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Tuesday, May 31, 2022

‘People pour together in a time like this:’ Bedford County rallies to clean up after tornado - WSLS 10

BEDFORD COUNTY, Va. – A community is rallying together to pick up the pieces after a tornado ripped through Bedford County early Friday morning.

While no one was killed in its wake, the twister with wind gusts of 135 miles per hour brought miles of destruction to a Forest neighborhood.

Cleaning up wasn’t the way neighbors planned to spend their holiday weekend, but it’s looking like it’s how they will be spending the next several.

“I was in the bed and the cats took off running first and I knew something was wrong,” Patricia Spruce said. “It sounded like a train coming through the house.”

Spruce has lived in her home for 20 years and she says she’s never been so afraid. The tree in her yard came within two feet of crashing into her bedroom.

“I was just hoping I could get out in time,” she said. “I knew it was going to hit the house.”

When the storm passed, the first thing she did was check up on her neighbors. When she learned everyone was going to be okay, they got to work.

“Thank you to all the people who are willing to come out and support,” said Janet Blankenship, chief with Bedford County Department of Fire & Rescue. “It really shows you that people do come together during a time of tragedy.”

Rescue crews are out here each day checking on neighbors. The power is back on for most and a lot of folks are waiting on insurance companies.

“To come back today and see the miraculous recovery of all the efforts that have been poured into this area, it’s changed a lot,” Blankenship added.

“It changed the whole landscape, but you know, change is good,” Spruce said. “Maybe just not this much at one time.”

Spruce is still finding things, like her flag which once flew proudly on her back porch. It’s now out front, in the middle of all the devastation, serving as a reminder of how the community came together and will continue to until the job is done.

“People pour together in a time like this,” Spruce said. “We are not divided.”

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Do you take your coffee like this? It may help you live longer - study - The Jerusalem Post

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Do you take your coffee like this? It may help you live longer - study  The Jerusalem Post

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What will COVID look like this summer in NJ? Here's what the latest models show - NorthJersey.com

If the iPhone 14 looks like this, we want one! - Digital Camera World

The Apple iPhone 14 rumors (opens in new tab) are continuing to be leaked thick and fast online and at this point we’ve built up a pretty good idea of what to expect. Recently there’s been the hopeful news (opens in new tab) that Apple are finally going to equip the iPhone with a suitable high-tech front facing camera and the disappointing news that despite looming legislation there’ll be no USB-C (opens in new tab) on the new flagship. This latest leak (opens in new tab) is more of a consolidation of all the likely-to-be-true rumors that have been doing the rounds – in the form of some beautiful authentic-looking renders courtesy of Apple leaker Jon Prosser (opens in new tab).

Prosser shared a series of HD renders – styled exactly as Apple do - on his Front Page Tech YouTube channel and we think they are as close to seeing the real thing as we’re going to get until the new phone is released in September, assuming Apple follow launch timelines this year.  

The biggest design change compared to the iPhone 13 (opens in new tab) is that there’s no notch, as per a long string of rumors from numerous sources (opens in new tab). However, the renders show the new cut-out sitting slightly lower than the notch which doesn’t look to give much more, if any, screen space. 

More positively, the camera cut-out on the back – to house the rumored seriously upgraded camera system, looks big, enormous even but it’s not ridiculously so. There’s a fine line between impressive and ridiculous in the heady world of smartphones! 

(Image credit: Jon Prosser/Front Page Tech)

Perfectly purple 

Apple releases at least one exclusive color with each iPhone generation – we saw the iPhone 13 released in Alpine Green and the iPhone 12 released in Pacific Blue. According to whispers online and now these renders, iPhone 14 Pro will come in a stunning purple color. 

Read more
iPhone 14: Everything we know so far (opens in new tab)
Phone rumors (opens in new tab)
Best iPhones for photographers (opens in new tab)
Best USB-C hubs (opens in new tab)
Best camera phone (opens in new tab)
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Best camera for Instagram (opens in new tab)

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Monday, May 30, 2022

NBA Finals ticket prices 2022: Here are the cheapest & most expensive seats for Warriors vs. Celtics games - Sporting News

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The 2022 NBA Finals are set, with the Warriors taking on the Celtics after the conclusion of the Eastern Conference Finals.

With the matchup decided, fans will now begin — if they haven't already started — clamoring for tickets to get into the Chase Center or TD Garden to watch the games.

Whether you're a fan of either team, a San Francisco local or a Boston local, the process of hunting down tickets can be difficult. The Sporting News can help with the search for the best way to purchase tickets.

MORE: Buy 2022 NBA Finals tickets with TicketSmarter

Looking to buy tickets for the NBA Finals? Here's a look at how much it will cost to watch the Warriors play the Celtics.

How much are NBA Finals tickets in 2022?

Tickets for the 2022 NBA Finals certainly aren't cheap. TicketSmarter says tickets can run anywhere from $696 to $24,716. For games in San Francisco, fans can expect to pay, on average, $3,249. Fans looking for tickets in Boston can expect to pay $2,862 on average.

These prices are quite a bit more on average than tickets available in past NBA Finals. According to TicketSmarter, tickets for the NBA Finals from 2017-19 never ranged above $2,300.

Year Arena City Average price
2019 Oracle Arena Oakland $1,402.76
2019 Scotiabank Arena Toronto $2,202.48
2018 Oracle Arena Oakland $1,494.78
2018 Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse Cleveland $963.74
2017 Oracle Arena Oakland $1,195.41
2017 Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse Cleveland $1,228.73

Game 1

The cheapest ticket that can be found for Chase Center is $800 per seat, according to TicketSmarter. The most expensive tickets available are $16,852, with the average price at $2,353.

Game 2

Tickets for the second game of the NBA Finals can be found for as little as $856 for upper-level seats at the Chase Center, per TicketSmarter. The most expensive seats cost $20,222. The average price is listed as $2,685.

Game 3

The first game in Boston will cost fans at least $814 but the price could run as high as $15,750, according to TicketSmarter. The average ticket price is $2,361.

Game 4

Tickets for the second game in Boston are more expensive because the game is the first potential series clincher. TicketSmarter lists the starting price as low as $961 but as expensive as $15,750. The average price is $2,532.

Game 5

Should there be a Game 5 in San Francisco, ticket prices will continue to run high. TicketSmarter lists the average available price as $3,655, the cheapest at $1,049 and the most expensive at $24,716.

Game 6

Tickets for a potential final matchup in Boston currently start as low as $1,286 and go as high as $17,814, according to TicketSmarter. The average price is $3,564.

Game 7

Everybody wants to be in the arena for Game 7, and that's reflected in the prices to get into the Chase Center. TicketSmarter says the cheapest available tickets for the game are $1,391 and the most expensive ones list for $11,870. The average ticket price is $4,267.

Most expensive NBA Finals tickets for Warriors vs. Celtics

Website Price
TicketSmarter $24,716
Seatgeek $80,879
Vivid Seats $66,203
StubHub $75,000

Cheapest NBA Finals tickets for Warriors vs. Celtics

Website Price
TicketSmarter $800
Seatgeek $822
Vivid Seats $615
StubHub $705

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Sunday, May 29, 2022

'I felt like I had to be here': Looking back at the first Reunions since start of COVID-19 pandemic - The Daily Princetonian

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The University welcomed back almost 25,000 alumni and their families for Reunions from Thursday, May 19 to Sunday, May 22. The long weekend festivities marked the first Reunions since 2019 and since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. 

The event included a range of activities from “The One and Only P-Rade” — a focal point of the weekend — to alumni-faculty panels and after-hours social events grouped by class year.

The P-Rade, a traditional procession of alumni across campus, began at Nassau Hall with the “Old Guard” alumni, which featured Joseph Schein ’37, the oldest living alumnus. The Old Guard includes Princetonians who are celebrating their 66th Reunion and beyond. One highlight of the parade included the Class of 1970, which held “Co-Education begins today” signs to mark the first University class in which women graduated.

The Class of 1970 marches down Elm Drive.
Phillip Wang / The Daily Princetonian

Onlookers along the parade’s route were treated to a unique display of pride for the alma mater as many alumni adorned themselves in orange and black clothing. The 2022 P-Rade marked the first time that the classes of 2019, 2020, and 2021 could walk since their respective graduations. The Class of 2022 also participated in the march from Nassau Hall to Poe Field before their graduation, which was held on Tuesday, May 24.

Two members of the Class of 2019 walk in the P-Rade.
Zoe Berman / The Daily Princetonian

Other notable moments from the P-Rade include performances from several student groups, including the Princeton University Band, and local high school marching bands. Each “major” class — those celebrating a reunion with a multiple of five — had themes as they marched, including the Class of 1972, in which each alumnus held up old headshots from their undergraduate days as they marched.

“I thought [the P-Rade] was pretty corny as an undergrad, but once you’ve been out for a while and you watch it and see how it unfolds and folds into itself, it’s a pretty special phenomenon,” Stephen Massad ’72 said in an interview with The Daily Princetonian.

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Celebrations on campus began earlier than usual this year, with the postponed Class of 2020 Commencement Ceremony taking place at Powers Stadium on May 18, a day before other alumn were set to arrive. The Ceremony marked the in-person, on-campus graduation for the Class of 2020, as their initial graduation was virtual due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

“It’s just nice to be back on campus,” Casson Masters ’98 told the ‘Prince.’

“I felt like I had to be here,” Sean Gregory ’98, his classmate, agreed.

“We’re warming up for next year,” Masters said, in reference to his and Gregory’s upcoming 25th reunion.

The Class of 1992 takes a class photo for their 30th reunion.
Zoe Berman / The Daily Princetonian

The weekend featured panels on a variety of topics, drawing alumni and their families to remain up-to-date and informed on current University, domestic and international issues. 

A few notable panels included “The Fight for Free Speech at Princeton and Beyond,” moderated by Robert P. George, director of the James Madison Program in American Ideals and Institutions and McCormick Professor of Jurisprudence, “From Kabul to Kyiv: International Correspondents Review the News and How It’s Covered,” moderated by Gloria Riviera ’96, a digital journalist at ABC News, and “Climate Change and Energy Solutions Alumni-Faculty Panel,” moderated by Judi Greenwald ’82, the Executive Director of the Nuclear Innovation Alliance.

Throughout the weekend, more than a dozen University student entertainment groups held performances for alumni and their families to enjoy. The ‘Prince’ has previously reported on these student groups’ difficulties in gaining access to on-campus housing for Reunions.

The weekend also featured an annual address by University President Christopher Eisgruber ’83, who discussed issues such as fossil fuel disassociation, mental health, free speech, financial aid, and more.

Each major reunions had a designated tent featuring music ranging from DJs to live bands with dance floors for alumni to come together and socialize. Some of the most notable themes included the 5th reunion tent, which featured a “Dancing Queen ’17” theme for the classes of 2017-2022, the 25th reunion tent, which featured a “’97 Prime Time” theme and recreated “Central Perk” from the television show “Friends,” and the 55th reunion tent, which featured a “Clear the Track, ’67s Back” theme, with railroad crossing signs blinking at the entrance.

The Class of 1967 marches during the P-Rade, showing off their themed railroad carts.
Philip Wang / The Daily Princetonian

Edmund Hampden ’72, who spent the weekend celebrating his 50th reunion, said in an interview with the ‘Prince’ that his favorite thing to do during Reunions is “commune and commingle,” emphasizing the community aspect of the events.

“It’s mainly about seeing friends, including people I didn’t even know as an undergrad,” Massad, also celebrating his 50th reunion, said.

For Hampden, Reunions present a unique opportunity.

“Once you’re new and then you have two chances to make a first impression, and [this is] a second chance to make that first impression,” Hampden added.

On Saturday night, a fireworks display and performance by the Princeton University Orchestra was held and open to spectators at Powers Stadium, with thousands in attendance and watching the fireworks from nearby locations around campus.

A still shot from Poe Field of the Saturday night fireworks display. 
Photo courtesy of Nick Sudarsky ’23

Reunions are held annually on campus and serve to foster school pride by bringing back alumni from around the globe. 

Next year’s Reunions are planned to take place from May 25 to May 28, 2023.

Bailey Glenetske is an Assistant News Editor and Geosciences concentrator who often covers breaking news, University affairs and STEM news. She can be reached at bailey.glenetske@princeton.edu or on Instagram @bailey.glenetske.

Lia Opperman is an Assistant News Editor who often covers University affairs, student life, and local news. She can be reached at liaopperman@princeton.edu, on Instagram @liamariaaaa, or on Twitter @oppermanlia.

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Election 2022: Here's Who is Running for Illinois' U.S. Senate Seat - NBC Chicago

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For the second election cycle in a row, one of Illinois’ seats in the United States Senate is being contested, and the Democratic incumbent is looking to stay in Washington.

Sen. Tammy Duckworth is running for her second term in office, having defeated incumbent Mark Kirk in the 2016 election.

Duckworth is currently serving on the Senate’s Armed Services’ committee, as well as the Environment and Public Works committee. She also chairs the Senate subcommittees on Airland and Fisheries, Water and Wildlife.

While Duckworth is running unopposed in the Democratic primary, the Republican side of the ledger is significantly more crowded, with seven candidates currently on the GOP ballot.

Here are the candidates running for Senate:

Democrats –

Sen. Tammy Duckworth

Duckworth’s campaign website says that she will continue focusing on eliminating bureaucratic and systemic problems that are impacting the nation’s veterans and their families. She is also looking to invest in job development programs, pushing ahead with additional funding for Social Security and Medicare, and “advocating for environmental justice” if elected to a second term.

Republicans –

Casey Chlebek

A Polish immigrant who worked for years for companies like Zenith and Northern Trust Bank, Chlebek is running on a platform of curbing government spending and cutting taxes. He also wants to encourage parents to send children to private schools, expand vocational school training programs and to dramatically overhaul immigration laws in the U.S.

Matthew Dubiel

A Naperville-native, Dubiel’s campaign website says that he will run on an “America First” platform that includes school choice, increasing investment in law enforcement, border security and medical freedom, including campaigning against mask mandates and other health mitigations undertaken during the COVID pandemic.

Peggy Hubbard

A former police officer and a Navy veteran, Hubbard is campaigning on a platform to reduce the size of government, emphasizing preventative health care to improve outcomes, and to invest in border security and immigration reform, according to her campaign website.

Bobby Piton

A portfolio manager, Piton is running on a platform that includes term limits at all levels of government, as well as calling for a “full nationwide audit” of the 2020 presidential election. He is also pledging to work to abolish the Department of Education and says he would push for legislation to “strip lawmakers of their position” if they vote to enforce executive orders like mask mandates and other COVID mitigations.

Kathy Salvi

Salvi, a licensed attorney for more than 30 years, says she is running on a platform to lower costs and energy prices for regular Americans. She also is seeking additional funding and support for law enforcement, and she is pushing for parental control over what their children learn in schools, according to her campaign website.

Jimmy Tillman II

Tillman, an Academy Fellow with the Heritage Foundation, has been critical of the Biden administration’s policies on border security and COVID response on his campaign website. He has also criticized mask and vaccine mandates, and says he intends to run on an “America First” platform similar to that of former President Donald Trump.

Anthony Williams

A pastor in Chicago, Williams is a fierce advocate for anti-violence initiatives, but says that focusing on illegal guns won’t achieve that goal. Instead, his campaign is pushing for rebuilding neighborhoods and focusing on mental health, according to an interview he conducted with Patch’s Mark Konkol.

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Saturday, May 28, 2022

Election 2022: Here's Who is Running in Illinois' 3rd Congressional District - NBC Chicago

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The state of Illinois’ 3rd Congressional district is one of the few where there isn’t an incumbent running in this cycle, and as a result the Democratic field has several contenders hoping to represent the newly-designed district.

The 3rd district, which includes part of Chicago’s South Side as well as portions of suburban Cook and DuPage counties, was redrawn after the 2020 Census, meaning that there is no incumbent in the race. Rep. Marie Newman will instead run in the 6th district against incumbent Rep. Sean Casten in the Democratic primary.

The district will have four Democrats running in the June primary, while Republican Justin Burau will run unopposed.

Here are the candidates running for Congress in the district:

Democrats –

Juan Aguirre

Aguirre, a registered nurse who holds a bachelor’s degree in the field, says on his campaign website that he is running against “corruption in government.” He has proposed bills to enact social equity in the cannabis industry, as well as legislation to honor and support health care workers along with his anti-corruption proposals.

Iymen Chehade

A college professor and artist, Chehade is running on a platform to increase federal funding for public education, implementing Medicare for All, and to offer property tax relief for homeowners. He is also seeking to provide a path to citizenship for undocumented immigrants, according to her website.

State Rep. Delia Ramirez

Ramirez has served in leadership positions for numerous activism organizations, including the Latin United Community Housing Association, and was elected to the Illinois General Assembly in 2018. She is running on a platform of increasing access to affordable housing, expanding access to health care, and pushing for more funding for public education, according to her website.

Gilbert Villegas

A Chicago alderperson, Villegas says he will push to invest in the technology sector to encourage job growth in the United States. He has also called for additional investments in both local and federal law enforcement to help curb increases in crime, and he is proposing expanding tax credits for parents and to mandate family and medical leave at the federal level.

Republicans –

Justin Burau

A businessman with experience in starting several small businesses, Burau is campaigning on a platform to expand health care access by allowing companies to compete across state lines, as well as a policy that would encourage legal immigration to the United States by simplifying laws and making applications more affordable, among other issues.

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Twitter Circle may be rolling out to more users - The Verge

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Twitter started testing Circle earlier this month with a limited group, and now it looks like it’s starting to roll out to more users (via Android Police). The feature works a lot like Instagram’s Close Friends, as it allows users to send out tweets to a specific group of people rather than all of Twitter.

To check if you have access to Twitter Circle, update your Twitter app or head to Twitter in a web browser. When you start composing a tweet, you’ll see a dropdown menu at the top that reads Everyone. From here, you can choose Twitter Circle to limit your tweet to a select audience, or you can hit Edit to add or remove people from your Circle. Twitter won’t notify users if you add or remove them.

You can add up to 150 users to your Circle, whether they follow you or not. Users in your Circle will see a note appended to Circle-only tweets (and vice versa), stating: “Only people in @[yourusername]’s Twitter Circle can see this tweet.” Tweeting to your Circle is almost like having a private account, only it privatizes certain tweets instead of limiting access to your entire profile.

The people in your Circle won’t be able to retweet anything you post to it, but they can still screenshot and download your tweets. It’s also important to keep in mind that Twitter’s community guidelines still apply even if you’re sending your tweets out to a smaller audience.

Although it seems like more users are getting access to the feature, Twitter spokesperson Joseph Nunez told The Verge it’s still in testing. “We are still currently testing Twitter Circle with a group of people across iOS, Android and Web globally,” Nunez said. “The feature has not rolled out widely to everyone yet as we continue to gather feedback.”

Right now, it’s unclear how many people currently have access to Circle. It looks like more users (myself included) are finally seeing the feature pop up when they start composing a tweet, but some users still report not having access quite yet.

Update May 28th, 5:27PM ET: Updated to add a statement from a Twitter spokesperson, as well as to reflect that Circle hasn’t rolled out to everyone yet.

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Nothing says summer like this Raclette tabletop grill - Boing Boing

From picking out the right decor to making sure your home is spotless, hosting your friends and family over can get pretty stressful. But if you really want to make an impression on your party guests, the key is providing them with an experience they can remember — and that isn't going to happen with run-of-the-mill cocktails and a boring old cheese plate.

If you want to take your dinner parties up a notch, make things interactive with the Party Grill. This raclette tabletop grill gives you and your friends a unique culinary experience, grilling and cooking food right at the table, entertaining them in a way they've never seen before. And lucky for you, if you act fast, you can snag this awesome gadget for the deeply discounted price of $54.99 before May 31. 

While it looks a bit fancy, using the Party Grill is incredibly easy and enjoyable. You can choose to use different cuts of meat, like shrimp or beef, and a mix of your favorite veggies, and get grilling! You can cook them together or separately, giving your party guests something to do at the table as they chit-chat. And thanks to the grill's non-stick trays below the top grill, you can also melt a variety of cheeses, which always makes for a great party treat.

From its entertainment value to its clever, easy-to-handle design, there's a lot to love about the Party Grill. But the best part? If your guests are all cooking the food themselves, that means way less time slaving away in the kitchen. It's no wonder this innovative gadget has earned rave reviews online, with people praising it for its easy clean-up to the fact that it takes up very little space, despite its incredible grilling power.

Make your get-togethers something to remember with the Party Grill®: Raclette Tabletop Grill, now discounted to just $64.99 bucks if you purchase it before May 31!

Prices are subject to change.

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'It shouldn't be like this': Baby formula shortage highlights racial disparities - Maryland Daily Record

Capri Isidoro, of Ellicott City looks at her 1-month-old baby Charlotte, on May 23, 2022, in Columbia, Maryland, during a lactation consultation. Charlotte was delivered via emergency c-section and given formula by hospital staff. Isidoro has been having trouble with breastfeeding and has been searching for a formula that her daughter can tolerate well. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

Capri Isidoro, of Ellicott City looks at her 1-month-old baby Charlotte, on May 23, 2022, in Columbia, Maryland, during a lactation consultation. Charlotte was delivered via emergency c-section and given formula by hospital staff. Isidoro has been having trouble with breastfeeding and has been searching for a formula that her daughter can tolerate well. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

COLUMBIA, Md. — Capri Isidoro broke down in tears in the office of a lactation consultant.

The mother of two had been struggling to breastfeed her 1-month-old daughter ever since she was born, when the hospital gave the baby formula first without consulting her on her desire to breastfeed.

Now, with massive safety recall and supply disruptions causing formula shortages across the United States, she also can’t find the specific formula that helps with her baby’s gas pains.

“It is so sad. It shouldn’t be like this,” said Isidoro, of Ellicott City. “We need formula for our kid, and where is this formula going to come from?”

As parents across the United States struggle to find formula to feed their children, the pain is particularly acute among Black and Hispanic women. Black women have historically faced obstacles to breastfeeding, including a lack of lactation support in the hospital, more pressure to formula feed and cultural roadblocks. It’s one of many inequalities for Black mothers : They are far more likely to die from pregnancy complications, and less likely to have their concerns about pain taken seriously by doctors.

Low-income families buy the majority of formula in the U.S., and face a particular struggle: Experts fear small neighborhood grocery stores that serve these vulnerable populations are not replenishing as much as larger retail stores, leaving some of these families without the resources or means to hunt for formula.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that 20% of Black women and 23% of Hispanic women exclusively breastfeed through six months, compared to 29% of white women. The overall rate stands at 26%. Hospitals that encourage breastfeeding and overall lactation support are less prevalent in Black neighborhoods, according to the CDC.

The Association of Women’s Health, Obstetric and Neonatal Nurses also says Hispanic and Black women classified as low wage workers have less access to lactation support in their workplaces.

The racial disparities reach far back in America’s history. The demands of slave labor prevented mothers from nursing their children, and slave owners separated mothers from their own babies to have them serve as wet nurses, breastfeeding other women’s children.

In the 1950s, racially targeted commercials falsely advertised formula as a superior source of nutrition for infants. And studies continue to show that the babies of Black mothers are more likely to be introduced to formula in the hospital than the babies of white mothers, which happened to Isidoro after her emergency cesarean section.

Physicians say introducing formula means the baby will require fewer feedings from the mother, decreasing the milk supply as the breast is not stimulated enough to produce.

Andrea Freeman, author of the book “Skimmed: Breastfeeding, Race and Injustice,” said these mothers still aren’t getting the support they need when it comes to having the choice of whether to breastfeed or use formula. They also may have jobs that do not accommodate the time and space needed for breastfeeding or pumping milk, Freeman said.

“Nobody’s taking responsibility for the fact that they’ve steered families of color toward formula for so many years and made people rely on it and taken away choice. And then when it falls apart, there’s not really any recognition or accountability,” Freeman said.

Breastfeeding practices are often influenced by previous generations, with some studies suggesting better outcomes for mothers who were breastfed when they were babies.

Kate Bauer, an associate professor of nutritional sciences at the University of Michigan School of Public Health, said she began hearing back in February about Black and Latino families in Detroit and Grand Rapids feeling stuck after finding smaller grocery stores running out of formula.

Some were told to go to the local office of the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children, better known as WIC, the federal program that supports low-income expectant and new mothers. Between 50% and 65% of the formula in the U.S. is bought through the program.

“Going to the WIC office is like a full day’s errand for some moms,” Bauer said.

She fears mothers are getting desperate enough to try foods that are not recommended for babies under 6 months.

Yury Navas, a Salvadoran immigrant who works at a restaurant and lives in Laurel, Maryland, says she was not able to produce enough breast milk and struggled to find the right formula for her nearly 3-month-old baby Jose Ismael, after others caused vomiting, diarrhea and discomfort.

One time, they drove half an hour to a store where workers told them they had the type she needed, but it was gone when they got there. Her husband goes out every night to search pharmacies around midnight.

“It’s so hard to find this type,” she said, saying sometimes they have run out before they can secure more formula. “The baby will cry and cry, so we give him rice water.”

On a recent day, she was down to her last container and called an advocacy group that had told her it would try to get her some at an appointment in five days. But the group could not guarantee anything.

Some mothers have turned to social media and even befriended other locals to cast a wider net during shopping trips.

In Miami, Denise Castro, who owns a construction company, started a virtual group to support new moms during the COVID-19 pandemic. Now it’s helping moms get the formula they need as they go back to work. One of them is a Hispanic teacher whose job leaves her with little flexibility to care for her 2-month old infant, who has been sensitive to a lot of formula brands.

“Most of the moms we have been helping are Black and Latinas,” Castro said. “These moms really don’t have the time to visit three to four places in their lunch hour.”

Lisette Fernandez, a 34-year-old Cuban American first-time mother of twins, has relied on friends and family to find the liquid 2-ounce bottles she needs for her boy and girl. Earlier this week, her father went to four different pharmacies before he was able to get her some boxes with the tiny bottles. They run out quickly as the babies grow.

Fernandez said she wasn’t able to initiate breastfeeding, trying with an electric pump but saying she produced very little. Her mother, who arrived in Miami from Cuba as a 7-year-old girl, had chosen not to breastfeed her children, saying she did not want to, and taken medication to suppress lactation.

Some studies have attributed changes in breastfeeding behavior among Hispanics to assimilation, saying Latina immigrants perceive formula feeding as an American practice.

“Over the last three to six weeks it has been insane,” Fernandez said. “I am used to everything that COVID has brought. But worrying about my children not having milk? I did not see that coming.”

Jacquelyn Martin, Adriana GĂłmez LicĂłn and Terry Tang report for The Associated Press.


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Thursday, May 26, 2022

Review: ‘Here’s the Deal,’ by Kellyanne Conway - The New York Times

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In her memoir, “Here’s the Deal,” she calls her time working for President Trump “the wildest adventure of my life.”

HERE’S THE DEAL: A Memoir, by Kellyanne Conway


Can this marriage be saved? That was the name of a long-running couple’s counseling column in the defunct magazine Ladies’ Home Journal, a onetime client of Kellyanne Conway’s. And it’s a question that hovers over Conway’s new memoir, “Here’s the Deal,” its title seeming to assure the kind of straight dope that her former boss Donald J. Trump’s ghostwritten chest-thumper, “The Art of the Deal” (1987), did not deliver.

There is some of that, but also familiarly dizzying spin.

Encouraged in her telling by Trump himself (“Write a great book, honey”), this is but the latest of the squazillion accounts to splash down from his presidential administration, for which the author was campaign manager, senior counselor and frequent media representative in what she calls, as if it were a rocky theme-park ride, “the wildest adventure of my life.” Conway clutches policy like a flotation device, but keeps drifting back to the home front in this book.

Introduced by Ann Coulter, the conservative fellow “pundette” she met while making the cable TV rounds in the late 1990s, Conway and her husband, George T. Conway III, a lawyer, had a Concorde courtship — it was “intrigue at first sight,” she writes — and eventually an “amazing wedding” (the “Viennese dessert selection” is noted) and an apartment in Trump World Tower. They were blessed by Pope John Paul II on their honeymoon and later with four children, including fraternal twins. More than a decade later, a few months into the highest profile job she’d ever had and without any preparatory pillow talk, he — who had helped to impeach Bill Clinton and had seemed to cheer the Make America Great Again platform — dove onto Twitter and started posting disapprovingly about her boss.

“The duplicity of it stung me,” Conway writes. “Of course it did.”

Before long George was telling her “You work for a madman” in “a loud, sinister voice,” dramatically ramping up his online output in a manner she found obsessive and helping to found the Lincoln Project, a committee to not re-elect the president she was so close to. Bristling at personal questions from curious journalists, which she perceives as sexist, Conway borrows from both Julius Caesar — “Et tu, Wolf?” she writes of the CNN anchor Wolf Blitzer — and, a few channels down on HBO, Carrie Bradshaw: “Is cheating by tweeting actually a thing?”In an afterword, she speculates, “George and I may not survive” as a couple.

Damon Winter/The New York Times

Watching the chin-juttingly independent Conway toggle between her actual husband, her work husband and the Fourth Estate, this critic also flashed improbably on the TCM staple “The Philadelphia Story,” wherein Katharine Hepburn’s Tracy Lord is buffeted by mild fiancĂ©, violent ex and boyish reporter.

But though both women are fast talkers and snappy dressers with intermittently absent fathers, Lord was a blue blood from the Main Line, and Conway — as she’ll proudly remind you — is a Blueberry Pageant Princess raised in Atco, N.J., a tiny town between Philly and Atlantic City. The “Golden Girls” is what she calls the four Italian Catholic women who raised her, and Kellyanne was also a kind of golden girl: popular, athletic and the valedictorian of her high school who was soon volunteering on Capitol Hill. Primed to support Geraldine Ferraro’s vice-presidential candidacy in the 1984 election, she instead fell hard for Ronald Reagan.

Conway — then known as Fitzpatrick — got a law degree; she had enjoyed playing “judge, prosecutor, defense counsel and all the witnesses” in a mock courtroom as her dolls and stuffed animals “sat in stunned silence” — and then became the E.E. Cummings of pollsters: rendering the name of a firm she founded, the Polling Company, in all lowercase on business cards before it was a “hipster clichĂ©.” She was good at analyzing data and hopping on prop planes to see how it was playing in Peoria; and, as amply evidenced here, she also likes wordplay: “Gawk and squawk.” “Armful of harmful.”

“We don’t trust her numbers,” Conway’s mostly male competitors would sneer.

“They hadn’t seen my numbers,” she writes. “But I had their number.”

Conway wants to identify and indict her underminers. She catches Steve Bannon, “a serial leaker” whom she portrays as doing little actual work, “standing like a spring break bar bouncer” and nodding his head “so emphatically he looked like a bobblehead doll in a windstorm.” Jared Kushner she characterizes as a hopeless silver spoonster, revisionist historian, “a crown prince who used encrypted apps to literally talk to a crown prince.”

But while rat-a-tat and packed in a manner to be expected from someone once known as “Sally Soundbite,” Conway’s own bid at recording history, written with a book doctor, is spotty and selective. She goes on for pages about opioid addiction and abortion, but other than fleeting mentions of the Second Amendment, completely ignores the issue of gun control, which lands terribly in a month of two massacres. She is furious about incursions of the press, including this newspaper, into her family and private life, but gives them ever more grist by fuming hyper-specifically about her husband’s foibles. Though she scorns “angry feminists” wearing “pink hats and yoga pants,” her own triumphs over doubting Thomases, the overbilling “nonwizards of Ozzes” behind Mitt Romney’s failed 2012 presidential campaign, are satisfying, in the way a Jacqueline Susann heroine is satisfying.

“Ladies, how many times do we feel ‘less-than’?” she writes. “Or apologize even though we did or said nothing wrong? Pass it on: ‘Being you’ is enough!” And once is not enough, as Susann put it — but this is real life.

Pass it on: Though it’s hardly short, this book isn’t remotely the whole story, nor is it likely to be the last volume of the Conway Chronicles.


Alexandra Jacobs is a book critic and the author of “Still Here: The Madcap, Nervy, Singular Life of Elaine Stritch.” @AlexandraJacobs


HERE’S THE DEAL: A Memoir, by Kellyanne Conway | 512 pp. | Threshold Editions | $30

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Tuesday, May 24, 2022

Chris Murphy Slams Fellow Senators After Texas Shooting: 'Why Are You Here?' - The New York Times

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Senator Chris Murphy was a young United States representative from Connecticut when he stood at a firehouse in 2012 with families from his district as they learned that their children, all first graders, had been shot dead at Sandy Hook Elementary School.

On Tuesday, nearly 10 years later, he stood on the Senate floor in anguish as yet another American city learned that children in elementary school had been gunned down.

“What are we doing?! What are we doing?!” Mr. Murphy demanded of his colleagues, imploring them to take action on gun control.

“Why do you spend all this time running for the United States Senate — why do you go through all the hassle of getting this job, of putting yourself in a position of authority — if your answer is that as this slaughter increases, as our kids run for their lives, we do nothing?”

His voice at times strained in anger as he confronted his fellow senators with the grief and frustration of a nation that has seen mass shooting after mass shooting with little congressional action: “What are we doing?” he asked. “Why are you here if not to solve a problem as existential as this?”

Mr. Murphy’s address on the Senate floor was viewed hundreds of thousands of times on social media in the hours after 19 children, a teacher and another adult were killed in Uvalde, Texas. It is the deadliest school shooting in the United States since Sandy Hook, which changed the course of Mr. Murphy’s career.

He took office in the Senate less than a month after he watched those parents in Newtown, Conn., learn that their children were not coming home, and spent the next decade trying and failing to enact gun safety bills.

“I have this very deep sense,” he said, “that I will see my time in public service as a failure if I don’t meet the expectations of those parents in Sandy Hook, and Hartford and Bridgeport.”

Mr. Murphy, who holds an “F” rating with the N.R.A., told The New York Times last week that he rejected the notion that his crusade is hopeless — that if 20 elementary school children being murdered in Newtown didn’t transform American gun laws, nothing would.

“That’s fundamentally the wrong way to look at how Washington works,” he said. “There are few epiphanies here. It’s all about political power, and political muscle, and we’re in the process of building our own.”

Still, some of his speech on the Senate floor on Tuesday attempted to elicit a change of heart in his colleagues.

Children who returned to school at Sandy Hook after the shooting had to be taught a safeword to use when they were reliving moments from the attack, like stepping over their classmates’ bodies as they fled, Mr. Murphy said.

“In one classroom, that word was ‘monkey,’” he recounted, describing how teachers would then talk the children through their flashbacks. “And over and over and over through the day, kids would stand up and yell, ‘Monkey!’”

“Why?” Mr. Murphy exclaimed. “Why are we here if not to try to make sure that fewer schools and fewer communities go through what Sandy Hook has gone through? What Uvalde is going through?”

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Australia's election was all about climate change. Here's what it means for businesses - CNBC

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Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese speaks during a press conference at Parliament House on May 23, 2022 in Australia.
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Australian businesses and their investors globally will be keeping a close watch on the newly elected government's climate change policies.

Analysts say the Labor government under Prime Minister Anthony Albanese may come under pressure to strike a new deal to stretch its emissions reduction targets.

Even though the Labor party won the federal election on the weekend, it has yet to claim 76 seats to form a majority government and counting continues. On Tuesday afternoon, Labor was still two seats short.

If Labor cannot form a majority government, it may have to negotiate with a rush of climate change-focused independent and minority candidates who have snatched up more seats than expected. 

For now, Labor has promised to reduce emissions targets by 43% by 2030, based on 2005 figures.

"The one that will move, that markets want to watch, is around the environment, carbon tax and all that," Richard Martin, managing director of IMA Asia, told "Street Signs Asia" on Monday.

Who climate policies will impact

Martin said businesses like coal miners and electricity generators would most likely be impacted by the government's climate policies. Companies would need to stay alert to any policy changes by the Labor government, which unlike its predecessor which was soft on climate change, could step up on climate action.

But whether Labor needs to negotiate or not, Martin's concern is whether currently proposed mechanisms to reach 2030 targets would even work.

"That's just five years away and the mechanisms outlined by Labor are at the status of 'a nice plan,'" he told CNBC.

All large emitters from power through industry to mining will have to accelerate plans for emissions reduction, and that has a cost to operations.
Richard Martin
Managing director, IMA Asia

"Central to the plan will be imposing tighter caps on big emitters while bringing to life a market for trading carbon credits that doesn't exist."

Martin pointed to the flailing effectiveness of Australia Carbon Credit Units awarded to eligible projects that result in a reduction of Greenhouse Gas (GHG) emissions. 

The value of the units fell after the previous government under Scott Morrison said it would step back as the largest buyer of emissions in March.

Anthony Albanese, leader of the Labor Party, stands on stage with his partner Jodie Haydon, his son Nathan Albanese, and Penny Wong, Australia's shadow foreign minister, during the party's election night event in Australia, on May 21, 2022. Businesses in Australia and their investors globally will remain wary of how the new Australian Labor government rolls out its climate change policies amid concerns it will come under pressure to strike a new deal to stretch its emissions reduction targets, analysts say.
Brent Lewin | Bloomberg | Getty Images

"If Labor is genuine in committing to its 2030 carbon emissions cap, then Australia faces a dramatic acceleration over the next year in carbon regulation and trading framework development," Martin said.

"All large emitters — from power through industry to mining — will have to accelerate plans for emissions reduction, and that has a cost to operations."

There may be benefits from things such as new investment energy generation but "who gains from such spending isn't the same as who must spend to lower emissions and that's what investors need to focus on," Martin said.

Labor, Greens and climate promises

As vote counting continued and Australia's new leader Albanese took time out to attend the Quad security meeting in Tokyo, newly sworn in Treasurer Jim Chalmers reiterated to local media on Monday that the new government had no intentions of cutting new deals on emissions targets.

However, minority party, the Greens, may be on track for a record election outcome. With the possibility of six seats in parliament, they've said they would use their increased power to push the government on more climate change.

Either way, the Australian public has signaled through its election of a record number of climate change-focused candidates that it is keen on more climate action although it is unlikely the new government will budge on existing promises, Danielle Wood, CEO of think tank Grattan Institute told CNBC on Monday.

Political analyst and professor at the Australian National University's Australian Studies Institute Mark Kenny agreed.

"Conventional wisdom held that voters would put climate concerns to one side if they felt green-policies might erode their buying power through higher electricity prices," Kenny said.

Voters are worried about soaring costs but care also about climate and sustainability.
Mark Kenny
Australian Studies Institute, Australian National University

"Election 2022 disproved this thesis. Voters are worried about soaring costs but care also about climate and sustainability."

And while the Labor government will likely hold its ground against independent candidates for now to keep its election promises, it may still shift down the track, Kenny adds.

"In time, Labor may find ways to exceed the target anyway – much as the Morrison government set its target at 26-28% by 2030 and then [boasted] constantly that it was on track to 'meet and beat' that benchmark," he said.

Stability is key

Additionally, long-term stability in climate change will be crucial, Australian businesses say. 

"When we make investments, we're going to be operating these assets for 20 and 30 years. We know governments will come and go and will change and their priorities will change," Australia's largest LNG producer Woodside chief executive Meg O'Neill told CNBC on the eve of the election.

"What's important for us is that fiscal and policy stability that gives us confidence that when we make an investment, that we'll be able to get the return that we want."

The stability of policy would be key, especially when surveys showed sluggishness among businesses in Australia to make a move on climate change policies. 

The Deloitte 2022 CxO Sustainability Report released earlier this year showed that while concerns from businesses over climate change had risen, there was no urgency to act.

Executives are "not yet convinced on the link between climate action and the core drivers of value creation – long-term revenue, margin, and asset values," Will Symons, Deloitte's Asia-Pacific climate and sustainability leader said.

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New Eagles CB James Bradberry opens up on being released by Giants: 'Personally, I didn't necessarily like it' - CBS Sports

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James Bradberry has been with the Philadelphia Eagles for nearly a week, getting acclimated to his new surroundings after spending two seasons with the New York Giants. Bradberry still has some feelings about getting released by the Giants this month, allowing him to land in Philadelphia days later. 

"First of all, I understand it's a business," Bradberry said Tuesday. "I have to put my business cap on first and understand I'm an asset. I understand they want something for me. That was part of the game.

"Personally, I didn't necessarily like it. It's a business at the end of the day."

Bradberry had has best season with the Giants in his first year with the team (2020), earning his first Pro Bowl appearance after recording 54 tackles, three interceptions, and 18 pass breakups. Opposing quarterbacks targeting Bradberry had just a 55.7 passer rating, the first-year of a three-year contract he signed with the team. 

Bradberry had a successful two-year stint with the Giants, finishing with 35 pass breakups with the team -- trailing only J.C. Jackson for the most in the NFL. He also finished with seven interceptions and allowed just a 66.6 passer rating when opposing quarterbacks targeted him. 

The Giants had to part ways with key veterans in the secondary this offseason. Along with Bradberry, Logan Ryan was a cap casualty -- as New York is paying $24,377,778 in dead cap as a result of both players being released. 

Instead of having Bradberry and Ryan, the Giants are going with a secondary of Aaron RobinsonAdoree' JacksonXavier McKinney, and Julian Love. The franchise is still rebuilding as a result of the contracts former general manager Dave Gettleman handed out over the last several years. 

Bradberry was a cap casualty as a result, but he didn't have to be a fan of the decision. He won't circle the two games against the Giants on the calendar. 

"I'm looking forward to every game that we play next year," Bradberry said. "There's 17 games. i know we have to win a lot of them to make it to the playoffs. I'm looking forward to all the games that we play." 

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Monday, May 23, 2022

Here's what happened during Boeing's 'nail-biting' spacecraft docking - CNN

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New York (CNN Business)Boeing managed to dock a spacecraft at the International Space Station late last week, but it was not without several minor hangups.

The mission kicked off Thursday evening with a Florida launch, and the Starliner — which is designed to carry astronauts but is flying without people for this test — docked with the ISS Friday night at 8:28 pm ET. The docking occurred about an hour later than expected as ground crews worked through a few issues, including a software issue that skewed graphics, sort of like a misaligned GPS map. There were also issues with sensors and some docking components that were not initially moving correctly.
The capsule has a docking ring that pops out as it approaches its port and is used to latch on to the ISS. During the first attempt at docking, some components didn't move into the proper configuration. Ground teams had to try the pop-out process a second time to get everything in the right place. There had also been a small problem with the Starliner's cooling loops, which are part of the system that regulates the spacecraft's temperature.
All those issues had to be analyzed or fixed in time for the Starliner to move ahead, and the docking ultimately went off without a major issue.
"It was really nail-biting watching that vehicle sit out there for a while until it was it was time to come in," Mark Nappi, Boeing's Starliner program manager, told reporters Friday night.
Looming over the mission, however, has been several other issues with the spacecraft's on-board thrusters, which maneuver and orient that vehicle as it sails through space. Two of those thrusters shut down prematurely shortly after the spacecraft reached orbit. A couple of other thrusters had problems later on.
Despite the setbacks, the spacecraft was performing "beautifully," according to Steve Stich, the manager of NASA's Commercial Crew Program, which oversees Starliner as well as SpaceX's Crew Dragon program.
"Of course this is a test flight, and as those that probably watched throughout the day, you saw that we're learning along the way, and it's very exciting," Stich said on a press call Friday night.
NASA and Boeing officials said that the thruster issues aren't major concerns because the Starliner has "a lot" of built-in backups, Stich said. There are 48 such thrusters on the vehicle, and the capsule's onboard computers can choose to use one thruster over another if it detects anything slightly off.
Although Boeing does want to understand why the thrusters weren't working as planned, according to Nappi, it might not happen.
"We may never know what the real cause of this is," he said.
Engineers narrowed the thruster issues down to "six or seven" possible causes, with three that seemed most likely. Zeroing in on the exact issue may require engineers to see the thrusters in person, something that can't happen because the thrusters are attached to the service module — a part that will be jettisoned and left to burn up in the atmosphere before the Starliner makes its controlled return to Earth.
That's expected to happen in the next few days. The Starliner will undock from the ISS, maneuver its way toward home, then use its thrusters to slice back into the thick part of the Earth's atmosphere before parachuting to a landing in the desert of New Mexico.
If all that goes well, it will be massive win for Boeing, which is coming off of years of delays and development hangups with Starliner.
The spacecraft's first attempt at completing an orbital test mission in 2019 had to be returned from space prematurely, without completing an ISS docking, because of software issues. A second attempt to launch Starliner to the ISS in August last year was scrapped after pre-flight checks discovered issues with key valves becoming stuck.
If this mission is completed safely, Boeing's Starliner could launch astronauts by the end of 2022.

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