Boston school to be renamed to honor civil rights icon Mel King

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 13:38:33 GMT

Boston school to be renamed to honor civil rights icon Mel King Boston will honor civil rights icon and trailblazing politician Mel King by naming a school after him. City officials will gather at 90 Warren Avenue at 10 a.m. to celebrate the renaming of the McKinley Schools to the Melvin H. King South End Academy.Mayor Wu, Boston Public Schools Superintendent Mary Skipper, School Leader Cindie Neilson, and Joyce King are all expected to attend the event. King was a longtime community activist, educator, and lawmaker who made history as the first Black person to make it on the ballot for Boston mayor in 1983. He died last month at the age of 94. A mural depicting King and his famous words, “Love is the question and the answer” is painted on one of the McKinley Schools’ buildings.

Rinse & Repeat

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 13:38:33 GMT

Rinse & Repeat The pattern hasn’t changed all that much the last several days as cool air aloft has sparked an occasional shower popping up. Today, the pattern is similar with just a few isolated showers popping up across the interior. That means much of the day is dry, but with an east wind prevailing, it’ll be a bit cooler today vs. the last couple of days and clouds are more stubborn at times. Highs range from near 50 at the coast to mid to upper 50s inland. Tomorrow, the pop-up shower chance is farther east, as anywhere will be fair game for a passing shower or two in the afternoon. It’ll be cool and mostly cloudy as highs hold in the low to mid 50s. Not a washout of a day, but certainly chilly and a bit dreary at times. Friday is the pick of the week. Highs head for the mid 60s inland and run in the 50s along the coast under a mostly sunny sky. Showers arrive by Saturday afternoon as temps hold in the 50s. Those showers linger through the night but taper early Sunday. Sunda...

Lawmakers to hold hearing on Boston Marathon bombings following 10th anniversary of attack

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 13:38:33 GMT

Lawmakers to hold hearing on Boston Marathon bombings following 10th anniversary of attack Lawmakers on Capitol Hill will hold a Senate hearing Wednesday morning on how the Boston Marathon bombings changed terrorist prevention and response efforts. The hearing is set to begin at 10:30 a.m. and will be led by Senator Maggie Hassan (D-NH), Chair of the Emerging Threats and Spending Oversight Subcommittee, and Senator Mitt Romney (R-UT), the Subcommittee’s Ranking Member.Titled “Lessons Learned: 10 Years Since the Boston Marathon Bombings,” the hearing will feature former Boston Police Commissioner Edward Davis, former Deputy FEMA Administrator and Chief of Boston Emergency Medical Services Rich Serino, and former FBI Deputy Assistant Director Kerry Sleeper – all of whom held these positions at the time of the 2013 bombings“New England will never forget the day that two terrorists detonated bombs during the Boston Marathon, killing three people and injuring hundreds,” Hassan said in a statement. “Ten years after this horrific tragedy, we must examine how that att...

ASK IRA: Is the Heat’s 3-point shooting sustainable this postseason?

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 13:38:33 GMT

ASK IRA: Is the Heat’s 3-point shooting sustainable this postseason? Q; Jimmy Butler has been sublime, but this series also has highlighted what this season’s biggest frustration was: poor shooting. When they shoot well, especially from 3, this is a totally different team. Do you think this stretch is a fluke, or are they finally returning to last year’s form? – Ruben, Davie.A: That’s the issue going forward. Is this shooting a progression to the mean from what was abysmal regular-season shooting? Or will there be a regression to the mean of how they shot during the regular season? The fact that there now is more Duncan Robinson and less Victor Oladipo could keep the percentage higher (with all due respect to what Vic is going through). And it could be that Jimmy Butler is Dwyane Wade 2.0 when it comes to playoff 3-point shooting rising to another level. (Guess we’ll have to ask Purple Shirt Guy in Charlotte about that one.)Q: Ira, You said Jimmy Butler’s Game 4 performance was unprecedented in Heat history, how ab...

Editorial: Q: Why do the Bears need taxpayer help for their move to Arlington Heights? A: They don’t.

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 13:38:33 GMT

Editorial: Q: Why do the Bears need taxpayer help for their move to Arlington Heights? A: They don’t. Forgive Bears fans for being transfixed by the NFL draft, which begins Thursday in Kansas City. The first game of the 2023 season won’t kick off until September, but that doesn’t matter to a fan base starved for whatever morsel of hope of a turnaround the draft might provide.In Chicago’s northwest suburbs, however, taxpayers and taxing bodies are preoccupied by a very different Bears game plan — the playbook for enlisting as much taxpayer help as possible to build a new, stadium-anchored megadevelopment at what was once Arlington International Racecourse.Most residents of Arlington Heights and surrounding suburbs have reacted enthusiastically to the prospect of the Bears coming to their patch of the Chicago region. What they’ve been less enamored with is the Bears’ insistence that taxpayers subsidize nonstadium components of the project, including the new roadways, utilities and other infrastructure needed to make it happen.A couple of legislative...

Protest over disabled access in France before Paris Olympics

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 13:38:33 GMT

Protest over disabled access in France before Paris Olympics PARIS (AP) — An influential disabled rights group in France is boycotting a conference on disability Wednesday with French President Emmanuel Macron, amid frustration at years of unmet promises to make Paris more accessible ahead of the 2024 Olympic and Paralympic Games.The group Collectif Handicaps, an umbrella group for more than 50 organizations advocating for disabled rights, announced hours before the conference in Paris that it would not take part. Its leaders had asked for the opportunity to speak in front of Macron and were refused. The group worries that measures Macron is expected to announce Wednesday will fall short of what is needed.Even getting to the conference at the Elysee Palace is an ordeal for many people it’s designed to help. The nearest wheelchair-accessible Metro line is about a kilometer (half a mile) away. Public buses in Paris are hard and time-consuming to ride for people with limited mobility. The 2024 Olympics risk highlighting how inaccessible France i...

Meryl Streep wins Spain’s Princess of Asturias award

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 13:38:33 GMT

Meryl Streep wins Spain’s Princess of Asturias award MADRID (AP) — Meryl Streep has won one of Spain’s most prestigious awards in the arts for her long career of acting excellence, the jury of the Princess of Asturias awards said Wednesday.The jury said that in her nearly five decades on screen, Streep has “developed a brilliant career that given life to full and complex feminine characters which inspire reflection and a critical spirit in the spectator.”The 73-year-old actor has won multiple accolades, including three Oscars for her work in “Kramer vs. Kramer,” “Sophie’s Choice” and “The Iron Lady.”The 50,000-euro ($55,000) award is one of eight prizes covering the arts, communication, science and other areas that are handed out annually by the foundation named for Spanish Crown Princess Leonor.Flamenco musical artists Carmen Linares and María Pagés won the arts award last year. Other past winners include English director Peter Brook, and American directors Martin Scorsese and Francis Ford Coppola.The prizes are among the most ...

Officials banned for false report for Olympic qualification

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 13:38:33 GMT

Officials banned for false report for Olympic qualification MONACO (AP) — Two track and field officials in Albania have been banned from the sport for falsifying an athlete’s result to help him qualify for the Tokyo Olympics, the Athletics Integrity Unit said Wednesday.Long jumper Izmir Smajlaj was cleared of being part of the conspiracy to register a national record in May 2021 that gained him entry to compete at the Tokyo Games.The AIU had said Smajlaj, Albanian track federation president Gjergj Ruli and federation general secretary Nikolin Dionisi “conspired together and submitted falsified wind measurement readings” for the athlete’s 8.16-meter leap in Tirana.The jump, which was not legal by track and field rules, earned Smajlaj one of two available “universality” entries — an Olympic wild card given to lower-ranked nations — in the 32-man lineup for his event.He was Albania’s only men’s track and field athlete at the Tokyo Olympics, where Ruli traveled as his coach, the AIU said. Smajlaj also competed at the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Ol...

Iran court issues $312.9M judgment against US amid tensions

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 13:38:33 GMT

Iran court issues $312.9M judgment against US amid tensions DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — An Iranian court issued a $312.9 million judgment against the United States over a 2017 Islamic State-claimed attack on Tehran, authorities said Wednesday, the latest judicial action between the nations amid their decadeslong enmity. Iran’s state-run IRNA news agency, in reporting the decision, offered no direct evidence to support the court’s allegation that American officials had any part in the June 2017 attack that killed at least 18 people and wounded 50 others. The assault saw gunmen attack Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini’s mausoleum and the country’s parliament, starting an hourslong siege. However, the court ruling comes after the United Nations’ highest court in March rejected Tehran’s legal bid to free up some $2 billion in Iranian Central Bank assets frozen by U.S. authorities. Meanwhile, U.S. judges have issued rulings that call for billions of dollars to be paid by Iran over attacks linked to Tehran, as well as thos...

Prison sex abuse must be rooted out, Justice official says

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 13:38:33 GMT

Prison sex abuse must be rooted out, Justice official says AURORA, Colo. (AP) — Sexual abuse in the nation’s federal prisons must be rooted out, the Justice Department’s second-highest-ranking leader told prison wardens gathered for their first nationwide training since revelations that a toxic, permissive culture at a California prison allowed abuse to run rampant.The Associated Press gained exclusive access to the training Tuesday for wardens of the country’s 122 federal prisons, the first since AP investigations uncovered deep, previously unreported flaws within the federal Bureau of Prisons, the Justice Department’s largest law enforcement agency.Teams of experts and officials will soon be fanning out to women’s prisons around the country to follow up on on reforms the agency adopted last fall, and they’ll speak to both staff and incarcerated people, Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco said in a speech at the training facility outside Denver.At the training, wardens sat at round conference tables dotted with quotes abo...