US – Sunday, March 21
The Senate’s Weak Health Care Bill
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid “got to 60” at 1:08 yesterday morning, clearing a key Republican hurdle and keeping the Senate’s version of a health care reform bill on track for passage before Christmas.
 
Alumni look for like-minded fans
When last month’s apocalyptic snowstorm never hit, despite empty streets outside, 50 Syracuse basketball fans still attended a local alumni association basketball watch party at the Pour House.
 
MBTA steps up for Riverside riders
Riverside Line commuters only have to endure two more days of bus service as Secretary of Transportation Jeffery Mullen estimated yesterday that the D line will be open for the Monday morning commute.  
 
Twenty years without a clue
For the past twenty years officials at the Isabella Stewart Gardner museum have been working with FBI agents the U.S. Attorney’s office to bring back 13 stolen artifacts that were infamously stolen on March 18th, 1990.  
 
Two tickets to ‘Paradise Lost’
“Paradise Lost” is a Depression-era drama rife with parallels to the current economic and political climate. In the wrong hands, a predictable production of Clifford Odets’ period piece could bore an entire audience into a coma.
 
‘I’ll be your mama’
Sandra Shipley says she wants a lot of people to come see her in “Entertaining Mr. Sloane,” but there’s one person she’s a little nervous about.
 
Buchholz: Season in majors the goal
For three years, the Red Sox have implored Clay Buchholz to slow down. Still, who could blame the right-hander for wishing April 9 was here already?
 
Cooke-ing up a B’s grudge match
When the Bruins and Penguins face off tonight at the Garden, it will be more than a chance for the Bruins to hang on to the final playoff spot in the East.
 
T Time: Week of February 26, 2010
Where to go and what to see
 
Published 20:42, November the 19th, 2009
 
James Campano, left, and Bruce Guarino, stand by one of the last remaining West End homes. James Campano, left, and Bruce Guarino, stand by one of the last remaining West End homes. 
Photo: NICOLAUS CZARNECKI/METRO
 

The last of the original urban village

Eminant domain claimed the West End

The redevelopment of the West End was announced in the early 1950s. Despite rampant opposition to the plan by residents, they were handed eviction letters in early 1958 saying the city had taken over their homes by eminent domain. Bulldozing began soon thereafter.

City officials said the neighborhood was a slum and many of its areas unsafe. They sought higher tax revenues through a revamped neighborhood, but residents then and now classified the West End as a united community that was torn apart.

"There was a strong bond," Campano said. "It was different than a lot of neighborhoods."

More than 20 ethnic groups were once present in the neighborhood.

 

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.

“Watching them clear out our house,” said Jim Campano, 68, of the memories of his last moments as a resident of the West End, most of which was razed in a controversial case of urban renewal.

The Campanos, who moved to Somerville, were among roughly 12,000 West End residents displaced. Today, Campano helps keep alive memories of the old neighborhood as the editor-publisher of “The West Ender.”

However, nearly half of the latest edition contains obituaries and death notices, a grim reminder that the number of those who can still recall the thin, crowded, diverse streets of the long-gone neighborhood is shrinking. The original "West Enders" are an endangered species.

Campano himself is one of three surviving members from a family of 11.

“It was a street society. Everyone would come out and play and everyone knew each other,” said Campano, who runs The West End Museum with 70-year-old Bruce Guarino, an old classmate at St. Joseph’s Parochial School on now-defunct Chambers Street. “But a lot of them have passed away.

“The last one out will have to shut the lights.”

 
 
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MMMpod
The March MMMpod features conversation and music from Surfer Blood and The Allman Brothers Band (There's a double-bill you're not too likely to see. However, Gregg Allman does mention Hannah Montana!). We also speak with Vampire Weekend and the Dropkick Murphys.