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Ya can't pahk ya cah theah, but ya can get butt naked

The Crimson reports on the traditional end-of-semester naked run around Harvard Yard:

Alongside urinating on the John Harvard statue and having sex in the stacks of Widener Library, Primal Scream is one of the three tasks that Harvard students should complete before graduation, according to undergraduate lore.


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Three-alarm fire damages two Mattapan three-deckers, displaces 25

A fire that started on the third floor of 15 Woolson St. shortly before 6 a.m. today jumped to 19 Woolson St., the Boston Fire Department reports. Photo.

None of the the 16 adults and 2 children living in the two buildings were injured, thanks to working smoke detectors that woke them up, the department says, estimating damage at $400,000. The department says the cause was a short circuit.

Fri, 05/06/2011 - 05:15


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On like Donkey Kong: Mass. woman sues Sony over PlayStation hacking

An Essex County resident yesterday filed a class-action lawsuit against Sony over the theft of some 100 million PlayStation Network user records - and the loss of access to the gaming network.

In her lawsuit, filed yesterday in US District Court in Boston, Dawn Thompson says she is seeking in excess of $5 million - plus lawyers' fees - for herself and fellow gamers. Thompson charges the company negligently disregarded basic security measures, lied to subscribers and is depriving customers of access to the network that they paid for.

Sony shut PSN last month after discovering it had been hacked. Thompson, who says she bought a PlayStation 3 and PSN access in 2009, charges:

Plaintiff is informed and believes that Defendants have been aware for a substantial period of time that PSN was prone to catastrophic loss of data from a security breach. Nevertheless, Defendants failed to warn its customers of the problem or tried to prevent them from suffering system suspension from security breaches and data losses. Defendants have failed to effectively remedy the problems and defects inherent in the PSN. Unwilling to admit fault, SONY sat silently while consumers purchased defective PlayStation consoles and PSN service without warning customers about the risks inherent in purchasing and relying upon SONY’s data security.

The suit alleges:

SONY was, at all times relevant herein, in violation of the Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard by, including (without limitation), the following conduct: improperly storing and retaining credit card transaction and customer data in an unencrypted, unsecured, and unauthorized manner, failing to all reasonable steps to destroy, or arrange for the destruction of a customer’s addresses to and from its computer systems; or properly perform dynamic packet filtering; failing to properly restrict access to its computers; failing to properly protect stored data; failing to encrypt cardholder data and other sensitive information; failing to properly implement and update adequate anti-virus and anti-spyware software that would properly prevent unauthorized data transmissions caused by viruses, executables or scripts, from its servers or computer systems; failing to track and monitor all access to network resources and cardholder data; failing to regularly test security systems and processes or maintain an adequate policy that addresses information security, or to run vulnerability scans.


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No strike at Tufts Medical Center

Nurses, hospital reached a last-minute deal, Channel 5 reports.


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A springtime stroll in Jamaica Plain

Matt reports on a stroll down Centre and South streets tonight for the monthly 1st Thursday art/music/food celebration:

My wife and I grabbed some eats at James's Gate and made our way through all of it. Most places had wine or other refreshments. A few drinks in, along with a few bucks in drink donation jars, it was an enjoyable evening for sure. Rarely do I walk around my neighborhood thinking "I wish more people were here." Today was one of those days.


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Watching John Lackey pitch is like ...


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Police hunt disgusting cigar smoker for Orange Line attack

SuspectMBTA Transit Police report they are looking for a guy who responded to a woman's request to put out his

Fri, 04/08/2011 - 15:00
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East Boston restaurant punished for wonton disregard of licensed closing time

The Boston Licensing Board today rolled back the legal closing time of Canton Eatery, 339 Meridian St. for selling and delivering food after it was legally required to be closed.

For the next six months, the restaurant has to shut at 1 a.m., the board ruled, adding the restaurant can reapply for a 2 a.m. closing time after that.

The board voted to roll back the hours after Lt. Christopher Hamilton said at a Tuesday hearing that the restaurant continued to serve people coming out of bars after they closed, which meant lots of noise and urinating in an alley near the eatery. He read from a letter by A-7 Captain Frank Mancini that restaurant owner Guang Hung had refused repeated requests from both himself and beat cops to stop staying open until 3 a.m. and that he had proven he had "no intention to be a responsible member of the business community of East Boston."

Restaurant attorney Stephen Miller acknowledged Canton Eatery had been staying open later than it should last year - the result, he said, of employees who just wanted to help out Hung by making him some more money. He said Hung has since re-programmed his cash register so that it shuts down promptly at 1:30 a.m. and that the restaurant has had no problems with police since December.

And as he presented the board with petitions signed by hundreds of people, including Merdian Street residents, in favor of the restaurant, he charged that all of the complaints come from just a single resident with a grudge against Canton Eatery, who blames every last problem in the area on his client.

"Allegations that we're delivering at 3 in the morning are absolutely false," he said.

Board Chairwoman Nicole Murati Ferrer, however, noted the restaurant had had its license suspended twice last year for serving after 2 a.m. and said that it really didn't matter if it was just one person or 55 people complaining about the problem - after hours is after hours.


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Licensing Board to Airport Hilton: Do not disrespect the police

The Boston Licensing Board today put the Airport Hilton on notice: Give the local constabulary any guff and the result could be a license suspension.

At issue was a surprise license inspection by two BPD detectives on March 23. The detectives told the board at a hearing Tuesday that the hotel restaurant manager at first refused to let them because they had not made an appointment. He then called the hotel security director, who told the detectives they could carry out their inspection but that in the future, they should make an appointment.

"We don't make appointments," Det. Kevin McGill said.

Hotel attorney Andrew Upton apologized to the board, said the hotel realized the behavior was wrong and that the restaurant manager's employment status was now "tenuous" because of the incident.

Despite his apology, board Chairwoman Nicole Murati Ferrer made it clear she wouldn't tolerate any such behavior in the future. The whole point of surprise inspections is surprise, she said.

"You do understand that just because you're a hotel or just because you're at the airport you don't get special treatment," she told Upton and two hotel managers who attended the hearing.

At a meeting today, the board voted to suspend the hotel's license for one day, but to suspend the punishment to see if the hotel shapes up.


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Proposed Long Wharf restaurant gets 60-day reprieve

The Boston Licensing Board voted today to give restaurateur Michael Conlon at least two more months to actually start using the liquor license he was granted in 2007 for a restaurant at the end of Long Wharf that has yet to open.

Conlon wants to turn the public shelter into a seafood restaurant called Doc's. The BRA approved the idea in 2006 and the licensing board granted him a liquor license the following year, but the project has been held up in bureaucratic and court wrangling ever since. After the state Department of Environmental Protection gave permission, a group of North End residents sued, claiming the city could not simply privatize a public facility. The BRA argues a restaurant up the dock from Legal Seafood and the Chart House would revitalize the waterfront like nobody's business.

Today's vote means Conlon has to return to the board in 60 days to explain whether he's made any progress - which in his case means gaining a favorable ruling from the Superior Court judge who finished hearing testimony last fall but who has yet to issue a ruling.

At that point, the board could either decide to rescind the license for non-use - as it did in March with an equally non-existent restaurant at 45 Province St. - or give him more time.


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