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Submitted at 07-10-2023, 04:22 PM by Wreckard | |
3 Comments | |
Electric green algal blooms are spreading, threatening wildlife, pets, people and cities. And algae season is only getting started. | |
Submitted at 07-10-2023, 03:56 PM by sleeppoor | |
Submitted at 07-10-2023, 03:56 PM by sleeppoor | |
Pathetic. | |
Submitted at 07-10-2023, 11:09 AM by Mordant | |
At least four people have died in Alabama, United States, after taking on another deadly TikTok challenge, which had them jumping off the rear of a fast-moving boat.
State officials said all four died instantly after they broke their necks. | |
Submitted at 07-10-2023, 02:16 AM by droog | |
Three teenagers are charged with murder after police say their plot to egg a home as part of an "ongoing lover's quarrel" in Griffin, Georgia, escalated to gunfire.
Deputies arrived to a call of a "man down" in the road last week to discover a man had been shot and killed, the Spalding County Sheriff's Office said in a press release Saturday. The victim was identified as Johnathan Gilbert.
The three teenagers — Sydney Maughon, 18; Jeremy Munson, 19; and McKenzie Davenport, 19 — were allegedly vandalizing Gilbert's home when he came out to confront them, according to Spalding County Sheriff Darrell Dix. | |
Submitted at 07-09-2023, 09:22 PM by Wreckard | |
Submitted at 07-09-2023, 07:56 PM by sleeppoor | |
Content warning: This article contains mention of hazing, sexual assault and suicidal ideation.
A former Northwestern University football player told The Daily some of the hazing conduct investigated by the university involved coerced sexual acts. A second player confirmed these details.
The player also told The Daily that head coach Pat Fitzgerald may have known that hazing took place.
“I’ve seen it with my own eyes, and it’s just absolutely egregious and vile and inhumane behavior,” the player, who asked to remain anonymous in this story, said. | |
Submitted at 07-09-2023, 07:56 PM by sleeppoor | |
The exclusive Horatio Alger Association brought the justice access to wealthy members and unreported V.I.P. treatment. He, in turn, offered another kind of access. | |
Submitted at 07-09-2023, 07:17 PM by sleeppoor | |
SFPD encircle large group of teenagers, holding them for hours. Parents arrive to wait hours before seeing and retrieving their kids. | |
Submitted at 07-09-2023, 06:50 PM by sleeppoor | |
Damn, nightlife downtown hasn’t been this hot since the 90s. | |
Submitted at 07-09-2023, 05:27 PM by John Holmes Boxxyfucker | |
Submitted at 07-09-2023, 06:54 AM by sleeppoor | |
In post-World War I America, young people shocked their elders with jazz music, jittery dancing and public displays of affection. | |
Submitted at 07-08-2023, 08:53 PM by Forensic | |
Submitted at 07-08-2023, 08:27 PM by Nibbles | |
Submitted at 07-08-2023, 06:11 PM by sleeppoor | |
What happened before, during and after the South Baltimore shooting that killed 2 and injured 28. | |
Submitted at 07-08-2023, 06:08 PM by sleeppoor | |
In May, the Sierra Club—the 130-year-old environmental group—announced an extensive overhaul of the organization, meant to make up for a projected $40 million budget deficit. That means massive layoffs, cutting whole departments, and radically changing the job descriptions of remaining employees. Under the terms of its collective bargaining agreement with the Progressive Workers Union, or PWU, which represents nearly 400 Sierra Club employees, the group is also required to negotiate over the impact that the restructuring process will have on union members.
For more than two months, the union and the nonprofit have been going back and forth about the terms of its restructuring. It’s getting ugly.
Last week, the Sierra Club made its last, best, and final offer on the terms of the restructuring and layoffs, according to PWU President C.J. Garcia-Linz, who is also a Sierra Club employee in Michigan. If the union doesn’t accept that within four business days, by July 10, then Sierra Club has said it will declare that negotiations have reached an impasse, a technical term indicating that there is no hope for the two parties to reach an agreement.
PWU disputes that negotiations are anywhere close to an impasse, highlighting the nonprofit’s refusal to bargain over important aspects of the restructuring process and provide requested information.
“Just because they’re tired and over the process doesn’t mean we’re done,” Garcia-Linz told me.
The PWU currently has four unfair labor practice charges against the Sierra Club pending in front of the National Labor Relations Board, three of which were filed after the restructuring announcement. (One relates to an earlier hiring freeze.) The Sierra Club also made the somewhat unusual move of filing its own unfair labor practice charge against the union after it had leveled two against the green group in May. In the charge, the Sierra Club accuses the PWU of violating the National Labor Relations Act by bargaining in bad faith. The text of the charge isn’t publicly available—only the section of the NLRA that the group accuses the union of having violated. The Sierra Club declined to provide either a copy of the charge or further details about it. | |
Submitted at 07-08-2023, 06:08 PM by sleeppoor | |
Almost $32,000 worth of high-speed storage | |
Submitted at 07-08-2023, 06:09 PM by Nibbles | |
A Texas man reported missing eight years ago as a teen actually returned home a day later and has been there all along with his mother, who deceived police by giving fake names and insisting he was gone in the years before his discovery last week at a Houston church, city police said Thursday.
Rudolph “Rudy” Farias IV, 25, returned home March 8, 2015, one day after he was reported missing, Lt. Christopher Zamora said in a news conference. While Houston officers had interacted since then with Farias and his mother, both provided fake names and dates of birth, misleading officers, he said.
His mother “continued to deceive police by remaining adamant that Rudy was still missing,” he said. | |
Submitted at 07-08-2023, 01:38 PM by Wreckard | |
One afternoon in the middle of June, Elan Quashie had just finished restocking the vending machine outside of the Brownsville nonprofit where he works when a co-worker told him a man was slumped over next to it. Quashie suspected that the man was overdosing on fentanyl and immediately jumped into “training mode”; as the overdose program director at Services for the UnderServed, he has spent nearly a decade teaching people how to use naloxone, also known as Narcan, to reverse overdoses. But he had never done it in real life.
After calling for an ambulance and rubbing his knuckles on the man’s sternum to wake him (this didn’t work), Quashie punched some buttons on the vending machine to get a pack of Narcan nasal spray. He pushed one dose into the man’s nose, and then, when that didn’t seem to revive him, another. The unconscious man finally stirred awake. He was confused — the last thing he remembered was looking for a place to sit down. New York’s first naloxone vending machine had only been installed on the sidewalk days earlier, and it had probably saved his life. | |
Submitted at 07-08-2023, 04:47 AM by Grief Bacon | |

Electric green algal blooms are spreading, threatening wildlife, pets, people and cities. And algae season is only getting started.
Pathetic.
At least four people have died in Alabama, United States, after taking on another deadly TikTok challenge, which had them jumping off the rear of a fast-moving boat.
State officials said all four died instantly after they broke their necks.
Three teenagers are charged with murder after police say their plot to egg a home as part of an "ongoing lover's quarrel" in Griffin, Georgia, escalated to gunfire.
Deputies arrived to a call of a "man down" in the road last week to discover a man had been shot and killed, the Spalding County Sheriff's Office said in a press release Saturday. The victim was identified as Johnathan Gilbert.
The three teenagers — Sydney Maughon, 18; Jeremy Munson, 19; and McKenzie Davenport, 19 — were allegedly vandalizing Gilbert's home when he came out to confront them, according to Spalding County Sheriff Darrell Dix.
Content warning: This article contains mention of hazing, sexual assault and suicidal ideation.
A former Northwestern University football player told The Daily some of the hazing conduct investigated by the university involved coerced sexual acts. A second player confirmed these details.
The player also told The Daily that head coach Pat Fitzgerald may have known that hazing took place.
“I’ve seen it with my own eyes, and it’s just absolutely egregious and vile and inhumane behavior,” the player, who asked to remain anonymous in this story, said.
The exclusive Horatio Alger Association brought the justice access to wealthy members and unreported V.I.P. treatment. He, in turn, offered another kind of access.
SFPD encircle large group of teenagers, holding them for hours. Parents arrive to wait hours before seeing and retrieving their kids.
Damn, nightlife downtown hasn’t been this hot since the 90s.
In post-World War I America, young people shocked their elders with jazz music, jittery dancing and public displays of affection.
What happened before, during and after the South Baltimore shooting that killed 2 and injured 28.
In May, the Sierra Club—the 130-year-old environmental group—announced an extensive overhaul of the organization, meant to make up for a projected $40 million budget deficit. That means massive layoffs, cutting whole departments, and radically changing the job descriptions of remaining employees. Under the terms of its collective bargaining agreement with the Progressive Workers Union, or PWU, which represents nearly 400 Sierra Club employees, the group is also required to negotiate over the impact that the restructuring process will have on union members.
For more than two months, the union and the nonprofit have been going back and forth about the terms of its restructuring. It’s getting ugly.
Last week, the Sierra Club made its last, best, and final offer on the terms of the restructuring and layoffs, according to PWU President C.J. Garcia-Linz, who is also a Sierra Club employee in Michigan. If the union doesn’t accept that within four business days, by July 10, then Sierra Club has said it will declare that negotiations have reached an impasse, a technical term indicating that there is no hope for the two parties to reach an agreement.
PWU disputes that negotiations are anywhere close to an impasse, highlighting the nonprofit’s refusal to bargain over important aspects of the restructuring process and provide requested information.
“Just because they’re tired and over the process doesn’t mean we’re done,” Garcia-Linz told me.
The PWU currently has four unfair labor practice charges against the Sierra Club pending in front of the National Labor Relations Board, three of which were filed after the restructuring announcement. (One relates to an earlier hiring freeze.) The Sierra Club also made the somewhat unusual move of filing its own unfair labor practice charge against the union after it had leveled two against the green group in May. In the charge, the Sierra Club accuses the PWU of violating the National Labor Relations Act by bargaining in bad faith. The text of the charge isn’t publicly available—only the section of the NLRA that the group accuses the union of having violated. The Sierra Club declined to provide either a copy of the charge or further details about it.
Almost $32,000 worth of high-speed storage
A Texas man reported missing eight years ago as a teen actually returned home a day later and has been there all along with his mother, who deceived police by giving fake names and insisting he was gone in the years before his discovery last week at a Houston church, city police said Thursday.
Rudolph “Rudy” Farias IV, 25, returned home March 8, 2015, one day after he was reported missing, Lt. Christopher Zamora said in a news conference. While Houston officers had interacted since then with Farias and his mother, both provided fake names and dates of birth, misleading officers, he said.
His mother “continued to deceive police by remaining adamant that Rudy was still missing,” he said.
One afternoon in the middle of June, Elan Quashie had just finished restocking the vending machine outside of the Brownsville nonprofit where he works when a co-worker told him a man was slumped over next to it. Quashie suspected that the man was overdosing on fentanyl and immediately jumped into “training mode”; as the overdose program director at Services for the UnderServed, he has spent nearly a decade teaching people how to use naloxone, also known as Narcan, to reverse overdoses. But he had never done it in real life.
After calling for an ambulance and rubbing his knuckles on the man’s sternum to wake him (this didn’t work), Quashie punched some buttons on the vending machine to get a pack of Narcan nasal spray. He pushed one dose into the man’s nose, and then, when that didn’t seem to revive him, another. The unconscious man finally stirred awake. He was confused — the last thing he remembered was looking for a place to sit down. New York’s first naloxone vending machine had only been installed on the sidewalk days earlier, and it had probably saved his life.