Bruins close out record regular season, beat Canadiens 5-4
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 22:07:47 GMT
MONTREAL (AP) — David Pastrnak’s goal midway through the third period was the winner and the Boston Bruins closed out their record-setting regular season with a 5-4 comeback win over the Montreal Canadiens on Thursday night.Dmitry Orlov had a goal and an assist. Trent Frederic, Jake DeBrusk and Charlie Coyle also scored for Boston (65-12-5). Jeremy Swayman made 30 saves.The Bruins closed their Presidents Trophy-winning season by establishing records for wins (65) and points (135) in a season. “We took five minutes and celebrated it and we moved on,” said Jeremy Swayman, who was awarded the William Jennings trophy along with teammate Linus Ullmark. “We know that there’s a bigger goal in mind. … And we’re going to take that confidence into the playoffs.”Boston broke the NHL points record with a 5-2 victory over Washington on Tuesday. With that win, the Bruins pushed their points total to 133, one more than the 1976-77 Montreal Canadiens and added to it on Thursday. Those Canadie...Aurora superintendent candidate Andre Wright avoids questions on embezzlement report
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 22:07:47 GMT
AURORA, Colo. (KDVR) — Andre Wright's meet and greet with Aurora Public School teachers probably didn't go the way he hoped Wednesday night.He's one of three finalists to be the new superintendent for Aurora Public Schools. The public forum for teachers was a chance for educators to ask questions of the candidate but the Problem Solvers estimate not even 10 teachers showed up from the entire district, and one teacher who did have questions was not given an answer by Wright. "So I'm curious to know how you feel like your name should still be in the running for superintendent when your name is riddled throughout that police report against Ron Fay and Jill Watkins," was the question posed by Jill Cullis. Cullis taught at Gateway High School for 30 years but retired in 2021, after she says she was forced out by her principal Ronald Fay. Fay himself would retire in July of 2021 after he became the target of an embezzlement investigation.Alleged embezzlement and grade fixingA 338-page Aur...Group speaks out against alcohol sales extension at Rockies games
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 22:07:47 GMT
DENVER (KDVR) -- An Anti-drinking-and-driving group is speaking out after the Colorado Rockies announced they are extending alcohol sales at home games.On Thursday, the team announced they are extending alcohol sales from the seventh inning to the end of the eighth inning.The move is being made to adjust to Major League Baseball-mandated quicker games.Among those paying attention to the announcement was Fran Lazer. Will Coors Fields’ 8th-inning beers cause more crime? Lazer is the State Executive Director for Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD).“Here in Colorado, last year,” said Lazer, “281 people died in suspected impairment fatalities, on our roads.”He said MADD, as of yet, has not been contacted by the Rockies for any sort of input or collaboration.Lazer hopes that changes.The alcohol extension begins April 17, when the Rockies return home to face the Pittsburgh Pirates.Florida Legislature passes 6-week abortion ban; DeSantis signs it into law
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 22:07:47 GMT
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) â The Republican-dominated Florida Legislature on Thursday approved a ban on abortions after six weeks of pregnancy, a proposal supported by GOP Gov. Ron DeSantis as he prepares for an expected presidential run.DeSantis signed the bill into law late Thursday night. Florida currently prohibits abortions after 15 weeks.https://twitter.com/MBurgosNews/status/1646717841754685440?s=20A six-week ban gives DeSantis a key political victory among Republican primary voters as he prepares to launch a presidential candidacy built on his national brand as a conservative standard bearer.The policy would also have wider implications for abortion access throughout the South in the wake of the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision last year overturning Roe v. Wade and leaving decisions about abortion access to states. Alabama, Louisiana and Mississippi have banned abortion at all stages of pregnancy, while Georgia forbids the procedure after...Silly comedy ‘Mafia Mamma’ mobbed with cliches
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 22:07:47 GMT
MOVIE REVIEW“Mafia Mamma”Rated R. At the AMC Boston Common and suburban theaters.Grade: C+Director Catherine Hardwicke is not known for making comedies, unless you count “Twilight” (2008), the first of several laughable films in the “Twilight” series of teen-vampire romance films. She’s not Italian, either. For the most part, the director has been of a keen observer of the quirks and travails of millennial teens. In “Mafia Mamma,” Hardwicke reunites with the great Toni Collette, one of the two protagonists in her 2015 weepie buddy movie “Miss You Already” co-starring Collette and Drew Barrymore.In “Mafia Mamma,” Collette plays a mother named Kristin unhappily sending her son off to college and dealing with a sexist boss and coworkers. To add to her troubles, Kristin catches her feckless musician husband Paul (Tim Daish) in flagrante delicto with a younger woman in his home studio. At the same time, Kristin, whose maiden name is Balbano, learns that her grandfather, whom she di...McCown: Climate lawsuits threaten national security
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 22:07:47 GMT
Climate lawsuits might play well in the press, but they make for lousy policy regarding everything else. Since 2017, cities and states across the United States have filed more than two dozen lawsuits against major energy companies, alleging they sold oil and gas to Americans despite the known environmental effects of fossil fuel consumption.An untold implication of these lawsuits is the potential for jeopardizing U.S. national security. Energy security is national security, and one needs only to look at Europe to see the disastrous consequences of ideologically driven policy decisions that have devastated parts of the economy despite some trying to downplay the significance.After food, fuel represents the greatest operational sustainment demand for the military and national security. As a result, the Department of Defense is by far the largest energy consumer in the United States and one of the largest electricity consumers in the world. Unlike oil-producing countries like Saudi Ara...Franks: Tenn. reps wrongly removed while fighting wrong fight
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 22:07:47 GMT
The two Black state Representatives from Tennessee – let’s call them the Tennessee Duo – who were kicked out of the state Legislature earlier this month for breaking rules of order (while protesting in the chamber during a debate on gun legislation) brought back memories.Protesting wrongs is truly what Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and other civil rights leaders did in the 1960s. But, they would have not protested the elimination of ropes and the cutting down of trees to stop the lynching of Black folks by the Ku Klux Klan. They knew that it was due to the hate in the hearts of those bad people. The rope nor the trees were to blame.Today with the senseless, often random, taking of lives via gun violence, removing any style of gun would not solve the problem. There are 400 million guns in America. Deranged individuals on suicide missions crying for help are severely mentally ill. Last century we built prisons and hired more officers to help address crime. Today we need more individual i...Editorial: UMass votes to raise costs – where’s the outrage?
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 22:07:47 GMT
Those who lucked out with administrative jobs at the University of Massachusetts can rest easy – UMass has has agreed to increase tuition, room and board next academic year,.As the State House News Service reported, the UMass Board of Trustees voted during their quarterly meeting on Wednesday to increase tuition for in-state undergraduates by 2.5%, and increase room and board on the Amherst campus by 4.5% and on the Dartmouth and Lowell campuses by 2.7%.Tuition for graduate students is also going up — 2.5% for in-state graduate students at the Amherst, Boston and Lowell campuses, 3.5% for medical students at the T.H. Chan School of Medicine, Tan Chingfen Graduate School of Nursing and Morningside Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, and 2% at UMass Law.Of course UMass is raising prices – because they can. And while corporations who raise prices on goods and services are called out by progressive politicians for “price gouging,” you’ll find no ...‘Showing Up’ spare, offbeat & definitely worth watching
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 22:07:47 GMT
MOVIE REVIEW“Showing Up”Rated R. At AMC Boston Common and Landmark Kendall Square.Grade: BA light comedy about rivals in an art college town, Kelly Reichardt’s “Showing Up” reunites the director and co-writer with the actor Michelle Williams for the fourth time. At this point, we might say that Williams is Reichardt’s muse and alter ego in the manner of many directors before her such as Federico Fellini and Marcello Mastroianni.In this outing filmed in Portland, Oregon, Williams plays Lizzy, an artist who works for a local college and lives in a flat owned by a fellow artist and neighbor named Jo (Hong Chau). Lizzy makes small, fired clay figurines resembling dolls in distress. Jo makes large 2D sculptures made of colored string resembling dream catchers. An edgy, competitive spirit permeates much of their exchanges. They both have shows coming up. Lizzy’s is first and it will be at a local gallery. Lizzy, who wears slipper-like shoes outdoors and has a frumpy walk...Hip hop champ Brandie Blaze turns struggles into ‘Broken Rainbows’
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 22:07:47 GMT
Brandie Blaze wanted to make a sonic telenovela. Instead the Boston hip hop champion made an album about her personal pain and triumph.To follow up her second album, 2019’s “Late Bloomer,” Blaze dreamed up a fictional concept album – a sort of murder mystery that plays out over a set of banging hip hop tracks. The album got a boost when Blaze won a LAB Grant from the Boston Foundation to help her make it. Then the project took an unexpected personal turn.“As I was writing, I realized that the album started to mirror my life,” Blaze told the Herald. “I was in a relationship that was emotionally abusive… I realized as I was writing these songs that it wasn’t a fictional story anymore. It was about my life and what I was going through.”“It became this super personal album that I did not intend on doing,” Blaze added.Blaze put her struggles into her songs. Into her wise and mighty, raw and catchy songs.Those songs make up “Broken Rainbows,” an LP that comes out April 20 and gets a relea...Latest news
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