Hundreds of Amazon workers protest company’s climate impact, return-to-office mandate

Published Sat, 23 Nov 2024 10:15:30 GMT

Hundreds of Amazon workers protest company’s climate impact, return-to-office mandate SEATTLE (AP) — Telling executives to “strive harder,” hundreds of corporate Amazon workers protested what they decried as the company’s lack of progress on climate goals and an inequitable return-to-office mandate during a lunchtime demonstration at its Seattle headquarters Wednesday.The protest came a week after Amazon’s annual shareholder meeting and a month after a policy took effect requiring workers to return to the office three days per week. Previously, team leaders were allowed to determine how their charges worked.The employees chanted their disappointment with the pace of the company’s efforts to reduce its carbon footprint — “Emissions climbing, time to act” — and urged Amazon to return authority to team leaders when it comes to work location. Wearing a black pirate hat and red coat, Church Hindley, a quality assurance engineer, said working from home allowed him to live a better, healthier life.“I’m not suited for in-office work,” Hindley said. “I...

Louisiana lawmakers reject resolution that opponents say target diversity, equity efforts in schools

Published Sat, 23 Nov 2024 10:15:30 GMT

Louisiana lawmakers reject resolution that opponents say target diversity, equity efforts in schools BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) — Republicans in Louisiana rejected a resolution Wednesday that sought to request K-12 schools and institutions of higher education submit a report of all programs and activities related to critical race theory and diversity, equity and inclusion.Authored by Republican Rep. Valarie Hodges, the resolution came before the House Committee of Education for consideration and stemmed from “concerns” about how much money is being spent specifically on the programs and because “activities offered by the state’s education institutions merit further examination.”Proponents argued that the measure was simply being proposed to further look into the cost of the programs. Opponents of the resolution, which included Louisiana’s Board of Elementary and Secondary Education, said that the legislation was unnecessary and worried about how it defined DEI — diversity, equity and inclusion — and critical race theory.“At its core, this is a racist instrument,” Monty Sullivan, the pre...

Movie Review: The giddy splendor of ‘Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse’

Published Sat, 23 Nov 2024 10:15:30 GMT

Movie Review: The giddy splendor of ‘Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse’ Let’s get this upfront: “Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse” was the best comic-book film of the last decade. With an animation blizzard blown straight in from the pages of comics, “Into the Spider-Verse” took a supercollider to all the conventions of the superhero movie. Solemnity was out. Gone, too, was the idea of a chosen one. Spider-Man could be anyone, including a graffiti-tagging kid from Brooklyn, including a pig named Spider-Ham. The possibilities of the comic book movie were suddenly limitless. With Post Malone and Swae Lee’s “Sunflower” thumping, the vibes were, as they say, immaculate. So a lot to live up to. Yet five years later, the Spider-verse is still expanding in thrilling ways. “Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse” is the rare sequel that dazzles as much as the original did. It’s something to behold. Colors drip, invert and splatter in a shimmering pop-art swirl. If “Into the Spider-Verse” reveled in the head-spinning collision of universes,...

Movie Review: Sydney Sweeney is brilliant in ‘Reality,’ based on true story of NSA whistleblower

Published Sat, 23 Nov 2024 10:15:30 GMT

Movie Review: Sydney Sweeney is brilliant in ‘Reality,’ based on true story of NSA whistleblower “Reality,” a new movie starring Sydney Sweeney, is largely set in one empty room. There is nothing on the walls. There are no chairs or rugs, just a stark and ugly room in a nondescript rental property in a downtrodden neighborhood. Its script is as minimalistic — lifted directly from the transcript of one long conversation between two FBI agents and a young woman they suspect has leaked classified documents. The dialogue has all the ums and ahs, botched sentences and awkward small talk one might expect from actual human beings, not slickly intelligent Aaron Sorkin creations. And it’s one of the most tense and exciting films of the year. It’s based on the actual FBI interrogation of the unbelievably named Reality Winner, a former Air Force translator who worked as a contractor at a National Security Agency office in Augusta, Georgia. One day in May 2017, she printed a classified report, tucked it into her pantyhose, walked out of the office and mailed it to an online news outlet. Th...

Portland mulls ban on daytime camping amid sharp rise in homelessness

Published Sat, 23 Nov 2024 10:15:30 GMT

Portland mulls ban on daytime camping amid sharp rise in homelessness PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — City Council members in Portland will decide Wednesday whether to ban homeless camping during daytime hours in most public places, a move that aims to bring the city into compliance with a new state law and appease the growing number of residents frustrated by a deepening yearslong homelessness crisis.Portland is among the progressive West Coast cities moving to adopt stricter rules on camping while grappling with intertwined homelessness, housing, mental health and addiction crises. In Portland, homelessness jumped more than 30% between 2019 and 2022, according to federal data.But while there appears to be an increasing appetite for camping regulations in Oregon’s largest city, advocates said the new rules would further burden homeless people and strain nonprofits already working at capacity. Mayor Ted Wheeler has said his goal is to have enough shelter and housing to eliminate unsanctioned camping in Portland. The City Council previously voted in Novemb...

Former Que. finance minister Leitão appointed to Bank of Canada

Published Sat, 23 Nov 2024 10:15:30 GMT

Former Que. finance minister Leitão appointed to Bank of Canada OTTAWA — Former Quebec finance minister Carlos Leitão has been appointed to the Bank of Canada’s board of directors.Leitão was Quebec’s finance minister between 2014 and 2018.He represented the provincial riding of Robert-Baldwin in Québec’s National Assembly from 2014 until his retirement from politics in 2022.Before entering politics, Leitão had a 30-year career in the Canadian banking and financial sector, including stints at the Royal Bank of Canada and Laurentian Bank Securities.Leitão’s appointment was announced by federal Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland on Wednesday.His term will last until Feb. 28, 2025.This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 31, 2023.The Canadian Press

Beloved New York swan babies rescued after mother was eaten by family, police say

Published Sat, 23 Nov 2024 10:15:30 GMT

Beloved New York swan babies rescued after mother was eaten by family, police say The village of Manlius in upstate New York is mourning the loss of Faye, a swan who was stolen from the town’s pond over the weekend along with her four cygnets. The cygnets, or baby swans, were recovered, but officials say the mama swan was eaten.“The mother swan was consumed,” Manlius Mayor Paul Whorrall said Wednesday. “Sad to say, but that’s what they did.”Three teenagers were arrested Tuesday on charges including grand larceny and criminal mischief in connection with the swan-napping, Manlius police Sgt. Ken Hatter said. Mute swans like Faye and her mate, Manny, are not native to North America. They were introduced as an ornamental species and are loved for their beauty but are considered invasive by wildlife officials.Hunting swans is legal in a few U.S. states but not in New York.Southeast of Syracuse, the village of Manlius has a swan insignia on its website, as well as on merchandise like hats and T-shirts.“The swans have been a part of this village for well ove...

Pediatric drug shortage led to dosing errors in Ontario children, research shows

Published Sat, 23 Nov 2024 10:15:30 GMT

Pediatric drug shortage led to dosing errors in Ontario children, research shows The shortage of pediatric medication in Canada last year led to a spike of dosing errors in children in Ontario, new research shows.The study, published Wednesday in the New England Journal of Medicine, examined the effect of the shortage of children’s ibuprofen and acetaminophen, which forced parents to crush up pills of the drugs intended for adults in order to treat their children.Researchers found a twofold increase in calls to the Ontario Poison Centre for unintentional dosing errors of the medications for patients 18 years old or younger last fall, particularly in November 2022, compared to the four years prior.“What our research does is shine some light on the issue of drug shortages and the potential consequences associated with them,” said Dr. Jonathan Zipursky, the lead author of the study and a clinical pharmacologist and toxicologist at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre in Toronto.“Fortunately, our findings didn’t show that there was excess ...

2 Chicago area students advance to National Spelling Bee semifinals

Published Sat, 23 Nov 2024 10:15:30 GMT

2 Chicago area students advance to National Spelling Bee semifinals WASHINGTON – Two local students recently advanced to the semifinals of the Scripps National Spelling Bee being held in suburban Washington, D.C.The girls are two of 56 kids who made it through to the next round. RELATED: West suburban 7th grader competing in National Spelling BeeBoth Annette Chu, a 7th grader at GEMS World Academy Chicago, and Daphne Gil, an 8th grader from Alan B. Shepard Middle School, are still in the running for the top prize. Read more: Latest Chicago news headlinesThe semifinals will be held Wednesday, beginning at 7 p.m.

Skilling: Cloudy Wednesday night before low 90s Thursday

Published Sat, 23 Nov 2024 10:15:30 GMT

Skilling: Cloudy Wednesday night before low 90s Thursday Another warm day for this final day of May 2023—with the warmth more noticeable because humidity's were higher. Dew points, a measure or atmospheric moisture surged into the mid 60s versus the upper 40s 24 hour earlier. That's a fairly BIG INCREASE and one that renders the air noticeably more "humid"--though hardly oppressively so. Mid 60-deg dew points constitute a "moderately humid" air mass. (70+-degree dew points would quality as more "oppressively" humid.It was 2023's second day with an official 90 degree temp—the same number of 90s we had seen by this time a year ago.There was a big spread between the lakeshore and inland areas again today—with temps as warm 95 at Poplar Grove in Boone County, 94 at Barrington and 93 at Carpentersville and Warrenville—compared to a mid afternoon temp of 62 at the Wilmette Harbor buoy, 67 at Winthrop Harbor, 68 at the Lake Forest lakefront, 66 at the Kenosha, WI lakefront,74 at Calumet Harbor and 74 at the Michigan City, IN buoy. That means tem...