See the Good: Harvard Law student is giving back to school support staff
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 19:42:44 GMT
Harvard Law student Rehan Staton is gaining national recognition for the second time, and this time, it’s for giving back.“I’m just simply giving back to those who give to me every single day,” Staton said.The 27-year-old from Maryland collected garbage for years to afford his undergraduate degree. He says the sanitation company he was working for at the time helped him get back to school, and he was accepted into Harvard Law School.His success story went viral, and now he’s making a difference for sanitation workers at the university. Staton says it all started when he said hello to a custodian in the hallway.“She said me? I said yes you, how are you doing? And she said I’m sorry, I’m sorry, students don’t talk to me. Students would rather look at the wall then talk to me,” he said. “I was kind of taken back, and I said, ‘oh I’m sorry, I’m going to talk to you though.'”Staton began developing relationships with the school suppor...Crews free trapped passenger from Lakeville crash that left 4 hospitalized
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 19:42:44 GMT
Four were hospitalized after a single-car crash Saturday night in Lakeville, and one passenger had to be extricated from the car using hydraulic tools, officials said.The Lakeville Fire Department responded after getting multiple 911 calls around 10:45 p.m. Saturday. Three of the four people had removed themselves from the car, but when the car collided with trees off the roadway, the fourth passenger was trapped. Crews used the Jaws of Life to free them.All four were sent to three different hospitals with what appeared to be non-life threatening injuries, officials said.Low ‘concerning’ number of North Atlantic right whale births reported this season: New England Aquarium
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 19:42:44 GMT
As North Atlantic right whale calving season ends, New England Aquarium scientists are sounding the alarm that the number of mother-calf pairs documented this season is far below what’s needed to sustain the critically endangered species.The annual calving season in the southeastern U.S. produced 11 mother-calf pairs and a 12th calf without an observed mother. Nine of those calves were born by the end of December, with the last one detected on Jan. 20.In the last 10 years, scientists have documented 108 calves born, while the previous 10 years yielded 216 calves.“There were half as many right whales born this past decade,” said senior scientist Philip Hamilton, who leads the New England Aquarium’s right whale research program in the Anderson Cabot Center for Ocean Life.“To reach the previous decade’s number, we would need an average of 22 right whales born each year,” Hamilton added. “It is certainly concerning for a population that ha...Massachusetts State Police investigating after dead body found along Charles River in Newton
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 19:42:44 GMT
State Police are investigating the death of a person who was found along the Charles River in Newton Saturday night, according to police.Troopers from the State Police-Boston Barracks and local police responded at about 8 p.m., to Forte Park along the Charles River after the dead body was discovered.The location is state Department of Conservation and Recreation property.“Troopers from the State Police Troop H Detective Unit, the State Police Detective Unit for Middlesex County, and the State Police Crime Scene Services Section also responded and at this time continue to investigate the identity of the body and the facts and circumstances of the death,” a Massachusetts State Police spokesperson said in a statement.Related ArticlesCrime & Public Safety | Easter fire that destroyed Cambridge church investigated as ‘suspected arson,’ police ask public for help Crime & Public Safety | Police investigate discovery infant remains ...Peru’s ex-president returned home to face corruption charges
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 19:42:44 GMT
LIMA, Peru (AP) — Former President Alejandro Toledo arrived in Lima Sunday after being extradited from the United States to face charges he allegedly received millions of dollars in bribes in a giant corruption scandal that has ensnared four of Peru’s ex-presidents. Toledo, who was Peru’s president from 2001 to 2006, had surrendered to U.S. authorities on Friday, ending a yearslong legal battle against his extradition, which started in 2019 when he was arrested at his home in Menlo Park, California. Police and officials from Peru’s prosecutor’s office received Toledo, 77, at Lima’s airport early Sunday. Police released a photo of Toledo, looking disheveled, accompanied by agents. He was transferred to a court in Lima’s historic center. Peru’s former president will serve 18 months of preventative detention while he is investigated for allegedly taking at least $20 million in bribes from Odebrecht, a giant Brazilian construction company that has admitted to U.S. authorities that...Sudan fighting hastens evacuations of diplomats, citizens
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 19:42:44 GMT
KHARTOUM, Sudan (AP) — Foreign governments evacuated diplomats, staff and others trapped in Sudan on Sunday as rival generals battled for a ninth day with no sign of a truce that had been declared for a major Muslim holiday.While world powers like the U.S. and Britain airlifted their diplomats from the capital of Khartoum, Sudanese desperately sought to flee the chaos. Many traveled risked dangerous roads to seek safer spots or crossed the northern frontier into Egypt.“My family — my mother, my siblings and my nephews — are on the road from Sudan to Cairo through Aswan,” prominent Sudanese filmmaker Amjad Abual-Ala wrote on Facebook.Fighting raged in Omdurman, a city across the Nile from Khartoum, residents said, despite a hoped-for cease-fire to coincide with the three-day Muslim holiday of Eid al-Fitr.“We did not see such a truce,” Amin al-Tayed said from his home near state TV headquarters in Omdurman, adding that heavy gunfire and thundering explosions rocked the cit...German soccer match abandoned after referee doused in beer
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 19:42:44 GMT
ZWICKAU, Germany (AP) — A third-tier soccer game in Germany was abandoned on Sunday after the referee was doused in beer by an angry fan at halftime. Relegation-threatened Zwickau’s match against visiting Rot-Weiss Essen did not continue for the second half because referee Nicolas Winter had a cup of beer thrown in his face by a fan, who was apparently unhappy with his decision to send off a Zwickau player and award a penalty to Essen before halftime.Winter showed Zwickau defender Nils Butzen a red card for bringing down American forward Isaiah Young, then awarded Essen a penalty for hand ball from the resultant free kick.Simon Engelmann scored from the penalty spot to equalize for 1-1 before the break, when the home fans made their frustrations known. The match officials waited before the leaving the field. Magenta Sport TV showed the fan throwing the beer at the referee’s face.___More AP soccer: https://apnews.com/hub/soccer and https://twitter.com/AP_SportsThe Associated PressUkrainian troop positions spark counteroffensive speculation
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 19:42:44 GMT
KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — Ukrainian military forces have successfully established positions on the eastern side of the Dnieper River, according to a new analysis, giving rise to speculation Sunday that the advances could be an early sign of Kyiv’s long-awaited spring counteroffensive.The Institute for the Study of War, a Washington-based think tank, reported late Saturday that geolocated footage from pro-Kremlin military bloggers indicated that Ukrainian troops had established a foothold near the town of Oleshky, along with “stable supply lines” to their positions. Analysts widely believe that if Ukraine goes ahead with a spring counteroffensive, a major goal would be to break through the land corridor between Russia and the annexed Crimean Peninsula, which would necessitate crossing the Dnieper River in the country’s south.Responding to Ukrainian media reports proclaiming that the establishment of such positions indicated the counteroffensive had begun, Natalia Humeniuk, the...Ex-Disney employee allegedly shot videos up women’s skirts
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 19:42:44 GMT
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — A former Walt Disney World employee is facing a charge that he surreptitiously took a video up the skirt of a female customer, allegedly telling investigators he had done it more than 500 times over the past six years. Jorge Diaz Vega, 26, worked at the Star Wars gift shop inside Disney World’s Hollywood Studios theme park in Florida until his recent arrest on one count of video voyeurism, a third-degree felony punishable by up to five years in prison. According to court records filed by Orange County Sheriff’s detectives, Vega was spotted by a witness shooting a video up an 18-year-old woman’s skirt. She later told security officers she was not aware of Vega’s actions. Detectives said that Vega volunteered during questioning that he takes the videos as a “guilty pleasure” and showed them multiple examples on his cellphone. He was arrested March 31 and released on $2,500 bail. Court records do not show if Vega has an attorney and a ...Russian airspace ban means pricier flights for Canadian travellers and airlines
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 19:42:44 GMT
MONTREAL — Ross Aimer still recalls the snow-white Russian tundra unfurling on the horizon during flights he piloted between the U.S. and Asia.“In summertime, it’s all daytime flying. That’s beautiful views,” said Aimer, CEO of California-based Aero Consulting Experts and a former United Airlines captain.Those vistas are no longer available to flight crews from many Western countries. Russia barred Canadian, American, British and European Union operators from its airspace more than a year ago in response to airspace prohibitions against it by those states and others that support Ukraine, after Moscow invaded its neighbour in February 2022.European airlines are among the most affected, having to reroute planes on hours-long detours to reach Asia and parts of the Middle East.But Canadian carriers are impacted too, with planes en route to East Asia and South Asia forced to skirt around Russian airspace daily, and no sign of relief on the radar. The detours mean longer trips...Latest news
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