2 decades later, smoking consequences to be posted at tobacco retailers

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 07:04:39 GMT

2 decades later, smoking consequences to be posted at tobacco retailers DENVER (KDVR) — New signage could be coming to your local gas station and convenience stores, and it would be posted near the cigarette counter.While the U.S. has made great progress in reducing smoking, 11.5% of adults, or 28.3 million, still smoke cigarettes.So why now?This all stems back from a lawsuit filed by the Clinton administration back in 1999.The initial result was a 2006 federal court ruling that said the major cigarette companies had violated federal anti-racketeering laws by what the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids calls “decades of deception and lies about the hazards of their products.” Thornton mayor granted permanent protection order Under this court order, tobacco companies were ordered to post signs highlighting the deadly consequences of smoking at 220,000 retail stores across the U.S.However, FOX31 was told the tobacco companies put all their resources into appeals. Over the course of 16 years, they have fought this requirement with four different appeals and...

Wesleyan University joins other schools in nixing legacy admissions after Supreme Court’s affirmative action ruling

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 07:04:39 GMT

Wesleyan University joins other schools in nixing legacy admissions after Supreme Court’s affirmative action ruling (CNN) — Wesleyan University will stop giving preferential treatment to applicants who are the children of alumni – joining a growing list of schools to end legacy admissions after the Supreme Court’s ruling on affirmative action.“We will still value the ongoing relationships that come from multi-generational Wesleyan attendance, but there will be no ‘bump’ in the selection process,” Wesleyan University President Michael Roth said in a statement Wednesday.Family members of alumni will be admitted based on their own merits, he said.Roth said legacy status has only played a “negligible role” in the admissions process for years. “Nevertheless, in the wake of the recent Supreme Court decision regarding affirmative action, we believe it important to formally end admission preference for ‘legacy applicants,’” he said.Last month, the Supreme Court said colleges and universities can no longer take race into consideration as a specific basis for granting admissio...

Double-lottery mania: Tonight’s Powerball drawing will be for $1 billion as the Mega Millions jackpot soars to $720 million

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 07:04:39 GMT

Double-lottery mania: Tonight’s Powerball drawing will be for $1 billion as the Mega Millions jackpot soars to $720 million (CNN) — Start saying goodbye to your coworkers, because you might soon retire with a lottery ticket worth $1 billion.OK, probably not. But Wednesday night’s billion-dollar Powerball drawing – combined with a Mega Millions jackpot that keeps growing – means some lucky winners could become millionaires even if they don’t hit the jackpot.No one hit all six numbers in Tuesday night’s Mega Millions jackpot drawing: 19, 22, 31, 37, 54 with a mega ball of 18.That means the jackpot for Friday’s Mega Millions drawing is worth an estimated $720 million, with a cash value of $369.6 million.If you can’t wait until Friday to buy 264 Ferrari LaFerraris (or whichever supercar you prefer), the drawing for Wednesday night’s $1 billion Powerball jackpot drawing will happen at 10:59 p.m. ET.The colossal jackpot is the seventh largest in US lottery history and the third largest Powerball jackpot. One insanely lucky winner scored the record-high $2....

Driver killed, another seriously injured after head-on collision in southern New Hampshire

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 07:04:39 GMT

Driver killed, another seriously injured after head-on collision in southern New Hampshire Authorities say one driver was killed and another was left with life-threatening injuries after both their vehicles collided in Pelham, New Hampshire, early Wednesday morning.Police say it was around 5:50 a.m. when both officers and the Pelham Fire Department were called to the area of Bridge Street, near Hobbs Road for a report of an accident.Authorities went on to find two vehicles there with significant damage to their front-ends and one of them on fire.According to the police department, both operators were unconscious and still in their vehicles when emergency crews arrived.“Good Samaritans stopped on scene with fire extinguishers and assisted officers with knocking down the fire until the fire department arrived,” Pelham PD officials stated in a news release. “Both operators were transported to Massachusetts Hospitals.”Police said that despite life-saving measures being taken, one of the drivers died following the crash, while the other had life-threate...

Raising minimum wage benefits health of poor mothers and their babies, study finds

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 07:04:39 GMT

Raising minimum wage benefits health of poor mothers and their babies, study finds Isabel Webb Carey | (TNS) Bloomberg NewsRaising the hourly minimum wage holds unexpected benefits for low-income pregnant women and their children, with increases as small as $1 helping to fend off events linked to poor health, researchers found.Pregnant women in U.S. states that increased the minimum wage were less likely to encounter high-stress incidents — like being unable to pay bills — in the year before delivery, according to research published Tuesday in the JAMA Network Open medical journal. Other disruptive occurrences linked to poor maternal health, such the incarceration of a partner, were also less likely, according to the study of nearly 200,000 women across 39 states who gave birth between January 2004 and December 2015.U.S. rates of pregnancy-related death more than doubled in the last 20 years, especially among minorities, according to a separate study published this month in JAMA that found Black women are more than twice as likely to die from pregnancy-related cau...

Study: Extreme heat increases summer health care costs by $1 billion in ‘ominous trajectory’

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 07:04:39 GMT

Study: Extreme heat increases summer health care costs by $1 billion in ‘ominous trajectory’ Hunter Boyce | (TNS) The Atlanta Journal-ConstitutionA new study from Virginia Commonwealth University published by the Center for American Progress has reported that the heat wave running rampant across the U.S. is significantly inflating health care costs. The authors of the study — an interdisciplinary group of faculty, staff and students from the university — estimated that heat events each summer are responsible for nearly 235,000 emergency department visits and over 56,000 hospital admissions for heat-related or heat-adjacent illnesses. In total, this is believed to add approximately $1 billion in health care costs across the country each summer.To combat the hazardous effects of summer heat waves on U.S. health care, the study made a series of policy recommendations, including the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions and the raising of public awareness about the risks of extreme heat.“The growing threat of extreme heat requires all levels of government and the private sector...

Firms with flex-work policies are hiring faster than those fully in office

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 07:04:39 GMT

Firms with flex-work policies are hiring faster than those fully in office Mia Gindis | (TNS) Bloomberg NewsCompanies with flexible in-office policies are hiring faster than those that have fully returned to pre-pandemic attendance rules. But landing a flexible job still comes with challenges.New research from Scoop Technologies Inc., which advises organizations on how to coordinate hybrid staffing, compared headcount growth at roughly 3,600 fully-flexible, hybrid and entirely in-office companies. It found that flexible outfits — those with hybrid, fully-remote or electively-remote staffs — added headcount at more than two times the rate of fully in-office counterparts during the March-through-May period.“Companies grow faster when they offer flexibility because people are more excited to join,” said Rob Sadow, co-founder and chief executive officer of Scoop. Prospective employees rank flexibility second only to compensation when it comes to workplace satisfaction, meaning that consistent headcount growth might be explained in part by talent flocking to fl...

Source: Patriots hosting RB Leonard Fournette for free-agent workout

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 07:04:39 GMT

Source: Patriots hosting RB Leonard Fournette for free-agent workout The Patriots are hosting free-agent running back Leonoard Fournette for a workout Wednesday, a source told the Herald’s Doug Kyed.Related ArticlesNew England Patriots | Patriots training camp countdown No. 7: Can Mac Jones return to form? New England Patriots | Doug Kyed joins Boston Herald’s Patriots coverage New England Patriots | DeAndre Hopkins picks Titans over Patriots, so what’s next in New England? New England Patriots | Patriots reportedly sign defensive captain to 2-year contract extension New England Patriots | Source: Patriots, WR DeVante Parker agree to reworked 3-year deal Fournette started nine of 16 games last season for the Buccaneers, rushing for 668 yards and three touchdowns. The six-year veteran previously visited New England as a free agent in March 2022. He left Foxboro without a deal and eventually re-signed with Tampa Bay.Over the past two seasons, Fournette rus...

Boston City Councilor Kendra Lara pleads not guilty to charges from June crash

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 07:04:39 GMT

Boston City Councilor Kendra Lara pleads not guilty to charges from June crash Boston City Councilor Kendra Lara pleaded not guilty Wednesday to traffic charges stemming from a June crash that left her son injured, a home in Jamaica Plain wrecked, and the homeowner accusing the elected official of not caring about the damage she caused.Lara appeared in court Wednesday where an assistant clerk magistrate found enough evidence to move forward with an arraignment later in the day on six charges.Her lawyer, Attorney Carl Williams, entered a not-guilty plea on her behalf after police said she was speeding down Centre Street, crashed into a house, and endangered her son by not putting him in a car seat.Boston City Councilor Kendra Lara ,with her attorney Carl Williams, is arraigned in West Roxbury District Court in West Roxbury. Staff Photo by Nancy Lane/Boston Herald (Wednesday,July 19, 2023).Lara said she is “committed to seeing” the legal process through.“I have faith and trust in the court process and I will continue to go through it as is required of me,” Lara ...

Powerful storm sweeps Croatia and Slovenia after days of heat, killing at least 3 people

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 07:04:39 GMT

Powerful storm sweeps Croatia and Slovenia after days of heat, killing at least 3 people ZAGREB, Croatia (AP) — A powerful storm with strong winds and heavy rain hit Croatia and Slovenia on Wednesday, killing at least three people and injuring several others, police and local media outlets said. The storm was the second in two days to sweep over the two countries following a string of extremely hot and dry days. Elsewhere in Europe, a heat wave caused wildfires and public health warnings. Two men died in Croatia’s capital, Zagreb, after they were hit by falling trees, Croatian police said. A 50-year-old man was struck while outside in the street, and a 48-year-old man was in his car, a police statement said.Earlier, emergency doctor Ljupka Hitrova told the official Hina news agency that the two victims had multiple head injuries. Elsewhere in Zagreb, a 36-year-old man was severely injured when a construction crane collapsed, the police statement said. The storm suddenly darkened the sky and brought blinding rain, flash floods and winds across Zagreb starting at ab...