LOCAL NEWS

After gun ban ruling, Menino to press on

Joining dozens of mayors across the country, Mayor Thomas M. Menino said his fight to enact what he called "common sense regulations" to prevent the use of handguns by criminals in the City of Boston will continue, despite a recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling outlawing a ban on such guns in the nation's capital. More »

Kennedy's Senate career full of civil rights history

When the Civil Rights Bill reached the U.S. Senate on March 30, 1964, it was met by a group of Southern senators determined to prevent it from hitting the desk of then-President Lyndon B. Johnson. More »

Civil rights icon stresses kids' social engagement

Drawing on his own inspiring life as an example of how one young person can make a difference, legendary civil rights leader Hollis Watkins, 66, spoke to a group of Boston teachers at Old South Meeting House last Saturday about how to engage today's youth in pressing social issues. More »

1920s time capsule found in Dudley at Ferdinand's

The contents of an 86-year-old time capsule recently found at the Ferdinand?s Blue Store Addition in Dudley Square were unveiled last Wednesday, giving present day Bostonians a glimpse of Roxbury life in 1922. More »

Seeking global perspective, S. African students visit Hub

Five South African college students traveling across the U.S. in search of a global perspective on business, education and culture made a three-day stop in Boston last week. They called their maiden trip to the Hub an eye-opening experience. More »

Free tuition program ends in Mass. with diplomas

A program that gained national attention in 1991 for offering to pay college tuition for 69 second-graders closed its doors in Cambridge last Friday. More »

Northeast braces for home heating oil cost increases

WASHINGTON - New Englanders struggling this summer to pay gas prices topping $4 a gallon should brace for more bad news - home heating oil costs are expected to hit record highs next winter. More »

Atkins, first black Hub city councilor, dies at 69

Thomas Atkins, Boston's first black at-large city councilor, who faced off against school busing opponents as an NAACP leader in the 1970s, has died. He was 69. More »


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