Indie artist Caroline Rose is proud of new album’s vulnerability, despite moments of regret

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 13:57:43 GMT

Indie artist Caroline Rose is proud of new album’s vulnerability, despite moments of regret LOS ANGELES (AP) — During a recent performance at the Fonda Theater in Los Angeles, indie musician Caroline Rose disappeared from the stage and emerged moments later atop a table in the back of the room.“We’re going to do a trust fall,” they told the audience, encouraging concertgoers to gather around before plunging backward into the sea of people and letting it carry her back to the stage.The stunt was emblematic of her latest album — admittedly, their most unguarded yet — about a breakup and its aftermath. One to always hide behind humor, Rose said this level of vulnerability was new for her and that she is still processing whether it was even the right choice.“When I’m writing the material, it feels really cathartic. And I’m like, ‘Wow, I made something beautiful from this really dark time.’ But performing the songs has been totally different,” they said of having to recount those dark memories over and over.But despite having some “huge moments of regret,” the singer, songwrite...

Archdiocese of St. Louis to pay $1 million to settle sex abuse lawsuit

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 13:57:43 GMT

Archdiocese of St. Louis to pay $1 million to settle sex abuse lawsuit ST. LOUIS (AP) — The Archdiocese of St. Louis will pay $1 million to settle a lawsuit filed by a man who was sexually abused as a child by a priest who previously spent 12 years in prison for abusing another boy, an attorney for the victim said Friday.The plaintiff was an altar boy at Ascension Catholic Church in Chesterfield, Missouri. The suit alleged he was abused by the Rev. Gary Wolken starting in 1993, when the boy was in fourth grade, and continuing through 1995. The lawsuit said the plaintiff repressed memories until he was an adult. The man’s lawsuit, which did not use his name, was filed in 2018.His attorney, Rebecca Randles, said the settlement was reached this week.“We applaud our client who has been very brave in facing down the Archdiocese of St. Louis in a case that was very hard-fought and difficult from an emotional and legal standpoint,” Randles said.The archdiocese didn’t immediately respond to messages Friday but said in a statement to the St. Louis P...

UConn students getting expelled for vandalism that followed team’s NCAA championship

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 13:57:43 GMT

UConn students getting expelled for vandalism that followed team’s NCAA championship STORRS, Conn. (AP) — Some University of Connecticut students are getting expelled for vandalizing their campus following their basketball team’s April 3 victory in the NCAA championship game, a university spokesperson said Friday.“Although we can’t address individual students’ outcomes, we can say that some reviews have concluded with expulsions,” UConn spokesperson Stephanie Reitz said. She said the investigations are ongoing for other students who were arrested following the vandalism at the Storrs campus, which included smashing windows and damaging a police vehicle.The Huskies’ 76-59 win over San Diego State University in the championship game in Houston secured UConn’s fifth NCAA title in 24 years. Most of the celebrations that followed in Storrs were peaceful, but some students pulled down signs and light poles and smashed windows.The vandalism, which included damaging a campus police cruiser and flipping a van on its side, caused thousands of dollars w...

Reparations campaigns get boost from new philanthropic funding

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 13:57:43 GMT

Reparations campaigns get boost from new philanthropic funding NEW YORK (AP) — The campaign to win reparations for Black Americans plans to bring broader support for smaller nonprofits advancing the cause, with a new philanthropic funding initiative announced Friday at the “Alight Align Arise” national conference in Atlanta.The Decolonizing Wealth Project, an organization dedicated to creating racial equity through education and “radical reparative giving,” is committing $20 million over five years to boost campaigns for reparations across the country, along with a research collaboration with Boston University to map reparation projects.The project’s founder and CEO Edgar Villanueva announced the plans at the Atlanta gathering of advocates, including the writer Ta-Nehisi Coates, journalist Nikole Hannah-Jones and U.S. Rep. Jamaal Bowman, the Democratic congressman whose district represent parts of The Bronx and Westchester County in New York.“The point of all of this for us is to elevate the issue and the opportunity for reparations and t...

Ontario to stop giving out free COVID-19 rapid test kits in pharmacies, grocery stores

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 13:57:43 GMT

Ontario to stop giving out free COVID-19 rapid test kits in pharmacies, grocery stores An Ontario program that distributes free rapid tests for COVID-19 at grocery stores and pharmacies will end after this month.The Ministry of Health wrote in a memo to the retailers recently that with lower rates of COVID-19, high vaccination rates and decreasing demand for tests, the program will wind down as of June 30.The ministry is encouraging grocery stores and pharmacies to place final orders by June 16.However, the ministry says free rapid tests will still be distributed in some “high priority” communities through organizations such as community health centres and Ontario Health Teams until December 31.The ministry says the extended distribution of tests will go toward groups that represent people at the highest risk for severe outcomes of COVID-19.NDP health critic France Gelinas says the tests should continue to be available to people who need them, and there are vulnerable people across the province.RELATED: Health Canada warns of counterfeit COVID-19 rapid ant...

Trump shakes up legal team in documents case after indictment

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 13:57:43 GMT

Trump shakes up legal team in documents case after indictment Former President Trump on Friday announced a significant change in his legal team representing him in the case of whether he mishandled classified documents, one day after he was indicted by the Justice Department.Trump posted on Truth Social that he will be represented by attorney Todd Blanche moving forward, “and a firm to be named later.” Attorneys Jim Trusty and John Rowley will no longer represent Trump in the case, he said.“I want to thank Jim Trusty and John Rowley for their work, but they were up against a very dishonest, corrupt, evil, and ‘sick’ group of people, the likes of which has not been seen before,” Trump wrote. “We will be announcing additional lawyers in the coming days. When will Joe Biden be Indicted for his many crimes against our Nation? MAGA!”Trusty appeared Thursday night on CNN to speak about the case, and he went on NBC’s “Today” show earlier Friday to discuss the indictment.In a joint statement labeled “OUR DECISION” shortly after Trump’s announcement, t...

WATCH LIVE | Sen. Durbin discusses national cancer drug treatment shortage

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 13:57:43 GMT

WATCH LIVE | Sen. Durbin discusses national cancer drug treatment shortage A growing shortage of common cancer treatments is forcing doctors to switch medications and delaying some care, prominent U.S. cancer centers say.The National Comprehensive Cancer Network said Wednesday that nearly all the centers it surveyed late last month were dealing with shortages of carboplatin and cisplatin, a pair of drugs used to treat a range of cancers. Some are no longer able to treat patients receiving carboplatin at the intended dose or schedule. Dr. Kari Wisinski has had to turn to other treatments for some patients or switch the order in which people receive their drug combinations. She said she’s done that “hoping that within three months there will be a better carboplatin supply.”“It’s really difficult as a physician to have these conversations with a family or a patient about not having a medication you’d like to prescribe to them,” she said.Wisinski is a breast cancer specialist with the UW Health Carbone Cancer Center in Madison, Wisconsin, a member of the netwo...

CPD: Boy, 16, shot in Garfield Park

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 13:57:43 GMT

CPD: Boy, 16, shot in Garfield Park CHICAGO -- A 16-year-old boy is in serious condition after he was shot in Garfield Park Friday morning. According to police, the boy was standing outside near the 0-100 block of North Keeler Avenue around 9:31 a.m. when shots were fired. Docs: Logan Square woman found nearly decapitated in duffle bag; boyfriend had cleaning supplies He suffered multiple gunshot wounds throughout the body and was transported to Mount Sinai Hospital where he is listed in critical condition. There is currently no one in custody and police are investigating the incident.

Armed robber steals woman's purse at CVS in Park Ridge

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 13:57:43 GMT

Armed robber steals woman's purse at CVS in Park Ridge PARK RIDGE, Ill. — Police in Park Ridge responded to an armed robbery Thursday night at a CVS Drug Store.The robbery happened around 9:15 p.m. in the parking lot of the store located in the 2600 block of East Dempster. Upon arrival, officers spoke with three victims — two women and a man — who said they were exiting CVS when a man approached them and showed his handgun, which was tucked into his waistband.According to police, the man then took one woman's purse and ran to an awaiting vehicle then fled from the parking lot eastbound on Dempster. Woman found shot in West Side apartment fire dies: officials Police describe the offender as a man wearing a mask and glasses, tan-colored hooded sweatshirt, tan pants and black shoes.The getaway vehicle is described as a tan-colored four-door sedan with tinted windows, police said.Anyone with additional information is asked to call the Park Ridge Police Department at 847-318-5256.

Trump-appointed judge Aileen Cannon assigned to his documents case

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 13:57:43 GMT

Trump-appointed judge Aileen Cannon assigned to his documents case Judge Aileen Cannon, a Trump appointee who took the extraordinary step of appointing a special master in the Mar-a-Lago case, may initially oversee the case, according to reporting from multiple outlets.Cannon’s name appeared on the summons for Donald Trump’s Tuesday appearance, as did Judge Bruce Reinhart, who approved the warrant to search the former president’s Florida home, ABC News first reported Friday.Rulings from Cannon substantially slowed the Department of Justice's (DOJ) investigation into Trump, in one instance barring prosecutors from using the classified documents they seized from the home.She later appointed a special master in the case tasked with assessing whether documents aligned with Trump’s claims that documents might be covered by executive privilege — an argument the special master himself later expressed skepticism over.  Cannon was twice overturned by a higher court, the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals, which both greenlit the DOJ’s us...