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Page 12 - தேசிய கால்நடை சேவைகள் ஆய்வகங்கள் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Gorilla Troop tests positive for COVID-19 at SD Zoo Safari Park

3 gorillas test positive for COVID-19 at San Diego Zoo Safari Park—first in the world

Several gorillas test positive for COVID-19 at California zoo first in the world Natasha Daly © Photograph by Edwin Giesbers, Nature Picture Library Critically endangered western lowland gorillas are known to be susceptible to the novel coronavirus. On January 11, three at the San Diego Zoo Safari Park tested positive. Three western lowland gorillas at the San Diego Zoo Safari Park have tested positive for the coronavirus, the U.S. Department of Agriculture announced this afternoon, making them the world’s first-known great apes to contract the virus. The gorillas, who live in a troop of eight, are expected to recover, says Lisa Peterson, executive director of the San Diego Zoo Safari Park, in California. Caretakers have decided to keep all eight gorillas together and monitor them closely.

3 gorillas test positive for COVID-19 at San Diego Zoo—first in the world

Several gorillas test positive for COVID-19 at California zoo first in the world Natasha Daly © Photograph by Edwin Giesbers, Nature Picture Library Critically endangered western lowland gorillas are known to be susceptible to the novel coronavirus. On January 11, three at the San Diego Zoo Safari Park tested positive. Three western lowland gorillas at the San Diego Zoo Safari Park have tested positive for the coronavirus, the U.S. Department of Agriculture announced this afternoon, making them the world’s first-known great apes to contract the virus. The gorillas, who live in a troop of eight, are expected to recover, says Lisa Peterson, executive director of the San Diego Zoo Safari Park, in California. Caretakers have decided to keep all eight gorillas together and monitor them closely.

Pell Grants For Incarcerated Students Are Coming Soon But Will Quality Education Follow?

SCHOOL POLICE Updated Published January 11, 2021 4:41 PM Protestors rallied in front of LAUSD s headquarters during a protest last summer calling on the board to defund the LA School Police. (Chava Sanchez/ LAist) Last summer, following nationwide protests against police brutality and the death of George Floyd, the L.A. Unified School District Board of Education agreed to cut its school police department’s budget by $25 million. The details such as how to make those cuts, and where to redirect the money were to be figured out soon thereafter. Now, six months later, the proposal is still in limbo. A discussion on a drafted policy was scheduled for December, but Superintendent Austin Beutner postponed the item to allow more time for feedback from the school community. It was supposed to be taken up again at tomorrow’s board meeting but a revised agenda posted online says the item on School Police Budget Reduction and Reinvestment is “to be withdrawn.”

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