Wu announces investments in water safety, free swimming lessons

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 21:49:58 GMT

Wu announces investments in water safety, free swimming lessons Mayor Michelle Wu jumped into the issue of water safety this summer in an announcement of the city’s Swim Safe initiative — then dove into East Boston’s newly renovated BCYF Paris Street pool.“Today in Boston, we have an opportunity to ensure that every pool, every beach, every body of water in Boston is safe for all of our families and young people to cool off and have fun,” Wu said, standing at a podium in front of the pool in a striped bathing suit Thursday.The Swim Safe initiative is comprised of a series of investments in water safety this summer, officials announced, including free swimming lessons for young people, free life jackets at open water locations, and lifeguarding incentives and training programs.The announcement follows the drowning death of a 4-year-old child who wandered away from his guardian at Castle Island in May.Swimming lessons can reduce the risk of drowning by nearly 90%, Wu said.Officials also emphasized that water safety is...

Ben & Jerry’s stock melts down

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 21:49:58 GMT

Ben & Jerry’s stock melts down It’s Bud Light 2.0. Or more precisely, $2.5 billion.That’s the drop from its market capitalization before the cookies and cream hit the fan on July 4 after the Vermont-based brand slammed the U.S. over “stolen Indigenous land.” A call to boycott the pint-sized ice cream behemoth quickly followed.The stock in Unilever PLC, the Dutch owner of Ben & Jerry’s, slipped to $51.31 a share, a 77% drop, at market close Thursday.The fireworks were off over the Fourth when Ben & Jerry’s posted, “This 4th of July, it’s high time we recognize that the US exists on stolen Indigenous land and commit to returning it.”The post is still up. It goes on to state: “We need to start with Mount Rushmore. Long before South Dakota had become a state, long before the faces of four American presidents were blasted into the side of Mount Rushmore, that mountain was known as Tunkasila Sakpe, the Six Grandfathers, to the Lakota Sioux — a holy mountain that rises up from the B...

Francisco Alvarez navigating ups and downs of rookie season: ‘It’s the biggest jump in professional sports’

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 21:49:58 GMT

Francisco Alvarez navigating ups and downs of rookie season: ‘It’s the biggest jump in professional sports’ PHOENIX — If the Mets are going to right the ship that is the 2023 season, they’ll need more performances like the ones they turned in this week in Arizona. And they’ll need more home runs like the ones they’re getting from Francisco Alvarez.It’s hard to believe there was a time when moments like the one he faced Wednesday night in Phoenix once looked too big for him. It’s also hard to believe that last month he fell into a slump. Rookies are prone to stops, starts and extreme highs and lows as they learn to hit the game’s most elite pitching and navigate the Major Leagues for the first time. Those pitchers are more adept at adjusting to hitters and rookies aren’t as adept at making their own adjustments to counter.Last month, Alvarez went 15 games without a home run. Over that span, he hit only .111 with a .317 OPS, only one extra-base hit, four walks and 15 strikeouts.“He’s a 21-year-old catcher making adjustments on the ...

Matt Poitras, Brett Harrison are Bruins’ centers of attention

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 21:49:58 GMT

Matt Poitras, Brett Harrison are Bruins’ centers of attention The pipeline that was supposed to produce the next top Bruins’ center has barely produced a trickle in the last decade.Tyler Seguin was dealt away in a still controversial trade. Ryan Spooner never took the next step. Jakob Forsbacka-Karlsson returned home to Sweden and hasn’t played since 2021. It’s still anyone’s guess what Jack Studnicka will be, but the B’s decided it was time to move on.Could Matt Poitras and Brett Harrison be the ones to finally reopen the B’s centerman spigot? There’s no question they need some infusion of talented youth at the pivot position. Whether or not Patrice Bergeron and/or David Krejci retire this summer, the end of the line is in sight.To think either Poitras or Harrison could or should contribute to the 2023-24 Boston Bruins would seem a stretch. But if they continue on their promising paths they set for themselves in the Ontario Hockey League, then they may not be too far away, given the opportunity that s...

Wildfires in Canada have broken records for area burned, evacuations and cost, official says

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 21:49:58 GMT

Wildfires in Canada have broken records for area burned, evacuations and cost, official says VANCOUVER, British Columbia (AP) — Wildfires raging across Canada have already broken records for total area burned, the number of people forced to evacuate their homes and the cost of fighting the blazes, and the fire season is only halfway finished, officials said Thursday.“It’s no understatement to say that the 2023 fire season is and will continue to be record breaking in a number of ways,” Michael Norton, director general, Northern Forestry Centre, Canadian Forest Service, said during a briefing.A health expert also warned that smoke from the fires can cause health problems for people living in both Canada and the United States.“When you’re emitting large amounts of fire smoke into the air, and that smoke is reaching populated areas, there will be health effects,” said Ryan Allen, a professor of health sciences at Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, British Columbia.Norton said warm weather and dry conditions across Canada indicate the ...

Red Sox Notebook: Jorge ‘Aquaman’ Alfaro back in Boston on major league contract

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 21:49:58 GMT

Red Sox Notebook: Jorge ‘Aquaman’ Alfaro back in Boston on major league contract There was an unexpected, familiar face in the Red Sox clubhouse on Thursday afternoon.With Reese McGuire continuing to recover from an oblique strain, Jorge Alfaro is back with the organization on a Major League deal. Fellow catcher Caleb Hamilton was designated for assignment as the corresponding move.During his first stint with the Red Sox, which spanned spring training and the beginning of the minor league season, Alfaro worked diligently to improve his defense.“You always want to get better,” he said. “I like to work, and if it’s gonna make me better, I’m not afraid to do it. I’m not gonna waste time, I’m gonna go to work, and try to get better.”With guidance from Jason Varitek and the coaches in Triple-A, he showed improvement. The Red Sox took notice. So much so that it was Cora’s first comment in Thursday’s pregame media availability.“Behind the plate, he made some progress in spring training,” Alex Cora ...

Celtics face defensive void after trades

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 21:49:58 GMT

Celtics face defensive void after trades There was a common denominator that led to the Celtics’ downfall last season that ultimately ended with their painful Game 7 loss to Miami in the Eastern Conference Finals: Defense.Inconsistency on that end, to be specific.“It was the issue,” Malcolm Brogdon said. “I think this was a team in the last year that prided themselves on defense. I think defense was our calling card. This year offense was our calling card. I don’t think you win championships with … a better offense than you have a defense.”The Celtics relied too much on 3-pointers and couldn’t rely on their defense consistently. They suffered too many breakdowns. They weren’t tough enough over seven games against Miami. The C’s needed to get better defensively as they went back to the drawing board to plan their championship pursuit next season.But less than a month into the offseason, the Celtics – at least on paper – have objectively gotten worse defensively.In the matter of two weeks, the Celtics have traded away ...

Maine governor expected to sign bill easing restrictions on abortions later in pregnancy

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 21:49:58 GMT

Maine governor expected to sign bill easing restrictions on abortions later in pregnancy AUGUSTA, Maine (AP) — The Maine Legislature gave final approval Thursday to a proposal to expand access to abortions later in pregnancy, sending the bill to the governor for her signature.Once signed into law by Democratic Gov. Janet Mills, as expected, Maine will have one of the least restrictive abortion laws in the country.Current state law bans abortions after a fetus becomes viable outside the womb, at roughly 24 weeks, but allows an exception if the patient’s life is at risk. The bill would allow abortions at any time if deemed medically necessary by a doctor.The Senate enacted the bill 20-11 on Thursday, sending it to the governor’s desk.Democrats control both chambers of the Maine Legislature but that didn’t prevent emotional debate over the proposal, with opponents regularly appearing in the State House to make their voices heard.Some Democratic opponents said the bill goes too far, allowing a major expansion of abortions and putting too much trust in doctors to...

REVIEW: Something You Said Last Night, a quiet revelation

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 21:49:58 GMT

REVIEW: Something You Said Last Night, a quiet revelation For the entire history of cinema, there hasn’t really been a trans genre. There have been films with trans characters, from the Christine Jorgensen Story, Monty Python’s Life of Brian, and the Academy Award-winning the Silence of the Lambs. But all of these films are very concerned with depicting the more sensational aspects of being transgender (or in the case of Life of Brian, making a joke out of it). None of these films show what it’s like to live your average everyday life from the perspective of a trans person.Carmen Madonia in Something You Said Last Night, courtesy of Elevation Pictures.Something You Said Last Night, which premiered at TIFF in 2022, is a film that shows what it’s like to be an average person who happens to be trans. But it’s not about showing the transition or the prejudice trans people face. It’s about a few days in the life of Renata (played by newcomer Carmen Madonia). She’s a young trans woman who takes a vacatio...

Attacker ‘has limited memory’ of deadly B.C. mass stabbing, can’t give motive: lawyer

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 21:49:58 GMT

Attacker ‘has limited memory’ of deadly B.C. mass stabbing, can’t give motive: lawyer NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C. — The lawyer representing a man who stabbed a woman to death and injured several other victims at a library in North Vancouver, B.C., two years ago says his client has “limited memory” of the attack and cannot offer a motive for his crimes.Defence lawyer Georges Rivard told a B.C. Supreme Court sentencing hearing that Yannick Bandaogo accepts responsibility and “the intention was there” during the attack, but the 30-year-old cannot explain what led to it.Rivard told the hearing in New Westminster that his client had personality traits that may have been “augmented” by drug use, and two psychiatric tests done after the attack determined Bandaogo to have anti-social and aggressive tendencies.Bandaogo pleaded guilty to murder, several charges of attempted murder and one count of aggravated assault over the March 2021 mass stabbing.Crown and defence lawyers have jointly proposed that Bandaogo receive a sentence of life in prison ...