Ingested Articles

Nashville mayor: Oracle to bring 8500 jobs, $1.2B investment

Officials in Tennessee say the Texas-based Oracle Corporation plans to bring 8,500 jobs and a $1.2 billion investment to Nashville over coming years. The office of Nashville Mayor John Cooper’s office said in disclosing details Wednesday that the project is “unrivaled” in the history of Tennessee economic development projects. Cooper’s office also said that the computer technology company has requested a public hearing for its economic impact plan with a city development board. Officials say the project would create 2,500 jobs in Nashville by the end of 2027, reaching a full 8,500 jobs by the end of 2031. 

C. Vivian Stringer signs 5-year extension with Rutgers

Hall of Fame women's basketball coach C. Vivian Stringer has agreed to a five-year contract extension that will keep her at Rutgers through the 2025-26 season. The New Jersey-based Big Ten Conference university announced the deal. The 73-year-old Stringer has led the Scarlet Knights to a top-three finish in the conference in two of the past three seasons, along with a pair of NCAA Tournament appearances. The contract guarantees compensation of $5.5 million, beginning at $1 million in the first year, plus performance incentives and retention bonuses. Stringer will enter her 27th season at Rutgers.

New Boy Scouts bankruptcy plan could exclude local councils

The Boy Scouts of America have filed a new bankruptcy reorganization plan that increases the proposed contribution of local BSA councils to a trust fund for victims of child sex abuse. But the new plan also includes the option of cutting the local councils out of the bankruptcy case and leaving them to face thousands of individual lawsuits from abuse victims. The BSA’s previous proposal to resolve more than 80,000 sexual abuse claims included a $300 million contribution by local councils to a victims trust in exchange for liability releases. The new plan increases that amount to $425 million.   

'Zoom in a Room'? California's schools lag in reopening push

Some of California’s biggest school districts are starting to reopen classrooms this week, including Los Angeles, San Diego and San Francisco. But California is lagging the rest of the country, and in some cases offering options that parents say are unacceptable. In San Francisco, many parents learned their children will be taught in the classroom by teachers working remotely. They are calling it “Zoom in a Room." Across the U.S., what it means to be back in school looks very different from one state to the next. California's governor has declared a return to business as usual in June. He pleaded Wednesday with districts to reopen, saying he's responded to teachers' demands.

Biden taps ex-Obama official as Interior Department deputy

The White House is naming a former Obama administration official to be deputy secretary at the Interior Department after dropping plans for a more liberal nominee who faced key Senate opposition. President Joe Biden has nominated Tommy Beaudreau to the No. 2 post. Beaudreau is a former chief of staff there and served as the first director of the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, an agency created after the disastrous 2010 BP oil spill. Beaudreau’s appointment is widely seen as an attempt to win favor with Republican Sen. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia. The moderates are vital to many of Biden’s priorities.

Harris planning first trip abroad to Mexico, Guatemala

WASHINGTON (AP) — Vice President Kamala Harris announced plans Wednesday to visit Mexico and Guatemala on what would be her first official trip abroad, as she pushes ahead on leading the White House's diplomatic efforts on the migration challenge at…

5 Astros land on injured list because of COVID-19 protocols

The Houston Astros have placed second baseman Jose Altuve, third baseman Alex Bregman, designated hitter Yordan Álvarez, catcher Martín Maldonado and infielder Robel Garcia on the injured list because of COVID-19 health and safety protocols. General manager James Click made the announcement hours before the Astros were scheduled to wrap up a three-game series with the Detroit Tigers. He said he couldn't say if the team had a positive test.

Big-business pushback against voting measures gains momentum

A pushback against new voting bills and laws in numerous states is gaining momentum. Dozens of nation’s largest corporations and business leaders have signed a new statement objecting to “any discriminatory legislation.” Signatories to the letter published Wednesday in The New York Times and The Washington Post include Amazon, American Airlines, Bank of America, Google and Best Buy. Also signing were  hundreds of business and civic leaders, such as Warren Buffett and Michael Bloomberg. More than 350 different voting bills are under consideration in dozens of states. On Tuesday, Arkansas was among the latest to approve changes to its election laws, including restrictions on outside polling places and on absentee ballots.  

Review: An intimate, wordless portrait of a pig in 'Gunda'

The barnyard setting of “Gunda” could hardly be more familiar, but in Russian director Victor Kossakovsky's documentary, a pigsty is rendered an almost alien landscape. Kossakovsky's film is shot in textured black and white and his cameras are often situated,…

Kansas fight shows how election 'reforms' may favor one side

A political fight in Kansas illustrates how proposals on voting laws billed as reform or anti-fraud measures can be help a specific party or policy priority. The Republican-controlled Legislature has approved a measure that would limit people to picking up and delivering 10 absentee ballots for voters. GOP lawmakers who back the bill argue that they're protecting the integrity of elections. They've been joined in supporting the measure by anti-abortion groups worried about abortion-rights supporters using that tactic to help defeat an anti-abortion initiative on the August 2022 primary ballot. Democrats see the bill as an attack on get-out-the-vote efforts that some of them have used. 

Mock crew straps into space capsule, exits before liftoff

Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin company has launched another capsule to the edge of space. This time, two employees strapped into the fueled rocketship for a rehearsal. They got out shortly before Wednesday's liftoff from West Texas, and the capsule soared with only a test dummy  on board. The New Shepard rocket landed vertically seven minutes after liftoff, and the capsule parachuted into the desert soon afterward. The pretend astronauts went back to the capsule following touchdown to climb inside for some recovery practice. Company officials say they're “very close” to launching people.

IndyCar opens season with stacked rookie class chasing Dixon

The IndyCar season begins at Barber Motorsports Park in Birmingham, Alabama, with a stacked rookie class. It features champions from three different motorsports disciplines. Jimmie Johnson has transitioned from NASCAR. Scott McLaughlin moved from Australian SuperCars. Roamain Grosjean defected from Formula One. All will be chasing six-time IndyCar champion Scott Dixon. He is aiming to tie A.J. Foyt's mark of seven IndyCar titles. Dixon has never won back-to-back titles. The 17-race season opens Sunday. 

AP sources: NCAA dumps requirement that transfers sit a year

Major college football and basketball players will be permitted to transfer one time before graduating without being required to sit out a year of competition starting next season. The NCAA Division I Council voted to changed the long-standing rule which has helped deter players in high-profile sports from switch schools, a two people with knowledge of the council’s decision told The Associated Press. 

Braves place LHP Fried, OF Pache on 10-day injured list

Atlanta Braves left-hander Max Fried has been placed on the 10-day injured list with a strained right hamstring after injuring himself while running the bases. Fried is off to a rocky start coming off a stellar 2020 season. Now he’s sidelined by a fluke injury in Tuesday night’s loss to the Miami Marlins. Fried tweaked his hamstring running from second to third on a wild pitch. The Braves also placed rookie outfielder Cristian Pache on the injured list with a strained left groin. Left-hander Tucker Davidson and outfielder Guillermo Heredia were called up from the alternate-training site to fill the openings.

AP PHOTOS: Sacrifice, sorrow: 20 years of war in Afghanistan

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — President Joe Biden has announced a withdrawal of all remaining U.S. troops from Afghanistan by September, about 20 years after the start of a war provoked by the deadliest terror assault on the United States. Biden’s…

To retain workers, Walmart moves more of them full time

Walmart is moving more of its workers to full time. The nation's largest private employer says it is looking for more ways to attract and retain employees. The discounter said Wednesday it plans to have two-thirds of the hourly jobs in its U.S. stores be full time with more consistent work schedules by early next year. That’s up from 53% five years ago. With this move, Walmart says it will have 740,000 of its 1.2 million U.S. Walmart hourly store workers work full time by Jan. 31. The strategy come as Walmart sees worker demand for full-time jobs, which have better health and dental benefits. 

12 missing from capsized ship after 6 rescued off Louisiana

The U.S. Coast Guard is searching for a dozen people in waters off the coast of Louisiana where one person died and six were pulled from rough seas when their commercial vessel capsized. Coast Guard Capt. Will Watson said Wednesday that one dead worker had been pulled from the water. The workers had been on the Seacor Power, an oil industry lift vessel that drops massive legs to the sea floor and becomes an offshore platform. The ship flipped over Tuesday in hurricane-force winds and high seas. Watson said the weather’s role in the capsizing was under investigation

EXPLAINER: Why won’t George Floyd’s friend testify?

A friend of George Floyd who was with him the night he died won’t testify at the trial of the former Minneapolis police officer charged in his death. Derek Chauvin's defense attorney wanted to call Morries Hall to testify in an effort to shift blame for the death to Floyd himself, for his use of illicit drugs and other health problems. Hall's attorney said Wednesday that there was no way he could answer even narrowly tailored questions without risking exposure to third-degree murder and drug charges. Hennepin County Judge Peter Cahill agreed and quashed the subpoena.

Kim Godwin named ABC News president, CBS' Zirinsky to exit

ABC has appointed Kim Godwin as its news division president, making her the first Black woman to serve as the top news executive at a network news division. She's been second-in-command at CBS News, which learned Wednesday that its own news division president, Susan Zirinsky, will be stepping down. Besides working at CBS News, Godwin has run local news operations in New York, Los Angeles, Dallas and Cleveland. She takes over a division where the top two broadcasts, “World News Tonight” and “Good Morning America,” lead in the ratings. At CBS, Zirinsky will relinquish power but promised to remain at the network, where she has been a longtime producer of news content.

Queen returns to royal duties after death of Prince Philip

LONDON (AP) — Queen Elizabeth II has returned to royal duties, four days after the death of her husband, Prince Philip, as preparations stepped up on Wednesday for his ceremonial funeral on the weekend. The 94-year-old British monarch attended a…

The disabled hope their Oscar moment can become a movement

The disabled have a moment in the Oscar spotlight that they hope becomes a movement. Jim LeBrecht, co-director of the nominated documentary “Crip Camp,” who has spina bifida and uses a wheelchair, says a golden age for disabled films could come if Hollywood lets disabled filmmakers tell their own stories. Robert Tarango, the deaf-blind star of the nominated short “Feeling Through," says his film can help alleviate the fear of hiring actors like him. Paul Raci, nominated for best supporting actor for “Sound of Metal,” says that movie's innovative and authentic treatment of the deaf should become the norm.    

NATO to match US troop pullout from Afghanistan

BRUSSELS (AP) — NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg says the alliance has agreed to withdraw its roughly 7,000 non-American forces from Afghanistan to match U.S. President Joe Biden’s decision to pull all American troops from the country starting on May 1.…

US weighs next steps for J&J virus shot amid clot mystery

U.S. health officials are weighing next steps as they investigate a handful of unusual blood clots in people who received Johnson & Johnson's COVID-19 vaccine. The reports are exceedingly rare — so far, six cases out of more than 7 million inoculations. And it's not clear if they are really linked to the J&J vaccine. European regulators have declared such clots a rare but possible risk with another vaccine that's made in a similar way, from AstraZeneca. Wednesday, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention debated in a public meeting how to handle the J&J vaccine while authorities investigate.