Editorial: We work for Herald readers

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 10:01:55 GMT

Editorial: We work for Herald readers If you have a tip, we’ll chase it down.If you have a smart idea, send it our way.Basically, the journalists at the Boston Herald work for you. Our competitors, we’ve learned, attempt to manage the news to fit their agendas. We have one agenda: the truth!We’re taking time out today from all the noise to promise that no matter how many times the Boston Globe attempts to decode our scoops, we won’t reciprocate.We will give you the Herald’s take if a story breaks that needs your immediate attention, not knock another outlet for exposing the truth. (Yes, that word means everything to us.) We did so this past week after a 53-year-old New Hampshire man died after a fight in the stands at Gillette Stadium in the fourth quarter of the Dolphins game.An eyewitness to the altercation told us the brawling has to stop. “It’s sad and senseless,” he said. “It’s just a football game!” He told us he would grab a copy of the Herald the next day. That is all we...

CineFest Latino Boston celebrates community

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 10:01:55 GMT

CineFest Latino Boston celebrates community After months of prep, the first annual CineFest Latino Boston opens Wednesday.For Founder/Executive Director Sabrina Avilés, CineFest is a place to shatter stereotypes and celebrate community. She has worked since March to book the 30 films – 15 shorts, 15 features — that comprise CineFest Latino Boston. Filmmakers from Mexico, Peru, Colombia and Brazil are represented.“It’s a lot of logistics but as a filmmaker-producer,” Avilés said, “it’s about creating a cohesive presentation. This is technically our first festival; I’d forgotten how difficult it is with planning and logistics, almost like having a baby.“In the long run, as difficult as it is, it’s so worthwhile because of the conversations that come up during the screenings.”“La Pecera,’ directed by Glorimar Marrero Sánchez, opens the festival Wednesday night at the Coolidge Corner Theatre, co-presented by Ágora Cultural Architects.“The film,” she said, “is a metaphor of the relationship between Puerto Rico and the United...

Classical music old & new on Boston’s fall calendar

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 10:01:55 GMT

Classical music old & new on Boston’s fall calendar Beethoven! Ellington! A bunch of composers you’ve never heard of!Wonderfully, thankfully, the definition of classical music is changing. The genre can be classical (in the well, classical sense of the word) or it can be thoroughly modern, and, of course, it can be everything in between.Take a look at these fall calendar highlights for stuff from Beethoven to Arab-Andalusian songs to something from Kennedy Center composer-in-residence Carlos Simon.Opening Night with the Boston Symphony OrchestraOct. 7, Symphony HallThe Boston Symphony Orchestra celebrates its 2023-24 season with old and new friends, expected and underappreciated repertoire. Maestro Andris Nelsons will conduct works by Beethoven and Mozart. But the BSO expands beyond European icons by welcoming jazz pianist Aaron Diehl’s trio to collaborate with the symphony on Duke Ellington’s “New World A-Coming” and “Tonk.” Between Ellington and the Europeans, the BSO reimagines traditional Southern dances in the Carlos Simon...

Dear Abby: Wife wants divorce, hubby needs her $$

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 10:01:55 GMT

Dear Abby: Wife wants divorce, hubby needs her $$ Dear Abby: I have seriously thought about giving my husband an ultimatum and moving out for a while. Living with him is no longer tolerable. His children support me 100%. He’s an alcoholic and can be a bully when he’s drinking. His bad behavior comes and goes. I never know who he’ll be when he puts the can down. We have been married 30 years. He’s better now, but I don’t know how long it will last.I have recently met and fallen in love with someone who says he wants to marry me. I still love my husband, but I’m also in love with this other person. I feel life is too short to stay with someone so unpredictable, and I no longer feel romantically attracted to my husband. I dread hurting him and also the idea of divorce. I’m not sure if I should wait and see how things play out or pull the plug and get it over with. I don’t want to make a mistake, but I also do not want to stay in an unhappy relationship for the rest of my life.The other t...

First Lady Jill Biden visits San Diego for fundraiser; Mayor Gloria welcomes

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 10:01:55 GMT

First Lady Jill Biden visits San Diego for fundraiser; Mayor Gloria welcomes SAN DIEGO -- The First Lady of the United States, Dr. Jill Biden landed in San Diego Saturday afternoon for a fundraiser event to support her husband's reelection campaign.Biden arrived at San Diego International Airport around 2:20 p.m. Saturday. She was welcomed by San Diego Mayor Todd Gloria on the tarmac.“San Diego always loves it when Doctor Biden or her husband are here in town," Gloria said. They are frequent visitors of San Diego, I love that level of attention for the second-largest city in California, the eighth largest in America. I appreciate the time they spend here it helps us get our issues in front of the administration."Following her greeting, Biden headed to the private Rancho Santa Fe estate owned by Allan and Megan Camaisa, according to a report from the White House press pool. Allan is an entrepreneur in biotech and security software, while Megan is a producer in film and Christian media.During the event, reports say she encouraged the American people to send he...

Thousands turn out for Day 2 of MCAS Miramar Airshow

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 10:01:55 GMT

Thousands turn out for Day 2 of MCAS Miramar Airshow SAN DIEGO -- The Marine Corps Air Station Miramar airshow continued into its second day Saturday, drawing out thousands for the event. This year's theme is “America’s Airshow: Presented by the United States Marine Corps.” “I’d say the biggest draw here is obviously the airplanes but also the people -- the marines, the sailors, the airmen,” said Luke Esposito, executive officer of Marine Corps Air Station Miramar. “We’ve got members of every service here that are showing off what they do and the equipment that they have.”During the second day of the Miramar Airshow, visitors were able to check out immersive experiences, static displays and more. Meanwhile, crowds were also wowed by daytime demonstrations, including one by the Marine Air-Ground Task Force (MAGTF). Miramar Air Show returns: What to know “The display for the MAGTF demo was just generally showing how the marine corps fights as team integrating both air and ground together all in one,” said Davis Wilson, a Cobra co-pilo...

One injured due to shooting in Scarborough

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 10:01:55 GMT

One injured due to shooting in Scarborough One person has been injured from a shooting in the McCowan Road and Hollyhedge Drive area of Scarborough on Saturday night. Police responded to reports of a shooting at approximately 10: 58 p.m. in the area. Once on scene police located a male victim with injuries who was transported to hospital.There is an ongoing investigation and anyone with information is asked to contact police.

A Ukrainian train is a lifeline connecting the nation’s capital with the front line

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 10:01:55 GMT

A Ukrainian train is a lifeline connecting the nation’s capital with the front line KRAMATORSK, Ukraine (AP) — Among the hundreds of trains criss-crossing Ukraine’s elaborate railway network every day, the Kyiv-Kramatorsk train stands apart, shrouded in solemn silence as passengers anticipate their destination.Every day, around seven in the morning, passengers of this route leave the relative safety of the capital and head east to frontline areas where battles between Ukrainian forces and Russian troops rage and Russian strikes are frequent with imprecise missiles that slam into residential areas.The passengers are a mix of men and women that offer up a slice of Ukrainian society these days. They include soldiers returning to the front after a brief leave, women making the trip to reunite for a few days with husbands and boyfriends serving on the battlefields, and residents returning to check on homes in the Donetsk region.They are all lost in thought and rarely converse with each other.Nineteen-year-old Marta Banakh anxiously awaits the train’s next brief stop at ...

After climate summit, California Gov. Gavin Newsom faces key decisions to reduce emissions back home

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 10:01:55 GMT

After climate summit, California Gov. Gavin Newsom faces key decisions to reduce emissions back home SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — California Gov. Gavin Newsom made big waves in the climate world recently by announcing a lawsuit alleging major oil and gas companies deceived the public about the risks fossil fuels posed for global warming and saying he would sign the nation’s most sweeping emissions reporting rules for large companies.Newsom must now decide whether to go even further. Lawmakers have sent him bills aiming to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from buildings, help schools adapt to the changing climate and ease the cost to taxpayers for the cleanup of orphan oil and gas wells. After the Legislature wrapped up for the year earlier this month, Newsom touted California’s leadership on environmental issues at a United Nations climate summit in New York. In California, he said, climate change has led to “places, lifestyles and traditions being destroyed right in front of our eyes, despite all of that leadership.”“If you read the newspaper or turn on your TV … you...

Migrants hoping to reach US continue north through Mexico by train amid historic migration levels

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 10:01:55 GMT

Migrants hoping to reach US continue north through Mexico by train amid historic migration levels IRAPUATO, Mexico (AP) — As a train roared in the distance, some 5,000 mostly Venezuelan migrants hoping to make it to the U.S. snapped into action.Families with young children sleeping on top of cardboard boxes and young men and women tucked away in tents under a nearby bridge scrambled to pack their things. After the train arrived on the outskirts of the central Mexican city of Irapuato, some swung their bodies over its metal trailers with ease, while others tossed up bags and handed up their small children swaddled in winter coats.“Come up, come up,” migrants atop the train urged those below. Others yelled, “God bless Mexico!”After three days of waiting for the train that many in the group worried would never come, this was their ticket north to Mexico’s border with the United States.Thousands of other migrants were stranded in other parts of the country last week after Mexico’s biggest railroad said it halted 60 freight trains. The company, Ferromex, said so many migrants w...