaning.
Mitt Romney pulled out a narrow win in the caucuses in Maine today, averting an embarrassing defeat in a state he won handily in 2008.
The Celtics face Chicago twice in the next five days, and for them to avoid being totally outclassed, they desperately need a better mental approach.
Vasaloppet China is the 10-year-old cousin of a historic Swedish ski race.
Unpacking a mind: Dying from ALS, Tony Judt reviews his life and that of modern Europe.
London’s great art institutions have lined up a series of ambitious exhibitions for 2012.
“When it comes to sexual assault on campus, it’s amazing how little has changed over the years, and how wrongheaded some rape-prevention messaging remains.”
Joanna Weiss
“In the 50 years since the competition, architects have declared Kallmann and McKinnell’s City Hall one of the greatest buildings of the 20th century. Yet its relationship with the people of Boston has remained uneasy, even hostile.”
Leon Neyfakh on Boston’s City Hall