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  • Large Earthquake Off Alaska Prompts Tsunami Fears, Fleeing

    Large Earthquake Off Alaska Prompts Tsunami Fears, Fleeing

    JUNEAU, Alaska (AP) — A magnitude 7.5 earthquake prompted a tsunami warning Monday for a nearly thousand-mile stretch of Alaska’s southern coast, with waves over 2 feet at the nearest community as the threat subsided.

    The quake was centered near Sand Point, a city of about 900 people off the Alaska Peninsula where wave levels late Monday topped 2 feet (0.61 meters), according to the National Tsunami Warning Center. The warning was downgraded to an advisory just over two hours after the quake hit, and was lifted Monday night.

    “It was a pretty good shaker here,” said David Adams, co-manager of Marine View Bed and Breakfast in Sand Point. “You could see the water kind of shaking and shimmering during the quake. Our truck was swaying big time.”

    Adams didn’t take any photos or video: “It just kind of happened all of a sudden.”

    The quake struck in the North Pacific Ocean just before 1 p.m. It was centered about 67 miles (118 kilometers) southeast of Sand Point, according to the Alaska Earthquake Center. The community is about 800 miles (1,288 km) southwest of Anchorage. The quake was recorded at a depth of 19 miles (30 kilometers).

    The National Tsunami Warning Center in Palmer, Alaska, said the tsunami warning — and later advisory — was in effect for roughly 950 miles (1,529 kilometers), from 40 miles (64 kilometers) southeast of Homer to Unimak Pass, about 80 miles (129 kilometers) northeast of Unalaska.

    The quake was felt widely in communities along the southern coast, including Sand Point, Chignik, Unalaska and the Kenai Peninsula, according to the Alaska Earthquake Center, which said a magnitude 5.2 aftershock was reported 11 minutes later, centered roughly in the same area.

    Patrick Mayer, superintendent of the Aleutians East Borough School District, said parents picked up their children from Sand Point School, which also served an evacuation point. The earthquake was felt to varying degrees at the other four schools in the district, the closest of which is 90 miles away, he said.

    Mayer said a school bus was dispatched to a fish processing facility to bring workers to the school since it’s on high ground.

    The workers were to wear masks to protect against the spread of the coronavirus, he said, in a community where there have been only “limited cases.”

    Public safety officials in King Cove had urged residents to remain vigilant after the warning was downgraded and to stay off the beach and out of harbors and marinas. Waves by late afternoon in King Cove were less than 2 feet (0.61 meters), according to the National Tsunami Warning Center.

    The size of the quake was originally reported to have been a magnitude of 7.4, but was revised to a 7.5, said Paul Caruso, a geophysicist with the U.S. Geological Survey. He said an earthquake of this size, in this area, is not a surprise.

    “This is an area where the Pacific Plate is subducting underneath the North American Plate. And because of that, the Pacific Plate actually goes underneath the North American Plate, where it melts,” Caruso said, noting that’s why there are volcanoes in the region. “And so we commonly have large, magnitude 7 earthquakes in that area.”

    Rita Tungul, front desk assistant at the Grand Aleutian Hotel in Unalaska, said she felt some shaking but it wasn’t strong. Her coworker didn’t feel the quake at all, she said.

    Connie Newton, owner of the Bearfoot Inn, a grocery store, liquor store and small hotel in Cold Bay, said the temblor it felt like someone drove into her building with a truck. Still, nothing fell to the ground and she said she suffered no damage because she earthquake-proofed her stores by installing 2-inch (5-cm) risers around the outside of her shelves.

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    Associated Press journalists Jennifer Sinco Kelleher, Audrey McAvoy and Caleb Jones in Honolulu and Mark Thiessen in Anchorage contributed to this report.

  • How Trump Plowed Through $1 Billion, Losing Cash Advantage

    How Trump Plowed Through $1 Billion, Losing Cash Advantage

    WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump’s sprawling political operation has raised well over $1 billion since he took the White House in 2017 — and set a lot of it on fire.

    Trump bought a $10 million Super Bowl ad when he didn’t yet have a challenger. He tapped his political organization to cover exorbitant legal fees related to his impeachment. Aides made flashy displays of their newfound wealth — including a fleet of luxury vehicles purchased by Brad Parscale, his former campaign manager.

    Meanwhile, a web of limited liability companies hid more than $310 million in spending from disclosure, records show.

    Now, just two weeks out from the election, some campaign aides privately acknowledge they are facing difficult spending decisions at a time when Democratic nominee Joe Biden has flooded the airwaves with advertising. That has put Trump in the position of needing to do more of his signature rallies as a substitute during the coronavirus pandemic while relying on an unproven theory that he can turn out supporters who are infrequent voters at historic levels.

    “They spent their money on unnecessary overhead, lifestyles-of-the-rich-and-famous activity by the campaign staff and vanity ads way too early,” said Mike Murphy, a veteran Republican consultant who advised John McCain and Jeb Bush and is an outspoken Trump critic. “You could literally have 10 monkeys with flamethrowers go after the money, and they wouldn’t have burned through it as stupidly.”

    For Trump, it’s a familiar, if not welcome, position. In 2016, he was vastly outraised by Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton but still pulled off a come-from-behind win. This time around, though, he was betting on a massive cash advantage to negatively define Biden and to defend his own record.

    Trump campaign manager Bill Stepien insisted money was no issue. “We have more than sufficient air cover, almost three times as much as 2016,” he told reporters Monday.

    Biden, Stepien added, was “putting it all on TV,” as he eschewed most door-knocking because of the pandemic, while Trump has roughly 2,000 field staffers across the country knocking on doors and making calls for his campaign.

    “Where we have states that are sort of tipping, could go either way,” Trump told campaign staffers Monday, “I have an ability to go to those states and rally. Biden has no ability. I go to a rally, we have 25,000 people. He goes to a rally, and he has four people.”

    The campaign and the Republican National Committee will offer a glimpse of their financial situation Tuesday when they file mandatory monthly campaign finance reports.

    Advertising spending figures, however, offer a bleak picture.

    While a half-dozen pro-Trump outside groups are coming to the president’s aid, Biden and his Democratic allies are on pace to dump $142 million into ads in the closing days of the campaign, outspending Republicans by more than 2-to-1, according to data from the ad tracking firm CMAG/Kantar.

    On Monday, the firm Medium Buying reported Trump was canceling ad buys in Wisconsin; Minnesota, which Trump had hoped to flip; and Ohio, which went for Trump in 2016 but now appears to be a tight contest.

    It’s a reversal from May, when Biden’s campaign was strapped for cash and Parscale ominously compared the Trump campaign to a “Death Star” that was about to “start pressing FIRE for the first time.”

    The ad campaign they unrolled over the next three months cost over $176 million but did little to dent Biden’s lead in public opinion polling.

    Trump is now in a position that’s virtually unthinkable for an incumbent president, said Travis Ridout, co-director of the Wesleyan Media Project, which tracks advertising spending.

    “Advertising obviously isn’t everything. But we do think ads matter for a couple percentage points in a presidential race. And it’s just not a good sign for the Trump campaign,” Ridout said.

    A review of expenditures by Trump’s campaign, as well as the Republican National Committee, lays bare some of the profligate spending.

    Since 2017, more than $39 million has been paid to firms controlled by Parscale, who was ousted as campaign manager over the summer. An additional $273.2 million was paid to American Made Media Consultants, a Delaware limited liability company, whose owners are not publicly disclosed.

    Campaigns typically reveal in mandatory disclosures who their primary vendors are. But by routing money to Parscale’s firms, as well as American Made Media Consultants, Trump satisfied the basic disclosure requirements without detailing the ultimate recipients.

    Other questionable expenditures by Trump and the RNC that are included in campaign finance disclosures:

    — Nearly $100,000 spent on copies of Donald Trump Jr.’s book “Triggered,” which helped propel it to the top of the New York Times bestsellers list.

    — Over $7.4 million spent at Trump-branded properties since 2017.

    — At least $35.2 million spent on Trump merchandise.

    — $38.7 million in legal and “compliance” fees. In addition to tapping the RNC and his campaign to pay legal costs during his impeachment proceedings, Trump has also relied on his political operation to cover legal costs for some aides.

    — At least $14.1 million spent on the Republican National Convention. The event was supposed to have been held in Charlotte, North Carolina, but Trump relocated it to Jacksonville, Florida, after a dispute with North Carolina’s Democratic governor over coronavirus safety measures. The Florida event was ultimately cancelled, as well, with a mostly online convention taking its place.

    — $912,000 spent on ads that ran on the personal Facebook pages of Parscale and Trump spokesperson Katrina Pierson.

    — A $250,000 ad run during Game 7 of the 2019 World Series, which came after Trump was booed by spectators when he attended Game 5.

    — At least $218,000 for Trump surrogates to travel aboard private jets provided by campaign donors.

    — $1.6 million on TV ads in the Washington, D.C., media market, an overwhelmingly Democratic area where Trump has little chance of winning but where he is a regular TV watcher.

    Instead of giving more to Trump, some supporters are exploring their options.

    Republican megadonor Sheldon Adelson and his wife, Miriam, recently donated $75 million to Preserve America, a new pro-Trump super political action committee that is not controlled by Trump World political operatives.

    One of the reasons the group was founded in August is because there is deep distrust among some GOP donors that the existing pro-Trump organizations would spend the money wisely, according to a Republican strategist with direct knowledge of the matter. The strategist spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive discussions with donors.

    Dan Eberhart, who has given over $190,000 to Trump’s election efforts, said many Republican donors are now focused on keeping control of the Senate in GOP hands — not Trump’s chances of winning.

    “The Senate majority is the most important objective right now,” he said. “It’s the bulwark against so much bad policy that the Democrats want to do if they sweep the elections.”

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    Associated Press writer Andrew Milligan in New York contributed to this report.

  • Louisiana Considering Law Changes After BB Gun Suspension

    Louisiana Considering Law Changes After BB Gun Suspension

    BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) — Louisiana lawmakers are working to rewrite the state’s student discipline laws after a Jefferson Parish fourth-grader was suspended because a teacher saw a BB gun in his bedroom during online classes held amid the coronavirus pandemic.

    The Senate Education Committee backed the legislation without objection Monday, sending the bill by Rep. Troy Romero to the full Senate for debate. The House already has unanimously supported the measure by the Jennings Republican, which was sparked by the suspension of Ka’Mauri Harrison.

    Harrison, 9, was suspended in September for six days for violating a school policy banning weapons on school property and at school events after a teacher saw the gun in his room as he took a test via computer. Initially, Harrison was recommended for expulsion, though that later was changed to a suspension.

    The boy from Harvey has attended the hearings and votes on the legislation, and spoke Monday. The law, if passed during the ongoing special session, would be named after Harrison.

    “Thank you for helping kids my age and kids like me,” Harrison told senators.

    His father, Nyron Harrison, said his son’s brother tripped over the gun and Ka’Mauri picked it up briefly while visible on camera to move the gun.

    “I just felt like my home was totally invaded, once they told me he was taking his test and doing what he was supposed to do,” Nyron Harrison said.

    Romero’s bill would give students and their families more options to appeal disciplinary decisions such as expulsions that are reduced to suspensions, including filing some challenges in district court. It would require the state’s public school districts to clearly define the rules of conduct for students who are taking classes online, rather than in person.

    “If we just give everybody the rules, they can learn to follow them,” Romero said.

    Students like Harrison who were suspended or expelled for activities during online courses during the coronavirus outbreak this year would be entitled to a school board hearing and judicial review of those disciplinary actions.

    “This is a very good bill because it addresses a problem that none of us really anticipated,” said Liz Murrill, with the Louisiana attorney general’s office, testifying in support of the bill. “I don’t think anyone contemplated that all of the on-campus policies would apply to your home.”

    Louisiana’s school superintendents organization and the Jefferson Parish School System opposed the proposal. Jennifer Ansardi, representing the parish school system, said the system was concerned the measure creates new paths for legal action and damage awards against schools.

    “If you decide to clarify the law and do these types of things, please don’t penalize those that were operating” with the existing policies that had been in place, Ansardi said.

    Senators said people have privacy rights that apply to their homes that don’t apply to public school facilities.

    “This thing should never have made it to this point,” said Sen. Kirk Talbot, a Jefferson Parish Republican.

    Murrill said the attorney general’s office has found at least three instances where students have been recommended for expulsion because of BB guns in the home, visible during online classes.

    Harrison’s suspension has drawn criticism from people and groups across the political spectrum, including the American Civil Liberties Union and the National Rifle Association. Harrison’s family is suing the Jefferson Parish school system.

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    The bill is filed as House Bill 83.

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    Follow Melinda Deslatte on Twitter at http://twitter.com/melindadeslatte

  • Saints Will Host Carolina Inside Dome In New Orleans

    Saints Will Host Carolina Inside Dome In New Orleans

    NEW ORLEANS (AP) — The New Orleans Saints will be hosting the Carolina Panthers on Sunday inside the Mercedes-Benz Superdome.

    The Saints released a statement Monday saying president Dennis Lauscha and team staff met with New Orleans Mayor LaToya Cantrell to talk about how to get fans safely back into the stadium for games this season. The meeting included epidemiologists and the mayor’s own medical advisers.

    The team noted in a statement that New Orleans’ COVID-19 positivity rates remain stable.

    “The city currently has one of the lowest rates in the nation,” the Saints said. “We all agree that the priority is to make sure our city’s residents and our fans are safe and not to regress from the progress that has been made. We look forward to providing our fans more information shortly.”

    The Saints (3-2) have played three of eight scheduled regular-season home games in the Superdome so far this season with no ticketed fans in attendance. The few hundred in the stands consisted primarily of privately invited family members of players, coaches or staff.

    The Saints had asked Cantrell to allow ticketed fans to occupy about 25% of the Superdome’s 73,000 seats while wearing masks and following other social distancing guidelines for last week’s Monday night’s game against the Los Angeles Chargers. That request was denied.

    One of New Orleans’ losses came inside the Superdome to Green Bay. The team had started talking with LSU about playing games at Tiger Stadium in Baton Rouge as a way of getting fans into the stands for Saints’ games.

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    More AP NFL: https://apnews.com/NFL and https://twitter.com/AP_NFL

  • Judge Sentenced To 14 Years For Fondling Teen Girls

    Judge Sentenced To 14 Years For Fondling Teen Girls

    EDGARD, La. (AP) — A Louisiana judge who resigned after being convicted on sex charges involving the fondling of teenage girls was sentenced Monday to 14 years in prison.

    New Orleans area news outlets report that Jeff Perilloux was sentenced by ad hoc Judge Dennis Waldron.

    Perrilloux was convicted in September on three counts of felony indecent behavior with juveniles and one count of misdemeanor sexual battery. He had been a district judge in St. John the Baptist Parish.

    His victims were 14, 15 and 17-years old when the crimes happened. Four accusers testified at his trial.

    Assistant Attorney General Matthew Derbes praised the young women for telling authorities about Perilloux’s unwanted advances in 2017.

    “The road was not easy to travel, but today we finally arrived to justice for the young victims,” Attorney General Jeff Landry said in a news release.

    Waldron described Perilloux’s crimes as “awful, hideous and reprehensible,” while delivering the sentence.

    Waldron had jailed Perilloux pending his sentencing, after a hearing in which several of his accusers and their parents testified about the effects of his actions. Waldron also denied a motion for a new trial.

    Perilloux had consistently insisted that he was not guilty. He had qualified in July to run again for reelection.

  • After Lawsuit, City To Pay Millions For Emergency Repairs

    After Lawsuit, City To Pay Millions For Emergency Repairs

    SHREVEPORT, La. (AP) — A judge presiding over a lawsuit against a Louisiana city ordered millions of dollars of payments Monday to two companies for emergency work on a sewerage system.

    KTBS-TV reports that Pulley Construction and Yor-Wic Construction had sued the city of Shreveport earlier this year after they weren’t paid. The city and the companies reached an agreement late last month, according to KTBS and, under a judge’s order announced Monday, Pulley will get almost $5.4 million; Yor-Wic, just over $3.7 million.

    The City Council was expected to authorize the payments at a special meeting Tuesday.

  • After Mandate Repeal, Masks Required Again In Nine Counties

    After Mandate Repeal, Masks Required Again In Nine Counties

    JACKSON, Miss. (AP) — Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves announced Monday that he is imposing a mask mandate for public indoor spaces and other restrictions in nine counties to curb the spread of coronavirus amid weeks of steadily rising case numbers.

    “Here in Mississippi, we have seen this before,” Reeves said, referencing a spike in cases the state saw in the summer. “We know what can happen if we allow this to get out of control, so want to be proactive to prevent that from happening.”

    Reeves said explicitly that he does not think what is happening in Mississippi qualifies as a spike.

    “We’ve seen a relatively slow, slight increase over the last six weeks, which has really been exacerbated over the last 10 or 11 days,” he said.

    In the past week, Mississippi had two days when the number of new cases reported in one day reached more than 1,000, something the Department of Health hadn’t reported since mid-August. The seven-day rolling average of daily new confirmed cases in Mississippi has risen from 518 per day on Oct. 4 to 725 cases on Sunday, according to Johns Hopkins data analyzed by The Associated Press.

    Reeves’ method of imposing restrictions for counties by case count is similar to how he approached restrictions at the start of the pandemic. The Republican governor first resisted imposing a statewide mask mandate, focusing instead on individual counties with high cases, until cases were spiking throughout the state in early August. Reeves’ statewide mask mandate went into effect on Aug. 4 and was repealed on Sept. 30.

    He said the new restrictions will be imposed in counties that have 200 recent confirmed cases of coronavirus or 500 confirmed cases per 100,000 residents. Exceptions to that rule are counties with 200 recent cases that have fewer than 200 cases per 100,000 residents.

    The counties where restrictions will be imposed are DeSoto, Jackson, Lee, Forrest, Lamar, Itawamba, Neshoba, Claiborne and Chickasaw.

    In those nine counties, masks will be required indoors in public when social distancing is not possible. Social gatherings will be limited to 10 people indoors and 50 outdoors.

    Additionally, Reeves said he is requiring that hospitals statewide reserve 10% of total space for COVID-19 patients. If hospitals fail to comply with this order, they will not be allowed to perform non-urgent elective procedures.

    Reeves said no single “silver bullet” solution exists to bring case numbers down.

    “I know a lot of y’all will say, ‘Why don’t you just throw that statewide mask mandate back on and everything will be fine.’ Go look at the data in Arkansas. Go look at the data in Alabama. Never have taken their statewide mask mandates off, and their curve looks much worse than ours,” he said.

    Reeves said his primary concern is making sure Mississippi’s health care system is able and prepared to care for both coronavirus and non-coronavirus patients.

    “Our goal in Mississippi has never been to completely eradicate the virus. It has never been to completely eliminate the virus, because we do not believe — or at least I don’t — that that’s a realistic goal,” he said. “Our goal has always been to protect the integrity of our healthcare system.”

    The state Health Department said Monday that Mississippi, with a population of about 3 million, has reported more than 110,500 confirmed cases and at least 3,171 deaths from COVID-19 as of Sunday evening. That’s an increase of 586 confirmed cases and zero deaths from numbers reported over the weekend.

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    Willingham is a corps member for the Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues.

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    Follow AP coverage of the pandemic at https://apnews.com/VirusOutbreak and https://apnews.com/UnderstandingtheOutbreak.

  • Ole Miss Renaming Building For Activist Turned Administrator

    Ole Miss Renaming Building For Activist Turned Administrator

    OXFORD, Miss. (AP) — The University of Mississippi said it’s renaming a campus building to honor a one-time student activist who became a longtime administrator at the school.

    The school said a board voted to rename the Martindale Student Services Center as the Martindale-Cole Student Services Center.

    The new name honors Donald R. Cole, who enrolled in 1968 and pressed for an end to racism and more opportunities for Black people on campus. He was among eight students expelled after a protest in 1970 but later returned.

    Cole retired from Ole Miss in 2019 after a decades-long career as a professor and administrator. A university announcement said Cole was known as an advocate for diversity.

    “Dr. Cole’s legacy can be seen, heard and felt all across this institution each and every day, so it’s very fitting that his name adorn the very building that so many students go to for support on our campus,” Chancellor Glenn F. Boyce said in a statement.

  • Voters To Decide Whether To Relocate Confederate Monument

    Voters To Decide Whether To Relocate Confederate Monument

    HATTIESBURG, Miss. (AP) — Voters will have a voice is deciding whether to relocate a Confederate monument that’s outside the Forrest County courthouse.

    The Hattiesburg American reports the referendum was placed on the Nov. 3 ballot after the Forrest County Board of Supervisors couldn’t agree on what to do with the monument in June.

    The monument question on the ballot reads: “Please vote ‘yes’ or ‘no’ on whether the Confederate monument should be moved to a more suitable location.” The non-binding measure is meant to give supervisors guidance on where their constituents stand.

    Hattiesburg Mayor Toby Barker and City Council members have voiced their opposition to the monument remaining downtown, but the city doesn’t have any authority to move it.

    Multiple other Confederate monuments have been removed across the South since the police killing of George Floyd earlier this year in Minnesota. Many Forrest County residents advocated for the removal of the memorial during protests calling for change.

  • Danny Seyfarth

    [vc_single_image image=”1514″ img_size=”large” alignment=”center”][vc_single_image image=”1515″ img_size=”large” alignment=”center”][headerText widget_name=”Birthday and Anniversary Cakes Provided By The Markets” level=”h3″ url=”” el_class=””]

    Happy Birthday to Danny Seyfarth!

    Birthday Cake winner 10/20/20