Man ghosts Chapel Hill woman who paid him for backyard work
"Where are you? Are you showing up today?" A Chapel Hill woman's contractor took the money and ran...and this contractor pleaded guilty to doing something very similar several years ago.
The lack of gas is making it hard for school employees and students to drive to campus.
“They just want to gauge how you react and how you think through a response.”
Another club can now sign Albert Pujols and only pay him the prorated minimum of $570,050. The Angels would pay the rest of his $30-million salary.
Joel Embiid and the Philadelphia 76ers knock off the Orlando Magic to finally clinch the No. 1 seed in the East.
Turns out Gracie the kitten was losing lots of her fur because she's a Lykoi, a breed of cat with a genetic mutation that makes them look a little bit like werewolves.
The popular mockumentary series was full of improvised lines, unplanned moments, and unscripted scenes, according to the cast.
'Ivan Stepanov' is one of those 'Blacklist' episodes that makes you ask the existential questions.
Former Alabama wide receiver DeVonta Smith looks fantastic going through drills with the Philadelphia Eagles, who drafted him in the first.
On the ground in India, COVID-19 is everywhere. It's in the fear that keeps people trapped indoors, a vacant silence falling over the normally bustling city of New Delhi. It's in the chaos outside of hospitals, where we see family members desperately searching for an intensive care unit bed or oxygen for their loved ones.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) told CNN Thursday that members will still be required to wear masks on the House floor, despite new CDC guidance allowing fully vaccinated people to remove their masks indoors. What she's saying: “No,” Pelosi told CNN when asked if the rule would change. "Are they all vaccinated?” Get market news worthy of your time with Axios Markets. Subscribe for free.Pelosi's spokesperson cited the lack of clarity about which House members and their staffs are fully vaccinated, per Bloomberg.The big picture: According to the CDC guidance issued Thursday, fully vaccinated people can participate in indoor and outdoor activities without masks or physically distancing, regardless of crowd size.The White House emailed staff later Thursday saying that fully vaccinated staffers can remove their masks while on the White House grounds.Some House Republicans called on Pelosi and the Capitol's attending physician to lift the mask rule, per Bloomberg.Of note: Earlier this week Pelosi loosened the House's mask rules, allowing members to remove their masks when recognized to address the chamber. Pelosi introduced the mask requirement in July 2020 after several Republican members refused to wear them.Pelosi's office did not immediately respond to Axios' request for comment. More from Axios: Sign up to get the latest market trends with Axios Markets. Subscribe for free
“I just collapsed outside the store.”
The market for hand sanitizer absolutely exploded last year, and for good reason. The coronavirus pandemic made hand sanitizer not just a nice thing to have, but an absolute necessity for many, and it flew off store shelves so fast that it was virtually impossible to find for months. At the time, a lot of companies jumped at the chance to make a quick buck and produce their own hand sanitizer, even if they were never in the business to begin with, and we began to see a ton of recalls for hand sanitizer that was tainted with far more dangerous things that simple alcohol. Now, a new recall bulletin posted by the FDA announces that yet another random hand sanitizer brand has apparently been slinging hand sanitizer that is tainted with methanol. Methanol, unlike alcohol, can lead to toxic exposure through the skin. Symptoms can include headache and nausea but more serious things like blindness, coma, nervous system damage, and even death can come as a result of exposure. The brands, which are called DIBAR Labs Hand Sanitizer and ProtectoRX Hand Sanitizer, were produced by Dibar Nutricional S. de R.L. de C.V. of Mexico. The product was sold in bottles ranging from 2oz to 16oz. A total of nearly 30 lots of hand sanitizers are subject to recall, and the FDA is advising anyone that purchased the product to avoid using it and return it to where it was purchased. Via the FDA: These products are used as hand sanitizers and marketed to help decrease bacteria on the skin when soap and water are not available. The affected bottles of hand sanitizer include a twelve digit lot code printed on the bottle near the base. The products can be identified by the label, scent, and lot code provided in the table at the end of this release. These products were distributed nationwide in the USA through S.E.N.D. LLC and its customers (Table 1). Products labeled as ProtectoRx Hand Sanitizer were distributed in Puerto Rico through PR TRADING LLC and its customers (Table 2.). The inclusion of methanol makes them toxic, and the list of potential health effects is long and, to be honest, pretty scary: Substantial methanol exposure can result in nausea, vomiting, headache, blurred vision, permanent blindness, seizures, coma, permanent damage to the nervous system, or death. Although all persons using these products on their hands are at risk, young children who accidentally ingest the products and adolescents and adults who drink the products as an alcohol (ethanol) substitute are most at risk for methanol poisoning. If you purchased any of this recalled hand sanitizer you should immediately stop using it and return it for a refund. The company doesn't say how it came to ship methanol-tainted hand sanitizer, but this isn't exactly the first time it has happened.
Ashok Khondare, a 39-year-old vegetable seller in the western Indian city of Pune, had already borrowed money to pay for his sister's treatment when she died in a private hospital two weeks after contacting COVID-19. The only available hearse driver charged 5,000 Indian rupees ($68) for a 6-km (four-mile) journey to the nearest crematorium – five times the going rate. India’s second wave of the coronavirus has not only created shortages of oxygen, medicines and hospital beds, but also of wood for funeral pyres, hearses and crematorium slots, forcing people like Khondare to pay exorbitant amounts to perform the last rites of loved ones.
“I absolutely believe that the more good things happen, the more good things you expect to happen.”
Using Guam, a U.S. territory, to screen refugees before they come to America is not a new idea. It's a practical way to redeem the war's meaning.
After my water broke in front of a class of high schoolers, I realized: Human beings, even teenagers, will never stop surprising you.
Former "Bachelor" Colton Underwood came out as gay earlier this year, while actor Joshua Bassett recently said he is "figuring out" his sexuality.
Gov. DeSantis and Republican lawmakers are taking a victory lap around Florida touting their success in pushing through their agenda during the 2021 legislative session.
The picture is the first of the Microsoft billionaire since announcing his divorce from Melinda Gates.
The best gaming chair deals to shop right now include some of our top favorites from brands such as Secretlab and more—get the scoop.