Patriots 34, Colts 27

Tom Brady, Bill Belichick, and the rest of the Patriots left Indianapolis with a 5-0 record, and that?s what mattered most to them.

Barry Chin/Globe staff

CHRISTOPHER L. GASPER

Patriots? victory was kind of a letdown

With revenge on their minds, the Patriots couldn?t get the Colts to submit to a primetime public shaming.

//c.o0bg.com/rf/image_90x90/Boston/2011-2020/2015/10/19/BostonGlobe.com/Sports/Images/CRpfo_xUEAEClXM.png Colts? attempt at trick play goes horribly wrong

On a fourth-and-3 in the third quarter, all but two Colts players lined up on the right side of the field. The trick play failed.

Patriots 34, Colts 27

//c.o0bg.com/rf/image_90x90/Boston/2011-2020/2015/10/19/BostonGlobe.com/Sports/Images/chin101815PatriotsatColts_spt48.jpg Patriots turn Colts? miscue into a victory

The Colts botched a trick play in the third quarter, a treat for the Patriots.

//c.o0bg.com/rf/image_90x90/Boston/2011-2020/2015/10/19/BostonGlobe.com/Metro/Images/200_jessica_kensky.jpg After second amputation, bombing survivor forges ahead

Jess Kensky misses both legs every day. But she is more than alive now; she is upright and mobile.

The Three-Year Swim Club girls? team in 1939 seen in Newburyport native Julie Checkoway?s new book ?The Three-Year Swim Club: The Untold Story of Maui?s Sugar Ditch Kids and Their Quest for Olympic Glory.?

The Alexander and Baldwin Sugar Museum

How swimmers fought anti-Japanese sentiment on quest for gold

Newburyport native Julie Checkoway?s new book relates the tale of a Japanese-American teacher and the impoverished children he turned into record-setting swimmers.

//c.o0bg.com/rf/image_90x90/Boston/2011-2020/2015/10/18/BostonGlobe.com/Metro/Images/151018_KDB_PLANE_PULL_0009.jpg Peace is the focus at new memorial to Krystle Campbell

The Medford garden honors the victims of the Marathon bombings and MIT Police Officer Sean Collier.

Stat

//c.o0bg.com/rf/image_90x90/Boston/2011-2020/2015/10/02/BostonGlobe.com/Metro/Images/151001_STATDementia_Ackerman(2).jpg Efforts spread to aid dementia sufferers

As the number of Americans with Alzheimer?s soars, communities train everyone from waitresses to bank tellers to be ?dementia friendly.?

//c.o0bg.com/rf/image_90x90/Boston/2011-2020/2015/10/19/BostonGlobe.com/Metro/Images/moynahan150-8968.jpg Mass. native, actress Bridget Moynahan weds businessman

The Longmeadow-bred actress who stars in ?Blue Bloods? and used to date Tom Brady hinted at the fact she got married over the weekend.

//c.o0bg.com/rf/image_90x90/Boston/2011-2020/2015/10/13/BostonGlobe.com/Business/Images/101215_diabetes_bear_0099AA.jpg High-tech teddy bear teaches kids about health

Jerry the Bear is helping sick kids learn to take care of themselves, and his creators hope the next version will charm its way into the homes of healthy children, too.

Not all restaurant owners are sold on a no-tips policy

Kamariah Jackman looks forward to being paid better on slow days.

Josh Reynolds for The Boston Globe

Some wait staff, who can earn between $50,000 and $100,000 a year, also are hesitant.

A Boston Municipal Court judge ruled last week that former House Speaker Tom Finneran should have his seized pension reinstated.

Adrian Walker

Tom Finneran gets the last laugh

Somehow, by a logic only the judge who found in his favor seems to understand, the former House speaker stands to get his pension back.

Boston City Hall.

For some, short days in City Hall

A push by councilors to give themselves a raise has cast a spotlight on the debate about the workload of the 13-member body.

//c.o0bg.com/rf/image_90x90/Boston/2011-2020/2015/10/19/BostonGlobe.com/Metro/Images/200_essaibi_george_campbell.jpg Maura Healey to endorse Boston City Council candidates

Annissa Essaibi-George and Andrea Campbell are hoping to unseat incumbents and grab seats on the 13-member council.

JONATHAN WIGGS/GLOBE STAFF

Faculty bullying alleged at UMass

What began as minor personality clashes at the chemical engineering department in Amherst has mushroomed in the past three years.

Former House speaker Salvatore F. DiMasi with his wife, Deborah. The former legislator now has stage-four cancer of the tongue, his wife said.

Sal DiMasi?s wife appeals for compassionate release law

Deborah DiMasi asked state legislators to pass a law to help critically ill inmates ? like her husband, the ex-House speaker.

A look at the fantasy sports website DraftKings.

DraftKings still operating in Nevada, despite order

The Boston-based fantasy sports site accepted entries into its contests this weekend, apparently defying an order to quit operating.

Drug pricing uproar shakes biotechs

At stake for companies is how much money they can raise and the level of potential profits for investors and insiders alike.

The Big Picture

Protesters opening their umbrellas, symbols of the pro-democracy movement, in 2014.

Reuters

The Umbrella Movement, one year later

A year after Hong Kong riot police fired tear gas at pro-democracy protesters, a Reuters photographer revisited the scenes.

BetaBoston

Innovation Economy

//c.o0bg.com/rf/image_90x90/Boston/2011-2020/2015/01/11/BostonGlobe.com/Business/Images/kirsner_new_20150111.jpg Startups serve up ways to get patients to take meds

They?re part of the entrepreneurial drive to solve a problem that costs the health care system hundreds of billions of dollars.

Crux

JOHN L. ALLEN JR. | ALL THINGS CATHOLIC

//c.o0bg.com/rf/image_90x90/Boston/2011-2020/2014/09/07/BostonGlobe.com/Foreign/Images/allen_20140906.jpg Synod on families must not lose sight of bigger issues

Bishops may find themselves accused of having spent the last three weeks fiddling, while everyplace other than Rome burns.