Democrats who voted along with eight Republicans to strip McCarthy of the job said the seeds for his undoing were planted in January. Continue reading →
With state assistance, Baltimore has built or renovated 29 schools in a decade, while Boston and other urban districts in Massachusetts have struggled to get their share of state aid. Continue reading →
About half the flights were probably for recreational or luxury purposes, based on their resort destinations and weekend flight dates, the authors said. Continue reading →
The House voted on Tuesday to oust Kevin McCarthy from the speakership, a move without precedent that left the chamber without a leader and plunged it into chaos. Continue reading →
WATCH: Hundreds of homes were damaged by catastrophic flash flooding. Is your home adequately insured? Reporter Sean P. Murphy has what you need to know. Watch →
WATCH: Correspondent Nancy West discusses the rising education trend of nature-based preschools, a program that takes learning from indoors to the outdoors. Watch →
The New York judge presiding over former president Donald Trump’s civil fraud trial ordered the former president Tuesday not to attack or even comment on court staff after Trump posted a message to social media targeting the judge’s law clerk. Continue reading →
Hunter Biden, the president’s son, pleaded not guilty in federal court Tuesday to charges stemming from his purchase of a handgun in 2018, the latest development in an investigation that Republicans have tried to use to inflict political damage on his father. Continue reading →
The political and legal chaos is likely to be resolved by the US Supreme Court, which currently has a 6-3 conservative majority and has long been an arbiter on questions of the rights of LGBTQ+ people. Continue reading →
Across desolate fields and shattered villages, Ukraine’s counteroffensive is confronting Russian minefields and Russian soldiers dug into elaborate trench networks. Continue reading →
The Nobel Prize in physics was awarded to Pierre Agostini, Ferenc Krausz, and Anne L’Huillier on Tuesday for techniques that illuminate the subatomic realm of electrons, providing a new perspective into a previously unexplored domain. Continue reading →
Haitians on Tuesday welcomed news that the United Nations Security Council had approved deployment of an international armed force to Haiti. Continue reading →
A proposal for a Kenyan-led security mission to Haiti is controversial. But the US should back the idea as a way to bring stability to the country that has descended into chaos. Continue reading →
Few may recall Dan White’s name. But his heinous acts are a template for the current far-right violent extremism roiling American politics. Continue reading →
The Roche Bros. supermarket chain has agreed to pay the penalty and make changes to its security protocols at its store in Downtown Crossing, legal filings show. Continue reading →
A 19-year-old Medfield man is charged with operating a boat while under the influence during a July crash in Dennis that killed a 17-year-old Sherborn girl, authorities said Tuesday. Continue reading →
Four onetime employees of Darwin's banded together to take over the chain's Putnam Avenue space as a worker co-op — and together, they're facing the realities of what it means to be owners. Continue reading →
Financial experts say it's important to learn the basics of budgeting, saving and compounding, building credit, and using credit cards. Continue reading →
With $380 million in new funding, Electric Hydrogen is trying to disrupt the global market for hydrogen gas, which might one day offer an alternative (and cleaner) fuel for cars, trucks, and airplanes. Continue reading →
John Gordon, an artist who as a young art student helped design the Green Bay Packers’ distinctive “G” team logo, has died at age 83. Continue reading →
Alice Shalvi, an innovative educator and social activist revered by many as a founding mother of modern Jewish feminism in Israel, died Monday at her home in Jerusalem. She was 96. Continue reading →
Horace Ové, a prolific and groundbreaking Trinidad-born filmmaker and photographer whose 1975 film, “Pressure,” explored the fraught experience of Black Britons and is considered the first feature film by a Black British director, died Sept. 16 in London. He was 86. Continue reading →
The longtime producing artistic director of Lyric Stage Company played a central role in the rise of midsize theaters as a vital force in Boston. Continue reading →
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