Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Spare Change News (SCN) is a street newspaper founded in 1992 in Boston, Massachusetts for the Greater Boston Area and published out of the editorial offices in Cambridge, Massachusetts through the efforts of the Homeless Empowerment Project (HEP), a grassroots organization created to help end homelessness.
Western Massachusetts Hampshire Daily The Somerville Times: Somerville Middlesex Weekly Prospect Hill Publishing Corp. The Somerville/Medford News Weekly Somerville, Medford Middlesex Weekly South Boston Online: Boston: Suffolk: Weekly: South Boston Inc. Covers South Boston and Seaport District South End News: Boston: Suffolk: Weekly: South End ...
Cambridge (/ ˈ k eɪ m b r ɪ dʒ / [4] KAYM-brij) is a city in Middlesex County, Massachusetts, United States.It is a suburb in the Greater Boston metropolitan area, located directly across the Charles River from Boston.
The New England Confectionery Company Factory, also known as the NECCO Candy Factory, is a historic factory complex at 250 Massachusetts Avenue in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The property is now owned by DFS Advisors, and is under long-term lease to Novartis. The complex, which includes the factory building, a power plant, and a modern (2003 ...
WLVI (channel 56) is a television station licensed to Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States, serving the Boston area as an affiliate of The CW.It is owned by Sunbeam Television alongside WHDH (channel 7), an independent station.
E. Denise Simmons (born October 2, 1951) is the mayor [3] [4] [5] of Cambridge, Massachusetts, having served her first mayoral term 2008–2009, her second mayoral term 2016–2017, and her third mayoral term 2024–present.
A burglary ring that allegedly stole more than $4 million worth of jewelry mostly from the homes of South Asians in over two dozen communities has been broken up, the Massachusetts State Police said.
He is a graduate of Cambridge Rindge and Latin High School, Providence College, and Suffolk Law School. [3] He was first elected to the Cambridge City Council in 1994, becoming vice-mayor in 1998 and served as mayor of Cambridge from 2000 to 2001. [4] As Mayor, he chaired both the City Council and the School Committee.