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Month: July 2023

UPS reaches tentative contract with 340,000 unionized workers potentially dodging calamitous strike

By HALELUYA HADERO AP Business Writer NEW YORK (AP) — UPS has reached a tentative contract with its 340,000-person union, potentially averting a strike that threatened to disrupt package deliveries for millions of businesses and households nationwide. The agreement was announced Tuesday, the first day that UPS and the Teamsters returned to the table after

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Manchin, Tuberville introduce college sports bill to standardize NIL rules, regulate collectives

By RALPH D. RUSSO AP College Football Writer Senators Joe Manchin and Tommy Tuberville introduced a college sports bill that would require athletes to disclose how much they money make from name, image and likeness deals, regulate collectives and agents and put restrictions in transferring players. The bipartisan action is the second to come out

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People walk through the gate on Harvard Yard at the Harvard University campus on June 29 in Cambridge

Department of Education launches civil rights probe after lawsuit accuses Harvard of giving preferential treatment to legacy applicants

By Celina Tebor and Christina Maxouris, CNN (CNN) — The US Department of Education has begun a civil rights investigation into whether Harvard University discriminates in its admissions process by giving preferential treatment to children of wealthy donors and alumni, roughly three weeks after a lawsuit made those allegations. That lawsuit, filed by Lawyers for

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Oklahoma attorney general joins lawsuit over tribal gambling agreements, criticizes GOP governor

By SEAN MURPHY Associated Press OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — Oklahoma’s new Republican attorney general says he’s stepping into an ongoing legal dispute over tribal gambling agreements signed by Gov. Kevin Stitt several years ago. Attorney General Gentner Drummond notified Stitt on Tuesday that he’s joining the lawsuit to represent the state’s interest at the request

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Israel’s government has passed the first part of its legal overhaul. The law’s ripples are dramatic

By JULIA FRANKEL, ISABEL DEBRE and ILAN BEN ZION Associated Press The Israeli government has passed the first major piece of legislation in Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s plan to overhaul the country’s legal system — part of a broader plan that has triggered nationwide protests, divided the country and rattled the powerful military and influential

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Abortion rights amendment cleared for Ohio’s November ballot, promising volatile fight this fall

By JULIE CARR SMYTH Associated Presss COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Ohio voters will have the opportunity this fall to decide whether to guarantee access to abortion in the state, setting up a volatile fight rife with emotional messaging and competing factual claims. State officials said Tuesday that a ballot measure to change the state constitution

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Ohio officer put on paid leave amid probe into police dog attack on surrendering truck driver

By PATRICK ORSAGOS and BRUCE SHIPKOWSKI Associated Press CIRCLEVILLE, Ohio (AP) — An Ohio police officer has been put on leave while he’s investigated for releasing his police dog on a surrendering truck driver, even after state troopers told the officer to hold the dog back. The Circleville police chief said Officer Ryan Speakman was

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Ecuador suspends rights of assembly in some areas, deploys soldiers to prisons amid violence wave

QUITO, Ecuador (AP) — Ecuador’s President Guillermo Lasso is once again making use of the executive’s power to suspend people’s rights of assembly in some areas and mobilize the military in an attempt to quell the most recent spike in violence in the South American country. Lasso on Tuesday declared a state of emergency covering

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