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How did Whitey get a shopping pass?

Whitey, is that you?

Look in the lower right corner.

From the cover of today's Building 19 circular. Maybe that explains why Martha Coakley (upper right) looks so annoyed.


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Can't always trust MIT freshmen

Just ask the Globe-ish The Next Great Generation, which quotes an MIT freshman on how awesome it is that MIT is powered by its own nuclear reactor.

Although it's true MIT does have its own reactor (conveniently located just off Mass. Ave.), Cambridge City Councilor Minka vanBeuzekom tweets this morning:

WRONG! MIT doesn't power the campus with nuclear power!!


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Bowdoin Street knife fight sends two to hospital, one of them under arrest

Brian D'Amico reports a man stabbed in the neck was found at Bowdoin and Washington streets shortly before 9 p.m. He was taken to a local hospital with life-threatening injuries. Not long after, a second man was found with a stab wound to the stomach and was transported to a local hospital under police guard.

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Knife-wielding mountain-bike rider sought for swooping in on JP dog walker

Boston Police report a man walking his dog around 4 p.m. on Heath Street near South Huntington was robbed by a guy on a mountain bike.

Police say the victim began to chase the bike rider - until he took out and flashed a knife, escaping down Day Street.

Police described the robber as black, heavy set, 6' to 6'2" and weighing 220 to 240 lbs. He was between 35 and 45 and wearing a blue short-sleeved shirt and blue jeans as he pedaled away on his black or dark-blue bike.

Fri, 03/23/2012 - 16:13
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Three-car crash in Roslindale Square sends three to hospital

Roslindale Square crash.

Washington Street by Corinth.

Ed Grzyb, who took this photo (along with this one showing skid marks). Channel 5 reports the collision may have started when a tire on the police cruiser blew out.


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Having the Talk with your kid - the Cinnamon Talk

After reading this Globe article, I had to know: Had she ever tried swallowing an entire spoonful of cinnamon?

No, she said, but she'd heard of a couple of kids who had.

Phew. Her mother and I are the lucky ones. Because as Ben Jackson reminds us, "cinnamon is the gateway for nutmeg."

But a parent's work is never done. R. Hookup warns us: "All the cool kids do rosemary."


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Ever get the feeling the T is just messing with you?

What's the message behind this MBTA fare machine?

Yes, we have no CharlieCards.

Boston to a T snapped this fare machine at Park Street today. In a word: Wha?


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Police: Cape man goes on two-hour terror spree across Fort Hill

BakerA Centerville man who tried pulling one woman into his Jeep, then broke into another woman's apartment, led police on a short chase that ended with him hitting a cruiser then trying to run away and finally struggling with officers as he refused to let go of a knife, police say.

Christopher Baker, 43, was charged with attempted kidnapping, home invasion, armed breaking and entering of a dwelling house, assault by means of a dangerous weapon, assault and battery on a police officer, operating after license revocation and failing to stop for police officers following a two-hour hunt across Roxbury's Fort Hill neighborhood.

Sat, 03/24/2012 - 12:31
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Judge: Government can't hire Catholic charity to aid sex slaves because it prohibits referrals for abortions, contraception

A federal judge in Boston yesterday ruled a federal contract with a Catholic charity to administer a program to aid people brought here as prostitutes violates the First Amendment because the charity ordered subcontractors not to refer victims for abortions or birth control.

The ruling comes in a lawsuit brought by the ACLU of Massachusetts. Although the government's contract with the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops has expired, US District Court Judge Richard Stearns said the issue is not moot because the conference had indicated a desire to re-apply for the job of administering benefits under a federal human-trafficking law - even though government lawyers argued future programs would "give strong preference to organizations that will make referrals for the full range of legally permissible obstetrical and gynecological services, including abortion and contraception."

Stearns wrote paying the conference a total of $16 million for services that were limited by its religious views:

Violated the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment to the United States Constitution, insofar as they delegated authority to a religious organization to impose religiously based restrictions on the expenditure of taxpayer funds, and thereby impliedly endorsed the religious beliefs of the USCCB and the Catholic Church.

In a footnote, he added:

This case is not about government forcing a religious institution to act contrary to its most fundamental beliefs. No one is arguing that the USCCB can be mandated by government to provide abortion or contraceptive services or be discriminated against for its refusal to do so. Rather, this case is about the limits of the government’s ability to delegate to a religious institution the right to use taxpayer money to impose its beliefs on others (who may or may not share them).


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Mattapan convenience store to be charged with re-selling stuff stolen from nearby drug stores

The Dorchester Reporter reports the owners of Lili's Market are in hot water with police, who say they paid 25 cents on the dollar for stuff lifted from local chain drug stores - and that it's not the only store under suspicion.


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