The Latest: FDA authorizes 2 changes to Moderna s vaccine
The Associated Press
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1of30Dr. Mark Ghaly, Secretary, California Health and Human Services, left, inoculates California Gov. Gavin Newsom, right, at the Baldwin Hills Crenshaw Plaza in Los Angeles Thursday, April 1, 2021. Newsom was vaccinated with the new one-dose Janssen COVID-19 vaccine by Johnson & Johnson.Damian Dovarganes/APShow MoreShow Less
2of30FILE - This Wednesday, Feb. 3, 2021 file photo shows a BinaxNOW rapid COVID-19 test made by Abbott Laboratories, in Tacoma, Wash. On Wednesday, March 31, 2021, the FDA said Abbott’s BinaxNow and Quidel’s QuickVue tests can now be sold without a prescription for consumers to test themselves repeatedly at home.Ted S. Warren/APShow MoreShow Less
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DUBAI/ISTANBUL/RIYADH (Reuters) - Some Turkish exporters are rerouting food, clothing and other goods to circumvent a months-long unofficial blockade by Saudi Arabia that has sent trade to record lows, exporters and traders said.
FILE PHOTO: The Cosco Shipping Danube, a container ship of the China Ocean Shipping Company (COSCO), sails in the Bosphorus, on its way to the Mediterranean Sea, in Istanbul, Turkey August 11, 2018. REUTERS/Murad Sezer
Production in nearby countries allows exporters to obtain customs documents and to ditch “Made in Turkey” product tags, allowing goods to enter the kingdom, exporters, traders and a diplomat told Reuters.
By Cherranda Smith
Apr 1, 2021
Two Black women head coaches are making history at this year’s NCAA Women’s Final Four. For the first time in the tournament’s history, two Black women coaches, South Carolina’s
Dawn Staley and Arizona head coach
Adia Barnes, will be leading their teams at the same Final Four.
This will be Coach Staley’s third Final Four, according to
CNN. Coach Barnes will be making her Final Four debut.
Following South Carolina’s win over Texas, Coach Staley told reporters she was “super proud of Adia” and “cheering for her to get it done.”
Leonardo exhibit grapples with a tricky question: What should be done with historical but racially insensitive objects?
Stereotypical depictions of people of color “create biases that exist today,” says executive director of the Utah Black Chamber.
(Leah Hogsten | The Salt Lake Tribune) Copies of the children s books Little Black Sambo and Beauty and the Beast are displayed March 25 in The Leonardo s exhibit Sorting Out Race, a collection of vintage and antique objects that display stereotypical racial imagery. People may write these objects off as kitsch, but as America scrutinizes its racism, past and present, everything from salt shakers to state flags are becoming increasingly fraught for people of color.