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Giving thanks for life and engaging the end of life with grace

A group of health-care bloggers, including Paul Levy of Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, and Alexandra Drane, CEO of Beverly's Eliza Corp., have organized a "blog rally" to bring attention to end-of-life issues:

The idea is to get people to share just ONE slide that helps them and their loved ones talk about having a purposeful end-of-life experience. Thanksgiving is a perfect time for families and loved ones to have this most difficult of conversations. We've already had great publicity about Engage with Grace, and are getting national press exposure.

But to make this a viral movement we need your help. So on Wednesday Nov. 26 to Monday Nov. 30 we are going to leave one identical post up on The Health Care Blog and Running a Hospital.

Read more at Engage with Grace:

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Prison nurse charged with trying to help brutal rapist escape

Channel 4 reports Deborah Girouard smuggled items to Che Sosa in an alleged plot to help him escape MCI-Cedar Junction prison in Walpole.

In March, Sosa was convicted of repeatedly raping a Jamaica Plain woman in 1995 and sentenced to 35 to 40 years in prison. That was on top of the 55-year sentence he was already serving for raping a woman in Norfolk County (in a case in which he slashed his own lawyer in Norfolk Superior Court in Dedham).

If convicted, Girouard faces up to 15 years in prison herself.


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The Alewife T station is always a joy in the rain

Dan Dunn loves it so:

... Returning this evening, I found that not only was the escalator to the roof out of order, but so was the the escalator the fourth floor. Flooding, I presume. So, I took the stairs. And had to slosh my way up the stairs, stepping through running water sluicing down each step.


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Spare Change Guy doesn't always ask for spare change


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The fabled white squirrel of Davis Square


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Boston Magazine drops best snarker on staff

The magazine has laid off blogger and general great writer Amy Derjue (whom you can still read at her personal blog).


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Family has a real steak in this lawsuit

Terry Klein alerts us to Giuffrida vs. High Country Investor, a case in which a court will eventually decide whether the family of the founder of the Hilltop Steakhouse in Saugus gets to eat there for free for their rest of their lives.

Seems that when Frank Giuffrida sold the landmark eatery in 1988, the purchase-and-sale agreement set a high standard for treatment of Giuffrida, his wife and their two daughters:

"During all of their lifetimes shall at any and all times be entitled" to various privileges, at no cost to them, including unlimited meals and beverages at the restaurant and unlimited goods for personal consumption at the butcher shop, as well as "[t]reatment of the highest priority, courtesy and respect," including the ability to bypass any line in obtaining service.

This included training all employees to recognize family members so that they would not suffer the indignity of being forced to prove their identity.

Except they only sold the business, not the land or building. When High Country then bought the restaurant and then exercised an option to buy the land and building in 2004, the year after Frank died, the Giuffridas were assured their "privileges" would continue and were "etched in stone."

But while they were "etched in stone," they were not written on paper. And when relations between the two sides failed, High Country stopped giving the Giuffridas the run of the place. Of course, the Giuffridas sued (High Country in turn sued them).

The Massachusetts Appeals Court has just kicked the case back to Superior Court, saying that oral agreements need to be considered when deciding contract cases like this. Klein, who provides a copy of the decision, says it's something to chew on:

... Doesn't this case mean that the black and white of the deal documents can be negated by the spoken words of one of the principals? Isn't it usually the other way around?

There will be a predictable rush to limit this case to its facts, on one side of the bar, and an equally predictable rush to expand the scope of its holding, on the other. If it stands, the Giuffrida case and its implications will be briefed if not to death, then very close to it. With triple damages and attorneys' fees in the balance, you can count on that.


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Guerilla shopping techniques at TJ Maxx

Sarah shares some secrets, but warns if you try any of them on her, she'll cut you.


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Let an umbrella be your smile

Penny Cherubino snaps a cool photo on an otherwise icky day.


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Paging Whitaker Walt

The Russians finally came, and they figured out how to loot the town of Sandwich's bank account.


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