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Monday is National French Fry Day, so several restaurants are giving away french fries to help you celebrate!Here is a list of places that are celebrating the holiday:Beef 'O' Brady's: With a purchase, you'll receive a free basket of fries.BurgerFi: If you order in-store a regular-sized French fries, you'll receive double cheeseburgers at half-price on Monday. Starting Tuesday and ending July 17, if you download the BurgerFi app, you'll get free regular-sized fries with any purchase ordered on the app.Burger King: Get the app and you can get large fries for . Carl’s Jr.: If you are a subscriber of Carl's Jr. newsletter, check your inbox because you received an email with a coupon. Purchase a Thickburger on Monday and you'll get free large fries.Checkers: Order any size French fries for . Farmer Boys: Order anything off the menu after 2 p.m. and you'll get fries for . Deal only good on Monday.Fatburger: Order anything or more on Postmates Monday through July 19 and receive a free order of Skinny or Fat Fries.Hardee's: The company emailed you a coupon if you are a newsletter subscriber that gives you free large fries with the purchase of a Thickburger. KFC: The fast-food chain is offering French fries for 30 cents with any purchase. McDonald's: Use the app to receive a free order of medium fries.Rally's: For , you can get a small, medium, or large order of fries. Want them for free? Purchase anything when you sign-up for their Flavorhood program.Smashburger: Order any double burger and get a free side of Smash Fries.Steak 'n Shake: Several of their locations are giving away a small order of fries, but only for a limited time.Taco John's: Find a deal for free small orders of Potato Olés on their app. Wendy's: Order through your phone and you'll receive off an order of large fries.White Castle: Use this coupon and can get a free small French fries in-restaurant, online, or app.If you are not into eating french fries but still want to participate in the holiday, you can enter the contests below to win some very cool prizes to mark the occasion:Heinz and Great American Takeout: Post a photo on Instagram or Twitter of your ketchup art creation using the hashtags #TheGreatAmericanTakeout and #Sweepstakes and you could win ,869! To enter on Instagram, use the tag @thegreatamericantakeout. For Twitter use the tag @TheGATakeout. 50 runners-up will get to use on to-go orders. Idaho Potato Commission: You can win a 0 Visa gift card, an air fryer, or other prizes. To win, you can enter the contest by clicking here. 2582
MILWAUKEE — Eight Sisters at Notre Dame of Elm Grove, a retirement home near Milwaukee, died from COVID-19 in a week despite the home’s best efforts.“The Sisters, were being extra careful in terms of getting their meals in rooms and they can’t congregate together,” Sister Debra Sciano, Provincial Leader of the School Sisters of Notre Dame Central Pacific Province said. “More testing, being tested twice a week for the virus.”Sciano says they are heartbroken to lose these eight women. Combined, they had over half a millennium of service to the community.All educators in their own right, their reach went far beyond the walls of the School Sisters of Notre Dame retirement home.“Every one of our sisters is really important,” Sciano said. “Not only to us, but we feel they have touched thousands of lives we’ll never be aware of.” 842

More than 190,000 ceiling fans sold at Home Depot in the U.S. and Canada are being recalled after receiving reports that blades were detaching from the fan while in use, which the company said could cause injuries.According to the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC), 182,000 of the Hampton Bay 54-inch Mara Indoor/Outdoor fans were sold in the U.S. in stores and online from April through October 2020. Home Depot also sold 8,800 fans in Canada.The CPSC said 47 reports of the blades detaching have caused two people being struck and four accounts of the blades causing property damage. It was not reported if the people hit were injured.The CPSC said the recalled fans come in matte white, matte black, black, and polished nickel finishes. The fans also came with a white color changing integrated LED light and remote control.UPC #Matte White082392519186Matte Black082392519193Black082392599195Polished Nickel082392599188Consumers are asked to immediately stop using the ceiling fans and inspect the ceiling fans using the instructions.The CPSC says if consumers observe "blade movement or uneven gaps between the blades and fan body or movement of the clip during the inspection," to immediately contact the distributor King of Fans for a free replacement ceiling fan. 1286
More than 100 college newsrooms across the country plan to flood social media with editorials emphasizing the importance of student media on Wednesday, as well as calls for alumni donations.It's all part of a campaign called #SaveStudentNewsrooms -- an effort spearheaded by the editors at the Independent Florida Alligator, the student paper at the University of Florida. Editors there said they learned that Southern Methodist University's paper -- The Daily Campus -- would have to re-affiliate with the university due to lack of funding.Lack of funding is an issue that various student publications around the country have been facing, as it puts editorial independence in jeopardy."The whole idea behind the call to action day was to start a conversation about the state of student media in the US," said Melissa Gomez, the editor-in-chief of The Independent Florida Alligator. "Some people who may be removed from the university and or their publication may not realize that student newsrooms don't look like they did 20 years ago. Some of them have folded. Some of them are struggling to survive the next month. Others don't really have a secured future. And we want people to be aware of that."The Independent Florida Alligator is still separate from its university, but Gomez said it has faced other issues, such as a 7% pay cut across the board for its staff and other financial constraints.Gomez and her fellow editors plan to spend Wednesday pushing online content to raise awareness for #SaveStudentNewsrooms and highlighting the editorials of other student-run publications, she said. Some of of these editorials have already been posted on the campaign's website.The Daily Orange, the student-run paper at Syracuse University, is one of the 117 publications that will be participating Wednesday. Last week, the paper published a video of Syracuse's Theta Tau fraternity chapter exhibiting "extremely racist" behavior, after the university said it would not be releasing the video, according to Alexa Díaz, the editor-in-chief of The Daily Orange."I think that was the power of independent journalism as well, is that we were able to do that and able to put that content out there, and we're not telling people to watch it or not watch it," Díaz said. "We just believe in the accessibility of information being a platform where community members can watch these videos and formulate their own opinions accordingly."Along with posting an editorial, Díaz said The Daily Orange will be showing off its newsroom in a Facebook live video and sharing staff photos for Wednesday's event. The paper's staff also plans to urge its alumni to participate."I'm extremely proud of our staff and I think when it comes to the independence factor and being students, everyone likes to say, 'Oh you're the student newspaper,' or, 'Oh you're a student journalist,' but I mean student journalism doesn't really exist, it's just journalism," Díaz said.Even after the unofficial Support Student Journalism Day is over, Gomez and her peers plan to continue raising awareness."We're still going to be advocating for a conversation about the state of student media to happen," Gomez said. "Because we don't want these papers to just disappear and fold or be under the control of their university without editorial independence, because at that point they stop being a resource for their community and they just start being a public relations arm." 3465
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — A Delta Air Lines pilot from Minnesota was charged Friday with operating an aircraft under the influence of alcohol.Tests confirmed that 37-year-old Gabriel Schroeder, of Rosemont, had a blood alcohol level between 0.04% and 0.08% when detectives arrested him on a plane at the Minneapolis airport just as it started boarding for a flight to San Diego on July 20, according to the criminal complaint.The limit set by the Federal Aviation Administration is 0.04%, which is half the legal limit for driving in Minnesota.Schroder's first court date is Nov. 27. Court records don't list an attorney who could comment for him.According to the complaint, Schroeder told detectives that he'd had one beer and three vodka drinks the night before. He also admitted discarding an unopened vodka bottle that investigators found in an airport bathroom after he saw that security screening for crews had been stepped up.Delta removed Schroder from flying after his arrest. 986
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