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What? The Globe is worth no more than the Metro?

Dan Kennedy has posted a report from Barclays Capital that puts the value of the Boston Globe at just $12 million to $20 million - less even than the value of "the Worchester papers." It also puts the value of the Times' share in Boston Metro (49%, right?) at $5 million to $10 million, which would make the Metro worth as much as the Globe. Which I'm just finding hard to believe, especially given that this valuation comes from a service that can't spell "Worcester" right and hasn't done enough basic research to know that the Telegram & Gazette haven't been separate papers for years and years now (also, Barclays puts a value of $140 million to $166.5 million on the company's stake in "the Boston Red Sox's").


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Three wise men needed

To find the Baby Jesus that Brookline Police report was stolen sometime over the weekend from a nativity scene at St. Mary of the Assumption Church.


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Free rides for soused Cambridge revelers

Drink at a Cambridge establishment on New Year's Eve and get a free cab voucher (for the first $35 worth of your ride, at any rate, but the tip is not included).


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No Boston Folk Festival in 2009

Bad weather washed out ticket sales for this year's festival, leaving WUMB radio with a $12,000 loss. So there will be no festival next year.


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Never park next to a snowbank if you're going away for a few days


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Surge in violence among black teens in Boston

The good news is violence is still nowhere near the levels of the crack-fueled early 1990s. The bad news, according to this report by Northeastern's James Fox and Mark Swatt, is that violence among this group is on the increase, even as violent crime in Boston in general is going down.

Between 2001 and 2007, the homicide rate among blacks in Boston, aged 14-24, increased from 36 to 64, or 78%, compared to a decrease among the comparable white group from 15 to 9, they report. Across Massachusetts, the homicide rate among blacks, 14-24, increased 98% (the homicide rate among comparable whites also increased, but by 17%, so that more young blacks now die violently in Massachusetts than young whites, even though they make up a much smaller percentage of the population).

The Globe has analysis and comments.


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And the moral is: No Bostonian should work in Worcester

Or if they do, they should never take commuter rail. Alison, our favorite suffering Worcester Line commuter, tweets this morning from aboard the latest train from hell:

Power went out on the train and we're standing by at Back Bay.

Earlier:
Alison is at least 40 minutes late
Alison gets to work two hours late.


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Downtown in all its glory

Downtown at night

Faegirl took this cool photo of downtown Boston from the Madonna Shrine in East Boston.


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Tom Menino plays coy; Sam Yoon needs cash or else

Down amidst the news about Tom Menino spending roughly $400,000 a year campaigning for the past three years against, oh, nobody in particular is Hizzonah's assertion that he's not yet sure if he'll be running next year.

Meanwhile, Yoon recently sent out a fundraising e-mail that went something like: I need to raise $100,000 by the end of the year to run for mayor in 2009 or I'll be called home.


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Op-ed well running a bit dry at the Globe?

Muammar Gaddafi thinks Boston is important enough to pen a Globe op-ed piece about Russia? Or as the Outraged Liberal asks:

... But it would be fascinating to know how this piece wound up in the Globe. No offense, but how many other newspapers rejected it? Who is representing Gaddafi? How much is the author being paid? Couldn't the PR advisor find a Harvard faculty member the same thing while not stirring up the kinds of comment that have already started to register? ...

The best part of his op-ed piece, though, is the tag line:

Muammar Gaddafi, the leader of the Great Socialist People's Libyan Arab Jamahiriya, recently returned from a state visit to the Russian Federation.


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