When your friends' #books are on the same shelf in a @barnesandnoble in #SantaMonica #BlackMass #MasterThieves @publicaffairsbooks
That's Tony DeBlois on the piano @UMassBoston's @TEDx gathering w/ chef-entrepreneur Barbara Lynch, USA Hockey Captain Meghan Duggan....
Teller tells the audience at the American Repertory Theater that this production of "The Tempest" started with "Sleep No More".
On the pillow? Really?
great advice...
SHONDA RHIMES ‘A screenwriter’s advice’
Looking into the #USSenate #chamber at the #EMK #Institute as Dick Flavin recites some poems from his recently released book #RedSoxRhymes from #WilliamMorrow
What an innovation this was in its time... #vintage #typewriter #music
Music typewriter from 1936.
Important issue.
Cancer Votes Massachusetts was out last week at the U.S. Senate candidate debate in Springfield, MA, the third of four scheduled debates between Sen. Scott Brown (R) and Elizabeth Warren (D).
Cancer Votes volunteers and staff spent time talking with supporters from both campaigns about why cancer needs to be a national priority, and six volunteers and staff were able to attend the sold-out debate.
And Cancer Votes volunteer Pat Spain from North Andover gave several interviews to reporters, including one with NPR!
According to Cancer Votes staffer Patricia Mallios, volunteers and staff were able to meet a lot of people and many of them kept their stickers on during the debate and were interested in hearing about Cancer Votes.
Photos: Cancer Votes volunteers Ellen Croibier, Peter Levine, Pat Spain, Anna Nguyen, Nora Wallace and staff Patricia Mallios, Erica Concors and Whitney Thomas and supporters of both candidates.
Sarah Jane Cook Dakin and Edmund H. Cook via the City of Boston Archives on Flickr.
First of three articles by The Boston Globe adapted from “The Kid: The Immortal Life of Ted Williams,” by Ben Bradlee, Jr. to be published Tuesday by Little, Brown and Company.
Startling details about Ted Williams’s life unearthed
A monumental new biography reveals more about the Red Sox legend’s last hours, and his son’s bizarre hope that Teddy Ballgame would one day live again.
(PHOTO: John-Henry Williams, shown with his father in 1982, arranged for Ted to be frozen and then stored in a large “Dewar” by Alcor Life Extension. Boston Globe File 1982.)
Just some musings and electronic gatherings of an ink-stained wretch turned social media junkie. As JADAL says: No trees were destroyed in the sending of this organic message. I do concede, however, a significant number of electrons may have been inconvenienced.
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