Wednesday, Apr 29th, 2020
A pug in Chapel Hill, North Carolina becomes the first dog in the United States to test positive for COVID-19. Three of the humans it lives with have also tested positive for the disease. (WRAL-TV)
Trump orders meat plants remain open, despite COVID-19 outbreaks President Trump on Tuesday night used the Defense Production Act to order meat processing facilities stay open amid the coronavirus pandemic. Several have shut down in recent weeks due to employee illness, with some plants reporting that hundreds of workers have been infected with COVID-19. Trump’s executive order classifies meat plants as “critical infrastructure,” and says the closures “threaten the continued functioning of the national meat and poultry supply chain” during the pandemic. Trump signed the order after John Tyson, chairman of the board of Tyson Foods, placed a newspaper ad over the weekend stating that “the food supply chain is breaking.” The United Food and Commercial Workers International Union says at least 20 meat plant employees have died of the coronavirus. Source: The New York Times
COVID-19 has now killed more Americans than the Vietnam War A grim milestone was reached on Tuesday evening, as the number of coronavirus deaths in the United States surpassed the number of Americans who were killed in the Vietnam War. A tally kept by Johns Hopkins University shows the U.S. COVID-19 death toll is now at 58,365, with more than one million confirmed cases. The first known U.S. death from COVID-19 occurred on Feb. 6 in San Jose, California. Over the course of nearly two decades, 58,220 Americans died while fighting in the Vietnam War. The deadliest year for the United States in Vietnam was 1968, when 16,899 troops were killed. The most deaths that year occurred on Jan. 31, with 246 Americans killed during the Tet Offensive. Source: NPR
U.S. passes 1 million confirmed coronavirus cases There have now been more than one million confirmed cases of COVID-19 in the United States, the Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center reported Tuesday. Worldwide, there have been more than three million confirmed cases of coronavirus. More than 58,300 deaths from COVID-19 have been reported in the United States, and more than 213,000 deaths have been reported globally. A model from the University of Washington that’s been used by the White House estimated there will be more than 74,000 deaths from COVID-19 in the United States by the beginning of August, up from the projection of 67,000 last week. The Wall Street Journal notes the U.S. reached one million confirmed cases less than three weeks after reaching 500,000 cases. Source: CBS News
Oscars changes rule requiring films be released in theaters The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences has adjusted its rule requiring that films receive at least a limited theatrical release in Los Angeles in order to qualify for the Oscars. After a meeting of the board of governors, the Academy said on Tuesday that for the 2021 Oscars, movies that “had a previously planned theatrical release but are initially made available” on streaming or on demand can now qualify for the awards as long as they meet other eligibility requirements and are made available on the Academy’s streaming site within 60 days of release. The Academy said this is a “temporary exception” that will no longer apply beginning “on a date to be determined” after movie theaters reopen. Source: The Hollywood Reporter
Tuesday, Apr 28th, 2020
Offshore drilling contractor Diamond Offshore Drilling files for bankruptcy due to the oil price collapse, following the reduction in oil demand during the global coronavirus pandemic. (The Wall Street Journal)
Delta Air Lines announces it is suspending flights to several small-hub airports after losing $534 million in the first quarter of this year due to aviation restrictions caused by the coronavirus pandemic. (MLive.com)
A prison riot at the Lurigancho jail over demands for better sanitary measures and COVID-19 medical care in San Juan de Lurigancho, Peru, leaves nine inmates dead, according to the National Penitentiary Institute. (Reuters)