from Old Farmer's Almanac -- www.almanac.com/
WHEN IS THE NEXT FULL MOON?
The next full Moon, September's Full Corn Moon, will occur on Wednesday, September 2, 2020. 1:23 a.m.
My part of the city, state, nation, world, solar system, galaxy, universe
from Old Farmer's Almanac -- www.almanac.com/
The next full Moon, September's Full Corn Moon, will occur on Wednesday, September 2, 2020. 1:23 a.m.
Niles District Library in Niles, Michigan 49120
Monday, September 7, 2020 Labor Day
Monday, October 12, 2020 Columbus Day (Staff Work Day)
Wednesday, November 25, 2020 Close at 5:00pm for Thanksgiving Eve AND Thursday, November 26, 2020 Thanksgiving Day
Thursday, December 24, 2020 Friday, December 25, 2020 Saturday, December 26, 2020 Christmas Holiday
Thursday, December 31, 2020 Close at 5:00pm New Year’s Eve
from online article at UMC dot-org ---
The Commission on the General Conference has announced new 2021 dates for General Conference following the postponement of the event due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The quadrennial legislative event will take place on August 29 - September 7, 2021, at the Minneapolis Convention Center in Minneapolis, Minn.
"We're grateful that we were able to secure new dates while keeping the site of General Conference in Minneapolis. Nearly seven years of pre-planning and preparations by the host team have gone into this event," said Kim Simpson, chair of the Commission on the General Conference.
The Commission decided to focus on 2021 as it was not feasible to schedule any earlier with so much uncertainty over international travel and the spread of COVID-19. Business manager Sara Hotchkiss was authorized by the Commission in March to pursue negotiations for new dates with the venue and area hotels after the Convention Center canceled May events due to concerns over coronavirus.
Hotchkiss said that it was surprising to find an available time block long enough to accommodate General Conference needs with so much competition for event space and lodging with other events shifting their dates as well.
“The hospitality industry has been devastated by COVID-19 with staffing levels significantly reduced, so negotiating amid the pandemic was a much slower process. I am grateful for our partnerships in the industry we have built over the years that assisted us in getting our foot in the door early enough to find any dates in 2021,” said Hotchkiss. “Another challenge was to secure agreements for the number of hotel rooms and room types that we needed. Again, many of our partners faced furloughs and reduced staff hours.”
In making the announcement, the Commission expressed regret that they were not able to accommodate a request from a group of young delegates regarding the reported dates of the postponed General Conference. The group asked the Commission to not schedule meeting dates that would conflict with the start of the academic year in the U.S. They cited concerns that the timing would disproportionately affect young leaders and hinder their participation, as well as that of educators who might not be able to take off work at that time.
The leadership of the Commission met with the group and invited them to address the full Commission, which includes young adult members, at their May 16 meeting to hear the requests directly and consider their concerns.
“Including young adults in the General Conference is always an important consideration. We affirm that their voices need to be heard,” said Simpson. “Unfortunately, this request did not come to the Commission until late in the process. By that time, the available dates were secured and any attempt to change the dates would endanger the carrying forward of the deposits to the newly agreed upon dates. This is at least a half-million dollars. To move the event now would require either finding a new meeting location and host annual conference(s) or pushing the event to 2022, both of which would involve cancelling contracts and significant penalties.”
Simpson said the impact would go beyond finances. “To meet in 2021, if at all possible, is very important in the life of the church. Many things hinge on the dates for General Conference. Pushing it to 2022 affects budgets, jurisdictional conferences, central conferences, the election of bishops, bishops’ retirement dates, terms of office of general agency boards and elected denominational leadership, and more. After listening carefully and discussing it thoroughly, we felt we had to proceed with the dates we’ve secured.”
Hotchkiss said “Our partners in the hospitality industry moved mountains in good faith with us to help us find dates for a postponed General Conference. There could be significant repercussions, not just financially, but also affecting those who would even be willing to assist us into the future if we do not honor our agreements and all the work that has gone into this.”
However, the Commission did take steps to address a second request contained in a letter from the young adult group to consider alternative methods of accommodating full participation, including utilizing technology to enable virtual voting.
In response to this request, the Commission voted to gather a group of creative thinkers, including young delegates, to explore the implications of options for accommodating full participation at General Conference, including, but not limited to, the possibility of utilizing technology and online voting at the General Conference. The recommendations of this group will be presented to the Commission for consideration.
“We know this would not be a simple task,” said Simpson. “We must consider the integrity of the voting and credentialing processes, legal ramifications, and the global nature of our church.”
373-acre site on NE side of Niles
Largest piece shipped for assembly is 100-feet long, 12-feet high and 15-feed wide Heat Recovery Steam Generators - - - weight is 613,000 pounds
Other enormous components include 750,000 pound Turbine Generators
$1.1 billion project at 2200 Progressive Avenue, Niles, MI
Around two million linear feet of electrical conduit & cable will be installed to 4 miles of concrete sidewalk; 125,000 feet of piping
from article in Detroit Free Press = www.freep.com/
Fitness centers, theaters, bowling alleys, ice rinks and related facilities — ordered closed for more than five months during the coronavirus pandemic — are expected to get the OK this week from Gov. Gretchen Whitmer to reopen after the Labor Day holiday (next Monday is Labor Day / September 7).
An announcement could come as soon as Wednesday, the Free Press has learned.
Though the situation remains fluid and is subject to change based on factors such as a sudden spike in case numbers, Whitmer is expected this week to finally give a green light for the businesses and facilities to reopen, subject to social distancing and sanitation safety protocols and new requirements intended to facilitate contact tracing in the event of an infection, according to one person with close knowledge of discussions.
Most of the affected facilities have been ordered closed since March 21, 2020 in south and central Michigan, but have been able to open in the Upper Peninsula and northern Lower Peninsula since June 10.
August 30 Web Page Views = 48
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September 9 page views = 61
September 16 page views = 286
September 17, 2020 Page Views = 252
September 18 page views = 95
9/19/2020 = 42
Sunday Sept. 20, 2020 = 200
Sept. 21, 2020 page views = 67
September 22 = 52
September 24 = 32
September 25, 2020 Page Views = 110
from AP News web announcement
ABC will air “Black Panther” commercial-free Sunday 8/30/2020 as a prime-time tribute to Chadwick Boseman.
The film will be followed by an ABC News Special, “Chadwick Boseman: A Tribute for a King.” Disney said the special “will celebrate Boseman’s storied life, legacy and career” and “shine a light on the medical condition he privately battled.”
Boseman died Friday after a four-year battle with colon cancer. He was 43.
Walt Disney Co., which owns ABC, released “Black Panther” as well as the other three Marvel movies Boseman appeared in. The film will be broadcast at 8 p.m. EDT, with the special following at 10:20 p.m. EDT.
Upcoming dates are Fridays in September 2020 and October 2
An outdoor lunch-time concert series, Fridays by the Fountain at Jon R. Hunt Plaza, is a summertime tradition in downtown South Bend! Each summer between the months of June and August, the concert series runs every Friday and features live entertainment from local blues, jazz, rock, folk, and country bands. The concerts are free and run from 11:45 a.m. – 1:15 p.m.
Food vendors are available and they offer a variety of lunchtime favorites including pizza, sandwiches, salads and smoothies, or you may choose to bring your own! Tables are set in and around the plaza to give concertgoers a space to eat or bring a blanket and relax on the lawn.
July 10 Jerica Paliga
July 17 High Life
July 24 Hey Annie
July 31 P.T. and The Cruisers
August 7 The Toona’s
August 14 The Van Dyke Revue
August 21 Sankofa
August 28 Ginger & Her Baked Goods
September 4 The Music Village
September 11 Whistle Pigs
September 18 The Oblates of Blues
September 25 Kennedy’s Kitchen
October 2 The Remedy Band
Website with related information is http://visitsouthbend.com/
This Midsummer reading features Sarah Scanlon, Ariel in the NDSF 2016 production of The Tempest, and Cameron Knight, director of NDSF's 2018 production of Othello and star of NDSF 2017's production of Much Ado About Nothing. Titania and Bottom will be read by Chicago-based actors Susaan Jamshidi and Jason Goff, and Helena will be read by Nemuna Ceesay.
Whitty, whose text is the basis of this reading, is an Academy Award-nominated and Tony Award-winning playwright (Avenue Q), screenwriter, and actor.
Premiering Friday August 28, 2020 at 7 p.m. EDT, the reading will be available on the Shakespeare at Notre Dame YouTube channel for four days only. The performance is FREE; donations will benefit the Paul Rathburn Fund supporting NDSF artists. The Festival's founder and original Producing Artistic Director, Dr. Paul Rathburn passed away February 12, 2020. The reading celebrates his legacy, and takes place on his birthday weekend.
The Notre Dame Shakespeare Festival exists to enrich on-campus and surrounding communities and in the summer of 2020 celebrated the award of two prominent grants: the Play On Shakespeare! reading and another from the National Endowment for the Arts Shakespeare in American Communities: Juvenile Justice.
Storms likely on/off through the afternoon and evening hours with the best chance of severe weather after dark, arriving around midnight. We’ll be tracking heavy rain, potential flooding, strong winds, and small hail. A minor tornado can’t be counted out. Today is hot and humid with temperatures in the upper 80s feeling like the mid to upper 90s. Very sticky and uncomfortable before this evening’s cold front moves through Michiana.
TONIGHT:
Overnight storms will be dangerous in some parts of Michiana. Make sure you have fresh batteries in your weather radio and download the first alert weather app. Lows drop into the upper 60s with a much more comfortable setting.
How well you fare in fighting a new pathogen like SARS-CoV2 depends in large part on how your immune system responds to—and kills—the virus. The immune system’s job is to protect you from invasions, both right after you’re infected as well as when you encounter similar viruses in the future.
As the pandemic marches on, we still don’t know exactly how our immune systems tackle this virus. The people who get the sickest seem to have an exaggerated, but ineffective immune response that turns on their own bodies. Others have lasting symptoms, sometimes for months. Immune responses even seem to vary based on your sex.
Increasingly, research suggests that COVID-19 is a disease like many others, at least in some important ways. Your body remembers the virus, and may therefore fight it more effectively the next time you encounter it—which has big implications for eventually developing an effective vaccine.
Immunobiologist Deepta Bhattacharya and New York Times science journalist Katherine J. Wu talk to Ira about the complicated and varied response of the immune system to SARS-CoV2—and why current research suggests we can be optimistic about gaining long-lasting immunity from future COVID-19 vaccines.
https://www.sciencefriday.com/segments/coronavirus-immune-system/
www.sciencefriday.com/
BREAKING NEWS: (noon) Aug. 28, 2020
President John Jenkins has announced that in-person classes will resume on
September 2, 2020 (Wednesday)
The National Weather Service in Northern Indiana has issued a * Severe Thunderstorm Warning for... Northeastern La Porte County in northwestern Indiana... South central Berrien County in southwestern Michigan... * Until 645 PM EDT/545 PM CDT/. *
At 618 PM EDT/518 PM CDT/, a severe thunderstorm was located near Three Oaks, or 8 miles northeast of La Porte, moving east at 20 mph. HAZARD...60 mph wind gusts and penny size hail.
SOURCE...Radar indicated. IMPACT...Expect damage to roofs, siding, and trees. * Locations impacted include... Three Oaks
National Dog Day was founded in 2004 by Animal Welfare Advocate Colleen Paige;
it celebrates all breeds, pure and mixed, serves to help galvanize the public to recognize the number
of dogs that need to be adopted each year.
http://nationaldogday.com/
August 24 -- story reported by CBSLocal dot-com
More restrictions for swimming in Lake Michigan, but this time it’s not because of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Due to a shorage of lifeguards, swimming and wading are prohibited at Indiana Dunes State Park from now until Saturday, Sept. 5, 2020.
The beach remains open for sunbathing and walking during regular park hours.
Three Oaks, Michigan -
The Harbor Country Singers presents a folk song sing-along at 6:30 p.m. 8/27/2020 at the Arts & Education Center, 14 Maple Street.
Songs by Pete Seeger, Woody Guthrie, Bob Dylan, Joni Mitchell, Peter/Paul/Mary
The School American Music's Donna Mitchells and HCS Producer Pat Putnam will lead singing. Guitar Instructor Ron Spears will provide accompaniment.
http://schoolofamericanmusic.com/hcs
at Notre Dame dot-edu website
-
Location: via Zoom
Join the Klau Center for Civil and Human Rights as James Goodwin, BA '61, owner and publisher of Tulsa’s only Black-owned newspaper, The Oklahoma Eagle, explores his city’s 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre, when hundreds of Black-owned businesses were burned, nearly 300 Black residents were killed, thousands more fled, and a vibrant and successful Black community was gutted by mob violence.
Streaming from August 22 - September 5, 2020
http://raybradburyreadathon.com/
FAHRENHEIT 451
as read by writers, actors, librarians, and young readers across the county
NEIL GAIMAN
SUSAN ORLEAN
William Shatner
Carla Hayden
Charles Bolden, Jr.
Marlon James
Ann Druyan
Marjorie Liu
from www.CVS.com/
Our practitioners provide this vaccine to children 18 months or older.
Patients must be 5 years or older in Connecticut and 2 years or older in Kentucky.
Patients with the following may be directed to another health care provider:
see www.nileslibrary.com/ For more specifics of the limited display in the Library Rotunda, Niles, MI
Righting a Wrong poster exhibition traces the story of Japanese national and Japanese American incarceration during World War II and the people who survived it. Young and old lived crowded together in hastily built camps, endured poor living conditions, and were under the constant watch of military guards for two and a half years. Meanwhile, brave Japanese American men risked their lives fighting for the United States. Some 40 years later, members of the Japanese American community led the nation to confront the wrong it had done—and urged Congress to make it right. Based on an original exhibition at the National Museum of American History, the Righting a Wrong poster exhibition centers around eight core questions that encourage viewers to engage in a dialogue about how this happened and could it happen again. Embracing themes that are as relevant today as they were 75 years ago, the poster exhibition brings forth themes of identity, immigration, prejudice, civil rights, courage, and what it means to be an American
Righting a Wrong: Japanese Americans and World War II was developed by the National Museum of American History and adapted by the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service. The traveling exhibition and poster exhibition are supported by a grant from the Asian Pacific American Initiatives Pool, administered by the Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Center, the Terasaki Family Foundation, and C. L. Ehn & Ginger Lew.
August 14, 2020 marks the Display opening in Niles, Michigan.
from WW II Museum (New Orleans, LA) online web article
The Allied celebrations on Victory in Europe Day (V-E Day), on May 8, 1945, were subdued by the knowledge that war raged on in the Pacific. As the fighting ended in Europe, US troops were drawing a noose around the Japanese home islands. But there were ominous signs that Japan’s fierce resistance would continue. The battles for Iwo Jima and Okinawa during the first half of 1945 were marked by spectacular carnage, and Americans were chastened by the knowledge that Japan had never surrendered to a foreign power and that no Japanese military unit had surrendered during World War II.
After Okinawa fell to US forces on June 22, 1945, an invasion of the Japanese home islands was set to begin. But before the invasion was to take place, the most destructive war in history came to a shattering and rapid end. On August 6, the United States dropped the first atomic bomb over Hiroshima, ultimately killing as many as 140,000 people. Two days later, the Soviet Union declared war on Japan. Then, on August 9, the United States dropped a second atomic bomb over Nagasaki, ultimately killing approximately 70,000.
Finally recognizing that victory was impossible, the Japanese government accepted Allied surrender terms without qualifications on August 14, 1945. That same day, President Harry S. Truman announced from the White House that the Japanese acceptance met the terms laid down at the Potsdam Conference for unconditional surrender. As soon as the news of Japan’s surrender was announced on August 14, celebrations erupted across the United States. The United Kingdom announced that its official V-J Day would be the next day, August 15, 1945, and Americans exuberantly joined in that day’s merriment, too.
https://the1a.org/segments/vaccine-covid-coronavirus-cost/
There are at least 165 coronavirus vaccine candidates in development around the world. Billions of dollars are being spent and most are in “preclinical testing” — although most are not expected to go much further.
But according to the World Health Organization, 26 COVID-19 vaccine candidates are now being tested on humans.
Dr. Anthony Fauci says we should not expect to find a silver bullet but the signs are promising. That’s the feel-good news. It seems we are on track for a vaccine.
But what’s the cost of a COVID-19 vaccine? Who will pay? And how will it be made available?
Check your NPR listings for Tuesday August 11 -- The 1A is available from 10 - 12 Noon weekdays.
from WNDU (NBC affiliate) South Bend, IN for NE Indiana and SW Michigan "Michiana"
SEVERE THUNDERSTORM WATCH 429 IS IN EFFECT
UNTIL 1200 AM EDT FOR THE FOLLOWING LOCATIONS MI .
MICHIGAN COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE BERRIEN, CASS & others
from Sun-Times Chicago media online information (early morning, Monday 8/10/2020)
Looting and property damage was reported throughout downtown Chicago overnight.
Videos posted to social media showed large crowds breaking windows and entering stores along the Magnificent Mile.
Chicago police said the situation was still ongoing early Monday and could not provide details about specific incidents or numbers of arrests.
The CTA suspended bus and train service downtown at the “request of public safety officials,” the transit agency said in a tweet. No buses or trains will run in the area bordered by Fullerton and Ashland avenues and, Cermak road.
from Notre Dame student media (ND - SMC - Holy Cross "Observer" web article)
Friday, August 7, 2020
A member of the Notre Dame community has tested positive for COVID-19, according to a Friday email from Paul Browne, vice president for public affairs and communications.
The email said the individual and six others who came into close contact with them are now in quarantine. A public dashboard will be available next week to provide the Notre Dame community with daily updates regarding campus cases.
“Please remember to wear your masks, socially distance, and wash your hands frequently, and complete your daily health check,” Browne said.
from ABC 57 (network affiliate in S. Bend, IN) -- early a.m.
Thousands of people across Michiana are in the dark early Monday morning (August 10, 2020) after a storm in our area.
We've heard many police and fire calls for downed power lines and blown transformers.
According to the I&M Outage Map, there are nearly 9,000 total I&M customers without service as of about 3:30 a.m. Monday.
The majority of them are on South Bend's west side, but there's also a large outage near Three Oaks and smaller outages in Niles and Elkhart.
According to that map, the outages in South Bend are estimated to be fixed by 7:30 a.m. and the outage in Michigan should be fixed by 5:30 a.m.
www.cbsnews.com/
Sunday Morning website section announces
8/8 is annually the "International Day of the Cat"
The BYU Cougars announced that the program’s football team will open the 2020 college football season against the Naval Academy.
The game will take place at Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium and will start at 6 p.m. (Mountain Time). It will be televised during primetime on ESPN.BYU will travel to Annapolis, Maryland to play Navy on Labor Day, Monday, September 7.