DiCicco, Gulman & Company Now Accepting Applications for Pro Bono Summer of …

WOBURN, Mass., Jun 11, 2012 (BUSINESS WIRE) -- DiCicco, Gulman Company LLP (DGC), a CPA and business consulting firm that specializes in non-profit organizations, today announced that the firm will once again offer its pro bono Summer of Service program beginning June 15, 2012. To date, the firm has donated close to 1,000 hours and assisted more than 35 nonprofit Continue reading >>>

Generation couch surfer?

The economy and the collapse of the housing bubble gets much of the blame in yesterday's Globe piece, but there is more too it then that. If anything, home prices are still extravagantly high in Greater Boston, with some suburbs almost back to bubble years' levels and others having seen declines far short the big drops common elsewhere in the country. It just takes a lot to get onto the first rung of the housing ladder in the Boston area - you have to be bringing in, individually or collectively, six figures to afford the median-priced home. The median sale price in Middlesex Country, covering Continue reading >>>

Council denies PTC greenbelt purchase

A resident’s request to purchase a small amount of greenbelt to improve his backyard was denied by the Peachtree City Council Thursday night. Although Councilman Eric Imker was open to the request, the remainder of council agreed that the matter would set a precedent. Ming Lu, who lives at 706 Bostonian Trace in the Centennial subdivision, wanted to be able to create a slightly larger back yard for his children to play in and also extend his deck while adding a covered, screened porch to the deck. Part of Lu’s case was supported by the fact that the home next to him was Continue reading >>>

Toni Peabody, 89; outspoken wife of governor’s governor wife aided disabled; at 89

Nevertheless, he added, whenever his father “wanted to campaign again, she did not ­always say, ‘OK, let’s do another one.’ She’d say, ‘Are you kidding me?’ She’d push him very hard to give her a good reason why he should do it, why he should put his family through this again. My mother always had the urge to serve her family first.”

Finding family

Pressley believes many women of color assume they’re not “mentor material.’’ She recalls meeting one black woman, a hairstylist, who was concerned about whether she could make the cut. “In her mind, she felt there was a very specific sort of profile that makes someone fit to be a mentor . . .; a very specific kind of a professional, a lawyer or someone with a PhD,’’ Pressley explains. “I told her, ‘You are appropriate, and you are worthy, and you are good enough.’ ’’

Mocking Boston: antique edition

Google Books The cover of an Oct. 19, 1911 issue of Life about Boston. Taking digs at Boston is almost a national pastime. The city is a little cold, a little snobby, and a little full of itself—as we’re constantly reminded by the barbs of national politicians and the frustrated, if more affectionate, grousing of Bostonians themselves. Roll back the clock a hundred years, though, and you’ll find...actually, you’ll find the exact same complaints. In 1911, most of an entire magazine issue was published simply to make fun of Boston. The illustrations Continue reading >>>

joan vennochi Politicians still seek the labor vote

The big-picture battle for survival that Mandarini addressed so passionately looks even more dire now, after labor failed to oust Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker from office. Walker cut collective bargaining rights for most public workers and lived to fight another day. With his triumph, the political ground shifts. But how much?Don’t count labor’s political influence out just yet. In the Massachusetts Senate race, at least, both sides want the votes of union members. But the Democratic and Republican camps are both recalibrating how to secure them.Democrats are still seeking union support Continue reading >>>

Mayor: ‘Nothing to apologize for’

The war of words between Mayor Thomas M. Menino and clothing mogul Greg Selkoe heated up this week after a media report said Menino administration officials claimed the young entrepreneur was once fired by the city. Selkoe demanded an apology from the mayor after WGBH-TV host Emily Rooney said on her show “Greater Boston” that “the mayor’s office” told her Selkoe was fired by the Boston Redevelopment Authority. “He can’t go around saying things that are completely false,” Selkoe told the Herald. “It’s an attempt to damage my reputation. The mayor should apologize to me.” Selkoe Continue reading >>>