From The Boston Globe <[email protected]>
Subject Today's Headlines: Sha’Carri Richardson isn’t a cheater. She’s human. And she got caught up in a system that might need to change
Date July 3, 2021 9:03 AM
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Today's Headlines
Saturday, July 3, 2021

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Today's Headlines

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Today's Paper
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Metro
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Arts
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Comics
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Crossword





Page one







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Tara Sullivan


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Sha’Carri Richardson isn’t a cheater. She’s human. And she got caught up in a system that might need to change

It’s probably time for organizations like the World Anti-Doping Agency to recognize the good that marijuana can do for the mental health of some athletes.
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Crime & Courts


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Suspect in Brighton stabbing of rabbi held without bail as investigators search for a motive

Rabbi Shlomo Noginski was stabbed multiple times Thursday outside the Shaloh House, a Jewish day school on Chestnut Hill Avenue in Brighton. His alleged attacker, Khaled Awad, 24, was arraigned Friday on seven charges, including assault and battery with a dangerous weapon causing serious bodily injury.
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THE GREAT DIVIDE


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Judge in exam school case calls allegations of withholding text messages ‘potentially fraud on the Court’

The judge denied Boston school officials’ request for additional time, making it clear he views the plaintiffs’ request to reconsider his ruling as urgent.
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Metro


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As drownings increase, state’s response to limit swimming, increase fines draws criticism

The state Department of Conservation and Recreation announced Friday that Walden Pond visitors will be asked to “cease open water swimming” and swim only in areas marked off by ropes and buoys. The restrictions sparked an immediate outcry from open water swimmers who say that water-safety education, not bans, is the best way to prevent drownings.
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Massachusetts


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At 108 years old, Cape Cod woman starts fund-raiser to allow her to keep living at home

Although Juliet Bernstein was born before World War I, at a time when the telephone was considered high technology, she has settled on a 21st-century path toward her goal: a GoFundMe account to help pay for home care.
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The Nation






Nation


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Death toll from Northwest heat wave expected to keep rising

Each day, more deaths are being linked to the heat wave that struck the Pacific Northwest this past week, with medical staff who treated people overwhelmed by temperatures well above 100 degrees saying the toll from the extreme weather will keep creeping up.
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Nation


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Tally of missing in condo collapse falls to 128 after audit

The number of people missing in the Florida condominium collapse fell substantially Friday, from 145 to 128, after duplicate names were eliminated and some residents reported missing turned up safe, officials said.
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Nation


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Concern over crime is growing — but Americans don’t just want more police, Post-ABC poll shows

The poll reflects a larger debate — raging in city council chambers, activist circles, and even the White House — about whether the nation can mitigate a troubling recent spike in violent crime and still make progress on the police reforms that gained momentum after George Floyd was murdered by a Minneapolis police officer.
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The World






World


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US leaves last Afghan base, effectively ending operations

US troops and their Western allies have departed Bagram Airfield, the last active air base used by the US military in Afghanistan, officials said Friday, effectively ending major US military operations in Afghanistan.
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World


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Lebanese judge goes after top officials over port blast

The Lebanese judge leading the investigation into last year’s massive explosion at Beirut’s port announced Friday he intends to pursue senior politicians and former and current security chiefs in the case, and requested permission for their prosecution, state media reported.
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World


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China bolsters nuclear options with new missile silos in desert

Researchers spotted the construction in commercial satellite images of remote areas west and southwest of the city of Yumen, on the edge of the Gobi Desert in Gansu province.
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Editorial & Opinion






EDITORIAL


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Should you know if your neighbor owns a gun?

The Winthrop case highlights the importance of knowing where and how gun-owners obtained a permit.
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OPINION


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More investment in swimming supervision would save lives

Perhaps some of this year’s record-breaking drownings could have been prevented if only there had been more safety policies in place.
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LETTERS


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Through expressions of thanks, we celebrate our interdependence

From vaccine guidance to the attention of care providers to the comforts of animals, readers share who came through for them in the depths of the coronavirus pandemic.
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Metro






Metro


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As drownings increase, state’s response to limit swimming, increase fines draws criticism

The state Department of Conservation and Recreation announced Friday that Walden Pond visitors will be asked to “cease open water swimming” and swim only in areas marked off by ropes and buoys. The restrictions sparked an immediate outcry from open water swimmers who say that water-safety education, not bans, is the best way to prevent drownings.
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Politics


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Fired BPD commissioner Dennis White alleges gender and race discrimination in new court filings

Dennis White, the former Boston police commissioner who was fired last month following the reemergence of decades-old domestic violence allegations, is now alleging gender and race discrimination in a federal case against the city and Acting Mayor Kim Janey.
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Crime & Courts


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Retired trooper killed in Winthrop last weekend remembered at funeral

Relatives and friends said a final goodbye on Friday to David Green, who served with the US Air Force in Vietnam and Thailand and spent 36 years as a Massachusetts State Police trooper only to be slain in his hometown last Saturday in an apparent hate crime.
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Sports






Red Sox


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Kiké Hernández cuts down A’s in 10th inning, Red Sox win eighth straight

The Red Sox now have a 4½-game lead in the AL East, their largest of the season.
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colleges


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What is NIL? NCAA rules are changing regarding athlete pay. Here’s what it means

This will be the biggest change to college athletics since … well, possibly ever.
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Adam Himmelsbach | Beat Writer's Notebook


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Can Ime Udoka juggle Olympic team and Celtics’ Summer League team and other observations

It’s fairly common for first-time head coaches to guide summer squads.
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Business








Business


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U.S. hiring accelerated last month as workers see pay gains

In an encouraging burst of hiring, America’s employers added 850,000 jobs in June, well above the average of the previous three months and a sign that companies may be having an easier time finding enough workers to fill open jobs.
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Business


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Mass. racial equity fund awards $2 million in first round of grants

The New Commonwealth Racial Equity and Social Justice Fund has awarded 40 organizations grants up to $150,000 to support their work to end systemic inequities throughout Massachusetts.
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Obituaries






Obituaries


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Louis Andriessen, lionized composer with radical roots, dies at 82

Louis Andriessen, who as a young iconoclast disrupted the Dutch classical music scene before becoming one of Europe’s most important postwar composers with a series of large-scale, often brash works, died Thursday in Weesp, the Netherlands. He was 82.
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Obituaries


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Frieda Fritzshall, 91, dies; survived to create a Holocaust museum

Frieda Fritzshall, who not only survived the Holocaust but established a museum outside Chicago to keep the memory of it alive for future generations so history would not repeat itself, died June 19 in Deerfield, Illinois. She was 91.
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Arts & Lifestyle






ART


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In Fort Point, public art helps visualize rising sea levels

Carolina Aragón's "FutureSHORELINE" represents climate threats as well as solutions proposed by scientists.
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Music


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Watch: Boston Dynamics robots challenge K-pop stars BTS to a dance-off

You’ve seen the vaguely terrifying Boston Dynamics robots climb stairs, open doors, and march in formation. Now the four-legged bots are grooving alongside the world's biggest boy band, BTS.
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MUSIC


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Keith Lockhart on July 4: ‘The theme of this concert, in my mind, is about rebirth’

The 2021 Boston Pops July Fourth Spectacular marks the conductor's reunion with live audiences.
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