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Detectives searching for person of interest in Portsmouth homicide

PORTSMOUTH, Va. (WAVY) -- Detectives in Portsmouth are looking to the public for help finding a person of interest in a deadly shooting.

A spokeswoman with Portsmouth Police says they got a call for help on Monday around 2 p.m. from the 1400 block of Crawford Parkway. When they got there, first-responders say they found a 16-year-old boy with a fatal gunshot wound.

Later that day, police named 20-year-old Shawnise Marie Stephenson as a person of interest.

Detectives say she was last seen driving a light color BMW convertible possibly light gray or light blue.

Shawnise Marie Stephenson (PPD)

Anyone with information is asked to call the Crime Line at 1-888-LOCK-U-UP (1-888-562-5887) or submit a tip online.

Stay with WAVY.com for more local news updates.



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Oceanfront rebounds for Memorial Day weekend 2021

VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. (WAVY) -- The other Memorial Day weekend tradition: opening the doors to those from Virginia and beyond the state lines.

It seems that after a tough 2020, the Oceanfront is bouncing back.

People were still in the resort area Monday, extending their start to the summer season a little while longer.

Even with the weekend rain, business owners are happy that Virginia Beach is once again completely open.

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No injuries after house fire on Yacht Club Lane in Gloucester

GLOUCESTER COUNTY, Va. (WAVY) -- A house was damaged but there were no injuries after a fire Monday afternoon in Gloucester County.

Abingdon Volunteer Fire and Rescue Inc. responded to the fire around 4:20 p.m. Monday.

Crews arrived to find a working house fire and then asked fire boats from Abingdon Volunteer Fire and Rescue and York County to also respond due to the home's proximity to the water.

Gloucester Volunteer Fire and Rescue Squad Inc. also responded for mutual aid with two additional engines and manpower.

The first crew to arrive on scene knocked down the fire and conducted a search of the home quickly.

Firefighters spent two and a half hours at the scene.

There were no injuries.



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মোবাইলে চার্জ দেওয়া নিয়ে আমাদের মাঝে প্রচলিত ৫টি ভুল ধারণা, যেগুলো আমাদের সবার জনা উচিত

বর্তমানের প্রায় বেশিরভাগ মানুষই কিন্তু স্মার্টফোন ব্যবহার করে। কিন্তু স্মার্টফোন ব্যবহার করার সময় চার্জ এর ক্ষেত্রে আমাদের সবার মধ্যে কয়েকটি ভুল ধারণা রয়েছে। স্মার্টফোন চার্জ দেওয়ার সময় আপনাদের যেসব ভুল ধারণা রয়েছে আজকে আমি সে সব ভুল ধারনাগুলো আপনাদেরকে বলে দেবার চেষ্টা করব। এই টিউনটি যদি আপনি সম্পূর্ণ দেখেন, তবে আপনার স্মার্টফোন চার্জের ক্ষেত্রে ভুল […]

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Hundreds attend Virginia War Memorial ceremony honoring fallen heroes

RICHMOND, Va. (WRIC) -- The Virginia War Memorial held an in-person ceremony on Monday to honor fallen heroes across the Commonwealth.

In 2020, the ceremony had to go all-virtual for the first time since the tradition started in 1956 due to the coronavirus pandemic.

This year, COVID-19 capacity restrictions lifted just in time to allow more members of the public to attend in person. Organizers estimate at least 600 people turned out.

“For all the claims of what the American public has or has not had to sacrifice during this pandemic, today should remind us of the true meaning of sacrifice and the real meaning of freedom," said Virginia War Memorial Director Dr. Clay Mountcastle.

According to Virginia's Acting Secretary of Veterans and Defense Affairs Kathleen Jabs, more than 12,000 Virginians have fought and died in combat since the Revolutionary War.

“They were ordinary people who responded in extraordinary ways in extreme times when their country called," Jabs said.

It was an emotional morning for Gold Star Mother and Vietnam War Veteran Brenda May. Her son was one of four fallen heroes honored at the ceremony after all of their names were added to the "Shrine of Memory" in the last year.

Marine Staff Sgt. Donald C. May, Jr. was killed while serving in Iraq when his tank plunged off a cliff into the Euphrates River, according to his mother. She said he died in 2003 after 13 years of service.

"I was shaken...my heart still feels a little heavy but I know he is in a better place," May told 8News after the ceremony. "Everyday that someone comes and reads my son's name and those of many others that is honor and remembrance to me.” 

Other names recently added to the Virginia War Memorial include Richard J. Harris of Henrico, Ben Maxwell of Appomattox and Humayun S. M. Khan, of Bristow.



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16-year-old, 23-year-old shot and injured Monday in Chesapeake

CHESAPEAKE, Va. (WAVY) -- Chesapeake police say a 16-year-old and 23-year-old were injured in a shooting on Sir Kay Court Monday evening.

Police responded around 5:12 p.m. to the 3100 block of Sir Kay Court in Chesapeake for reports of gunshots heard in the area.

Police arrived to find two males, a 16-year-old and 23-year-old, who had been shot.

They were taken to a local hospital for treatment. Their injuries were not considered life-threatening, police said.

There is no suspect information available, police said.

Get the free WAVY News App, available for download in the App Store and Google Play, to stay up to date with all your local news, weather and sports, live newscasts and other live events.



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How an Ohio native kicked off one of America's most popular BBQ sauces

(WKBN) - What BBQ sauce did you choose for Memorial Day grilling? One of the most famous BBQ sauces in America comes from a kid raised in Braceville, Ohio.

Guy Hughes worked for General Motors until losing his job in one of the downsizings, but he never stopped cooking and came up with an idea that's been unstoppable.

Hughes caught Mike Audi's attention when he set up at the Italian Fest once.

"He's got BBQ chicken and ribs and something's just telling me if there's that long of a line at the Italian Festival, this has got to be some good stuff," Audi said.

He asked Hughes if he'd be interested in having his sauce made at Summer Garden Manufacturing in Boardman.

Hughes says it was a match made in sauce.  He's been cooking at rib fests and burnoffs for years, and remembers the last one at the Eastwood Mall.

"On the best sauce, I said I'm going to enter my sugar-free sauce. Nobody knew that and I won first place," Hughes said.

It was the Smoky Garlic flavor and Hughes knew he had a hit. He felt people were ready for a sugar-free sauce that helps people eat healthier but doesn't taste like it.

"When I first brought the idea to the table, they wanted me to do no sugar added. I said no, it has to be sugar-free. We went round and round. Finally, they said OK, if this is what you want," said Hughes.

Now, the G. Hughes Sugar Free sauces go into 140,000 bottles a day.

Sales have doubled for six straight years. It's a $50-million brand and the number-four BBQ sauce in America.

"It just keeps going up and I don't know when it's going to stop and I don't want it to stop," Hughes said.

The G. Hughes Sugar Free brand also includes marinade, wing sauce and ketchup. It all started with his idea to help people eat healthier.

"He is the pit master. He is the guy. That's his idea. He developed the product. It's a true story. It resonates with people," said Audi.



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California eyes shuttered malls, stores for new housing

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — California state lawmakers are grappling with a particularly 21st-century problem: What to do with the growing number of shopping malls and big box retail stores left empty by consumers shifting their purchases to the web.

A possible answer in crowded California cities is to build housing on these sites, which already have ample parking and are close to existing neighborhoods.

But local zoning laws often don't allow housing at these locations. Changing the zoning is such a hassle that many developers don't bother trying. And it's often not worth it for local governments to change the designations. They would prefer to find new retailers because sales taxes produce more revenue than residential property taxes.

However, with a stubborn housing shortage pushing prices to all-time highs, state lawmakers are moving to pass new laws to get around those barriers.

A bill that cleared the state Senate last week would let developers build houses on most commercial sites without changing the zoning. Another proposal would pay local governments to change the zoning to let developers build affordable housing.

This Thursday, May 27, 2021, photo shows the closed Sears in Buena Park Mall in Buena Park, Calif. California state lawmakers are grappling with a particularly 21st-century problem: What to do with the growing number of shopping malls and big-box retail stores left empty by consumers shifting their purchases to the web. A possible answer in crowded California cities is to build housing on these sites, which already have ample parking and are close to existing neighborhoods. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)

“There has always been an incentive to chase retail and a disincentive to build housing,” said Sen. Anthony Portantino, a Los Angeles-area Democrat who authored the bill to pay local governments. “There is more dormant and vacant retail than ever.”

If successful, it's believed California would be the first state to allow multi-family housing on commercial sites statewide, said Eric Phillips, vice president of policy and legislation for the California chapter of the American Planning Association. Developers who use the law still would have to obey locally approved design standards. But Phillips said the law would limit local governments' ability to reject the projects.

That's why some local leaders oppose the bill, arguing it undermines their authority.

“City leaders have the requisite local knowledge to discern when and which sites are appropriate for repurposing and which are not,” wrote Mike Griffiths, member of the Torrance City Council and founder of California Cities for Local Control, a group of 427 mayors and council members.

It's a familiar battle in California. While nearly everyone agrees there is an affordable housing shortage, state and local leaders face different political pressures that often derail ambitious proposals. Last year, a bill that would have overridden local zoning laws to let developers build small apartment buildings in neighborhoods reserved for single-family homes died in the state Senate.

Sen. Anna Caballero, a Democrat from Salinas and author of this year's zoning proposal, said her bill is not a mandate. Developers could choose to use the bill or not. The Senate approved the measure 32-2, sending it to the state Assembly for consideration.

“It’s always a challenge when you’re trying to do affordable housing, because there are entrenched interests that don’t want to negotiate and compromise, and we’re working really hard to try to break through that,” she said. “I’m trying to give maximum flexibility to local government because the more that you start telling them how they have to do it, the harder it becomes for them to actually do it.”

Even before the pandemic, big-box retail stores were struggling to adapt as more people began buying things online. In 2019, after purchasing Sears and Kmart, Transformco closed 96 stores across the country — including 29 in California.

The pandemic, of course, accelerated this trend, prompting major retailers like J.C. Penney, Neiman Marcus and J. Crew to file for bankruptcy protection. An analysis by the investment firm UBS shows online shopping will grow to 25% of all retail sales by 2025. The analysis predicted that up to 100,000 stores across the country could close.

Local governments and developers in California are already trying to redevelop some retail sites. In Salinas, a city of about 150,000 people near the Monterey Peninsula, city officials are working to rezone a closed Kmart. In San Francisco, developers recently announced plans to build nearly 3,000 homes in the parking lot that surrounds Stonestown Mall — a sprawling, 40-acre site that has lost some anchor retail tenants in recent years.

Still, the idea of repurposing shopping centers has divided labor unions and affordable housing advocates, putting one of the Democratic Party's core base of supporters against backers of one of their top policy goals.

Housing advocates love the idea, but they don’t like how Democrats want to do it. Both proposals in the Legislature would require developers to use a “skilled and trained” workforce to build the housing. That means a certain percentage of workers must either be enrolled or have completed a state-approved apprenticeship program.

Developers have said while there are plenty of trained workers available in areas like San Francisco and Los Angeles, those workers are scarce in more rural parts of the state, potentially delaying projects in those areas.

California needs to build about 180,000 new housing units per year to keep up with demand, according to the state's latest housing assessment. But it’s only managed about 80,000 per year for the past decade. That’s one reason the state’s median sales price for single-family homes hit a record high $758,990 in March.

This Thursday, May 27, 2021, photo shows the closed Sears in Buena Park Mall in Buena Park, Calif. California state lawmakers are grappling with a particularly 21st-century problem: What to do with the growing number of shopping malls and big-box retail stores left empty by consumers shifting their purchases to the web. A possible answer in crowded California cities is to build housing on these sites, which already have ample parking and are close to existing neighborhoods. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)

“At a time when we’re trying to increase production, we don’t believe we should be limiting who can do the work,” said Ray Pearl, executive director of the California Housing Consortium, a group that includes affordable housing developers.

Robbie Hunter, president of the State Building and Construction Trades Council of California, dismissed that argument as just greedy developers trying to maximize their profits.

He said there is no construction project in California that has been delayed because of a lack of workers, adding: “We man every job.”

“When there is a demand for workers, we rise with the demand,” Hunter said.

Labor unions appear to be winning. A bill in the state Assembly that did not initially require a “skilled and trained” workforce stalled in committee because it did not have enough support.

___

The legislation is SB 6 and SB 15.



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টেকটিউনস ট্রাস্টেড টিউনার হোন!

টেকটিউনসে অরিজিনাল, রিচ ও হাই কোয়ালিটি কন্টেন্ট লিখুন আর 'ইনকাম করুন' "টেকটিউনস ক্যাশ"। 'টেকটিউনস ক্যাশ' সরাসরি পে-আউট, আপনার বিকাশ, রকেট, নগদ, ব্যাংক অ্যাকাউন্টে। টেকটিউনস ট্রাস্টেড টিউনার হোন: https://ift.tt/2SRB0QR টেকটিউনস ট্রাস্টেড টিউনার সম্বন্ধে প্রশ্ন করুন: https://ift.tt/3uF2U0h

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Why bees are so important for humans

DES MOINES, Iowa -- Many people fear bees, but what we should all fear is a life without bees.

Bees contribute billions of dollars to the United States agriculture sector every year. In fact, more than a third of the food we eat is pollinated by bees.

“They pollinate 100% of almonds, they pollinate squash and cucurbits, so any sort of squash, pumpkins, cucumbers, that sort of thing, zucchini, the bees are out there pollinating that. Most berries are pollinated by bees and most tree fruit,” said Randall Cass, an entomologist at Iowa State University.

But bees are facing several stressors that have contributed to a decline in the bee population, including climate change.

“It impacts precipitation, temperatures, throwing that out of whack. It also throws the plants out of whack,” said Stephanie Shepherd, wildlife diversity biologist with the Iowa Department of Natural Resources.

When the plants don’t bloom during their normal time, bees cannot do their job of pollinating all the plants we get our food from. In addition to a decline in plants to pollinate, bees are also affected by parasites and insecticides.

“The biggest stressor affecting honeybees is a parasite called the varroa mite. It's a little mite that lives on their backs and feeds off of the bees, and that weakens them overall,” Cass said.

While most of us can’t help with the parasite problem, there is still a lot we can do to support bees of all kinds such as adding plants to support pollination.

“Especially early season nectar, so thinking about things like some of our native shrubs or even fruit trees, things like that that bloom fairly early in the season, as well as adding things like asters, sunflowers,” Shepherd said.

More facts about bees and honeybees

  • Honeybees can fly up to 20 mph
  • Most of the honeybees you see are female worker bees 
  • A beehive can have anywhere from 20,000 to 80,000 bees in it
  • Honeybees carry pollen on their hind legs in a pollen basket or corbicula
  • Bumblebees usually build their nests close to the ground

You can help researchers keep track of what species of bees are where by simply taking a photo and sending it to Bumble Bee Watch

Plants that support pollination

  • Aster 
  • Coneflower
  • Coreopsis
  • Fruit trees 
  • Sunflower
  • Shasta daisy
  • Goldenrod
  • Lavender (also keeps other insects like mosquitos and flies away)
  • Milkweed
  • Snapdragon


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Study blames climate change for 37% of global heat deaths

(AP) - More than one-third of the world’s heat deaths each year are due directly to global warming, according to the latest study to calculate the human cost of climate change.

But scientists say that’s only a sliver of climate’s overall toll — even more people die from other extreme weather amplified by global warming such as storms, flooding and drought — and the heat death numbers will grow exponentially with rising temperatures. 

Dozens of researchers who looked at heat deaths in 732 cities around the globe from 1991 to 2018 calculated that 37% were caused by higher temperatures from human-caused warming, according to a study Monday in the journal Nature Climate Change

That amounts to about 9,700 people a year from just those cities, but it is much more worldwide, the study’s lead author said.

“These are deaths related to heat that actually can be prevented. It is something we directly cause,” said Ana Vicedo-Cabrera, an epidemiologist at the Institute of Social and Preventative Medicine at the University of Bern in Switzerland.

The highest percentages of heat deaths caused by climate change were in cities in South America. Vicedo-Cabrera pointed to southern Europe and southern Asia as other hot spots for climate change-related heat deaths. 

Sao Paulo, Brazil, has the most climate-related heat deaths, averaging 239 a year, researchers found.

About 35% of heat deaths in the United States can be blamed on climate change, the study found. That’s a total of more than 1,100 deaths a year in about 200 U.S. cities, topped by 141 in New York. Honolulu had the highest portion of heat deaths attributable to climate change, 82%.

Scientists used decades of mortality data in the 732 cities to plot curves detailing how each city’s death rate changes with temperature and how the heat-death curves vary from city to city. Some cities adapt to heat better than others because of air conditioning, cultural factors and environmental conditions, Vicedo-Cabrera said.

Then researchers took observed temperatures and compared them with 10 computer models simulating a world without climate change. The difference is warming humans caused. By applying that scientifically accepted technique to the individualized heat-death curves for the 732 cities, the scientists calculated extra heat deaths from climate change.

“People continue to ask for proof that climate change is already affecting our health. This attribution study directly answers that question using state-of-the-science epidemiological methods, and the amount of data the authors have amassed for analysis is impressive,” said Dr. Jonathan Patz, director of the Global Health Institute at the University of Wisconsin.

Patz, who wasn’t part of the study, said it was one of the first to detail climate change-related heat deaths now, rather than in the future.



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Kentucky men returned for burial 80 years after Pearl Harbor

CENTERTOWN, Ky. (AP) — The remains of two Kentucky men who died 80 years ago during the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor were returned to the commonwealth this week for burial. 

U.S. Navy Fireman 3rd Class Welborn L. Ashby’s niece Paula Kern told The Courier Journal that her mother had always been haunted by the uncertainty surrounding Ashby’s death.

The family was told the 24-year-old was declared to have lost his life, but the Navy could not locate the body.

Martha Christian was 13 at the time. In the 1990s she travelled to Hawaii, lowering her feet into the cold waters of Pearl Harbor and weeping for her lost brother. In 2011, she donated DNA to help with the identification of remains, but Christian died in 2017, two years before Ashby’s remains were positively identified by the federal Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency.

A Memorial Day service was planned for Ashby in Beaver Dam, followed by a burial at Centertown Cemetery with full military honors, including a “Missing Man” flyover by vintage planes.

Paula Kern said she’ll be thinking about her mother and her long quest to have her brother returned home to Kentucky. 

“It’s what she would have wanted. And we want that closure too,” Kern said. “We can’t forget all those we’ve lost.”

Ashby was 24 when he died in the Dec. 7, 1941, attack that launched the United States into World War II — one of 2,403 Americans killed. U.S. Navy Seaman 2nd Class Howard Scott Magers, killed at 18, was another.

Magers’ remains arrived in Barren County on Saturday after they were identified by the federal Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency. He was laid to rest with full military honors.

Magers’ three brothers and one sister have all died, but sister-in-law Betty Magers, now 91, still lives in the Merry Oaks area and remembers a young Howard Magers, the Daily News reported

“My parents had a general store in Hays,” said Betty Magers. “He would come real often to the store.

“We had a juke box, and he liked to play the song ‘South of the Border’ by Gene Autry. He was real friendly and always pleasant. I’m just happy that he can be home.”



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Solo kayaker embarks on journey from San Francisco to Hawaii

SAN FRANCISCO (KRON) -- Early before sunrise, Cyril Derreumaux hopped into his kayak in the San Francisco Bay in front of a crowd of supporters and press, setting on his 70-day journey to Hawaii.

Just him, his kayak (which he named Valentine) and over 2,000 miles of ocean water.

Derreumaux, 44, said it took three years to prepare for this solo expedition. Plus, "a lot of passion, a lot of thoughts -- many, many thoughts."

There's plenty of dangers and challenges that come to mind that would keep most people from trying this type of adventure -- but for the French-born kayaker, he's most concerned about being totally alone.

Cyril Derreumaux (Yoli Aceves/KRON)

"I'm an extrovert person, I love people, so maybe the biggest challenge for me to manage my time with myself," he laughs.

It's not the first time he's crossed the Pacific from California to Hawaii -- but it is his first time taking the trip by himself.

In 2016, he and his teammates got first place in the Great Pacific Race, an Ocean Rowing race from Monterey, California to Oahu, Hawaii. They set a Guinness World Record and did it in fewer than 40 days.

And even though there's just one seat on this boat, he says he had a long list of people who helped prepare him for his dream.



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USA Volleyball drops Colorado tournament after breastfeeding mothers denied entrance

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (KDVR) -- USA Volleyball has cut ties with the Colorado Crossroads tournament after breastfeeding mothers were denied entrance with their babies into the Colorado Convention Center.

"In light of recent events and effective immediately, USA Volleyball has terminated its agreement with Colorado Crossroads Girls Junior National Qualifier. Effective 2022 and beyond, Colorado Crossroads will no longer be a qualifying event for the USA Volleyball Girls Junior National Championship. USA Volleyball will honor all bids that have been awarded to teams who competed in the event in 2021," a statement said.

One nursing coach came out to the tournament hosted by Colorado Crossroads with her team. She said she was able to bring her 4-month-old baby in one day when a security guard wasn’t sure of the policy. But was not allowed on Saturday after she was stopped by security at the front door.

The tournament director, Kay Rogness held firm on the decision to not allow the nursing coaches and other mothers breastfeeding their babies into the event at the Colorado Convention Center.



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Virginia teacher opposing new transgender rules fights suspension

LEESBURG, Va. (AP) — A northern Virginia gym teacher is fighting his suspension after he spoke out at a school board meeting against proposed policies to address transgender students by their preferred pronouns. 

Alliance Defending Freedom, a conservative Christian legal group, wrote a letter Friday to Loudoun County Public Schools on behalf of Leesburg Elementary teacher Tanner Cross. The letter demands Cross’ reinstatement.

Cross was suspended after he said at a May 25 school board meeting that he could not abide by proposed rules that would require teachers to address transgender students by their chosen gender.

The school board is reviewing its policies in conjunction with a state mandate requiring all school systems to update their policies on transgender students. The model regulations circulated by the state include a requirement that students be addressed by their preferred pronouns.

The school system did not immediately respond Monday to a request for comment.



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Deaf basketball player makes Miss. history with scholarship

ACKSON, Miss. (AP) — A Jackson student has become the first deaf player to sign a Division 1 basketball scholarship in Mississippi.

Alexis Roberts, a 6-foot forward with more than 1,000 career points and 500 rebounds, has signed to play for the Jackson State Tigers, WAPT-TV reported. 

“I feel very excited because I am the first deaf person to do that, and it’s great to make history,” Roberts said through interpreter Cheryl Keller.

Roberts was born with a percentage of hearing in both ears, but her hearing faded. Communicating has been a challenge, but Roberts was introduced to basketball when she was 12 and it changed her life.

“Picking up that basketball, it was everything to her,” Velma Patrick, Alexis’ mother, told the television station. “Basketball, you can say, gave her life.

Roberts continued to grow as a basketball player at Mississippi School for the Deaf, under head coach Sekoe White, who was a deaf athlete himself. 

White believes Roberts’ biggest impact playing for Jackson State will be off the court.

“At that level, it’s a chance to let the world know any deaf person can do it,” White said. “You just need the hard work, but sometimes the deaf people need to work a little bit extra hard, but you can make it happen and here is our proof.”

Jackson State head Coach Tomekia Reed said the coaches and players at JSU will take sign language courses to learn how to communicate with their new teammate.

“She deserves the opportunity to play for a Division 1 program — not because of her situation, she shouldn’t be limited to that,” Reed said. “She should be able to receive everything else that everybody else receives, and she doesn’t let her situation hold her back from being great.”

Roberts plans to major in physical education at Jackson State.



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High levels of cancer-causing ingredients in several sunscreen brands, study says

(WJW) - An independent study claims several popular brands of sunscreen contain high levels of benzene, a known carcinogen.

Out of nearly 300 different sunscreen products, 27% contained benzene, according to Valisure

Valisure is an online pharmacy that tests medications and supplements for safety and consistency. 

Valisure says it analyzed 294 unique batches of sunscreen from 69 different companies. Fourteen batches of sunscreen contained between 2.78 and 6.26 parts per million of benzene. 

Currently, the FDA has a restriction on benzene in products set at 2 parts per million. But the agency also says "if their use is unavoidable in order to produce a drug product with a significant therapeutic advance, then their levels should be restricted"

Valisure is asking for a recall of the affected products.

"Benzene is known to cause cancer in humans according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the World Health Organization, and other regulatory agencies," Valisure says.



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Win $2,000 and a Nintendo Switch Lite for playing video games for 21 hours

(KRON) - Wanna get paid to play video games?

Well, internet provider Frontier has a deal for you. They're offering to pay $2,000 to a pair of friends who are willing to spend 21 hours playing video games together.

All they have to do is report back on their experience!

The company wants to know if people play better on their own, or with a buddy.

"Let’s be honest with each other: you’re already playing 20+ hours a week anyway, so why not get paid for it?" the company asked in a statement announcing the contest.

You have until June 18 to be considered -- and winners will be announced on June 25.

Winners will also receive a Nintendo Switch Lite and a series of new and retro games.

You can apply online through Frontier.



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Possible TikTok challenge sends Portland teen to ICU with severe burns

PORTLAND, Ore. (KOIN) -- A 13-year-old Portland girl is fighting for her life in the ICU from severe burns.

Destini Crane's family said she suffered these burns in the bathroom of her home after she lit a candle, causing a bottle of rubbing alcohol to explode.

Her family believes she may have been trying to follow a popular TikTok "challenge," where one draws a design onto a mirror with a flammable liquid and then sets it on fire.

Portland Fire & Rescue investigators have not yet confirmed this is what happened but told KOIN 6 News that it's important for parents to talk to their children about safety in their homes.

"Anytime you're lighting an ignitable liquid in your home, you are putting yourself, your family, and everyone in that home at extreme risk," said Robert Garrison, a Portland Fire & Rescue arson investigator."Whether they have ignitable fluid or not they need to be having conversations about how dangerous fire is especially inside your home."

Crane's sister Andrea told KOIN 6 News that she agrees with fire officials, and this incident serves as a tough reminder that kids and teens should be monitored, and parents should be aware of their online activity.

Crane is still in critical condition, but recent updates indicate that skin graft surgery this week was successful.



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'That is just what needed to happen': Father of man arrested for DUI thanks state trooper

DENVER (KDVR) -- A Colorado state trooper assigned to the overnight DUI patrol shift got an unexpected letter after he arrested someone with alcohol on their breath.

It was an appreciation from the parent of the man suspected of driving intoxicated.

“I didn't expect to get a compliment on a DUI stop,” said Trooper Camden Nichols.

About a month ago, Nichols was on a typical patrol. He ended up arresting someone for DUI. He didn’t expect to get a compliment email from the parent of the man arrested, thanking him for doing the right thing.    

They were unexpected words on a page about something Nichols does every day.

“My main goal is go out and get DUIs before they turn into crashes where someone hurts themselves or hurts someone else,” said Nichols. 

Only a year and half into his career, Nichols’ passion for patrolling reignited.

“It makes you feel good. That's why I got into policing in the first place,” Nichols said. “I take a lot of pride in hearing those good words.”

Nichols is a third-generation law enforcement officer and he hopes lessons in this letter will reach others.

“Who knows? This may have had a bigger effect than I thought (and) might save a lot more lives,” said Nichols.



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Williamsburg city facilities to reopen Tuesday

WILLIAMSBURG, Va. (WAVY) — All City of Williamsburg facilities, with one exception, are expected to fully reopen to the public on Tuesday, June 1.

In a release Monday morning, city officials say face masks are no longer required for fully vaccinated individuals inside city buildings.

The Quarterpath Recreation Center is the only facility not expected to reopen just yet.

The center will reopen to the public once it can transition back to its public programming. A reopening date will be announced in the coming weeks.

Following the latest CDC guidelines, those who are unvaccinated should wear face masks indoors. Social distancing is also advised.



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কথা বলার সময় কারো মনোযোগ আকর্ষণ করতে ৬টি দারুন কৌশল

বন্ধুরা সবাই কেমন আছেন? আশা করছি আপনারা সকলেই আল্লাহর রহমতে অনেক ভাল আছেন। আমরা দিনের প্রায় ৭০ থেকে ৮০ শতাংশ সময় মানুষের সঙ্গে কথা বলে কাটিয়ে থাকি। এটা নিয়ে কোন সন্দেহ নেই যে, আমরা আমাদের দুঃখ-কষ্ট, ভালোলাগা এবং বিভিন্ন অনুভূতির কথা একে অপরের সঙ্গে বলাতে আমাদের মানসিক অবস্থা ভালো থাকে। আপনি কি জানেন, কারো যদি […]

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Biden observes first Memorial Day weekend in Virginia, Delaware

(NewsNation Now) — President Joe Biden continued his first Memorial Day weekend as commander in chief by laying a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier Monday morning and calling on Americans to honor their sacrifices by committing toward bettering the country in a speech afterward. It comes after a deeply personal tribute Sunday to those lost while remembering his late son Beau, a veteran who died six years ago to the day.

The president was joined on Monday by first lady Jill Biden, Vice President Kamala Harris and second gentleman Doug Emhoff in a somber ceremony at the Virginia cemetery's Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, which is dedicated to the fallen U.S. service members whose remains have not been identified.

After approaching the wreath, Biden bowed his head before the wreath and made the sign of the cross. Later, he delivered a Memorial Day address and called on Americans to honor their fallen heroes by remembering their sacrifices.

“All those we honor today gave their lives for the country, but they live forever in our hearts," he said.

As a cold rain fell, Biden made his annual appearance at the commemoration in New Castle, not far from his Wilmington home Sunday.

The death of his son from brain cancer at age 46 is ever-present for the elder Biden, with the loss defining so much of his worldview, dotting his speeches and stirring his empathy for others in pain.

The Memorial Day weekend, long an important moment for Biden, took on added poignancy this year as the president spoke frequently and emotionally of his own loss while expressing the gratitude of a nation for the sacrifices of others.

“I can’t thank you enough for the continued service for the country,” said Biden, addressing a crowd of Gold Star military families and other veterans in a ceremony at War Memorial Plaza in the shadow of the Delaware Memorial Bridge. “I know how much the loss hurts.”

“They’re the guardians of us and we’re the guardians of their legacy,” Biden said of those who served in the armed forces. “Despite all the pain, I know the pride you feel in the loved one you have lost.”

Though a tent was overhead, the cold wind whipped the rain onto the guests as they watched a lone military trumpeter play taps at a memorial to Delaware’s fallen troops. Biden appeared to pay the chill no mind, remaining for the entirety of the 75-minute ceremony and mouthing the words to the closing rendition of “God Bless America.” When it was time, he snapped a salute to the wreath laid at the memorial.

Biden had attended the ceremony nearly every year for decades, and it was at last year’s event when he emerged for the first time since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, spotted with a mask while laying a wreath.

Hours before Sunday's ceremony, the president, first lady Jill Biden and other family members attended a memorial Mass for Beau Biden at their local church. After the service, the Bidens greeted well-wishers outside the church and, for the first time in more than a year, were able to receive warm hugs and handshakes at their home parish.

The Bidens walked to Beau’s grave, which is on the property of St. Joseph's on the Brandywine, and left flowers amid several American flags that had been placed on the well-manicured lawn next to the marker.

Beau Biden served two terms as Delaware's attorney general before declaring a run for governor, and many saw in him the same aspirations that brought his father to the White House. Beau Biden also served in Delaware’s National Guard and, when sent to Iraq, received permission to wear a uniform emblazoned with a different last name so as not to receive special treatment.

That story, which Biden told Friday at a Virginia air force base, was one of the many moments in which Biden’s son defined the Memorial Day weekend. After beginning with an emotional remembrance of his late son, Biden acknowledged the unheralded sacrifices made by the service members and their families.

“You are the very best of what America has to offer,” Biden said then.

Biden also underscored his recent decision to pull troops out of Afghanistan later this year, expressing gratitude to service members who took multiple tours of duty in America’s longest war.

He largely avoided the particulars of international affairs on Sunday, though he pledged to press Russia’s Vladimir Putin on human rights during their summit in Geneva next month and said that the moment was right to show the world, and namely China, that the United States was ready to lead again after four years of a largely inward-looking foreign policy under President Donald Trump.

“It’s time to remind everybody who we are,” he said.



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Virginia COVID-19 May 31 update: 146 new cases, 44% of population fully vaccinated

PORTSMOUTH, Va. (WAVY) — The Virginia Department of Health is reporting 146 new cases along with 13 new deaths related to COVID-19 Monday. The percent positivity rate in the commonwealth remains at 2.7%.

As of Monday morning, May 31, Virginia has an overall number of 675,538 coronavirus cases since the start of the outbreak. Of the overall cases reported, 525,569 have been confirmed by testing. 149,969 are probable cases, in which a patient who shows symptoms is diagnosed without testing.

According to the Virginia Hospital & Healthcare Association, there are currently are 481 people in Virginia hospitalized due to COVID-19. State health officials also reported 13 new COVID-19-related deaths. So far, the virus has taken the lives of 11,186 people in the state.

State Metrics

  • New Cases (+146, 675,538 total)
  • New Deaths (+13, 11,186 total)
  • Current Hospitalizations (481 Currently)
  • Vaccine Doses Administered (Total doses administered 8,133,183) (44,776 average doses administered per day) (Percent of population with at least 1 dose 54.5%, Percent of population fully vaccinated 44%)

Local Cases

Accomack: 2,856 cases, 209 hospitalized 42 deaths (NO CHANGES)
Chesapeake: 21,097 cases, 1018 hospitalized, 302 deaths (+7 cases, +3 deaths) 
Franklin: 1,134 cases, 55 hospitalized, 32 deaths (NO CHANGES)
Gloucester: 2,249 cases, 61 hospitalized, 49 deaths (+1 case)
Hampton: 10,637 cases, 400 hospitalized, 178 deaths (+6 cases)
Isle of Wight: 3,162 cases, 150 hospitalized, 69 deaths (NO CHANGES)
James City County: 4,642 cases, 158 hospitalized, 72 deaths (+2 cases, +1 hospitalized) 
Mathews: 599 cases, 22 hospitalized, 12 deaths (NO CHANGES)
Newport News: 14,219 cases, 467 hospitalized, 230 deaths (+7 cases, +1hospitalized) 
Norfolk: 17,888 cases, 1014 hospitalized, 263 deaths (+8 cases) 
Northampton: 807 cases, 80 hospitalized, 36 deaths (NO CHANGES)
Poquoson: 890 cases, 22 hospitalized, 16 deaths (NO CHANGES)
Portsmouth: 9,129 cases, 678 hospitalized, 199 deaths (NO CHANGES)
Southampton: 1,984 cases, 57 hospitalized, 56 deaths (NO CHANGES)
Suffolk: 7,977 cases, 456 hospitalized, 191 deaths (-1 case, +1 hospitalized) 
Virginia Beach: 36,181 cases, 1,661 hospitalized, 406 deaths (+6 cases, +1 hospitalized) 
Williamsburg: 772 cases, 28 hospitalized, 13 deaths (NO CHANGES)
York: 3,776 cases, 71 hospitalized, 54 deaths (+1 case)

For additional information on COVID-19 metrics in the commonwealth, go to the Virginia Department of Health website.



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Excellent Educators: Experienced 3rd grade teacher learns how to adapt to teaching in the pandemic

CHESAPEAKE (WAVY) - When Rebecca Karch began teaching, Ronald Reagan was president.
Cell phones were about the size of a briefcase. Back to the Future was at the movies.

Fast forward 35 years later.

"I'm vintage," Karch says.

Karch had to get her third-graders at George Washington Carver Intermediate excited about school. In a video from one of her science classes, a student holds a container with soil in it and points out to her how some animals live underground.

It's that kind of excitement Karch is trying to achieve, even when she can't it in their faces.

"My kids have made great progress this year but I push them hard," Karch said. "That was probably the biggest challenge this year was knowing how hard you could push somebody behind a mask. Their body language tells you a lot."

The pandemic meant a new way of teaching. Carver intermediate is grades 3, 4 and 5.
That meant her kids needed to adapt not only to a new school, but a new way of learning, and a new teacher.

"I'm almost 5’9” - so here I am, I don’t have that Cinderella voice, and you’re coming to me."

She calls her students "precious jewels ". She'll have them honor their heroes by dressing up like Rosa Parks or Ruth Bader Ginsburg. Karch says her students relate best to stories - and she says they loved "The Wild Robot".

"If I had to pick my favorites thing to do instructionally, I love doing the read-aloud. Kids have gotten so used to watching the story on Zoom that we have to bridge that a little bit because I like to walk around and read them stories. You have to work the room, because if not and you’re only at the front, then only a couple of kids get a great seat."

When asked what she would be doing if she weren't a teacher, Karch was hard-pressed to answer.
She says teaching is her favorite "sport".



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Virginia War Memorial to have in-person Memorial Day ceremony

RICHMOND, Va. (WRIC) — Memorial Day is a day to remember those who died while serving in the U.S. military. But this year, like the last, some ceremonies will have a twist because of COVID-19.

According to a release, The 2021 Commonwealth's Memorial Day Ceremony at the Virginia War Memorial will be live and presented via live stream on Monday, May 31, from 11 a.m. until noon. The event takes place at the E. Bruce Heilman Amphitheater and Shrine of Memory.

The annual ceremony is to honor all the men and women who gave the ultimate sacrifice in defense of America from the Revolutionary War to today's Global War on Terrorism.

With social distancing and capacity guidelines set to ease on May 28, members of the community will be able to attend the live event.

Speakers for the event include:

  • Governor Ralph Northam
  • Kathleen Jabs, Virginia Acting Secretary of Veterans and Defense Affairs
  • John Maxwell, Commissioner, Virginia Department of Veterans Services
  • Dr. Clay Mountcastle, Director, Virginia War Memorial
  • 380th Army Reserve Band Quintet
  • Gold Star families and other special guests

All attendees are encouraged to arrive no later than 10:45 a.m. People who are not fully vaccinated are strongly urged to wear masks in all settings -- indoors and outdoors.

Anyone can watch the ceremony on the Virginia War Memorial's Facebook page.

Organizers say limited free parking will be available in the memorial parking lot and deck. The memorial will be open to the public from 9 a.m. until 4:30 p.m.



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China easing birth limits further to cope with aging society

BEIJING (AP) — China’s ruling Communist Party said Monday it will ease birth limits to allow all couples to have three children instead of two in hopes of slowing the rapid aging of its population, which is adding to strains on the economy and society.

The ruling party has enforced birth limits since 1980 to restrain population growth but worries the number of working-age people is falling too fast while the share over age 65 is rising. That threatens to disrupt its ambitions to transform China into a prosperous consumer society and global technology leader.

A ruling party meeting led by President Xi Jinping decided to introduce “measures to actively deal with the aging population,” the official Xinhua News Agency said. It said leaders agreed ”implementing the policy of one couple can have three children and supporting measures are conducive to improving China’s population structure."

Leaders also agreed China needs to raise its retirement age to keep more people in the workforce and improve pension and health services for the elderly, Xinhua said.

Restrictions that limited most couples to one child were eased in 2015 to allow two, but the total number of births fell further, suggesting rule changes on their own have little impact on the trend.

Couples say they are put off by high costs of raising a child, disruption to their jobs and the need to look after elderly parents.

Comments on social media Monday complained the change does nothing to help young parents with medical bills, low incomes and grueling work schedules known popularly as “996,” or 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. six days a week.

“Every stage of the problem hasn’t been solved,” said a post on the popular Sina Weibo blog service signed Tchaikovsky. “Who will raise the baby? Do you have time? I go out early and get back late. Kids don’t know what their parents look like.”

Another, signed Hyeongmok, joked bitterly: “Don’t worry about aging. Our generation won’t live long.”

China, along with Thailand and some other Asian economies, faces what economists call the challenge of whether they can get rich before they get old.

The Chinese population of 1.4 billion already was expected to peak later this decade and start to decline. Census data released May 11 suggest that is happening faster than expected, adding to burdens on underfunded pension and health systems and cutting the number of future workers available to support a growing retiree group.

The share of working-age people 15 to 59 in the population fell to 63.3% last year from 70.1% a decade earlier. The group aged 65 and older grew to 13.5% from 8.9%.

The 12 million births reported last year was down nearly one-fifth from 2019.

About 40% were second children, down from 50% in 2017, according to Ning Jizhe, a statistics official who announced the data on May 11.

Chinese researchers and the Labor Ministry say the share of working-age people might fall to half the population by 2050. That increases the “dependency ratio,” or the number of retirees who rely on each worker to generate income for pension funds and to pay taxes for health and other public services.

Leaders at Monday's meeting agreed it is “necessary to steadily implement the gradual postponement of the legal retirement age,” Xinhua said.

It gave no details, but the government has been debating raising the official retirement ages of 60 for men, 55 for white-collar female workers and 50 for blue-collar female workers.

The potential change is politically fraught. Some female professionals welcome a chance to stay in satisfying careers, but others whose bodies are worn out from decades of manual labor resent being required to work longer.

The fertility rate, or the average number of births per mother, stood at 1.3 in 2020, well below the 2.1 that would maintain the size of the population.

China’s birth rate, paralleling trends in other Asian economies, already was falling before the one-child rule. The average number of children per Chinese mother tumbled from above six in the 1960s to below three by 1980, according to the World Bank.

Demographers say official birth limits concealed what would have been a further fall in the number of children per family without the restrictions.

The ruling party says it prevented as many as 400 million potential births, averting shortages of food and water. But demographers say if China followed trends in Thailand, parts of India and other countries, the number of additional babies might have been as low as a few million.

___

AP Writer Fu Ting in Bangkok contributed.



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Excellent Educator: Newport News teacher engages students during pandemic

NEWPORT NEWS, Va. (WAVY) — When the COVID-19 pandemic kept Carolyn Harris and her first-grade students from meeting in person, she found a way to keep them engaged, while in the virtual classroom.

And sometimes, that meant bringing in a little help.

"So, Noah, would you like to read that for us?" Harris stared intently at one of about 16 square boxes on her TV screen. Noah, feels the gaze and locks onto the projected words.

"His body and his feet are half frog!"
 
"That's so awesome," says Erin Dealy, who wrote those words in the book "Peter's Easter Frog." Dealy is a guest author for this zoom class, hosted by Ms. Harris, who joins in with the praise of Noah's effort, clapping and laughing," Great job!"

Through the year-long pandemic virtual classes, this longtime Carver Elementary school teacher has brought in nationally known authors to share her enthusiasm with students for reading and writing.

"Another thing that's really cool about Mrs. Harris' writing program is that Noah's a little shy on camera." Dealy continues "a lot of kids are math kids or science kids, and they don't think they have a voice. They don't think they can write. And she has really empowered them to use their writing to get their opinions out."

Carolyn Harris has read and heard a lot of her students' opinions in her 28 years in education.
So, how much of a challenge has it been during a pandemic that forced her to stand in front of a TV instead of 20 rambunctious children?

"It really hasn't. I mean, I think I'm always thinking about what I can do, different, thinking about different ways to get the kids excited."

Children get excited about winning awards and Harris gave them that chance when entering their work in WHRO Public Broadcasting Writer's Contest recently. One of her students won. And Harris believes she has a future winner in Noah.

"She takes notice of things and she provides support," says Tetie Sessoms, Noah's mothjer. "She does it out of love and kindness."

Ms. Sessoms says Noah has had his challenges this year, learning from home. But, she's thankful he gives his all for Ms. Harris, and vice versa.
 
"When they (students) leave Ms. Harris, Ms. Harris has them  right."



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Is it safe to swim in a pool as the COVID pandemic eases?

(NEXSTAR) - With temperatures rising and summer on the horizon, many are eager to break out their swimsuits and hit the pool.

But is it safe?

According to Dr. Richard Kennedy, an infectious disease expert at Mayo Clinic, "The devil's in the details."

Kennedy says it's possible to swim at a pool without contracting COVID-19, but there are some things you should be conscious of: How many people are around you? How closely are you interacting with them?

There are a few things that are "working in your favor," according to Kennedy. For one, pools are typically outside, which limits the spread of COVID-19. It will also, presumably, be hot when you're swimming, which also limits the transmission of coronavirus.

Also, there's typically fewer cases of COVID-19 during summer, so "you're less likely to run into an infected person," Kennedy said.

But there are a few things working against you, as well. Typically, younger people are at the pool, and only children ages 12 and up are currently able to be vaccinated. Younger people also typically show fewer COVID-19 symptoms if they are infected, which means they could be swimming and infected without their knowledge.

Lastly, at the pool, there's lots of yelling and laughing, which can spew a greater amount of viral particles into the air.

"Overall, I'd say there's no such thing as perfectly safe," Kennedy said. "There is a level of risk. People will have to decide for themselves if they're comfortable with it."



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Excellent Educators: Newport News teacher keeps students engaged one quirky step at a time

NEWPORT NEWS, Va. (WAVY) - Although the pandemic presented many challenges for teachers everywhere, it was no match for the fun, quirky and dance-filled lessons one Newport News teacher had for her students.

In her nine years as a teacher, Emily Voss makes learning fun with "brain breaks" for her students at Carver Elementary School, which typically involve dancing.

Voss says she became a teacher because she wanted to make learning fun for students, something she says she desperately wished her teachers would've done for her when she was in school.

The mix between being goofy and serious times teaches her students about when it's okay to let loose and relax a little.

“They just want to do well," she said. "They want to strive, work harder, experience new challenges, and it’s the confidence that comes along with that, when you create that community.

Jada Patterson has been Voss' teacher-in-resident during this school year as she finishes up her Masters at Christopher Newport University.

She said she was definitely a little intimidated to be working in a classroom this year, as there was a lot of uncertainty over whether students would even come back to the classroom and how it would be handled.

Not to mention, virtual learning has presented many challenges for teachers to overcome, most importantly keeping students engaged.

Throughout the year, Patterson says she saw firsthand the importance of building a community in the classroom through Voss's community-classroom building approach.

“Do a morning greeting, and then having sharing time and doing a fun activity and just kind of building a relationship better with the kids, it did go better with teaching the lesson,” said Patterson.

Voss says their brain breaks not only help keep students engaged, but it makes them try harder when they know their teacher cares about them.

“To know that you are bringing pride to them and you are showing them that you love and care about them and their well-being, it just makes you want to be happy,” she said.

Voss also says she couldn't have gotten through the last year without the never-ending support from her fellow teachers and staff at Carver Elementary.



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ডিপফেক ভিডিও কি? এবং এটি কিভাবে কাজ করে?

আসসালামু আলাইকুম, বন্ধুরা সবাই কেমন আছেন? আশা করছি আপনারা সকলেই আল্লাহর রহমতে অনেক ভাল আছেন‌। বরাবরের মতো আজও এসেছি আপনাদের জন্য নতুন একটি টিউন নিয়ে। আশা করছি বরাবরের মতো আজকের টিউনটি ও আপনাদের কাছে অনেক ভালো লাগবে। এজন্য অবশ্যই আপনাদেরকে ধৈর্য ধরে সম্পূর্ণ টিউনটি মনোযোগ দিয়ে দেখতে হবে। আপনাদের মধ্যে অনেকেই হয়তো বা ডিপফেক ভিডিওর […]

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Virginia May 30 COVID-19 update: Hospitalization down to 500, positivity rate at 2.5%

PORTSMOUTH, Va. (WAVY) — The Virginia Department of Health is reporting 227 new cases along with 13 new deaths related to COVID-19 Sunday. The percent positivity rate in the commonwealth remains at 2.5%.

As of Sunday morning, May 30, Virginia has an overall number of 675,392 coronavirus cases since the start of the outbreak. Of the overall cases reported, 525,447 have been confirmed by testing. 149,945 are probable cases, in which a patient who shows symptoms is diagnosed without testing.

According to the Virginia Hospital & Healthcare Association, there are currently are 500 people in Virginia hospitalized due to COVID-19. State health officials also reported 13 new COVID-19-related deaths. So far, the virus has taken the lives of 11,173 people in the state.

State Metrics

  • New Cases (+227, 675,392 total)
  • New Deaths (+13, 11,173 total)
  • Current Hospitalizations (500 Currently)
  • Vaccine Doses Administered (Total doses administered 8,133,183) (44,776 average doses administered per day) (Percent of population with at least 1 dose 54.5%, Percent of population fully vaccinated 44%)

Local Cases

Accomack: 2,856 cases, 209 hospitalized 42 deaths
Chesapeake: 21,090 cases, 1018 hospitalized, 299 deaths 
Franklin: 1,134 cases, 55 hospitalized, 32 deaths 
Gloucester: 2,248 cases, 61 hospitalized, 49 deaths 
Hampton: 10,631 cases, 400 hospitalized, 178 deaths 
Isle of Wight: 3,162 cases, 150 hospitalized, 69 deaths 
James City County: 4,640 cases, 157 hospitalized, 72 deaths 
Mathews: 599 cases, 22 hospitalized, 12 deaths 
Newport News: 14,212 cases, 466 hospitalized, 230 deaths 
Norfolk: 17,880 cases, 1014 hospitalized, 263 deaths 
Northampton: 807 cases, 80 hospitalized, 36 deaths 
Poquoson: 890 cases, 22 hospitalized, 16 deaths 
Portsmouth: 9,129 cases, 678 hospitalized, 199 deaths 
Southampton: 1,984 cases, 57 hospitalized, 56 deaths 
Suffolk: 7,978 cases, 455 hospitalized, 191 deaths 
Virginia Beach: 36,175 cases, 1,660 hospitalized, 406 deaths 
Williamsburg: 772 cases, 28 hospitalized, 13 deaths 
York: 3,775 cases, 71 hospitalized, 54 deaths 

For additional information on COVID-19 metrics in the commonwealth, go to the Virginia Department of Health website.



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Vets return to Memorial Day traditions as pandemic eases

BOSTON (AP) — A pair of military vets navigate the hilly, meandering paths in a historic cemetery in Boston, searching out soldiers' graves and planting American flags in front of them.

About 10 miles away, scores of other vets and volunteers do the same, placing more than 37,000 small flags on the downtown Boston Common — a sea of red, white and blue meant to symbolize all the Massachusetts soldiers killed in battle since the Revolutionary War. It’s an annual tradition that returns in full this yearafter being significantly scaled back in 2020 because of the pandemic.

In Boston and elsewhere, this holiday weekend will feel something closer to Memorial Days of old, as COVID-19 restrictions are fully lifted in many places.

“This Memorial Day almost has a different, better feeling to it,” said Craig DeOld, a 50-year-old retired captain in the Army Reserve, as he took a breather from his flag duties at the Fairview Cemetery earlier this week. “We’re breathing a sigh of relief that we’ve overcome another struggle, but we’re also now able to return to what this holiday is all about — remembering our fallen comrades.”

Around the nation, Americans will be able to pay tribute to fallen troops in ways that were impossible last year, when virus restrictions were in effect in many places. It will also be a time to remember the tens of thousands of veterans who died from COVID-19 and recommit to vaccinating those who remain reluctant.

Art delaCruz, a 53-year-old retired Navy commander in Los Angeles leads the Veterans Coalition for Vaccination, said his group has been encouraging inoculated veterans to volunteer at vaccine sites to dispel myths and help assuage concerns, many of which are also shared by current service members.

“We understand it’s a personal choice, so we try to meet people where they are,” said delaCruz, who is also president of Team Rubicon, a disaster-response nonprofit made up of military veterans.

There’s no definitive tally for coronavirus deaths or vaccinations among American military vets, but Department of Veterans Affairs data shows more than 12,000 have died and more than 2.5 million have been inoculated against COVID-19 out of the roughly 9 million veterans enrolled in the agency's programs.

The isolation of the pandemic has also been particularly hard on veterans, many of whom depend on kinship with fellow service members to cope with wartime trauma, says Jeremy Butler, a 47-year-old Navy Reserve officer in New York who heads the advocacy group Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America.

“We’re reuniting now, but it’s been an extremely challenging year,” he said. “To have those connections cut off — the counseling sessions, the VA appointments, social events with other vets — those are so important to maintaining mental health.”

But for the families of veterans who survived the horrors of war, only to be felled by COVID-19, Memorial Day can reopen barely healed wounds.

In western Massachusetts, Susan Kenney says the death of her 78-year-old father last April from the virus still remains raw.

Charles Lowell, an Air Force veteran who served during the Vietnam War, was among 76 residents of the Holyoke Soldiers' Home who died in one of America'sdeadliest coronavirus outbreaks last year in a long-term care facility. A memorial service was held at the home earlier this week, and the names of residents who died over the past calendar year were read aloud.

Kenney, who has been a vocal advocate for reforming the troubled home, says there are still lingering questions about who else should be held accountable, even as top officials at the state-run facility face criminal negligence and abuse charges and federal and state agencies launch investigations.

“I’ve been reliving this for a whole year,” she said. “At every milestone. Veterans Day. His birthday. His death anniversary. Everything is a constant reminder of what happened. It’s so painful to think about.”

For other families, Memorial Day will be as it ever was, a day to remember loved ones killed in war.

In Virginia, Willie Ransom, a 74-year-old Vietnam War vet, said his family will hold a modest service at the grave of his youngest son.

Air Force Maj. Charles Ransom was among eight U.S. airmen killed in Afghanistan when an Afghan military pilot opened fire at the Kabul airport in 2011. The American Legion post in Midlothian, Virginia, that the elder Ransom once helped lead is now named in his honor.

The Powhatan resident says a silver lining this year is that the country is poised to end the war that claimed his 31-year-old son and the lives of more than 2,200 other American fighters. President Joe Biden has promised to end the nation’s longest conflict by Sept. 11, the anniversary of the 2001 terror attacks that launched the war.

“It’s the best decision we could make,” Ransom said. “It’s become like Vietnam. They don’t want us there. We should have been out of there years ago.”

Back in Boston, DeOld will be thinking about his father, an Army vet wounded in a grenade attack in Vietnam.

Louis DeOld returned home with a Purple Heart and went on to become a police officer in New Jersey, but the physical and mental scars of war persisted long after, his son said. He died in 2017 at the age of 70.

On Memorial Day, DeOld will gather with fellow vets at the VFW post in the city’s Dorchester neighborhood that he commands.

They will lay a wreath by the American flag out front and then grill burgers out back. It will be the first large social event hosted by the post since the pandemic virtually shuttered the hall more than a year ago.

“I hope it’s nice,” DeOld said. “I hope folks linger. Families and friends gather. Good camaraderie. The way it should be.”



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