Agnostic platform for almost 100 years
Why wait for the morning edition when you can write the news in the light? In the early 20th century, newspapers struggled to find faster ways than print to relay breaking news, especially on presidential election nights. None was as famous as the New York Times Motograph, an electric billboard 368 feet long. Better known as “zipper”, came to life on November 6, 1928to inform the crowd in Times Square that Herbert Hoover had defeated Governor Alfred E. Smith of New York. Five-foot-tall words made up of 14,800 light bulbs moved endlessly around the sign, wrapped like a ribbon above…
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Large fight breaks out, police respond to political party campaign event at Minneapolis city hall
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) – A fight broke out Saturday at a political party campaign event for city council candidates in Minneapolis, prompting a call to police and injuries after the brawl stemmed from heated disagreements over the nominations. The Star Tribune reports that at least one person was taken to a hospital for non-life-threatening injuries and another was treated at the scene of the Democratic-Farmer-Labor endorsement convention for Minneapolis Ward 10. The Star Tribune reports that Minneapolis police spokesman Brian Feintech says officers made no arrests. Video posted on social media showed the disturbance starting after supporters of Minneapolis Councilwoman Aisha…
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Politics, Police, Pozole: The Battle for Sunset Park
For Sonia Cortes, the battle for Sunset Park began with soup. Two years ago, after the pandemic ended her job as a dressmaker, Ms. Cortés began selling pozolea hot Mexican soup, a la park, a 25-acre strip of green in southwest Brooklyn. On a good Sunday, I might make $600 or $700. “I was able to pay my rent,” he said. By last fall, the Sunday market had grown to more than 80 vendors, mostly immigrant women selling Mexican food and wares on the street to large weekend crowds. They called it Tonatiuh Square, after an Aztec sun god. Every…
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Large fight breaks out, police respond to political party campaign event at Minneapolis city hall
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) – A fight broke out Saturday at a political party campaign event for city council candidates in Minneapolis, prompting a call to police and injuries after the brawl stemmed from heated disagreements over the nominations. The Star Tribune reports that at least one person was taken to a hospital for non-life-threatening injuries and another was treated at the scene of the Democratic-Farmer-Labor endorsement convention for Minneapolis Ward 10. The Star Tribune reports that Minneapolis police spokesman Brian Feintech says officers made no arrests. Video posted on social media showed the disturbance starting after supporters of Minneapolis Councilwoman Aisha…
Read More »Lawmakers rush into late session to pass housing reforms
A measure pulled midway through an Assembly vote this week shows state Democrats could struggle to reach a compromise on housing reform in the remaining weeks of the legislative session. With the session ending June 8, time is running out for lawmakers to pass legislation, such as Good Cause Eviction, they say is a priority after housing proposals were pulled from the state budget. A bill to ban landlords The rent delinquent statement to a credit agency was withdrawn Wednesday during a slow roll call vote initiated by Assembly Republicans. Twenty Democratic lawmakers voted against it, including Rep. Phil Steck,…
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‘He doesn’t understand journalism’: ex-producer’s verdict on BBC director-general Tim Davie | Tim Davie
The producer who until recently was at the center of the BBC’s political coverage has criticized director-general Tim Davie’s failure to “really understand journalism” and lamented new threats to the standard of current affairs analysis of the station Rob Burley claims that an element of the BBC’s core purpose, questioning politicians and scrutinizing politics, is now being “virtually thrown away”. Speaking to the Observer this weekend, Burley, who previously produced the BBC’s live political output including The Andrew Marr Show, hit out at the corporation for losing many of its experienced and heavyweight interviewers and for the recent ” arrogance”…
Read More »Regional election in northern German state of Bremen is test for center-left alliance – WPRI.com
BERLIN (AP) – Voters will go to the polls in the northern German state of Bremen on Sunday to decide whether the center-left Social Democrats should continue to rule a city they have ruled since World War II. Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s party came second behind its conservative rivals for the first time in 70 years in the last election, but retained power with the help of the Greens and Left party. Although recent polls show greater support for the Social Democrats than for their opponents in the Christian Democratic Union, Mayor Andreas Bovenschulte’s two junior coalition partners have lost ground….
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In Turkey’s election, Erdogan is not bowing down as he fights for political life
Erdogan faces tight race against emboldened opposition The cost of living crisis is seen as affecting his chances. Turkey’s two-decade transformation at stake ANKARA, May 14 (Reuters) – Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan has cultivated the image of a tough and invincible leader during his two decades in power, but he appears vulnerable as the political landscape may be shifting in his favor opponent in Sunday’s presidential vote. Erdogan rose from humble roots to rule for 20 years and reshape Turkey’s domestic, economic, security and foreign policy, rivaling the historic leader Mustafa Kemal Ataturk who founded modern Turkey a century ago….
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