From The Boston Globe <[email protected]>
Subject Today's Headlines: A demolition. A garden. An umpire’s mask. How one city moved forward after a mass shooting.
Date November 27, 2023 10:11 AM
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Today's Headlines
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Monday, November 27, 2023


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Today's Headlines

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Today's Paper
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Metro
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Opinion
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Sports
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Arts
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Comics
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Crossword





Page one







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Nation


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A demolition. A garden. An umpire’s mask. How one city moved forward after a mass shooting.

Every place shattered by a mass shooting has to decide what to remember, and what to leave behind. In this way, Lewiston, Maine, might look to Thousand Oaks, Calif., which is marking five years since its community was irrevocably changed.
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Retail


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Why landlords hold the post-pandemic fate of downtown in their hands like never before

Restaurants and retailers still struggling to meet the terms of leases they signed before COVID are approaching landlords with creative proposals to restructure their monthly rent check. The answers often determine the fate of the business.
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Politics


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Effort aims for greater equity in the state’s fractured public health system

A bill under consideration in the state Legislature would make new public health standards law.
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Elections


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Efforts to undermine voters’ decisions are part of a perilous pattern, specialists say

Democracy experts say state lawmakers who try to reject the will of the voters are starting down a dangerous path.
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World


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As Hamas releases more hostages, longer cease-fire appears possible

A third group of Gaza Strip hostages, including a 4-year-old American girl whose parents were killed in the Hamas raids on Israel, was freed Sunday, raising the prospect more captives could be set free and a fragile truce extended.
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The Nation






Politics


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Members of Congress head for the exits, many citing dysfunction

More than three dozen members of Congress have announced they will not seek reelection next year, some to pursue other offices and many others simply to get out of Washington.
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Nation


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US troops still train on weapons with known risk of brain injury

Despite recognition of the dangers from blast waves of weapons, training for soldiers have continued largely as it did before.
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Nation


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Stabbing of Derek Chauvin raises questions about inmate safety

The stabbing was the latest in a series of attacks against high-profile inmates, including Whitey Bulger, in the troubled, short-staffed federal Bureau of Prisons.
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The World






World


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Need therapy? In West Africa, hairdressers can help.

About 150 women have received mental health training in West and Central African cities from a nonprofit trying to fill a critical gap: providing mental health care in one of the world’s poorest regions — where counseling remains barely accessible, let alone accepted.
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World


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Raped during Ethiopia’s war, survivors now rejected by their families

More than 100,000 women may have been raped during the two-year civil war in Ethiopia's northern Tigray region, according to a comprehensive study.
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World


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Ukrainian attack cuts power to some Russian-occupied areas

The overnight attack was another sign of Kyiv’s determination to inflict damage on its adversary’s electricity infrastructure before what many in Ukraine expect will be a renewed wintertime assault by Russia on Ukraine’s power grid.
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Editorial & Opinion






OPINION


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‘Napoleon’ isn’t accurate? Excuse me, mate, were you there?

Though, yes, there is a howler or two.
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EDITORIAL


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Challenges to Trump’s eligibility are murky at best. But there is a clear way to stop him.

Even the perception that the next president was chosen by legal maneuvers, as opposed to the will of the people, could cause more damage to the Republic. Trump should be defeated at the ballot box instead.
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LETTERS


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The world is setting climate records — this is not a good thing

We need to focus on this crisis as if we were on a sinking ship. This is our "all hands on deck" moment.
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Metro






Transportation


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What to know about the upcoming Green Line closures

Much of the MBTA’s oldest line — including all its downtown Boston rails — will close for more than a week Monday as workers repair tunnels, rails, and ties.
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Massachusetts


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More than 80 years later, the victims of the Cocoanut Grove fire are remembered

Families of victims and survivors remembered the club fire, which broke out the evening of Nov. 28, 1942, and killed at least 490 attendees.
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Vermont


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Three Palestinian college students shot while visiting Burlington, Vt., according to police

All three are 20-year-old men, who attend Brown University, Trinity College, and Haverford College, according to the schools.
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Sports






Sports


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Christian school that objected to transgender athlete sues Vermont after it’s banned from competing

Mid Vermont Christian School of Quechee forfeited the Feb. 21 game, saying it believed that the transgender player jeopardized “the fairness of the game and the safety of our players.”
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Nicole Yang | State of the Patriots


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The quarterback controversy continues to swirl, but it really doesn’t matter — the Patriots stink

The Patriots are too dysfunctional on offense for either QB to make a difference.
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Ben Volin | Instant Analysis


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Ugly loss to the Giants seals it: It’s over for Bill Belichick with the Patriots

The coach had two weeks to prepare his team after the bye, and the Patriots came out flat, sloppy, and unprepared.
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Business








THE FINE PRINT


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Cash is no longer king. Paying by plastic is the new norm.

As use of a credit or debit card becomes second nature for many of us even for the smallest purchases, some businesses are looking for ways to get around the state's must-accept-cash law.
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Business


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Are old Facebook posts fair game in labor protests? Construction company and laborers’ union are heading to court to find out.

A lawsuit highlights the uneasy dynamic between construction firms and labor unions.
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innovation economy


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‘Cambridge, we have a problem’: The true story of NASA’s center in Kendall Square

The NASA Electronics Research Center, which will soon be knocked down, is “the only major center the space agency has closed,” according to the author of the official NASA history.
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Obituaries






Obituaries


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Judge Baron H. Martin, a groundbreaking Black lawyer for MBTA, dies at 97

“If I made a difference in one life, just one, that’s important,” Mr. Martin said when he reached the mandatory retireent age for state judges of 70.
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Obituaries


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Marty Krofft, co-creator of fantastical TV shows, dies at 86

Marty Krofft, who, with his brother Sid, created a string of television shows that captured audiences from Saturday morning to prime time, including fantastical children’s fare, like “H.R. Pufnstuf” and “Land of the Lost,” and variety shows, like “Donny and Marie,” died Saturday in Los Angeles. He was 86.
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Arts & Lifestyle






Music


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Dozens of young people have created a thriving underground concert scene. The only challenge: keeping it underground.

House shows are a draw for young people migrating to Boston. In a city with a lackluster nightlife scene that’s financially and logistically inaccessible for many, student-run concerts provide a place for twenty-somethings to hang out.
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Names


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Vermilion Theater presents ‘God of Carnage’ as a Mandarin and English production

Yasmina Reza’s acclaimed 2008 comedy is about a conversation between two privileged couples that collapses into vehement disputes.
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Arts


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On Instagram and TikTok, annotating books is an art

Eboni Thompson's Instagram isn't just an ode to the classic literature that she loves. It's also a celebration of annotation: Warmly lit video reels linger on the colorful tabs that fringe the edges of her Penguin Classics, the ruler-straight lines highlighting important passages and the margins where neat handwriting frames each page.
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