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    • Biden makes historic nomination for Army chief

      Biden makes historic nomination for Army chief

      If confirmed by the Senate, Christine Wormuth would be the first woman to hold the Army's top civilian post.

      ‘A true patriot’ »
      • Suspect in shooting at Tenn. school killed: Authorities

        Suspect in shooting at Tenn. school killed: Authorities

      • Protesters face off with state troopers in a city on edge

        Protesters face off with state troopers in a city on edge

      • What's next for unions after Amazon defeat?

        What's next for unions after Amazon defeat?

      • Biden admin's new deal to curb migration

        Biden admin's new deal to curb migration

      • Experts: Biden's outreach to Tehran just got complicated

        Experts: Biden's outreach to Tehran just got complicated

    • LA woman arrested for keeping $1.2 million accidentally deposited into her account
      U.S.
      TheGrio

      LA woman arrested for keeping $1.2 million accidentally deposited into her account

      Kelyn Spadoni, 33, of Harvey, Louisiana, allegedly refused to return more than $1.2 million she mistakenly received from Charles Schwab & Co. According to Nola.com, the suspect allegedly immediately transferred them to another account. “She secreted it, and they were not able to access it,” said a Sheriff's Office spokesperson, Capt. Jason Rivarde. Before receiving the funds, Spadoni had opened an account with Charles Schwab & Co. in January.

      • Louisiana Woman Arrested for Refusing to Give Back $1.2 Million Accidentally Deposited Into Her Account
        Louisiana Woman Arrested for Refusing to Give Back $1.2 Million Accidentally Deposited Into Her Account
        Complex
      • Woman arrested after refusing to give back $1.2 million bank accidentally wired to her account
        Woman arrested after refusing to give back $1.2 million bank accidentally wired to her account
        The Independent
    • World
      Associated Press

      Libyan officials say UN-sanctioned human trafficker freed

      Libyan authorities released one of the country's most wanted human traffickers less than four months after his arrest in Tripoli, security officials said Monday. Abdel-Rahman Milad, who was sanctioned by the U.N. Security Council, walked free Sunday, following a decision by prosecutors late last month, they said. Milad, better known by his alias Bija, was seen after his release in his hometown of Zawiya in western Libya, where he had commanded a coast guard unit.

    • Tucker Carlson: call for Fox News to fire host after anti-immigration tirade
      Politics
      The Guardian

      Tucker Carlson: call for Fox News to fire host after anti-immigration tirade

      The head of the Anti-Defamation League has called for Fox News to fire Tucker Carlson, after the primetime host said immigration would “dilute the political power” of Americans. Carlson was referring to “white replacement”, a racist theory that has been cited as a motivation in deadly attacks. I think we've really crossed a new threshold when a major news network dismisses this or pretends like it isn't important,” Greenblatt said.

      • 'Crock Of S**t': Ex-Fox Host Gretchen Carlson Rips Network Over Tucker Carlson
        'Crock Of S**t': Ex-Fox Host Gretchen Carlson Rips Network Over Tucker Carlson
        HuffPost
      • Fox stands behind Tucker Carlson after ADL urges his firing
        Fox stands behind Tucker Carlson after ADL urges his firing
        Associated Press
    • China brands Japan's plan to release treated Fukushima water into sea as 'extremely irresponsible'
      World
      The Telegraph

      China brands Japan's plan to release treated Fukushima water into sea as 'extremely irresponsible'

      Japan's government has approved a plan to release over one million tonnes of treated water from the stricken Fukushima nuclear plant into the ocean, Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga said on Tuesday. Japan's government argues that the release will be safe because the water has been processed to remove almost all radioactive elements and will be diluted. It has support from the International Atomic Energy Agency, which says the release is similar to processes for disposing of waste water from nuclear plants elsewhere in the world.

      • Japan to release Fukushima water into sea
        Japan to release Fukushima water into sea
        Reuters Videos
      • Japan to release contaminated Fukushima water into sea after treatment
        Japan to release contaminated Fukushima water into sea after treatment
        Reuters
    • Cops went to a Florida mom’s home on a child abuse call. Then they saw a Dr. Seuss book
      U.S.
      Miami Herald

      Cops went to a Florida mom’s home on a child abuse call. Then they saw a Dr. Seuss book

      Dr Seuss books have made headlines lately, but not for this reason. According to a police report from the Pinellas County Sheriff's Office, deputies went to a Largo home on a call of suspected child abuse. When they arrived around 9 p.m.

    • Biden gets positive GOP reviews after infrastructure meeting, a hard no on corporate tax hike
      Politics
      The Week

      Biden gets positive GOP reviews after infrastructure meeting, a hard no on corporate tax hike

      President Biden hosted a bipartisan group of eight lawmakers in the White House on Monday evening to discuss his $2.25 trillion American Jobs Plan, and Republican attendees said afterward the president seemed genuinely interested in their input. "I'm prepared to negotiate as to the extent of my infrastructure project, as well as how we pay for it," Biden said in the two-hour Oval Office meeting. "Everyone acknowledges we need a significant increase in infrastructure."

      • Biden wants infrastructure deal, but GOP doubts persist
        Biden wants infrastructure deal, but GOP doubts persist
        Associated Press
      • Biden 'prepared to negotiate' size, taxes with lawmakers on $2.25 trillion infrastructure and jobs plan
        Biden 'prepared to negotiate' size, taxes with lawmakers on $2.25 trillion infrastructure and jobs plan
        USA TODAY
    • Texas oil pipelines face dry months as production languishes
      Business
      Reuters

      Texas oil pipelines face dry months as production languishes

      NEW YORK (Reuters) -Nearly half of all oil pipelines from the Permian basin, the biggest U.S. oilfield, are expected to be empty by the end of the year, analysts and executives said. Pipeline companies went on a construction spree throughout 2018 and 2019 to handle blistering growth in U.S. crude production to a record 13 million barrels per day (bpd). Major pipeline companies are exploring ways to ship other products in those lines and considering selling stakes in operations to raise cash.

    • Taiwan: 'Record number' of China jets enter air zone
      World
      BBC

      Taiwan: 'Record number' of China jets enter air zone

      Taiwan has said a record number of Chinese military jets flew into its air defence zone on Monday. The defence ministry said 25 aircraft including fighters and nuclear-capable bombers entered its so-called air defence identification zone (ADIZ) on Monday. The incursion is the largest in a year and comes as the US warns against an "increasingly aggressive China".

      • Chinese aircraft in biggest Taiwan airspace incursion for a year despite US warning
        Chinese aircraft in biggest Taiwan airspace incursion for a year despite US warning
        The Independent
      • Taiwan says China flew 25 warplanes into its airspace in the largest breach yet
        Taiwan says China flew 25 warplanes into its airspace in the largest breach yet
        Business Insider
    • ‘My Body, My Sweat, Your Tears.’ Amber Alert for girl, 11, wearing distinctive hoodie
      U.S.
      Miami Herald

      ‘My Body, My Sweat, Your Tears.’ Amber Alert for girl, 11, wearing distinctive hoodie

      She shared a photo of herself Monday wearing a hooded sweatshirt with the phrase: “My Body, My Sweat, Your Tears. Then 11-year-old Montana Breseman — who goes by the name Jordan — disappeared from River Ridge Middle School in New Port Richey, which is near Tampa, said the Pasco County Sheriff's Office. Pasco County Sheriff Chris Nocco pleaded with the community Monday night for help in finding the girl, who was last seen around 11 a.m.

    • News
      Yahoo News Video

      U.S. Army lieutenant files suit against two Virginia police officers for assault during traffic stop

      A U.S. Army lieutenant filed a lawsuit against two Virginia police officers over what court papers say was a violent traffic stop, where officers pointed their guns, knocked him to the ground, pepper-sprayed him and "threatened to murder him."

    • Myanmar activists cancel new year festivities; U.N. urges end to 'slaughter'
      World
      Reuters

      Myanmar activists cancel new year festivities; U.N. urges end to 'slaughter'

      Opponents of military rule in Myanmar cancelled traditional new year festivities on Tuesday and instead showed their anger with the generals who seized power through low-key displays of defiance and small protests across the country. The United Nations human rights office said it feared that the military clampdown on protests since the Feb. 1 coup risked escalating into a civil conflict like that seen in Syria and appealed for a halt to the "slaughter". A Myanmar activist group, the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners, says the security forces have killed 710 protesters since the ouster of an elected government led by Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi.

      • Myanmar's Suu Kyi asks court to let her meet lawyers, activists urge New Year defiance
        Myanmar's Suu Kyi asks court to let her meet lawyers, activists urge New Year defiance
        Reuters
      • Myanmar marchers carry new year flowers in protest
        Myanmar marchers carry new year flowers in protest
        Reuters Videos
    • Black Army officer pepper-sprayed by police said he thought he could be murdered as officers gave quickly changing commands
      U.S.
      INSIDER

      Black Army officer pepper-sprayed by police said he thought he could be murdered as officers gave quickly changing commands

      A uniformed Black Army officer was held at gunpoint and pepper-sprayed during a traffic stop. Second lieutenant Caron Nazario filed a lawsuit against the 2 Virginia officers involved. In a complaint, Nazario said they gave conflicting orders and he was worried he would be murdered.

      • U.S. Army lieutenant files suit against two Virginia police officers for assault during traffic stop
        U.S. Army lieutenant files suit against two Virginia police officers for assault during traffic stop
        Yahoo News Video
      • Town Fires Officer Who Pepper-Sprayed Black Army Lieutenant During Traffic Stop
        Town Fires Officer Who Pepper-Sprayed Black Army Lieutenant During Traffic Stop
        HuffPost
    • Fed's Powell sees US boom ahead, with COVID still a risk
      Politics
      Associated Press

      Fed's Powell sees US boom ahead, with COVID still a risk

      The U.S. economy is poised for an extended period of strong growth and hiring, the chair of the Federal Reserve said in an interview broadcast Sunday, though the coronavirus still poses some risk. Chair Jerome Powell, speaking to CBS' “60 Minutes," also said that he doesn't expect to raise the Fed's benchmark interest rate, currently pegged at nearly zero, this year. And he downplayed the risk of higher inflation stemming from sharp increases in government spending and expanding budget deficits.

      • Powell: Worried about economy reopening 'too quickly'
        Powell: Worried about economy reopening 'too quickly'
        Yahoo Finance
      • Powell on recovery: We're starting to make progress
        Powell on recovery: We're starting to make progress
        Yahoo Finance Video
    • ‘It was indeed terrible.’ Officials in St. Vincent get look at volcano destruction.
      World
      Miami Herald

      ‘It was indeed terrible.’ Officials in St. Vincent get look at volcano destruction.

      A large eruption at the La Soufrière volcano in the eastern Caribbean early Monday is sending a rapidly moving avalanche of hot rocks and volcanic ash down the mountain, raising fears that some communities could be destroyed. Satellite imagery shows the 4:15 a.m. eruption produced dangerous pyroclastic flows traveling faster than a river down the mountain in St. Vincent and the Grenadines as ash filled the air. “I suspect quite a bit of the mountain now, and the communities, the buildings and the structures that are on the mountain, are destroyed and damaged,” said Richard Robertson, the lead geologist with the University of the West Indies Seismic Research Center, which has been closely monitoring the volcano.

      • Caribbean island faces ‘destruction and devastation’ after 'huge' new volcano eruption
        Caribbean island faces ‘destruction and devastation’ after 'huge' new volcano eruption
        Yahoo News UK
      • 'Huge' explosion rocks St. Vincent as volcano keeps erupting
        'Huge' explosion rocks St. Vincent as volcano keeps erupting
        Associated Press
    • The World’s 9 Most Expensive Listings Currently on the Market
      World
      Architectural Digest

      The World’s 9 Most Expensive Listings Currently on the Market

      These fantastical homes range from a 64,000-acre Texas ranch to an oceanside estate in the south of France Originally Appeared on Architectural Digest

    • Czech foreign minister sacked after losing challenge to party leader
      World
      Reuters

      Czech foreign minister sacked after losing challenge to party leader

      PRAGUE (Reuters) -Czech Foreign Minister Tomas Petricek, who frequently warned against risks posed by Russia and China, was sacked on Monday after losing a bid to lead his own centre-left Social Democratic party (CSSD) party last week. His replacement may take a less resolute stance on China and possibly on other issues such as Russia and its "vaccine diplomacy" or its bid in a Czech nuclear power plant tender. President Milos Zeman, who favours close ties with Russia and China and often clashed with Petricek, dismissed him after receiving a proposal to do so from Prime Minister Andrej Babis.

    • A former Minneapolis police officer said Derek Chauvin violated protocol kneeling on George Floyd's neck, but he doesn't think the officer committed a crime
      U.S.
      INSIDER

      A former Minneapolis police officer said Derek Chauvin violated protocol kneeling on George Floyd's neck, but he doesn't think the officer committed a crime

      Insider spoke with an officer who recently left the Minneapolis Police Department. A cardiologist testified Monday that Floyd from a "cardio pulmonary arrest" caused by the "position that he was subjected to." A former Minneapolis police officer told Insider that Derek Chauvin violated protocol while kneeling on George Floyd's neck for several minutes last year but that he didn't think the officer's actions led to Floyd's death.

      • The trial of Derek Chauvin, the former police officer charged in the death of George Floyd, continues
        The trial of Derek Chauvin, the former police officer charged in the death of George Floyd, continues
        Yahoo News Video
      • George Floyd’s brother gets emotional on witness stand
        George Floyd’s brother gets emotional on witness stand
        Yahoo News Video
    • Antibody cocktail ‘rapidly’ prevents and treats COVID, study finds. Here’s how
      Health
      Idaho Statesman

      Antibody cocktail ‘rapidly’ prevents and treats COVID, study finds. Here’s how

      New results from a multi-stage clinical trial show that a cocktail of special antibodies can reduce risks of developing symptomatic COVID-19 by 81% if someone is not already infected with the virus. A separate trial found that the cocktail, called REGEN-COV, is also able to reduce people's chances of developing coronavirus symptoms if dealing with an asymptomatic infection by 76% after three days, the American biotechnology company Regeneron announced Monday. The cocktail was given emergency-use authorization by the Food and Drug Administration in November, and is currently being used to treat mild to moderate COVID-19 in adults and children at least 12 years old who face high risks for severe disease and who are not hospitalized; it was the same drug given to former President Donald Trump when he tested positive for coronavirus in October.

      • Regeneron to seek U.S. OK for COVID-19 cocktail to be used for prevention
        Regeneron to seek U.S. OK for COVID-19 cocktail to be used for prevention
        Reuters
      • Regeneron drug proves effective in preventing COVID
        Regeneron drug proves effective in preventing COVID
        Reuters Videos
    • Missouri lawmakers move to bar businesses from requiring ‘vaccine passports’
      U.S.
      Kansas City Star

      Missouri lawmakers move to bar businesses from requiring ‘vaccine passports’

      The Missouri House of Representatives gave initial approval Monday evening to a measure prohibiting any government entity or business from requiring COVID-19 vaccination. Debate over “vaccine passports” has flared in the legislature as eligibility for getting a shot widens. Missouri last week expanded eligibility to all adults and state health officials are preparing to tackle widespread hesitancy over the vaccine.

      • Experts debate pros vs. cons of vaccine passports saying they’re desired by business, not government
        Experts debate pros vs. cons of vaccine passports saying they’re desired by business, not government
        NBCU
      • Why America has a problem with vaccine passports
        Why America has a problem with vaccine passports
        BBC
    • Minnesota prohibits dangling items like air fresheners from rearview mirrors, which was a factor in the traffic stop that killed Daunte Wright
      U.S.
      INSIDER

      Minnesota prohibits dangling items like air fresheners from rearview mirrors, which was a factor in the traffic stop that killed Daunte Wright

      Daunte Wright was stopped by police and cited for having an object hanging from his rearview mirror. The ACLU said the rearview mirror law is used disproportionately against Black drivers. Police said Monday that officers pulled over Daunte Wright for a minor traffic violation before events escalated and an officer shot the 20-year-old dead.

      • Police shooting of Daunte Wright puts spotlight on 'pretextual arrest' laws
        Police shooting of Daunte Wright puts spotlight on 'pretextual arrest' laws
        Yahoo News
      • The Rush: Minnesota teams postpone games, athletes react to the death of Daunte Wright
        The Rush: Minnesota teams postpone games, athletes react to the death of Daunte Wright
        Yahoo Sports Videos
    • 14 Ways to Do Memphis Without Doing Memphis
      Entertainment
      Architectural Digest

      14 Ways to Do Memphis Without Doing Memphis

      You don't have to commit to full-on maximalism to make a statement Originally Appeared on Architectural Digest

    • Software fix planned for Mars helicopter
      Technology
      CBS News

      Software fix planned for Mars helicopter

      The long-awaited maiden flight of an experimental $80 million mini helicopter carried to Mars by the Perseverance rover is on hold while engineers test software to resolve a glitch that cropped up Friday during a pre-flight test, NASA announced Monday. If all goes well, the team hopes to determine a new flight date next week. Engineers initially expected to clear the Ingenuity helicopter for launch Sunday on a 30-second up-and-down flight to verify the 4-pound drone can, in fact, autonomously lift off, hover and land in the ultra-thin atmosphere of Mars.

      • The Morning After: Even NASA’s Mars drone needs software updates
        The Morning After: Even NASA’s Mars drone needs software updates
        Engadget
      • First flight for Mars helicopter, Ingenuity, delayed until next week
        First flight for Mars helicopter, Ingenuity, delayed until next week
        The Weather Network
    • Pricey pup or costly cat? Here are tips to save money, keep them healthy
      Lifestyle
      Kansas City Star

      Pricey pup or costly cat? Here are tips to save money, keep them healthy

      Between food, toys, supplies and routine medical costs, you could easily spend thousands each year trying to keep them happy and healthy. It is important for pet owners to have money set aside each month for these expenses, just as you would for yourself, so that you have what you need to give your pet a great life. It may seem counter-intuitive but spending more on good-quality pet food is an easy way to keep your pet out of the emergency room and away from your emergency fund.

    • The judge in the Chauvin trial won't admit statements from Morries Hall, the passenger in George Floyd's car
      U.S.
      INSIDER

      The judge in the Chauvin trial won't admit statements from Morries Hall, the passenger in George Floyd's car

      Morries Hall has invoked his 5th Amendment right not to testify in Derek Chauvin's trial. The judge ruled against admitting statements Hall previously made to investigators at trial. The judge will rule Tuesday on whether Hall will be ordered to testify with limitations.

      • The trial of Derek Chauvin, the former police officer charged in the death of George Floyd, continues
        The trial of Derek Chauvin, the former police officer charged in the death of George Floyd, continues
        Yahoo News Video
      • George Floyd’s brother gets emotional on witness stand
        George Floyd’s brother gets emotional on witness stand
        Yahoo News Video
    • U.S.
      Tribune Publishing

      Police: Beaten boy drops from window to escape abusive dad

      Apr. 12—A boy who was locked in a bedroom for days at a time jumped from a second-floor window and skirted security cameras to escape his abusive father, police said. Elvis Justiniano, 31, of 122 Woodside Dr., is facing false imprisonment and child endangerment charges alleging he regularly beat the child in addition to keeping him locked upstairs. According to the complaint, the boy showed up at Wilkes-Barre police headquarters Saturday morning and reported his father had slapped his face and beat him with a wooden paint mixer.

    Companies speak out on voting rights
    • “There’s no ‘both sides of the debate’ when it comes to active voter suppression.”

    • “Companies that do this ooze contempt for their own customers and employees who are not in the leftmost quarter of opinion.”

    • “The truth is that Fortune 500 companies were never taking moral stances from the goodness of their corporate hearts.”

    • “The truth is, the companies hold the cards…If companies stick to their guns, Georgia is likely to back down as well.”

    • “When a company folds to the unfounded outrage of a few misinformed nuts, they are forever at the mob’s beck-and-call.”

    Read the 360