Colorado shooting scares, saddens and stymies us

Shouting fire in a crowded theater is a terrible thing to do. Opening fire is a horror of a whole order of magnitude. Most of America is struggling to make sense out of 24-year-old neuroscience student James Holmes' rampage, which so far has resulted in the deaths of 12 people and injured 59 others, some of whom may …

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Tanglewood: the Higgs boson of classical music

I can't really understand, much less explain, the Higgs boson, or the Higgs field that excites the creation of the Higgs boson. Scientists tell us it is the last fundamental piece of standard model of particle physics to be discovered in an experiment, and it seems to have enough potential as an explanation for an irreducible something, …

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Patrick vetoes raise questions

What is Deval Patrick is thinking  these days? Other than his campaigning for President Obama, of course.   At issue are the Governor's support of loosening a ban on gifts to doctors from pharmaceutical companies and medical device manufacturers and his move to veto legislative reforms of the use of welfare debit cards. Big pharma has long plied …

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Tierney v. Tisei: Time to focus on the issues

Last Tuesday, Congressman John Tierney did what he should have done many months ago.  He held a press conference and faced questions about what he knew and when he knew it regarding his brother-in-laws' illegal activities.  For Tierney, there were no new revelations.  Too bad he waited until he was backed against a wall by the two …

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Ogunquit fireworks preserve charm of yesteryear

While tens of thousands of Boston concert-goers were being herded from the Esplanade to a tunnel under Storrow Drive under threat of storm, Ogunquit, Maine was celebrating July 4th as tradition would have it: simple and lovely.  Standing on the Marginal Way, overlooking the water, the friendly, appreciative crowd could see the fireworks unfolding along the coast: …

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Hatred trumps culture with Algerian novelist’s trip to Jerusalem

As Syria goes deeper into civil war (and may draw in Turkey) and Egypt's first civilian president, Mohamed Morsi,  calls for the release of  the 1993 World Trade Center  bombing plotter, "blind sheik"  Omar Abdel-Rahman, here's a small story that could be even more dispiriting when thinking about the future of the region.  Well-known Algerian author Boualem Sansel  was …

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Health care – the end of the beginning and the beginning of hard work

Thanks to CNN and Fox,  Thursday's SCOTUS announcement was an emotional roller coaster.  Like the Dewey-beats-Truman headlines, they both were so eager to be first that they were wrong.  Shame on them. This time, print media at least made a stab at reading the Supreme Court decision before pronouncing the individual mandate dead.  And, of course, it wasn't.  …

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Big money mocks one person, one vote

That whoosh you hear is the sound of money, gobs of it, flying from wellheeled donors to political candidates and "independent" committees on behalf of candidates.  The roar is increasingly deafening especially when the money is coming from corporations and superPAC's (and, to a lesser extent, labor unions.  Corporations, Mitt Romney explains to us, are …

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Obama’s executive order: the Dream Act lives on

Mitt Romney says that President Obama's recent move not to deport illegal immigrants brought here as children was motivated by politics. Now there's a surprise!  That's a little bit like Captain Renault in Casablanca saying "I'm shocked, shocked to find that there is gambling is going on in here."  Of course it was political, shrewdly political.  And it …

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Bea Barron, a life lived to the fullest

I first met Bea Barron when I was a political reporter and she was selling ads for The Newton Times in the 1970's.  She was a longtime community activist who had worked for Newton Fair Housing, marched with Dr.  King when he was in Boston, volunteered at the local NAACP headquarters and raised money for the …

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