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JERSEY CITY, NJ — A detective with 15 years experience as a cop was identified as the Jersey City, New Jersey police officer killed in a shootout that left six people dead on Tuesday, officials said.Joseph Seals was fatally shot on Garfield Avenue, officials said. He worked with the city's Cease Fire Unit. The officer was the leading cop in removing guns from city streets, Jersey City Police Chief Michael Kelly said."Dozens and dozens of handguns, he is responsible for removing from the street," Kelly said.Seals was promoted to detective in the last few years, Kelly said. Before that, he worked in the South District, which has a high volume of crimes."Joe was somebody who was involved in city," Mayor Steven Fulop said. "Officers in other precincts knew who he was because he was a good cop."The officer was killed toward the start of an hours-long shootout.Around 12:30 p.m., officers rushed to reports of shots fired, officials said. Police were immediately engaged by high power rifle fire.Seals was shot at a second scene at about that same time.He was married and had five children. Seals is the 35th police officer from Jersey City to die in the line of duty.Gov. Phil Murphy praised Seals for his service."He gave his life in the line of duty and in the name of service to his community," he said. "Our sadness comes with an immense debt of gratitude for his service and sacrifice."Two other officers were injured. They've since been released from the hospital. One of those officers was identified as Ray Sanchez.Jersey City Councilman Jermaine Robinson expressed his condolences for the police department."As regular citizens, we get to run away from the crime," he said. "But as police officers, they run toward the crime and they put their lives on the line every single day."This article was written by Aliza Chasan for 1853
It's official: Marvel's Black Widow has a movie -- and now she has a past, too.A trailer for "Black Widow," the long awaited feature film about the mysterious heroine of the Marvel movie universe, premiered Monday -- and it is about time. 250

Late last Saturday night, Ethan Crispo had just left a friend's birthday party in Birmingham, Alabama, and walked into a Waffle House around midnight to grab a bite.Crispo told CNN only a single employee was working in the restaurant.He described the cook's face, as "awash in bewilderment," at finding he was by himself managing the night shift.More than 30 people were there eating, and there was just one man left to "fend off the incoming crowd of hungry, heavily imbibed customers," Crispo said.He became resigned to going home on an empty stomach.But a customer finished his meal, asked for an apron and stepped behind the counter to wash dishes."It was a smooth transition," Crispo, 24, said. "He just busted his butt and helped out."'It was one of my most memorable experiences'Crispo said he asked Ben, the lone associate working, who the man washing dishes was.Turns out he didn't work at the restaurant, nor did he work at a Waffle House anywhere.Another woman, wearing a dress and heels, also stepped up. She walked behind the counter to get a coffee pot."At first I thought it was out of necessity, like she just wanted coffee," Crispo said. But she was enlisting as a second member of the volunteer staff.The two worked together in a team, busing tables, stacking cups and washing dishes. Meanwhile, Ben, the actual employee, manned the cash register and cooked at the grill.The man washing dishes occasionally "had to ask Ben where stuff should go," Crispo said, but otherwise it was as though though two strangers, without even talking to each other, had spontaneously learned to run a restaurant in tandem.Pat Warner, a spokesman for Waffle House, told CNN the store had a miscommunication about the duty roster that night, and it had created "a little gap" in staffing."We're very appreciative and thankful, but we do prefer to have our associates behind the counter," Warner said.He added that Waffle House restaurants tend to have a special sense of community. He recalled a similar time in 2014 when diners volunteered to keep a restaurant running when paid staff couldn't get to work during Atlanta's notorious Snowmageddon storm.But, for Crispo it was the first time, and it'll stick out to him for years to come, as an example of humanity at its best."I've never seen anything like this ever happen, nor will I again, probably," Crispo said. "It was one of my most memorable experiences." 2424
if you want Wheels for your Mac Pro tower, it'll cost you an iPad pic.twitter.com/p2hnZIXoGX— Dan Nguyen (@dancow) December 10, 2019 144
Larry Tesler, the Silicon Valley pioneer who created the now-ubiquitous computer concepts such as “cut,” “copy” and “paste,” has died. He was 74.He made using computers easier for generations as a proponent and pioneer of what he called “modeless editing.” That meant a user wouldn’t have to use a keyboard to switch between modes to write and edit, for example. “The inventor of cut/copy & paste, find & replace, and more was former Xerox researcher Larry Tesler. Your workday is easier thanks to his revolutionary ideas,” Xerox 550
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