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The Boston Globe
Boston fell behind early, 2-0, but turned on the jets in the second period but outshot and outplayed St. Louis the rest of the way.
Connor Clifton steps up Bruins fans gather for City Hall Plaza watch party

Casino and daily fantasy industries get on same page about sports bets

The state?s three gambling emporiums say both casinos and established fantasy sports firms should be able to run digital sports books.

Amid growing pressure, lawmakers push to overhaul school funding formula

A legislative commission concluded nearly four years ago that the state is shortchanging K-12 education by $1 billion or more.

Dan Shaughnessey
Unfortunate that Bill Buckner was defined by one play
Buckner?s error became a metaphor for cataclysmic failure, and that was terribly unfair.

Former Red Sox first baseman Bill Buckner dies at 69

Tornados leave trail of destruction across Ohio, Indiana

A rapid-fire line of apparent tornadoes tore across Indiana and Ohio overnight, packed so closely together that one crossed the path carved by another. 34 minutes ago

Wampanoag tribe fights latest in long history of ills

The tribe, decimated by English settlers in the 17th century and forced onto lands in Mashpee, was the target of a tweet by President Trump that opposed continued protection for its lands.

A cleaning company with a lofty goal: transforming a low-wage industry

Well-Paid Maids employs cleaners full-time, with benefits, and hopes to serve as a case study to increase worker protections.

Kevin Cullen
The Irish, the famine and the legacy of colonialism
The unveiling on Deer Island of the Great Hunger Memorial to the 850 Irish immigrants who fled famine only to die of disease in Boston tells a story of colonialism and the universality of immigration.

Sean P. Murphy | The Fine Print
A damaged Torah and a fight over fixing it
A sacred Torah damaged by UPS en route to a Milton synagogue leads to questions about who?s responsible for paying for repair.

Japan bus stop stabbing wounds 16, kills at least 2

Most of the victims were elementary school girls who were lined up at a bus stop near Noborito Park in the city of Kawasaki when a man in his 50s began slashing them with knives.
RED SOX 12, INDIANS 5

Fenway, Cleveland get Red Sox back into the swing

After a trio of tight, tense games in Houston, Boston broke out the bats on Memorial Day, smashing three homers in a rout of Terry Francona?s Tribe.

DeLeo touts $1.3b GreenWorks program

Cities and town would be able to seek grants for projects to mitigate climate change.

In West Roxbury, hundreds gather to honor those who served

A Memorial Day service highlighted sacrifices made by generations of Boston families who fought for their nation from the Revolutionary War to the present.

Worcester police investigating hit and run

Worcester police are investigating a hit and run that left a 53-year-old man with serious injuries on Sunday, officials said.

Beyond budget figures: Report provides a snapshot of 1.8m on MassHealth

An attempt to humanize an insurance program that is often reduced to numbers and statistics.

Ireland votes overwhelmingly to liberalize divorce laws

It?s the latest blow at the ballot box for the Catholic Church, which once dictated social norms in the country.

N.H. governor set to approve children?s proposal to name red-tailed hawk state raptor

An effort hatched four years ago to designate the red-tailed hawk as New Hampshire?s official state raptor is finally close to completion.

Recommended Reads

devra first

Dear St. Louis, I hope your hockey team isn?t as bad as your food

An open letter to the city that toasts its ravioli and cuts its pizza all wrong.

Amid illness, Tufts student Sam Lobley, 22, created fictional characters of depth and compassion
Samuel Lobley, 22, who died May 10 from complications of a double-lung transplant, was a gifted writer who finished a short story collection that earned highest honors at Tufts University.

Robotics companies getting a grip on e-commerce
Soft Robotics and RightHand Robotics are leaders in the effort to master an activity that?s trivial for humans but ferociously tough for machines: picking stuff up and putting it down.

?Not really if, it?s when?: Mass. marijuana pesticide ban prompts fears of crop failure
As the state?s cannabis industry scales up, business leaders say they have far more to lose because of Massachusetts? hard-line ban on pesticides.

Metro

sports

Saying he ?needs some time,? Dustin Pedroia will step back and reassess his status

Pedroia, who was placed on the 60-day injured list, said he isn?t sure he can play again.