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Front Page - 2011-03-17

Hundreds of bodies wash ashore in quake-hit Japan

TAGAJO, Japan - There are just too many bodies. Hundreds of dead have washed ashore on Japan's devastated northeast coast since last week's earthquake and tsunami. Others were dug out of the debris Monday by firefighters using pickaxes and chain saws. Funeral homes and crematoriums are overwhelmed, and officials have run out of body bags and coffins. More »

Interview: Libyan rebels plead for no-fly zone

BAYDA, Libya - A rebel leader pleaded Saturday with the international community to approve a no-fly zone over Libya as Moammar Gadhafi's forces gained strength in the east, securing a key port city and oil refinery. More »

Would-be soldiers hope for revival of Haitian army

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti - Their military fatigues faded and their grizzled faces stern, the squad of veterans barks out orders to rows of young men and women who sweat as they run through exercises under the blazing Caribbean sun. More »

Unions frame bargaining as civil rights issue

WASHINGTON - Labor unions at the heart of a burning national disagreement over the cost of public employees want to frame the debate as a civil rights issue, an effort that may draw more sympathy to public workers being blamed for busting state budgets with generous pensions. More »


Tito Jackson wins District 7 in a landslide

Heavy favorite Tito Jackson easily beat Cornell Mills in the District 7 city council race to replace the ousted Chuck Turner. A former aide to Gov. Deval Patrick and son of a community activist, Jackson earned 82 percent of the vote. More »

'Winds of change'

Former President of Zanzibar Amani Abeid Karume shed light last week on the popular revolutions sweeping northern Africa to an eager crowd at Boston University. In his lecture, Karume called on Western nations to end their support for autocratic regimes in Africa, and to instead back real democracy in the region. More »

Critics question effectiveness of Civil Rights Commission

WASHINGTON - Halfway through his term, President Barack Obama is moving to wrest control of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights from Republican appointees, but questions are being raised about its future and its ability to create a better America for victims of discrimination. More »