Outstanding Voices: For Wells Fargo's Alfredo Pedroza, housing comes first From the mayor's office to working at San Francisco's largest bank, Alfredo Pedroza has lived and breathed the city since birth. 06/6/2024 - 3:00 pm | View Link
Most Consumers Showing Interest In 2024 GMC Acadia New to GMC According to consumer response data, the vast majority of handraisers for the 2024 GMC Acadia are new to the GMC brand and General Motors itself. 06/6/2024 - 1:30 pm | View Link
The Destructive Generation — proving to be America’s weakest link Reagan today might have expanded on his theme by declaring that civilization itself is both fragile and can lost by a generation that recklessly spends its inheritance while neither appreciating nor ... 06/6/2024 - 3:35 am | View Link
Navitas’ Gen-3 Fast SiC MOSFETs Accelerate Next-Gen AI Growth & EV Charging The G3F family is optimized for high-speed switching performance, resulting in 40% improvement to hard-switching figures-of-merits (FOMs) compared to competition in CCM TPPFC systems. This will enable ... 06/6/2024 - 1:56 am | View Link
Queer people have shaped America. Why celebrating that fact protects kids LGBTQ+ people have helped define America. Our contributions to the nation's cultural identity are indelible. We cannot be erased. 06/5/2024 - 10:59 pm | View Link
Steve Bannon is going to jail.
US District Judge Carl Nichols—a Trump appointee in Washington, DC—ordered Bannon to start serving a four-month sentence for contempt of Congress by July 1. The ruling comes after the onetime Trump aide’s attempt to appeal his 2022 conviction was rejected by a federal circuit court.
When Becky King’s daughter Beth Papp turned 18, she couldn’t register to vote in her home state of Arizona. Five years later, she still can’t.
Papp is autistic and nonspeaking; when she was in her teenage years, King was advised that placing her daughter under full legal guardianship, a process she applied for when Papp was 17, was the right thing to do.
Gov. Jared Polis this week signed a bill into law that allows students to wear objects of cultural or religious significance during graduation ceremonies.
HB24-1323 prohibits preschools, public K-12 schools and higher education institutions from restricting what students may wear under their graduation attire. However, schools are still allowed to prevent students from wearing an adornment that is likely to disrupt or interfere with a graduation ceremony, according to the bill.
Last year, a Mexican-American student at Grand Valley High School in Parachute was told by officials from the school and Garfield County School District 16 that she couldn’t wear a stole decorated with both the American flag and Mexican flag during her graduation ceremony.
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While the governor said he supported what he called the bill sponsors’ “reinforcement of cultural and religious freedom,” Polis raised concerns about the legislation, which he said mirrored a broader trend this session of bills that included language preventing schools from seeking a waiver from the state Board of Education related to the legislation.
“As someone who believes strongly in innovation and local control in education, I do not feel it is wise to statutorily prohibit alternative approaches that schools may use for accomplishing any piece of legislation’s core objectives,” Polis said in a signing statement addressed to the Colorado General Assembly.
Officials overseeing Denver’s sprawling National Western Center say they have found a development team that can bring a hotel, a parking garage and an equestrian center to the campus that’s been undergoing massive redevelopment since 2019.
Thursday’s announcement marks a tentative step forward for a critical missing piece of the National Western Center landscape.
Hunter Biden, the second son of U. S. President Joe Biden, is currently on trial for charges of lying about his drug use on background check documents when purchasing a handgun in 2018. The President’s son has struggled with addiction for much of his adult life, and went through a particularly intense period after his brother, Beau Biden, died of brain cancer in 2015.
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In 1972, when they were just toddlers, Hunter and Beau survived a tragic car accident that left their mother, President Biden’s first wife Neilia Hunter Biden, and their younger sister Naomi Christina Biden dead.