US – Saturday, November 21
Shave and a haircut — Elliott’s $.02
You’ll notice none of America’s problems have been solved. Well, you can only blame yourself for not doing a good enough job of demanding the government act on the brilliant ideas I’ve been dispensing every week in Metro, the world’s greatest newspaper. Don’t bother groveling for forgiveness; it demeans us both.

 
The last of the original urban village
It was once a vibrant neighborhood, but was cleared out to make way for hospitals, hotels and upscale condos emblematic of a new Boston. Fifty years later, those that remember the neighbors and streets of the "old" West End are becoming as scarce as the landmarks of their youth.
 
First drop in Mass. jobless rate since ’07
The state unemployment rate fell to 8.9 percent in October, marking the first decline in over two years, according to state labor officials.

 
Kids stand by as reform debated
Eighth-graders at the Excel Academy Charter School in East Boston scored tops in Massachusetts on the English and math MCAS tests last year, a feat that left principal Komal Bhasin and her staff both proud and motivated to continue their success.
 
These Orphans are not afraid to play with ‘Dolls’
Ryan Landry and his Gold Dust Orphans have long been having their way with some of the greatest films of all time. Finally, the men, women and not-so-easily-identifiable members of this ridiculously talented troupe take on the big kahuna of camp, “Valley of the Dolls.”
 
Exploring every ‘Avenue Q’ puppet
The fuzzy puppets that inhabit “Avenue Q” won’t teach their audiences how to sing the ABC’s. These mature Sesame Street-like adult puppets have real problems: sex, racism, morals and finding a purpose in life. 
 
Time to erase fourth-and-2
The Patriots sound like they’re sick of talking about it.
 
UMass heads the crowded HEA pack
UMass sits atop Hockey East going into the weekend. But not by much.
 
T time
What to do and where to go. 
 
Published 21:14, June the 30th, 2008
 
Gov. Deval Patrick and Mayor Thomas Menino met with the media yesterday to announce the latest steps in the Jackson Square revitalization project. Gov. Deval Patrick and Mayor Thomas Menino met with the media yesterday to announce the latest steps in the Jackson Square revitalization project.
Photo: NATHAN FRIED-LIPSKI/METRO
 

City, state join to ‘change the face’ of Jackson Square

It’s the pivotal intersection that serves as the unofficial gateway between Jamaica Plain and Roxbury, but for years, a dormant Jackson Square has waited patiently while other blocks in the city have been redeveloped.

Planners have spent more than a decade figuring out how best to reconfigure and revitalize Jackson Square — at the corner of Columbus Avenue and Centre Street — that currently contains empty lots, chained-link fences and several run-down buildings. But yesterday, officials promised the wait is over.

Gov. Deval Patrick announced a $3.1 million MORE grant for streetscape and public way improvements in Jackson Square, a move that will jump-start  the first of the $250 million project’s four phases. The project will include mixed-use buildings with 436 new units (59 percent affordable housing), office space, restaurants, ground-floor retail stores and a marketplace at the T’s shed building on Centre Street.

The 11-acre development will include also two recreational buildings — a youth and family center and a facility with basketball and tennis courts and ice skating rink. The project will also improve pedestrian access to the Jackson Square T station.

“This will change the face of Jackson Square,” said Mayor Thomas Menino.

Officials say the project, which could break ground next year, will create 185 new jobs, as well as green space — including a new park and a revamped Southwest Corridor Park — for families to enjoy.

“There will be three acres of new open space, our own little greenway in Jackson Square,” said Mossik Hacobian, president of Urban Edge, a local community development group.    

 
 
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MMMpod
The November MMMpod features interviews and music with a band called Girls, a band of girls called Supercute, and a supercute vampire. Yes, listeners, we have Pattinson!



 
 
Metro Life Panel