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The hiring fair is scheduled for 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Those interested can apply in-person or online, with interviews taking place at the hiring fair.Click here to find a Best Buy store near you. 189
The impact caused the big rig to pin the car against the center divider. The car immediately caught fire after the collision, the CHP reported. 143

The Nissan driver told a CHP dispatcher that he had struck the pedestrian near the start of the offramp, according to a CHP incident log. 137
The go-karts were sold between 0 and 0 at national retails including Orsheln Farm, Shopko, Target, Toys R Us, Wal-Mart and online at Amazon.com and Fingerhut.com.Hauck Fun For Kids has received 639 reports of the steering wheels breaking, detaching or cracking. One case resulted in a laceration to a child's face that required stitches.Consumers are urged to immediately stop using the recalled go-karts and contact Hauck for a new steering wheel.Hauck can be contacted at 877-428-2545 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. ET Monday through Friday or online at www.hauck-toys.com. 597
The monolith, discovered during a late-November helicopter flyover, was found southeast of Moab, about a half a mile from a high-clearance, 4x4 dirt road near the Canyonlands Needles District.On Monday, Colorado-based photographer Ross Bernards told KSTU that he had watched the monolith fall on Friday evening.Bernards said that a group of four people walked up as he and his friends were taking pictures, pushed the monolith over, took it apart and then loaded it onto a wheelbarrow and left.Bernards said the group told him and his friends, "this is why you don't leave trash in the desert," and told his friends to, "Leave no trace."The next morning, Bernards described seeing dozens of vehicles — including many not equipped to handle the rough road conditions — converge upon the area as people trampled through brush all over to find the monolith. Some of them, he recounted, were wandering up the wrong canyons in search of monument.It was in that moment that Bernards said he understood why the group took the monolith down, and he agreed with the move.Read Christensen's full statement below."We removed the Utah Monolith because there are clear precedents for how we share and standardize the use of our public lands, natural wildlife, native plants, fresh water sources, and human impacts upon them. The mystery was the infatuation and we want to use this time to unite people behind the real issues here— we are losing our public lands— things like this don't help.Let's be clear: The dismantling of the Utah Monolith is tragic— and if you think we're proud— we're not. We're disappointed. Furthermore, we were too late. We want to make clear that we support art and artists, but legality and ethics have defined standards-- especially here in the desert— and absolutely so in adventuring. The ethical failures of the artist for the 24" equilateral gouge in the sandstone from the erecting of the Utah Monolith, was not even close to the damage caused by the internet sensationalism and subsequent reaction from the world.This land wasn't physically prepared for the population shift (especially during a pandemic).People arrived by car, by bus, by van, helicopter, planes, trains, motorcycles and E-bikes and there isn't even a parking lot. There aren't bathrooms— and yes, pooping in the desert is a misdemeanor. There was a lot of that. There are no marked trails, no trash cans, and its not a user group area. There are no designated camp sites. Each and every user on public land is supposed to be aware of the importance and relevance of this information and the laws associated with them. Because if you did, anyone going out there and filming the monolith and monetizing it without properly permitting the use of the land— would know that's an offense too."This story was originally published by Lauren Steinbrecher on KSTU in Salt Lake City. 2863
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