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ANTAD Podcast--Episode 2 "The Missing Eloquence TTS Engine"

In our second episode of the ANTAD Podcast, we discussed the sudden disappearance of the Eloquence TTS engine from the Google Play Store.

Michael demonstrates the capabilities of the unsung hero--"Voice Access" from Google.

Ravi unveiled the new feature in WhatsApp wherein one can use the fingerprint Reader to lock the app.

Warren demonstrates a little tucked away feature that is hidden even from file manager in the Chrome browser where one could clear the footprints of websites either individually or clear all with one tap.

Should you want to catch mike demonstrate features or apps on the Android Platform, you may do so by navigating to the following URL where he joins a Canadian crew, every other week starting from Oct. 14th at 2:25 Eastern
That website is:
AMI.ca/

For questions, concerns and suggestions for the ANTAD Podcast crew, please, direct those to:
antadpodcast@gmail.com

Audio File: 




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Minnesota ranks second in the nation for highest corporate tax rate

(The Center Square) – Minnesota’s top marginal corporate tax rate, 9.8%, is the second-highest the nation, according to an analysis the Tax Foundation released Tuesday.




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Mesopotamain Night: Melodies from the East

Mesopotamain Night: Melodies from the East



  • Fine Arts Information

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Antiquities under Siege: Cultural Heritage Protection after ...

Antiquities under Siege: Cultural Heritage Protection after the Iraq War [Hardcover]



  • Fine Arts Information

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The "Gutenberg Bible" of Modern Syriac

The "Gutenberg Bible" of Modern Syriac




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[Swedish] Högskolorna í övre Mesopotamíen: Del I - Edessa, N...

[Swedish] Högskolorna í övre Mesopotamíen: Del I - Edessa, Nsibin och Qartëmin




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Modelling and Simulation of Robot Manipulators

Modelling and Simulation of Robot Manipulators



  • Science and Technical Information

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Assyriska, Anatolians in Swedish football

Assyriska, Anatolians in Swedish football



  • Assyrian Sports Network

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Football: Gilbert Awekam Samuel

Football: Gilbert Awekam Samuel



  • Assyrian Sports Network

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Mesopotamian Night Debuts in Chicago

Mesopotamian Night Debuts in Chicago



  • Assyrian Fine Arts Network

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WikiLeaks: 2009-12-15: 09STOCKHOLM779: Snapshot of Muslim Co...

WikiLeaks: 2009-12-15: 09STOCKHOLM779: Snapshot of Muslim Communities in Sweden




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WikiLeaks: 2010-02-08: 10VATICAN23: Vatican: Iran is not Res...

WikiLeaks: 2010-02-08: 10VATICAN23: Vatican: Iran is not Respecting Human Rights




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I Remember and Demand. Recognise! Do not Keep Silent!

I Remember and Demand. Recognise! Do not Keep Silent!



  • Assyrian Government Network

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Perspective: Guest-Editorial: Assyrian Football Clubs in the...

Perspective: Guest-Editorial: Assyrian Football Clubs in the Diaspora



  • Perspective: Editorials | Guest-Editorials | Letters


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Britain has forgotten its debt to the Christians of Iraq

Britain has forgotten its debt to the Christians of Iraq




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Census: New York lost more people than any other state

(The Center Square) – Data from the U.S. Census Bureau released Thursday showed New York has lost a greater percentage of its population over the last two years than any other state.




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Just Got A New Android Device - Here Is A Great Article To Get You From 0 to 60 in No Time

So you just got that shiny new android device and are eager to get up and running with it, find some apps and games and generally make the most of your new device. The Inclusive Android Website is a great resource to use to make the most of your device.    This is where it all happens! Share your information, ideas, apps and tips with the community of  people with disabilities who are Android users from across the world! Information To Promote Sight,  Sound, Physical & Cognitive Digital Inclusion for people with disabilities.

If you are just  starting out with android there are a ton of
Guides to help you get started on Android
 

Also a number of community members have recorded many
Audio Tips And Tutorials. In particular, if you are just starting out, the
demystifying Series Of Audio Tips From Sebastien, the walkthrough for using Google Now or OK Google From Warren the walkthrough of the initial setup on stock android plus factory resetting an old device from Quentin  and the walkthrough on  Enabling Talkback On Samsung A3 from Alan are excellent audio tips for a new user.

Maybe you are eager to get into downloading apps and seeing what Android really can do.  You could start out by exploring these collections of apps from polls we have done:

  1. Results Of The 2015 Favourite Accessible Android Assistant Software Poll
     
  2. Results Of The December 2014 Favourite Accessible Podcatcher Poll
     
  3. You could also find out what apps I have installed on my phone in the article: List Of App Recommendations For Blind And Partially SightedAndroidUsers

Now that the partying, turkey eating and unwrapping are done, maybe you are looking for something fun to do, you can check out the Accessible app directory's Game Section

If you are looking for something to remove a specific barrier, a perfect tool or something made with a specific disability in mind, you could check out the following App Directory Sections:

  1. Apps Designed Specifically For Blind And Low Vision Users
  2. Apps Designed Specifically For Deaf And Hard Of Hearing Users
  3. Apps Designed Specifically For Users With LD Or Cognitive Requirements
  4. Apps Designed Specifically For Users With Physical or Dexterity Requirements

And remember, as you explore the world of apps or learn to use your android device; please remember that this is a community driven site so feel free to sign up for a free account and post your app finds or tips for other users.  If you wan to keep up on the latest postings on the inclusive android website, here is a list of RSS feeds.

From All Of Us At Inclusive Android, we wish you the most merry and festive time this Holiday Season.




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Wincanton and Co-op join forces for another five-years

Wincanton, a supply chain partner for UK business, has been awarded a five-year contract extension by convenience retailer, Co-op, building on over three decades of successful collaboration between the two companies. 




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Giant 'God of Darkness' Asteroid May Not Escape Earth Unscathed




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Travis Kelce's and Patrick Mahomes' Kansas City Homes Burglarized Within 48 Hours of Each Other




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Genocide Recognition by Itself Is Not Enough

Genocide Recognition by Itself Is Not Enough



  • Armenian
  • Assyrian and Hellenic Genocide News

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Artsakh Uprooted: Aftermaths of Displacement

Artsakh Uprooted: Aftermaths of Displacement



  • Armenian
  • Assyrian and Hellenic Genocide News

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The Boycott Turkey Campaign

The Boycott Turkey Campaign



  • Armenian
  • Assyrian and Hellenic Genocide News

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Speaki - Voice Notifications

Description: 

Features:
+ Smart - trying and learning to read only the relevant text from your notification. + Selection - select which apps would you like Speaki to read aloud. + Speak Output - protect your privacy and control when Speaki should read. + Read content - read aloud full notification content (beside title and summary). + Caller ID - speak caller ID on incoming call. (For Android 8.1 and below) + Stop - stop Speaki from reading by shaking your device, double pressing the power key or by pressing the stop/play button on your headset. + No interruption during phone calls.
+ Quick...

Free Or Paid: 

Free

Category: 




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CRISPR Immune Cells Not Only Survive, They Thrive After Infusion Into Cancer Patients

CRISPR Immune Cells Not Only Survive, They Thrive After Infusion Into Cancer Patients

In the first-ever (sanctioned) investigational use of multiple edits to the human genome, a study found that cells edited in three specific ways and then removed from patients and brought back into the lab setting were able to kill cancer months after their original manufacturing and infusion.

This is the first U.S. clinical trial to test the gene editing approach in humans, and the publication of this new data today follows on the initial report last year that researchers were able to use CRISPR/Cas9 technology to successfully edit three cancer patients' immune cells. The ongoing study is a cooperative between Tmunity Therapeutics, the Parker Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy, and the University of Pennsylvania. 

Patients on this trial were treated by Edward A. Stadtmauer, MD, section chief of Hematologic Malignancies at Penn, co-lead author on the study. The approach in this study is closely related to CAR T cell therapy, in which patient immune cells are engineered to fight cancer, but it has some key differences. Just like CAR T, researchers in this study began by collecting a patient's T cells from blood. However, instead of arming these cells with a receptor against a protein such as CD19, the team first used CRISPR/Cas9 editing to remove three genes. The first two edits removed a T cell's natural receptors so they can be reprogrammed to express a synthetic T cell receptor, allowing these cells to seek out and destroy tumors. The third edit removed PD-1, a natural checkpoint that sometimes blocks T cells from doing their job. 

Once the three genes are knocked out, a fourth genetic modification was accomplished using a lentivirus to insert the cancer-specific synthetic T cell receptor, which tells the edited T cells to target an antigen called NY-ESO-1. Previously published data show these cells typically survive for less than a week, but this new analysis shows the edited cells used in this study persisted, with the longest follow up at nine months. 

Several months after the infusion, researchers drew more blood and isolated the CRISPR-edited cells for study. When brought back into the lab setting, the cells were still able to kill tumors. 

The CRISPR-edited T cells used in this study are not active on their own like CAR T cells. Instead, they require the cooperation of a molecule known as HLA-A*02:01, which is only expressed in a subset of patients. This means that patients had to be screened ahead of time to make sure they were a match for the approach. Participants who met the requirements received other clinically-indicated therapy as needed while they waited for their cells to be manufactured. Once that process was completed, all three patients received the gene-edited cells in a single infusion after a short course of chemotherapy. Analysis of blood samples revealed that all three participants had the CRISPR-edited T cells take root and thrive in the patients. While none responded to the therapy, there were no treatment-related serious adverse events. 

CRISPR technology has not previously been tested in humans in the U.S. so the research team had to move through a comprehensive and rigorous series of institutional and federal regulatory approval steps, including approval by the National Institutes of Health's Recombinant DNA Research Advisory Committee and review by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, as well as Penn's institutional review board and institutional biosafety committee. The entire process required more than two years.

 Researchers say these new data will open the door to later stage studies to investigate and extend this approach to a broader field beyond cancer, several of which are already planned at Penn.

sb admin Thu, 02/06/2020 - 14:52
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Coronavirus Is Not Passed From Mother to Child Late In Pregnancy

Coronavirus Is Not Passed From Mother to Child Late In Pregnancy

After a newborn (born to a mother infected with the 2019 novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) testing positive for COVID-19 infection within 36 hours of birth, there were concerns about whether the virus could be contracted in the womb. A new study finds that COVID-19 does not pass to the child while in the womb. The women in the small study were from Wuhan, China, in the third trimester of pregnancy and had pneumonia caused by COVID-19. However, it only included women who were late in their pregnancy and gave birth by caesarean section. 

There were two cases of fetal distress but all nine pregnancies resulted in live births. That symptoms from COVID-19 infection in pregnant women were similar to those reported in non-pregnant adults, and no women in the study developed severe pneumonia or died.

All mothers in the study were aged between 26-40 years. None of them had underlying health conditions, but one developed gestational hypertension from week 27 of her pregnancy, and another developed pre-eclampsia at week 31. Both patients’ conditions were stable during pregnancy. The nine women in the study had typical symptoms of COVID-19 infection, and were given oxygen support and antibiotics. Six of the women were also given antiviral therapy. In the study, the medical records of nine pregnant women who had pneumonia caused by COVID-19 infection were retrospectively reviewed. Infection was lab-confirmed for all women in the study, and the authors studied the nine women’s symptoms.

(A) Patient 1: left-sided patchy consolidation and multiple bilateral ground-glass opacities. (B) Patient 2: subpleural patchy consolidation in the right lung and slightly infiltrated shadows around left bronchus. (C) Patient 3: bilateral multiple ground-glass opacities, prominent on the left. (D) Patient 4: left-sided patchy ground-glass opacity. (E) Patient 5: multiple ground-glass opacities bilaterally. (F) Patient 6: bilateral clear lung fields with no obvious ground-glass opacities. (G) Patient 7: right-sided subpleural patchy consolidation. (H) Patient 8: multiple bilateral ground-glass opacities, prominent on the right. (I) Patient 9: multiple bilateral ground-glass opacities.


In addition, samples of amniotic fluid, cord blood, neonatal throat swabs and breast milk were taken for six of the nine cases [2] and tested for severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). Importantly, the samples of amniotic fluid, cord blood, and neonatal throat swabs were collected in the operating room at the time of birth to guarantee that samples were not contaminated and best represented intrauterine conditions. All nine pregnancies resulted in live births, and there were no cases of neonatal asphyxia. Four women had pregnancy complications (two had fetal distress and two had premature rupture of membrane), and four women had preterm labor which was not related to their infection and occurred after 36 gestational weeks. Two of the prematurely born newborns had a low birth weight.

The authors note that their findings are similar to observations of the severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) virus in pregnant women, where there was no evidence of the virus being passed from mother to child during pregnancy or birth. The findings are based on a limited number of cases, over a short period of time, and the effects of mothers being infected with the virus during the first or second trimester of pregnancy and the subsequent outcomes for their offspring are still unclear, as well as whether the virus can be passed from mother to child during vaginal birth.

Dr Jie Qiao (who was not involved in the study) of Peking University Third Hospital, China,compares the effects of the virus to those of SARS, and says: “Previous studies have shown that SARS during pregnancy is associated with a high incidence of adverse maternal and neonatal complications, such as spontaneous miscarriage, preterm delivery, intrauterine growth restriction, application of endotracheal intubation, admission to the intensive care unit, renal failure, and disseminated intravascular coagulopathy. However, pregnant women with COVID-19 infection in the present study had fewer adverse maternal and neonatal complications and outcomes than would be anticipated for those with SARS-CoV-1 infection. Although a small number of cases was analysed and the findings should be interpreted with caution, the findings are mostly consistent with the clinical analysis done by Zhu and colleagues of ten neonates born to mothers with COVID-19 pneumonia."

sb admin Wed, 02/12/2020 - 13:03
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Appreciating van Leeuwenhoek: The Cloth Merchant Who Discovered Microbes

Appreciating van Leeuwenhoek: The Cloth Merchant Who Discovered Microbes

Imagine trying to cope with a pandemic like COVID-19 in a world where microscopic life was unknown. Prior to the 17th century, people were limited by what they could see with their own two eyes. But then a Dutch cloth merchant changed everything.

His name was Antonie van Leeuwenhoek, and he lived from 1632 to 1723. Although untrained in science, Leeuwenhoek became the greatest lens-maker of his day, discovered microscopic life forms and is known today as the “father of microbiology.”

Visualizing ‘animalcules’ with a ‘small see-er’

Leeuwenhoek opened the door to a vast, previously unseen world. J. Verolje/Wellcome Collection, CC BY

Leeuwenhoek didn’t set out to identify microbes. Instead, he was trying to assess the quality of thread. He developed a method for making lenses by heating thin filaments of glass to make tiny spheres. His lenses were of such high quality he saw things no one else could.

This enabled him to train his microscope – literally, “small see-er” – on a new and largely unexpected realm: objects, including organisms, far too small to be seen by the naked eye. He was the first to visualize red blood cells, blood flow in capillaries and sperm.

Drawings from a Leeuwenhoek letter in 1683 illustrating human mouth bacteria. Huydang2910, CC BY-SA

Leeuwenhoek was also the first human being to see a bacterium – and the importance of this discovery for microbiology and medicine can hardly be overstated. Yet he was reluctant to publish his findings, due to his lack of formal education. Eventually, friends prevailed upon him to do so.

He wrote, “Whenever I found out anything remarkable, I thought it my duty to put down my discovery on paper, so that all ingenious people might be informed thereof.” He was guided by his curiosity and joy in discovery, asserting “I’ve taken no notice of those who have said why take so much trouble and what good is it?”

When he reported visualizing “animalcules” (tiny animals) swimming in a drop of pond water, members of the scientific community questioned his reliability. After his findings were corroborated by reliable religious and scientific authorities, they were published, and in 1680 he was invited to join the Royal Society in London, then the world’s premier scientific body.

Leeuwenhoek was not the world’s only microscopist. In England, his contemporary Robert Hooke coined the term “cell” to describe the basic unit of life and published his “Micrographia,” featuring incredibly detailed images of insects and the like, which became the first scientific best-seller. Hooke, however, did not identify bacteria.

Despite Leuwenhoek’s prowess as a lens-maker, even he could not see viruses. They are about 1/100th the size of bacteria, much too small to be visualized by light microscopes, which because of the physics of light can magnify only thousands of times. Viruses weren’t visualized until 1931 with the invention of electron microscopes, which could magnify by the millions.

An image of the hepatitis virus courtesy of the electron microscope. E.H. Cook, Jr./CDC via Associated Press

A vast, previously unseen world

Leeuwenhoek and his successors opened up, by far, the largest realm of life. For example, all the bacteria on Earth outweigh humans by more than 1,100 times and outnumber us by an unimaginable margin. There is fossil evidence that bacteria were among the first life forms on Earth, dating back over 3 billion years, and today it is thought the planet houses about 5 nonillion (1 followed by 30 zeroes) bacteria.

Some species of bacteria cause diseases, such as cholera, syphilis and strep throat; while others, known as extremophiles, can survive at temperatures beyond the boiling and freezing points of water, from the upper reaches of the atmosphere to the deepest points of the oceans. Also, the number of harmless bacterial cells on and in our bodies likely outnumber the human ones.

Viruses, which include the coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 that causes COVID-19, outnumber bacteria by a factor of 100, meaning there are more of them on Earth than stars in the universe. They, too, are found everywhere, from the upper atmosphere to the ocean depths.

A visualization of the human rhinovirus 14, one of many viruses that cause the common cold. Protein spikes are colored white for clarity. Thomas Splettstoesser, CC BY-SA

Strangely, viruses probably do not qualify as living organisms. They can replicate only by infecting other organisms’ cells, where they hijack cellular systems to make copies of themselves, sometimes causing the death of the infected cell.

It is important to remember that microbes such as bacteria and viruses do far more than cause disease, and many are vital to life. For example, bacteria synthesize vitamin B12, without which most living organisms would not be able to make DNA.

Likewise, viruses cause diseases such as the common cold, influenza and COVID-19, but they also play a vital role in transferring genes between species, which helps to increase genetic diversity and propel evolution. Today researchers use viruses to treat diseases such as cancer.

Scientists’ understanding of microbes has progressed a long way since Leeuwenhoek, including the development of antibiotics against bacteria and vaccines against viruses including SARS-CoV-2.

But it was Leeuwenhoek who first opened people’s eyes to life’s vast microscopic realm, a discovery that continues to transform the world.

By Richard Gunderman, Chancellor's Professor of Medicine, Liberal Arts, and Philanthropy, Indiana University. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

 

sb admin Tue, 04/06/2021 - 10:49
Categories




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Terrifying the public about COVID or other health concerns is bad for their health

Back around 2010, just before Halloween, a reporter friend retweeted a local police department’s warning to check your kids’ candy for drugs or razor blades or something like that. I asked, “Is there any evidence of something like that ever happening?”




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How the Homelessness Problem in Virginia Compares to Other States

On a single night in 2022, 582,462 people experienced homelessness in the United States, and numbers are on the rise. Since 2017, there has been a 6% increase in homelessness.




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Outbreak of neurotoxin killing unprecedented number of sea lions along California coast

Unprecedented deaths of sea lions along California's Central Coast




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Opinion: A route to safer chemotherapy

The danger of toxic side effects for two common chemotherapy drugs could be mitigated with a simple genetic test.




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How parents and caregivers can evaluate the research on MERT and other potential treatments

For parents considering autism interventions for their children, evaluating treatments can be daunting. Experts talked to The Times about what to watch for.




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California reports a total of eight H5N1 bird flu outbreaks among dairy herds

Two more California dairy herds have been infected by H5N1 bird flu, bringing the state's total to eight.




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Tooth decay still plagues California kids nearly a decade after Medi-Cal promised change

Kids in California struggle with more cavities than kids in most states, despite Medi-Cal efforts to fix dental care administrative hurdles and focus on prevention.




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30 years later, a family's loss gives life to others

Nicholas Green's organ donation legacy lives on 30 years later.




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Sex, radiation and mummies: How farms are fighting a pesky almond moth without pesticides

An experimental program seeks to protect California almond trees from a pesky moth by using X-rays to sterilize the insects.




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Listeria recall expands to 12 million pounds of meat and poultry sold at Trader Joe's, Target and others

Meat producer BrucePac is recalling nearly 10 million pounds of meat and poultry products sold at Trader Joe's, Target, Kroger and other retailers because they might be contaminated with listeria.




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Opinion: Menopausal women have a lot at stake in this election

The politics of reproductive health aren't just about abortion and aren't limited to younger women.




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Opinion: I'm a doctor in East L.A. and Beverly Hills. I want to treat obesity the same way in both places

In under-resourced parts of Los Angeles, people develop life-altering, preventable diabetes complications related to obesity. These patients rarely live to grow old.




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Two LAPD officers injured when patrol car hit by another vehicle

Two Los Angeles Police Department officers were injured early Sunday morning in South L.A. when their vehicle overturned after being struck by a car.




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Gas prices could rise after vote by California regulators

Gas prices could rise after vote by California regulators




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Photo of Fauci not wearing mask or social distancing earns him stern tongue lashing on social media

Radio host Mark Levin and others on Twitter slammed White House coronavirus task force member Dr. Anthony Fauci over a photo of him sitting next to two other people at a baseball game with his face uncovered.




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DC police seeking information on vehicle tied to shooting near Nationals Park

Authorities are seeking help from the public on obtaining information regarding a vehicle involved in the shooting incident near Nationals Park on Saturday, during which three people were shot and wounded near the baseball stadium.




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Police arrest suspect in connection to fatal shooting of 6-year-old DC resident

Law enforcement officials in Washington, D.C., have arrested a suspect in connection with the fatal shooting of a 6-year-old girl earlier this month.




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US lowers El Salvador travel advisory to Level 2 after caucus protest

The United States lowered El Salvador’s travel advisory to Level 2 after protests from the Congressional El Salvador Caucus. The United States had previously refused to lower the country’s travel designation from Level 3, “Reconsider Travel,” the second-highest rating possible, despite the transformation of the country’s crime situation. Over the past decade, the country had […]




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Schumer deputy rejects talk of pushing Sotomayor to retire: ‘Idle speculation’

Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin (D-IL) dismissed talk of replacing Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor as unrealistic amid calls on the Left for her to step down.  “I think that is idle speculation, and whoever makes those calls can’t count,” Durbin told reporters on Tuesday, pointing to the short window the Senate has to wrap […]




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McConnell successor shrouded in uncertainty ahead of monumental Senate vote

Republican senators emerged Tuesday night from a candidate forum largely tight-lipped on which of their colleagues they would support to replace Senate GOP Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) on the eve of a secret ballot vote and President-elect Donald Trump’s visit to Washington. Two hours of huddling behind closed doors with the trio of contenders fielding […]




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Caps 2, Rangers 1 (OT): Five Observations

1. So here we are again. Last year the Capitals and the New York Rangers were tied 2-2 in a best-of-seven Stanley Cup playoff series and Washington was moments away from securing Game 5. Instead, a late Joel Ward penalty led to a game-tying goal by Brad Richards with just seconds remaining. Madison Square Garden exploded and Washington wilted in a devastating overtime loss. The Caps survived Game 6 at home, but ultimately were dispatched in a bitter Game 7 loss in New York.




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Caps defenseman Mike Green retaliates after attempted slew foot

The Capitals were upset with a lot of calls on Sunday in a 1-0 loss to the New York Rangers. Maybe a better way to say it – they were upset about non-calls. New York, the most disciplined team in the NHL this season, wasn’t whistled for a single penalty. Washington took five – two of them obvious, and dumb, retaliation penalties.