High-throughput testing system latest addition to combat COVID-19 at LRMC – United States Army

LANDSTUHL, Germany Landstuhl Regional Medical Center recently introduced a high-throughput testing system to provide rapid high-volume testing of COVID-19 samples to its arsenal in the fight against COVID-19.The 74 inch by 32 inch device is as large as two standard-size refrigerators and provides standalone capabilities of up to 1,000 COVID-19 tests per day at LRMC. The automated system allows for minimal hands-on time while increasing staff safety, spending less time near samples, and productivity.This represents the most recent acquisition in our testing arsenal for SARS-CoV-2, said U.S. Army Lt. Col. David Peterson, chief, Department of Pathology and Area Laboratory Services, LRMC. This particular analyzer has both a high throughput and a shorter turnaround time. So results are available more quickly, and we can do a higher volume of testing on this analyzer.The system is currently configured for the COVID-19 assay through the U.S. Food and Drug Administration Emergency Use Authorization for medical devices. The system itself is approved by the FDA for various other disease testing and detection when configured for those purposes.This is huge, said Peterson. Other platforms we have are either very tedious or time consuming (up to 68 hours), or are low throughput.According to Peterson, the system also decreases test result wait times by automatically entering results into the patients electronic medical record rather than having technicians manually input test results into patient records, further decreasing possibilities for human error. Still, data must be analyzed and certified by pathologists to ensure accuracy, but can be done so in batches.There are certainly limiting factors (in performing high-volume testing at LRMC), said Peterson. Resources, maintenance and staffing will ultimately determine true output.Over the past months as operations have resumed and service members are continuing to deploy globally in support of various missions, the need for sentinel surveillance and asymptomatic testing has risen to break the chain of disease transmission and reduce risks to the force and to Department of Defense missions.In accordance with the DOD Guidance for COVID-19 testing, LRMC, along with other medical components throughout Europe, conducts asymptomatic testing based off different tier classifications, Service Members engaged in missions involving critical national capabilities, Service Members engaged fielded forces and those forward deployed and redeploying forces.The addition of the high-throughput system can improve turnaround times, allowing forces to continue with their missions, thereby increasing U.S. Armed Forces operational readiness throughout Europe, Africa, the Middle East and the U.S. Special Operataions Command.(The testing system) helps us out when we have a lot of volume. If we only have a handful of samples, we can we can run those on our other platforms to reserve resources, said Peterson. As part of unit deployments, they require recent COVID-19 testing. If it's large batches, the addition of the (high-throughput system) will help us return results more quickly so they can start their deployments.

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High-throughput testing system latest addition to combat COVID-19 at LRMC - United States Army

Nielsen pulls ahead of Peterson in the Gilbert mayoral race, while Tilque, Anderson and Hendrix lead in council races – AZCentral

Gilbert voters willsee a mayoral runoff between political newcomer Matt Nielsen and former Town Council member Brigette Peterson, based on the latest unofficial results in Tuesday's primary election.

Nielsen pulledslightly ahead of Peterson in the results released on Friday, but neither approached the 50% mark needed to win outright in the primary.

The ballots left to count, fewer than 2,400 countywide, could not boost either candidate enough to avoid arunoff in the Nov. 3 general election.

It wasthe first-time mayoral run for both candidates, as Mayor Jenn Daniels did not seekreelection. Two other contenders, Lynne King Smith and write-in Josh Lipscomb, trailed further back.

Nielsen who ran on a limited-government platform overtook King Smith for the second place spot late onTuesday. By Friday's count, he had shot past Peterson as the top vote-getter.

Gilbert mayoral candidate Brigette Peterson checks results on primary election night.(Photo: Courtesy of Brigette Peterson)

A pleased Nielsen monitored results at home with his family on Tuesday night refreshing the page "every few seconds." As results solidified into Friday, Nielsen said he was excited.

"As afirst-timecandidate in a significant race,mayoralrace, it was exciting," he said.

Nielsen said his hefty votecount was the result of months of hard work and long conversations with Gilbert residents. Nielsen said he had to grow from "a virtual unknown in the community" to someone who could overtake Peterson, a well-known Gilbert council member whom he called the "favorite" to win.

Nielsen said he is ready for 90 days of hard workto carry the race through to a runoff win.

Peterson said she will spend the lead-up to Nov. 3building a "big coalitionthat shows why I'm the tested and proven choice for mayor."

She said she was pleased by the primary results."I think that it shows that people in Gilbert know that my time in leadership matters, and I'm looking forward to competing in November," she said.

Three town council seats were on Tuesday'sballot.

Four candidates competedfor two council seats with the usual four-year terms. Incumbent Scott Anderson and Kathy Tilque held sizable leads over Tyler Hudgins and BusObayomi.

At this point, Anderson and Tilque likelywill win outright.

Laurin Hendrix led over Bill Spence fora council seat that carries a two-year term, according to early ballot returns.If results hold, Hendrix willwin outright.

Thetown's new General Planwas approved by a large margin.

ELECTION RESULTS:See who won in Arizona's August primary election

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King Smith, who handily outraised the other mayoral candidates, is the founder of a ticketing software company and co-working space in Gilbert.

She campaigned on providing strong leadership as Gilbert approaches build-out, supporting businesses and building a "Gilbert for all."

Peterson said King Smith did a "great job" in the election.

"I really admire when women step up to run for office. Her team worked hard, and they focused on business, and thats very important, especially in theseCOVID times that were in," Peterson said.

Nielsen, a charter school management executive, is a political newcomer, as is King Smith.

Nielsen is focused on returning government to a more limited role and campaigned on conservative values. He said he wants to maximize individual liberty and minimize government interference.

Peterson resigned from her Town Council seat, as the law requires, to run for mayor. She has said she would bring the necessary experience to the mayoral seat. Her priorities are job growth, public safety and responsible growth.She's an advocate for transportation and planning improvements.

Lipscomb, the write-in candidate, aimedto investin south Gilbert, diversifythe town, expandtwo-lane roads, protectfarmers and increasepublic safety, according to his campaign on Instagram.

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Thecandidates in the race for two Town Council seats with full, four-yearterms were:

Tilque, who led the pack in initial results, said she was excited, but waiting eagerly for more of the vote count to roll in.

Tilquesaid she was confident going into theprimary, butdidnt know what to expectgiven how unique campaigning was during the pandemic.She expressed gratitude for her opponents behavior during the race.

In myparticular race, I felt that everybody was runningareally honestrace, talking about their credentials and thequalities that they bring, and there wasnt that negative politicking going on. I was really thankful for that.

Anderson, also in the lead, said he was pleased with the early results and hopedthe race wouldbe decided at the primary, without a November runoff.

The candidates vying for the council seat with a two-year term were:

Have election thoughts fromGilbert? Reach the reporter at Alison.Steinbach@arizonarepublic.com or at 602-444-4282. Follow her on Twitter @alisteinbach.

Support local journalism.Subscribe to azcentral.com today.

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Metros Lynn Peterson offers to reduce payroll tax rate in transportation package if business group remains – OregonLive

Less than a month after the Metro Council unanimously approved what it acknowledged at the time was a potentially hard-to-pass payroll tax on employers as the sole tool to raise money for a massive transportation package headed to voters this November, Council President Lynn Peterson appears ready to offer a different deal to business groups.

In a Thursday evening email to the head of Portlands chamber of commerce, Peterson said that she would support a potential compromise hammered out in recent weeks that would reduce a payroll tax on employers from 0.75% to 0.60%, if business groups agree to at least a neutral position on the measure and if the chamber actively lobbies for state funding for some projects.

Specifically, she wants Portland-area business leaders to encourage the state to tap its funds or find a new revenue source -- to backfill what amounts to a $50 million per year shortfall in project spending if the payroll tax were reduced. Peterson said that gap would grow by 3% every year for the first five years.

Peterson said that money would need to be directed to pay for repairs on state highways in the Portland area roads like 82nd Avenue, Oregon 213 and 99E. Those three signature corridors earmarked for significant transit, safety and maintenance work under the proposed package are all state highways.

The email marks a dramatic shift in tone from the celebratory and defiant public face put forth by Peterson and other Metro councilors during the vote to refer the $7 billion transportation package on July 16. In the days and weeks before that meeting, business groups, including the Portland Business Alliance, had asked the regional government to delay the tax due to the unprecedented dual crises of the pandemic and the economic recession.

Metro doesnt plan to collect the tax until 2022, but business groups said that was still too soon.

Peterson and other Metro officials said as they prepared to vote that there would never be a good time to pass a new tax. They unanimously approved the plan to create up to a .75% payroll tax on employers, while exempting entities with fewer than 25 employees as well as public agencies.

According to Petersons email, there have been additional conversations with local business leaders since the Metro vote last month.

In her email to Hoan, she said local advocates who helped shape the measure also supported a compromise. She also said the busines groups must lobby state lawmakers to allow Metro to tax public employers. The regional governments attorneys said last month that it is unclear whether Metro now has that power.

Peterson also said the business leaders must agree to lobby for a progressive regional or state vehicles miles traveled fee to funnel additional money needed for the work.

Willamette Week first reported on Petersons letter.

Peterson and Hoan did not immediately respond to calls.

Kari Schlosshauer, spokesperson for the civic group the Getting There Together Coalition which worked with Metro on the package and pushed for a regional transportation bond, said they have been part of the compromise discussions as well.

Theres a lot of concern that a really vocal anti-tax voice could be really detrimental to a lot of stuff on the ballot, she said in an interview, citing the tobacco tax and other issues on the ballot.

Schlosshauer said the business community isnt a monolith, and not everyone opposes the measure.

If its not well received and it doesnt go anywhere, she said of the floated compromise, then we still have a strong coalition who fought to put this package together and are willing to fight for it.

Heres the full email:

Dear Andrew,

In a continuing effort to bring our regional community to an agreement on a transportation funding measure for this Novembers ballot, we have had additional conversations with local business leaders to see if we can find a path forward.

After listening and brainstorming with many parties over the past few weeks, we think we have come up with a framework for a potential compromise between the Getting There Together Coalition (GTT), labor partners, other stakeholders, Metro Council, and the Portland Business Alliance and your stakeholders.

If agreed upon, this framework will be built into a resolution to be adopted by Metro Council as legislative policy.

1. Getting There Together, labor partners, other business stakeholders, and Metro Council would agree to set the payroll tax rate from .75% to .60% if and only if all parties, including PBA members and stakeholders, agree to at least a neutral position on the measure as PBA and lobby the legislature for Orphaned Highway funds, or other transportation funding, that will help fill the initial $50m hole created by lowering the rate from .75% to .60%.

These funds are justified because the state has neglected its upkeep responsibility to state routes like Hwy 99W and 99E and OR 213/82nd Ave for decades. It is also understood that PBA has been supportive of the Orphaned Highways Bill in the past.

Please note, the $50M gap would need to be increased by 3% every year past the first 5 years to cover the bond payments.

2. If the additional $50M (plus growth) in revenue is not finalized and authorized by federal or state sources by 2022, then a default ramp up in the tax rate would be imposed from .6% in 2022 to .75% in 2026 in order to pay off the bonds. This would allow the economy to return to a better position before the full tax rate is imposed.

3. All parties agree to lobby the legislature to grant Metro the authority to add local public employers to the payroll tax.

4. All parties agree to lobby the legislature for a progressive regional or state Vehicle Miles Traveled fee, with a portion directed to fill the $50M (plus growth) gap in funding past commitments to the Orphaned Highway Bill timeline.

We appreciate your willingness to convey this information to your Government Relations Committee members at tomorrows meeting. Our team can be standing by to answer questions before, during, or after the meeting.

If interested then a conversation would be required between business leaders from PBA and the proponents stakeholders mentioned above to finalize an agreement as soon as possible.

Sincerely,

Lynn Peterson

***

-- Andrew Theen;atheen@oregonian.com; 503-294-4026;@andrewtheen

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Adrian Peterson has goals: Breaking Emmitt Smiths rushing record, and a championship – The Dallas Morning News

Adrian Peterson is old.

But the 13-year league veteran looks good and says he feels even better. Peterson recently told NFL Network that he would like to play 3-4 more years. If that comes to pass, he would retire from the NFL on the doorstep of 40 years old. Thats almost unthinkable.

But its entirely possible. And given that Peterson still has goals in mind, hes not ready to walk away from the game just yet.

Winning a championship is the one I want most.

But theres also the matter of Emmitt Smiths all-time NFL rushing record. Peterson needs 4,140 more rushing yards to pass the Cowboys legend.

Thats one of the goals I set to myself when I entered the NFL was to pass the GOAT, Peterson told NFL Network.

Both achievements are unlikely. The Washington Football Team would currently be considered a Super Bowl longshot, and theres no reason to expect that Peterson can string together four straight 1,000-yard rushing seasons at his current age. Peterson turned 35 in March.

But the touches might be there, at least for the 2020 season.

Washington released running back Derrius Guice on Friday night, just hours after he was arrested on domestic violence charges.

That leaves Peterson as the top running back on the roster, though recent Washington draftees will also compete to replace Guices production.

Find more Cowboys stories from The Dallas Morning News here.

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Adrian Peterson has goals: Breaking Emmitt Smiths rushing record, and a championship - The Dallas Morning News

Mobile COVID testing to soon hit the road in central Pa., will also deliver regular flu tests and shots – PennLive

A mobile operation to expand access to COVID-19 testing has been tested twice and is expected to be fully functional in September.

The goal is to bring testing closer to people in Harrisburg and in outlying areas of Dauphin and Perry counties who face barriers such as lack of transportation or distance.

The operation will be run by Harrisburg-based Hamilton Health Center with help from county commissioners in Dauphin and Perry.

It was tested on two Saturdays in July in the parking lot of Hamiltons main facility on South 17th St. in Harrisburg, with each one drawing close to 50 people, according to Jeannine Peterson, the CEO of Hamilton. Those events were held mainly for practice and with minimal advertising, she said.

The plan is to take testing to various locations advertised in advance so people who lack access to testing because of barriers such as lack of transportation can get tested.

Peterson said shes in the process of hiring a team that will be fully devoted to the mobile testing operation.

People wont have to pay for the tests. If the testing is not covered by their health insurance or they lack insurance, it will be covered by the federal CARES Act, Peterson said.

People tested so far have received their results within five days, which is slower than Peterson would like. We would like to get them back within 24 hours, she said. We have no control over turnaround time.

RELATED: People waiting way too long for COVID-19 test results in Pa.

The tests are processed by Quest Diagnostics, one of the national labs that has been overwhelmed as COVID cases have spiked around the country.

Recently, some of those labs have taken up to about two weeks to provide results. Quest has said it is adding equipment and technology and steadily increasing its testing capacity in order to reduce the waits.

Still, shortages of chemicals known as reagents are also delaying tests results, including some of the tests done by hospitals and health systems.

Pennsylvania Secretary of Health Dr. Rachel Levine acknowledged the problem Thursday, saying she has been having discussions with labs including Quest and with federal officials about how to shorten the wait for results.

Levine said the state lab, which is still able to deliver results in 24-48 hours, is only able to handle testing involving long-term care facilities, health care workers ad similar high priority situations.

The mobile testing operation will be open to anyone who wants to get tested, even if they have no symptoms. Hamilton is considering using pre-registration to speed up the process, although Peterson says people who walk up without having registered will also be tested.

Once flu season begins in October, Peterson said, the mobile testing operation also will provide flu shots and flu tests.

That will address another problem expected to arise this fall as people get the flu, it will cause confusion over who has the flu and who has COVID, which is more dangerous for reasons including the fact its more contagious and theres no vaccine.

Public health officials will be urging everyone to get a flu shot in an effort to reduce the confusion and prevent hospitals from being overwhelmed by a combination of flu and COVID patients.

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Mobile COVID testing to soon hit the road in central Pa., will also deliver regular flu tests and shots - PennLive

Ducks in the show: Week Two – 247Sports

(Photo: 247Sports)

Welcome to the second installment of the weekly Oregon MLB round-up. This recap will feature appearances by Ducks starting August 2 and ending August 9. A Sunday to Sunday recap. In the early stages of the 2020 MLB season, four former Ducks have made their debuts, and one has made their MLB debut.

I plan on dividing this recap into two sections, one for hitting and one for pitching. So far this year of the six Oregon players to make their debut, three have been pitchers. Tyler Anderson of the San Francisco Giants, Cole Irvin of the Philadelphia Phillies, and 2017 first-round pick David Peterson of the New York Mets all made their pitching debuts in the 2020 season and all made appearances in the last week. As for hitting, Scott Heineman made his 2020 debut with the Texas Rangers last week and played five games this week. Ryon Healy of the Milwaukee Brewers made his 2020 debut this week, as did Kyle Garlick of the Phillies.

Pitching

David Peterson

After making his MLB debut back on July 28th against the Boston Red Sox, Peterson made just one start this week against the Miami Marlins. Peterson turned in another reliable performance, five innings, allowing two earned runs on four hits while striking out three. Peterson struggled with his command against the Marlins, walking three batters, which matched his season total in walks, in just five innings. Regardless, Peterson turned in another quality start and has now won two of his first three appearances in the show.

Peterson also made his way onto Pitching Ninja, one of baseballs best Twitter fan accounts. Pitching Ninja showcases unhittable pitches thrown by the games best and here was Petersons contribution:

Updated 2020 stats: 2-1, 16.2 IP, 3.78 ERA, 14 K, 1.32 WHIP, 3.93 FIP

Tyler Anderson

Andersons tenure so far with the Giants has been an up and down road. His ERA coming into this week reflects a solid season with the giants, but his peripheral stats, like a 5.89 FIP, tell a sign of being a lucky pitcher. Anderson made his second start of the season and his lone appearance this week on Aug. 6 against the Colorado Rockies, his former ballclub, in the mile-high stadium, Coors Field. Anderson responded with a tremendous five-inning performance, allowing zero runs on two hits while striking out three. Anderson was limited to just 66 pitches, making it clear the Giants were either looking for a spot start or are in the middle of stretching Anderson out to become a full-time member in this rotation. This past Sunday, Johnny Cueto of the Giants left his start against the Dodgers due to a left leg injury, which could open an opportunity for Anderson in the rotation.

Anderson has had a successful year by changing his pitch usage, and with it, good outcomes have followed. The lefty has limited his use of his cutter from July to August by four percent and upped both his sinker and changeup usage by four and two percent. This change will be something to keep an eye on in the future.

Stats: 0-1, 12.1 IP, 2.19 ERA, 7 K, 1.46 WHIP, 5.89 FIP

Cole Irvin

Irvin doubled his innings pitched total for 2020 after throwing just one inning on Aug. 9 against the Atlanta Braves. Irvin allowed two hits, zero runs, and didnt strike out a batter in his brief inning of work.

Stats: 0-2, 2 IP, 18.00 ERA, 1 K, 3.50 WHIP, 1.97 FIP

Hitting

Scott Heineman

Last week, Heineman made waves with his unexpected power against the Giants as he drove home three runs in four games with a two-run double and a home run. This week, Heineman continued to get the nod but mostly as a defensive replacement. Heineman started two games against the Oakland Athletics, going 0-for-6 with two strikeouts. Heineman played in the next three straight games but came in as a defensive replacement in either the eighth or ninth inning against the Los Angeles Angels. Heineman was able to steal one bag in those three games, his lone offensive production.

Stats: 9 G, 19 AB, 3 H, 1 HR, 3 RBI, .158 AVG, .526 OPS

Ryon Healy

Welcome to the recap, Healy. The sharp corner infield made his 2020 debut this week with the Milwaukee Brewers after being a surprise cut from the MLB roster out of spring training part two. Healy played three games this week, amassing six at-bats, and getting one hit. Healy, a DH in two of the three games, was relieved of his position in the first game after three innings and came up as a pinch hitter in the second game. Healy rounded out the three games by playing first base until being relieved in the eighth inning.

Stats: 3 G, 6 AB, 1 H, 0 HR, 0 RBI, .167 AVG, .333 OPS

Kyle Garlick

Garlick made his 2020 season debut as a designated hitter on Aug. 5 against the New York Yankees, earning two at-bats before being relieved in the sixth inning. Garlick came in as a defensive replacement on Aug. 9 in game one of a doubleheader against the Braves. Garlick recorded zero offensive stats in his brief two-game stint.

Stats: 2 G, 2 AB, 0 H

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Peterson: NCAA could be another casualty | News, Sports, Jobs – Daily Mining Gazette

For an organization that has been under fire in many quarters over the past decade or so, the NCAA could well be another casualty of the current mess we find ourselves in today.

The COVID-19 disaster has already closed the athletic schedules of some smaller leagues (the Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association is a prime example).

The MIAA action caused Finlandia University to cancel its fall schedule dealing the Lions football program what could be a telling blow. More on that later.

But now football players in some major conferences have indicated theyre reluctant to put their health at rick in what looks like a perilous climate this fall.

Players in the PAC-10 argued that there should be some sort of financial compensation for their efforts.

Now, players from the SEC and reportedly, the Big 10, are voicing similar complaints about their participation.

In the past, the NCAA has successfully sold the idea that college athletes are already receiving benefits for playing a game.

In an era where many athletes are opting to seek their fortunes in the pros before four years of college, that idea has lost much of its validity.

Virus outbreaks have already broken out in some college and professional training camps this summer.

Should the complaints get louder, the big conferences and the NCAA, could find themselves looking to closing entire seasons.

Regardless of what some misinformed people in Washington, D.C. are saying about the pandemic, there is a chance it could be with us longer than anyone anticipates.

The pros are making do so far with a combination of bubbles, isolated arenas, etc. But major league baseball appears to be fighting a losing battle with an alarming number of cancellations.

In the case of Finlandia, which has struggled to find a foothold in football in its first few seasons, the loss of another season could be fatal to recruiting and other factors in building a program.

No one has a clue as to what might eventually happen to sports in the future. And I surely dont

I dont claim to have any answers

Today's breaking news and more in your inbox

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Andrew Peterson farm donations grind to a halt; funding in jeopardy – SW News Media

The Carver County Historical Society staff was thrilled.

After years of applying for grants and planning restoration projects for the historic Andrew Peterson farm near Waconia, the society had received its biggest funding opportunity yet.

The Jeffris Family Foundation, which is dedicated to Midwestern historic preservation, had offered CCHS a challenge grant if the society raised $500,000 in three years, the foundation would give CCHS $250,000 to rehabilitate and restore the 12 acres and seven historic structures on the Peterson farm.

It was a dream come true, and CCHS had a steady stream of donations that went straight into a dedicated, untouchable bank account. In January, that bank account was just short of $190,000 they fully expected to hit $250,000 by the end of their first year in June, said CCHS director Wendy Petersen Biorn.

But after COVID-19 hit, donations slowed to a trickle. Events were canceled, donors who would match existing funds pulled out and laws that affect nonprofits were changed.

It took CCHS until July to finally cross that $190,000 mark, and theres no sign of upcoming growth.

Weve taken a breather because going in and asking people for donations in a time like this just wasnt the right thing to do. But thats a lot of money on the line, and we need people to not forget about us,Petersen Biorn said.

Petersen Biornand CCHS envision the farm as an interpretive center and event venue, converting cattle stalls into classrooms and barns into museums. The Petersons house would be restored to its 19th century look. The carriages, wagons, and even a glass hearse will be properly displayed. Original artifacts would be relocated back to their first home.

The farm is a labor of love for Minnesotans and Swedes, but with no increase in donations in sight and a fast-approaching deadline, this summers barn rehabilitation may have been the last project for a long time.

Were not going to get an extension on that fundraising time. If we dont hit that goal, we dont get that quarter of a million dollars. Its just a killer,Petersen Biorn said.

HISTORY

Andrew Peterson was a Swedish immigrant who moved to Minnesota in 1855 and kept journals from 1850 until his death in 1898. He worked with the development of apple trees, and his farm served as one of the first research stations for what would become the University of Minnesota Landscape Arboretum.

After Swedish author Vilhelm Moberg used Petersons journals as a primary source for his book series "The Emigrants" 50 years later, Petersons writings were turned into several movies and musicals, thrusting him and his farm into international spotlight.

The propertys last owner, Ward Holasek, helped preserve much of the property and its artifacts, working with author Jo Mihelich and the Minnesota Historical Society to place the farm on the National Register of Historic Places in 1978.

The only major alteration made by Holasek was the destruction of a house built by previous owners in 1920. To meet zoning regulations, he and his wife had to choose between the 1920s house or Petersons original home and razed the former to preserve the Peterson building.

When he died in 2013, Holasek left his 51-acre portion to the Carver County Historical Society, which worked with the other owner, WRH Properties, to swap the larger portion for the 12.17 acres with historical structures.

Petersons story isnt just a diary of a Swedish immigrant,Petersen Biorn said. Its a record of farmers in the 19th century, showing how the dairy industry evolved and the developments in agriculture and horticulture in Minnesota an overall statement of significance, reads the 2017 Historic Structure Report for the property.

The Projects

This isnt the first time CCHS has worked on the seven historic structures.

CCHS previously received around $160,000 in legacy funding from the state which comes from a small percentage of sales tax to rehabilitate and stabilize the main barn and silo. After three years of work, it finished in June.

After a wall of the North Barn collapsed in 2010, CCHS worked for seven years to obtain grants and restore the barn. Every saw mark and every wooden peg was created to replicate exactly how the barn would have looked in the 19th century.

Four members of the Andrew Peterson Society in Sweden raised money for plane tickets and building materials in 2006, flying 4,000 miles to replace the roof of the granary built by Peterson himself. Sven Lindfors, Olle Karlsson, Pertti Skillermark and Mikael Karlsson spent 17 days in snow, below-average temperatures and wind without a single complaint.

If CCHS receives their funding, it knows exactly where its going the Peterson family home.

The original house is standing strong, and while some changes have been made by the current renters, the historical architecture and structures remain intact. Instead of keeping the modern additions, theyll use the money to restore it to how it looked in its original time period.

Though not all seven structures were built in Petersons lifetime, all needed some kind of restoration or repair. Thanks to previous work by CCHS and the Swedes, several are up to par, but any leftover money from the foundation will continue to be put into the buildings, the programming and whatever else crops up.

Turning the farm into an interpretive center is going to take many years, but the chance to receive another $250,000 is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity,Petersen Biorn said.

This is a big undertaking. But the way to handle that is just look at one thing at a time and say, OK, well, you can do this, then this. With the (foundations) money, we can do so much more,Petersen Biorn said.

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Peterson working to make sure HEROES Act ag provisions make it in final bill – brownfieldagnews.com

News

Peterson working to make sure HEROES Act ag provisions make it in final bill

House Ag Committee chairman Collin Peterson says he and his colleagues are working to make sure ag provisions included in the HEROES Act are put in the next round of coronavirus relief.

Currently being negotiated now between the White House, the House, and the Senate. In the (HEROES Act), probably the most important thing we had is the help for hog (and turkey) producers for depopulation. Also some money for (processing) plants to keep them running.

Participating in a congressional candidate forum hosted virtually by Minnesota Farmfest, the Minnesota Democrat said theres also direct assistance for ethanol producers in the HEROES Act.

So its very much supported by all of agriculture. Were hoping that in the final bill thats negotiated by the leadership thats working on it right now, that will become part of the final bill.

Congress is scheduled to break for August recess at the end of the week, but lawmakers on both sides have indicated they will stay in session until the bill is completed.

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Peterson working to make sure HEROES Act ag provisions make it in final bill - brownfieldagnews.com

Rare tuna catch from shore attracts pack of giant roosters – For The Win

Theo Anest accomplished a rare feat recently by landing a yellowfin tuna from shore, while using spinning gear, on Mexicos Baja California peninsula.

But as Anest reeled the 37-pound tuna toward the beach, another remarkable event occurred: Several massive roosterfish, seemingly attracted by the commotion, accompanied the hooked tuna into the surf zone.

This placed them within fly-casting range and before long, local guide Lance Peterson was battling an estimated 80-pound roosterfish on a fly rod.

The tuna was spotted and specifically cast to, Peterson, owner of Lance Peterson Fishing, told For The Win Outdoors. I was hoping a few of its buddies would swim in for a look as it neared the beach, and sure enough there were some curious onlookers; mostly giant roosters.

ALSO ON FTW OUTDOORS: Sea lions wild ride on humpback whale captured in photos

The catches were made early last month in Baja California Surs East Cape region. But photos were not shared until last week, with Peterson describing the event on Facebook as a truly rare double hookup from shore.

Catching yellowfin tuna from shore is not unheard of, but its rare considering that the pelagic fish are generally found in schools several miles offshore.

Roosterfish, however, are a coastal species prized by East Cape anglers because of their exotic appearance, size and power. Anglers typically release their catches to preserve the vulnerable fishery.

Peterson was searching for roosterfish when he spotted the yellowfin tuna feeding on forage fish. He texted Anest and told him to bring spinning gear.

Anest, a sales representative for Scott Fly Rods, arrived with a long spinning rod and cast a silver metal lure toward the tuna.

They never quite came into fly range but we could see waves of them passing through an area 40 to 100 yards off the beach, Anest recalled. As soon as I hooked the tuna, 100 curious grande roosters that were lurking in the vicinity followed that tuna in.

However, when Lance made that cast we were still certain they were all tuna until about 20 giant combs [roosterfish dorsal fins] came out of the water.

Added Peterson: We had sighted several tuna that day, but they were lock-jawed. Eventually Theo stuck one. The commotion brought in several fish to investigate, among them a pack of giant roosters.

I was convinced I had managed to hook the smallest specimen in the group, which makes me wonder how big the others were!

Anest kept the tuna, while Peterson released the roosterfish after posing for a quick series of images.

Any roosterfish over 50 pounds is considered a prize catch, especially on a fly rod. The all-tackle world record a 114-pound roosterfish caught off La Paz, north of the East Cape has stood since 1960.

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Rare tuna catch from shore attracts pack of giant roosters - For The Win

Controversial professor Jordan Peterson suffering with coronavirus and got worse after taking treatment dru – The Sun

CONSERVATIVE podcaster and professor Jordan Peterson is battling coronavirus after a nearly year-long battle with prescription drug addiction.

Mikhaila Peterson, 28, told The Sun her dad caught coronavirus in a Serbian hospital whilst recovering for an over-reliance on the anti-anxiety drug Benzodiazepine.

1

"He was put on a whole bunch of, kind of preemptively, he was put on anti-virals and things," Mikhaila Peterson said.

"I don't know if that was necessary, because his symptoms weren't that bad -- he didn't have a cough, he had a mild fever, but they just put him on everything.

Mikhaila also said her father is suffering from pneumonia, the second time this year he has fought the illness.

"And so now we've had a step back in his recovery. Life is just not good, things are not good right now," she said.

"He'll get better, but he's definitely taken a step back and it's just really unfortunate... it's been a disaster."

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Peterson has battled health issues since 2016.

His daughter revealed earlier this year her dad flew to Russia for treatment after developing a 'physical dependency' on prescription drugs.

"The last year has been extremely difficult for our family," she said in February.

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Controversial professor Jordan Peterson suffering with coronavirus and got worse after taking treatment dru - The Sun

New Audis To Use Supercomputer That Controls Almost Everything – Motor1

As the mad dash for technology and innovation among automakers surges forward, new cars are becoming even more complex. In an effort to simplify how advanced components like the powertrain, chassis, and safety systems work together, the next crop of Audi cars will have much bigger brains.

That may sound like an oversimplification, but thats what Audi is getting at here. Today, the company showed off plans to incorporate a much more sophisticated computer called the Integrated Vehicle Dynamics computer, which functions as the central facility for the cars dynamic systems. Audis new central computer system is ten times more powerful than the one found in current models and will be able to control up to 90 different systems, depending on vehicle application.

The new vehicle dynamics computer will find its way into the entire Audi lineup. Everything from the compact A3 to the massive Q8 SUV will get the futuristic hardware, including the all-electric E-Tron. Audi says that this speaks to the dynamic computers versatility in that its designed to work with cars of all performance thresholds.

In Audis electric cars, the computer will monitor and control important systems such as brake regeneration, which contributes up to 30 percent of the batterys potential range. In hot rods like the RS models, trick systems like anti-roll stabilization and active suspension will rely on the vehicle dynamics computer for power. This also marks the first time that the chassis and powertrain controls will be housed within one component something that Audi says will bring a greater range of comfort and performance in its vehicles.

Audi didnt specify when the switch to the new dynamics computers would enter its product line, but an engineer mentioned that the component is ready for serialized production which means its happening soon. This doesnt mean much to the driver and how they interact with the car, but its one of several recent announcements from Audi that makes us even more excited for future models.

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New Audis To Use Supercomputer That Controls Almost Everything - Motor1

San Jose in a quandary over what to do with unauthorized Black Lives Matter mural – The Mercury News

  1. San Jose in a quandary over what to do with unauthorized Black Lives Matter mural  The Mercury News
  2. Just one week after it was painted, a Black Lives Matter mural in Indianapolis was vandalized  CNN
  3. Angry, hostile responses to the resurgent Black Lives Matter movement are exposing the intensity of Connecticu  Hartford Courant
  4. Black Americans fighting for equality on the frontlines of the Black Lives Matter protests explain what the movement means to them  Business Insider
  5. 'Black Lives Matter' mural in Indianapolis defaced after a week  USA TODAY
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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San Jose in a quandary over what to do with unauthorized Black Lives Matter mural - The Mercury News

How did the Black Lives Matter movement get to where it is today? – News@Northeastern

The Black Lives Matter movement has been developing in a variety of forms for centuries, and a deep vein of its history can be explored within the Archives and Special Collections at the Northeastern Library.

More than 64,000 records are available online, including the Lower Roxbury Black History Project, which provides oral histories of a community that has been pursuing racial equity for generations. The digitization of these resources has made them accessible during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Placing the current moment in a much longer time horizon really gives you critical context, says Dan Cohen, a professor of history who serves as vice provost for information collaboration and dean of the university library.

The Northeastern archives renew stories that have been forgotten to historyincluding many that resonate today.

In 1970, Frank Lynch, a 24-year-old singer, was a patient at Boston City Hospital when he and another man in his room, Edward Crowley, were shot and killed by a white police officer. In spite of protests in Boston and an investigation by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, the officer did not face charges.

The Lower Roxbury Black History Project blends compelling narratives with everyday efforts that were made by many people to bring justice to American society on the local level.

You see how activism is donethe meetings of nonprofit community groups, the pamphlets, the internal conversations, the letters that they wrote to other civic institutions in the city, Cohen says. This kind of history shows that community efforts, and individual people brought together in a collaborative spirit, have made changes to American society.

A secret to building upon the current momentum of Black Lives Matter can be found in these records, says Molly Brown, a reference and outreach archivist at Northeastern.

It starts with meetings, Brown says. It continues with conversations. And it asks us to look at all of the institutions that we participate in.

The Lower Roxbury Black History Project was funded in 2006 by Joseph E. Aoun, president of Northeastern, based on a suggestion by Reverend Michael E. Haynes, a local leader who died in 2019. Hayness interview is a featured treasure among the archives.

Today we cant talk to Rev. Haynes in person, but we can go to his interview and keep learning from his wisdom, says Giordana Mecagni, who heads the archives and special collections at Northeastern. He was involved in almost every Black activist cause in Boston for many years.

Dan Cohen, a professor of history who serves as vice provost for information collaboration and dean of the university library. Photo by Adam Glanzman/Northeastern University

The project includes references to the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., who led the 1965 civil rights march to the Boston Common from the William E. Carter Playground a decade after he had attended Boston University. His presence in the archives gives power to the actions that have been taken by people who werent so well known.

People think about the civil rights movement as being exemplified by Malcolm X, Martin Luther King, and Rosa Parks, says Mecagni, who also notes renowned Boston-based activists like Melnea Cass, Muriel Snowden, and Ruth Batson. But it was also millions of individual people with jobs and families doing their part to make sure that there was change happening. We want the people out in the streets right now to understand that there were people like them in Boston whose efforts sparked real change.

Another trove of perspective can be discovered at the Beyond Busing: Boston Public School Desegregation project, which provides thousands of digitized resources on desegregation, starting with Brown v. Board of Education, the unanimous 1954 Supreme Court ruling that found the segregation of public schools in Topeka, Kansas, to be unconstitutional.

In 1974, Judge W. Arthur Garrity Jr. issued a U.S. District Court ruling in Massachusetts that called for busing to desegregate Bostons public schools, which set off a series of protests and riots.

Left, Giordana Mecagni, head of Special Collections and university archivist, and Molly Brown, reference and outreach archivist. Photos by Adam Glanzman/Northeastern University and Photo courtesy Molly Brown

What was missing from this public narrative was the 40 years of Black activism in Boston that predated the Garrity decision, Mecagni says. There was a reason why the court had to intervene. It was because for years Black activists were saying, Schools are not equal. This is not fair. And finally, Boston was forced to do something about it. But this didnt happen in a vacuum. It took a lot of mostly unpaid volunteer work.

Bostons civil rights movement is mostly remembered as being education-focused. But Bostons activists werent just looking at Boston schools, Brown says. They are protesting racial imbalance. Theyre looking at housing. Theyre looking at the ways that our political constructions affect and enact white supremacy.

The Archives and Special Collections staff is also building the archives of Northeasterns Civil Rights and Restorative Justice Project, which was founded by Margaret Burnham, a lifelong civil rights activist and university distinguished professor of law at Northeastern. The justice projects staff of Northeastern students investigates acts of racially motivated crimes that took place in the Jim Crow South from 1930 to 1970.

Giordana Mecagni, Head of Special Collections and University Archivist, looks through Northeasterns archive at Snell Library. Photo by Ruby Wallau/Northeastern University

What happened to George Floyd tragically happened to thousands of other African Americans, Cohen says of Burnhams efforts to tell those stories. And so this goes back a long way and that makes it even more infuriating that its still going on in 2020. But it also shows the broader historical context of some of the economic, social, and cultural problems that have persisted in American society.

Additionally, the librarys Teaching with Archives Program offers an array of opportunities for experiential learning with archival records, such as documents, photographs, local newspapers, and architectural plans related to the history of Bostons social justice organizing as well as Northeasterns history. The program encourages reflection about the participants own role in history, and how their neighborhood, school, and beyond are part of the story of Bostons past and present. Teachers may access a variety of digitized community collections, including:

Northeasterns archivists have used the Boston Public School Desegregation collection to teach hundreds of Boston Public School students about the education history of their city.

The librarys archives are an important resource for understanding racial injustice during this polarized time, says Cohen. Northeasterns library is home to the Boston Research Center, a digital community history and archive lab that aims to bring Bostons deep neighborhood and community histories to light through the creation and use of new technologies.

The key service that we provide is knitting all of this together, Cohen says. Obviously, there are people who are interested in history. There are researchers who work with maps and data. There are social justice activists; there are community historical societies.

The library is the institution that can synthesize the wide variety of materials that are created by human beings in a city like Boston, and present that in a coherent way so that audiences can come to understand their world better.

For media inquiries, please contact media@northeastern.edu.

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How did the Black Lives Matter movement get to where it is today? - News@Northeastern

How this Llama is playing peacemaker amid Black Lives Matter protests in Portland – The Indian Express

By: Trends Desk | New Delhi | Updated: August 10, 2020 12:52:11 pm The unusually friendly Caesar is looked after by Larry McCool, who runs the Mystic Llama Farm in Jefferson, Oregon. (Source: Reuters)

Portland, which has been a site for anti-racism protests since May following the custodial death of African-American man George Floyd, has a new guest who is helping calming the nerves of demonstrators and law enforcement personnel with hugs.

A video of a Llama giving hugs and nuzzles to the demonstrators in Portland, Oregon, has gone viral online. Several clips of the 6-year-old Caesar, showing the animal going around and offering warm hugs to protesters as well as law enforcement officers on the street, have gone viral.

Watch the video here:

The unusually friendly Caesar is groomed and looked after by Larry McCool, who runs the Mystic Llama Farm in Jefferson, Oregon, the Reuters reported.

Claiming that the animal knows more than one thinks it does, McCool recalled an event where the animal stayed calm for over nine minutes when over 5,000 people gathered near a bridge near downtown Portland to pay respect to Floyd, who died on May 25th.

Caesar stood there, motionless, just like this. He understood the moment. He understood the importance of what we were doing, McCool told the news website. He did not move an inch that whole time.

The Indian Express is now on Telegram. Click here to join our channel (@indianexpress) and stay updated with the latest headlines

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How this Llama is playing peacemaker amid Black Lives Matter protests in Portland - The Indian Express

A look at where the Black Lives Matter murals will be placed in KC – KCTV Kansas City

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A look at where the Black Lives Matter murals will be placed in KC - KCTV Kansas City

N.Y.P.D. Besieges a Protest Leader as He Broadcasts Live – The New York Times

Derrick Ingram, an organizer of a group leading New Yorks Black Lives Matter protests, was besieged inside his Manhattan apartment on Friday while a police helicopter patrolled overhead, officers banged on his door and police dogs waited in the hallway.

The street outside had been closed off by roughly two dozen police vehicles and dozens of officers, including some who were wearing tactical gear and carrying shields. At the end of the block, Black Lives Matter supporters had gathered with bullhorns and cameras to protest what appeared to be Mr. Ingrams imminent arrest.

What did I do? What did I do? he said on a livestream posted on Instagram. I was born Black, thats what I did.

The tense standoff in the Hells Kitchen neighborhood continued for several hours as Mr. Ingram, 28, talked to lawyers via Zoom and communicated with the outside world over the Instagram video.

He declined to let the officers enter his apartment without a warrant. A police spokeswoman, Sgt. Jessica McRorie, said later that the officers were there to arrest him on charges that he had assaulted an officer by yelling in her ear with a megaphone.

In the end, the police left shortly after 1 p.m. without arresting him, and he turned himself in on Saturday morning at the Midtown North Precinct, accompanied by his lawyer and about 100 peaceful supporters.

But the tremendous show of force on Friday renewed questions about how the Police Department is addressing the protests for racial justice that have continued in New York for weeks and how they are dealing with those who participate in them.

The episode came about 10 days after the arrest of a transgender woman, Nikki Stone, 18, who was taken away from a protest in an unmarked van in a move that drew criticism from Mayor Bill de Blasio and Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo.

In that instance, Mr. de Blasio suggested the arrest had been justified, but he criticized its execution, saying police leaders should have handled it differently given continuing tensions over the departments practices.

Mr. Ingram was arrested on Saturday on a second-degree assault charge in connection with an incident during a protest in Midtown Manhattan on June 14, Sergeant McRorie said in a statement.

The sergeant said that Mr. Ingram had struggled with an officer who tried to stop him from crossing a police line during the demonstration. Mr. Ingram is accused of placing a live megaphone against the officers ear and yelling, causing pain and protracted impairment of hearing, Sergeant McRorie said.

When Mr. Ingram was brought before a judge on Saturday afternoon, a prosecutor from the Manhattan district attorneys office asked that the charge be reduced to a misdemeanor assault and that Mr. Ingram be released without bail. The judge agreed and Mr. Ingram was released.

Our office does not condone the extraordinary tactics employed by police on Friday, said Danny Frost, a spokesman for the district attorneys office. These actions were disproportionate to the alleged offense that occurred two months ago, and unjustifiably escalated conflict between law enforcement and the communities we serve.

Mr. Ingrams lawyer, Dorothy Weldon, could not immediately be reached for comment.

Mr. Ingram is a founder of Warriors in the Garden, a group that has led many marches and rallies around the city since forming in June.

With hundreds of people watching the scene unfold on Warriors in the Gardens Instagram account, Mr. Ingram sat in the living room of his West 45th Street apartment while a police officer pounded on his door and told him to come out.

At one point, the officer could be heard saying the police were treating Mr. Ingram like a gentleman.

Why do you think hostage negotiation is here right now? Mr. Ingram said to those who were watching the video. They have dogs. I can hear the dogs in the hallway. Theyre texting me right now.

Addressing the audience, he said he was afraid that the officers would hurt him if he went outside or would plant something incriminating in his home if he let them in.

The video was interrupted at another point. When it resumed, he said he believed the officers were interfering with his cellphone calls so that every time he got one, a detective was intercepting it. The claim could not be verified.

In a statement issued later, Mr. Ingram said the officers who came to his home had not produced a warrant and had used threats and intimidation tactics.

This was an attempt to silence our movement, he said. This militarized police response endangers the safety of residents in Hells Kitchen and across New York City.

Warriors in the Garden formed in New York amid the demonstrations that began after the killing in police custody of George Floyd in Minneapolis. Several of its leaders most of whom are Black and in their 20s live in Hells Kitchen and elsewhere in Midtown Manhattan.

One of the groups leaders, Joseph Martinez, 20, said in June that the name was a reminder to tend this vision we have while fighting in this climate of violence and brutality.

The groups Instagram following has swelled to more than 30,000 users over the course of the summer as it attracted the attention of so-called influencers. Several of its members have been arrested during the recent protests.

Before he began organizing protests, Mr. Ingram used his own Instagram account mostly to talk about his Haitian heritage and his diet and fitness regimen. He has participated in protests despite having lupus, an autoimmune disease that he said put him at a higher risk of complications were he to contract the coronavirus.

We are fighting two pandemics, Mr. Ingram told a reporter in June, referring to the virus and racism.

During the livestream on Friday, he said he had never assaulted or threatened anyone.

On Saturday morning, Mr. Ingram led a march of a hundred protesters to the Midtown North Precinct station house on West 54th Street, where he planned to turn himself in.

With one fist held high and the other holding onto a fellow protester, Mr. Ingram chanted along, Wheres the warrant? They dont have it!

The group was met by two dozen officers in riot gear, who blocked off 56th Street at Eighth Avenue. The police allowed only Mr. Ingram through with his lawyer and three fellow organizers.

Mr. Ingram held hands with the other organizers as they separated from the demonstration and made their way inside. Protesters shouted, We believe in you! We love you!

Kiara Williams, 20, a co-founder of Warriors in the Garden who walked with Mr. Ingram into the station, said Mr. Ingram decided to turn himself in before matters with the police escalated.

Hes doing it for us, Ms. Williams said. He knew this was the right thing to do in order to protect everyone else.

Several protesters said Fridays confrontation was one in a series of episodes in which officers took seemingly extreme measures to make an arrest.

People are asking, Why, why is this happening? and were able to ask why because were finally watching, said Chi Oss, 22, another co-founder of Warriors in the Garden. And were watching in a mass and sharing it with the rest of the world.

Troy Closson, Juliana Kim and Ali Watkins contributed reporting.

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N.Y.P.D. Besieges a Protest Leader as He Broadcasts Live - The New York Times

TV tonight: dramas from the Black Lives Matter frontlines – The Guardian

Unsaid Stories9pm, ITV

Stripped across the week, these four short dramas explore various aspects of the Black Lives Matter movement. We begin with Jerome Bucchan-Nelsons Generational in which Oliver (Nicholas Pinnock) catches his daughter Justina (Yasmin Monet Prince) sneaking out of the house. The usual fatherly concerns evaporate when he discovers she is attending a protest march. But they are replaced by another set of anxieties: will Justina be safe? And does she understand the battles fought on similar ground by previous generations? Phil Harrison

In 2013, a century-and-a-half after the death of Edvard Munch, Norway celebrated his anniversary by staging Munch 150: displaying 220 of his remarkable paintings; only one of which much of the world actually recognised on sight. Here is a behind-the-scenes of the exhibition, and a closer look at the artist. Ali Catterall

This superb series has put faces and names to the carnage of post-2003 Iraq and has been all the more affecting for it. We conclude with the long tail of the war: after emigrating to Canada, musician Waleed tells of returning to a different country in 2012, with divisive politics allowing extremism to gain a foothold. PH

A chirpy account of unemployment, filmed before the economic implications of Covid-19 became obvious. The care demonstrated by staff as they nudge clients back towards work is impressive. Hopefully, they are still smiling as they approach the most demanding spell of their working lives. PH

The trial is reaching its conclusion and so is this reimagining of the noirish detective serial. It has been thoroughly enjoyable Matthew Rhys has located precisely the right balance between dry wit and shoulder-slumped disillusion. With a second series commissioned, will Mason tie up the loose ends? PH

HBOs documentary about Michael Tubbs, a 26-year-old black man who was elected mayor of Stockton in California on the night of Trumps 2016 victory. Have his policies among them universal basic income for randomly selected residents improved a city blighted by poverty? Hannah J Davies

Predestination (Michael Spierig, Peter Spierig, 2014), 11.50pm, Sony MoviesEthan Hawke reunites with the Spierig brothers (Daybreakers) for another bloodthirsty fantasy. Based on a Robert A Heinlein story, it has Hawke as a time-travelling agent hunting a serial killer, the Fizzle Bomber, in a hallucinogenic adventure concerning the predestination paradox. Paul Howlett

Snooker: The World Championship, 10am, BBC TwoMore tense green-baize action.

Europa League football, 7pm, BT Sport 1Action from the quarter-finals of the long-delayed tournament.

NBA: Phoenix Suns v Oklahoma City Thunder, 7.30pm, Sky Sports Main EventFrom the Wide World of Sports Complex in Orlando, Florida.

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TV tonight: dramas from the Black Lives Matter frontlines - The Guardian

What is intolerance fatigue, and how is it fueling Black Lives Matter protests? – The Conversation US

Protesters remain on the streets demanding equality and justice for Black Americans. What theyre feeling, I believe, is something I call intolerance fatigue.

As a race scholar, examining the history of social justice movements, the phrase is new, but the concept isnt.

In 1962, during the civil rights movement, activist Fannie Lou Hamer sought to register to vote in her home state of Mississippi. When she was allowed to address the Democratic National Convention in 1964, Hamer told how she and her fellow activists were shot at, fined, arrested and brutally beaten in jail simply for trying to register to become first-class citizens.

She spoke for millions in another speech that year, in which she declared she was sick and tired of being sick and tired.

This exhaustion is not the sort that lays people out on their beds and couches, unable to move. Rather, its a frustration and anger about systemic racism that drives people to act, to demand change and become part of creating the social change they want.

The civil rights movement was sparked in 1955 by the murder of Emmett Till a Black 14-year-old from Chicago who was beaten, shot and drowned in a Mississippi river for allegedly offending a white woman in a store. In 1963, John Lewis, a young man who would become a civil rights icon and congressman, made a clear, and eloquent demand: We do not want our freedom gradually, but we want to be free now!

Similarly, the 2020 protests arose in the wake of George Floyds death in police custody in Minneapolis. Taking a stand against injustice, people again still are tired of being discriminated against, profiled and murdered because of the color of their skin.

Marchers are tired of intolerance, worn out by racism and refusing to be silent in the face of unjust treatment and inequality.

Just as their elders were, todays protesters and those they support are sick and tired of being sick and tired.

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What is intolerance fatigue, and how is it fueling Black Lives Matter protests? - The Conversation US

High school student forced to take off Black Lives Matter mask at graduation ceremony, family says – CNN

Dean Holmes, a student at York Catholic High School in York, Pennsylvania, put on a Black Lives Matter mask under his face shield at his July 28 graduation ceremony.

As students lined up before the ceremony started, the school's principal pulled him away in front of other students and told him to take off the mask, Holmes told CNN.

Holmes had previously been told by another school official to take the mask off, so he eventually relented for fear to not being able to walk across the stage, he said.

"I was so mad. I was shaking during the graduation, tapping my leg on edge...when it was over, I couldn't believe it," said Holmes.

York Catholic had opted to give every student a face shield instead of a mask for the ceremony.

" ... the capricious action taken against my son demonstrates that York Catholic High School has miles to go before they can put the ugliness of unconscious bias and racism to sleep. As a parent I will not stand for my son being humiliated publicly, having his basic human dignity crushed on what should have been one of the happiest days of his young life," he wrote in the post.

Both he and his wife were also wearing Black Lives Matter masks during the ceremony, he told CNN.

No masks with messages for graduation, school said

Two other students previously asked and were given permission to wear a solid color mask under the face shield, unlike Dean, Full explained.

"We wish to re-emphasize that York Catholic believes in the dignity of all human persons, and the equal treatment of all people. We encourage our students, faculty, and alumni to engage in personal conversation, continue to listen with open hearts, always strive for better understanding, and grow as a supportive community of love and respect," the statement continued.

Family says school didn't say no masks with messages

They were not told beforehand that masks with messages would be disallowed at the ceremony, the family said.

They also dispute several assertions in the school statement. According to the family, Dean had his mask on throughout the day and did not just put it on right before the ceremony, as the school said. Also, Dean was publicly told to take off the mask, not privately, as the school statement notes. The family also says Dean didn't have his temperature taken prior to the ceremony, despite the school saying he did.

The school declined to comment further beyond its original statement.

"The high school experience has been one thing after the other. He's had so many experiences that have really tried to belittle him and knock him down," said the father.

Going forward, Dean said he hopes to channel the graduation experience in his future studies at New York University in the fall. The incoming economics major said he will join NYU's Black Student Union and hopes that he will be able to link his experience to a class he will take this fall entitled "Cultures and Contexts: African Diaspora."

"Black Lives Matter is a statement that my life matters," Dean said. "It has nothing to do with politics, it's just a basic human rights issue."

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High school student forced to take off Black Lives Matter mask at graduation ceremony, family says - CNN