From The Boston Globe <[email protected]>
Subject Today's Headlines: Clouds loom over Boston’s first day of school
Date September 9, 2021 9:20 AM
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Today's Headlines
Thursday, September 9, 2021

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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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THE GREAT DIVIDE


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Clouds loom over Boston’s first day of school

Dire warnings about late-running school buses and canceled routes are adding anxiety to the new school year. Many families won’t know until Thursday morning whether their children will have a school bus, making some parents fearful kids could be left stranded on a morning with thunderstorms in the forecast.
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Globe Local


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Boston sheds more light on its relationship to slavery

Historians and public officials are working to highlight the history of slavery in Boston, a story that’s often been erased or marginalized, but, thanks to social justice movements of recent years, is increasingly coming into focus.
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Boston Mayoral Race


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Boston mayoral candidates face off in mostly genteel debate with preliminary less than a week away

Boston’s five major mayoral candidates jousted over housing, the COVID-19 pandemic, and police during their first televised debate Wednesday night, making their pitches to voters less than a week before the preliminary election will narrow the field to two.
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Shirley Leung


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Massport’s diversity policy had its skeptics, but its success is hard to ignore with the opening of new Omni Boston hotel

Companies owned by women and people of color were given a chance to be part of the windfall that major building projects represented.
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Globe Local


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Coyotes in the neighborhood: ‘They’re here to stay’

Coyotes are adaptable and resilient animals — and they are in Eastern Massachusetts, where they have learned to live in urban environments.
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The Nation






Nation


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More Americans say 9/11 changed US for worse than better, Post-ABC poll finds

Americans increasingly say the events of Sept. 11, 2001, had a more negative than positive impact on the country, and predictions for the pandemic’s long-term impact are even more downbeat, according to a Washington Post-ABC News poll.
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Nation


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From 4% to 45%: Biden sets an ambitious blueprint for solar energy

The Biden administration Wednesday released a plan to produce almost half of the nation’s electricity from the sun by 2050.
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Nation


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Virginia removes Robert E. Lee statue from state capital

After more than a year of legal wrangling, one of the nation’s largest Confederate monuments — a soaring statue of Robert E. Lee, the South’s Civil War general — was hoisted off its pedestal in downtown Richmond, Va., Wednesday.
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The World






World


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Trial begins over 2015 Paris terrorist attacks

The trial of 20 men accused of involvement in the November 2015 attacks in Paris began Wednesday, nearly six years after the coordinated and devastating assault that left more than 100 dead and shook France to its core.
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World


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Aid workers staying in Taliban-ruled Afghanistan tread a tricky path

Even as US and NATO forces and almost the entire Western diplomatic corps packed up and fled the Afghan capital last month as the Taliban seized control, a handful of international aid directors made a decision: They were staying put.
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World


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Abortion is no longer a crime in Mexico, but most women still can’t get one

When the Supreme Court in Mexico issued a historic decision Tuesday declaring that having an abortion was not a crime, activists across the country celebrated. On Wednesday, they got back to work, taking on the long and arduous process of ensuring that the legal shift applies across Mexico.
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Editorial & Opinion






EDITORIAL


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The drama around BPS buses goes ’round and ’round and ’round

The city needs to plan better for getting kids to and from school.
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OPINION


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The eviction crisis is upon us, the Legislature must act

Without strong legislative action, the end of the moratorium leaves renters and homeowners vulnerable to eviction, foreclosure, and the Delta variant, as they navigate burdensome rental and mortgage relief applications.
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OPINION


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A carbon tax is key to addressing the climate crisis — and carbon dividends could get Congress to support one

Providing carbon dividends to every resident transforms the cod liver oil of a new tax into a milkshake that most Americans would happily consume for years to come.
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Metro






THE GREAT DIVIDE


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Boston Public Schools orders tents for schools after teachers, parents complain about lack of outdoor meals

Some teachers and parents are upset by the discontinuation of providing tents for students to eat lunch, alleging that students at some schools will be safer than others due to schools’ varying circumstances during meals, one of the few times students will be allowed to remove their masks. The district says it is working to ensure safety at all schools.
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Metro


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On top of it all, busing woes in Boston

Last week, BPS said that, because of a labor shortage, some students might be picked up by school buses late, or not at all. And families affected would not know whether their kids would be stranded until Thursday morning — the first day of school.
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Health


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Brown University initiative aims to offer facts and advice on ‘long covid’

Little is known about what causes long COVID, who is susceptible, how long it lasts, and how best to treat it. Now, a new project at the Brown University School of Public Health will aim to sort through the evolving knowledge, clarify the facts as they emerge, and provide recommendations on how society can cope.
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Sports






Red Sox notebook


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Red Sox will look to Tanner Houck in Friday’s series opener against White Sox

In 12 appearances (10 starts), Houck has been a significant boost to the rotation, carrying a 3.26 ERA while fanning 62 in 49⅔ innings.
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Red Sox 2, Rays 1


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Hunter Renfroe beat the Rays with his bat, and then his arm

The blast came in the eighth inning and was Renfroe's 27th of the season.
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Patriots


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Mac Jones is just a rookie, but he is clearly in charge for the Patriots

Jones has earned respect and admiration from his teammates.
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Business








Shirley Leung


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Massport’s diversity policy had its skeptics, but its success is hard to ignore with the opening of new Omni Boston hotel

Companies owned by women and people of color were given a chance to be part of the windfall that major building projects represented.
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THE FINE PRINT


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AG gets $2.25 million settlement in debt collection case

For the second time in a month, a national debt collection company has agreed to pay the state a large sum of money to settle allegations that it used abusive collection practices.
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Technology


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Cambridge startup takes big step toward clean fusion power

Working with MIT, Commonwealth Fusion Systems has successfully tested the world’s most powerful superconducting magnet, capable of containing the immense energy of a fusion reaction.
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Obituaries






Obituaries


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Adlai E. Stevenson III, ex-senator and scion of formidable political family, dies at 90

“It was ordained at birth that I would go into a life of public service,” Mr. Stevenson said shortly after his election as senator. “The question was never ‘whether’ — it was always ‘when’ and ‘how.’ ”
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Obituaries


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Adlai E. Stevenson III, ex-senator and scion of formidable political family, dies at 90

“It was ordained at birth that I would go into a life of public service,” Mr. Stevenson said shortly after his election as senator. “The question was never ‘whether’ — it was always ‘when’ and ‘how.’ ”
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Arts & Lifestyle






Welcome Back


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Instead of hitting a wall, these workers are decorating one — together

Boston-based branding firm Hatch welcomed employees back to the office with a colorful art installation they would help complete
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Names


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After months of filming in Boston, Netflix’s teaser trailer for ‘Don’t Look Up’ is out

Leonardo DiCaprio, Jennifer Lawrence, Meryl Streep, Timothée Chalamet, Ariana Grande, and many more star in Netflix's forthcoming satire, but what about the Chris Evans rumors?
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Names


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Through a pay-it-forward wall, Ula Cafe serves up coffee with a side of kindness

An episode of "Stanley Tucci: Searching for Italy" inspired this Jamaica Plain cafe's pay-it-forward wall, where customers can post food and drink gifts for strangers.
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