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Man sentenced to 30 years for trying to kill Seminole County deputy during traffic stop

A man convicted of attempted manslaughter in a 2019 traffic stop that injured a Seminole County deputy will be sentenced on Wednesday.

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Albacore Park announces Remote Winter Lecture Series


Albacore Park announces Remote Winter Lecture Series
Staff Report
PORTSMOUTH –  Portsmouth Submarine Memorial Association and Albacore Park Museum will kick off their Remote Winter Lecture series. These lectures are funded and sponsored by New Hampshire Humanities To-Go program.  All lectures will be held in the Zoom platform and reservations are required.
“Thirteen Days in October: The Untold Cuban Missile Crisis Story with Michael Tougias," will be presented on Thursday, March 25 at 6 p.m. At the height of the Cold War, two things saved humanity: the strategic wisdom of John F. Kennedy and the U2 aerial spy program. Based on declassified intelligence and interviews with the pilots, Michael Tougias and co-author Casey Sherman's book "Above & Beyond: John F. Kennedy and America's Most Dangerous Cold War Spy Mission" grounds this conversation about presidential decision-making, nuclear containment, intelligence-gathering, and public information. It's a timely topic given today's concerns about the United States, North Korea and Iran. Tougias gives special emphasis to the U-2 pilots who flew unarmed over Cuba to secure photographic proof that the Soviets were installing nuclear missiles on the Island. 

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3-Minute Civics: 'People are policy' in presidential administrations


3-Minute Civics: ‘People are policy’ in presidential administrations
President-elect Joe Biden listens as retired Army Gen. Lloyd Austin, Biden’s choice to be secretary of defense, speaks during an event at The Queen theater in Wilmington, Del., on Wednesday. AP
Published: 12/13/2020 6:41:33 AM
(This is a companion piece to the Nov. 22 3-Minute Civics column on presidential transitions by Adam Krauss.)
When I teach my U.S. History students about American elections that changed the political landscape forever, I teach the election of 1800, when Thomas Jefferson defeated John Adams, as the one that saved democracy.
Against George Washington’s advice, political parties had solidified and the 1800 election was particularly nasty, far more than even by today’s standards, even to the point of planting the seed that grew into the duel that would, three years later, kill Alexander Hamilton. What makes this election so important, though, is that after all of the venom and vinegar, power peacefully transferred from one party to another for the first time in American history, setting the standard we follow today.

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