After going from lawyer to folk singer to minister, the Rev. Fred Small is back in Cambridge, singing. This time his concert is not going on the road and there will be only one a year.
The scene at Northeastern Law School yesterday - as Chuck Turner gave his last speech before starting a three year term in federal prison - was sad on a number of levels.
Cambridge, MA - In preparation for a huge national gathering of media reform activists on April 8-10 in Boston, local activists gathered last week to discuss opportunities for organizing a reform network focused on Metro Boston.
My friend Deborah Strod, a photographer and writer, has her first one-woman show at the Pierce Gallery, at the Cary Memorial Library, 1874 Massachusetts Avenue, Lexington, MA 02420.
Many years ago, in a situation that still produces much pain, close friends were thinking through treatment for their gravely ill child. They had exhausted conventional and experimental therapies; their doctors were urging them to do what they could to make their son feel comfortable and loved.
Boston public school students from around the city marched from the State House to a Boston School Committee meeting on Wednesday to protest proposed drastic budget cuts and school closings.
Over 200 people attended a Boston community speakout tonight to talk about the impact of a third year of state budget cutbacks on education, health care, elder services, teen jobs and other programs.
It's hard to believe, but Open Media Boston is celebrating its third anniversary today. On March 20, 2008, I wrote our first editorial and kicked off a big project ... launching a new kind of online community news weekly.
BOSTON/Brighton - Over 75 members of the Association of Employees of the Educational Foundation/Communication Workers of America Local 1300 and allies from the Greater Boston Labor Council and Massachusetts Jobs with Justice held a rally outside the offices of WGBH on Tuesday to protest the publ