From The Boston Globe <[email protected]>
Subject Today's Headlines: Boston City Council approves protest restrictions proposed by Mayor Wu
Date March 31, 2022 9:08 AM
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Today's Headlines
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Thursday, March 31, 2022


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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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Politics


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Boston City Council approves protest restrictions proposed by Mayor Wu

Following months of antivaccination demonstrations outside the home of Mayor Michelle Wu, the Boston City Council adopted a controversial proposal to further restrict the hours when protesters may target private residences with their demonstrations.
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Globe Local


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‘I think this is going to be a very bad year’: Recent teen driving deaths alarm experts in Mass.

At a time when motor vehicle crashes and fatalities are surging nationwide, a recent flurry of crashes involving Massachusetts teenagers has experts fearing what the warmer months could portend.
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Health


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Sleep is good for the brain. But what about napping? Research raises puzzling questions.

A recent study found that the progression of Alzheimer’s disease led to more napping, and also that people who napped a lot were at higher risk of developing Alzheimer’s.
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Business


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Independent hospitals are ‘one crisis away’ from financial instability

Unlike larger peers that have financial cushions to weather down years, independent organizations instead are cutting costs to make things work.
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World


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Russia bombards areas in Ukraine where it pledged to scale back

The shelling — and intensified Russian attacks on other parts of the country — tempered optimism about any progress in the talks aimed at ending the punishing war.
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The Nation






Nation


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New Title IX rules set to assert rights of transgender students

If finalized, the rules would set up a clash with state laws that bar transgender women from competing in women’s sports.
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Political Notebook


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House Democrats’ PAC ad spending shows widening battle

The breadth of the congressional map reveals the scope of Democrats’ worries about holding seats in midterm elections. Areas once considered safe, like South Texas, greater Pittsburgh, and Seattle, will see Democratic advertising.
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Nation


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After Russia invaded Ukraine, a US nonprofit shifted its mission

Jim Hake began working in Ukraine in 2015, the year after Russia annexed the Crimean Peninsula. His nonprofit, Spirit of America, supplied medical kits to the Ukrainian military and assisted US programs to counter Russian propaganda.
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The World






World


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In life, they showed Israel’s breadth. In death, they were victims.

Within minutes, five men were dead — shot and killed by a Palestinian gunman in the single deadliest terrorist attack in Israel in eight years.
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World


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Warring parties in Yemen announce overlapping cease-fires

The Saudi-led coalition fighting the Houthi rebels in Yemen began a unilateral cease-fire on Wednesday, saying it hoped to pave the way toward ending a seven-year war that has shaken the security of the Persian Gulf and caused one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises.
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World


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Myanmar’s rebellion, divided, outgunned, and outnumbered, fights on

Civilians in Myanmar have joined with existing ethnic armed groups to thwart junta efforts to suppress coup resistance. Despite their smaller numbers and comparatively weaker firepower, the rebels adapted, opening up the potential for continued, deadly combat across this Southeast Asian nation.
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Editorial & Opinion






OPINION


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The West can strengthen Zelensky’s negotiating position

The Western allies should announce that President Volodymyr Zelensky has been empowered to dial back or even withdraw elements of the unprecedented sanctions regime that has cut Russia off from the global economy.
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EDITORIAL


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Jan. 6 committee must subpoena Ginni Thomas. Now.

Yes, she is the wife of a Supreme Court justice. But this is one witness the committee cannot afford to handle with kid gloves.
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OPINION


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Let’s talk about Boston school violence

No matter what side of the police-in-school debate you are on, these incidents deserve transparency and public attention.
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Metro






Crime & Courts


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Somerville orthodontist and landlord sues Tufts student journalists over story on renters’ protest

Mouhab Rizkallah is suing two Tufts University student journalists over coverage of a renters’ protest outside his office, claiming defamation and emotional harm for suggesting he lied, according to a complaint filed in Middlesex Superior Court.
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Massachusetts


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Colleagues celebrate lasting legacy of former Globe editor Tom Winship at scholarship launch

Many of the most prominent Boston journalists of generations past gathered Tuesday to cheer Winship's legacy of breaking down barriers in newsrooms as Northeastern University announced a journalism scholarship in his name intended to increase diversity in the industry.
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Transportation


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Top lawmaker vows movement on e-bike bill long sought by advocates

Representative William Straus, co-chair of the Legislature’s Transportation Committee, said he’s confident lawmakers will act on the bill that would regulate the increasingly popular e-bikes as bikes as opposed to motor vehicles, and allow them to be ridden on bike paths.
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Sports






dan shaughnessy


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The Celtics lost a key player for the playoff push — we’ve seen this before in Boston

Robert Williams's injury reminds us of the could-have-beens involving Tony Conigliaro, Jim Rice, and others.
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Heat 106, Celtics 98


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Celtics lose to Heat, squander chance to move back into tie for first in Eastern Conference

Jaylen Brown had 28 points, 10 rebounds, and 6 assists to lead Boston.
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tara sullivan


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Even with Jackie Bradley Jr. back, Red Sox will rely on Kiké Hernández in center field

Could a Bradley-Hernández-Verdugo outfield rival the World Series-winning trio of Betts-Bradley-Benintendi? Alex Cora seems to think so.
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Business








Business


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Independent hospitals are ‘one crisis away’ from financial instability

Unlike larger peers that have financial cushions to weather down years, independent organizations instead are cutting costs to make things work.
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Business


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Got a scam text from yourself? Verizon is working to shut down ‘smishing’ campaign.

The wireless carrier recommended that customers not click on any links in texts that look suspicious or come from unfamiliar sources. Customers can also forward the text to 7726.
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Business


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FDA advisory vote casts pall over the future of Amylyx’s experimental ALS drug

A panel of neurologists voted against recommending approval, despite pleas from patients.
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Obituaries









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Arts & Lifestyle






MOVIES


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Oscar-winning ‘CODA’ to return to movie theaters — including Gloucester Cinema

Beginning April 1, the best-picture winner will be re-released in more than 600 movie theaters across the country for a limited run, including in Gloucester where "CODA" was filmed.
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Documentary


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‘Benjamin Franklin’ is about ‘the tensions between American definitions of freedom,’ filmmaker Ken Burns says

Mandy Patinkin voices the Founding Father in the two-part documentary premiering April 4 on GBH.
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VISUAL ART


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Candice Lin turns survival, solitude, and loss into art

At home alone with her cat Roger in the early days of the pandemic, she dyed textiles, made ceramic cats, and let her imagination percolate in fearful and fruitful ways. “Candice Lin: Seeping, Rotting, Resting, Weeping” at Harvard University’s Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts springs from that time.
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