“I’m trying to make lemonade stands legal across my community and ultimately across the country,” said Jennifer Knowles
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How a Denver mom is taking a stand for lemonade
“I’m trying to make lemonade stands legal across my community and ultimately across the country,” said Jennifer Knowles
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How a Denver mom is taking a stand for lemonade
“I’m trying to make lemonade stands legal across my community and ultimately across the country,” said Jennifer Knowles
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How a Denver mom is taking a stand for lemonade
Branson, Missouri mayor Karen Best joins “CBS This Morning: Saturday” from Branson to discuss her community’s response to the deaths of 17 people after a tourist boat capsized and sank on Thursday, Branson’s reputation for embracing strangers and why she’s not ready to say whether duck boats should be banned or not.
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Branson mayor says it’s "too early" to make a call on banning duck boats
LOS ANGELES (AP) — The California company that sells Crystal Geyser bottled water has been charged with illegally disposing of arsenic-tainted wastewater, federal prosecutors said Thursday. The charges don’t allege that CG Roxane LLC sold tainted water, but that it illegally shipped and disposed of the toxic waste filtered from well water. A 16-count indictment in Los Angeles federal court alleged that Crystal Geyser and two other companies failed to properly disclose the toxic material they shipped in May 2015 and disposed of at a facility not permitted to treat hazardous waste. “Our nation’s environmental laws are specifically designed to ensure that hazardous wastes are properly handled from beginning to end,” U.S. Attorney Nick Hanna said. “The alleged behavior of the three companies charged in this indictment undermines that important objective and jeopardizes the safety of our community.” Naturally occurring arsenic was filtered out of water pumped from wells and later discharged in a pond near the company’s Olancha facility in the Owens Valley, 160 miles north of Los Angeles. The company stopped dumping the tainted water in the pond after the California Department of Toxic Substances Control found it contained hazardous waste in 2014, the prosecutors said. In May of 2015, the company hired two firms in the Los Angeles area to drain and dispose of the water in the pond. The three companies violated federal law by not disclosing in shipping documents that they were transporting hazardous waste that contained arsenic, the indictment said. Federal law requires that toxic and other hazardous waste be documented from “cradle to grave.” The material was taken to a facility in Fontana, about 45 miles east of Los Angeles, that wasn’t approved to handle hazardous waste, prosecutors said. If convicted of all counts, each company faces fines up to $8 million. (© Copyright 2018 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)
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Crystal Geyser Accused Of Illegally Disposing Of Arsenic-Tainted Water
LOS ANGELES (CBSLA) — Congresswoman Maxine Waters is urging her supporters to not be baited into a confrontation with what she calls an anti-government militia group that is expected to protest at her Los Angeles district office Thursday. “I am requesting those individuals and groups planning a counter-protest to not be baited into confronting the Oath Keepers with any demonstrations in opposition – such an occurrence would only exacerbate tensions and increase the potential for conflict,” Waters said in a statement she released Wednesday. Please read my statement on the Oath Keepers' planned protest at my district office tomorrow. pic.twitter.com/1ZALWLaZJS — Maxine Waters (@RepMaxineWaters) July 19, 2018 A far-right group called the Oath Keepers is reportedly planning to demonstrate at Waters’ offices in response to her call for people who are angry about the recent separation of families at the border to confront members of the Trump administration. “The Oath Keepers have a history of engaging in violent and provocative behavior. The group is known to protest in military-style clothing while carrying various assault weapons,” Waters’ statement said. “The Oath Keepers would like nothing more to inflame racial tensions and create an explosive conflict in our community.” Counter-protesters have gathered outside Congresswoman Maxine Waters office ahead of a protest by the Oath Keepers. The militia group is upset by comments Rep. Waters made about confronting the Trump administration. LAPD officers are also on hand. pic.twitter.com/jjNU5G2T77 — Kandiss Crone (@KandissCroneTV) July 19, 2018 The group is known for its heavily-armed members showing up wherever the national spotlight happens to be shining at that moment, like in Ferguson, Mo. on the anniversary of Michael Brown’s fatal shooting by police. Earlier this year, there was a call for members to stand armed guards outside schools after the mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Florida, according to the Southern Poverty Law Center. Waters says Los Angeles Police officers and personnel will be on site to ensure safety and security at her office.
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Maxine Waters Cautions Supporters Against Confrontation With ‘Oath Keepers’ Militia-Style Group
LOS ANGELES (CBSLA) — Congresswoman Maxine Waters is urging her supporters to not be baited into a confrontation with what she calls an anti-government militia group that is expected to protest at her Los Angeles district office Thursday. “I am requesting those individuals and groups planning a counter-protest to not be baited into confronting the Oath Keepers with any demonstrations in opposition – such an occurrence would only exacerbate tensions and increase the potential for conflict,” Waters said in a statement she released Wednesday. Please read my statement on the Oath Keepers' planned protest at my district office tomorrow. pic.twitter.com/1ZALWLaZJS — Maxine Waters (@RepMaxineWaters) July 19, 2018 A far-right group called the Oath Keepers is reportedly planning to demonstrate at Waters’ offices in response to her call for people who are angry about the recent separation of families at the border to confront members of the Trump administration. “The Oath Keepers have a history of engaging in violent and provocative behavior. The group is known to protest in military-style clothing while carrying various assault weapons,” Waters’ statement said. “The Oath Keepers would like nothing more to inflame racial tensions and create an explosive conflict in our community.” The group is known for its heavily-armed members showing up wherever the national spotlight happens to be shining at that moment, like in Ferguson, Mo. on the anniversary of Michael Brown’s fatal shooting by police. Earlier this year, there was a call for members to stand armed guards outside schools after the mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Florida, according to the Southern Poverty Law Center. Waters says Los Angeles Police officers and personnel will be on site to ensure safety and security at her office.
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Maxine Waters Cautions Supporters Against Confrontation With Militia Group
(CNN) — Months after a Texas school district broke ground on a new technical center, archaeologists there made a surprising discovery : the long-buried remains of 95 people. The first remains were discovered in February in Sugar Land, a suburb southwest of Houston. And now officials have learned who these people probably were — freed black people forced to work in convict labor camps. For over a century, these graves were underground and untouched. But the finding that they likely held the remains of slaves, which researchers announced Monday, highlights an era that’s largely forgotten in history — a time when slavery was illegal, but many blacks were essentially still enslaved. The Sugar Land property is owned by the Fort Bend Independent School District, which is building its new technical school on the land. “It’s a remarkable opportunity for our community and our school district to learn much more about the history of our local region,” Superintendent Charles Dupre said in a statement. The site’s archaeological project manager agrees. “It’s a rare opportunity,” Reign Clark of Goshawk Environmental Consulting told CNN. “We’ll be telling the story of what it was like to live here, work here, and, in some cases, die here.” How they were found It started with a hunch. Reginald Moore took an interest in historical cemeteries after working as a Texas state prison guard in the 1980s. He no longer works at the prison, but he’s still a community activist. One of his main focuses: getting people to recognize the abuses of the Sugar Land convict-leasing system, in which prison inmates were forced into labor. “I felt like I had the duty to be an advocate for them and to speak from the grave for these people,” Moore told CNN. Moore is the caretaker of another cemetery in Fort Bend County: the Imperial Farm Cemetery , which is nestled behind a shopping center off the highway. Near the cemetery is the home of the school district’s new James Reese Career and Technical Center. So when construction on the Sugar Land school’s center started last fall, Moore told officials that other cemeteries might be nearby. “He has documented and provided a lot of information about the history of that cemetery. He has a lot of ideas where the burials could’ve been,” said Chris Florance of the Texas Historical Commission, which has played an advisory role in the project. What they found The bodies were each buried in individual wooden caskets. Of those analyzed so far, all but one are men. Researchers say they could have been as young as 14 and as old as 70. They were probably buried between 1878 and 1910, Clark said. Despite the passage of time, researchers can tell that the workers were malnourished or sick and faced huge physical stress when they were alive. Clark said there’s lots of evidence that they were doing very heavy labor that, for some, began at a young age. “We can tell from the state of the bone and muscle attachment features that these were heavily built individuals. Some bones were misshapen by the sheer musculature and labor,” Clark told CNN. It’s no surprise in Texas Moore wasn’t the only one who wasn’t shocked at the discovery. Florance said his commission took a role in the project knowing a find like this could happen. “It’s not uncommon in Texas,” he told CNN. What was shocking, though, was how hard the graves were to find. The commission had done assessments before construction began, Florance said, but the land was so altered over the years that it was hard to know anything would be there. “One of the biggest problems with old cemeteries is that the markers might have gone away. There’s no surface evidence,” he said. The are 177 cemeteries in Fort Bend County, but there could be as many as 50,000 cemeteries across the state. Only 1,706 have a historic Texas cemetery designation . The ‘Hellhole on the Brazos’ President Lincoln’s 1860 Emancipation Proclamation said all slaves were free. That doesn’t mean forced labor didn’t continue. After the Civil War ended in 1865 and slaves were outlawed, the Texas economy dropped into a deep depression . Businesses needed a new form of cheap labor. So they resorted to prisons. The convict-leasing system was essentially slavery all over again. Prisoners were taken from state prisons and leased to private businesspeople who worked the laborers as hard as they could for the cheapest price. And the less food, water and shelter these workers got, the less they cost. “One 14-year-old was 6 feet tall,” Clark told CNN. “This population was hand-selected.” Sugar Land’s economy had thrived on sugar cane plantations , which largely relied on slave labor. So two Confederate veterans, Edward Cunningham and Littleberry Ellis, signed a contract with the state in 1878 to lease the state’s prison population. Conditions were so bad that the city got itself a nickname: “Hellhole on the Brazos.” “It had the worst reputation of all the prison farms in Texas,” sociologist Richard Vogel told CNN affiliate KTRK. What happens next Digging up and analyzing all 95 graves takes serious time — likely more than nine months’ worth of work. Each unburial takes up to two days, plus up to eight hours of cleaning and up to 15 hours for analysis, the school district said. So far, they’ve dug up 50 graves and analyzed more than 22, Clark said. Once they’re dug up, a team of forensic archaeologists will look for more information on the corpses, such as their medical conditions and how they died. After that, the school district will work with the state’s historical commission to figure out where to rebury them. Moore wants to get a memorial for the group as a form of restitution. “I’m speaking for those who didn’t have a voice, then and now,” he told CNN. “I felt like I was called to set them free.” — Jessica Campisi and Brandon Griggs The-CNN-Wire ( & © 2018 Cable News Network, Inc., a Time Warner Company. All rights reserved.)
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Nearly 100 Bodies Found At A Texas Construction Site Were Probably Black People Forced Into Labor — After Slavery Ended
LYNCHBURG, Va. (CBS Local) – A Virginia restaurant is facing public backlash after they shamed a 17-year-old customer who paid for his meal in change. Cohen Naulty took his friends to lunch at Beer 88 in Lynchburg on July 16. The teen, who works as a server at another restaurant in Virginia, only had a $20 bill and the quarters he collected from his tips to pay for the meal. Naulty paid the $45 check with his change and also reportedly left a $10 tip on top if it. Seemingly ungrateful for the tip, the Beer 88 staff took to social media to mock the teen’s payment. “We’ll just caption this…How NOT to pay at a restaurant, cause that’s the nicest thing we can think to say about this ridiculousness,” Beer 88 wrote, along with the hashtag “#nohometraining.” “If anybody met Cohen, they know it couldn’t be the farthest thing from the truth, and you know… he’s a good kid,” Cohen’s mother Kim Naulty said to WSET . The post immediately received a tremendous amount of backlash from the community, which was perceived as an attack on a teen who was treating his friends to lunch. “I love paying for people’s meals even if I have to scrape together my last quarters to do so,” the teen wrote on Facebook. Naulty turned the incident into a positive by setting up an online fundraiser that will collect spare change to pay for other people’s meals. “Even though I got blasted for it, it only served to make me realize how much I love doing this,” Naulty explained. “Paying for someone’s meal can change a really bad day around in just one moment of kindness… I am sure there are places out there that wouldn’t mind being paid in quarters.” Beer 88 initially defended their online shaming of the 17-year-old, hitting back at critics by posting “Obviously the SARCASM and HUMOR of this post is lost on most of y’all.” By July 17, the online post was deleted and Beer 88 apologized for the incident.
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Restaurant Slammed For Shaming Teen Who Paid For Meal With Change
EXCLUSIVE: Dan Harmon is a pretty busy guy; the Community creator is working on 70 episodes of his Adult Swim series Rick and Morty and is …
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'Rick & Morty' & 'Community' Creator Dan Harmon To Exec Produce Comedy Rap Album
Warriors star Kevin Durant was named Sports Humanitarian of the Year for his leadership in the community. The Finals MVP pledged $10 million to help disadvantaged youth attend college. He established the Kevin Durant Charity Foundation in 2012.
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KD wins another award: Humanitarian of Year
Warriors star Kevin Durant was named Sports Humanitarian of the Year for his leadership in the community. The Finals MVP pledged $10 million to help disadvantaged youth attend college. He established the Kevin Durant Charity Foundation in 2012.
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KD wins another award: Humanitarian of Year
TOWN OF ISLIP, N.Y. (CBSNewYork) – With temperatures reaching the high 80s Monday, some Long Island residents are demanding to know why their community pool is still closed after five years of waiting. The Town of Islip shuttered Roberto Clemente Park’s Olympic-sized pool amid budget cuts in 2013. Then as it was set to reopen, tons of polluted debris dumped at the site forced the entire park’s closure. The park has finally reopened, but still no pool despite a scheduled summer 2018 completion date. “You said 2018 it is now July 16,” community advocate Nelsena A. Day said to CBS2’s Carolyn Gusoff. The community advocate and local residents say the town seems to have no sense of urgency to reopen the pool. “Just a few people, Some in the car sleeping. They’re just taking their time,” Brentwood resident Royetta Alston observed. A town spokesperson claims crews are working around the clock, but have been faced with a “Pandora’s Box” including pool walls that needed to be rebuilt and weather delays in March and April. “What kind of weather? We didn’t have 12 feet of snow… so what are they talking about?” Nelsena Day countered. Town officials say they believe they are now in the home stretch, but have not said if 2018 means anytime this summer when the pool is needed most.
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Long Island Community Wants Their Long-Shuttered Pool Reopened
DALLAS, TEXAS (CBSDFW.COM) – It’s being called the “big bang” breakthrough in Alzheimer’s research. Doctors at UT Southwestern’s O’Donnell Brain Institute have detected what they believe are changes in a single molecule that could act as the starting point for the deadly, memory-stealing disease. Scientists are fairly certain that a molecule called “tau” is the culprit. “When the protein is in its good form, the reactive portions are hidden,” said Mark Diamond, M.D, at UT Southwestern’s O’Donnell Brain Institute. “When it transitions to bad form, the bad parts get exposed and allow the protein to assemble on itself, sort of like a Lego.” Dr. Diamond, also director of UT Southwestern’s Center for Alzheimer’s and Neurodegenerative Diseases and a leading dementia expert, said the ability to detect these molecular changes is his most significant finding in some 15 years of research. “The goal of what we’re doing right now is to develop tests that will diagnose the problem before there’s a disease…to pick up the first changes that are happening in someone’s brain before there are any symptoms,” said Dr. Diamond. Alzheimer’s is characterized by clumps of tangled protein in the brain. According to the Alzheimer’s Association, one in three seniors will die of the disease — and that’s more than breast and prostate cancer combined. Ultimately, researchers hope that warning signals for the disease can be effectively detected and therefore prevented with something as simple as a vaccine or pill. “I anticipate a day when we will think about these diseases like Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s as problems that only people who don’t get medical care develop,” said Dr. Diamond. Researchers know that there is much work ahead. It could be several years before the discovery is ready for human clinical trials. Until then, supporters say it’s critical for lawmakers to fund research at all levels. Patients can also get involved in local studies so doctors can learn as much as they can from seniors as they age. And while the advances won’t happen overnight, doctors say the overriding message for the community in the discovery is that there is hope. “There’s tremendous hope!” said Dr. Diamond. “We are actually super excited in our field. When I look at the future, I see many, many opportunities for good shots on goal.” And if he’s right, the discovery could be a life-changing win for the world.
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UT Southwestern Celebrates ‘Big Bang’ Breakthrough in Alzheimer’s Research
ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) — A New York woman convicted of killing her infant daughter in the 1980s and suspected of killing seven of her eight other children has been granted parole. The state Department of Corrections and Community Supervision says Monday that 75-year-old Marybeth Tinning could be released from prison as early as next month. Her release from a Westchester County prison was approved last week after a parole hearing, her seventh since being imprisoned in 1987. A jury convicted the Schenectady resident of killing her ninth child, 4-month-old Tami Lynne, in December 1985. She was one of Marybeth and Joseph Tinning’s eight young children to die between 1972 and 1985 under suspicious circumstances. Authorities believe the couple’s first child died of natural causes. Marybeth Tinning was sentenced to 20 years to life. (© Copyright 2018 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)
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Woman Who Killed Daughter In ’80s Granted Parole On 7th Try
Ryan Mayer While some of the future NBA stars are lighting up the court in Las Vegas in Summer League, Milwaukee Bucks forward Jabari Parker chose to take his game to the blacktop and take on some fans in a pickup game. Parker put out a post on Instagram yesterday afternoon of him in his basketball shoes with the address of a local park in Milwaukee. Fans in the area flocked to the court and Parker played in some pick-up games with those that showed up. CBS 58 News was able to talk to Parker and ask him why he chose to come out and shoot some hoops with the community. “My whole neighborhood is St. Francis which I lived in for three years so its pretty much home to me and no better place to me than right off the highway and right by the lake,” said Parker. Local sports anchor Scott Grodsky was able to get some video of Parker playing in the pickup game, which he shared on Twitter last night. Love seeing stuff like this! @JabariParker surprises some local @Bucks fans with a game of pickup. Jabari has always been incredibly active in the Milwaukee community. “I just want to say I love the city, I love Milwaukee and I love the people” pic.twitter.com/nitKUaRK5E — Scott Grodsky (@ScottGrodsky) July 13, 2018 Parker is currently a restricted free agent and the Bucks have extended him the one-year qualifying offer of $4.3 million. Since he is a restricted free agent, the Bucks would have the right to match any offer sheet that Parker is signed to by another team. Last season, he averaged 12.6 points and 4.9 rebounds per game after recovering from a torn ACL.
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Milwaukee Bucks Forward Jabari Parker Hosts Pickup Game In Local Park