Harlem Globetrotters at TD Garden, Sat, Mar 31 7:00pExperience the world famous tradition of ball handling wizardry, basketball artistry and one-of-a-ki...more Handel and Haydn Society Presents Bach's St. Matthew Passion at Boston Symphony Hall, Sun, Apr 1 3:00pGiven its first complete performance in this country by H&H in 1879, the St. Matthew Passion is ...moreBoston Celtics vs. Miami Heat at TD Garden, Sun, Apr 1 3:30p...more"e" inc. hosts the Wild and Scenic Film Festival -- EcoFest at Atlantic Wharf, Sat, Mar 31 12:00pJoin us at Atlantic Wharf for a day of science and arts activities,short film programs, a wonderful ...moreWalking Tour: Back Bay, Beacon Hill and the Downtown Freedom Trail at Boston Public Library - Central Branch, Fri, Mar 30 12:30pBegin in the elegant Back Bay, find out how the Back Bay was filled, check out the great 19th centur...more
 | | |  |  | One day, when Barbara Martin was 11 years old and lounging around her Tennessee home with her three siblings, their mother returned from a backyard foray with some unexpected marching orders. For three decades, Dr. Gerard T. Berry has studied a rare, potentially lethal genetic disease that makes milk poison to an infant. Still, it’s difficult for him to know exactly what life will be like for 1-year-old Oliver Siminoff, a ferocious crawler with a penchant for high-fives. Few people’s careers are set into motion at age 6. But that’s what happened for Carolyn Rubenstein, whose family spent a week at a camp in Maine, owned by friends, for children with cancer. Rubenstein later volunteered at Camp Sunshine and, while new in high school, started a nonprofit corporation to benefit teens with cancer. Now 24 and a Harvard ... |  |  | | |
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