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President Biden has called for setting up 100 mass vaccination centers around the country within a month. Author: Andrew Weil Updated: 2:00 PM CST February 5, 2021
WASHINGTON NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell has reportedly told the Biden administration that every team in the league will make its stadium available for mass COVID-19 vaccinations.
In a letter obtained by Axios, Goodell wrote to President Joe Biden that the NFL is committed to doing our part to ensure that vaccines are as widely accessible in our communities as possible.
The NFL commissioner explained that each of the 32 teams in the league plan to make their stadiums available in coordination with local, state, and federal health officials.
Patrick Mahomes Reveals His Call of Duty: Warzone Loadout Ahead of Super Bowl LV
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Patrick Mahomes, the quarterback of the Kansas City Chiefs, and the man standing in the way of another Tom Brady Super Bowl ring has revealed not his strategy for picking apart of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers defense, but picking apart teams in
Call of Duty: Warzone. More specifically, and during a recent interview, Mahomes revealed his go-to
Warzone loadout, at least at the moment.
During the interview, Mahomes revealed he actually doesn t play
Warzone very much, especially during the NFL season, which makes sense. However, he did recently hop back on, though when he did, he wasn t sure what the best guns were to use because he hadn t played in a while. In other words, his go-to class at the moment is just what those playing with him told to use, and of course, he was advised to use the Kilo and the Mac-10, two of some of the best guns in the game.
A Super Bowl conversation with Tampaâs police chief: âWe donât want to be the mask policeâ
Chief Brian Dugan talks about plans to police a city during a hometown Super Bowl in the middle of a pandemic.
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Tampa police Chief Brian Dugan, seen here at a news conference in November, said his department doesn t want to be the mask police but we will if we have to. [ LUIS SANTANA | Times ]
Published Jan. 30
TAMPA â Like the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Tampa police Chief Brian Dugan finds himself in an unprecedented situation.
Dugan is leading a department tasked with policing its city during the first-ever hometown Super Bowl in the middle of a global pandemic. And Dugan himself is still recovering from his own bout with the coronavirus â he first tested positive on Jan. 10 and again as recently as last Saturday. He returned to the office on Thursday after a negative test.