The public university is looking to tap federal funding to support Latino students at a time when that may be more politically challenging than ever. Continue reading →
President Trump’s recent moves to end temporary protections for immigrants from Venezuela and Haiti are expected to revive a legal battle from his first term when he tried, unsuccessfully, to revoke similar legal permissions for migrants. Continue reading →
Responding to an outcry among consumers and elected officials, the state Department of Public Utilities has ordered the state’s five natural gas utilities to reduce their total gas bills for the next two months. Continue reading →
With some reimbursements halted and projects in limbo, New Hampshire farmers are facing difficult financial decisions and an uncertain future. Continue reading →
MGB has been lobbying against its former partner's proposed $1.7 billion, 300-bed cancer center, saying it is unnecessary, too big, and would raise health care spending in the state. Continue reading →
Controversy at Fenway South and spring training as Rafael Devers doesn’t want to give up third base. Columnist Chad Finn isn’t worried. Continue reading →
Columnist and host Christopher Gasper says the Sox are a “hot topic of conversation again,” after rocking the boat with key additions. Continue reading →
President Trump fired Air Force General CQ Brown on Friday, sidelining a respected officer as part of a campaign to rid the military of leader. Continue reading →
A New Jersey man was convicted for stabbing the author multiple times on a New York lecture stage in 2022. The attack left the novelist blind in one eye. Continue reading →
A federal judge has adjourned the corruption trial for New York City Mayor Eric Adams and appointed counsel to advise him on how to handle the Justice Department's request to drop charges against the Democrat. Continue reading →
Israelis remain deeply traumatized by the October 2023 assault, and the return of the Bibas boys, coupled with the uncertainty about their mother’s whereabouts and the way that Hamas paraded their coffins Thursday, revived the torment. Continue reading →
The Israeli prime minister has vowed revenge for what he said is a “cruel and malicious violation," raising new doubts about the future of the cease-fire. Continue reading →
The banks of the Thames River have hosted human settlements for thousands of years, from Neolithic huts to the soaring skyscrapers of London. Evidence of bygone civilizations has been steadily deposited on the river’s muddy bottom for modern archaeologists to mine. Continue reading →
While all immigrants should know their rights, they must also understand their individual risk level — because for most of them, the fear of deportation is greater than the reality. Continue reading →