Monday, June 22, 2015
Supreme Court cuts the string on Spider-Man toy inventor's patent
WASHINGTON — Even Spider-Man can't unravel the nation's patent laws, the Supreme Court ruled Monday.
The justices turned thumbs down on an effort by the inventor of a Spider-Man toy to pocket royalties beyond the expiration of his patent. The wristband toy, which shoots foam string, became the basis for Marvel Enterprises' popular Web Blaster.
Obama in new presidential podcast: US not cured of racism
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama said the United States has not overcome its history of racism and is using the N-word to make his case. In an interview, Obama weighed in on the debate over race and guns that has erupted after the arrest of a white man for the racially motivated shooting deaths of nine black church members in Charleston, South Carolina.
Sunday, June 21, 2015
11 shot, 1 fatally, on deadly night in Detroit
DETROIT — In two separate incidents, 11 people were shot in Detroit in a matter of hours Saturday, one fatally. Ten people were shot at a block party on a basketball court on the city's west side Saturday night. One of those victims died.
They died so we could vote: James Chaney, Michael Schwerner and Andrew Goodman
FBI Photos of missing civil rights workers - Andrew Goodman, James Earl Chaney, and Michael Henry Schwerner
As the nation mourns for nine black Americans murdered in a Charleston, South Carolina, church, let us never forget that this most recent incident of domestic terrorism is part of a long series of murders, not only of blacks, but of whites who worked in solidarity with black activists. Today is the anniversary of the tragic deaths of three young civil rights workers, on the night of June 21 and 22 in Neshoba County, Mississippi, whose deaths brought the attention of the nation to the issue of voting rights, and whose murders influenced the enactment of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965.
As the nation mourns for nine black Americans murdered in a Charleston, South Carolina, church, let us never forget that this most recent incident of domestic terrorism is part of a long series of murders, not only of blacks, but of whites who worked in solidarity with black activists. Today is the anniversary of the tragic deaths of three young civil rights workers, on the night of June 21 and 22 in Neshoba County, Mississippi, whose deaths brought the attention of the nation to the issue of voting rights, and whose murders influenced the enactment of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965.
WESTERN UNION, MONEY GRAM COMPENSATE SCAM VICTIMS
Western Union and Money Gram compensate scam victims. The United States Government, with the help and aid of United Nations organized this scheme to enable victims of scam gets compensated.
After Charleston, the time has come for Republicans to denounce hate peddlers or be stained by them
We know why he did it. Exactly why. The terrorist Dylann Roof hated and feared African Americans, and that's why he murdered nine people in Charleston, South Carolina. He wanted to "start a civil war" for "the sake of the white race." Let's dispense with the banalities of Nikki Haley, who offered "we’ll never understand what motivates" such actions. How dare a governor of South Carolina make such an ignorant statement? And for God's sake (pun intended), Fox News and Republican elected officials need to stop—right now—pretending that these murders were about persecuting Christians. The time has come for some honest reckoning about why this evil, white supremacist terrorist did what he did, about who, other than Dylann Roof himself, bears responsibility, and about what those people will do going forward.
Teachers are professionals, and they deserve to be treated that way
When I look back at my youth, I am reminded of how teachers were a respected part of the community. My dad, who saw no use for education beyond high school, felt that teachers held the same social status as doctors and lawyers. My dad's milk route took him to every school in Madison, Wisconsin, public and parochial. It made things a little tough on me in high school, where the principal, Milt McPike, would take the time to chat with my dad as he unloaded his truck (until my dad lost his job due to union busting). Mr. McPike would remind me that he and my dad chatted every morning. Even with Mr. McPike keeping a close watch on me, I was not a very good student in high school. But, there were many teachers who influenced me at Madison East High School. Mr. McArdle (Aerospace), Mr. DuVair (Biology), Mrs. Bayer (English), Mr. Piddington (English), Mr. Sample (Auto Shop), Mr. Ross (World Civilizations), and many, many others.
Union closes, reopens after Panda Express fire
The Michigan Union was evacuated at at 8:15 a.m. Wednesday morning due to a cooking fire in the
Panda Express kitchen, located on the ground floor.
According to Union Director Susan Pile, the fire alarm system was set off, but by the time the Ann Arbor Fire Department reached the Union, the kitchen’s fire suppression system had already extinguished the flames.
“The fire department responded quickly and did what they needed to do,” Pile said. The Union reopened around 9:30, but Panda Express remained closed. According to Pile, the fire department will continue to inspect the Panda Express kitchen throughout the day.
As of 3 p.m., News Report Online was still closed as Union and fire safety service workers helped clean the kitchen.
Panda Express kitchen, located on the ground floor.
According to Union Director Susan Pile, the fire alarm system was set off, but by the time the Ann Arbor Fire Department reached the Union, the kitchen’s fire suppression system had already extinguished the flames.
“The fire department responded quickly and did what they needed to do,” Pile said. The Union reopened around 9:30, but Panda Express remained closed. According to Pile, the fire department will continue to inspect the Panda Express kitchen throughout the day.
As of 3 p.m., News Report Online was still closed as Union and fire safety service workers helped clean the kitchen.
Business student to appear on 'Wheel of Fortune'
Update: This story has been updated to include an interview with Beatty after the game show aired. Business senior Sarah Beatty will be featured as a contestant on CBS’s Wheel of Fortune Tuesday night at 7 p.m. In an interview with the Daily before the show aired, Beatty said she landed the role after a YouTube video she posted in May 2014 gained attention from the show’s talent search committee. “Literally the next day after I posted the video, they e-mailed me and said hey, we want you to audition,” Beatty said. Beatty said she wanted to audition for the show because she enjoyed watching it as a child with her grandparents.
8 million mummified animals, mostly dogs, in catacombs at Egypt site
For centuries, dogs have been humans' loyal, domesticated companions. They've been wild animals, doing what's needed to survive. And in ancient Egypt, they served as bridges to the afterlife, with the hope that they'd intercede with the god Anubis on their owner's behalf. But only now is it becoming known the extent to which dogs served this latter role -- 8 million times over. That is the number of dead animals, most of them dogs, estimated to have laid in the catacombs of Anubis around Saqqara, one of Egypt's most historic and oft-visited sites, according to a group of British researchers. While such mass burials aren't unprecedented, given the numerous animal cults of ancient Egypt, this one's scale makes it unique.
New York prison break: Intense search continues in rural area of possible sightings
fter
16 days on the run, two convicted killers who escaped from a New York
prison could be anywhere. But authorities continued Sunday to comb
through a rural "hot spot" in southwestern New York state.
The latest possible sighting of fugitives,
came in Allegany County, just north of the Pennsylvania border. That's
where a witness reported seeing two men along a railroad line Saturday
in the town of Friendship, New York State Police said.
New Orleans police arrest man suspected of killing officer
New Orleans police arrested Sunday the
man suspected of shooting and killing a police officer who was
transporting him to jail a day earlier, ending a nearly 24-hour manhunt
that left residents on edge.
During a press conference Sunday, New Orleans Police Chief Michael Harrison said Travis Boys, 33, was arrested Sunday morning near the intersection of Reynes St. and St. Claude Ave. Boys was arrested through tips received across the metropolitan area, Harrison said, which detailed the Dodge pickup truck Boys was spotted in. Marshals pursued Boys in the truck, then continued the chase on foot when he abandoned the vehicle and fled into the St. Roch neighborhood.
During a press conference Sunday, New Orleans Police Chief Michael Harrison said Travis Boys, 33, was arrested Sunday morning near the intersection of Reynes St. and St. Claude Ave. Boys was arrested through tips received across the metropolitan area, Harrison said, which detailed the Dodge pickup truck Boys was spotted in. Marshals pursued Boys in the truck, then continued the chase on foot when he abandoned the vehicle and fled into the St. Roch neighborhood.
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