Severe COVID-19 infections are beginning to abate in many parts of the U.S. even as the death toll mounts, signaling an end to the pandemic's post-holiday surge https://t.co/lbsQ7Js6wm pic.twitter.com/HYK9XcV1KX
— Reuters (@Reuters) January 28, 2021
Doctors see increase in children with severe illness after Covid-19. - @NBCNightlyNews https://t.co/gcK3GAYUDt
— NBC News (@NBCNews) January 28, 2021
China uses anal swabs to test for COVID-19 https://t.co/KdvaBP1uaJ pic.twitter.com/mhYwzP5UnT
— The Hill (@thehill) January 28, 2021
➤BIDEN SIGNS CLIMATE-RELATED ORDERS, SAYS 'CAN'T WAIT ANY LONGER': President Biden signed several executive orders yesterday intended to help combat climate change, saying, "We can’t wait any longer" and calling the threat "existential." Biden presented his approach as being one of job-creation, saying, "When I think of climate change and the answers to it, I think of jobs," stating that his plans would create jobs in the automotive and renewable energy sectors, like solar and wind power, that would offset losses in oil, coal or natural gas jobs.
➤HOMELAND SECURITY DEPT. ISSUES NATIONAL TERRORISM WARNING: The Department of Homeland Security issued a national terrorism bulletin yesterday about a remaining potential for violence after President Biden's inauguration by people motivated by anti-government sentiment. While not citing any specific plots, the bulletin suggested the U.S. Capitol attack may embolden extremists, and believes the heightened threat environment will continue for weeks after the inauguration. A statement that went out with the bulletin said the potential for violence from a, quote, "broad range of ideologically-motivated actors."
➤PROUD BOYS LEADER WAS REPORTEDLY GOVERNMENT INFORMANT: The leader of the Proud Boys, Henry "Enrique" Tarrio, was a government informant who worked undercover and cooperated with investigators after he was accused of fraud in 2012, Reuters first reported Wednesday, with the information found in court documents. Tarrio denied to Reuters ever cooperating with authorities. The Proud Boys, a far-right extremist group, was a major agitator during the Capitol riot, according to AP, however Tarrio was arrested in Washington shortly before the attack, accused of vandalizing a Black Lives Matter banner at a historic Black church during an earlier protest in D.C.
➤S-F BOARD REMOVES NAMES OF LINCOLN, WASHINGTON, JEFFERSON, OTHERS FROM SCHOOLS: The San Francisco Board of Education decided in a 6-1 vote Tuesday night to remove the names of former Presidents George Washington, Abraham Lincoln and Thomas Jefferson and other prominent figures from public schools in the city. Others whose names will be removed from a total of 44 San Francisco schools in the controversial decision include Paul Revere, "Star Spangled Banner" composer Francis Scott Key, naturalist John Muir, 18th century Spanish priest Junipero Serra, and current Democratic Senator Dianne Feinstein of California, who was a former mayor of San Francisco. A committee was created in 2018 to lead the renaming process, charged with identifying schools named for people who owned slaves or had connections to slavery, colonization or exploitation, anyone who oppressed women, children, queer or transgender people, anyone connected to human rights or environmental abuses, or anyone who espoused racist or white supremacist beliefs. Washington and Jefferson owned slaves, and the criticisms of Lincoln were related to Native Americans, including construction of the transcontinental railroad, which affected their lands, and his refusal to commute the sentences of 39 Native Americans sentenced to hanging. Feinstein was included because when she was mayor in 1984, she replaced a vandalized Confederate flag that was part of a flag display in front of City Hall. Seeyew Mo, executive director of Families for San Francisco, which has been critical of the renaming effort, called the process "top-down" in which a small group of people made the decisions without consulting experts and the wider school community. He also said, "We would like to have historical experts to provide historical context as we are evaluating people from the past with today’s sensibilities."
Hollywood has lost a star: Legendary actress, Cloris Leachman, has died at the age of 94. 💔 (📷: Getty) pic.twitter.com/pz3xf3iMnj
— E! News (@enews) January 28, 2021
Chad Wheeler |
🏈TEXANS HIRE CULLEY AS HEAD COACH: The Houston Texans have hired David Culley as their new head coach, according to media reports Wednesday. The 65-year-old Culley spent the past two seasons with the Baltimore Ravens as assistant head coach. This will be his first job as head coach.
⚾METS TRADE MATZ TO BLUE JAYS: The New York Mets traded pitcher Steven Matz to the Toronto Blue Jays yesterday, getting three prospects in return, all of them pitchers. Matz struggled in the coronavirus-shortened season last year, going 0-5 with a 9.68 ERA.
🏈NFL'S JASON WITTEN RETIRING AFTER 17 SEASONS: Jason Witten is retiring after 17 seasons in the NFL, ending a career in which he played more games than any other tight end in league history, is second only to Hall of Famer Tony Gonzalez in receptions and yards in the position, and is fourth on the all-time receptions list behind Jerry Rice, Larry Fitzgerald and Gonzalez. The 38-year-old played 16 seasons with the Dallas Cowboys, before spending 2020 with the Las Vegas Raiders. He plans to sign a one-day contract with the Cowboys and retire as a member of the team. Witten first retired after the 2017 season and spent 2018 as a Monday Night Football analyst, but returned to the Cowboys in 2019. Witten told ESPN yesterday, "As I hang it up, I walk away knowing that for 17 seasons I gave it my absolute all."
"His whole life was a home run." Presidents and everyday fans pay respects to Hank Aaron, the baseball legend who was laid to rest at Atlanta's South-View Cemetery. But not before the hearse rolled by the site of the former stadium where he hit No. 715. https://t.co/nU3h8R5cHu
— The Associated Press (@AP) January 28, 2021
⚾FUNERAL HELD FOR HANK AARON: The funeral service was held yesterday for baseball Hall of Fame legend Hank Aaron, who died last Friday at age 86, with former Presidents Bill Clinton attending and former President Jimmy Carter sending a videotaped message. Both had been friends of Aaron. Only some 50 people attended the service at Atlanta's Friendship Baptist Church because of Covid-19 restrictions. After the funeral, the hearse carrying Aaron's coffin detoured to the former site of Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium, where Aaron broke Babe Ruth's career home run record in April 1974. The stadium no longer exists, but the outer retaining wall is still there, as well as a display that marks the location where the home run cleared the left-field fence. Fans have been leaving flowers, notes and baseball memorabilia since Aaron's death.
➤INAUGURATION POET GORMAN TO READ POEM AT SUPER BOWL: Amanda Gorman's time in the spotlight after reciting her poem, "The Hill We Climb," at President Biden's inauguration last week to acclaim is continuing, with news that she will read a poem before the Super Bowl. The NFL has chosen three people who have served during the pandemic as honorary captains for the game, and the 22-year-old Gorman will read her original poem about their impact that will be televised and shown inside Tampa's Raymond James Stadium. The honorary captains are educator Trimaine Davis, nurse manager Suzie Dorner and Marine veteran James Martin. They will take part in the coin toss.
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