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WASHINGTON — The White House has announced a ban on travel to the U.S. from Brazil due to the spread of coronavirus in Latin America’s hardest-hit country.Press secretary Kayleigh McEnany says in a statement Sunday evening that the ban applies to foreign nationals who have been in Brazil in the 14 days before they sought to travel to the United States.McEnany cast it as a move by President Donald Trump “to protect our country.”Trump has already banned travel from the United Kingdom, Europe and China, all of which have been hit hard by the virus. Trump had said last week that he was considering imposing similar restrictions on Brazil.Brazil had reported more than 347,000 COVID-19 cases, second behind the U.S. in the number of infections, according to a Johns Hopkins University count.Brazil also has recorded more than 22,000 deaths, fifth-most in the world. There have been more than 97,000 U.S. deaths. 925
Walk in to Cafe 180 in Englewood, Colorado and you’ll see cookies on display, smiling staff, and a diverse menu. What you won’t see is a single price tag on any of it.“Cafe 180 is a nonprofit donation based restaurant,” Boo Crosby, the manager at Cafe 180 said. “We believe all of our guests who come through our door should be able to be provided a meal regardless of their ability to pay.”About 35 percent of the people who come in to the cafe on any given day are coming in to work for their meal, he said.Some choose to volunteer their time preparing food, cleaning, or completing other tasks. Customers can also choose to donate what they can. It’s the “pay what you can” model.“A lot of people who have never been here before need more of an explanation and that’s fine. We do our best to explain,” Kenzie Burns, a part-time employee at the cafe, said. “Sometimes not being told what to pay scares people so I think being open to the idea of it really helps people participate in our cafe and enjoy it here.”This model opens up the door to those who may not have the money to pay for a healthy meal.“We volunteer for like an hour and then we get food, it helps those who can’t really pay for their meal,” Jeffrey Valdez, one of the volunteers for the cafe, explained. He comes up to the cafe multiple times a week using public transportation. “I can come in, have a good day, start my day off, and then go from there.”“It’s very important because for some of us homeless it sucks, sometimes it’s hard for us to get by on a day to day basis,” Cafe volunteer Amber Priest said. “It actually helps because I can actually have a full meal and actually work.” On the day we talked to her, she was assigned to clean the bathrooms in exchange for her meal.“We’re far from a soup kitchen, we’re a fully operating restaurant,” Crosby explained. “A lot of people care about our community, a lot of people care about making our city a better city.”“Pay what you can” cafes are scattered across the United States. One organization, One World Everybody Eats, has tracked more than 50 independent cafes. However, there’s no way to track the real number since they are all different and no one regulates them.“We’ve actually helped mentor 60 different restaurants around the United States,” Tisha Steele, the Operations Officer at SAME Cafe, said. Steele now trains others how to run their business using this model.SAME Cafe was one of the first cafes to use this business model.“We never put an actual value on anything because we want people to come in and participate how they can,” she said. “We are the longest operating pay what you can model in the United States.”So how do these restaurants make money?“We try to get 65 percent of our revenue from paying customers. The other 35 percent is gonna come from grants. Both private and public grants,” Crosby said.Each cafe works a little bit differently, but they all have the same goal — healthy food accessibility. Recently, SAME Cafe has launched a food truck that mirrors their business model, but the truck can travel to different areas.“Access to food has become an issue, access to healthy food has become a bigger issue,” Crosby said.About 11 percent of households in the United States were food insecure at one point in 2018, according to the USDA.“When you look at how the cost of living is increasing so rapidly across the country but the pay scale isn’t really keeping up with that, one of the first things to go when you’re experiencing hardship is purchasing food,” Steele said.“It helps the people that can’t really pay for their meals, pay,” Valdez said. 3628

UK police have launched a murder investigation after 39 people were found dead in a truck container at an industrial park in Essex, 30 kilometers east of London. One of the victims was in their teens.Authorities believe the truck, which originated in Bulgaria, entered the UK through the Welsh port of Holyhead over the weekend. A regular ferry service connects Holyhead with the Irish capital, Dublin."We are in the process of identifying the victims, however I anticipate that this could be a lengthy process," Chief Superintendent Andrew Mariner said in a statement.They have arrested a 25-year-old Northern Irish truck driver "on suspicion of murder" after finding the bodies early on Wednesday morning, 720
WARNER, Oklahoma — A small town football team is doing big things, pioneering the investment in high-tech helmets for the entire district.“It’s not just a select few, they are valuing every kid in this school,” Josh McElyea, a Warner High School parent said.It’s no secret football is a contact sport. In some cases, the harder the hit, the bigger the play. As the game of football gets more competitive, it has created a growing concern: head injuries that can lead to long-term complications.“Across the state of Oklahoma there is a decline in kids that are playing football,” Sam Fairchild, Warner Public Schools Athletic Director, said. “In this day and time, we face a lot of parents that have the fear of allowing their kids to play for fear of major injury or even death.”But in the small Muskogee County town of Warner, school officials are squashing the stigma of concussions and football with cutting edge technology.“This community realizes we got to do what big people do, even when we are small,” McElyea said. “That's what you do. You got to plan for that even while you are small."The district is taking the steps to enhance player safety for every football player in the district, grades 6 through 12.Inside each maroon and gold Eagles helmet is Riddell's latest innovation in head impact monitoring technology. An "InSite" training tool inside each helmet builds a player's impact profiles. That means for each hit, a piece of data is recorded in real time, which identifies what part of the player's head was hit and how hard. Players stats will then be stored and compared in a national database with players all over the country. Coaches can then learn from the data and teach players to improve technique.“That feedback that we get from this helmet will help me as a coach to make sure that not only am I teaching proper technique, but my players are performing with that proper technique,” Chuck Capps, Warner High School Head Football Coach, said.Not only that, but the censors will also detect a high impact hit while on the field, which then sends a red flag to the coaches immediately. Coaches and medical personnel monitoring the data can then decide to pull the player from the game and determine if they should see a doctor.“We want to remove that… to be a part of that leading edge, to be a part of removing that fear, that word, concussion from the sport itself,” Capps said.The technology is giving parents peace of mind. And as the season approaches, the Warner Eagles are ready to show out, tackles and all.The school district is one of the first in Oklahoma to invest in helmets for all grade levels. It cost the district around ,000 for the program, which is something school officials saved up for over the years. This isn’t the district’s first step in player safety. School officials purchased Riddell SpeedFlex helmets for players back in 2015 before buying the InSite technology this year. 2950
When Dr. James Sulikowski, a professor of marine science at the University of New England, and his team was chumming the waters off the coast of Maine just after dawn July 2, they hoped to attract a porbeagle 221
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