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Newspaper Area County Frequency [verification needed] Circulation [verification needed] Publisher/parent company Athol Daily News [1] Athol: Franklin: Daily: Newspapers of New England, Inc. The Berkshire Eagle: Pittsfield: Berkshire: Daily: 23,835: New England Newspapers Inc. The Boston Globe: Boston: Suffolk: Daily: 245,572
After converting The Daily News Transcript to a weekly newspaper in 2009, GateHouse made a similar move with its Waltham property in August 2010, adopting a semiweekly printing schedule for the renamed Waltham News Tribune, and focusing that paper's coverage on its home city. GateHouse continued to cover Newton via the Newton Tab, a weekly ...
Judge allows plaintiff's false arrest case to go to trial, and also finds substantially true' his claims that one Newton officer had abused girlfriend Judge finds Newton officers lacked cause for ...
Newton is a city in Middlesex County, Massachusetts, United States.It is roughly 8 miles (13 km) west of downtown Boston, and comprises a patchwork of thirteen villages.. The city borders Boston to the northeast and southeast (via the neighborhoods of Brighton and West Roxbury), Brookline to the east, Watertown and Waltham to the north, and Weston, Wellesley, and Needham to the we
At 4:21 p.m. Wednesday, authorities said police responded to the home in Wakefield, about 45 miles northeast from the state capital city of Concord. Officers found four deceased adults in the house.
Tab Communications Inc. (also called Tabloid Newspaper Publishers), based first in Newton, Massachusetts, United States, then in nearby Needham, was a weekly newspaper publisher in Greater Boston before being bought by Fidelity Investments in 1992 and dissolved into Community Newspaper Company in 1996.
Newton Centre is one of the thirteen villages within the city of Newton in Middlesex County, Massachusetts, United States. The main commercial center of Newton Centre is a triangular area surrounding the intersections of Beacon Street , Centre Street, and Langley Road.
After his death in the 1890s it was subdivided according to a plan by the engineering firm of Aspinwall and Lincoln. The area was outfitted with all of the latest amenities: water, sewer, and gas lines, and electrical service, and was described in a 1907 newspaper article as "Newton's choicest residential section". [2]