Cow donated to Vermont high school agriculture science program

SWANTON, Vt. (WCAX) – Every morning for the past 55 years, the animal science students at Missisquoi Valley Union High School clean, care for the animals and learn all about agriculture, hands-on.“We get to be with the animals and do things other than just sitting in a classroom,” said Brooklynn Gervais, a sophomore.Students learn not only how to care for the animals, but how those animals fit into the larger picture of food production.“I think people should definitely have a better understanding of where their food comes from and how it’s processed,” said Jacob Beauregard, a sophomore.Most of the animals are leased from local farmers, but there’s one new addition to the herd.“We picked the heifer up last Monday,” said Elizabeth Sweet, an animal science instructor at MVU and adviser for the Future Farmers of America.Sweet says this little Hereford cow is called Miss Pattee, named after Enosburgh farmer Renee Pattee who donated the cow to the MVU Animal Science Program.“She wanted to make a donation in her son Colby’s remembrance, who she lost at a young age,” Sweet said.While the livestock throughout the whole history of the program taught students things like how to care for the animals and food processing, Miss Pattee is going to be bringing a whole new set of lessons that haven’t been brought to the program before.“When she is at breeding maturity, our students will be choosing the bull and they will breed her,” Sweet said.Students have raised baby animals in the program before, but now they’ll be involved from the beginning to the end. When the calf is born, it will be raised by students for 16 to 18 months. Then, it will be butchered and processed, and students will sell the meat.“I think it’s an excellent opportunity for the students. They can see the practical application of what they’ve learned in the classroom,” said James Messier, an MVU animal science instructor.“There are things you do that [can] be uncomfortable, but that’s with anything. You have to kind of push yourself out of your boundaries and out of your comfort zone a little bit, but I think it’s definitely worth it,” said Terrell Houston, a senior at MVU and president of the MVU FFA.As for Miss Pattee, she’ll stick around after she’s bred in September. The plan is to keep her as a breeding cow so the school can eventually have a herd of its own.Copyright 2025 WCAX. All rights reserved.

Commentary: AI voice tech used in The Brutalist is nothing new – the backlash is about transparency

READING, England: Director Brady Corbet’s stunning new film, The Brutalist, has won three Golden Globes and remains a frontrunner for this year’s Oscars despite a controversy over its use of artificial intelligence (AI) which erupted this week. (The film has received 10 Oscar nominations, including best film, best director and best actor.) The growing backlash centres on whether the film should have used AI to improve the Hungarian accents of its stars, Adrien Brody and Felicity Jones.

Many of today’s actors are superb at delivering accents – like American Renee Zellweger’s perfect English in Bridget Jones, or British actor Idris Elba’s Baltimore accent in The Wire or Australian Margot Robbie’s utterly convincing American accent in Barbie.

For The Brutalist, the accent challenge faced by Brody and Jones was truly brutal: The tricky vowel sounds of the Hungarian language. It was even difficult for Brody, whose mother was a Hungarian refugee who arrived in the US in 1956.

Brody’s character is Laszlo Toth (roughly pronounced Laslo Tort), a Hungarian-Jewish architect who emigrates to the United States after the Holocaust. Jones plays his wife, Erzsebet (roughly Air-zhay-bet), trapped back in Europe. 

During the film’s post-production, the Budapest-born editor, David Jancso (pronounced Daavid Yancho), was looking for accent perfection. So he reached for an AI tool that could make Brody’s and Jones’s accents sound convincingly Hungarian.

The controversy over this decision is surprising because it’s nothing new. I have been researching the creative use of AI in filmmaking for the past six years. Recently, the biggest progress has been in voice AI. 

Voice cloning technology has been misused, causing outrage over unlicensed vocal replicas of Jennifer Aniston, Scarlett Johansson and David Attenborough. But The Brutalist made just tiny alterations to two actors’ voices – and with consent – which in comparison is hardly shocking.

Book Review: Amor Towles’s Excellent ‘Table For Two’

In his 2023 book The Art Thief, author Michael Finkel crucially observed (my book review here) that “art is the result of facing almost no survival pressure of all.” So true, and it raises an exciting question about the present and future of art: as an increasingly globalized division of labor comprised of man, machines, and machines that think make life’s necessities and luxuries more and more of a sure thing, isn’t the brilliance of art set to explode in a myriad of amazing ways?

Time will tell. For now, it’s interesting to contemplate the past. In particular, what was happening economically in 19th century Russia that so much amazing literature and music was created? Think Dostoevsky, Gogol, Tchaikovsky, and Tolstoy among many others. If art is the result of facing almost no survival pressure at all, it’s apparent that in the 19th century Russia must have had prosperity-oriented policies (or better yet a lack of policy) that enabled immense artistic progress.

All the spectacular 19th century Russian culture came to mind while reading Amor Towles’s newest book, Table for Two. This time Towles has written a series of short stories along with a novella. The first of the short stories is titled “The Line,” and it’s about a peasant named Pushkin and his wife Irina. In the last days of the Tsar, they live in a small village “one hundred miles from Moscow.”

Farmers Pushkin and Irina belong to a mir, or a cooperative that “leased the land, allocated the acres, and shared expenses at the mill.” Members of the mir occasionally gather, and one night a man from Moscow comes to “explain the injustice of a country in which 10 percent of the people owned 90 percent of the land.” I felt from this that Towles provided the answer to the above question about why Russian culture flowered so substantially in the 19th century.

Economies aren’t blobs, rather they’re collections of individuals. Which is a reminder that wealth inequality is a sign of progress. It signals the freedom of individuals to pursue the commercial path that reveals their unique genius, and being matched with capital so that they can realize their potential.
Absent capital there’s no Jeff Bezos, and then absent Jeff Bezos’s capital there’s quite a bit less wealth to match with strivers who aim to improve on what Bezos achieved. Crucially, if there’s no wealth creation, it’s a near certainty that not much art is being created precisely because artists require patrons. Get it?

19th century Russian culture was an effect of wealth. It raises questions about what Russia (and the world) lost in the 20th century. In his 1922 masterpiece Socialism, Austrian scholar Ludwig von Mises observed that socialist demagogues are given life by wealth creation, and it brings us back to the demagogue from Moscow who speaks in disdainful fashion about wealth inequality to Pushkin and Irina’s mir. Wealth demagogues are an effect of wealth creation, wealth creation is an effect of freedom, and art is once again an effect of wealth. Too bad the wealth demagogues won in Russia as evidenced by the country’s economic suicide in the 20th century. What a tragedy for freedom, progress and art.
In Towles’s remarkable story, Irina in particular is taken in by the visitor and subsequently decides for herself and Pushkin that “the time has come for Russia to lay the foundations of the future – shoulder to shoulder and stone by stone!” They subsequently sell their meager possessions, and move to Moscow to join the revolution.
Irina thrives in the new, declining Russia, while Pushkin flails. They both take jobs at Red Star Biscuit Collective, but Pushkin is soon fired. Irina memorably asks her beta husband “How does one get fired from communism?”
Yet despite Pushkin’s ineptitude on the job, he oddly finds life under communism appealing exactly because there’s little to no choice. Long lines for a black loaf of bread, but only a black loaf of bread. To Pushkin, the appeal of limited choice is that he can do no wrong. And having found inner peace of sorts within the brutality of communism, Pushkin oddly prospers. Which speaks to the joy of Towles’s short story.
It brings to mind the heavily passed around clip of Milton Friedman on Phil Donahue’s eponymous show, of Donahue asking Friedman if Soviet communism has noble qualities since it’s allegedly a society devoid of greed. Friedman rejected the question outright, pointing out to Donahue that greed in fact did define life in the Soviet Union. So does it in “The Line.”
Markets always speak, and Pushkin makes them speak. Cognizant of the reality that lines for limited goods had to be the norm under communism, Pushkin starts a waiting-in-line business. And it proves lucrative. “By 1925, Pushkin had 10 boys waiting in 30 lines, all of them handing tokens of gratitude to Pushkin.” Yes!
Markets once again always speak, and they do because they’re an expression of human nature. It’s a reminder of a happy truth too often forgotten by critics of free markets: they claim that the return of economic freedom where there had been none amounts to “shock therapy” whereby individuals allegedly require an easing back to freedom as they re-learn what they allegedly forgot. Nonsense. That’s like saying people who’ve been starving need to learn once again how to eat. They don’t. It’s natural.
The only difference with Pushkin is that he’s particularly good at instituting market forces where there are none such that he and Irina are soon living well. Wait, Irina is living well after cheering the revolution against possessions? Well, yes. As Towles puts it oh so well, “There is nothing that a human will adapt to more quickly than an improved standard of living.” Amen.
The main thing is that there’s so much to Towles’s story. No doubt Pushkin figures out how to prosper in a country that has largely banned it, which is itself a tragedy. As made plain in my review of Towles’s best novel so far, A Gentleman In Moscow, it’s the unequal (yes, the 1 percenters) who drive progress in all ways. Pushkin and Irina were living well, but all due to a system that suffocated genius of all kinds such that gaming the lines that are the rule under communism was one of the very few ways to prosper.
Towles writes through the eyes of Pushkin of genius suffocated, that “To possess such a gift and no longer be allowed to put it to use struck Pushkin as heartbreaking.” Yes. So true.
It arguably speaks to why most hated communism, but some actually were ok with it. For those who lacked skills, or who had not happened on skills, communism would reasonably be the excuse for their failure. But for those cognizant of their genius, how brutalizing to not be able to showcase it.
About this, it’s difficult to not think of actors like Kevin Spacey who are no longer able to do what gave them so much happiness. Some will say Spacey earned his suffocation, but that’s not fair. They’re judging Spacey’s past acts on present morals. George Will refers to this as presentism. It’s wrongheaded, and not just because talented people can no longer express those talents. Presentism is also wrong because it supposes a world and society defined by rigidity, or a lack of progress. No, that’s not us. We keep improving, and in improving we quite frequently look back to past actions with disdain. Yes, we’re evolving. The past is the past. To ruin the present of so many based on the past is truly horrifying.
In “The Ballad of Timothy Touchett” that follows, we meet a would-be writer who interestingly lacks the life experiences and sufficient misery to be a writer. As Towles puts it so comically, “Timothy’s parents hadn’t even bothered to succumb to alcoholism or file for divorce.” Notable there is that in reading the story, I found myself wondering if life’s brutalities had informed Towles’s own writing.
Whatever the answer, the Touchett story is a reminder of how much learning there is in fiction. It’s useful to point out mainly because so many voracious readers stick to non-fiction. Some feel they don’t have time for stories, that life is short such that reading time has to be spent on real history. Towles’s stories show us what a mistake this is. Just as we learn about ourselves through real historical figures, so do we through fictional characters.
With Touchett, Towles brings the reader to the arguably crucial revelation that we’re more malleable than we think, and arguably to our detriment: “…offer a young man an extra fifty dollars a week in exchange for a modest adjustment in his dreams, and you have him by the throat.” I felt like Towles was describing all too many of us, including your reviewer.
It also made me think of the 2016 movie La La Land. Why did Mia fall out of love with Sebastian? My speculation has always been that he sold his dreams in return for more stable earnings, and she lost interest as a result. Was that the director’s (Damien Chazelle) message?
What got Touchett by the throat was dishonesty, though seemingly harmless dishonesty that proved remunerative. The story is a page turner, but for one disappointing line that may or may not be the thinking of Towles. With Touchett, the story is about the writer and his rare bookstore owner boss Mr. Pennybrook, along with a NYC cop who is informed of a potential crime. Are opinions expressed through Touchett, Mr. Pennybrook and Lieutenant McCusker those of Towles, or are they what Towles imagines Touchett, Pennybrook and McCusker would think?
Whatever the answer, in pursuing a crime of false signatures McCusker contemplates how “the boys with the MBAs had begun building Sistine Chapels of larceny right there on Wall Street.” Towles’s background is finance, but did he or does he share McCusker’s simplistic view of Wall Street? I found myself hoping not. With all commerce there’s two sides, and on Wall Street the clients of the institutions are much more often than not smarter than their coverage at the institutions. Think Goldman Sachs, a firm that makes an appearance in a later story by Towles: its wealth managers earning millions a year earn that money because they’re managing the wealth of centimillionaires and billionaires, their traders are covering the most sophisticated hedge funds in the world, and their investment bankers are courting and financing the world’s greatest companies. The Sistene Chapel line implies trickery hatched within investment banks. Ok, but whom did they trick?
In “Hasta Luego,” what most stuck with me was the question asked by Jerry at the story’s end about whether “my wife would be willing to fight for me as hard as Jennifer had fought for her husband.” Her husband, Smitty, unexpectedly has problems that reveal themselves after bad weather forces the cancellation of LaGuardia’s outbound flights.
What’s interesting about Jennifer in the story is that as a reader of it, you find yourself thinking of her as the nightmarish wife, as the person you hope Smitty won’t get in too much trouble with, only for the great storyteller in Towles to force the reader (married male readers in particular) to rethink the perception of Smitty’s wife, and in the process perhaps rethink how they perceive their own wives.
About the canceled flights that set the stage for Jerry and Smitty’s night at a hotel bar in Manhattan, Towles writes of “the audible sighs, the eye rolling, the muttered profanity.” Yes. Fiction is reality in so many ways.
The story of Jerry and Smitty also brings up something about Towles the fiction writer: he knows so much. Smitty loved tequila, “He loved the blanco, the reposado, and the anejo.” In “The DiDomenico Fragment,” we learn about art, including that some art pieces exist as fragments. Who knew? Towles explains why turkey on Thanksgiving is frequently so dry, and all sorts of little and big things that enhance his page-turning stories. It’s a digression on the way to speculating that Towles is a good conversation and a great Trivial Pursuit partner. His knowledge is vast.
Back to the stories, “I Will Survive” seemed least believable at first, but ended pretty powerfully. Peggy worries second husband John is cheating on her, and asks daughter Nell to follow him to his weekly squash game at the Union Club to see if her worries are true. Peggy says to Nell that “You and your sister both like to joke about what a mess your lives would be if it weren’t for John.” Except that John is 68, and he came into their mother’s life at 64. The comment didn’t fit the timeframe?
And when Nell gets dressed to follow her stepfather, her husband tells her to not wear his Mets’ cap since “John is a Mets fan. And when one Mets fan sees another, he’s bound to come over and commiserate.” No, that just didn’t read as realistic.
Just the same, the conclusion of the story did seem realistic. And powerfully so. Without mentioning what Peggy ultimately finds out about her husband, what a revelation it is. And it’s unexpectedly cruel despite the revelation not being of the prurient sort. Towles is so interesting.
In an argument that ensues from the revelation Towles observes that “in the aftermath of a heated conversation, bad ideas travel at the speed of light.” So true, and a reminder to us all that our worst ideas and most crippling thoughts reveal themselves when we’re most prone to act or talk on them. We all need to learn to shut our mouths. Let time elapse. Lots of time.
The least compelling of the stories was “The Bootlegger.” It involves a young, but pretty senior Goldman Sachs investment banker (Tommy Harkness) and his wife at Carnegie Hall for a concert, or series of concerts. Arthur Fein sits next to them early on, and it quickly becomes apparent to Harkness that Fein is taping the concerts. Harkness is deeply offended: he haughtily asserts that “copyright laws were created because a world in which artists cannot secure fair compensation for their endeavors is a world less likely to contain art.” The bet here is that Towles doesn’t agree with Tommy.
Towles plainly loves writing, and while he’s made substantial sums as a writer, it’s hard to imagine he got into it with the expectation that he would be the globally famous author of bestsellers, including one (so far) that’s made it into the miniseries category. The speculation here is that Towles recognized that he had a talent, and then proceeded to write a book for himself. Huge audiences were the against-all-odds surprise.
People create art because they want to, because they can’t not create it. More than a few would still create it even without fair compensation. And if given the choice between typical compensation and reaching millions without compensation, most would take the big audiences. Furthermore, copyright as applied to Carnegie Hall cuts both ways. If Carnegie Hall reserves the right to distribute the music of the artists that play there, why would Fein have needed to bootleg in the first place?
Fein has an answer to the above question, but it didn’t make much sense, nor did it make sense that a top investment banker would suddenly have the inclination or time to walk a pre-scanned part of Manhattan each day in search of Fein in order to apologize for what transpired at the concert hall. And then the reaction of Fein’s daughter to Harkness was way over the top.
“The Bootlegger” is redeemed by “The DiDomenico Fragment.” Once again, Towles knows so much. Or he knows a great deal more than his readers. The short story about a piece of art and subsequent sale of same was interesting and revelatory.
Which brings us to the novella, “Eve In Hollywood,” that closes Towles’s excellent book. About it, I first read Towles’s first novel, Rules of Civility, in 2011. It rates mention because Eve is a character from it, though one I’m pretty hazy about at this point. “Eve In Hollywood” was very good, but would likely be much better after a re-read of Rules of Civility (so little time), and also a re-read of the novella itself.
Having done neither, I lacked sufficient memory of Eve to bring to the novella. The latter also brings a lot of characters into the story at short bursts. The story seemed a little bit difficult to follow, but it was rewarding just the same. So rewarding that it deserves another read.
With “Eve In Hollywood,” Towles is doing novel noir. The Los Angeles of old, “the city within the city that had its own diners and cable cars, its own chapels and banks,” but also the other one defined by “gangsters and grifters and ladies of the night.” Towles writes it so well, including the great Beverly Hills Hotel. To read the novella is to hope that Curtis Hanson (L.A. Confidential) will option it for a movie, or that Roman Polanski (Chinatown) will get ahold of it.
The characters (including Eve) are so interesting, so wise. Prentice Symmons is the once prominent actor who once had great looks because by his own admission he was starving himself. His “rotundity” is what ended his career, and it happened on a day when he “tumbled down the vertiginous trail of my desires.” Food got the best of him. Don’t ever say actors and actresses are soft or don’t work hard.
About men, “we are doomed to end our days in an ignorance largely of our own making” but for the sad fact that we’re “either too proud, too stubborn, or too timid to submit to the process of discovery.” As always, Towles is so interesting, as is his story about a movie industry scandal and bribery that takes place in a town (it’s said 1935 Los Angeles had town-like qualities) where “the law, like everyone else in this city, was on the payroll.”
What a read “Eve In Hollywood” was, and what a better read it will be a second time around thanks to a grasp of the various characters. What a collection of stories Table for Two is. How fun it will be to read and write about what’s next from Amor Towles.

Three faculty receive Presidential Early Career Award for scientists, engineers

UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Three Penn State researchers have been awarded the Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers (PECASE), the White House announced on Jan. 14. The award is the highest honor the United States government bestows on early-career scientists and engineers. The awards are conferred annually following recommendations from federal funding agencies.
The three Penn State awardees are:

Catherine Berdanier, associate professor of mechanical engineering, specializes in engineering education research, with a particular expertise in characterizing and modeling mechanisms of engineering doctoral attrition, persistence and thriving, with implications for educational policy and interventions.
Margarita Lopez-Uribe, Lorenzo L. Langstroth Early Career Professor and associate professor of entomology, manages research and extension programs that aim to better understand the unintended consequences of agricultural practices on the health and evolutionary trajectories of bees.
Lauren Zarzar, professor of chemistry, develops innovative methods to integrate a variety of materials at nano and microscale levels for next generation technologies, such as dynamic materials that sense and adapt to their surroundings.

“Receiving the PECASE is a profound honor, as it represents our nation’s highest recognition for early-career scientists and engineers,” said Penn State President Neeli Bendapudi. “This accolade acknowledges the dedication and research impact of Dr. Berdanier, Dr. López-Uribe and Dr. Zarzar, and underscores the power of public R1 institutions in building the next generation of scientific leaders. We are proud to support their journeys and excited to see how their work will shape our future.”
Established by then-President Bill Clinton in 1996, PECASE recognizes scientists and engineers who show potential for leadership early in their research careers.
“This recognition highlights the exceptional work of our faculty and underscores the importance of investing in innovation and discovery at every stage of a research career,” said Andrew Read, senior vice president for research at Penn State. “These outstanding members of our community shine as researchers and educators. The sky’s the limit for what they can achieve.”
Each award winner receives a citation, a plaque and up to five years of funding from their respective federal agency to advance their own research.
“The PECASE Awards are intended to recognize some of the finest scientists and engineers who, while early in their research careers, show exceptional potential for leadership at the frontiers of scientific knowledge during the twenty-first century,” the U.S. National Science Foundation said in a statement.
This year’s awardees are employed or funded by 14 participating agencies within the Departments of Agriculture, Commerce, Defense, Education, Energy, Health and Human Services, Interior, Transportation, and Veterans Affairs, as well as the Environmental Protection Agency, the intelligence community, NASA, the U.S. National Science Foundation and the Smithsonian Institution.
“The award recognizes innovative and far-reaching developments in science and technology, expands awareness of careers in science and engineering, recognizes the scientific missions of participating agencies, enhances connections between research and impacts on society, and highlights the importance of science and technology for our nation’s future,” the Biden-Harris administration stated in a news release.
In addition to current faculty, three Penn State alumni were also honored: M. Ehsan Hoque, who earned a bachelor of science in computer engineering in 2004; Cara Lubner, who earned a doctorate in biochemistry and molecular biology in 2011 and also served as a postdoctoral researcher; and Natasha Batalha, who earned a doctorate in astronomy and astrophysics in 2017.

Why multinational takeovers of indie publishers are ‘bad for readers’

Independent Melbourne-based publisher Text Publishing — the home of high-profile authors including Helen Garner, Michelle de Kretser and JM Coetzee — has been acquired by Penguin Random House (PRH) Australia.Text publisher Michael Heyward says Text will operate independently under its new owners with no planned job losses.”Everything that people identify with Text Publishing … we will continue to do,” he tells ABC Arts.But the move has caused alarm among some in the industry, who say the consolidation of the Australian publishing industry will further harm a literary scene already embattled by underfunding and falling national reading rates.Heyward says the cost of printing in some formats has increased more than 50 per cent.Text Publishing has had a range of owners since it was founded by Diana Gribble and Eric Beecher in 1990. Current equity holders Maureen and Tony Wheeler, founders of Lonely Planet, acquired the share of UK publisher Canongate Books in 2011.Heyward, who is 65 and joined the company in 1992, says publishing in Australia has become more challenging due to increasing costs and the rise of Amazon.But he says the decision to sell was motivated by a desire to preserve Text Publishing’s legacy and safeguard its future.Listen to ABC RN’s The Book ShowYour favourite fiction authors share the story behind their latest books.The acquisition is the latest in a spate of takeovers of small and independent publishers by larger firms.In 2024, Simon & Schuster — one of the global ‘Big 5’ publishers, alongside Penguin Random House, Hachette, HarperCollins and Macmillan — acquired local indie publisher Affirm Press.A month later, Hardie Grant, a mid-tier local independent publisher, bought fellow indie Pantera Press.Heyward is upbeat about the sale of Text to PRH, arguing it will provide more “muscle” to acquire and market books.The role of small publishersSmall and independent publishers are a critical component of Australia’s publishing landscape, says Dr Ben Eltham, a lecturer in media and communications at Monash University.”They play a disproportionate role … in nurturing young talent and bringing through independent authors and new voices into our literary scene.”Dr Millicent Weber, a lecturer in English at the Australian National University, says small presses have dominated literary prize shortlists and book review pages in recent years.The value of indie presses for larger publishers lies in “their reputation and existing relationships within the industry and with readers; their assets, specifically the titles for which they hold copyright; and the staff and operational assets that make up the organisation”, she explains.Literary legend Helen Garner takes on local under-16s footyThe acclaimed author of Monkey Grip and The Children’s Bach is back: this time she turns her razor-sharp writer’s eye to her 16-year-old grandson’s footy team.Text Publishing, for example, comes with a roster featuring winners of the Booker Prize, the Miles Franklin Literary Award and the Stella Prize.It also has the rights to an extensive catalogue of classic Australian literature — launched in 2012 as Text Classics — which Eltham says hands its new owner valuable “long-tail” content that sells over a long period.He believes the recent indie takeovers will result in fewer opportunities for authors to be published.”Ultimately, I think it will be bad for readers and Australian literature,” he says.”It’s going to mean a lack of diversity, but it’s also going to mean an industry that’s very focused on blockbusters, on a few big-name authors, rather than … bringing through interesting books, difficult books, creative works of fiction that may not be [otherwise] publishable.”Penguin Random House is one of the ‘Big 5’ global book publishers.

 

‘Star Wars’ Film Starring Daisy Ridley Lands ‘Bourne Ultimatum’ Writer George Nolfi

Daisy Ridley‘s “Star Wars” movie is still alive. Lucasfilm has hired George Nolfi (“The Borne Ultimatum”) to write the script for the long-gestating follow-up to 2019’s “Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker,” which is still set to be the feature directorial debut for Oscar-winning documentarian Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy. By the time Lucasfilm president Kathleen Kennedy officially…

MAKING A DIFFERENCE: CFD firefighter teaching fire safety by writing children’s book

Senior Firefighter Allen Green loves to connect with kids and teach them about fire safety, which is a big part of his career with the Chattanooga Fire Department.”I’m really passionate about community, kids, and education,” he said.Green said teaching kids about fire safety is an important element to preventing fires. To do that, Green is using the power of books, but not just any book.”Let me write my own book, that way when I’m reading to them, I know exactly what I want them to learn and what they need to know,” he added.Green wrote, “Mom! Dad! What Should I Do?” a children’s book explaining the importance of fire safety and having a plan. He said the characters in the book are just as important as it’s message.”I wanted to develop a book that had characters that resembled or related to not just a few of the students, but we can capture all of them,” Green said.Proceeds from the book go to Green’s non-profit called Pain. Perseverance. Character. Hope. Inc., or PPCH, Inc., to help those who have walked a path similar to his.Green grew up in Alton Park, both of his parents were sent to jail, and he dropped out of school in sixth grade. Green aims to mentor kids and help them succeed.”I come in and provide self development, social and emotional learning, executive functioning skills development. These are things that I didn’t get into until I was almost in my 30s,” he added.His mission is empowering the community he also protects.”Once I went through everything I went through, state’s custody, foster homes, group homes, I said, “What can I do in my life to be a bridge builder?” to reach back, to reach out into the community,” Green said.You buy a copy of Allen Green’s book on Amazon.

Champagne calls for review of Ottawa’s ‘business relationship’ with Amazon after Quebec shutdown

Amazon AMZN-Q says its plans to close all seven of its warehouses in Quebec remain unchanged, even as the federal industry minister calls for a review of Ottawa’s “business relationship” with the online retail giant.“They’ll have me fighting to make sure that this is not going to go unanswered in Canada,” Industry Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne said Friday.The closing will eliminate 1,700 permanent jobs and 250 temporary ones. It comes after workers at an Amazon warehouse in the Montreal suburb of Laval, Que. managed to unionize in May.Amazon is dismissing the suggestion that the closures are linked to a unionization push in the province and has said it’s about delivering efficient and cost-effective services to customers.The company said in a media statement Friday that it’s “happy to discuss this matter further with Minister Champagne and other officials in Quebec and Canada.”Champagne said in an online post Friday that he wanted to speak to Amazon CEO Andy Jassy.“Mr. Jassy, let’s talk,” he wrote.But in a follow-up statement issued later in the afternoon, Amazon indicated that Champagne won’t be getting a sit-down with the company’s global CEO.“Members of Amazon’s local team will continue to meet with the minister to discuss our business – as we typically do. Our plans remain unchanged,” a spokesperson said.Champagne hasn’t said how the federal government might respond. Ottawa has ongoing contracts with Amazon and the federal government’s website lists more than 200 contracts signed since 2020. Several of those contracts are worth more than $5 million each – one contract is for $22.7 million.“I’m not going to tell them what I’m going to do in advance. That’s called negotiation 101,” he said. “Let them reconsider, let them figure out what we might do as a review.”Champagne also sent a letter to Jassy saying it’s not too late to reconsider. He posted the letter online Thursday evening.“We’re standing up. I can tell you they were quite surprised,” he said. “I think we had more than one million views yesterday, so they’re not used to that kind of response from Canada, and I’m glad we did it.”Champagne said the company wasn’t transparent about the extent of the layoffs in the conversation with Amazon, adding he got only half the story when he spoke with a representative. A spokesperson for Champagne confirmed he spoke with Amazon Canada’s country manager Eva Lorenz Wednesday.“This is also about treating Canada with respect,” he told reporters Friday. “I’m even less pleased than I was yesterday.”Amazon said in the statement that when it makes “operational decisions like this, we generally share the news first with employees and then officials.”With files from Tara Deschamps