Saucepans clang anew in France against Macron’s pension law
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 02:19:07 GMT
PARIS (AP) — Protesters loudly banged pots and pans near a castle where French President Emmanuel Macron was to make a speech Thursday, in what has become a popular way to voice anger at a resented new law raising the retirement age from 62 to 64. Similar saucepan actions, dubbed “casserolades, ” were staged elsewhere in the country where government members were scheduled to travel.Macron attended a ceremony for the 175th anniversary of the abolition of slavery in France at the Fort de Joux, near the border with Switzerland, a castle where the most prominent leader of the Haitian slave revolution, Toussaint Louverture, was imprisoned and died in 1803.As police were preventing protesters from getting too close to the Fort de Joux, Macron made a surprise stop in the nearby town of Dole to meet with French people on a street market without the clattering of pots and pans. Yet he was not able to avoid all criticism, with several people raising their concerns out loud — from the pe...Bank regulator says no indicators of liquidity shock re-emerging
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 02:19:07 GMT
TORONTO — The head of Canada’s banking regulator says that despite continued liquidity stress at some U.S. banks, he isn’t seeing any data to suggest that a wider shock is going to re-emerge.Superintendent of Financial Institutions Peter Routledge says it feels like the market has accepted that authorities have stabilized liquidity concerns.Speaking to media after a speech at the Economic Club of Canada, Routledge cautioned that he isn’t saying that the sector is fully in the clear, noting that the problem with shocks is you don’t know when they’re going to return.His comments come as First Republic Bank has seen its stock price plummet this week after it disclosed that it saw more than US$100 billion of deposit outflows last month.The San Francisco bank is one of several that saw knock-on effects of the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank, though wider contagion was limited after U.S. authorities agreed to backstop deposits at SVB.Routledge says the recent...Cow located in Niles after 'senior prank'; students cited
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 02:19:07 GMT
NILES, Ill. — Authorities in Niles located a cow after it was on the loose for several hours due to a "senior prank" and the students involved have been cited.Just before 3 a.m. Thursday, police responded to the 8300 block of Ballard on the report of suspicious people in the area.Officers located several students from Northridge Preparatory School in the area and they were apparently conducting a "senior prank," police said.At some point, a live cow escaped from the group of students and went into a local neighborhood. Niles police and other authorities were working with Wagner Farms to secure the cow. ‘Uncontainable excitement’: 18-year-old captures northern lights over Illinois At around 9:20 a.m., SkyCam9 was over the scene when the cow was secured and put into a trailer.In an update Thursday afternoon, police said the students also brought a pig and chickens to the school as part of the prank. The pig and the cow were purchased via Craigslist near Winneconne, Wisconsin and the...Bicyclist in critical condition after hit-and-run crash in Vernon Hills
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 02:19:07 GMT
VERNON HILLS, Ill. — A bicyclist is in critical condition after he was hit by a hit-and-run driver early Thursday morning in Vernon Hills, according to police.Vernon Hills Police Department officers were called around 4:15 a.m. to the area of Butterfield Road and Golf Road on the report of a hit-and-run involving a bicyclist. Cow located in Niles after ‘senior prank’; students cited Officers arrived and found a 60-year-old man, of Grayslake, with life-threatening injuries, according to a news release from police. He was taken to Advocate Condell Medical Center in Libertyville in critical condition.According to a preliminary investigation, officers determined the driver was heading south on Butterfield Road and didn't stop after the crash, according to the release. Man breaks into church, damages property in Loop overnight The driver was later located through a combination of evidence and images from a license plate reader. Police haven't identified the driver or confirmed if th...How to know if US economy is in recession
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 02:19:07 GMT
WASHINGTON (AP) — The government’s report Thursday that the economy grew at a 1.1% annual rate last quarter signaled that one of the most-anticipated recessions in recent U.S. history has yet to arrive. Many economists, though, still expect a recession to hit as soon as the current April-June quarter — or soon thereafter.The economy's expansion in the first three months of the year was driven mostly by healthy consumer spending, yet shoppers turned more cautious toward the end of the quarter. Businesses also cut their spending on equipment, a trend that has continued.The list of obstacles the economy faces keeps growing. The Federal Reserve has raised its benchmark interest rate nine times in the past year to the highest level in 17 years, thereby elevating the cost of borrowing for consumers and businesses. Inflation has eased slowly but steadily in response. Yet price increases are still persistently high.And last month the collapse of two large banks resulted in a whole new threa...Rock-throwing suspect said he and 2 others now 'blood brothers,' documents show
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 02:19:07 GMT
JEFFERSON COUNTY, Colo. (KDVR) -- More information is surfacing about what led to the arrest of three high school seniors suspected of a rock-throwing crime spree that killed a 20-year-old woman.Arrest documents obtained by KDVR on Thursday outlined what led to the arrest of Joseph Koenig, Nicholas "Mitch" Karol-Chik and Zachary Kwak.Timeline of investigationAccording to the documents from the Jefferson County court, investigators located a camera near one of the incidents that showed three vehicles, one of which was driven by a victim and another driven by a witness. The only other vehicle on the road was tracked between multiple cameras and moving at a high speed, the affidavit showed. Father of rock-throwing suspect also arrested during investigation Investigators said they sent photos of the taillights to a Chevrolet employee. The vehicle was identified as a 2014-2016 Chevy Silverado pickup.On Tuesday, a person called police to explain that he and a coworker were talking abou...Intense downpours become the norm in a warming world
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 02:19:07 GMT
AUSTIN (KXAN) — Climate change is playing a critical role in enhancing extreme weather including rainfall patterns, intensity and flooding across the country. As the globe continues to warm (from greenhouse gas emissions) our atmosphere can hold more and more moisture. The air can hold an extra 4% of moisture for every 1°F of warming. This increased warming is enhancing these intense rainfall and flooding events. Warmer air holds more moistureOur partners over at Climate Central analyzed 150 cities in the United States and found that of those 150, 136 of them experienced an increase in rainfall intensity since 1970. This comes out to 91% of the analyzed cities experiencing an increase.Impacts of increased intensity of rain and downpours:More flash flooding events More landslides Negative impacts to agriculture including cropsDamage to infrastructureExposure to more hazardous debrisDisplaced contaminants including chemicals and sewage Increased water-borne diseasesTheir study shows t...Actor Glen Powell to return to Austin to speak at UT graduation
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 02:19:07 GMT
Editor’s Note: The video above shows KXAN News Today’s top headlines for April 27, 2023. Glen Powell will be speaking at the University of Texas at Austin's Moody College of Communication graduation ceremony. This story has been updated.AUSTIN (KXAN) — A former UT Longhorn and Austin actor will be back on the 40 acres to deliver a graduation speech at the University of Texas at Austin.UT says Glen Powell will return to campus to deliver the keynote address at the Moody College of Communication graduation ceremony on May 5 at the Moody Center. Powell studied radio, television and film at UT and is an alumnus of the UTLA program, where he spent a semester in Los Angeles. At 19 he headed to Hollywood to pursue acting.He's best known for his roles in “Devotion,” “Hidden Figures,” and most recently in the blockbuster hit with Tom Cruise in “Top Gun: Maverick.” Austin actor soars alongside Tom Cruise in ‘Top Gun: Maverick Before landing big roles, Powell went to Westwood High School and...Minnesota, Washington become trans refuges, shield abortions
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 02:19:07 GMT
By LISA BAUMANN and STEVE KARNOWSKI (Associated Press)SEATTLE (AP) — Washington and Minnesota won’t cooperate with attempts to prosecute out-of-state patients seeking reproductive or gender-affirming procedures and treatment, under new laws signed Thursday by the two states’ Democratic governors.They’re the latest liberal states to enact legal safeguards as Republican legislators across the country are rushing to block or limit transgender and abortion health care. More than a dozen states have effectively banned abortion outright in the year since the Supreme Court’s conservative majority overturned Roe v. Wade.“Freedom of choice is a health care issue. We are protecting access to health care,” said Gov. Jay Inslee, who wore a pink tie to the outdoor bill signing ceremony in Seattle. The laws block other states from using Washington- or Minnesota-run courts or judicial processes to enforce their bans — things like warrants, subpoenas,...Minnesota State chancellor finalists make their case in public Q&A
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 02:19:07 GMT
The two finalists to lead the Minnesota State system of 26 colleges and seven universities delivered aspirational messages about higher education Thursday during back-to-back public forums.Tonja Johnson rejected the notion that college should simply be about workforce development.“I’m not interested in grooming students to just go into the workforce to push buttons,” she said. “We need to get students into our campuses so that they can be more than what people told them they can be.”Tonja Johnson, University of Alabama System senior vice chancellor for academic and student affairs (Courtesy of Minnesota State Colleges and Universities)Scott Olson spoke of the Minnesota Miracle of 1971, when lawmakers overhauled the way the state pays for education in order to reduce inequities while also cutting property taxes.Equity in education was “the right dream, it just hasn’t been fully fulfilled yet,” Olson said, pointing to persistent and wide achievement gaps among racial and ethnic groups...Latest news
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