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Jack Parsons, one of the “suicide squad” trio of young rocket-boy founders of Jet Propulsion Laboratory, had an improbable extracurricular life. | |
Submitted at 05-13-2023, 10:59 PM by sleeppoor | |
5 Comments | |
Lori Vallow, 49, faces up to life in prison for murdering her two children and her husband's former wife. | |
Submitted at 05-13-2023, 10:57 PM by sleeppoor | |
The world’s largest crypto exchange by volume said new guidance related to stablecoins and investor limits prompted the exit. | |
Submitted at 05-13-2023, 05:08 PM by Disruptive Emotional-Support Pig | |
Submitted at 05-13-2023, 04:07 AM by Grief Bacon | |
Submitted at 05-12-2023, 05:06 PM by Disruptive Emotional-Support Pig | |
After 71 years, one of southern Indiana's best known pharmacies is closing.
Butt Drugs in Corydon notified customers on Thursday that it plans to close on April 29, 2023.
"This was a decision that did not come lightly, considering Butt Drugs has been serving our beloved community for over 70 years," wrote Katie Butt Beckort.
She is a third generation owner of the business that has been a target of more than a few one-liners from customers and the media.
Beckort's grandparents started the pharmacy in 1952 on East Chestnut Street as "William H. Butt Drugs." Her father continued it as "Butt Rexall Drugs."
"When I took over and purchased it from my father, we legally changed it to 'Butt Drugs.' Keeping it simple," Beckort explained to WDRB in a past story.
"Butt was the given name, you know," Beckort said. "You make it what it is, you make it what life can be, have fun with it."
The business has used the family name in commercial jingles with clever puns, and Beckort said the shop has been known for its old fashioned soda fountain and a prescription pick-up in the store's rear (that's no joke).
People travel from all over just to get their "I love Butt Drugs" t-shirts, magnets and hats.
Beckort said she and the staff are "deeply saddened that we must close our doors."
"Our customers have always been more than customers to us. They are family. Our staff at Butt Drugs want to thank you for your loyalty and the trust you have had in us," the notice said.
Beckort's letter placed some of the blame on changes in healthcare and the lack of control by pharmacies to control what insurance companies pay for medicines.
"Unfortunately, insurance companies continue to reimburse less and less. More and more prescriptions are filled where we are reimbursed less than what we pay for the medications from the wholesaler," she said. "More than 50% of all prescriptions go out the door at a loss, and this has been a trend in pharmacy that has exacerbated over the last five years."
Beckort said the store could have closed five years ago, but she got creative and made sacrifices to keep the store open, but from a business standpoint the business was unable to continue. | |
Submitted at 05-12-2023, 04:30 PM by katheudo | |
What led to his firing earlier that month was a matter of some dispute. In a termination letter, Feinstein’s chief of staff wrote that Purley had lost his job simply because he had stopped showing up to work and had repeatedly corresponded with constituents on behalf of the senator without first getting approval from his manager. Purley, meanwhile, thought he was being punished for telling “hard truths” about Feinstein. It was obvious to him that her mental faculties were dimming and she might be going senile. Purley also thought the Senate office should be focusing more on constituent services — casework like tracking misdirected benefit payments or providing help filling out federal forms. During a pandemic, this was the kind of work that Purley felt could save lives — especially lives in hard‐up communities of color. (Feinstein’s office declined to provide comment for this story.)
Things had come to a head two weeks earlier. On a phone call with other members of the office, Purley had let loose, airing concerns for what felt like 10 minutes. He talked about the coworkers who had touched his hair while he sat at his desk, how the senator hadn’t ever learned his name or spoken to him despite five years of service to her, how the chief of staff seemed to be operating as a shadow senator since the actual one was, in his opinion, no longer mentally there.
Perhaps most memorable to those on the call was his belief that the senator cared “more about her dog, Kirby, than she does about Black people.”
After he’d finished speaking, Purley said, there was silence.
Purley knew then that he wasn’t long for the job. He ordered the mushrooms later that day. | |
Submitted at 05-12-2023, 01:18 PM by Wreckard | |
A YouTuber who intentionally crashed an aeroplane for views will plead guilty to obstructing a federal investigation by cleaning up the site of the crash, US prosecutors say.
Trevor Jacob, 29, posted the video of the plane crash to YouTube in December 2021, implying it was an accident. It has over 2.9 million views to date.
In a plea agreement, he said he filmed the video as part of a product sponsorship deal.
He could face up to 20 years in prison.
He reported the crash to the National Transportation Safety Board, who said he was responsible for preserving the wreckage. According to the plea agreement, Mr Jacob later claimed he did not know the location of the site.
He did, and returned by helicopter and secured and removed the wreckage, which he later destroyed, the statement says. | |
Submitted at 05-12-2023, 12:35 PM by Wreckard | |
The billboard reads “THIS IS A STRICT 25 MPH ZONE: A reminder courtesy of Planet of the Vapes.” By Annie Nickoloff | |
Submitted at 05-12-2023, 12:34 PM by John Holmes Boxxyfucker | |
The former president of the Massachusetts State Police troopers’ union, Dana Pullman, was sentenced to 2 1/2 years in federal prison for accepting kickbacks from a lobbyist and for using a union debit card for personal expenses, including meals and travel. | |
Submitted at 05-12-2023, 12:48 AM by sleeppoor | |
“Doesn’t matter what cultural institution you work with in America, you’re going to be working with billionaires and there’s not a billionaire on this planet that is not fucked up.”… | |
Submitted at 05-12-2023, 02:59 AM by nocash | |
The U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday overturned the bribery conviction of Joseph Percoco, an ex-aide to Democratic former New York Governor Andrew Cuomo, in a ruling that further limits the ability of federal prosecutors to pursue corruption cases. | |
Submitted at 05-12-2023, 02:42 AM by sleeppoor | |
The leaders agreed to meet early next week, a White House spokesperson said.
Aides from both sides have started to discuss ways to limit federal spending, as talks on raising the government's $31.4 trillion debt ceiling to avoid a catastrophic default creep forward, people familiar with the discussions said.
White House officials acknowledge that they must accept some spending cuts or strict caps on future spending if they are to strike a deal, two sources said, while insisting they must preserve Biden's signature climate legislation that passed along party lines last year. | |
Submitted at 05-12-2023, 01:47 AM by sleeppoor | |
Billionaire Sam Zell is the largest mobile home landlord in the US, but his tenants say they reckon with disrepair, neglect, flooding and rising rents. Some have had enough | |
Submitted at 05-12-2023, 01:10 AM by sleeppoor | |
Patricia McCullough, who is on the ballot on Tuesday, handed Donald Trump a rare legal victory in 2020 and has sided with the GOP on other election cases, only to be repeatedly struck down by the high court she now wants to join. | |
Submitted at 05-12-2023, 12:53 AM by sleeppoor | |
The private jet industry is destroying the climate and intensifying inequality. Rather than providing subsidies, we should tax the hell out of it. | |
Submitted at 05-12-2023, 12:50 AM by sleeppoor | |
A spokesperson for the Manhattan District attorney said that Daniel Penny, the commuter who put Jordan Neely in a fatal chokehold, will be arrested on second-degree manslaughter charges. | |
Submitted at 05-11-2023, 10:27 PM by Disruptive Emotional-Support Pig | |
Submitted at 05-11-2023, 07:08 PM by sleeppoor | |
Submitted at 05-11-2023, 06:15 PM by sleeppoor | |
As Disney approaches its third round of expected layoffs and deals with production delays due to the ongoing writers strike, the company delivered more bad news to investors. Its flagship streaming service, Disney+, lost four million subscribers in Q2 2023, bringing the total to 157.8 million subscribers, compared to 161.8 million subs in the previous quarter. Analysts expected subscriber growth of 163.17 million.
The main reason behind the decline was Disney+ Hotstar, which shed 8% of its subscriber base, going from 57.5 million subs in Q1 2023 to 52.9 million. Many viewers in India are upset with the company’s decision to not retain streaming rights for the Indian Premier Cricket League. | |
Submitted at 05-11-2023, 05:01 PM by sleeppoor | |

Jack Parsons, one of the “suicide squad” trio of young rocket-boy founders of Jet Propulsion Laboratory, had an improbable extracurricular life.
Lori Vallow, 49, faces up to life in prison for murdering her two children and her husband's former wife.
The world’s largest crypto exchange by volume said new guidance related to stablecoins and investor limits prompted the exit.
After 71 years, one of southern Indiana's best known pharmacies is closing.
Butt Drugs in Corydon notified customers on Thursday that it plans to close on April 29, 2023.
"This was a decision that did not come lightly, considering Butt Drugs has been serving our beloved community for over 70 years," wrote Katie Butt Beckort.
She is a third generation owner of the business that has been a target of more than a few one-liners from customers and the media.
Beckort's grandparents started the pharmacy in 1952 on East Chestnut Street as "William H. Butt Drugs." Her father continued it as "Butt Rexall Drugs."
"When I took over and purchased it from my father, we legally changed it to 'Butt Drugs.' Keeping it simple," Beckort explained to WDRB in a past story.
"Butt was the given name, you know," Beckort said. "You make it what it is, you make it what life can be, have fun with it."
The business has used the family name in commercial jingles with clever puns, and Beckort said the shop has been known for its old fashioned soda fountain and a prescription pick-up in the store's rear (that's no joke).
People travel from all over just to get their "I love Butt Drugs" t-shirts, magnets and hats.
Beckort said she and the staff are "deeply saddened that we must close our doors."
"Our customers have always been more than customers to us. They are family. Our staff at Butt Drugs want to thank you for your loyalty and the trust you have had in us," the notice said.
Beckort's letter placed some of the blame on changes in healthcare and the lack of control by pharmacies to control what insurance companies pay for medicines.
"Unfortunately, insurance companies continue to reimburse less and less. More and more prescriptions are filled where we are reimbursed less than what we pay for the medications from the wholesaler," she said. "More than 50% of all prescriptions go out the door at a loss, and this has been a trend in pharmacy that has exacerbated over the last five years."
Beckort said the store could have closed five years ago, but she got creative and made sacrifices to keep the store open, but from a business standpoint the business was unable to continue.
What led to his firing earlier that month was a matter of some dispute. In a termination letter, Feinstein’s chief of staff wrote that Purley had lost his job simply because he had stopped showing up to work and had repeatedly corresponded with constituents on behalf of the senator without first getting approval from his manager. Purley, meanwhile, thought he was being punished for telling “hard truths” about Feinstein. It was obvious to him that her mental faculties were dimming and she might be going senile. Purley also thought the Senate office should be focusing more on constituent services — casework like tracking misdirected benefit payments or providing help filling out federal forms. During a pandemic, this was the kind of work that Purley felt could save lives — especially lives in hard‐up communities of color. (Feinstein’s office declined to provide comment for this story.)
Things had come to a head two weeks earlier. On a phone call with other members of the office, Purley had let loose, airing concerns for what felt like 10 minutes. He talked about the coworkers who had touched his hair while he sat at his desk, how the senator hadn’t ever learned his name or spoken to him despite five years of service to her, how the chief of staff seemed to be operating as a shadow senator since the actual one was, in his opinion, no longer mentally there.
Perhaps most memorable to those on the call was his belief that the senator cared “more about her dog, Kirby, than she does about Black people.”
After he’d finished speaking, Purley said, there was silence.
Purley knew then that he wasn’t long for the job. He ordered the mushrooms later that day.
A YouTuber who intentionally crashed an aeroplane for views will plead guilty to obstructing a federal investigation by cleaning up the site of the crash, US prosecutors say.
Trevor Jacob, 29, posted the video of the plane crash to YouTube in December 2021, implying it was an accident. It has over 2.9 million views to date.
In a plea agreement, he said he filmed the video as part of a product sponsorship deal.
He could face up to 20 years in prison.
He reported the crash to the National Transportation Safety Board, who said he was responsible for preserving the wreckage. According to the plea agreement, Mr Jacob later claimed he did not know the location of the site.
He did, and returned by helicopter and secured and removed the wreckage, which he later destroyed, the statement says.
The billboard reads “THIS IS A STRICT 25 MPH ZONE: A reminder courtesy of Planet of the Vapes.” By Annie Nickoloff
The former president of the Massachusetts State Police troopers’ union, Dana Pullman, was sentenced to 2 1/2 years in federal prison for accepting kickbacks from a lobbyist and for using a union debit card for personal expenses, including meals and travel.
“Doesn’t matter what cultural institution you work with in America, you’re going to be working with billionaires and there’s not a billionaire on this planet that is not fucked up.”…
The U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday overturned the bribery conviction of Joseph Percoco, an ex-aide to Democratic former New York Governor Andrew Cuomo, in a ruling that further limits the ability of federal prosecutors to pursue corruption cases.
The leaders agreed to meet early next week, a White House spokesperson said.
Aides from both sides have started to discuss ways to limit federal spending, as talks on raising the government's $31.4 trillion debt ceiling to avoid a catastrophic default creep forward, people familiar with the discussions said.
White House officials acknowledge that they must accept some spending cuts or strict caps on future spending if they are to strike a deal, two sources said, while insisting they must preserve Biden's signature climate legislation that passed along party lines last year.
Billionaire Sam Zell is the largest mobile home landlord in the US, but his tenants say they reckon with disrepair, neglect, flooding and rising rents. Some have had enough
Patricia McCullough, who is on the ballot on Tuesday, handed Donald Trump a rare legal victory in 2020 and has sided with the GOP on other election cases, only to be repeatedly struck down by the high court she now wants to join.
The private jet industry is destroying the climate and intensifying inequality. Rather than providing subsidies, we should tax the hell out of it.
A spokesperson for the Manhattan District attorney said that Daniel Penny, the commuter who put Jordan Neely in a fatal chokehold, will be arrested on second-degree manslaughter charges.
As Disney approaches its third round of expected layoffs and deals with production delays due to the ongoing writers strike, the company delivered more bad news to investors. Its flagship streaming service, Disney+, lost four million subscribers in Q2 2023, bringing the total to 157.8 million subscribers, compared to 161.8 million subs in the previous quarter. Analysts expected subscriber growth of 163.17 million.
The main reason behind the decline was Disney+ Hotstar, which shed 8% of its subscriber base, going from 57.5 million subs in Q1 2023 to 52.9 million. Many viewers in India are upset with the company’s decision to not retain streaming rights for the Indian Premier Cricket League.