Berthaud’s work “Sweet Spot” stands outside the Roxbury branch of the Boston Public Library and is on view until Jan. 31.
SJC Chief Justice Kimberly S. Budd, the first Black woman to serve in the position, swore Cartwright in. Also present at the ceremony in the John Adams Courthouse downtown was Roderick L. Ireland, the ...
Sports Illustrated’s Sportsperson of the Year announcement has been made, and it’s Simone Biles. The Olympic gold medalist and most decorated gymnast in world championship history receives the honor ...
The athlete was sent into the world with little or no chance of success. The landscape of college sports is littered with stories of broken athletes with broken dreams. While colleges and their star ...
The National Football League team that created and marketed the saying the “Patriot Way” has proven, once again, that they may not be the family organization they claim to be. The sudden firing of ...
Buying a home is a milestone, but also a dream passed down to many millennial children and grandchildren from baby boomers and Gen-Xers. It has long been sold as the cornerstone of the “American Dream ...
As 2024 closed and we ring in the New Year, it is imperative to reflect on the significant strides made in one of Boston’s key economic drivers — the hospitality sector, particularly regarding ...
Greater Boston got three new stores in a month. The week before Ellie Paris’ grand opening, JustBook-ish, which calls itself a “literary gathering space and cafe,” opened in Boston’s Fields Corner.
That cultural legacy is why it’s one of the initiatives at the heart of the program “ From Liabilities to Contributors ,” which his organization runs, an effort that offers Black and brown community ...
State legislators passed two bills at the end of the legislative session that, if signed by Gov. Maura Healey, would add new health care reform in Massachusetts.
Leading British scholar Gary Younge, born to parents from Barbados, writes about Black cultural identity. His latest book, “Dispatches from the Diaspora,” published in November, examines identity ...
Sixty-two years ago, segregation under Jim Crow was completely legal and violently enforced in the South in states like Florida. The Civil Rights Act of 1964, which would end legal segregation, wouldn ...