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NYC, San Francisco Pride Parade crowds panic after confusing fireworks, fight for gunfire

June 27, 2022 by www.foxnews.com Leave a Comment

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Thousands run frantically in NYC streets after what sounded like shots are heard during the Pride Parade Video

Thousands run frantically in NYC streets after what sounded like shots are heard during the Pride Parade

Panicked parade-goers run frantically through the streets as possible gunshots are fired during this year’s NYC Pride Parade. (Credit: @mgogel/Local News X / TMX)

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The perceived noise of gunfire sent crowds running during two of the country’s largest Pride Parades in New York City and San Francisco this weekend despite law enforcement confirming false alarms.

Despite videos showing Manhattan revelers storming away from the sound of what they thought was a shooting, NYPD Chief of Patrol Jeffrey Maddrey confirmed that there had been no shots fired in Washington Square Park, the green epicenter of the Pride celebrations. NYPD said a further investigation determined fireworks were set off at the 9.75-acre public park in Greenwich Village.

Days earlier, tens of thousands of protesters assembled at the park for a pro-abortion protest after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade. The crowd marched up 6th Avenue, and about two dozen protesters were arrested for blocking traffic near 42nd St., the New York Post reported. On Sunday, Planned Parenthood was the first contingent of the New York City Pride Parade .

In San Francisco, police officers assigned to the Civic Center area for the San Francisco Pride Festival responded at approximately 5:25 p.m. to a report of a shooting near 7th and Market Streets.

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  • NYC Pride Parade crowds

    Image 1 of 3

    People participate in the New York City Pride Parade on June 26, 2022, in New York City. ((Photo by Alexi Rosenfeld/Getty Images))

  • NYC Pride Parade supporters with pro-abortion sign

    Image 2 of 3

    A person holds an “abort the patriarchy” sign at in the New York City Pride Parade on June 26, 2022, in New York City. ((Photo by Alexi Rosenfeld/Getty Images))

  • Sen. Schumer marchers in Pride parade

    Image 3 of 3

    U.S. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) participates in the New York City Pride Parade on June 26, 2022. ((Photo by Alexi Rosenfeld/Getty Images))

However, upon arrival, officers were unable to locate any victims or witnesses, and the police department said it was not immediately apparent if there was any merit to the shooting in the area. The department said officers remained on the scene to ensure the safety and security of Pride events.

Man runs across the street in a panic as what sounded like shots are heard during San Francisco Pride event Video

The panic came on the heels of high-profile mass shootings in Uvalde, Texas, and Buffalo, New York.

This year was the first time pride parades in New York City and San Francisco made a full comeback since they were canceled in 2020 due to the coronavirus pandemic .

Social media users at both events described chaotic scenes as the crowds began to stampede and people reportedly started running and screaming of shots fired.

  • San Francisco pride parade-goers with rainbow flags

    Image 1 of 2

    SF Pride grand marshal public poll choice Vinny Eng greets the crowd during the 52nd Annual San Francisco Pride Parade and Celebration on June 26, 2022 in San Francisco, California. ((Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images))

  • Nancy Pelosi at pride parade with rainbow gavel

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    U.S. Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) holds a gavel during the 52nd Annual San Francisco Pride Parade and Celebration on June 26, 2022 in San Francisco, California. ((Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images))

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Some users noted the recent shooting at a gay bar in Oslo, Norway. The Associated Press reported that the shooting killed two people and injured more than a dozen in a case of possible terrorism.

Last month, police in Idaho arrested more than 30 alleged members of the group called Patriot Front found packed into the back of a U-Haul near an LGBTQ event.

Danielle Wallace is a reporter for Fox News Digital covering politics, crime, police and more. Story tips can be sent to [email protected] and on Twitter: @danimwallace.

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Vaccine expert in dire warning over next pandemic as known virus ‘could cause outbreak’

June 27, 2022 by www.express.co.uk Leave a Comment

AstraZeneca vaccine: Dr Green shares what’s in Oxford jab

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She said: “We need to be better prepared in many different areas. In vaccine development, there are viruses we already know can cause disease outbreaks, yet we don’t yet have a vaccine against them. “We should be developing vaccines now against all those and having them ready so that if there is an outbreak, we’ve got the vaccine to cope with it.

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Alongside anticipating the next outbreak, it is important to not become complacent about COVID-19, which still has the potential to resurge in a more severe form, Dame Sarah said.

She explained: “The truth is that we don’t know where COVID-19 is going next.

“It could continue to become milder or it could become a more severe disease again.

“Anticipating what the virus will do next is the job of those who do surveillance in epidemiology.

“But if a new sequence is thought to be becoming dominant, our problem is that making a new version of the vaccine takes time and has to be tested and approved.”

Dame Sarah Gilbert

Dame Sarah Gilbert has warned that we now need to make preparations for the next pandemic (Image: Getty Images)

Phials of the AstraZeneca Covid vaccine

Dame Sarah was one of the research heroes behind the AstraZeneca coronavirus vaccine (Image: Getty Images)

According to Dame Sarah, a key challenge posed by coronavirus is that the virus has evolved new strains too quickly as we move through one wave after another.

She told the Guardian: “Regulators cannot approve a vaccine unless they can see the clinical data.

“Then you have to scale up manufacturing to produce the vaccine in quantity.

“Developers are still using the original vaccines, which are supplying good protection against the disease.”

READ MORE: Britain faces ANOTHER crisis from highly contagious ANCIENT illness

An infographic about the different vaccines

According to Dame Sarah, a key challenge posed by coronavirus is that the virus evolves rapidly (Image: Express.co.uk)

A discarded face mask

Dame Sarah said that she had “more or less” stopped wearing her own mask (Image: Getty Images)

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Asked whether the UK had become over-reliant on the efficacy of Covid vaccines and “slipshod” in largely giving up the wearing of face masks, Dame Sarah said that she had “more or less” stopped wearing her own mask.

She said: “I had about a year of always following the guidance. But, recently, there hasn’t been any guidance.

“I’ve travelled on the tube without a mask. I got Covid, for the first time, about 10 days ago.

“It was like having an unpleasant cold and didn’t worry me. It only lasted a few days and I was fine again.”

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The cover of Vaxxers

Pictured: the cover of Dame Sarah’s new book, ‘Vaxxers: A Pioneering Moment in Scientific History’ (Image: Amazon)

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Dr Gilbert said that those people wary of the vaccination might — from a psychological standpoint — have been pushing against months of being told how to live during lockdown.

She added: “In some countries, people do not want to be vaccinated because their government recommends it and they don’t trust their government.

“I don’t think that was a feature in the UK because, whatever people’s view on [the] government, they recognise the input of the NHS.

“But a lot of the hesitancy among younger people was because they were receiving misinformation, sometimes through friends whose opinions they trusted.”

Professor Gilbert’s new book about the development of the AstraZeneca vaccine, “ Vaxxers: A Pioneering Moment in Scientific History ”, was co-authored with fellow Oxford researcher Dr Catherine Green and is available now.

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UC Law Dean: Roe v. Wade Reversal ‘Turns Back the Clock’ to When Women Were ‘Treated as Property’

June 27, 2022 by www.breitbart.com Leave a Comment

The chancellor and dean of the University of California Hastings College of the Law in San Francisco, California, reacted to the Supreme Court overruling Roe v. Wade on Friday by claiming that the ruling effectively “turns back the clock” to “when women did not have the right to vote” and were “treated as property,” adding, “I tremble for my granddaughters.”

“Today’s Supreme Court decision overturning Roe v. Wade is devastating on many levels,” Dean David Faigman proclaimed in an open letter, before claiming that women not being able to as easily kill their unborn children means the clock has been turned back to another century.

Abortion-rights activist Caroline Rhodes protests in front of the Supreme Court building following the announcement to the Dobbs v Jackson Women's Health Organization ruling on June 25, 2022 in Washington, DC. The Court's decision in the Dobbs v Jackson Women's Health case overturns the landmark 50-year-old Roe v Wade case, removing a federal right to an abortion. (Photo by Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

(Photo by Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

(Photo by Yasin Oztürk/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)

“This decision turns back the clock not just to 1973, but to a century when women did not have the right to vote and were, largely, treated as property,” Faigman wrote. “I tremble for my granddaughters.”

The dean then argued that “those with religious objections to abortion do not have the right to impose them on others,” before calling into question the legitimacy of the Supreme Court.

“As a dean and professor of constitutional law, this opinion — and, indeed, the composition of the Court itself, which is a product of political gerrymandering — raises basic questions regarding the legitimacy of the Court itself,” Faigman said.

On Friday, the Supreme Court overruled Roe v. Wade , holding in the Dobbs case that the Constitution does not include a right to abortion and returning the issue of abortion laws and regulations to state legislatures.

“On the eve of Pride weekend, Justice Thomas’s concurring opinion in Dobbs underscores the breadth of the potential challenges to other fundamental and hard-won rights, including marriage equality,” Faigman lamented in his letter.

Faigman concluded by pledging to use his role as the leader of one of California’s most prestigious law schools to help prepare future lawyers and policymakers to “grapple with the outcome of today’s decision.”

“UC Hastings is committed more than ever to its core mission to prepare diverse students to advance the rule of law and pursue justice,” he wrote. “Our students are the future lawyers and policymakers who will need to grapple with the outcome of today’s decision.”

Faigman is just one of the many members of academia having a public meltdown over the Supreme Court’s life-saving decision.

After the ruling, college and university professors took to social media, where they issued unhinged diatribes in response to the reality that not as many killings will transpire in a post-Roe America.

You can follow Alana Mastrangelo on Facebook and Twitter at @ARmastrangelo , and on Instagram .

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Dramatic underwater photo from Monterey Bay shows dead sea lion being devoured by starfish

June 27, 2022 by www.sfchronicle.com Leave a Comment

When the California Academy of Sciences announced the winners of its annual natural photography competition this month, the honorees included a former photo editor for National Geographic. An established commercial photographer in India. A 50-year Norwegian veteran who the BBC once placed among the world’s 10 top nature photographers.

And an emergency room technician in Monterey who went diving last September and came across a dead sea lion slowly being devoured by starfish, 40 feet below the surface.

“It was pretty ironic — here I am on my day off, and I encounter this huge dead sea lion,” recalled David Slater, 32, about the first of what became six visits to grim yet haunting scene. “There was sadness, but also a certain nurturing beauty.”

Slater, who moved to Monterey from Hawaii five years ago, had his image “Sea Lion Fall” selected as the best photograph in the “Aquatic Life” category of the Academy’s BigPicture: Natural World Photography Competition . Established in 2014, the contest this year attracted more than 7,000 entrants. From these, just nine were selected to receive awards.

As someone who says he “has been obsessed with undersea photography since I was kid,” Slater was familiar with BigPicture. But he had never given thought to entering until real life intervened.

“Sea Lion Fall” was taken on the sixth and last dive that Slater took to survey the scene off Monterey’s San Carlos beach. With each visit, the sea lion remained on the ocean floor, face buried in the sand. With each visit, Slater saw more and more members of one species drawing sustenance from the remains of another.

By the last visit, two dozen bat stars of varying sizes and hues had attached themselves to the carcass, latched tight so that one of their two stomachs could use enzymes to break down the solid mass and make it digestible.

Slater knew the grisly technical details, since he has a marine biology degree from the University of Hawaii. But he also knew that he was encountering a rare glimpse of nature’s cycle of life. One made more solemn by a handful of sea lions hovering nearby, keeping watch but not intervening.

“Sea lions are pretty intelligent creatures, and I wondered if the one who had passed had belong to this rookery,” Slater said in a phone interview.

For his final visit to the fallen sea lion — in between shifts at Community Hospital of the Monterey Peninsula — Slater brought along the gear to take vivid images of the world beneath the water, including strobes to capture the true colors in the gauzy underseas setting. What he returned with has a calm and haunting surrealism — a still gray creature studded with colorful sea stars, while other sea lions were a dim chorus in the background.

“I knew the photo was special to me,” said Slater, who has an instagram account devoted to his off-hours passion. “But to have the judges agree? I literally don’t believe it.”

An exhibition of BigPicture’s seven winners and 42 runners-up will be held this fall beginning Sept. 30 at the Academy’s home in Golden Gate Park.

The full set of 49 prize-winning and finalist photos is at www.bigpicturecompetition.org/2022-winners .

John King is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: [email protected]

Filed Under: Uncategorized David Slater, John King, Monterey Bay, California, Bay Area, India, Norwegian, Hawaii, San Carlos, Community Hospital of the Monterey Peninsula, Golden Gate..., sea lion show west midlands safari park, monterey bay aquarium underwater tunnel, monterey bay underwater explorers

In New Orleans, Time-Tested Charms and Some Bright New Baubles

June 23, 2022 by www.nytimes.com Leave a Comment

Even for a city like New Orleans, which has been bouncing back from calamities viral , meteorological and otherwise for three centuries, the last couple of years have been rough. But today, the most freewheeling city in the nation is strutting forward with a sense of relief and renewed confidence, seducing visitors with time-tested charms and a few bright new baubles.

Notably, a spirit of studied elegance and experimentation has made a mark on the hospitality scene, with bespoke boutique hotels popping up in neighborhoods beyond the French Quarter, and major international players, including Virgin Hotels and Four Seasons Hotels and Resorts, opening outposts near the heart of the old city.

A place that runs on tourism dollars and conviviality was bound to suffer some notable losses in the pandemic, particularly in the dining world. Among them were K-Paul’s Louisiana Kitchen , the French Quarter fixture that closed in 2020 after decades of spreading the gospel of Creole and Cajun cooking. More dialed-in gourmands are mourning the loss of Upperline , JoAnn Clevenger’s casually elegant Uptown dining room, which fit the neighborhood like the best kind of rumpled button-down shirt.

But fear not: Nobody’s going home hungry. New restaurants and old are thrumming again as tourists flock back to town and locals get back to their love affair with their city.

On the cultural front, returning visitors will be impressed by a new museum dedicated to Southern Jewish history, while a couple of art and technology-driven attractions offer immersive and virtual takes on what it means to be in New Orleans.

Eat and sleep

Though the French tend to get top billing, the Spanish-speaking world has also had an outsize impact on New Orleans culture, from the Spanish colonial era to the crucial months after Katrina, when Mexican and Central American workers helped power the rebuilding effort. One of the most buzzed-about new restaurants in town, Lengua Madre , pays homage to the chef Ana Castro’s family roots in Mexico City. Her sophisticated five-course tasting menu ($70) promises to tease out the culinary and cultural connections to the two cities: One of her mottos is “New Orleans is home, Mexico is life.” The menu is constantly changing, but it’s the kind of place where you are likely to find mustard greens on your tlacoyo.

Pandemic precautions, including mask wearing and proof of vaccination or a negative coronavirus test, have been lifted for restaurants and bars. The city’s storied bastions of Creole cuisine — among them Dookie Chase’s Restaurant, Galatoire’s and Arnaud’s — are running strong, and masterfully cranking out the greatest hits. Elsewhere, diners will find fresh experimentation and whimsy. A new restaurant Uptown called Mister Mao, from the transplanted chef and “ Chopped” TV show champion Sophina Uong, bills itself as a “tropical roadhouse” that is “unapologetically inauthentic,” with Southeast Asian, Mexican and Indian influences: Think pakoras, Mayan sikil pak pumpkin seed dip, Khmer grapefruit and mango salad all chattering to each other at the same table. In the hip Bywater neighborhood, the newish pop-up Chance In Hell SnoBalls (motto: “Icy treats for a world on fire!”) is gleefully pushing the boundaries of the New Orleans summertime treat, with homemade flavors that have included sweet corn with thyme and a “Tom Kha” version with basil, ginger, mint, lemongrass, lime and coconut milk.

An old port city accommodates such mash-ups, even as it honors its traditions. Indeed, over the years, the Israeli-American chef Alon Shaya has earned New Orleans homeboy status while slinging labneh and high-end hummus in the land of jambalaya and crawfish étouffée. There is something about the pace and pitch of a New Orleans brunch, in particular, that Mr. Shaya just seems to get. So there was much anticipatory drooling over his new project, Miss River, which opened in August 2021 in the new Four Seasons Hotel New Orleans. He is calling Miss River his “love letter to Louisiana,” offering his take on duck and andouille gumbo and a whole buttermilk fried chicken, served in a dining room evocative of Fitzgerald’s Jazz Age.

The Four Seasons , which also opened last year, is its own big story, bringing 341 high-end rooms (doubles from $395) to a repurposed downtown office tower formerly known as the World Trade Center. It boasts a second noteworthy restaurant, Chemin à la Mer , from the talented Louisiana chef Donald Link, and a crescent-shaped rooftop pool offering views of the Mississippi River.

On a different scale, and setting the tone for the city’s boutique hotel movement, is the Hotel Peter and Paul (doubles in the summer from $159), which opened in the Faubourg Marigny in 2018 and occupies a clutch of old buildings (former schoolhouse, rectory, convent and church). Visiting can feel like living through an imaginative fictional remix of their actual histories. The same can be said for two more recent studies in hotel hyperreality: The Chloe , a 14-room converted mansion (doubles from $550) on St. Charles Avenue (the vibe of which rhymes closely with the Columns, the beloved longtime manse-hotel-hangout just down the street); and the Hotel Saint Vincent (doubles recently started at $305), set in a 19th-century Garden District orphanage that was until recently a budget hostel. All three offer fine places to grab a drink and bask in micro-fantasias of interior design, each evoking a distinct iteration of subtropical Wes Anderson chic.

Culture and revelry

The rule for a good time in New Orleans remains the same: Trust your instincts for improvisation, avoid fruity alcoholic drinks served in garish novelty cups and follow your ears, particularly for the sounds of street parades, which are rolling again through the neighborhoods. The radio station WWOZ FM 90.7 remains the best resource for tracking such happenings, and for the action in the music clubs. New to the scene and old all at once is the refurbished Toulouse Theatre , in the heart of the French Quarter, which had until recently hosted a venue called One Eyed Jacks. Long before that, the New Orleans piano legend, James Booker, had a standing gig there. The new management books an eclectic mix of 21st-century R&B, indie rock and other delights.

Two new attractions seek to explain and expand on the New Orleans experience. Jamnola (for “Joy Art Music New Orleans”) is a 12-room immersive art space, with each room riffing on an aspect of the city’s cultural riches. Vue Orleans , atop the Four Seasons, offers panoramic views of the city and tech-forward presentations of the city’s history and culture.

A more specific kind of historical immersion can be found at the new home of the Museum of the Southern Jewish Experience , which offers welcome nuances to the story of a region that is too often exclusively broad-brushed as pure Bible Belt. With its roots in a Mississippi Jewish summer camp, the museum relocated to downtown New Orleans and had a soft opening in 2021. Its new home makes sense in a city where Jews have played an important, though underappreciated, role in education, health care, commerce and culture, and it complements the nearby National World War II Museum, which has evolved, with numerous expansions, into a world-class attraction that is reason enough to visit New Orleans on its own.

Elsewhere, the city continues to heal from a period of hardship that included not only the pandemic, but Hurricane Ida, the Category 4 storm that slammed into Louisiana in August. New Orleans was spared the kind of widespread catastrophe it suffered in 2005’s Hurricane Katrina. But there were some significant injuries on the cultural scene. Among them was the Backstreet Cultural Museum , a handmade love letter to Black New Orleans carnival and masking culture.

The museum has been closed for months after the building that housed it, an old funeral home in the Treme neighborhood, was damaged in the storm. But in a recent interview, Dominique Dilling, the museum’s executive director, said that a rebirth is in the works, with a new location selected in the heart of Treme and a grand reopening celebration set for July 9.


Follow New York Times Travel on Instagram , Twitter and Facebook . And sign up for our weekly Travel Dispatch newsletter to receive expert tips on traveling smarter and inspiration for your next vacation. Dreaming up a future getaway or just armchair traveling? Check out our 52 Places for a Changed World for 2022.

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