Obama takes a stand in budget
President Obama yesterday pinned dollar figures to his vision for the country, calling for targeted spending increases to shore up the middle class and higher taxes on the rich.
President Obama yesterday pinned dollar figures to his vision for the country, calling for targeted spending increases to shore up the middle class and higher taxes on the rich.
Although Mitt Romney’s changing GOP description may prove problematic for his presidential campaign, it also reflects a shift in the political lexicon.
Car exhaust and other air pollution, even at levels considered safe by federal regulations, may substantially increase the risk of a stroke, new research suggests.
Thousands of small businesses across the state could save at least 20 percent on their health insurance rates under a new group purchasing cooperative.
Bank of America Corp. has reached a tentative deal to sell its 37-floor skyscraper in Boston’s Financial District to Boston Properties Inc. for about $600 million.
Sales have soared over the past two years as helmet cameras have become the latest must-have skiing and riding accessory for the YouTube generation.
More than 400 riders blasted the MBTA’s proposed rate hikes and service cuts last night, insisting that the measures would harm the poor, elderly, and disabled.
One of the city’s most prolific developers, Anthony Pangaro, is now taking on his toughest test: restarting construction at the Filene’s site.
BC 3, BU 2 (OT)
Sophomore Bill Arnold scored with 6.4 seconds remaining in overtime, lifting Boston College to a 3-2 victory over Boston University in the 60th Beanpot Tournament.
“There’s been a lot more viral marketing.’’
Chris Chute, on helmet cameras popularity on the slopes
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.
A federal magistrate judge yesterday set the date for the trial of James “Whitey’’ Bulger, rejecting claims by his lawyers that they needed another year to prepare.
How will investors react to an IPO from a much smaller technology company than Facebook? Brightcove Inc. will find out this week.
With much of Joplin, Mo. in ruins after a tornado, young professionals abandoned secure corporate jobs to devote themselves to the community’s long recovery.
President Obama’s budget proposal was met with predictable hostility from congressional Republicans, who deemed the $3.8 trillion spending plan ridden with gimmicks.
David Ortiz received close to a $2 million raise from the $12.65 million he earned last season, one in which the designated hitter hit .309 with 29 home runs.
“A New Vision: Modernist Photography’’ is a somewhat wayward survey of the modernist aesthetic in photography.
When the honored disgrace themselves, and the award-worthy are overlooked, it’s enough to make anyone second-guess.
“If you give girls problems to solve — whether or not they involve flowers or small animals — they’ll be inclined to solve them.”
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