L.A. County hospital seeks public's help identifying patient
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 04:25:37 GMT
Authorities with the Los Angeles General Medical Center are asking for the public’s help in identifying a male patient. The approximately 55-year-old man was admitted on May 27 after an unknown incident in the 900 block of North Vignes Street in Los Angeles, not far from the Twin Towers Correctional facility. The patient is described as being around 6 foot 1 inch tall and weighing about 170 pounds with an average build. He has shaved light brown, dirty blond hair and hazel-colored eyes. The unidentified man is seen in a photo released by Los Angeles General Medical Center on May 30, 2023. Anyone with information about this man or who may know his family is asked to contact Cesar Robles, a clinical worker at L.A. General Medical Center’s Department of Social Work at 323-409-6884.Tomas Ayala Pronounced Dead after Fiery Crash on Old Nogales Highway [Sahuarita, AZ]
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 04:25:37 GMT
20-Year-Old Driver Dead and 24-Year-Old Suspect Arrested in Fatal DUI Crash near Quail Crossing BoulevardSAHUARITA, AZ (May 30, 2023) – Early Saturday morning, police were called to a deadly car accident that claimed the life of Tomas Ayala.The incident happened just after 12:00 a.m., May 13th, in the area of Old Nogales Highway, just half-mile north of Quail Crossing Boulevard.According to the authorities, a white Cadillac sedan driven by 20-year-old Ayala and a red Ford F150 pickup truck driven by 24-year-old Camron Ortega were the involved in the collision.Upon investigation, the officers have learned that Ayala was on his way home from work when Ortega collided with him.Furthermore, Ayala’s vehicle was engulfed in flames while he was still inside. He was pronounced dead by the responding authorities.Meanwhile, a witness told police that Ortega had fled the scene by foot. He was later captured and taken to the hospital.Following the crash, Ortega was booked to jail fo...Indigenous groups protest Brazil bill that limits land recognition
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 04:25:37 GMT
By Duarte Mendonca, Julia Vargas Jones and Tara John | CNNIndigenous groups blocked a highway just outside the Brazilian city of Sao Paulo and burned tires in the early hours of Tuesday to protest a draft bill that could hamper efforts for indigenous ancestral lands to gain protected status.Protestors could be seen burning tires, firing arrows and throwing objects at the riot and military police, who arrived at the scene soon after the start of the protest, using water cannons and tear gas to disperse the small crowd.The bill, known as PL 490/2007, strips the environment and indigenous people ministries of some powers, weakening their oversight of environmental protections and the demarcation of indigenous lands.The bill will be up for a vote in Brazil’s lower house in the coming days.Indigenous groups from across the country also planned protests in the capital Brasilia, where President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva is meeting with several other leaders from across South America.While ...Four-bedroom home sells for $1.6 million in Oakland
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 04:25:37 GMT
5162 Parkridge Drive – Google Street ViewThe property located in the 5100 block of Parkridge Drive in Oakland was sold on April 28, 2023 for $1,600,000, or $802 per square foot. The house, built in 1968, has an interior space of 1,996 square feet. The property features four bedrooms, three bathrooms, and a garage. It sits on a 0.3-acre lot.Additional houses that have recently been purchased close by include:In June 2022, a 1,806-square-foot home on Saddle Brook Court in Oakland sold for $1,700,000, a price per square foot of $941. The home has 3 bedrooms and 3 bathrooms.On Parkridge Drive, Oakland, in November 2022, a 2,105-square-foot home was sold for $1,500,000, a price per square foot of $713. The home has 4 bedrooms and 3 bathrooms.A 1,424-square-foot home on the first block of Lexford Place in Oakland sold in August 2022, for $1,755,000, a price per square foot of $1,232. The home has 2 bedrooms and 1 bathrooms.Letters: Taste test | Equal justice? | Finish term | Media slant | Buying votes | Practical classes |
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 04:25:37 GMT
Submit your letter to the editor via this form. Read more Letters to the Editor.Hybrid artichokesfail the taste testRe: “A new breed in artichoke battle” (Page A1, May 28).I am a fifth-generation San Franciscan and grew up eating artichokes. In the last many years, I have wondered why the artichokes are terrible. You can’t scrape the leaves with your teeth so the only edible part is the heart.Thanks for clarifying why. Now the only problem is where to find heirloom artichokes in the Bay Area.Libby TeelOaklandMarin DA abandonsequal justiceRe: “Marin DA’s office reduces charges in Junipero Serra statue vandalism case” (May 26).Kelsey Nelson drove the car used to pull down the statue of abolitionist Hans Heg in Madison, Wisc., one month after the June 2020 killing of George Floyd. He was sentenced to 6 months in jail and ordered to pay for the damaged statue.Compare that to the five people who had their felony vandalism charges reduced to misdemeanors for destro...CDC: Sick workers tied to 40% of restaurant food poisonings
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 04:25:37 GMT
By Jonel Aleccia | Associated PressFood workers who showed up while sick or contagious were linked to about 40% of restaurant food poisoning outbreaks with a known cause between 2017 and 2019, federal health officials said Tuesday.Norovirus and salmonella, germs that can cause severe illness, were the most common cause of 800 outbreaks, which encompassed 875 restaurants and were reported by 25 state and local health departments.Investigators with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention called for better enforcement of “comprehensive food safety policies,” which emphasize basic measures like hand washing and keep sick workers off the job.Although 85% of restaurants said they had policies restricting staff from working while sick, only about 16% of the policies were detailed enough to require workers to notify managers and to stay home if they had any of the five key symptoms — including vomiting, diarrhea, and sore throat with fever.About 44% of managers told the C...Who will replace Bob Myers as Warriors general manager? Lacob dropped some hints
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 04:25:37 GMT
SAN FRANCISCO — Blown up photos of Bob Myers holding the 2022 championship trophy were projected over the wall-to-wall podium room screen. Front office folk from majority owner Joe Lacob and his two sons, Kirk and Kent, to COO Brandon Schneider to assistant coaches and video coordinators filed in to watch Myers speak.Myers teared up as he recalled his childhood dream fulfilled of working for the team he grew up idolizing and broke out in a smile as Lacob recalled the 20 phone calls he’d make to his GM every day.Myers’ official announcement that he’d step down from his GM duties with the Warriors felt like a retirement party without the cake. But not much time could be spent celebrating the past with a crucial offseason afoot. The pressing question: Who will replace Myers?Lacob said he would “work Bob for every last day until June 30th” when his contract officially expires — Myers asserted he would only be operating in a supporting role on the upco...California lawmakers urge transit bailout, pushing back on Newsom’s proposed budget cut
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 04:25:37 GMT
California lawmakers Tuesday pushed back on Gov. Gavin Newsom’s proposed budget for trimming transit funding and declining to bail out transit agencies like BART, which are threatening deep service cutbacks as they struggle to rebound from a pandemic plummet in ridership.The lawmakers, led by state Sen. Scott Wiener, a Democrat from San Francisco, said the transit agencies’ money woes aren’t their fault but stemmed from from the COVID-19 pandemic lockdowns. Without a bailout, they said, service cuts will further depress ridership, worsening traffic congestion, air pollution and other woes.“Our transit systems have been telling us for months and months and months that this fiscal cliff is happening, and unfortunately the governor’s budget had zero dollars in it to address these operational shortfalls — zero!” Wiener told reporters Tuesday in Sacramento. “Instead, the governor’s proposal slashes $2 billion in transit infrastructure...Letters: Profit over pictures | Landlord favored | Step up | Poor leaders | Fossil fuels | Climate change
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 04:25:37 GMT
Submit your letter to the editor via this form. Read more Letters to the Editor.SJSU picks profitover family memoriesIt’s sad to see San Jose State University prioritizing profit at its 2023 graduations.Proud parents of graduating seniors were not allowed to attend graduation if their camera lens was more than two inches long. Security personnel said cameras with long lenses weren’t allowed because the university hired its own photographers and students would need to purchase its pictures rather than taking their own family photos with long lenses.It’s sad when university profit is more important than family memories.Ralph NicholsSan JoseCity officials favoredlandlord over tenantsRe: “‘It was inappropriate all the way around’” (Page B1, May 25).It’s hard to believe elected San Mateo officials could be so wrong about dangerous living conditions and a City Council could fail to back up city staff’s very reasonable enforcement of th...Ice Age mastodon tooth recovered in Santa Cruz County, museum officials say
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 04:25:37 GMT
SANTA CRUZ, Calif. (KRON) -- A mastodon mystery has been solved in Santa Cruz County. On Tuesday, a beach jogger turned in a giant mastodon tooth dating back to the Ice Ages, officials with the Santa Cruz Museum of Natural History said.The one-foot-long tooth first surfaced in the sand at Rio Del Mar beach near Aptos Creek on Friday. A curious beach-goer photographed the strange object, left it on the beach, and uploaded the photographs on Facebook asking what it was. "I practically hit the floor. It was a mastodon tooth, right in the same area where we know mastodons lived in Santa Cruz County," said Wayne Thompson, a paleontology collections advisor for the museum.Paleontologists and volunteers spent the weekend digging through sand trying to re-locate the tooth. But an unknown person had already carried it home.Jennifer Schuh took photographs of a giant tooth on May 26, 2023, at Rio Del Mar beach. (Image courtesy Jennifer Schuh)Thompson contacted KRON4 for help to get the word ou...Latest news
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