The pandemic disrupted their freshman year. It may also have prepared the Class of 2023 for the job market.
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 21:54:12 GMT
Adonis Brooks is about to graduate from Muhlenberg College, and he has a job lined up. A dual-major in psychology and business, the Brooklyn, New York, native will be going home to New York City to work for a consulting firm.“I have a job, I’ve accepted the offer, which is great,” said Brooks, who has secured a position with Huron Consulting Group’s office in Manhattan. “But while I was looking for the job, I was just super stressed with interviews and stuff like that. Overall, I can’t really complain about the job hunt, it was just a lot of work.”For college seniors over the years, Brooks’ story is a familiar one. But for the Class of 2023 the road to graduation day and the beginning of a career was one that included some unusual obstacles.Midway through the first year, in the spring of 2020, the COVID pandemic hit, forcing a mass exodus away from campuses to virtual classes back home, then back to campus again with almost a whole year of the college experience wiped away.Then ther...As Earth Day nears, these books for young readers show natural treasures and ways to protect them — every day
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 21:54:12 GMT
Caroline Luzzatto | Virginian-Pilot CorrespondentThe theme for this year’s Earth Day is “Invest in Our Planet” — an effort to encourage earthlings to preserve the planetary treasures we have and to look for ways to make the world a better, greener, healthier place. Young readers seeking ways to invest in the world they’ll inherit will find a great wealth of books about plants, animals, water and other resources.Here are just a few worth adding to your Earth Day (and everyday) bookshelf. (Earth Day, by the way, is April 22.)___Young people looking for a thoughtful, user-friendly guide to how and why to recycle will appreciate “Can I Recycle This?” by Jennie Romer. (Ages 4 through 8. Viking. $18.99.)Filled with sketchbook-like illustrations of grinning cans and bottles by Christie Young, this approachable book explains how recycling works and why some items can’t be recycled.But it also aims higher, looking ahead to “a future where all packaging is reusable or refillable, and companie...Bruins notebook: David Krejci slowly working his way back to form
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 21:54:12 GMT
Coach Jim Montgomery said Tuesday morning that David Krejci will not play in the final two games of the regular season, meaning the veteran centerman will miss the last six games of the season with a nagging lower body injury.The good news is Krejci skated prior to the B’s morning skate and Montgomery is hopeful he’ll be ready for the start of the playoffs.“Today was his best day, so that has us optimistic about where he’s going to be Game One,” said Montgomery.It is not yet known whether the B’s will start on Monday or Tuesday against an opponent that’s yet to be determined.The Krejci injury does deprive the B’s of giving the forward group one final test run with all the expected pieces in place. We’ve yet to see the presumed third line of Taylor Hall (who returned after a month-plus absence last Saturday), Charlie Coyle and Tyler Bertuzzi. With Krejci out, Pavel Zacha has been centering the second line with Bertuzzi and David Pastrnak, but...Supervisors pass 'no confidence' vote against Nathan Fletcher
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 21:54:12 GMT
SAN DIEGO — The San Diego County Board of Supervisors passed a vote of "no confidence" against Nathan Fletcher in a move to pressure him to resign from his position immediately.The vote was held during an emergency special meeting Tuesday morning at the County Administration Center.The resolution passed unanimously with Supervisors Joel Anderson, Jim Desmond, Terra Lawson-Remer and Nora Vargas voting in favor. Fletcher was not present at the meeting.The board does not have the power to outright remove Fletcher from office, so the vote is essentially a move to put pressure on him to resign immediately, instead of the May 15 date he had previously announced.The full letter requesting the vote of no confidence can be viewed here.Fletcher has been accused of sexual assault and harassment in a lawsuit by a former Metropolitan Transit System employee.“Because Supervisor Fletcher is not here, not available to respond to questions and concerns by the public and media about his actions,” Var...Union for RCMP 911 operators calls for recruitment plan to address staff shortages
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 21:54:12 GMT
OTTAWA — The union that represents the RCMP’s emergency dispatchers and operators is calling on the force to come up with a recruitment plan to fix worsening staff shortages.CUPE Local 104 president Kathleen Hippern said hundreds of people are off on long-term sick leave and knows of many more who are looking for an exit. “We’re so understaffed,” she said in an interview Tuesday. When someone dials 911 and asks for police, Hippern said their members take the call and gather the information officers need to know before heading to a scene. “Police are not moving until one of us answers that call.”Hippern said that few centres are fully staffed, specifying that in Nova Scotia, staffing is only at about 50 per cent. She said morale is “abysmal” and she believes the lack of staff is affecting public safety by leaving callers sometimes waiting for minutes before someone is able to answer. “I’m terrified for any of my family membe...Italy declares state of emergency as migrant numbers surge
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 21:54:12 GMT
ROME (AP) — Italy’s right-wing government on Tuesday declared a six-month national state of emergency to help it cope with a surge in migrants arriving on the country’s southern shores, Italian state TV said.Premier Giorgia Meloni and her Cabinet approved imposing the emergency status to deal with the migrant influx, state TV said, adding that a special commissioner was expected to be named.Initial funding of 5 million euros (nearly $5.5 million) was also approved as part of the measure.During the COVID-19 pandemic Italy’s governing coalitions also imposed a state of emergency, enabling the Cabinet to mandate many coping measures by decree, temporarily bypassing the usually long parliamentary process for funding and regulations.“Let’s be clear, this doesn’t resolve the problem, whose solution is tied to a mindful and responsible intervention of the European Union,” Civil Protection and Sea Policies Minister Nello Musumeci was quoted as saying by the Italian news agency A...In Colorado River talks, still no agreement about water cuts
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 21:54:12 GMT
BOULDER CITY, Nev. (AP) — The Biden administration released an environmental analysis Tuesday of competing plans for how seven Western states and tribes reliant on the dwindling water supply from the Colorado River should cut their use but declined to publicly take a side on the best option.On one side is California and some tribes along the river that want to protect their high-priority rights to the river’s water, which they use for drinking and farming. On the other side are the other six states — Colorado, Nevada, Arizona, Utah, Wyoming and New Mexico — who say it’s time to come up with an approach that more fairly shares the river. The Interior Department did not say how states should get to deeper water cuts, but defended its authority to make sure basic needs such as drinking water and hydropower generated from the river are met — even if it means setting aside the priority system.“Failure is not an option,” Interior Deputy Secretary Tommy Beaudreau told The...Ex-firefighter gets prison for Jan. 6 extinguisher attack
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 21:54:12 GMT
A retired firefighter who threw a fire extinguisher at police officers during the U.S. Capitol riot was sentenced on Tuesday to more than four years in prison.Robert Sanford struck two police officers in the head with the fire extinguisher that he threw as he stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, with a mob of Donald Trump supporters. He also threw an orange traffic cone at a Capitol police sergeant.“Sanford also hurled obscenities and insults at the law enforcement officers on the Lower West Terrace, calling them ‘traitors,’” a prosecutor, Janani Iyengar, wrote in a court filing.One of the officers struck by the fire extinguisher had a bump and swelling on his head; the other had a headache and went to a hospital for a medical exam, prosecutors said. U.S. District Judge Paul Friedman sentenced Sanford to four years and four months in prison followed by three years of supervised release, according to an online court record. Federal prosecutors had recommended a prison sentence of fiv...Sheriff Mark Lamb says he’s running for US Senate in Arizona
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 21:54:12 GMT
PHOENIX (AP) — Pinal County Sheriff Mark Lamb said Tuesday he’s running for the U.S. Senate in Arizona, becoming the first Republican to jump into a high-profile race for the seat now held by independent Sen. Kyrsten Sinema.Lamb, who has built a profile in Arizona and beyond as a staunch supporter of former President Donald Trump and an advocate for cracking down on illegal immigration and drug smuggling, pledged in a video announcing his candidacy to take on drug cartels, calling for the U.S. military to “wipe them out just like we did to ISIS.”The Arizona race is a top target for Republicans looking to take control of the Senate, which Democrats control 51-49, including Sinema and two other independents who generally vote with Democrats. The 2024 Senate map heavily favors the GOP, with Democratic-held seats up for grabs in three states Trump won.Sinema, who left the Democratic Party in December after her relationship with many members of the party ruptured, is raising money ...Louisville shooter targeted bank co-workers, police say
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 21:54:12 GMT
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — The bank employee who opened fire at his Louisville workplace targeted people he knew with a rifle that was bought legally a week earlier, police said Tuesday.Louisville Metro Police Department Chief Jacquelyn Gwinn-Villaroel said at a news conference that bank employee Connor Sturgeon, 25, bought the AR-15 assault-style rifle on April 4 at a local dealership. Armed with the rifle, Sturgeon killed five people — including a close friend of Kentucky’s governor — while livestreaming the attack Monday before he was killed by police, authorities said. Another eight people were wounded.“We do know this was targeted. He knew those individuals, of course, because he worked there,” Gwinn-Villaroel said, but didn’t give an indication of a motive behind the shooting. Officers’ body camera video will be released Tuesday afternoon, the chief said.Gwinn-Villaroel praised her officers’ response as they “unflinchingly” engaged the shooter at Old National Ban...Latest news
- 17-year-old killed during party at Kansas City short-term rental
- Military confirms 4th Marine killed in 5 Freeway crash
- Lockboxes disabled in series of Long Beach commercial burglaries
- NASA touts breakthrough in recycling astronaut pee and sweat
- Explainer: What we know about the document Trump mentions
- Michael Conforto exits SF Giants game with apparent leg injury
- Sharks take offensive-minded center with first pick in NHL Draft
- Thousands more behind bars will get college assistance
- Single-family house sells for $3.3 million in Los Gatos
- Letters: Local control | Hobbled hiring | Do-nothing Congress | Durable laptops | Interfering with wildlife