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¡¡¡¡The term "money laundering" was never more appropriate than this week, when Dutch police found around 0,000 stuffed inside the drum of a washing machine.A man present in the house during Monday's raid was arrested on suspicion of -- yes, you've guessed it -- money laundering.Authorities were checking for unregistered residents in western Amsterdam when they found the load."The municipal administration revealed that no one lived at the address," the police told CNN in a statement. "When the police did a search through the house they found €350,000 hidden in the washing machine."The police also confiscated several mobile phones, a firearm and a money-counting machine during the raid. The suspect, who is 24 years old, has not been named.The police news release included a picture of bundles of €20 and €50 bills crammed into the washing machine.They said in a statement that the raid was part of an investigation into "housing fraud, money laundering and other [signs] of crime." 997
¡¡¡¡The school buildings in Evanston, Illinois, are still empty. But the district¡¯s recently hired superintendent caused a stir during a public Zoom meeting announcing how the they will decide which students get priority seating when in-person learning resumes.¡°We have to make sure that students, who have been oppressed, that we don¡¯t continue to oppress them, and we give them opportunity,¡± said school superintendent Dr. Devon Horton of the Evanston/Skokie school district in late July.¡°We will be targeting our dependent learners ¨C those are students who are marginalized first,¡± he said.Low-income students, special needs and those dealing with homelessness are just some who will be first in line. There have been angry letters, petitions and even death threats to the superintendent and school board.¡°Understanding that other folks are experiencing more vulnerability and more harm than my family is experiencing,¡± says Anya Tanyavutti, a parent of two and the Evanston district¡¯s school board president. ¡°I'm happy to see those resources go to people who need it more.¡±For the last four years, the Evanston school district has been working on implementing anti-racism resolutions and curricula to address inequity.¡°Taking an anti-racist stance requires some sort of sacrifice,¡± says Dr. Onnie Rogers a professor at Northwestern University¡¯s school of Education and Social Policy. ¡°I think that's really the part of racial equity that our country is still getting used to on the ground.¡±Here in Evanston, the achievement gap does fall along racial lines where Black and Latino students are one-third as likely as white students to meet college readiness benchmarks.The district acknowledges that its plan to allow some students to return before others falls mostly along racial lines. But it is need, they say, not race, that will be the determining factor.¡°If we simply said we're gonna just reopen for whoever wants to come, then the people who are most well-resourced and most well-connected would likely be able to get those seats prior to people who are challenged with homelessness or challenged with getting food on the table,¡± says Tanyavutti.And there has been opposition. Arlington, Virginia, based ¡®Students for Fair Admissions¡¯- a non-profit advocacy group that has mounted legal challenges to affirmative action, has called the district¡¯s plan unconstitutional.¡°If that student has unique special needs then that's fine to take those into consideration,¡± says Edward Blum, president of Students for Fair Admissions. ¡°What is not fine to take into consideration is the skin color or ethnic heritage of students.¡±¡°It has been legally reviewed, and I am confident that we are operating within the bounds of our Constitution,¡± says Tanyavutti.In-person learning is tentatively scheduled to resume in mid-November. And while the district says it will accommodate as many students as possible the priority remains their most vulnerable student population. 2974
¡¡¡¡The USS Midway Museum will host a commemoration event for the 19th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks. The Fire Department of New York Retirees of San Diego, the National City Fire Department, San Diego Fire & Rescue, the Wounded Warrior Project and flight crews from United and American airlines will pay tribute to those who died as a result of that day. 365
¡¡¡¡The U.S. Postal Service has announced its holiday shipping deadlines as we approach a holiday season like none in our lifetime.Delivering cards and gifts through the mail may be more important than ever this year because many people will refrain from visiting loved ones to prevent the spread of the novel coronavirus.The Postal Service says you can you rely on them to deliver your parcels to family and friends, whether they¡¯re overseas, across the country or just on the other side of town.USPS officials recommend the following mailing and shipping deadlines for expected delivery by Christmas Day to domestic addresses and Air/Army Post Office/Fleet Post Office/Diplomatic Post Office addresses:Nov. 6 ¡ª APO/FPO/DPO (all ZIP Codes) USPS Retail Ground serviceDec. 9 ¡ª APO/FPO/DPO (ZIP Code 093 only) Priority Mail and First-Class MailDec. 11 ¡ª APO/FPO/DPO (all other ZIP Codes) Priority Mail and First-Class Mail servicesDec. 15 ¡ª USPS Retail Ground serviceDec. 18 ¡ª APO/FPO/DPO (except ZIP Code 093) USPS Priority Mail Express serviceDec. 18 ¡ª First-Class Mail service (including greeting cards)Dec. 18 ¡ª First-class packages (up to 15.99 ounces)Dec. 19 ¡ª Priority Mail serviceDec. 23 ¡ª Priority Mail Express* serviceUSPS also suggests skipping the trip to your post office and using their online tools to ship your items.The Postal Service anticipates Dec. 14 will be its busiest day online with more than 13 million consumers predicted to visit usps.com for help shipping things. Officials estimate nearly 500,000 consumers will use their Click-N-Ship feature and other online services on that day to order Priority Mail boxes, print shipping labels, purchase postage and even request free next-day package pickup.The Postal Service has offered these tips for a successful holiday mailing and shipping season:Use free Priority Mail Flat Rate boxes. They are available at local Post Offices or online at usps.com/freeboxes.Make it easy with Click-N-Ship. You can create shipping labels and pay for postage online at usps.com/ship.Schedule a free Package Pickup when the carrier delivers your mail. It¡¯s free regardless of the number of packages. Or, pickups can be scheduled at usps.com/pickup.Mail and packages that weigh more than 10 ounces and/or are more than a half-inch thick using stamps as postage cannot be dropped into a collection box or left for a carrier to pick up. Instead, take them to a window clerk at a Post Office. 2448
¡¡¡¡The Twitter account that once belonged to former Republican presidential candidate Herman Cain tweeted Sunday evening that new CDC info indicated that COVID-19 "isn't as deadly" as once thought ¡ª despite the fact that Cain himself died of the virus just weeks ago.Cain died of COVID-19 on July 30 ¡ª four weeks after his office announced that he had been hospitalized in connection with the disease.On Aug. 11, Cain's daughter said in an update on his website that his family and campaign staff would continue to post content on the web and operate under the moniker "The Cain Gang.""He would have wanted us to do this. And that's exactly what we're going to do," Cain's daughter, Dr. Melanie Cain Gallo, wrote on HermanCain.com.In the weeks since the announcement, Cain's Twitter account has actively been sharing news links from largely conservative-leaning news outlets. On Sunday evening, the account tweeted a link to a story about a recent CDC announcement stating that COVID-19 was only listed as the sole cause of death for 6% of those killed by the virus."It looks like the virus is not as deadly as the mainstream media first made it out to be," the "Cain Gang" wrote on Twitter. 1196