Letters: Online bullying | Attract teachers | Peace in Gaza

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 09:12:15 GMT

Letters: Online bullying | Attract teachers | Peace in Gaza Submit your letter to the editor via this form. Read more Letters to the Editor.Online bullying OK’dby MAGA leadersRe: “Meta engineer saw his own child face harassment online” (Page C7, Nov. 8).I was not surprised by Meta’s failure to take action to stem online harassment on Instagram. A former Meta engineering director reported online harassment his daughter experienced on Instagram, reporting them directly to Mark Zuckerberg. His concerns went unheeded.I am troubled more by the prevalence of unbridled, adolescent bullying online. Why is this so common? But I watch Donald Trump’s schoolyard bullying rhetoric in campaign rallies, even in a court of law. His behavior tells young people this is okay; this is how strong people talk to people they oppose. I watch the MAGA Republicans in the House, whose legislative strategy seems to be “I am going to hold my breath and stomp my feet until I get my way.” They are telling young people this is the way to work out differen...

Thousands flee Gaza hospital where they were sheltering

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 09:12:15 GMT

Thousands flee Gaza hospital where they were sheltering By Wafaa Shurafa, Isabel Debre and Jack Jeffery | Associated PressDEIR AL-BALAH, Gaza Strip — Thousands of Palestinians sheltering from the Israel-Hamas war at Gaza City’s main hospital fled south Friday after several reported strikes in and around the compound overnight. They joined a growing exodus of people escaping intense urban fighting in the north — including near other hospitals — as Gaza officials said the territory’s death toll surpassed 11,000.The search for safety across the besieged Gaza Strip has grown desperate as Israel intensified its assault on the territory’s largest city.The Israel army says Hamas’ military infrastructure is based amid Gaza City’s hospitals and neighborhoods, and that it has set up its main command center in and under the largest hospital, Shifa — claims the militant group and Shifa staff deny.Israel has vowed to destroy Hamas after its deadly Oct. 7 surprise incursion, which killed at least 1,200.More than 100,000 P...

Antioch residents call for resignation of police chief, other supervisors

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 09:12:15 GMT

Antioch residents call for resignation of police chief, other supervisors Multiple community organizers are calling for Antioch’s acting police chief — as well as the president of its police officers’ union — to step down amid revelations that they and other police supervisors approved of officers’ uses of force that the FBI later deemed criminal.The latest pleas for housecleaning at the highest levels of the Antioch Police Department come days after a Bay Area News Group report found that acting police Chief Joseph Vigil, Sgt. Rick Hoffman — the president of the Antioch Police Officers Association — and others concluded time and again that the actions of their officers followed department guidelines and deserved no discipline. The FBI, in a criminal indictment of three officers, found that some of the uses of force violated policies as well as people’s civil rights.“They’re the problem – they signed off on all this. Now, they’re watching the henhouse,” said Frank Sterling Jr., an Antioch residen...

First Look: Oakland’s Good Luck Gato revels in the fun of Mexican-Japanese cuisine

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 09:12:15 GMT

First Look: Oakland’s Good Luck Gato revels in the fun of Mexican-Japanese cuisine It’s hard to improve on the izakaya formula – a comfortable neighborhood joint with tasty bar bites, washed down with copious beer or bracing spirits. But chef Matt Meyer has given the genre a brilliant twist with Good Luck Gato, an “izakaya cantina” near downtown Oakland that blends the best of Mexican and Japanese cuisine.It’s eye-opening how well Meyer’s kitchen plays with the East-West flavors. A simple-looking taco is the menu’s blockbuster: It pairs a handmade tortilla with pork-curry sausage, ginger pico de gallo and a fried Jidori egg whose warm yolk collects in a wooden bowl for dipping. There is Mexican street corn boiled in dashi and slathered with uni-butter sauce – then topped with more fresh sea urchin – and a Choco Taco that will shatter your expectations for this bodega-freezer dessert.Left to right: Good Luck Gato owner Kyle Itani, chef/partner Matthew Meyer, beverage director/partner Daniel Paez (Nicola Parisi) Meyer was raised by Mexic...

10 tips to avoid a cooking fire this Thanksgiving

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 09:12:15 GMT

10 tips to avoid a cooking fire this Thanksgiving As people start their Thanksgiving cooking this year, please keep fire safety in mind, the National Fire Protection Association urges.Thanksgiving Day is the most common day for home cooking fires to break out in the U.S., according to the organization. On Thanksgiving Day in 2021, fire departments across the U.S. reported receiving about triple the number of daily home cooking fires compared to the daily average. (Christmas Day and Christmas Eve are the second- and third-most risky.)It’s easy to get distracted while cooking Thanksgiving dinner, but staying focused on what you’re doing and not leaving those pots unattended are critical matters of safety, says Lorraine Carli, vice president of outreach and advocacy at the National Fire Protection Association.“Thanksgiving is a hectic holiday with multiple dishes cooking and baking at the same time, along with lots of guests, entertaining and other distractions that can make it easy to lose sight of what’s on the sto...

Astronaut Frank Borman dies at 95; Apollo 8 commander helped pave way for 1969 moon landing

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 09:12:15 GMT

Astronaut Frank Borman dies at 95; Apollo 8 commander helped pave way for 1969 moon landing Associated PressBILLINGS, Mont. — Astronaut Frank Borman, who commanded Apollo 8’s historic Christmas 1968 flight that circled the moon 10 times and paved the way for the lunar landing the next year, has died. He was 95.Borman died Tuesday in Billings, Montana, according to NASA.Borman also led troubled Eastern Airlines in the 1970s and early ’80s after leaving the astronaut corps.But he was best known for his NASA duties. He and his crew, James Lovell and William Anders, were the first Apollo mission to fly to the moon — and to see Earth as a distant sphere in space.“Today we remember one of NASA’s best. Astronaut Frank Borman was a true American hero,” NASA Administrator Bill Nelson said in a statement Thursday. “His lifelong love for aviation and exploration was only surpassed by his love for his wife Susan.”Launched from Florida’s Cape Canaveral on Dec. 21, 1968, the Apollo 8 trio spent three days traveling to the moon, and slipped into lunar orbit on Christmas...

Child sex offender convicted of crimes committed at Salinas church

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 09:12:15 GMT

Child sex offender convicted of crimes committed at Salinas church (KRON) -- A convicted sex offender was living at a Salinas church when he preyed on a 14-year-old girl who attended church services, Monterey County prosecutors said. Jaime Tirso Ayala Jr., 47, of Salinas, was convicted by a jury this week of annoying or molesting a child. The judge noted that Ayala abused a position of trust at Family Christian Center, and he was on parole at the time he targeted the girl. Ayala is a registered child sex offender for a 1995 conviction, prosecutors said. He previously served prison time for committing a lewd act on a child younger than 14. "After his release on parole, the defendant began living in a room at the Family Christian Centerchurch in the city of Salinas. It was through this church that the defendant met Jane Doe, age 14,who was a member of the congregation. He began complimenting her appearance and asking for her phone number. Then he began following her around the church and touching her without her consent," the District Attorney's Off...

17-year-old arrested for stolen firearm with extended magazine in South SF

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 09:12:15 GMT

17-year-old arrested for stolen firearm with extended magazine in South SF (KRON) -- A 17-year-old boy was arrested with a stolen firearm and a 15-round magazine Thursday night, according to the South San Francisco Police Department. South SF PD's Criminal Interdiction Unit conducted a traffic stop on a vehicle near Airport Boulevard and Miller Avenue. DA: Serial shoplifter at Westfield San Francisco mall denied bail The driver, police said, was on probation with search and seizure, and had prior firearm related arrests. There were three other juveniles in the car at the time of the stop.Officers patted down one of the rear passengers -- a 17-year-old boy -- and located the firearm loaded with the 15-round magazine in his front jacket pocket. The firearm, officers determined, was stolen out of Texas.The 17-year-old was arrested and booked at Hillcrest Juvenile Hall.

Victim swept into ocean at Point Reyes dies

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 09:12:15 GMT

Victim swept into ocean at Point Reyes dies (KRON) -- A victim died after being swept by waves into the ocean at Point Reyes on Friday. Marin County firefighters said they responded to reports of a person struggling in the water at 9 a.m. Big waves, including sneaker waves, were breaking along Marin County beaches at the time. Six rescue swimmers, four helicopters, and three rescue watercraft were deployed as emergency crews found the victim and pulled the person out of the ocean. The victim was pronounced deceased shortly after, firefighters said. The National Parks Service Point Reyes is investigating circumstances around the incident.

Column: College football keeps its head in the sand and winds up with a silly scandal

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 09:12:15 GMT

Column: College football keeps its head in the sand and winds up with a silly scandal Those absurd signs they hold up on the sidelines — displaying everything from emojis to superheroes to Bluto from “Animal House” — show just how far college football is behind the times.Which makes the signal-stealing scandal at Michigan seem downright quaint.And so unnecessary.College football, which rakes in billions and billions of dollars like an insatiable Pac-Man (also coming to a sideline sign near you, we presume), should simply follow the NFL’s longstanding method of sending in plays.If the quarterback and a defensive player on each team had an electronic device in their helmets, we wouldn’t be dealing with this nonsense.The coaches would simply send in their calls through good ol’ technology, which actually dates to the mid-1950s when a pair of Ohio inventors came to innovative Cleveland NFL coach Paul Brown with a radio receiver they had developed. Instead, college football wound up with a thoroughly avoidable mess on its money-grubbing hands as Michigan, the ...