For $25, you can legally keep honey bees in Boston
The change to the city’s zoning codes was resoundingly approved Wednesday, opening up avenues for small-time residential beekeepers.
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Local faculty and staff divided over Gaza protests, administrators’ handling of encampments
As pro-Palestinian protests continue to roil Boston-area colleges, some professors and staff are supporting protesters — and others backing the administration. -
Healey supports police response at Emerson and Northeastern
Gov. Healey supported the right to protest on college campuses, but called out "threats of violence and disruption of students' access to safe education." -
'One Last Word' finds the comedy in what happens when you tell someone how you really feel
Author Suzanne Park's new rom-com is a novel centered around a Korean tech entrepreneur — and what happens when her new app accidentally sends intimate messages to all the important people in her life. -
A new group wants Mass. to be 'the first state to end hunger, permanently'
The Make Hunger History Coalition is made up of anti-hunger advocates, organizations and policymakers, and their ultimate goal is to eliminate hunger in the Bay State. -
‘This is too important’: Students share why they risk school discipline and relationships to encamp for Gaza
Some protesters are navigating dicey family dynamics and potential university discipline related to their pro-Palestinian activism. -
Indian-Canadian musician Kiran Ahluwalia is 'shedding her shame' in new album 'Comfort Food'
Ahluwalia says there can be a 'kind of loneliness' in dissenting from Hindu fundamentalism. -
Poll finds Mass. residents are dissatisfied with primary care
One-third of Massachusetts residents are dissatisfied with their ability to find a primary care doctor, according to a new Suffolk University-Boston Globe poll. -
Fenway Health to shut down Boomerangs thrift stores
Three Boomerangs stores have been losing money for several years; approximately 50 people will be losing their jobs.