| Home| News | Money | Sports | Entertainment | Food | Lifestyle | Travel | Health | Politics | Technology | Science | Opinion | Garden | Youth | Community | Video | |
| The Revolving Door Tue, 13 May 2008 16:23:57 -0400 The night before Hakim Cunningham was released from MCI Plymouth, he lay in his cell unable to sleep. "It was very overwhelming, very scary," he remembers. "You realize you're going back into the world and you have a second chance to make things right. I was thinking 'What if I go out and fail? Are people going to be more apprehensive because I'm an ex-offender, or will they help me turn things around?'" Cunningham's concerns were well-founded. A 2002 Legislature-commissioned study by the Massachusetts Sentencing Committee found recidivism rates had reached 49.1 percent. The Commission to End Homelessness estimated 16 percent of the 25,500 people released from Massachusetts correctional facilities each year become homeless. Former prisoners must also navigate Criminal Offender Record Information (CORI), the state's rap sheet on anyone ensnared in the criminal justice system. As the number of individuals arrested and incarcerated swells, so does the abundance of criminal records. In 2003, approximately 29 percent of Americans had a criminal record. Massachusetts keeps 2.8 million CORI on file. Approximately 1.5 million CORI checks are requested annually. Joe Finn, executive director of the Massachusetts Housing and Shelter Alliance, says people often emerge from prison with little support. "They have to find work and housing, when many of them never had those resources to begin with," Finn says. "Shelters are the one agency that have to let everybody in, so they don't run CORIs. They've become the de facto emergency net for people discharged from systems of care:; mental health institutions, corrections, treatment programs ... " Cunningham was convicted of possession with intent to distribute a Class B substance and given the mandatory minimum sentence of two years. Joel Pentlarge, of the Criminal Justice Policy Coalition, says mandatory minimums have impact beyond adding years to sentences. "Anybody serving a mandatory minimum is basically restricted to medium security and can never get classified down," he says. "It makes it impossible to get them into work release programs." Work release programs help prisoners who are less than 18 months away from freedom ease the transition to discharge. They work a full-time job, returning to prison or a halfway house after their shift. "I had no chance for pre-release," Cunningham says. "I was thrown into society." He received some transitional assistance as his release date approached. "They offer a two-day program that helps you get a game plan together. They had a resource directory of information for employment, services, emergency food stamps, vouchers. But some of that was outdated." Cunningham worked as a room attendant at Boston Park Plaza, until they did a CORI check and fired him. Then he worked at Stanley Steemer, a company less adverse to CORI. He's now a car salesman. He also got involved with Boston Workers Alliance (BWA), an advocacy group for the underemployed, where he's the job creation director. Aaron Tanaka, one of the group's organizers, recognizes a vicious cycle of imprisonment and unemployment. "The unemployment rate among black men in Roxbury and Dorchester is about 50 percent," he says. "A lot of young men and women in those areas can't get mainstream jobs and get sucked into crime. Seventy percent of our members are dealing with CORI problems." The Criminal History Systems Board (CHSB) is the state's CORI keeper, and it has authorized 10,000 employers and housing authorities to access records. Organizations that serve children, the disabled and the elderly have "statutory access," meaning they're mandated to check CORI, but any organization can apply for certification. Certified agencies see all convictions after age 17. Those with statutory access see non-convictions and acquittals. Last week, Carolyn Resnek trained six employers for certification at CHSB's Chelsea headquarters, explaining antidiscrimination law and translating CORI's confusing language of abbreviations. "This isn't a hiring tool," Resnek explained. "You have to be ready to hire someone before looking up their CORI. You can't narrow your applicant pool by doing twenty CORI checks." Resnek touted recent policy reforms, which include mandatory training for all registered employers (trainings are offered weekly), special procedures for identity theft victims and for those who receive someone else's CORI (the system's searched by name and birthday, so this is a fairly common occurrence) and aggressive audits to ensure employers follow procedure. "It became apparent not everyone understood how to read the document," Resnek says. "So we're requiring agencies be trained every two years in order to access it." But there are publicly accessible records. Anyone can look up a CORI and get results for felonies in the last two years, misdemeanors in the last year, cases that are still on parol, or convictions that carry more than a five-year sentence. You don't need to be CHSB-certified or trained; you just need a person's name and birthday and $30. All the basic amenities vital to a recently released prisoner are subject to a CORI check. Most employers run applicants' CORIs, and a clean record is almost essential to getting public housing. Even credit and student loans can be denied due to a CORI. Matt McCreight, a lawyer with Greater Boston Legal Services, says public housing policies vary, depending on the agency. "If it's section 8, what to do with the CORI is often left to the discretion of the private landlord who accepts government subsidies," says McCreight. "If it's HUD, they generally won't accept anyone with drug-related offenses or violent crimes." Housing providers and employers are required to tell applicants what aspect of the CORI made them ineligible, and to listen to rebuttals and explanations. "You have an opportunity for a hearing, but an applicant may get the impression—and it's probably true—that the other person isn't listening," says McCreight. Fran Fajana, a lawyer with the Massachusetts Law Reform Institute, says it's easy to get out of this requirement. "If the employer doesn't tell you that the reason they're not hiring you is your CORI, due process doesn't apply." McCreight insists it's a question of liability. "What if they take a chance on someone with a CORI and he re-offends? They're afraid of the headline in the Herald, which will say that the housing authority knew that person had a record," he says. "The judgment call often goes negative, out of caution." Housing authorities are more likely to accept ex-offenders if advocacy groups promise to advise former prisoners for their first few months of release, shouldering some of the liability. Anti-discrimination law is intended to protect job applicants with CORI. It prohibits employers from asking about non-convictions or about a misdemeanor that's over five years old. But Fajana says such provisions are outdated. "The statute says, 'Don't ask certain questions on a form or orally.' But there's nothing that says 'Don't use the information from CHSB.' So are these protections really meaningful, if an employer can still access all this information?" she asks. "Antidiscrimination law was written at a time when there was limited access to CORI. Over the last 15 years or so, there's been a significant movement to expand access to criminal records." CORI was created by the Legislature in 1972, to computerize records and protect privacy rights by restricting access. Prior to that, criminal records were disseminated freely, so CHSB was created to oversee CORI distribution. At first, access was limited to criminal justice officials, but certification has expanded. In 1990, the Legislature tried to address crime in housing projects by granting public housing authorities statutory access to CORI. In 2002, the Legislature granted statutory access to organizations serving vulnerable populations, including hospitals, schools and retirement homes. A Boston Foundation report found that in 1993, about 2,000 non-criminal justice agencies could access CORI; by 2005, over 10,000 were certified. Fajana says more limitations on CORI access are needed. "They should at least determine whether there's a connection between the job and the record. If you're applying to be a bank teller, and you've been convicted of larceny, that's a fair concern," she says. "But why can't you work in a daycare if you drove with an expired license?" BWA is creating CORI-friendly jobs, forming a nonprofit temp agency and green jobs in home weatherization and biodiesel conversion. BWA also seeks contracts with the city of Boston, which has "banned the box" asking if you've been convicted of a felony on civil service applications (they still run CORI checks, but criminal records are addressed later in the hiring process). "We're trying to create a direct database of contract vendors with the city and employers who wait until they know someone's eligible for a position before checking CORI," says Cunningham. "So far, we've got around 16, but there's probably another 50 or 75 that we're trying to get affiliated with." Gov. Deval Patrick wants to reform CORI policy. In January, he issued an executive order responsible for most of CHSB's impending changes. It strengthens CHSB's oversight by testing, retraining and doling out sanctions for agencies who violate nondisclosure and antidiscrimination laws. It also changed the Executive Office of Health and Human Services' (EOHHS) hiring policies, which used to require either a letter from a probation officer stating the ex-offender poses no threat, or an evaluation from a mental health professional (the applicant pays the therapist's fee). The executive order mandated the EOHHS' hiring policies be clearer and well-regulated. The EOHHS is finishing its policy revamp now, and cannot comment until they're done. Terrel Harris, spokesman for the Executive Office of Public Safety, acknowledged the order only changes governmental policies. "Look at it this way," he offers, "if one of the Commonwealth's largest employers no longer automatically turns away a former inmate for a job he qualifies for, other than past incarceration, it puts people to work. We also hope it sets the right example for private sector employers." Universities are a private sector monolith of employment, and students are appealing to their administrations to change hiring policies. Alyssa Aguilera is a Harvard junior who got involved in CORI reform through labor organizing. "For the past three years I've been pretty active in labor issues throughout Boston," she says. "CORI was something that kept coming up." Students at Harvard, Tufts, Brandeis, Roxbury Community College, Boston College and other schools formed a loosely confederated CORI reform network. "We've been doing teach-ins on campus. A lot of students now know 'CORI,' this Massachusetts policy term. And people get behind it, it's not a really hard sell," says Aguilera. "We've been doing phone-ins and call-ins, participating in public rallies." Aguilera says it took weeks to find out the university's policy. "They use a common application that asks if you've been convicted of a felony," she says. "We're gearing up for a ban the box campaign. Labor relations at Harvard seem interested, especially since the city of Cambridge has already banned the box." They also support the governor's legislation to reduce the waiting period to seal records. Anyone with a CORI who has remained arrest-free can have their CORI sealed, making a background check yield a "no record" result. Ex-offenders have to wait 10 years for misdemeanors and 15 years for felonies, before getting their records sealed. The governor's bill would change the waiting period to five for a misdemeanor and 10 for a felony. Many groups, like BWA and the student network, think the legislation doesn't close the waiting period enough. "We're basing our numbers on sociological data," Tanaka says, citing a study from the Florida DOC that found an ex-prisoner who doesn't re-offend for three years after a misdemeanor and seven years after a felony is as likely to get arrested as someone with no priors. BWA will march to the Statehouse on May 22nd to rally for reform more radical than the governor's legislation (Aguilera says many students plan to attend). But unless a special session is called, the governor's bill probably won't move this year, anyway. A paradox is nestled into the argument for shortening the seal waiting period; those first few years after someone gets out of jail are their most vulnerable to recidivism. Even if CORI were sealed after three years, the ex-offender still must find work and housing with a criminal record. Fajana sees the catch-22, but she says that safety concerns can't be ignored. "Regardless of where we draw the line, what should happen to this individual while they're waiting? What social services should we be offering to help them get back to mainstream? How much information should employers have access to?" asks Fajana. "I don't have the answers to those questions. But it's something we need to grapple with. I'm not suggesting that employers and housing groups don't have an interest in records. They have legitimate concerns. They don't want to be sued." Tanaka also acknowledges the paradox, but says the BWA must work within the system. "We have to deal with the political reality of the state," he says. "There's been a history of tough-on-crime politicians in Massachusetts. It's just not politically tenable to say you should seal CORI completely." |
| Your U-Lock won't protect you Tue, 13 May 2008 16:20:23 -0400 On May 5th, bicycles locked to parking meters began to disappear from Comm. Ave. Many of the owners received no notification that the bikes were to be removed, and no notice was left of where to go to claim them. Nicole Freedman, director of Boston Bikes, a city program that promotes bike riding, could not say if it's legal to lock bikes to parking meters. "I don't want to answer that, because we've been having some problems with BU that might turn the answer upside-down." Boston Bikes' website suggests that owners "Lock your bike in a highly visible area close to pedestrian traffic and streetlights [and] to a large metal immovable object." Boston University Assistant to the Dean of Students Katherine Hasenauer had sent an email to the BU community that stated, "Beginning on Monday, May 5, 2008, bicycles attached to anything other than an appropriate bike rack will be removed by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. This includes trees, parking meters and benches. This action is being taken to prevent the destruction of the new plantings and items installed during the Commonwealth Avenue Beautification Project." The Commonwealth Avenue Improvement Project is a joint venture between the Massachusetts Highway Department, the City of Boston and BU that has been in progress since 2006. It's scheduled to be finished this fall. The Office of the Dean of Students later sent out another email. "The university was merely conveying a message sent to us from city officials, and we apologize for the confusion," it said. "Unfortunately, the university has no sway over city policy, including bicycle removal from city property." But Masha Serdyukova, a BU student who witnessed the removals, says it was BU personnel—not the city—cutting bikes from the parking meters and loading them onto a flatbed truck. "I saw people cutting the lock on a bike, and my friend convinced them to let him lock it up to his bike while we waited for the owner," she says. "A couple of the guys were from McCourt, wearing McCourt hats, but most of them were in BU Facilities Management attire ... They said they were taking them to 120 Ashford Street, and when that filled up they were getting sent somewhere else." Personnel at 120 Ashford Street said that no bikes were being stored there. Colin Riley, BU's director of media relations, said that the bike removal program had been stopped. "I'm not sure exactly who was removing them," he said. "It's a moot point. Bicycles are not being removed. People need to appreciate that [the Commonwealth Avenue Improvement Project] is providing many new amenities along Comm. Ave." |
| Mediocrity Rising Tue, 13 May 2008 10:22:59 -0400 BUYOUTS STOPPED gutting the Globe (for now) two weeks ago. Those buyouts were brought on because neither the Globe's parent New York Times Co, nor the Globe itself can figure out how to stop shitting money like a goat that's gotten into a Taco Bell dumpster. The decimation continued this week, as two of the paper's biggest young names fled for journalistic organs that are failing far less quickly or spectacularly than our beloved hometown daily. From our vantage point, this indicates the paper will continue to suffer all sorts of indignities until the thing is unrecognizable and unrecognizably mediocre. There's no other conclusion we can draw from the departures of Pulitzer winners Charlie Savage and Sacha Pfeiffer. You expect the old guard—Steve Bailey, Jackie MacMullan, Colin Nickerson, Peter May, Thomas Palmer and Michael Larkin—to bite on a fat buyout offer. That's how these things are supposed to work. But the sight of good young talent running for the exits is certainly not a vote of confidence in the present state of the paper, nor in its future. Pfeiffer, who won her Pulitzer for work on the Spotlight Team's sexual abuse series, is jetting for a position reporting on health and science for WBUR. That's not some awful PR velvet coffin, but it's also far from being a marquee job in this town. When compared to Pfeiffer's current gig—which carries the potential for making not just news, but real, meaningful change—this new one almost seems like a step down. Except that, thanks to Cambridge's deep-pocketed cat ladies, the 'BUR newsroom will still be around in five years. Clearly, if the same could be said for the Globe, we wouldn't be writing this item right now. Likewise, Savage's decision to jump to the New York Times is anything but a sign that the Globe will be able to maintain a brawling, enterprising Washington bureau in the face of recent cuts to its national and foreign desks. Savage is one of the country's best young talents. His work, more than anything else coming out of the paper's Washington desk, sustained the Globe's reputation as a national newsmaker in the face of recent, painful cuts. Just a month ago, Boston magazine cited the "peerless" Savage as one of the main reasons the Globe "remains one of the finest dailies anywhere." Sorry to say, but from the looks of things, anywhere is catching up, and it's catching up quickly.
OR MAYBE NOT? Tim McGuire, the former head of the Minneapolis' Star Tribune, delivered an address on the future of newspapers last week that's been rocketing around that cyber-thing at a great velocity. His advice: You're not all going to die, but most of you are. If you live in some Podunk town, you might be OK. So get a Facebook page. Newspaper people are wallowing in self-pity and wishing for a return to a yesterday that is gone. It will never exist again ... Some ARE dying. The next several months will likely bring several to the brink of death and some might die. At the same time some medium size and smaller newspapers are going to rock along for a very long time and reward owners handsomely. All newspapers are not created equal and it is naïve to condemn all with the fate of the few ... You have to go ding around Facebook and Myspace. You need to deeply understand the capabilities of your cell phone and go to web sites like Digg and other sites that 17-year-olds tell you are important. All of these innovations have profound implications for our business and its future.
FINALLY, cheers to Time for getting Paul Steiger, the editor who fled the Wall Street Journal ahead of Rupert Murdoch's invading hordes, to write Murdoch's profile in this year's Time 100 issue. But please, Paul, tell us how you really feel: "There is, to be sure, a darker side to Murdoch's influence and legacy. He has at times subordinated the journalism operations he controls to further his own business interests, undermining their credibility if not their long-term profitability. His own test of journalism sometimes seems to be what sells—no less but also no more." Amazingly, revenge also sells—and generates a wicked lot of clicks on your website. Who knew? |
| YOUR VIEW: Parents must work together for special education Wed, 14 May 2008 06:00 EST I am a Wareham resident with three children who fall into the special-needs student category. I have started a movement called Together We Can to empower Wareham residents with special-needs children to get their children the help they need. |
| OUR VIEW: Second-class treatment for West Side Wed, 14 May 2008 06:00 EST The move to close West Side High School's alternative education program without any real plan for the students' future could erase any hope the 67 teens have of turning their lives around. |
| YOUR VIEW: Israel at 60: Keep connections alive Wed, 14 May 2008 06:00 EST Sixty years ago, world Jewry was at a turning point. The greatest mass murder of the 20th century, the Holocaust, was finally over. The remaining Jewish refugees were struggling to gain entry into Western countries, and the Arab nations had surrounded... |
| YOUR VIEW: World should not celebrate birth of a state that violates rights of Palestinians Wed, 14 May 2008 06:00 EST More of our fellow Americans need to know the information contained in a letter published in The Manchester Guardian, April 30, 2008, and signed by 105 members of Britain's Jewish community. The article is entitled, "We're Not Celebrating Israel's... |
| YOUR VIEW: New Bedford as 'Seed City' Wed, 14 May 2008 06:00 EST New Bedford has lived under an onslaught of despair and negative headlines long enough. Our resolve to protect and project our worthiness is at stake. We can choose to be defeated or to win as overcomers. Let's use our never-give-up attitude, imagination... |
| LETTER: Navy blue fits the Braga Bridge Wed, 14 May 2008 06:00 EST Navy blue fits |
| LETTER: Who polices the park-and-ride? Wed, 14 May 2008 06:00 EST Who polices park-and-ride? |
| LETTER: Parade boycott is local decision Wed, 14 May 2008 06:00 EST Parade boycott |
| Finish the job Wed, 14 May 2008 06:00 EST Several windows in a cafeteria at Falmouth High School were installed incorrectly, the roof leaks, and there is still no completion date for the multimillion dollar renovation project. |
| Feds laud Hub efforts Wed, 14 May 2008 01:39:19 -0400 Two high-ranking federal officials came away impressed yesterday after meeting with Mayor Thomas M. Menino and visiting Dorchester and Chelsea as part of a national tour by... |
| Judge weighs DiNunzio release bid Wed, 14 May 2008 01:32:24 -0400 The lawyer for the reputed mobster known as the Cheeseman claims the take from an alleged hustle to sell the Big Dig $6 million worth of substandard loam wasn't worth... |
| Moms drop dime on sons' guns Wed, 14 May 2008 01:32:01 -0400 Two Hub mothers have turned over guns stashed by their kids, a coup for the Boston Police Department's previously dormant and controversial new weapon seizure program. ... |
| Crackdown bottles up sales of high-end booze Wed, 14 May 2008 01:31:37 -0400 Gray Goose-sipping club-goers will have to hand their bottles over to bartenders in Boston starting Monday when the city begins enforcing a controversial crackdown on VIP... |
| Sox fan will pony up $ for brawl with Yank backer Wed, 14 May 2008 01:31:12 -0400 A Red Sox fan hit with a $25,297 penalty for his part in a barroom brawl decided yesterday to cowboy up and pay the bill. David Sanborn told the Herald he considered... |
| Bay State brides' revenge Wed, 14 May 2008 01:30:51 -0400 A Leominster wedding gown hawker accused of bilking brides and botching dresses has been ordered to pay thousands of dollars in fines and restitution for wreaking matrimonial... |
| Fright gallery: Museum of Bad Art expands into Somerville Theatre Wed, 14 May 2008 01:19:03 -0400 Take that, post-modern masters - Dedham's Museum of Bad Art is not only expanding, but releasing a second book of the worst would-be artists have to offer. The MOBA,... |
| Hub frantic as calls unanswered Tue, 13 May 2008 23:36:27 -0400 Loved ones left to worry back in Boston say they are in "a panic" as the death toll from China's killer quake reaches into the tens of thousands. "I'm... |
| Public transit suits sports fans to a T Tue, 13 May 2008 22:45:18 -0400 Die-hard Boston fans are ditching their cars and climbing on trains and trolleys in record numbers to catch a game as gas prices eat into ballpark budgets, according to an... |
| Town on lock-down after bold sex attack Tue, 13 May 2008 21:51:42 -0400 Dennis residents, some accustomed to leaving doors and windows unlocked, say they'll be turning the key a lot more after police say a man sexually assaulted a teenage... |
| Cleanup crews tackle Dot, Roxbury neighborhoods Tue, 13 May 2008 21:00:49 -0400 The city's Foreclosure Intervention Team yesterday descended on neighborhoods in Dorchester and Roxbury that have been hard-hit by the national foreclosure crisis. ... |
| Bus driver charged in rape of elementary school girl Tue, 13 May 2008 20:42:52 -0400 A Brookline school bus driver is behind bars for allegedly raping a preteen girl while he drove her home from school Friday, police said. Israel Santiago, 41, was charged... |
| Bills open door to homeowner relief Tue, 13 May 2008 20:36:47 -0400 State lawmakers yesterday heard testimony on three bills aimed at providing relief to homeowners ensnared in the subprime foreclosure crisis. The legislative package,... |
| Mass. backers urge Hill to keep fighting Tue, 13 May 2008 20:22:09 -0400 Top pols in the Bay State may be some of the leading members of the Hillary Clinton Fan Club as they ignore calls for her to quit the race for the White House and urge her... |
| DA drops sex rap against pol Tue, 13 May 2008 20:20:06 -0400 Middlesex District Attorney Gerry Leone will not pursue sexual assault charges against state Sen. James Marzilli, citing a lack of evidence stemming from an alleged encounter... |
| Hub pol urges more stings to cut car crime Tue, 13 May 2008 19:53:43 -0400 Hub cops have vowed to continue a blitz on car crime as a city councilor called for them to rev up more sting operations to put the brakes on vehicular villains. A Herald... |
| Judge considers springing Cheeseman Tue, 13 May 2008 18:22:58 -0400 A federal judge is weighing whether to release reputed Boston Mafia godfather Carmen "The Cheeseman" DiNunzio back to the North End against law enforcement's... |
| School van driver charged with child rape in Brookline Tue, 13 May 2008 17:47:00 -0400 BROOKLINE - Brookline police have accused a school van driver of sexually assaulting an elementary school student. Forty-one-year-old Israel Santiago of Roslindale is... |
| Patrick administration appoints three to education panel Tue, 13 May 2008 17:29:36 -0400 Gov. Deval Patrick has appointed three people to the state's first-in-the-nation Board of Early Education and Care. Orlando Isaza of Northampton is the senior program... |
| Patrick scales back bridge repair plan Tue, 13 May 2008 17:23:21 -0400 Gov. Deval Patrick unveiled a bill today to borrow nearly $3 billion to speed repairs for 250 to 300 "structurally deficient" bridges. House Speaker Salvatore... |
| Lawrence man gets life in arson that killed mother, infant Tue, 13 May 2008 17:21:38 -0400 BOSTON - A Lawrence man convicted of arson was sentenced to life in prison today for a fire that killed a 26-year-old mother and her infant daughter. Harry Guzman, 27,... |
| State Sen. James Marzilli won't be charged in assault case Tue, 13 May 2008 17:18:38 -0400 BOSTON - State Sen. James Marzilli will not be charged after an investigation found insufficient evidence to prove a woman's claim that he touched her inappropriately,... |
| Edith Wharton's estate averts foreclosure for six months Tue, 13 May 2008 17:16:50 -0400 LENOX, Mass. - Creditors have agreed to extend the foreclosure deadline by six months for the home of Edith Wharton after the estate raised more than $875,000 in 10 weeks. The... |
| Worried Boston parents turn over guns Tue, 13 May 2008 15:53:43 -0400 Two bold Hub mothers have turned over guns stashed by their kids in a major coup for the Boston Police Department's previously dormant "Safe Homes Initiative." ... |
| No worries, Carm, you're the cheesiest Wed, 14 May 2008 01:16:56 -0400 The Cheeseman turned around in court yesterday and looked directly at me, his blubbery arms out in a plaintive manner. "I thought you liked me, Howie." ... |
| Their opinions matter, right to the letter Tue, 13 May 2008 21:22:35 -0400 This one's for the prolific George McWhinnie, prompted by the passing of Bertrand Shannon and James "Grandpa" Moses, fellow masters of that consummate democratic... |
| Sermon on Reagan's mount Tue, 13 May 2008 18:35:50 -0400 RANCHO DEL CIELO, Calif. - Monday, while roaming the Reagan Ranch just outside Santa Barbara, I saw with my own eyes the vast gulf between and the politician some believe... |
| Burma's misery continues Tue, 13 May 2008 18:32:38 -0400 The world could hardly have imagined that 10 days after a deadly cyclone turned Burma inside out, the thuggish generals who rule that beleaguered nation would continue to... |
| Choose 'honorees' with care Tue, 13 May 2008 18:31:39 -0400 The University of Massachusetts appears poised to "rescind" an honorary degree that it issued to Robert Mugabe more than two decades ago, a degree, with all due... |
| Nurse staffing bill needs swift burial Tue, 13 May 2008 18:25:58 -0400 The Legislature has elevated spending other people's money to an art form. But a proposal to force hospitals into spending more, simply so lawmakers can satisfy the demands... |
| Lyon sets precedent Tue, 13 May 2008 15:38:41 -0400 It was wonderful to see the Mary Lyon mentioned for its high statewide MCAS ranking in the company of some excellent high-achieving, well-respected charter schools ("Charters... |
| A profession insulted Tue, 13 May 2008 15:36:42 -0400 As a nurse practitioner who has followed the debate over the banning of gifts to health-care professionals by pharmaceutical companies, I find it laughable to consider the... |
| Talking not just turkey Tue, 13 May 2008 15:34:30 -0400 Your editors got it all wrong ("Drug exec fights back," May 9). And their position is short-sighted. It's not about turkey sandwiches. It's about... |
| Jakes deserve credit Tue, 13 May 2008 15:30:54 -0400 How could we not be losing the credibility battle when the media prints only one side of the contract dispute ("Firefighters losing credibility battle," May 9). ... |
| Ike was neutral Tue, 13 May 2008 15:28:59 -0400 In your editorial ("As Israel reaches 60," May 8), you are either ignorant of history or you are telling a deliberate lie: Israel "to hold on to its independence,... |
| Snuff the taxes Tue, 13 May 2008 15:27:58 -0400 Were Massachusetts to rescind its minimum pricing law on cigarettes, contrary to what your article suggests, it would still be impossible for the price of a pack here to mirror... |
| Peace not by treaty alone Tue, 13 May 2008 15:21:27 -0400 Israel will celebrate its 60th anniversary today. On that day 60 years ago, a people who had been dispossessed for centuries and who had emerged from the Holocaust declared... |
| Clinton takes W.Va. in a stroll Wed, 14 May 2008 01:55:04 -0400 CHARLESTON, W.Va. - Hillary Clinton easily won the West Virginia primary last night, hoping against hope that it was more than a hollow victory, since she has little prospect... |
| 1 2 3 Next |
Copyright © Andanh.com 2008
Chinese Dir