ru24.pro
News in English
Июнь
2024

Новости за 20.06.2024

Kourtney Kardashian Shares Rocky's Rare Lung Issue That Led to Surgery - E! NEWS

Top Stories (us) - Google News (ru) 

  1. Kourtney Kardashian Shares Rocky's Rare Lung Issue That Led to Surgery  E! NEWS
  2. Kourtney Kardashian finally reveals why she was rushed into urgent fetal surgery  The Mirror US
  3. Kourtney Kardashian needed emergency fetal surgery because of 'super rare condition'  Yahoo New Zealand News

Suzlon Energy Ltd Surges 4.99%

Business Standard 

Suzlon Energy Ltd has added 16.6% over last one month compared to 1.4% gain in BSE Power index and 4.87% rise in the SENSEX

Toledo Crime Log: 6/20

The Toledo Blade 

Click on icons in the map to find details of reported crimes. For a full list of all reported crimes in Toledo this week, consult the table below.

Editorial: U.S. 23 connection a must

The Toledo Blade 

Northwest Ohioans should not be fooled, improvements planned for U.S. 23 between Waldo and Worthington are for the safety and convenience of the upscale residents of Delaware County.

Editorial: DeWine scandal

The Toledo Blade 

As documents from the discovery process in shareholder suits against FirstEnergy bring the bailout bribery scandal closer to Gov. Mike DeWine, Ohio’s chief executive claims a 45-year history without personal scandal to defend his integrity. (“DeWine doesn’t recall FirstEnergy texts,” Tuesday)

To the editor: Cartoon got it wrong on Social Security

The Toledo Blade 

The editorial cartoon on June 17 penned by Tim Hartman is not accurate. Persons getting “government pension” one of which is known as PERS, Public Employees Retirement System, do NOT automatically qualify for Social Security. People can only receive Social Security by paying into that system. Sen. Sherrod Brown is advocating for the abolition of the “windfall provision,” which blocks qualified retired persons who have paid into Social Security to get payments that they have earned.

Lessenberry: Racial representation missing in Detroit

The Toledo Blade 

DETROIT — Detroit elected its first African-American congressman in 1954, a funeral director named Charles Diggs, and its second, John Conyers, a decade later. For more than half a century, Michigan always had two Black members of Congress.