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WATCH BELOW:During the press conference, officials said they still have not uncovered a motive for the bombing.Federal and state investigators are trying to determine who set off a bomb inside a recreational vehicle parked near an AT&T facility, damaging more than 40 businesses and injuring three people. Separately, a law enforcement official told the AP that federal investigators have started examining Warner's digital footprint and financial history. The official could not discuss the case publicly and spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity. On Sunday evening, the FBI Memphis office tweeted that they were seeking info "concerning the owner of the RV." 682
Vice President Joe Biden will once again take the center of the stage in Detroit tonight, surrounded by two candidates who have been harsh critics of Biden's handling of race issues. Where are all of the candidates?The top 20 Democrats based off polling and fundraising were invited to one of two debates, the first taking place last night. Last night's round featured the two top candidates vying for support from the liberal wing of the party - Sens. Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren. To qualify for the debates, candidates had to fulfill one of two criteria: either get 65,000 donors to their campaigns, with at least 200 donors in 20 different states, or obtain at least 1% in three polls recognized as legitimate by the Democratic National Committee.Differences from last month's debateWhile there will be 20 Democrats on the stage -- 10 each night -- one Democrat has since dropped out of the race. Rep. Eric Swalwell of California ended his bid for the presidency earlier this month. His spot on the debate stage has since been filled by Montana Gov. Steve Bullock, who participated in last night's debate.With this debate being aired on CNN, there will be a different set of moderators. Don Lemon, Dana Bash and Jake Tapper will conduct the debate.Unlike last month’s Miami debate, CNN has told the candidates that there will be no “show of hands or one-word, down-the-line questions.”Also different, CNN has threatened to reduce the time of candidates who are constantly interrupting.What is the sameCandidates will be given 60 seconds to answer and 30 seconds for follow ups. The requirements to qualify for the debate also remained the same, and was based off of polling and fundraising criteria.Time, time timeIf last night's debate was any indication, Biden and Harris should get the most talk time. According to a tracker by the Washington Post, Warren and Sanders talked the most, with more than 17 minutes of talk time. Mayor Pete Buttigieg came in third with 14.4 minutes. All other candidates fell between 8.8 and 10.9 minutes. Warren and Sanders have been competing for second in the polling.Biden back as frontrunnerBiden’s lead took a bit of a hit in the days following the last debate thanks to a contentious confrontation from Sen. Kamala Harris. Harris’ emotional rebuke of Biden’s stance on public school busing in the 70s was easily the most memorable moment of the night.It also seemed to have, at least temporarily, cut into Biden’s lead. Polls from CNN and Quinnipiac University had Biden’s polling as low as 22 percent. Harris, for her part, saw her numbers increase to above 10 percent. Biden has seen his polling number return to near 30 percent. Harris, however, has continued to poll above 10 percent, indicating that she perhaps draw some support from some of the other candidates.Biden and Harris are the two center-stage candidates for tonight's debate.But Harris might not be Biden’s biggest concern on Wednesday. Sen. Cory Booker and Biden have been involved in a spat in recent days over criminal justice reform. Booker called Biden “an architect of mass incarceration.” This is over Biden’s support for the 1994 Crime Bill.Here are the candidates: 3192

We didn't take a broad enough view of our responsibility and that was a big mistake, he continued. "It was a big mistake. And I'm sorry. I started Facebook. I run it and I'm responsible for what happens here."During the five-hour hearing, he fielded questions on Facebook's data collection practices, the company's alleged monopoly power and his views on regulating internet companies.But with 44 senators asking questions, an unusually high number, and just five minutes of time allotted for each, there was limited potential for followup questions to and grilling of the CEO.Perhaps the most memorable line of the afternoon came from Sen. John Kennedy, who slammed Facebook for its complicated terms of service agreement."Your user agreement sucks," said Kennedy, a Republican representing Louisiana. "It's not to inform your users about their rights. I'm going to suggest to you that you go back home and rewrite it."Zuckerberg did stumble in answering a couple questions, including how Facebook staff came to the decision not to notify users of the Cambridge Analytica data issue when it first came to light in 2015.On the whole, however, investors appeared to like his performance. Facebook stock ended the day up 4.5%.The appearance marks the first time that Zuckerberg has testified before Congress. Zuckerberg, 33, swapped his usual gray t-shirt and jeans attire for a dark blue suit and light blue tie."It's extraordinary to hold a joint committee hearing. It's even more extraordinary to have a single CEO testify before nearly half the United States Senate," said Sen. John Thune, chairman of the Commerce Committee. "Then again, Facebook is extraordinary."When Thune pressed on why people should trust him now, after years of his promises to do better, Zuckerberg admitted that "we have made a lot of mistakes in running the company.""It's pretty much impossible to start a company in your dorm room and grow it to the scale we are at now without making some mistakes," he said. Now, however, "I would say we are going through a broader philosophical shift in how we run the company."For most of its history, Facebook focused on "building tools," he said. Now, Facebook recognizes the need to "take a more proactive role."The Congressional hearings come nearly a month after news broke that Cambridge Analytica, a data firm with ties to President Donald Trump's campaign, accessed information from as many as 87 million Facebook users without their knowledge.The data scandal wiped away tens of billions of dollars from Facebook's market value, prompted political scrutiny on both sides of the Atlantic and even raised the once unthinkable question of whether Zuckerberg should step down as CEO. It also reignited long simmering concerns about Facebook's impact on the world's privacy, civil discourse and domestic institutions.Zuckerberg will testify again on Wednesday before the House Energy and Commerce Committee.Related: Was your Facebook data shared with Cambridge Analytica? You can now find outWhile Zuckerberg took responsibility for Facebook's shortcomings in preventing abuse of the platform, he pushed back at the notion that Facebook is a monopoly and reiterated that Facebook sees itself as a tech company rather than a media company."I agree that we're responsible for the content, but we don't produce the content," he said.The distinction is more than semantic. It speaks to the responsibility that Facebook has historically felt regarding policing content on its platform -- or, more accurately, the lack thereof.He also defended the company's core business model: Using personal data to target ads."We think offering an ad-supported service is the most aligned with our mission to connect everyone in the world. We want to offer a free service that everyone can afford," he said.However, Zuckerberg said there "will always be a version" of the social network that is free, leaving some room for the possibility of a paid service.Not all senators were convinced by Zuckerberg's assurances, stressing the need for regulation."We've seen the apology tours before," said Sen. Richard Blumenthal, a Democrat from Connecticut. "My reservation about your testimony today is I don't see how you can change your business model unless there are specific rules of the road.... enforced by an outside agency."Zuckerberg, for his part, said he was open to regulation generally, including requiring companies to notify users of data breaches within 72 hours. But he conceded that pushing for more regulation could actually end up benefiting big companies like Facebook, possibly at the expense of the next Facebook."Part of the challenge with regulation, in general, is that when you add more rules that companies need to follow, that's something that a larger company like ours has the resources to do," he said.In the days leading up to the hearings, Facebook released a torrent of product and policy updates to address concerns about data privacy and election meddling. Zuckerberg, once press shy, also launched an apology tour as part of a rare media blitz.Behind the scenes, Zuckerberg and his team did mock hearings over the past week in a conference room at Facebook set up to look like a congressional hearing room. Zuckerberg plans to be contrite in his appearances before lawmakers. He will make the case for Facebook — why it helps people's lives — but be ready to push back when appropriate."He's nervous, but he's really confident," the source said. "He's a smart guy." 5545
What makes COVID-19 different from the prior epidemics SARS (2002- 3), MERS (2012), Ebola (1976) and especially H1N1 -- the 'swine flu' of 2009- 10, which killed 12,500 Americans alone -- is that although maybe fatal, it is potentially far more contagious, senior economist David Shulman wrote in the original forecast. "It is the contagious nature of COVID-19 that triggered the economic shutdowns that have become so disruptive to the global economy. Remember, China is far more integrated into the global economy than it was during the SARS epidemic." 554
UC High administrators have given some exemptions to student-athletes regarding taking PE as the sixth period. But Alanis doesn't fall into the exception, according to her mother.They plan to keep bringing the issue up with district officials. 243
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