Tuesday, December 1, 2020

Please take note

 ✅ Justice Dept. investigated potential ‘bribery-for-pardon’ operation involving White House 

Court records show that U.S. prosecutors this summer and fall looked into a scheme in which a large political contribution would be offered in exchange for a presidential pardon.

—WashPo

12-1: November coronavirus surge a ‘train wreck in slow motion’; Anti-Black discrimination at Southwestern College?

✅ Many OC Businesses Might Be Shut Down by Gov. Gavin Newsom Because of Rapid Coronavirus Spread 
State public health officials project Southern California intensive care units could be maxed out before Christmas. 
—Voice of OC
     ….OC and all of Southern California counties are in the Purple Tier, the most restrictive tier, on the state’s reopening system because of rising case rates. That means no indoor operations restaurants, gyms, places of worship and movie theaters, while further limiting indoor operations at retailers. 
     State public health officials are ringing alarm bells, warning hospitals could be nearly maxed out with patients by Christmas time, unless additional measures are taken like more business restrictions and a stay-home order…. 
     Orange County saw its coronavirus hospitalizations increase threefold in less than a month — a rate never before seen locally in the pandemic. 
     The daily case increases and hospitalization trends are causing concern for local public health experts. 
     “It’s like we’re working our way backward to a new peak. And that’s not good. We want to keep going in the down direction and not in the up direction,” said UC Irvine epidemiologist and public health expert Andrew Noymer….. 
     “I’m worried about Thanksgiving. It won’t show up in the data until about a week after today. So watch out,” Noymer said in a Friday phone interview. “Absolutely brace for impact.”… 

✅ November coronavirus surge a ‘train wreck in slow motion’ -- Andrew Noymer, an epidemiologist at UC Irvine, said he is truly worried about how much the virus spread over Thanksgiving and what’s to come this winter. “We’re not going to just hit the July peak again, we’re going to exceed it,” he said. Nikie Johnson in the Los Angeles Daily News$ -- 12/1/20 

✅ 
California considers strict stay-at-home orders as COVID-19 cases projected to exceed ICU capacity -- Coronavirus cases are rising so rapidly that Gov. Gavin Newsom says if trends continue he may reimpose strict stay-at-home orders like he issued in March to prevent hospitals from becoming overwhelmed. Sophia Bollag in the Sacramento Bee$ Don Thompson Associated Press Alexei Koseff in the San Francisco Chronicle$ Maggie Angst in the San Jose Mercury$ Luke Money, Rong-Gong Lin II in the Los Angeles Times$ Ian Wheeler in the Orange County Register -- 12/1/20 

✅ Early data on learning loss show big drop in math, but not reading skills -- Anational testing organization that predicted school closures last spring would leave students far behind where they should be academically as they entered schools this fall released data Tuesday showing the reality, while worrisome, was less dire. John Fensterwald EdSource -- 12/1/20 

✅ New lawsuit alleges years of anti-Black discrimination at Southwestern College -- It has been 18 months since researchers from the University of Southern California exposed “a palpable climate of anti-Blackness at Southwestern College” that included Black employees being called racial slurs and being overlooked for promotions. Gustavo Solis in the San Diego Union-Tribune$ -- 11/30/20 

—Inside Higher Ed 
     A group of 153 Nobel laureates has signed a letter expressing concern for an imprisoned Swedish-Iranian disaster medicine scholar, Ahmadreza Djalali, who is reportedly facing possible imminent execution in Iran. As Politico reported, Djalali was sentenced to death in 2017 on charges of spying for Israel, charges he denies. Human rights groups have condemned his conviction as unfair, saying a confession was extracted under torture…. 

—CHE

Court records show that U.S. prosecutors this summer and fall looked into a scheme in which a large political contribution would be offered in exchange for a presidential pardon.
—WashPo

Roy's obituary in LA Times and Register: "we were lucky to have you while we did"

  This ran in the Sunday December 24, 2023 edition of the Los Angeles Times and the Orange County Register : July 14, 1955 - November 20, 2...