Business Insider,
by
Aria Bendix
&
Mia De Graaf
Original Article
Posted by
NorthernDog
—
8/8/2021 8:37:22 PM
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Katie Bent and her three roommates all got Johnson & Johnson's vaccine in April at the Oakland Coliseum in California - the first shot offered to them after a year of relative isolation. "If the Pfizer had been the first option available to me, I would have gone with that over J&J," Bent, a 30-year-old tech worker, told Insider. "My priority was getting it sooner rather than getting the preferred option." Pfizer's and Moderna's clinical trials found that those vaccines reduced the risk of getting COVID-19 by roughly 95%, while J&J's single-dose shot was found to cut the risk of moderate
CNN,
by
Alta Spells
Original Article
Posted by
NorthernDog
—
8/8/2021 8:28:12 AM
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A Chicago police officer has died, and another officer is fighting for his life following a traffic stop Saturday night that ended in gunfire, officials said. Two suspects are in custody, said Eric Carter, First Deputy Superintendent of Police, during a news briefing early Sunday. "This evening, Chicago mourns the loss of one of its bravest and finest. And we have another officer who is struggling and fighting for his very life," Carter said. Officers were conducting a traffic stop on a vehicle with three people, two men and a woman, near 63rd Street and South Bell Avenue, when the
KMSP-TV [Eden Prairie MN],
by
Staff
Original Article
Posted by
NorthernDog
—
8/7/2021 4:52:01 PM
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MINNEAPOLIS - The Minneapolis Greek Festival says its 2021 Taste of Greece event won't go on next month as officials cite unrest in Uptown. In a message on the festival's website, officials say: "Due to the recent unrest in the Uptown district and the realization that we would be unable to find a successful solution to ensure the safety and security of our Festival guests, volunteers, and grounds, we have made the difficult decision to cancel this year’s Festival. We have every intent of holding our Festival next year." The 2021 festival was scheduled to run from Friday, September 10
Jerusalem Post [Israel],
by
Cnaan Liphshiz
Original Article
Posted by
NorthernDog
—
8/7/2021 1:32:38 PM
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Dutch police at Amsterdam’s Schiphol Airport removed 18 Orthodox Jewish girls from a Delta-KLM flight bound for New York on Friday allegedly because they failed to comply with COVID-19 measures about eating at proscribed times. The girls were part of a group of about 50 people traveling from Kyiv, Ukraine, with a layover in Amsterdam, the NIW Dutch Jewish weekly reported Friday. On the Amsterdam-New York City leg of the journey, which was operated by Delta Airlines in partnership with KLM, some of the girls began to eat their own food outside the designated meal time, allegedly because the flight
Associated Press,
by
Staff
Original Article
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NorthernDog
—
8/6/2021 7:19:39 PM
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MADISON, Wis. — The University of Wisconsin removed a large boulder from its Madison campus on Friday at the request of minority students who view the rock as a symbol of racism. Chamberlin Rock, on the top of Observatory Hill, is named after Thomas Crowder Chamberlin, a geologist and former university president. Students of color on campus say the rock represents a history of discrimination. The boulder was referred to as a derogatory name for Black people in a Wisconsin State Journal story in 1925. (Snip) The boulder is a rare, large example of a pre-Cambrian era glacial erratic that experts
CNBC,
by
Jennifer Liu
Original Article
Posted by
NorthernDog
—
8/6/2021 6:43:36 PM
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Lawmakers, economists and advocates are working to extend a handful of key federal aid programs established at the beginning of the pandemic, many of which are scheduled to end just as the delta variant has caused Covid caseloads to rise across the U.S. yet again. Already this week, following pressure from House Democrats, the CDC extended the federal eviction moratorium through October 3 after it lapsed over the weekend. Now, other Congressional Democrats are calling on the White House to extend the pause on federal student loan payments scheduled to expire at the end of September, the Washington Post reports.
Fox News,
by
Michael Ruiz
Original Article
Posted by
NorthernDog
—
8/5/2021 6:31:54 PM
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Michigan Rep. Rashida Tlaib is pushing for legislation that would let people who fail to pay their water, electricity or broadband bills off the hook. "Cancel water, electricity and broadband debt," the Squad member tweeted Wednesday morning. "#StopTheShutoffs. (Tweet) She changed her messaging Thursday afternoon – calling for a bailout instead of outright cancellation. "No one should live without water and critical services," she tweeted Thursday. "Congress bailed out the banks in 2008 when it was their own wrongdoing. There should be NO hesitation in bailing out people who, due to no fault of their own, are experiencing the impacts of
Boston Herald,
by
Rickey Sobey
Original Article
Posted by
NorthernDog
—
8/5/2021 5:47:12 PM
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Massachusetts health officials on Thursday reported more than 1,000 daily coronavirus cases, the first time the state has hit four figures for COVID cases in three months as the delta variant takes over. After state health officials on Thursday reported 1,046 new cases, the seven-day average of daily cases is now 660, which is more than 10 times the 64 daily cases in late June. The last time the state reported more than 1,000 infections in one day was on May 6. As virus infections spike amid the more highly contagious variant, COVID hospitalizations in the Bay State have also
KMGH-TV [DENVER, CO],
by
Liz Gelardi
Original Article
Posted by
NorthernDog
—
8/4/2021 9:51:57 PM
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LAKEWOOD, Colo. -- The owners of a family-owned car dealership are devastated after eight vehicles were stolen in one night. They say someone got into the dealership overnight and that person was caught on surveillance video stealing car keys. "We don’t know how, we don’t know how they did it," said Marjan Kandi, who owns the dealership with her husband. The dealership is equipped with a security system and surveillance cameras but Lakewood Police say there was no sign of forced entry. Kandi says the thieves moved the outside security cameras. Instead of facing the parking lot, the cameras were
Newsweek,
by
Carly Mayberry
Original Article
Posted by
NorthernDog
—
8/4/2021 8:31:23 PM
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Attorneys representing students of Minnesota's Lakeville School District have told Newsweek they intend to file a lawsuit against the district on Friday for violating their clients' First Amendment free speech rights. Doug Seaton, Upper Midwest Law Center president said his clients were discriminated against after being prohibited from displaying "All Lives Matter" signs on school property while "Black Lives Matter" posters were allowed. The UMCL is a non-profit public interest law firm whose website describes its mission as one that initiates pro-freedom litigation to protect against constitutional violations, government's overreach, special interest agendas and public union corruption and abuses.
Associated Press,
by
David Bauder
Original Article
Posted by
NorthernDog
—
8/3/2021 9:00:08 PM
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NEW YORK — For most nights at the Tokyo Olympics, NBC’s prime time coverage is drawing about half the audience that the Games had in Rio de Janeiro five years ago. The numbers are sobering: Sunday’s NBC audience of 13 million was down 51% from the 26.7 million who watched the corresponding night in Rio. Saturday night was down 57%, last Wednesday down 53% and Tuesday down 58%, the Nielsen company said. NBC’s best night last week, when it reached 16.2 million on Thursday, was still down 43% from Rio, Nielsen said. “We’ve had some bad luck,” NBC Universal chief
CBS News,
by
Jim Axelrod
,
Megan Towey
&
Rachel Bailey
Original Article
Posted by
NorthernDog
—
8/2/2021 9:43:14 PM
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The heartbreaking commercials are almost impossible to ignore: Sarah McLachlan singing to images of suffering animals and making an urgent appeal for donations to the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, or ASPCA. After those iconic commercials debuted more than a decade ago, the ASPCA's revenues tripled — going from $85 million in 2007 to nearly $280 million in 2019 — making the ASPCA one of the nation's leading animal welfare charities. With over 1,000 employees, the ASPCA's mission is to rescue, protect and care for animals in need through a wide range of activities like animal relocation, advocacy
Comments:
''Dangerous'' teenager girls were set straight by the COVID authorities.