
Photos of May spring rituals: commencements, Celtics playoffs, Boston Calling
Jessica Rinaldi/Globe Staff
Boston Celtics forward Jayson Tatum grimaced in pain on the floor during game four of the NBA Eastern Conference semifinal against the New York Knicks at Madison Square Garden on May 12. Tatum ruptured his right Achilles tendon in the final minutes of Boston's loss.
Danielle Parhizkaran/Globe Staff
A pedestrian walked on Boylston Street at an intersection by Massachusetts Avenue in Boston on May 15.
David L. Ryan/Globe Staff
Lilah Bilotta, 7, threw out her arms to run through the sea of American flags as she took a break from helping to create the Memorial Day Flag Garden on Boston Common on May 21. Massachusetts Military Heroes Fund and Home Base planted more than 37,000 flags for Memorial Day in honor of Massachusetts veterans who gave their lives.
Jessica Rinaldi/Globe Staff
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Bernardino Chavarría and his daughter Nahomy, 18, passed beneath a giant American flag painted by her classmates that read, 'The American Dream,' at Champlain Valley Union High School. Teachers and administrators scrambled to put together a graduation for Nahomy and her sister, who had chosen with their family to self-deport after the Trump administration sought to terminate the parole program that they had come to the United States under.
Jessica Rinaldi/Globe Staff
Nahomy Chavarría (left) embraced her sister Andrea during a reception held for them after a special commencement exercise of the Champlain Valley Union High School in Williston, Vt.
Jessica Rinaldi/Globe Staff
Mohsen Mahdawi kneeled to examine a plant while on a hike on his land in Fairlee, Vt., on May 7. Mahdawi, a Palestinian national and Columbia student, was arrested by ICE agents last month when he showed up for a citizenship meeting. He faces deportation.
Jessica Rinaldi/Globe Staff
Juan Francisco Mendez hugged his wife, Marilu Domingo Ortiz, and their 9-year-old son in their home in New Bedford on May 16. A native of Guatemala, Méndez was detained by immigration officials for 30 days before his release.
Erin Clark/Globe Staff
Members of the singing group O.G. (Original Gentlemen), from left, Robert Rose, Albert Brown, and Jabir Pope, performed an a cappella song during a rally for the wrongfully convicted outside the Massachusetts State House in Boston on May 21. The demonstration commemorated the five-year anniversary of George Floyd's murder while advocating for criminal justice reform.
Erin Clark/Globe Staff
A woman wore a poncho to protect herself from wind-blown rain on Atlantic Avenue during a rare spring nor'easter in Boston on May 22.
Craig F. Walker/Globe Staff
Members of the class of 2025 attended Harvard University's 374th commencement in Cambridge on May 29.
Craig F. Walker/Globe Staff
Jess Frey, a yoga educator, leapt from one of her favorite sitting spots by a stream at Kripalu Center for Yoga & Health in Stockbridge. 'Sometimes in life we all are invited to change - leap - jump - step - transform into new ways of being (personal and collective as a world)," she wrote in an email.
Martha and Howard Kaloogian (center), founders of Grace New England church in Weare, N.H., worshipped with other congregants at a prayer service in the barn on their property on May 3.
Erin Clark/Globe Staff
Reenactor Doug Ozelius played the part of a fatally shot Royal Navy sailor during a staged skirmish on the 250th anniversary of the Battle of Chelsea Creek celebration in East Boston on May 24. The Revolution's first naval battle involved colonial militia facing off with British troops and the HMS Diana. It ended with a victory for the colonists and the destruction of the British schooner.
Craig F. Walker/Globe Staff
A jogger ran on the North Point Pedestrian Bridge in Cambridge on May 14. The Leonard P. Zakim Bunker Hill Memorial Bridge loomed in the background.
Suzanne Kreiter/Globe Staff
Fans cheered after Boston Celtics center Al Horford made a 3-point basket during the second quarter in game five of the NBA Eastern Conference semifinal against the New York Knicks at TD Garden.
Danielle Parhizkaran/Globe Staff
Hubbardston Militia reenactor Bella Kaldera secured a tricorner Revolutionary War hat as a modern-day Coast Guard helicopter landed at Beverly High School during a Warrior Weekend event on May 18.
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San Francisco Chronicle
an hour ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
By sending troops to D.C. and eyeing Oakland, Trump continues targeting Black-led cities
When President Donald Trump announced Monday that he will deploy National Guard troops to the streets of Washington D.C. to combat crime, he named several other cities where he might take similar action. 'We have other cities also that are bad. Very bad,' Trump said during the White House news conference. 'You look at Chicago, how bad it is. You look at Los Angeles, how bad it is. We have other cities that are very bad. New York has a problem. And then you have, of course, Baltimore and Oakland. We don't even mention that anymore there.' Trump and other members of his administration, while often using false or misleading statistics, have cited rampant crime as the justification for deploying federalized troops within U.S. cities. But these cities share another commonality: They're led by Black mayors. Critics don't think that's a coincidence. Trump's focus on Washington D.C., Chicago, Baltimore, New York and Oakland is part of a larger pattern in which the president has suggested cities with majority-Black populations, or those led by Black leaders, are hotbeds of crime and corruption and symbols of American decline. 'I see this as a political dog whistle to his base, evoking long-running stereotypes that Black mayors cannot adequately govern or are soft on crime in their cities,' said Jordie Davies, a professor of political science at UC Irvine. 'Donald Trump is engaging in political theater so he can be seen as responding to the racist ideas that these cities are poorly run and overrun with crime — even as statistics demonstrate that violent crime in major U.S. cities, including D.C., is down this year.' Reports of violent crimes — homicides, robberies, assaults and sexual abuse —have seen steep declines over the last two years, the Washington Post reported. 'If he is going to start lying about major American cities to justify sending the military there, it is not surprising to me that he would pick cities with Black leadership and significant Black populations,' state Sen. Scott Wiener, D-San Francisco, said Monday. 'That is straight up Donald Trump's alley and straight out of his racist playbook.' Crime is also falling in Oakland, a trend that Mayor Barbara Lee cited Monday in arguing that Trump was less interested in facts than in scoring 'cheap political points by tearing down communities he doesn't understand.' Oakland experienced a 6% increase in reported violent crimes in 2024, but saw a decrease in homicides and property crimes, according to a Chronicle analysis. So far in 2025, violent crimes including homicides are down significantly in the city. 'We're making real progress on public safety in Oakland, and while we acknowledge we have more work to do, we are doing this work each and every day,' Lee said. 'Our comprehensive public safety strategy is working — crime rates are coming down even though we still face many challenges. And let me repeat, President Trump is wrong.' Before Trump accepted the Republican presidential nomination at the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee last year, he reportedly called the city 'horrible.' 'Trump is a lot of things but he certainly isn't subtle—all of the cities he denigrates have one important thing in common: they all have significant Black populations,' DNC Chair Jaime Harrison said in a statement to the Daily Beast at the time. In 2020, Trump said of Detroit, Oakland and Baltimore, 'these cities, it's like living in hell.' 'And everyone gets upset when I say it, they say, 'Is that a racist statement? ' It's not a racist,' Trump told Fox News. 'Frankly, Black people come up to me, they say, 'Thank you. Thank you sir for saying it.'' Davies, the UC Irvine professor, said using the fear of crime — especially the idea of 'Black crime' — has always been an effective political message in the U.S. It was a message Trump hammered consistently in the 2024 election, a race in which he doubled his share of Black voters from 2020. (still, Trump's opponent, then-Vice President Kamala Harris, won 83% of Black voters.) 'Crime evokes fear and fear provides a political vacuum that can be filled with state violence,' Davies said. 'It will be important for experts, politicians, and journalists to call out Trump's lies about crime in these places and name this for what it is: a racist attempt to dominate Black cities and a performance of power for his base.'
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
How can the Boston Celtics change their play style next season?
After a flurry of off-season moves, the Boston Celtics are looking drastically different from the one that started the 2024-25 NBA season. Brad Stevens is overseeing a retooling process in Boston, and that means taking chances on players who have struggled to cement themselves in an NBA rotation in recent years. The hope is that at least some of them will emerge as candidates to provide depth on the next championship roster. When you look at the current roster, it's clear that there isn't the same level of two-way talent as in recent years. As such, Joe Mazzulla may need to adapt his style of play if he wants to get the best out of his new-look team. After all, Jaylen Brown, who is expected to be the primary offensive option, is at his best when attacking downhill or working out of the mid-block; he is not a catch-and-shoot or pull-up threat from deep. During a recent discussion between "Felger and Mazz" on 98.5 The Sports Hub, Michael Felger and Tony Massarotti discussed whether Joe Mazzulla will need to adjust his team's style of play for the upcoming season. Because, as currently constructed, it's unlikely that the roster will be able to execute the style of basketball we've become used to watching from the Celtics. You can watch the full discussion by clicking on the embedded video above. Watch or listen to the "Taylor Talks Celtics" podcast on: YouTube: Spotify: Apple: Substack: This article originally appeared on Celtics Wire: How can the Celtics change their play style next season?

Miami Herald
an hour ago
- Miami Herald
Pope Leo calls for release of gang hostages in Haiti amid changes on security front
Pope Leo XIV is calling for the release of eight hostages in Haiti, including a 3-year-old boy and a longtime Irish missionary who remain in captivity after being abducted from a mountaintop orphanage by armed gangs in the middle of the night. 'I make a heartfelt appeal to all responsible parties to release the hostages immediately,' the pope said. The pontiff's heartfelt appeal came Sunday during a prayer service where he condemned the widespread 'violence of all kinds, human trafficking, forced displacement and kidnappings' in the volatile Caribbean nation. The comments marked the pope's first public acknowledgement of the unraveling situation in Haiti, where some of his ancestors were from, since the U.S.-born pontiff became the Catholic Church's first American pope in May following the death of Pope Francis in April. During the prayer service, in which he also highlighted other global conflicts, the pope called on the international community to provide tangible support to help create the social and institutional conditions 'that will allow the Haitian people to live in peace.' A week ago Sunday armed gangs breached the Saint-Hélène Orphanage in Kenscoff, an expansive rural enclave in the mountains above Port-au-Prince that has been under constant attack since the start of the year. Once inside, gangs grabbed Gena Heraty, an Irish national who has been working in Haiti since 1993, along with other adults and children. The orphanage is affiliated with Nuestros Pequeños Hermanos, NPH International, which confirmed the abductions on its website. The charity was founded by Father William Wasson, a Catholic priest, and serves vulnerable children in nearly two dozen countries across Latin America and Haiti. The kidnappings once more brought Haiti's rise in gang violence to the forefront. In Haiti, Saint-Hélène's orphans include children with disabilities from other orphanages that were attacked. 'The situation of the Haitian people is increasingly desperate,' the pope later said in a post on X. On Friday, the new head of Haiti's beleaguered Transitional Presidential Council, Laurent Saint-Cyr, said the climate of fear, violence and instability that reign inside the country has made life unbearable for the population of nearly 12 million. This includes more than 1.3 million who have been forced to flee their homes, of whom nearly 500,000 are children. Haitians are demanding only one thing, security, Saint-Cyr said, as he announced the firing of the head of the Haiti National Police, Rameau Normil , after 13 months and 20 days on the job. He was replaced by André Jonas Vladimir Parison, the former head of security for the National Palace. The change in leadership of the police came amid growing frustration with the force's failure to rein in armed gangs that now control about 90% of Port-au-Prince and are expanding elsewhere. Last year, more than 5,600 people died in Haiti in gang-related violence, according to the United Nations, and already this year, the country has logged more than 4,000 deaths. EarIier this month, the U.N. announced that more than 1,500 Haitians had been killed between April and June, while hundreds of kidnappings and rapes continue to be documented. At the same time, members of the powerful Viv Ansanm gang coalition had pillaged and/or burned at least 410 residences and other buildings, including six schools, health centers and local nongovernmental organizations during the period. Normil first served as director of the Haiti National Police in August 2019 when he replaced Michel-Ange Gédéon. He was fired in November 2020 and then brought back in June 21, 2024, replacing Frantz Elbé. But his tenure was marked by questionable arrests, too much territory lost to gangs, poorly executed police operations, a combative personality and a slow pace in recruiting new cops. Normil also faced questions over corruption and competence after the disappearance of a hotel manager and U.S. veteran, Patrice Miot Jacquet, who was working with a private military contractor in Port-au-Prince and disappeared along with police-issued weapons. But the most damning criticism Normil faced was the loss of 18 territories in 10 months to increasingly powerful gangs despite having more resources at his disposal than Elbé.. Despite that support, the police continued to face issues as Normil failed to effectively coordinate with the Kenya-led Multinational Security Support mission, cast aside qualified senior officers over accusations they were not loyal to him or were after his job, and his officers became overwhelmed while facing better armed gangs. Paraison, known for his 'warrior' approach to fighting gangs as he defended the National Palace earlier this year, has the confidence of most of the ruling presidential council but faces tough scrutiny as he takes on mired in corruption and human rights abuse allegations. Saint-Cyr called on Paraison to prove himself as a man of action, telling him 'to take all necessary measures to restore security' with the support of the Haitian Armed Forces and the Kenya-led mission. 'Rally your valiant... officers, earn their trust, intensify operations on all fronts, secure vulnerable areas, consolidate the territories we control, and liberate one by one those territories where our compatriots can no longer live in peace,' Saint-Cyr said 'Fear must change sides.'