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Boston and Globe
According to the Boston Globe ( as reported on May 18, 2010 ), the town has renamed its amphitheater in the artist's honor, and is looking to develop an Al Capp Museum.
* The meaning of the butterfly: Why pop culture loves the ' butterfly effect ,' and gets it totally wrong, Peter Dizikes, Boston Globe, June 8, 2008
Herald-Traveler Corp. operated for years under temporary authority from the Federal Communications Commission stemming from controversy over luncheon meetings the newspaper's chief executive had with an FCC commissioner during the original licensing process ( Some Boston broadcast historians accuse the Boston Globe of being covertly behind the proceeding.
* Ron Borges is a sports columnist and former long-time columnist for The Boston Globe.
* The Boston Globe
# REDIRECT The Boston Globe
The Boston Globe estimated that the project will ultimately cost $ 22 billion, including interest, and that it will not be paid off until 2038.
A Boston Globe report, however, countered that by stating there were nearly 700 leaks in a single section of tunnel beneath South Station.
" The grand old days of pranking have gone away at Caltech, and that's what we are trying to bring back ," reported the Boston Globe, which noted that " security has orders not to intervene in a prank unless officers get Mannion's approval beforehand.
In 2005 the Boston Globe reported that the church was considering consolidating Boston operations into fewer buildings and leasing out space in buildings it owned.
The game was won by Tufts 1-0 and a report of the outcome of this game appeared in the Boston Daily Globe of June 5, 1875.
Scrabble for the serious at District 14 ", The Boston Globe, October 7, 2001
The term " gonzo " was first used in connection with Hunter S. Thompson by The Boston Globe magazine editor Bill Cardoso in 1970.
In May 2008 The Boston Globe quoted an estimate of 670, 000 for this group.
* Associated Press Obituary of John Bardeen as printed in The Boston Globe
The daughter of Philip M. Hatfield ( a radiologist ) and The Boston Globe fashion critic Julie Hatfield, Juliana was born in Maine and grew up in the Boston suburb of Duxbury.
Upon his rescue, English's adventures were later chronicled in the Boston Globe.
* The Boston Globe reported on October 5, 2009, that the newly announced Nobel Prize winner, Dr. Carol W. Greider of Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, was asked if she had expected to win the honor.
Manatees have been spotted as far north as Cape Cod, and as recently as the late summer of 2006, one was seen in New York City and Rhode Island's Narragansett Bay, as cited in The Boston Globe.
U. S. journalist Paul Hoeffel in an article written for the Boston Globe concluded that, " Although there is widespread reluctance to use the term, it is now impossible to ignore the fact that civil war has broken out in Argentina.
* 1978 Paul Szep ( Boston Globe )
Immediately thereafter, The Boston Globe artist Phil Bissell developed the " Pat Patriot " logo.

Boston and publishers
Arion on the dolphin is the imprint of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, publishers based in Boston and New York ; the figure was used previously by the sixteenth-century Basel printer Johannes Oporinus as his device.
Quaker " publishers of truth " visited Boston and other mid-17th century colonies but were not always well-received.
In April 2005, however, the publishers announced that the editorial offices would be moved from its long-time home at 77 North Washington Street in Boston to join the company's advertising and circulation divisions in Washington, D. C. Later in August, Bradley told the New York Observer, cost cutting from the move would amount to a minor $ 200, 000 –$ 300, 000 and those savings would be swallowed by severance-related spending.
A majority of the trust's stock was controlled by the Taylor family, publishers of the Boston Globe.
Small local publishers ( often connected with commercial printers or music stores ) continued to flourish throughout the country, and there were important regional music publishing centers in Chicago, New Orleans, St. Louis, and Boston.
George approached two Boston publishers with the idea, but was unsuccessful.
Extremely controversial in both its subject matter and its use of obscene language ( something Burroughs recognized and intended ), the book was banned in Boston and Los Angeles in the United States, and several European publishers were harassed.
After the expiration of Root's contract with William Hall & Son in 1855, Crosby-Root songs were published by other publishers, including Six Songs by Wurzel published in 1855 by S. Brainard's Sons of Cleveland, Ohio, after being rejected by Nathan Richardson of Russell & Richardson of Boston.
At the age of 14, Fields took a job at the Old Corner Bookstore in Boston as an apprentice to publishers Carter and Hendee.
Other large publishers include Stanley Piltz in San Francisco, who established the " Pictorial Wonderland Art Tone Series ", Western Publishing and Novelty Company in Los Angeles and the Tichnor Brothers in Boston.
The Langenscheidt Publishing Group was also a major map publisher in the United States, encompassing former privately held regional map publishers Arrow ( Boston area ), Hagstrom ( New York area ), Patton ( Philadelphia area ), ADC ( Washington DC / Baltimore / Mid-Atlantc area ), Creative Sales ( CSC ) ( Chicago area ), and Trakker ( Florida ).
" Boston had many great publishers and magazines, such as The Atlantic Monthly ( founded 1857 ) and the publishers Little, Brown and Company, Houghton Mifflin, and Harvard University Press.
When Walt Whitman came to Boston in March 1860 to meet the publishers for his third edition of Leaves of Grass, he spent a day with Emerson, who had been one of Whitman ’ s earliest supporters, to discuss his new poems.
As recorded in the History of the Boston Athenaeum, an enterprising firm of publishers, " being desirous that the work should be continued, applied to the Rev.
He has accepted commissions from the New York Times, New York Magazine, RCA Records, Random House Publishers, Pan American Airways, Horizon Magazine, David R. Godine publishers, Boston, Alfred A. Knopf Inc. in New York, and Dell Publishing.
Since 1981 Michael Ruetz is a contract author for publishers Little, Brown & Co ./ New York Graphic Society, Boston, Massachusetts.
" In 1888 the publishers of a Boston songbook included " Dixie " as a " patriotic song ", and in 1895 the Confederate Veterans ' Association suggested a celebration in honor of " Dixie " and Emmett in Washington as a bipartisan tribute.

Boston and ran
For many years he simultaneously produced the daily strip, a weekly syndicated newspaper column, and a 500-station radio program ...." He ran the Boston Summer Theatre with The Phantom cartoonist Lee Falk, bringing in Hollywood actors such as Mae West, Melvyn Douglas and Claude Rains to star in their live productions.
It is also known for the large number of famous people who have been treated there, including mathematician John Nash, Douglas S. Holder, who ran poetry groups in inpatient wards for over a decade, published Poems of Boston and Just Beyond: From the Back Bay to the Back Ward.
The three major alignments were the Lower Post Road ( now U. S. Route 1 along the shore via Providence, Rhode Island ), the Upper Post Road ( now US 5 and US 20 from New Haven, Connecticut by way of Springfield, Massachusetts ), and the Middle Post Road ( which diverged from the Upper Road in Hartford, Connecticut and ran northeastward to Boston via Pomfret, Connecticut ).
These men were Robert Schmertz, who owned the WHA's New England Whalers and NBA's Boston Celtics ; a former hockey prospect named Howard Baldwin, who ran the Boston Bulls charter ; Ben Hatskin, who owned the WHA's Winnipeg Jets ; and R. Steve Arnold, another WHA associate.
In the second round matchup with top-seeded Boston, the Canes ran out to a 3-1 lead before the Bruins battled back for two wins ; in Game 7 in Boston Scott Walker scored the game and series winner 18: 46 into overtime to send Carolina to the Eastern Conference finals against Pittsburgh.
* The Middle Post Road, one of the three Boston Post Roads declared in 1671 with the creation of the Colonial post, ran through Coventry.
As of May 13, 2012, Shutesbury still has no means to provide access to high-speed internet to any of its inhabitants ( aside from universal-placement satellite uplinks ); The Boston Globe ran a story in 2005 describing Shutesbury and its neighboring town, Leverett, as one of " America's Broadband Black Holes ".
In the early 20th century, the Middlesex & Boston Street Railway line ran generally down Great Road ( Routes 4 and 225 ), with lines from as far west as Hudson running into Lexington and beyond.
The original Fitchburg Railroad ran through the Hoosac Tunnel, linking Boston and Albany, New York.
The Boston, Concord & Montreal Railroad ran through the town, which once included the village of Glencliff.
* Fifty Miles from Boston Broadway production opened on February 3 at the Garrick Theatre and ran for 40 performances
She ran for Massachusetts State Auditor in 1998 and was endorsed by the Boston Herald.
Dubbed " Wicked Fast " by the Product Manager, Frank Casanova-who came to Apple from Apollo Computer in Boston, Massachusetts where the term " wicked " was commonly used to define anything extreme-the system ran at a clock rate of a then impressive 40 megahertz, had 32 KB of Level 2 cache, six NuBus slots and included a number of proprietary ASICs and coprocessors designed to speed up the machine further.
* Evangeline, a US burlesque musical based upon a poem by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, opened at Niblo's Gardens on July 27 and ran for only 16 performances before moving to Boston.
The main line ran from London King's Cross via Hitchin, Peterborough, and Grantham, to York, with a loop line from Peterborough to Bawtry ( south of Doncaster ) via Boston and Lincoln, and branch lines to Sheffield and Wakefield.
Up trains took nearly six hours from Boston Lodge to the Quarry Terminus and each train ran in up to four sections, each hauled by a horse and comprising eight empty slate wagons plus a horse dandy.
The first public passenger train from Porthmadog to Boston Lodge ran on 23 July 1955.
Slaughter ran through the third base coach's stop sign and beat Boston shortstop Johnny Pesky's relay throw to home plate.
Though Frazee was well respected in Boston, Henry Ford's Dearborn Independent ran a series of articles purporting to expose how Jews were destroying America, and among these were articles lambasting Frazee, saying that with his purchase of the Red Sox " another club was placed under the smothering influences of the ' chosen race.
Boston College ran their football winning streak over Notre Dame to five games in 2007 with a 27 – 14 victory, helping the Eagles rise to # 2 in the BCS rankings.
The Eastern Railroad, Boston and Maine Railroad, and Grand Junction Railroad all ran on the Saugus Branch Railroad at some point.
At its peak, twelve trains per day ran up from locations such as New York City and Boston to bring passengers and freight to Clayton's ferry terminal, which was the gateway to the Thousand Islands region.

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