Categories
NOVA

Old-School 1983 Shmup Nova 2001 is the Arcade Archives release this week

‘Destroy all crazy robots!’

After a solid week of hitting, Hamster returns to the source of the golden age with the release of the Arcade Archives this week, with the return of UPL’s 1980s space shooter Nova 2001, now available for download on Nintendo Switch.

Originally released in the arcades in 1983 – back when the idea of ​​2001 technology seemed like the stuff of an HG Wells novel – Nova 2001 puts players in the pilot’s seat of a small, state-of-the-art spaceship battling large waves of enemy invaders. Players can zoom and shoot in eight different directions and battle five types of enemies, each armed with their own unique attack formation.

Nova 2001 was supposed to be a further development of some of the earliest eight-way shmups in the gaming world, such as the Atari classic Asteroids. Unfortunately. UPL’s shmup would be massively dwarfed by Williams’ more ambitious and technologically superior Sinistar, which launched that same year and took the arcade scene by storm. Nova 2001 wasn’t without its own charm, with a variety of backgrounds and fast-paced, button-hitting action, it just couldn’t match the frightening atmosphere and synthesized language of the Williams classic.

You can check out the action in the video below, courtesy of YouTuber Old Classic Retro Gaming. Nova 2001 is now available for download on Nintendo Switch and costs around $ 8. It was previously made available on PS4.

Chris Moyse

Senior Editor – Chris has been playing video games since the 1980s. Former Saturday Night Slam Master. Graduated from Galaxy High with Honors.

Categories
Richmond

Richmond Public Schools Aims to Use $ 65 Million Federal Restoration Funds To Help Resolve Reading Crisis | Local news in Richmond

“If [students] can’t read and write … that will hinder their success, “said Autumn Nabors, who coordinates the curriculum for the school department, in a recent interview. “We know these skills are essential in order to learn all areas of content, be it history, science or fine arts or [career and technical education].

The highest number of students found at risk of reading failure were found among black, Latin American, and low-income learners along with English language learners in kindergarten. RPS says. It also found that more students entered kindergarten and first grade and were at risk of reading failure in third grade.

The board voted the year-round school in March, with Jonathan Young, vice chairman of the Richmond School Board, the only one to turn it down on the grounds that RPS desperately needed a revolutionary change in learning.

Now Young is not surprised that the district is where they are planning to resolve a reading crisis.

“At the risk of being less collegial, I have to start with ‘I told you so,’” he said in an interview. “We all realized that closing the school for a year and a half would be a truly unprecedented hardship for our students.”

Categories
News

Sex trafficking isn’t what you think

This week’s solid story.

A billboard in Mounds View, Minnesota, put up by the nonprofit National Human Trafficking Resource Center.
Education Images/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

Corinne Schwarz, Oklahoma State University

The idea that sex trafficking is an urgent social problem is woven into American media stories, from reports of Republican U.S. Rep. Matt Gaetz’s alleged trafficking of teenage girls to debunked QAnon conspiracy theories about a sexual slavery ring run through online retailer Wayfair.

The common perception of sex trafficking involves a young, passive woman captured by an aggressive trafficker. The woman is hidden and waiting to be rescued by law enforcement. She is probably white, because, as the legal scholar Jayashri Srikantiah writes, the “iconic victim” of trafficking usually is depicted this way.

This is essentially the plot of the “Taken” movies, in which teenage Americans are kidnapped abroad and sold into sexual slavery. Such concerns fuel viral posts and TikTok videos about alleged but unproven trafficking in IKEA parking lots, malls and pizza shops.

This is not how sex trafficking usually occurs.

Since 2013, I have researched human trafficking in the midwestern U.S. In interviews with law enforcement, medical providers, case managers, victim advocates and immigration lawyers, I found that even these frontline workers inconsistently define and apply the label “trafficking victim” – especially when it comes to sex trafficking. That makes it harder for these professionals to get trafficked people the help they request.

So here are the facts and the law.

Small crowd stands on a lawn, some holding signs like 'Free the Children'Demonstrators gather May 1, 2021, outside of the Ohio Statehouse in Columbus, Ohio, to protest against pedophilia and sex trafficking.
Scott Olson/Getty Images

What is sex trafficking?

The Victims of Trafficking and Violence Protection Act of 2000 provides the official legal definition for sex and labor trafficking in the United States.

It makes “trafficking in which a commercial sex act is induced by force, fraud, or coercion, or in which the person induced to perform such act has not attained 18 years of age” a federal crime.

In short, to legally qualify as sex trafficking, a sex act involving an adult must include “force, fraud, and coercion.” This could look like someone – a family member, a romantic partner or a market facilitator colloquially described as a “pimp” or “madam” – physically abusing or threatening another adult into sex for money or resources.

With minors, any and all sexual exchanges – that is, trading sex for something of value like cash or food – are considered sex trafficking.

How common is sex trafficking?

Data on human trafficking is notoriously messy and difficult to measure. Survivors may be hesitant to disclose their exploitation out of fear of deportation, if they are undocumented, or arrest. That leads to underreporting.

One way to approximate how many people are being trafficked in the United States is to consult federal grant reports, as suggested by anti-trafficking nonprofit Freedom Network USA.

For example, the federal Office for Victims of Crime served 9,854 total clients – some of whom identified as trafficked, others who showed “strong indicators of trafficking victimization” – between July 2019 and June 2020. The Department of Health and Human Services Office on Trafficking in Persons served 2,398 trafficking survivors during the 2019 fiscal year.

Data from the same office also shows that 25,597 “potential victims” of sex and labor trafficking were identified through calls to the National Human Trafficking Hotline.

Again, this data is incomplete – if survivors have not accessed these particular resources or called these specific hotlines, they are not represented here.

What does sex trafficking look like?

As with other sexual crimes, like rape, sex trafficking survivors often experience violence at the hands of someone they know, not a complete stranger.

The 'Taken' movie posterMovies like ‘Taken’ – and its many sequels – present an unlikely sex-trafficking scenario in which an American teen abroad is snatched and sold into sexual slavery.
EuropaCorp

A study from Covenant House New York, a nonprofit focused on homeless youth, found that 36% of the 22 trafficking survivors in their survey were trafficked by an immediate family member, like a parent. Only four reported “being kidnapped and held against his or her will.”

Often, trafficking victims are younger transgender people or teens experiencing homelessness who exchange sex with others to meet their basic needs: shelter, economic stability, food and health care. Trafficking frequently looks like vulnerable people struggling to survive in a violent, exploitative world.

“They are creating sexual solutions to nonsexual problems,” says San Francisco-based researcher Alexandra Lutnick.

Under U.S. law, these youth are trafficking victims, because of their age. But they may reject the label, preferring terms like “survival sex work” or “prostitution” to describe their experiences.

Trafficking victims engaged in survival sex may well be arrested rather than offered help like housing or health care. If they cannot prove “force, fraud, or coercion,” or if they refuse to comply in a criminal investigation, they risk shifting from victim to criminal in the eyes of law enforcement. That can mean prostitution charges, felony offenses or deportation.

Such punishments are most commonly used against Black, Indigenous, queer, trans and undocumented sex-trafficking survivors. Black youth are disproportionately arrested for prostitution offenses, for example, even though legally any underage commercial sex is sex trafficking.

What is the difference between sex work and sex trafficking?

Legally and in other meaningful ways, sex work and sex trafficking are different.

Sex work is consenting adults engaging in transactional sex. In almost all U.S. states, it is a criminal offense, punishable with fines and even jail sentences.

Sex trafficking is nonconsensual, and it is generally treated as a more severe crime.

Most sex workers’ groups acknowledge that sex work is not inherently sex trafficking but that sex workers can face force, fraud and coercion because they work in a criminalized, stigmatized profession. Sex workers whose experiences meet the legal standards of trafficking may nonetheless fear disclosing that to police and risking arrest for prostitution.

Conversely, sex workers can be mistakenly labeled by police and advocates as “trafficked” and find themselves in the custody of law enforcement or social service agencies.

Street protest of people wearing face masks and holding signs demanding rightsSex workers march against discrimination, the criminalization of their job and sexual violence in Queens, New York, Sept. 18, 2020.
Joana Toro /VIEWpress

What can be done?

Based on my research, reducing sex trafficking requires changes that might prevent it from occurring in the first place. That means rebuilding a stronger, supportive U.S. social safety net to buffer against poverty and housing insecurity.

[Over 100,000 readers rely on The Conversation’s newsletter to understand the world. Sign up today.]

In the meantime, trafficking victims would benefit from efforts by frontline workers to combat the racism, sexism and transphobia that stigmatizes and criminalizes victims who don’t look as people expect – and are struggling to survive.The Conversation

Corinne Schwarz, Assistant Professor of Gender, Women’s, and Sexuality Studies, Oklahoma State University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Follow us on Telegram!

Categories
NOVA

New exhibition at Manassas Museum honors the “faces” that make Manassas great | Lifestyles

Although the Manassas Museum was closed to the public for most of last year due to COVID-19, the museum staff continued to focus on connecting with the community. The result is “Manassas Faces,” a special exhibition designed to introduce museum visitors to the past and present of Manassas residents, which have had a significant impact but are often overlooked.

About a year ago, museum curator Mary Helen Dellinger wanted to create a special exhibition that “isn’t just about the community, but actually created by the community itself,” she said.

She worked together with her staff and together they came up with the idea of ​​asking the residents to nominate “residents who make Manassas the place we all know and love” for an exhibition.



Several residents have been nominated as “COVID superheroes” for their work during the ongoing pandemic.



After the idea came up, they decided on a format for the exhibition and how it would be presented in the museum gallery. Then they informed the community that the museum was seeking nominations from exceptional residents, unsung heroes, and anyone who made a positive impact on Manassas to be included in the special exhibition, Dellinger said.

Museum staff worked side by side with city staff to spread the request in multiple modes of communication with the aim of reaching a broad cross-section of the population, she said.



Photo_Lifestyles_ManassasFaces_ Former Residents.jpg

The “Manassas Faces” exhibition highlights local residents in five categories: former residents, activists, COVID-19 superstars, philanthropy and the new generation.



When the museum received nearly 50 nominations submitted by residents, Dellinger said she was delighted. Then the difficult process of narrowing down the nominations and shaping them into an exhibition began.

Dellinger said she and her staff reviewed all of the submissions to show the diversity of the community and also to showcase the most compelling stories.

“All of the stories were great, and if we had a bigger room I would have put them all up against the wall,” said Dellinger.



Photo_Lifestyles_ManassasFaces_BrienJohnson.jpg

Brien Johnson, a Manassas Faces award winner recognized for his work with youth at risk, visits the museum with his nephew.



After a long deliberation process, Dellinger said, she and her staff selected 26 people whose faces, names and stories would be sprayed across the gallery wall to form the exhibition.

The exhibition is divided into five sections: former residents, activists, COVID-19 superstars, philanthropy, and new generation. The submissions fell into these categories, of course, and it makes sense to group them together, she said.

Dellinger said she continues to believe that all nominees should be included in the exhibition in some way as all of their contributions to the Manassas community are important. She and her staff pondered, and eventually decided, to create an electronic display that includes the remaining nominees as part of the exhibition.

At the end of the exhibition there are mirrors at different heights. Museum visitors are encouraged to look themselves in the mirror to become part of the exhibition.

“When you look in the mirror, you are also an important person. Her story is as valid as anyone else’s, ”she said.

Dellinger said she was proud of the community involvement in creating the exhibition, as well as the feedback it received from the public. The exhibition opened on July 2nd with more than 100 visitors to the exhibition opening, which took place outdoors. The visitors switched to the museum gallery to see the exhibition in small groups.

As a curator, Dellinger said she “liked”[s] to tell all the stories, not just the ones you expect to hear, but also the ones you don’t expect to hear. ”She said she hoped everyone would come to the museum and take a moment to think about the Manassas exhibit Thinking about faces.

“I hope it will convey to people that our community is very diverse. I really hope people can see that on the walls. And I hope it will convey to people that it is worth telling each individual’s story, ”she said.

The Manassas Museum is home to a permanent collection of historical artifacts, interactive exhibits, and educational opportunities for all ages exploring the city’s rich history from Native American to the present day, as well as a number of rotating galleries. The museum building will be closed for a major renovation at the end of this year and will reopen in April 2023.

“Manassas Faces” is now open for free at the Manassas Museum. Further information can be found on the museum website, available at www.manassas.gov/things_to_do

or by calling the museum at 703-368-1873.

Reach Cher Muzyk at cmuzyk@gmail.com

Categories
Richmond

Mask instructions divide parents on the way to the new school year | National news

Alima Bryant, 33, a mother of four who organizes anti-mask parenting in Branford, Connecticut, said she was not a conspiracy theorist but believes scientists have overestimated the dangers of COVID-19, especially to children. She said she will take her children off school instead of exposing them to wearing masks which she believes are more likely to make them sick than the virus.

“Especially with young children, I can imagine how often they touch dirty things and then touch the mask,” she said. “Plus, you have to learn social cues in kindergarten, and even when you’re talking and everything, it’s so important not to wear a mask.”

But parents like Ryan Zuimmerman of Lenexa, Kansas fear that this approach will prolong the pandemic.

In Johnson County, Kansas, the state’s most populous county, five counties recommend masks, but they are not mandatory. A sixth district has not yet been decided.

Zimmerman said at a recent country commissioner meeting that if masks are only recommended and not required, “95% of children will not wear them.”

“This is not about comfort or control or obedience or your rights. It’s not about conspiracy or child abuse. It’s about doing what you want others to do, ”he said.

“I ask you this, if your child was at high risk, what if you had to send this child, whom you had protected all your life, to school in this setting?”

Categories
NOVA

Fairfax County Public Schools: Student-Athletes Return Strong This Fall!

July 29, 2021

Returning to school brings a return to autumn sports. As with our entire return to school plan, safety is a top priority for us as we plan to resume autumn sports. The health and safety protocols in effect this fall include universal indoor masking.

The athletic safety protocols for returning to school are as follows:

  • Outdoor activities – no mask requirement
  • Indoor activities – Mask required for coaches and all players who do not participate in the activity
    • This applies to all exercises, games and outdoor sports that come to practice in the hall
    • This applies to students and employees
  • Masks are currently worn on the school bus; this practice follows the transport guidelines.
  • Students and trainers provide their own water in individual containers. Everyone must have at least 32 ounces; more is recommended depending on individual needs and the demands of the sport.

    A preliminary examination is required for students and trainers.

    Cleaning and disinfection protocols are available.

    The same procedures apply as in the previous school year.

    This press release was produced by Fairfax County Public Schools. The views expressed here are your own.

    Categories
    Richmond

    Matt Perry’s Column: Lawmakers Should Invest in Outdoor Recreation and Conservation | Columnists

    During this session, lawmakers will have the opportunity to make a historic, one-time investment in Virginia’s lands and waters.

    Many states – including North Carolina, Florida, Colorado, Indiana, New Hampshire, and Michigan – have prioritized investments in parks, trails, green spaces, water infrastructure, and conservation with their ARP funding to respond to the same increased demand that we do in Virginia .

    Members of the General Assembly face the unenviable challenge of determining how these federal funds will be used to address the many pressing problems facing the Commonwealth.

    While you are pressing ahead with your deliberations, I call for a well thought-out, future-oriented and focused distribution of these federal funds, which, in addition to the ongoing problem of inadequate access to nature for everyone, also addresses the overuse of our parks and public spaces.

    Increased maintenance and expansion of our open spaces is crucial in order to meet the growing demand from residents and visitors. It is equally important to expand the possibilities for people from all walks of life to develop a closer relationship with their surroundings.

    By properly funding these initiatives, not only will we meet the growing demand for outdoor recreation, but we will also encourage more people to care for and support nature in a sustainable, responsible and environmentally friendly way.

    Categories
    NOVA

    Healthy Voices Make healthy choices as a host of Wake Up Alexandria

    Horizon Public Health’s Healthy Voices Healthy Choices Coalition will host the Alexandria Lakes Area Chamber of Commerce’s Wake Up Alexandria event on Friday, August 6, from 7:30 am to 8:30 am at Discovery Middle School, 510 McKay Avenue North, Alexandria.

    The event is open to everyone. A $ 1 entry is requested, with all proceeds donated to the day’s charitable recipient, the Alexandria Area YMCA. All chamber members will also take part in a drawing for the Pot of Gold, which is currently valued at nearly $ 4,000.

    The Healthy Voices Healthy Choices Coalition is working to create an environment that makes it easier for young people in the Alexandria area to make healthy and positive decisions about substance use.

    The coalition was founded in 2016 and is composed of representatives from various sectors of the community, including youth, parents, businesses, media, schools, youth organizations, law enforcement agencies, correctional facilities, religious organizations, health care and government. The coalition is supported by Horizon Public Health and a grant from the Minnesota Department of Human Services, Behavioral Health Divisions.

    Learn more at facebook.com/HealthyVoicesHealthyChoicesCoalition.

    Categories
    Richmond

    School Board Member Bobby Jordan announces candidacy for President of Richmond Heights City Council

    RICHMOND HEIGHTS, Ohio – 11-year-old Richmond Heights Board of Education member Bobby Jordan has officially announced that he is a candidate for city council president.

    Jordan, who served as President of the Schools Committee from 2011-18, when submitting his petitions to the Cuyahoga County Electoral Committee, would face current City Council President Eloise Henry, who submitted. Ward 3 Alderman Cassandra Nelson has also petitioned to run for President of the Council, but has yet to apply. Henry has served on the Council since 2005 and President since 2014.

    Jordan believes his experience on the school board, including working with finance and being able to collaborate with others, are his strengths.

    “My understanding of governance will help the council in the work of city government,” he said in an email response to cleveland.com. “My willingness to work with everyone involved will ensure that the voices of our residents are heard.

    “My main platform is to maintain the city’s financial management, much like I took the school district from financial regulators to an A + rating with Standard & Poor’s. If the city is sitting with $ 10 million in the bank, why are services like (future of the city) pool, tomboy, (street) lighting, etc. not being addressed? It takes a visionary leader to strategically plan and implement these types of initiatives.

    “I understand governance and accountability,” said Jordan, 56. “I know that working with everyone involved will get things done efficiently and effectively.”

    A 16 year old resident of Richmond Heights, Jordan, and his wife, Angela, are the parents of three children and grandparents of one. He works as a mental health case manager at Signature Health.

    “I’ve lived in this town for a long time and have my children and now grandchildren who have gone through the Richmond Heights school system,” said Joran. “In order for a city to grow and prosper, it must provide services to its residents and support their schools. It is my desire to make Richmond Heights a target community. “

    Commenting on his years with the school board, Jordan said, “I am very proud of my leadership role in stabilizing the school district and building the new 21st Century Community Learning Center (the new Richmond Heights Upper and Middle School / Library building). a benefit for the general public.

    “The facility is more than a school as it houses the Cuyahoga (County) Library Richmond Heights branch and will now (will) host the elections for Districts 2 and 3. including courses for our seniors. “

    You can find more news about Sun Messenger here.

    Categories
    NOVA

    Arlington Asset Investment Corp. announces financial results for the second quarter of 2021

    MCLEAN, Virginia., July 30, 2021 / PRNewswire / – Arlington Asset Investment Corp. (NYSE: AAIC) (the “Company”) announced today that the company will publish results for the past second quarter June 30, 2021 after market close Tuesday 3rd August 2021 and will set up a conference call for investors 9:00 a.m. Eastern Time on Wednesday, August 4, 2021 to discuss the results.

    Investors who call the profit under. want to hear 9:00 a.m. Eastern Time on Wednesday, August 4, 2021, can do so on the Internet at: http://www.arlingtonasset.com/index.php?s=19

    Revenue call reruns will be available via webcast at the Internet address listed above for 60 days starting two hours after the call ended.

    about the company

    The company currently invests primarily in mortgage-related and other assets and has chosen to be taxed as a REIT. The company is based in the Washington, DC Metropolitan area. More information is available at www.arlingtonasset.com.

    Cision

    View original content: https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/arlington-asset-investment-corp-to-report-second-quarter-2021-financial-results-301345455.html

    SOURCE Arlington Asset Investment Corp.