Cost-controlled health coverage gaining ground
In just three years, more than 1.2 million people in Massachusetts are now covered by plans that put providers on a budget in an effort to restrain health spending.
In just three years, more than 1.2 million people in Massachusetts are now covered by plans that put providers on a budget in an effort to restrain health spending.
Before the school year began, drivers warned that Boston’s schools would repeat “systemwide chaos’’ if they proceeded with error-ridden routes.
R. Bradford Malt, chairman of Boston’s biggest law firm, burst into the national spotlight last week as the trustee responsible for Mitt Romney’s vast fortune.
Mitt Romney has been bolstered by impressive poll numbers and a sense that he will withstand a backlash from conservatives and the Tea Party to win the Florida primary.
Since making the Giants as an undrafted rookie in 2010, the former UMass player has set franchise records and become one of the best slot receivers in the NFL.
An invisible line wends its way along the Connecticut River Valley, splitting allegiances to the Giants and the Patriots down the middle.
The Patriots head coach was in high spirits yesterday, and as he embarks on his fifth Super Bowl even some of his players noticed his jovial mood.
Adrian Walker
The plain fact is that during school desegregation — the greatest challenge a Boston mayor has faced in modern times — White was paralyzed.
“This is like the Switzerland of sports. Last night, I talked to a Giants fan. I talked to a Mets fan. You never know who you’re sitting next to.”
Mike McCoy, who moved to Connecticut from Maine
Globe Insiders Video
Boston Globe reporters Michael Kranish and Scott Helman talk about their new biography of GOP presidential candidate and former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney.
Calif. prosecutors will have to overcome evidentiary hurdles to win a murder conviction against the man once known as Clark Rockefeller, legal specialists say.
Authorities were still trying to determine what caused a deadly pileup early yesterday near Gainesville on Interstate 75.
A bill cosponsored by Senator Scott Brown would prohibit members of Congress from using nonpublic information for their personal benefit.
A contest at MIT had specialists developing prototypes of inventions designed to help patients take control of their health.
The Celtics shut down for the final third of the fourth quarter, going scoreless and allowing 19-year-old Cavaliers rookie Kyrie Irving to steal the game with his heroics.
Acts of violence should be treated as a chronic health problem, according to Dr. Selwyn O. Rogers Jr., an associate professor of surgery at Harvard Medical School.
A month after Opera Boston’s self-extinguishment, Helios Early Opera debuted its first full operatic staging, of Marc-Antoine Charpentier’s 1688 “David et Jonathas.’’
“Sure, it sounds great at the time. Have one child! ... But it’s like the ‘Bill Me Later’ option on PayPal. It’ll get you eventually — and hurt much more then.”
Jennifer Graham
“A surprising number have pushed past the humiliation of defeat and laid claim to a level of prominence they might never have attained if they hadn’t run.”
Leon Neyfakh, on presidential election losers