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Parents slammed the Los Angeles Unified School district after kids were seen on campus for a commercial shoot for Apple TV during the pandemic.
With most schools remaining closed in southern California during the coronavirus outbreak, parents became upset after seeing children at Kester Avenue Elementary School in Sherman Oaks during a shoot for an advertisement, according to ABC7.com in a piece published Thursday.
Not only were the actors on a closed campus, some were reportedly seen not wearing masks nor social distancing despite the fact students have remained at home for almost a year during the pandemic.
California Transit Association director faces uphill battle - San Francisco Business Times bizjournals.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from bizjournals.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
The more children you have, the less you can give each one, and the worse they do. Right? Parents in pandemic isolation without the usual supports from schools, churches, and extended family will certainly resonate with the idea that their time, energy, and attention are split into ever-smaller slices with each child.
It’s also the tradeoff anthropologists and economists have assumed when studying modern fertility patterns. But when John Shaver came across projections during his graduate studies that Hispanic Catholics and Muslims were on track to surpass white Christian subgroups and Jews, respectively, by the midcentury, he was perplexed.
To the editor: I am an African American internal medicine physician who practices in the Crenshaw area. Two of your recently published articles on COVID-19 vaccination access include a piece on individuals receiving vaccinations outside their assigned tier and a column by Steve Lopez on the difficulty he had trying to get his first shot.
This difficulty is what many of my African American colleagues in healthcare and our patients are facing. We’ve endured the inequitable siting of testing locations, the inequitable distribution of Remdesivir to our community hospitals, and now the inequities in accessing vaccines, all of which create racial disparities in COVID-19 morbidity and mortality.