Biden and Sanders meet union organizers amid labor turmoil

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 17:20:45 GMT

Biden and Sanders meet union organizers amid labor turmoil WASHINGTON (AP) — With labor turmoil roiling industries from coast to coast, President Joe Biden and Sen. Bernie Sanders met with organizers at the White House on Monday to talk about ways to boost union membership.The organizers represent industries and workplaces that have not traditionally been represented by unions, such as Starbucks coffee shops and video game companies. Sanders, an independent from Vermont, said outside the White House that more people are “standing up and saying it is important for us to have a union so we can earn better wages, better working conditions, better pensions and dignity on the job.”White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said the president believes that “worker power is essential for growing the economy from the middle out and the bottom up.”The meeting took place as strikes have been launched and threatened around the country. Entertainment unions representing actors and writers have shut down film and television production over concerns ...

Book Review: Colson Whitehead pens entertaining, uneven sequel to 2021 bestseller ‘Harlem Shuffle’

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 17:20:45 GMT

Book Review: Colson Whitehead pens entertaining, uneven sequel to 2021 bestseller ‘Harlem Shuffle’ “Crook Manifesto” by Colson Whitehead (Doubleday)In his bestselling 2021 crime novel “Harlem Shuffle,” Colson Whitehead introduced the complicated character of Ray Carney, a Black furniture store owner and small-time fence clawing his way into the middle class while resisting the urge to follow in the footsteps of his thuggish father. That novel played out in Harlem during the civil rights struggles of the early 1960s, and the city itself was a major character.Now he’s written a sequel. When “Crook Manifesto” opens, it is 1971, Carney has been on the straight and narrow for four years, and civic harmony is in short supply, “like honest mayors and playgrounds free of nodding junkies and broken bottles.” Carney’s desire to score impossible-to-get Jackson 5 tickets for his increasingly aloof teenage daughter prompts him to seek out the corrupt cop and fixer he used to do business with — and all hell breaks loose. With Carney back in the game, Whitehead proceeds to show us “the invisibl...

Alabama Republicans reject call for 2nd majority Black district, despite Supreme Court ruling

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 17:20:45 GMT

Alabama Republicans reject call for 2nd majority Black district, despite Supreme Court ruling MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) — Alabama Republicans, under orders of the U.S. Supreme Court to redraw congressional districts to give minority voters a greater voice in elections, rejected calls Monday to craft a second majority-Black district and proposed a map that could test what is required by the judges’ directive. Lawmakers must adopt a new map by Friday after the high court in June affirmed a three-judge panel’s ruling that Alabama’s existing congressional map — with a single Black district out of seven statewide — likely violated the Voting Rights Act. In a state where more than one in four residents is Black, the lower court panel had ruled in 2022 that Alabama should have another majority-Black congressional district or something “close to it” so Black voters have the opportunity to “elect a representative of their choice.”Republicans, who have been resistant to creating a certain Democratic district, proposed a map that would increase the percentage of Black vot...

Car crashes into Hinsdale sub shop

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 17:20:45 GMT

Car crashes into Hinsdale sub shop HINSDALE, Ill. -- Police are investigating after a car crashed into a Hinsdale sandwich shop Monday afternoon.According to reports, a car crashed into Fontano's Subs near the intersection of Chicago Ave and Lincoln Street in Hinsdale on Monday. Plane debris falls into backyard of Far Northwest Side home Several patrons were inside and injuries are being reported, but details have yet to be released.No further information has been made available at this time.Stay with WGN-TV as this story develops.

Drug approved to help babies battling RSV — and more

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 17:20:45 GMT

Drug approved to help babies battling RSV — and more Medical Watch Digest for July 17Newly approved drug to help babies battling RSVMonday the Food and Drug Administration gave the nod for nirsevimab for preventing respiratory syncitial virus.The illness causes severe breathing problems and can lead to death.It strikes people of all ages, but is most devastating in the smallest patients as their tiny airway swells choking off oxygen. More: FDA approves new drug to protect infants, toddlers from RSV Nirsevimab, sold under the name Beyfortus, is a monoclonal antibody that kicks the immune system into gear against RSV.The approval is for infants up to 2-years-old. The drug comes in one shot prior to RSV season and it offers protection through the season.Anti-inflammatory Drugs & Alzheimer’s diseaseA medication in your medicine cabinet right now may provide aid against Alzheimer’s disease.University of Kentucky scientists found anti-inflammatory drugs hold promise as a target for the mind robbing, incurable disease.They work by...

How you can help Red Cross's need for blood donation

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 17:20:45 GMT

How you can help Red Cross's need for blood donation As we reach the mid-summer point, there's a critical need for donated blood.Anne-Marie Williams is with the United Way of Northwest Indiana and she joined the WGN News to discuss ways to help.More information at Red Cross.org

4 things to know about the rapidly changing housing market

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 17:20:45 GMT

4 things to know about the rapidly changing housing market (The Hill) – Home prices are ticking up amid a sustained housing shortage, making it even more difficult for people to enter the market.  Mortgage rates remain well above recent historic lows, and even with new homes coming on the market soon, according to recent data, experts don't expect first-time buyers to see lower prices right away.Home prices are moving up largely due to inventory constraints, especially at the lower end of the market, where fierce demand leads to bidding wars. The intense competition drives home prices higher — and often above what many would-be homeowners can afford.A For Sale sign hangs in front of a property April 18 in San Francisco. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu)Home prices are heating up againAfter falling during the second half of 2022 amid the Federal Reserve’s bout with inflation, home prices are rising again and nearing their peak, according to a recent report from Black Knight. Black Knight’s data showed five straight months of price gai...

Woman gored by bison at Yellowstone National Park suffers 'significant injuries'

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 17:20:45 GMT

Woman gored by bison at Yellowstone National Park suffers 'significant injuries' (NEXSTAR) - A woman was airlifted to a hospital with "significant injuries" after she was gored by a bison at Yellowstone National Park, officials said Monday. The 47-year-old woman from Phoenix was walking with another person in a field near the Lake Lodge Cabins on Monday morning, a news release from the park explained. The pair told officials they saw two bison and turned to walk away from the animals. Unfortunately, one of the bison charged and gored the woman. She suffered "significant injuries to her chest and abdomen," according to officials, and was airlifted to an Idaho hospital. Yellowstone rangers say they haven't yet determined how close the woman and her companion were to the bison when it charged, and the incident remains under investigation. Additional details weren't immediately available. Man pleads guilty to disturbing Yellowstone bison calf that later had to be killed by rangers The park warns that between mid-July and mid-August, bison are in mating season and...

Deaths of 4 women in Oregon are linked, person of interest ID'd: DA

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 17:20:45 GMT

Deaths of 4 women in Oregon are linked, person of interest ID'd: DA PORTLAND, Ore. (KOIN) – The deaths of four women in Oregon that were previously said to have been unrelated have now been linked to a person of interest, according to the Multnomah County District Attorney's Office.Working together, investigators from several local law enforcement agencies said they uncovered information that links Kristin Smith, Charity Lynn Perry, Bridget Webster and Ashley Real. Who is Jesse Lee Calhoun? What we know about person of interest in 4 Oregon deaths Through interviews, authorities said they discovered at least one person who connects the four women, however, no charges have been filed in the investigation.Multiple sources at different agencies confirmed to Nexstar's KOIN that the person of interest is Jesse Lee Calhoun, which was first reported by Willamette Week.According to the Department of Corrections, in 2019 Calhoun was charged with three counts of unauthorized use of a vehicle, one count of assaulting a public safety officer and one count of f...

WATCH: Intense videos show 'short-lived' tornado form over part of Puerto Rico

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 17:20:45 GMT

WATCH: Intense videos show 'short-lived' tornado form over part of Puerto Rico AGUADA, Puerto Rico (WFLA) – A "short-lived tornado" formed over Aguada, Puerto Rico, Sunday afternoon, according to the National Weather Service. Residents captured footage of the tornado, which lasted about four minutes. Janely Ivette was inside her car when she captured footage (above) of the wind howling and whipping around during the storm. Large branches can be seen piling up on the roadways. From afar, Amarilys Ruiz took a video of the funnel appearing to stay behind a hilltop. Country star Jason Aldean ends concert early after suffering heat stroke mid-performance Tornadoes are rare in Puerto Rico, the Associated Press reports. Only 24 – including Sunday's – have touched down in the U.S. territory since 1950.“The majority of them don’t even cause any damage,” Emanuel Rodríguez González, a National Weather Service meteorologist, told the AP. “They’re quite weak.”Multiple homes were damaged and a landslide was triggered by the storm, but no i...