From The Boston Globe <[email protected]>
Subject Today's Headlines: The most complicated election in modern history is coming — soon. Are we prepared?
Date September 20, 2020 10:19 AM
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Today's Headlines
Sunday, September 20, 2020

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Today's Headlines

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Page one







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Politics


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The most complicated election in modern history is coming — soon. Are we prepared?

Experts worry about a nightmare election during a pandemic marred by disenfranchisement and chaos, followed by an acrimonious legal and political dispute over the results that would test the nation’s democratic resolve.
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Politics


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The fate of Ginsburg’s successor rests with a handful of Senate Republicans

Buttressed by senators like Lindsey Graham, President Trump and Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell said they have every intent of moving quickly to fill the vacancy left by the death of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
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Politics


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Cash is flowing over confirmation battle for Supreme Court vacancy

Just hours after Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s death was announced Friday, the leaders of three of the left’s most potent advocacy groups, Demand Justice, Naral Pro-Choice America, and Indivisible, were on a call with 1,000 progressive activists and strategists to begin to unfurl a plan they hoped they would not have to use.
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The Great Divide


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Educational inequality likely to widen this fall as white students return to school and students of color learn from home

Roughly two-thirds of Black and Hispanic students live in districts where schools are starting the year remotely. By contrast, most white students—about 70 percent—live in school districts with “hybrid” back-to-school plans that include some learning time inside school classrooms.
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Television


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Who’ll win at the Emmys, who should, and who got left behind

Globe TV critic Matthew Gilbert offers his best guesses and biggest complaints.
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The Nation






Politics


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The most complicated election in modern history is coming — soon. Are we prepared?

Experts worry about a nightmare election during a pandemic marred by disenfranchisement and chaos, followed by an acrimonious legal and political dispute over the results that would test the nation’s democratic resolve.
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Continue reading &rarr;





Politics


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The fate of Ginsburg’s successor rests with a handful of Senate Republicans

Buttressed by senators like Lindsey Graham, President Trump and Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell said they have every intent of moving quickly to fill the vacancy left by the death of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
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Continue reading &rarr;







Politics


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Cash is flowing over confirmation battle for Supreme Court vacancy

Just hours after Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s death was announced Friday, the leaders of three of the left’s most potent advocacy groups, Demand Justice, Naral Pro-Choice America, and Indivisible, were on a call with 1,000 progressive activists and strategists to begin to unfurl a plan they hoped they would not have to use.
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The World






World


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Russia is slow to administer COVID-19 vaccine despite Kremlin’s approval

More than a month after becoming the first country to approve a coronavirus vaccine, Russia has yet to administer it to a large population outside a clinical trial, health officials and outside experts say.
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World


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Canada’s Napa Valley seeks elusive audience: Canadian wine drinkers

Canadian gastronomy may be better known for poutine, gravy-drenched cheese fries, than for pinot noir. But a new generation of winemakers is putting the Okanagan Valley on the global wine map, alongside famed regions like Bordeaux, Tuscany, and Napa Valley.
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World


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Thai protesters reinstall plaque symbolizing democracy

Anti-government demonstrators occupying a historic field in the Thai capital on Sunday installed a plaque symbolizing the country’s transition to democracy to replace the original one that was mysteriously ripped and stolen three years ago, as they vowed to press on with calls for new elections and reform of the monarchy.
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Editorial & Opinion






OPINION


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Why ranked choice is the wrong choice

Massachusetts elections are won by the candidate who gets the most votes. That’s a better system than the one Question 2 would create.
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OPINION


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New allegations evoke an American tradition of violating Black and brown women’s bodies

A whistleblower claims immigrant women in ICE custody were subjected to forced sterilization. No one should be surprised.
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OPINION


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What’s at stake in a new Supreme Court

If Trump gets a conservative justice, environmental regulations, Roe v. Wade, the Affordable Care Act, and affirmative action programs would be in jeopardy
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Metro






The Great Divide


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Educational inequality likely to widen this fall as white students return to school and students of color learn from home

Roughly two-thirds of Black and Hispanic students live in districts where schools are starting the year remotely. By contrast, most white students—about 70 percent—live in school districts with “hybrid” back-to-school plans that include some learning time inside school classrooms.
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Metro


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Mass. reports 26 new deaths, 569 new cases of COVID-19 Saturday

Massachusetts’s health department reported new deaths due to COVID-19 Saturday, along with new confirmed cases of the virus.
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Metro


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Ruth Bader Ginsburg remembered locally, at Harvard

On Saturday, mourners gathered at Harvard Law School and grieved the jurist, who persevered her way to the US Supreme Court, opening doors of opportunity for women and others at stops along the way.
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Sports






Sunday hockey notes


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Well-traveled Geoff Ward has found a coaching home with Calgary

The Flames' dossier includes three first-round exits in the last four years, and four coaches in the last five.
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Sunday baseball notes


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With few days off in MLB playoffs, pitching staffs will have to be managed differently

Once the best-of-three first round ends, a team could conceivably play 12 games over 13 days before getting to the World Series.
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Sunday football notes


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Patriots, Seahawks bring impressive defenses into Sunday night showdown

The Patriots had nine defensive backs who played at least 44 percent of the snaps in the Week 1 win over the Dolphins.
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Business











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Ideas








IDEAS


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Algorithms may never really figure us out — thank goodness

Life turns out to be messier than computerized decision-making systems usually can account for.
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IDEAS


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Social Studies: White women and interracial marriage, changing views on the death penalty

Unexpected findings from the world of social science
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Obituaries






Obituaries


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Kathleen Bruyere, Navy captain who helped win right for women to serve at sea, dies at 76

Joining a military branch steeped in a tradition of "iron men in wooden ships," Kathleen Bruyere went on to become a trailblazer for women in the Navy, rising to the rank of captain, shaping policies on sexual discrimination and working to expand opportunities for women to serve "not for self but for country," in the words of the Navy's unofficial motto.
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Obituaries


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Henrietta Boggs, southerner who spread her wings, dies at 102

At every turn Ms. Boggs challenged the segregated and patriarchal society in which she was raised. As a youth, she cut church on Sundays and sneaked off to the drugstore for Cokes and cigarettes. As a young woman traveling in Latin America, she wrote to her hometown newspaper, The Birmingham News, with detailed descriptions of the poverty and deprivation she witnessed.
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Obituaries


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Jack Kelley, who led BU to back-to-back national hockey titles, dies at 93

Mr. Kelley also led the then-New England Whalers to the first Avco World Trophy.
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Arts & Lifestyle






Television


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Who’ll win at the Emmys, who should, and who got left behind

Globe TV critic Matthew Gilbert offers his best guesses and biggest complaints.
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Continue reading &rarr;





FALL FOLIAGE


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Six places in New England to see fall foliage without the crowds

Mother Nature doesn’t stop for a pandemic. She’ll deliver us an eye-popping fiesta of color this fall, as always. Here are some less-populated places to take it all in.
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BIBLIOPHILES


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Claudia Rankine on race, reading, and conversation

Given the mass demonstrations over police violence against Black people plus a president bent on widening the country’s deep racial divide, the author’s new book, “Just Us: An American Conversation,” could not be timelier.
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Go to Arts & Lifestyle &rarr;


Travel






FALL FOLIAGE


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Six places in New England to see fall foliage without the crowds

Mother Nature doesn’t stop for a pandemic. She’ll deliver us an eye-popping fiesta of color this fall, as always. Here are some less-populated places to take it all in.
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Continue reading &rarr;





FALL FOLIAGE


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Six places in New England to see fall foliage without the crowds

Mother Nature doesn’t stop for a pandemic. She’ll deliver us an eye-popping fiesta of color this fall, as always. Here are some less-populated places to take it all in.
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Continue reading &rarr;








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Real Estate









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