The move will make Boston Children’s Hospital, already the dominant and most expensive pediatric hospital in the region, even more powerful and could force insurers and families with sick children to pay more for health care. Continue reading →
White House press secretary Jen Psaki said the administration has been clear that “we are committed to pursuing diplomacy until the moment an invasion begins.” Continue reading →
If Boston’s bid had been successful, we’d be looking back now with nostalgia at the days when all we fought about were vaccine mandates and masking rules. Continue reading →
Across Massachusetts, the exodus from such battering from critics and burnout includes health directors from Framingham, Oak Bluffs, and East Longmeadow, which also saw two of its three health board members resign amid mask debates. Continue reading →
For more than a year, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has collected data on hospitalizations for COVID-19 in the United States and broken it down by age, race, and vaccination status. But it has not made most of the information public. Continue reading →
JERUSALEM — Israel’s prime minister on Sunday criticized an emerging deal over Iran’s nuclear program, saying it would be weaker than a previous agreement and would create a “more violent, more volatile Middle East.” Continue reading →
TORONTO — The streets around the Canadian Parliament are quiet now. The Ottawa protesters who vowed never to give up are largely gone, chased away by police in riot gear. The relentless blare of truckers’ horns has gone silent. Continue reading →
In Maidan square, the site of the massacre, a ceremony was held Sunday morning to honor the “Heavenly Hundred,” as those killed Feb. 20 and 21, 2014, are known here. Continue reading →
Pedestrian deaths have risen in the past two years. Whatever the cause, there are better ways to make streets safer than increased penalties for jaywalking. Continue reading →
The Disability Law Center report clearly states that the state-run facility for these mentally ill men should be owned and operated by the Department of Mental Health, not the Department of Correction. Continue reading →
Hundreds gathered at a pair of Ukrainian churches in Jamaica Plain Sunday afternoon to stand together in the face of the conflict and decry Russia’s positioning of significant combat forces on the country’s northern, eastern, and southern borders. Continue reading →
In the 1870s, Smith started teaching at The Phillips School in Boston’s West End, one of the first schools to teach both Black and white students in the city. There, Smith became the first Black educator to teach in an integrated Boston public school. Continue reading →
The murders of two Black people gunned down in Winthrop last year by a man who wrote white supremacist screeds was cited by the Anti-Defamation League in a report that warned of the threat posed by domestic extremists. Continue reading →
According to NBA sources, Celtics ownership has decided to take steps to apply to host the All-Star Game, which was last played in Boston in 1964. Continue reading →
The Red Sox were operating within their rights in bouncing the 25-year-old between their top minor league affiliate and the big leagues throughout last season. Continue reading →
The move will make Boston Children’s Hospital, already the dominant and most expensive pediatric hospital in the region, even more powerful and could force insurers and families with sick children to pay more for health care. Continue reading →
Adagio Therapeutics had touted its potential to play a meaningful role in the fight against the pandemic, but fell out of favor in recent months. Continue reading →
As a teenager, Rosalie Kunoth-Monks, was believed to be the first female Indigenous person to star in a feature film in Australia and later became an Aboriginal rights activist. Continue reading →
He was virtually a one-man operation with the Rangers as their general manager from 1964 to 1976 and their coach for most of that time. Continue reading →
Perhaps it’s fitting that for its 25th birthday celebration, Boston Modern Orchestra Project chose to champion Symphony Hall’s often seen but rarely heard 1950 pipe organ, throwing open the doors for a free concert. Continue reading →
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