Thursday Morning: Tom Brady In Car Accident

Published September 9, 2010

Lots of news on a fall-like Thursday morning in Boston:

WEEI: Tom Brady Involved In Car Accident

Sources have told the Dennis & Callahan Show that Tom Brady was involved in a car accident on the corner of Commonwealth and Gloucester in Boston Thursday morning. According to the report Brady was “shaken” and it was believed that the jaws of life were used in the accident and that a pole was down at the scene. (WEEI)

From the WBUR newsroom: Boston Police says there was a transport to Brigham & Women’s Hospital due to an accident but couldn’t confirm it was Brady. Following.

Update: The Globe confirms — through unnamed sources — that Brady was involved in a Back Bay car accident but did not require hospitalization.

Update: The Patriots confirm on Twitter (@realpatriots):

Patriots QB Tom Brady was in a car accident this morning. He was not hospitalized and is expected at Gillette Stadium today.

Fed Finds Growth In Boston Economy

The Federal Reserve survey of regional businesses, known as the Beige Book, has been gloomy for months. But now, New England businesses — especially in information technology, manufacturing, and defense — say they are hiring and that they are seeing more sales. (WBUR)

Poll: Majority Of Voters Support Sales Tax Rollback

A majority of Massachusetts voters want the state sales tax reduced from 6.25 percent to 3 percent, according to a new poll from the State House News Service. The measure is Question 3 on November’s ballot initiatives. (ElectionWire)

‘Heinous’ Murder Reignites Death Penalty Push

The “cold-blooded” murder of a Hyde Park deliveryman for his pocket cash and a pepperoni pizza has reignited the push to reinstate the death penalty — in the middle of a hotly contested gubernatorial campaign just as the race kicks into high gear. (Herald)

Emerson Has A New President

M. Lee Pelton, a Harvard-educated scholar of English and poetry, was named Emerson College’s next president yesterday, becoming the school’s first African-American president and one of a handful of black college leaders in the state.

What are you reading this morning?

How To Contribute To Richel Nova's Trust Fund

Published September 8, 2010

A reader e-mailed to ask how to contribute to the trust fund set up for the daughters of Richel Nova, the man who was stabbed to death last week while delivering a pizza in Hyde Park.

I called the mayor’s spokeswoman for the answer. You can make checks out to:

Richel Nova Trust for Education
c/o TD Bank
200 State St.
Boston, MA 02109

Nova worked two jobs to pay for his two daughters’ college education. Mayor Thomas Menino set up the fund to help them finish school.

More:

Stream The High Holidays With Rabbi B

Published September 8, 2010

With the Jewish New Year upon us, the Jews in my life kvetch about the difficulty and expense of securing tickets for services. At one friend’s synagogue, you don’t get in until you have paid dues for the year or have a payment plan in place. Some people are simply skipping out.

L'shanah tovah! (Travis K/Flickr)

L'shanah tovah! (Travis K/Flickr)

In Swampscott, a blogging rabbi is doing something novel to offset the high cost of high holidays. Baruch HaLevi — who goes by “Rabbi B” — is streaming his services as a live webcast. (When HaLevi started streaming a few years ago, he might have been the first and only.)

“It’s been received overwhelmingly positively,” HaLevi told me by phone. He’s big in nursing homes. He gets fan letters from people who watch and podcast his sermons in other countries.

Now the streaming idea has caught on with Temple Israel of Boston, and the Jerusalem Post covered the same idea at a congregation in Cincinnati.

“There a lot of restrictions to what we can or can’t do on the sabbath or holidays,” HaLevi said. “Some congregations might feel bound by that — we do, too, but we work around it.” So everything is set up in advance. (Think of Red Sox fans who leave the radio on all weekend long.)

[pullquote author=”Rabbi Baruch HaLevi”]”If you ask your average Jew how they feel about high-holiday services, you’re probably going to see a yawn.”[/pullquote]

The streaming service is free — unlike services in person — and, ironically, financed by dues-paying members. Sort of like public radio.  So why does Rabbi B do it?

“It’s our duty as Jews to be a light to the nations, and we cannot keep this indoors,” he says. “Our job is to make Judaism accessible to Jews and non-Jews.”

HaLevi says the biggest obstacle he confronts is one of inspiration.

“If you ask your average Jew how they feel about high-holiday services, you’re probably going to see a yawn,” he said. Either that or the person runs away “with their tail between their legs.”

HaLevi’s services end not with traditional music but with the stylings of Hasidic rapper Matisyahu.

For those who want to celebrate in person but can’t pay for tickets to traditional services, HaLevi is offering a free service on the beach in Swampscott tomorrow afternoon.

Related Links:

Cambridge (UK) Tops Cambridge (MA)

Published September 8, 2010

Ivy (Amaury Henderick/Flickr)

(Amaury Henderick/Flickr)

Harvard University is no longer the world’s best, according to an annual ranking of top universities. The No. 1 spot goes to the University of Cambridge, England, as the Guardian reports:

John O’Leary, executive member of the QS academic advisory board, blamed a hiring freeze for Harvard losing its top spot. “Cambridge has gone top because it has improved its citations. Harvard has taken more students and had a hiring freeze amongst its academics. That’s the reason these two have swapped around.”

Harvard had been No. 1 for the previous six years, since the list’s inception. So, as Cantabrigia notes, “Cambridge bests Cambridge.”

Maybe we need a dating site for nice Cambridge boys.

She Ate The Pizza

Published September 8, 2010

The front of the vacant Hyde Park home where Richel Nova was murdered. (Bianca Vazquez Toness/WBUR)

The front of the vacant Hyde Park home where Richel Nova was murdered. (Bianca Vazquez Toness/WBUR)

If you missed it, a must-read: WBUR’s Bianca Vazquez Toness interviewed Aline Valery, the best friend of one of the men accused of stabbing Richel Nova, the 58-year-old Domino’s Pizza delivery man, in Hyde Park last week.

The police had not yet talked to Valery, but I suspect they will now.

Valery said she saw one of the men after the stabbing took place, blood on his hands, and he stashed the pizza box in her fridge.

“All I seen was they were panicking. Alex had blood all over his pants and his shirt. I asked them what happened. And I guess they told me a lie, they told me that they was walking, they three was walking and somebody was drunk and somebody was trying to touch Yamiley’s butt and they got into a fight.”

Valery says they put a Domino’s pizza box into her refrigerator. And she went to sleep.

Valery had no idea what her friends would be accused of.

Valery said she was offered a slice.

Incredibly sad story. Nova worked multiple jobs to pay for his daughters’ college tuition. Boston Mayor Thomas Menino has set up a trust fund to help them get through school.

Funeral services were held for Nova in East Boston today. Three people have pleaded not guilty to murder charges.

Wednesday Morning: Who Won The Debate?

Published September 8, 2010

Massachusetts Republican gubernatorial candidate Charles D. Baker, left, independent Timothy Cahill, second left, moderator and political analyst Jon Keller, center, Gov. Deval Patrick, second right, and Green-Rainbow Party candidate Jill Stein, right, prepare for the first televised debate at the WBZ-TV studios on Tuesday. (Bizuayehu Tesfaye/AP)

Massachusetts Republican gubernatorial candidate Charles D. Baker, left, independent Timothy Cahill, second left, moderator and political analyst Jon Keller, center, Gov. Deval Patrick, second right, and Green-Rainbow Party candidate Jill Stein, right, prepare for the first televised debate at the WBZ-TV studios on Tuesday. (Bizuayehu Tesfaye/AP)

On this stormy Wednesday morning, Boston is buzzing about last night’s first televised gubernatorial debate. So who won?

Todd Domke:

Who won really depends on who watched. If the audience was relatively small, and mostly voters who have already made up their minds, the debate was probably not a game-changer. But with a four-candidate dynamic, little shifts in loyalty can make a big difference in the polls. From that perspective, the independent candidates did pretty well.

Dan Payne:

The big surprise for me was that independent Timothy Cahill was able to stand out simply by being less argumentative and giving clear and simple answers.

John Carroll:

The main event was Gov. Deval Patrick (D-We’re Number Whatever!) vs. GOP challenger Charlie Baker (R-Blue Shirt Republicans). Treasury Secretary Tim Cahill (I-Think I Can Win) and Jill Stein (G/R-Gee Are You Still Listening?) were decidedly the undercard.

WBUR’s Martha Bebinger said the debate came down to jobs, health care and taxes, with a few barbs traded over the Big Dig.

Did you watch the debate? Who won?

Update: WBZ posted the video.

Sound Bites: Guberfest Edition

Published September 7, 2010

WBZ’s Jon Keller moderates the first televised debate of the gubernatorial candidates live on Channel 4 at 7 p.m.

The State House News Service tells us what to expect:

From the epic Kennedy-Romney match at Faneuil Hall to the shouting matches between Paul Cellucci and Scott Harshbarger to “Would you like to see my tattoo, Tim?” Massachusetts has had its share of memorable debate moments. Could tonight add to the list?

Republican Charles Baker, left, independent Timothy Cahill and Democratic Gov. Deval Patrick chat ahead of a debate at Suffolk University in Boston on Aug. 16. (AP)

These guys! (AP)

The Boston Globe’s Joan Vennochi thinks the Big Dig and taxes will emerge as lines of attack in the back-and-forth between incumbent Gov. Deval Patrick and Republican challenger Charlie Baker.

Our brand new politics blog, ElectionWire, will have useful (and, inevitably, hilarious) analysis of the debate performance tomorrow morning — from none other than Dan Payne and Todd Domke.

If you missed it, independent challenger Tim Cahill said he will pick up a Democratic ballot in the primary election Sept. 14. And Gov. Patrick said, after much hounding from the Herald, he would support the will of the voters if they approve a sales-tax rollback.

And in non-gubernatorial election news, the woman Rep. Barney Frank called “a dining room table” at a town hall meeting, will challenge him in the 4th district. (I guess she isn’t taking the insult lying down.)

You Can Take Away Their TV But Not Their Spirit

Published September 7, 2010

Universal Hub covers what appears to be a protest by the famed chair club in Harvard Square. Karen Snyder (@gegertha) tweets:

Cardullos took away the tv for the Red Sox games. No problem … there are 4 guys there with their own chairs and a radio!

Cardullo’s, the gourmet market, suddenly removed the big-screen TV from its window last week, ending a tradition of devoted Red Sox fans gathering on the sidewalk to watch games. Or so we thought.

The club members watch the game on the flat screen inside Cardullo's display window. (Andrew Phelps/WBUR)

No more.

The Cambridge Chronicle printed a great letter from Harvey Silverglate (the Boston defense attorney I interviewed about BPD gang fliers once upon a time):

I realized how and why this obviously misguided decision was made: A consultant, described in your article as “a designer who came to the shop,” recommended the change. “Are you a sports bar or a gourmet food store?” the consultant reportedly asked. The question that the consultant should have asked, however, is whether a store that has become a Harvard Square institution can afford to deprive residents and passers-by of such a humanizing amenity without incurring considerable loss of goodwill.

And this from Hubbub commenter Bob Power:

To Whom It May Concern: I have been enjoying Harvard Sq. for forty years. I loved the classical record collection at the old COOP (now just another Barnes & Noble); the wondrous french press coffee at the original Coffee Connection (now just another Starbucks) and Cardullos great family tradition of quality food in a unique setting. If by “clean up” you plan to become as safe & boring as the national chains, why not sell the place to Walmart? Be yourself. Your are wonderful, unique, and needed.

Maybe I should move back to Brookline?

Introducing ElectionWire, With Payne & Domke

Published September 7, 2010

Dan Payne and Todd Domke are two of the most respected political analysts in Boston. Now you can get their wicked sharp commentary every day on ElectionWire, WBUR’s new blog for Election 2010 in Massachusetts — which, by the way, is eight weeks away.

ElectionWire logoThe hidden star is Benjamin Swasey, the ElectionWire editor and a political junkie. Ben does a phenomenal job rounding up the day’s news and links and putting them in context. He also keeps close tabs on what the candidates are saying and doing each day.

From the ElectionWire introduction:

It’s an important election year for the Bay State. Although the four-way gubernatorial race is the headliner, there are two open statewide offices — treasurer and auditor. The congressional races, especially the competitive 5th and 10th, enable voters here to shape the national agenda — and offer the GOP chances to enter the Mass. delegation. And don’t forget about November’s ballot questions.

The blog is hopping. Here’s a sample of what’s there today:

Definitely worth following if you care a lick about politics.

Tuesday Morning: Weekend Violence, Tom Brady, Guberfest

Published September 7, 2010

What’s news in Boston on an overcast Monday, er, Tuesday morning:

1 Killed, 3 Hurt In Lawrence Restaurant Shooting

Gunfire erupted inside a crowded restaurant early yesterday, leaving one man dead and three other people wounded, including two with life-threatening injuries, police said. Two suspects are under arrest. (Globe)

Tom Brady, Patriots Close In On $58 Million Extension

Patriots quarterback Tom Brady has been offered a three-year extension believed to be worth $58 million that works out to $19.3 million annually, according to sources close to the negotiation. (Herald)

Gov. Deval Patrick Vows To Honor Tax Cut

After repeatedly dodging the issue, Gov. Deval Patrick yesterday pledged to implement a state sales-tax rollback if ballot Question 3 is approved by voters in November. (Herald)

Tim Cahill To Vote In Democratic Primary

Treasurer Tim Cahill, an Independent candidate for governor, told the News Service Monday that he plans to cast his ballot in the Democratic primary next week. (State House News Service via Wicked Local Brookline)

Gubernatorial Candidates Will Debate On TV Tonight

The hour-long, prime-time event is a fitting way to kick-off the post-Labor Day charge. Just in the last week or so, a new poll indicates that the race is slightly tightening, despite reports that donations to Patrick have jumped. On Friday, both Baker and Cahill also released new TV ads. (ElectionWire)

Also: ElectionWire, WBUR’s new Election 2010 blog, formally launches today.

2 Shot, 1 Fatally, In Separate Incidents In Boston

Just after 8:30 p.m., police responded to the corner of Astoria and Elizabeth streets in the Mattapan section, where they found an 18-year-old man shot at least once, said police spokesman Eddy Chrispin. Then, at 11:17 p.m., a man was shot in the head at 9 Tonawanda St. in the Field’s Corner section of Dorchester. (Globe)

1 Killed, 2 Hurt In Malden Gunfight

A Malden man licensed to carry a firearm got into a gunfight with two men from Boston this morning, an encounter that left one man dead, another seriously wounded and the gun owner suffering from gunshot wounds, according to Malden Mayor Richard C. Howard. (Globe)

Globe Investigates Escort Ads On Boston.com

The escort ads on Boston.com were generated by Google, which runs search-oriented ads along the right column of the website. Globe officials said they have removed the ads. (Globe)

Also: Dave Copeland broke this story.

3 Tons Of Lobster Destroyed In Maine Fire

It took firefighters about two hours to extinguish the Sunday afternoon blaze at an industrial park warehouse used by a lobster company owned by Linda Bean. She is the granddaughter of L.L. Bean. (AP via Globe)

What are you reading?