Tag: United States

  • Fact Check: Has West Virginia University increased unfunded aid to students?

    West Virginia University administrators have been grappling with fallout from budget shortfalls. Facing reduced revenue, the university is pursuing cutbacks in selected academic departments, including foreign languages.

    As the university’s trustees were approving a budget for fiscal year 2024 — including a 3% hike in tuition and fees — Paula Congelio, the university’s chief financial officer and vice president, emphasized WVU’s continuing commitment to providing financial aid to undergraduates and graduate students in a June 23 university news release.

    “We take every tuition increase very seriously, but we work diligently to leverage federal, state and externally funded financial aid to our students so the cost is manageable,” Congelio said. “The university has also increased the amount of unfunded institutional aid provided to students and expects this amount to exceed $134 million in 2024.”

    What is unfunded institutional aid? And has the university been increasing it?

    “Unfunded institutional aid,” also called internally funded aid, is one of WVU’s two major types of financial assistance to students. 

    One type is aid funded by outside sources, including federal Pell Grants; other types of federal, state, and local aid; and support from foundations. The other type of aid comes from the university, including merit-based undergraduate and graduate tuition waivers and institutional scholarships.

    Internally funded aid is the larger of the two aid pools; in 2022, internally funded aid accounted for about two-thirds of WVU’s student aid. That proportion has been fairly consistent in recent years.

    Every year from 2014 to 2023, WVU increased the amount of internally funded aid to undergraduate and graduate students. Cumulatively, internally funded aid is about 2.6 times as high as it was a decade ago, rising from $51.6 million in 2014 to nearly $136 million in 2023.

    However, internally funded aid is poised to drop in 2024, to the $134 million level Congelio cited. That would be the first drop in at least a decade, representing a decline of $1.8 million, or about 1.3%.

    Combined with the budgeted tuition increases, this decrease will squeeze students, undercutting Congelio’s point. 

    Our ruling

    Congelio said WVU has “increased the amount of unfunded institutional aid provided to students and expects this amount to exceed $134 million in 2024.”

    Scholarship and tuition waivers at West Virginia University come in two major categories — aid supported by outside sources, such as governments or foundations, and aid provided by the university itself.

    Every year from 2014 to 2023, WVU increased internally funded aid to undergraduate and graduate students. However, internally funded aid is poised to drop slightly in 2024, to about $134 million.

    This cutback will worsen the squeeze on students, who will see tuition and fees rise by about 3%.

    The statement rates Half True.



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  • Michael Waylon Hudson

    Michael Waylon Hudson

    Published 2:51 pm Tuesday, October 10, 2023

    Mr. Michael Waylon Hudson, age 60, of Andalusia, passed away Monday, Oct. 9, 2023, in Flowers Hospital.

    Michael is survived by his wife, Janie Parish Hudson; sons, John Hudson and Joshua Hudson; mother, Dorothy Hudson Kennedy and husband, Jerry; sister, Jennifer Hudson; and aunt, Patricia Felts. He was preceded in death by his father, John Waylon Hudson.

    Funeral services for Mr. Michael Waylon Hudson will be held Thursday, Oct. 12, 2 p.m., from Wyatt Funeral Home Chapel with burial following in Bethany Baptist Church Cemetery. Visitation will be held from 12:30 p.m. until service time. Bro. Jay Driver will officiate with Kenny Lee, Bobby Cobb, Phillip Spivey, Keith Lynch, Max Smith, and David Norris serving as pallbearers.

    Flowers will be accepted or memorials may be made to the charity of one’s choice.

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  • Man arrested after climbing Santa Monica Ferris wheel and claiming he had a bomb

    LOS ANGELES (TCD) — Police shut down the world-famous Santa Monica Pier this week after a man climbed on the Ferris wheel and made multiple bomb threats.

    On Monday, Oct. 9, at 2:35 p.m., Santa Monica Police Department officers received a call about a “distraught” male scaling the Ferris wheel and claiming he had a bomb in his backpack. Police located 37-year-old Juan Gonzalez as he was about two-thirds up the ride. Gonzalez reportedly wore steel supports to help him climb.

    Police said 10 riders were on the Ferris wheel at the time of the incident. Officials stopped the ride, and Santa Monica Fire Department rescuers helped bring the other riders down to safety. The department’s Crisis Negotiation Team came to the scene and communicated with Gonzalez to come down.

    According to Santa Monica Police, Gonzalez “was very agitated and upset and continued to make bomb threats to the officers negotiating with him.”

    After an hour, he reportedly made his way down the Ferris wheel and police took him into custody. Video taken by KTLA-TV shows officers tackling Gonzalez and arresting him.

    Santa Monica Police said Gonzalez did not have a bomb or any other explosives with him. He was arrested on charges of criminal threats, making a false bomb threat to authorities, and resisting arrest.

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  • Biden may physically abuse his animals, report suggests

    From BizPac Review:

    A new report has just dropped suggesting that President Joe Biden physically abuses his pets with insiders claiming he “kicks” his dogs violently when no one is around. 

    This might explain the recent aggression of his dogs toward Secret Service agents, biting a number of them and subsequently being banished from the White House. 

    Many did not immediately blame “Commander” for his behavior. After all, a lack of training and the behavior of an owner is usually what is at fault when a dog misbehaves. 

    “The dog reportedly has been removed from the White House after its most recent attack on a Secret Service agent and other White House staff. According to a Judicial Watch source, President Biden has mistreated his dogs. Judicial Watch has learned he has punched and kicked his dogs,” the conservative outlet reported. 

    Read more here..

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  • Fact Check: Widely shared video of pro-Palestinian rally in Chicago is from 2021

    In the days after a deadly attack by Hamas militants on Israel, many social media users were sharing a 2-year-old video of Palestinian supporters marching in Chicago and presenting it as new.

    “Pro Palestine march in Chicago now … THIS IS GETTING REAL FOLKS … Stay awake!! 10/8/23,” read sticker text atop an Oct. 8 TikTok video.

    The video showed a mass of people, some carrying a Palestinian flag, marching down a Chicago street and chanting, “free, free Palestine.”

    TikTok identified this video as part of its efforts to counter inauthentic, misleading or false content. (Read more about PolitiFact’s partnership with TikTok.)

    We found numerous examples of people sharing the video on TikTok and across other social media platforms and presenting it as a recent march.

    There was a rally of Palestinian supporters in Chicago on Oct. 8, the day after the Hamas attack. According to news reports, hundreds of people rallied outside the city’s Israeli consulate to call for a free Palestine.

    But footage from this rally isn’t what’s in many of the videos currently circulating on social media. 

    Those posts share a video showing a throng of Palestinian supporters who had gathered in May 2021, in Chicago’s Loop, one of several protests held in the city amid an 11-day conflict that month between Hamas and Israel.

    Using a reverse-image search, we found the same video posted May 17, 2021, on VK, a Russian social media site, from an account called Voice of Palestine. Reuters and Agence France-Presse fact-checkers also traced it to videos posted in 2021 on X and Facebook.

    The TikTok video and others like it suggesting the video is related to the current conflict in Israel is False.



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  • Accident victims in Monday accident lifeflighted from Opp

    Accident victims in Monday accident lifeflighted from Opp

    Published 4:30 pm Tuesday, October 10, 2023

    The Opp Fire Department, Opp Police Department and Haynes Ambulance responded Monday afternoon to a vehicle accident with injuries and entrapment.

    The accident occurred at the intersection of Hwy. 331 S. and Veterans Memorial Parkway.

    Upon arrival, fire and EMS reported trauma alerts and requested two medical helicopters to respond. Paramedics and EMTs began patient care and one driver was extricated. Walton Air Rescue and Haynes Lifeflight 1 responded and flew both patients to trauma centers. ALEA Troopers, Covington County Sheriff’s Deputies, Opp Street Department, David’s Garage and Opp Exxon also responded.

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  • Idaho woman allegedly left newborn’s body in suitcase inside doghouse

    BANNOCK COUNTY, Idaho (TCD) — A 32-year-old woman has been charged with multiple felonies after her newborn child was found deceased inside a suitcase in a doghouse on her property.

    A Bannock County Sheriff’s Office activity report shows Jessica Weeks was taken into custody for injury to a child, failure to notify or delaying notification of death, and destruction, alteration, or concealment of evidence. She has previously been arrested on drug-related charges.

    Court documents cited by East Idaho News say Weeks allegedly called her friend “in a panic” Jan. 27 and said she was in labor. Her water reportedly broke two days prior, but she refused to go to the hospital due to her history of drug use. While giving birth, Weeks allegedly “insisted on stopping and having a cigarette.”

    The friend reportedly noted Weeks was “not really showing any interest” in the child after its head came out. The woman reportedly tried saving the child by performing rescue breaths. The child’s father, Robert Ramsey, also attempted to resuscitate the newborn, but the child did not survive.

    The affidavit says the friend wrapped the child in a baby blanket and put the child in the suitcase because there was “no other flat surface in the house to place the baby.” Weeks’ home reportedly had an “extreme amount of clutter everywhere.”

    Both the child and Weeks tested positive for methamphetamine and amphetamine.

    According to the Idaho State Journal, law enforcement officials from the Bannock County Sheriff’s Office received information from an inmate that Weeks had a child, placed the newborn’s body in the piece of luggage, then left the suitcase in a doghouse. Another inmate reportedly told investigators he found the child’s body while cleaning.

    A woman contacted law enforcement after her son, who is incarcerated, told her a “deceased infant [is] possibly going to be located in a piece of luggage near the doghouse in the back of the residence.”

    The son reportedly told officials he inmate spoke with the friend who was at Weeks’ home when she gave birth. Another male inmate allegedly saw the child in the bag when he was cleaning Weeks’ home. When he went to the doghouse, he opened the suitcase and noticed an “infant’s leg that flopped onto his arm.”

    The child was reportedly placed in a garbage bag.

    After talking to the inmates, deputies executed a search warrant at Weeks’ residence and arrested her for the drug charges. While there, they reportedly smelled the “odor of decomposition” and discovered a “purple carry-on style suitcase” in the doghouse.

    The front of the doghouse was reportedly piled with trash bags and a tire. Deputies took the top off the structure and took the suitcase out, where they found a “blueish baby blanket” and “numerous types of insects.”

    The child’s body and bodily tissue were reportedly decomposed.

    According to East Idaho News, the child was born at 36 to 40 weeks and there was no evidence of trauma. The child’s father is also facing a charge of failure to notify or delaying the notification of a death.

    Weeks is in custody at the Bannock County Jail with bond set at $50,000. She could face a maximum of 25 years in prison if she is found guilty.

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  • Top Biden Adviser Bragged Of Quiet Middle East One Week Before Hamas Attacked Israel

    From Daily Wire:

    One week before Hamas launched a surprise attack in Israel, a top aide to President Joe Biden touted a relative calm in the Middle East. 

    “The Middle East region is quieter today than it has been in two decades,” said U.S. National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan, according to The Atlantic. He went on to stress that “challenges remain,” citing Iran’s nuclear weapons program and “tensions” between Israel and the Palestinians, but added, “the amount of time I have to spend on crisis and conflict in the Middle East today compared to any of my predecessors going back to 9/11 is significantly reduced.” 

    Sullivan, a former Obama administration official, was speaking at The Atlantic Festival. He had just talked about how the larger region had reached a semblance of peace after the Biden team “walked into” a chaotic situation dating back to the prior administration. 

    With the conflict escalating, clips of Sullivan’s comments gained traction on social media, leading to a torrent of criticism of him and the Biden administration that included references to controversies stemming from the deadly Benghazi embassy attack in 2012 and the 2016 presidential election. 

    “Jake Sullivan, the former Clinton aide who participated [in both the] Benghazi and Russia hoaxes, is one of those responsible for the worst foreign policy debacles and scandals in American history,” said Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton, alluding to former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. 

    Read more here…



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  • Fact Check: Fact-checking Tim Scott on Biden administration’s early response to Hamas attacks in Israel

    After Hamas infiltrated Israel from Gaza on Oct. 7, killing hundreds of civilians and taking others hostage, Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C., blamed President Joe Biden for allowing the attack to happen.

    The attack by Hamas killed upwards of 900 Israelis. By early Oct. 10, Gaza authorities had reported at least 765 Palestinians were killed in the Israeli counterattack.

    “Biden’s weakness invited the attack,” Scott, a Republican presidential candidate, posted on X, formerly Twitter. “Biden’s negotiation funded the attack. Biden admin wanted Israel to stand down after the attack. At this point, Biden is complicit.”

    Some critics called out a recent hostage-release agreement the administration negotiated with Iran, an ally of Hamas, that provided limited access to $6 billion in frozen funds. But no money has been transferred to Iran yet.

    Scott’s assertion went further, saying the Biden administration “wanted Israel to stand down.” That’s misleading. Scott’s claim relies on an early X post that was deleted and ignores subsequent comments from entities closer to the White House, including Biden himself, that affirmed U.S. support for Israel’s self-defense. These new comments had come by the time Scott posted on X.

    What the Office of Palestinian Affairs posted

    When we asked Scott’s campaign for comment, they said he was referring to a post on X that was subsequently taken down by the U.S. Office of Palestinian Affairs, a Jerusalem-based State Department outpost. 

    The Office of Palestinian Affairs’ post, uploaded in the Hamas assault’s early hours, said: “We unequivocally condemn the attack of Hamas terrorists and the loss of life that has incurred. We urge all sides to refrain from violence and retaliatory attacks. Terror and violence solve nothing.”

    Some observers were quick to criticize the post, seeing it as a betrayal of Israel’s right to counter a terror assault. The U.S. has staunchly defended Israel since the nation’s independence in 1948. The U.S. has also sought, to one degree or another, to broker peace between Israel and its neighbors, including Palestinians.

    The Washington Free Beacon, a conservative website, published a screenshot of the tweet, which had a 3:24 a.m. timestamp. (We weren’t able to independently verify the time zone.) The tweet’s “all sides” framing drew immediate heat from critics in the U.S., where it was still the middle of the night. 

    At 4:47 a.m., Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, shared the Palestinian Affairs office post, adding, “This is disgraceful and every single person involved in drafting and approving this tweet should be immediately expelled from the U.S. government.”

    The Washington Free Beacon quoted an anonymous State Department official who confirmed the tweet was deleted, saying it was not approved and did not represent American policy.

    It’s unclear exactly when the Office of Palestinian Affairs’ tweet was taken down, and the White House did not provide PolitiFact with details. The office’s next post came at 7:12 a.m.; it didn’t include the “all sides” language.

    From its first public statement on Oct. 7, the day the Hamas attacks began, the White House itself expressed a consistent message of support for Israel and its right to respond to the attacks.

    • In an emailed statement at 7:43 a.m. ET, National Security Council Spokesperson Adrienne Watson said, “The United States unequivocally condemns the unprovoked attacks by Hamas terrorists against Israeli civilians. There is never any justification for terrorism. We stand firmly with the Government and people of Israel and extend our condolences for the Israeli lives lost in these attacks.”
       

    • In an emailed statement at 9:39 a.m., the White House press office said, “Senior national security officials briefed the president this morning on the appalling Hamas terrorist attacks in Israel. The president will continue to receive updates and White House officials remain in close contact with Israeli partners.”

    • In an emailed statement we received at 11:06 a.m., Biden said, “This morning, I spoke with Prime Minister (Benjamin) Netanyahu about the horrific and ongoing attacks in Israel. The United States unequivocally condemns this appalling assault against Israel by Hamas terrorists from Gaza, and I made clear to Prime Minister Netanyahu that we stand ready to offer all appropriate means of support to the Government and people of Israel. Terrorism is never justified. Israel has a right to defend itself and its people. … My Administration’s support for Israel’s security is rock solid and unwavering.”

    • In public remarks from the White House televised at 2:48 p.m., Biden said, “In this moment of tragedy, I want to say to (Hamas) and to the world and to terrorists everywhere that the United States stands with Israel. We will not ever fail to have their back. We’ll make sure they have the help their citizens need and they can continue to defend themselves.” He added, “When I spoke with Prime Minister Netanyahu this morning, I told him the United States stands with the people of Israel in the face of this terrorist assault. Israel has the right to defend itself and its people. Full stop.”

    These repeated statements contradict the assertion that the Biden administration “wanted Israel to stand down.”

    Under Biden, the U.S. has expressed its differences over Israeli settlements in the West Bank and Netanyahu’s efforts to overhaul the nation’s independent judiciary. 

    Still, the Biden administration has reiterated U.S. support for Israel’s right to defend itself, the Council on Foreign Relations has written. In July 2023, the U.S. supported Israel’s decision to undertake the biggest in a series of counterterrorism operations against new militant groups in the West Bank. “Biden has also criticized the unpopular and ineffectual Palestinian Authority (PA) for letting such groups go unchecked,” the Council on Foreign Relations wrote.

    Our ruling

    Scott said the Biden administration “wanted Israel to stand down after the attack” by Hamas.

    The statement contains an element of truth, because the State Department’s Palestinian Affairs outpost in Jerusalem posted a statement in the attack’s early hours that urged “all sides to refrain from violence and retaliatory attacks.” Within hours, the post was taken down.

    Scott’s claim leaves a misleading impression, however, by ignoring four unambiguous comments from the White House and Biden from 7 a.m. to 3 p.m. that said the U.S. was siding with Israel and supporting its right to retaliate. Scott made his post after 3 p.m., when these statements were public.

    We rate it Mostly False.

    PolitiFact Staff Writer Samantha Putterman contributed to this report.



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  • Kiwanis County Fair set to open October 23-29

    Kiwanis County Fair set to open October 23-29

    Published 3:30 pm Tuesday, October 10, 2023

    The annual Kiwanis Covington County Fair will be held Oct. 23-29 and are currently taking vendor and booth applications.

    The fair will open on Monday, Oct. 23, 6 p.m. with scheduled entertainment provided by the Andalusia Elementary School Show Choir and the LBW Ensemble.

    General admission for most nights is $5 or $20 for unlimited rides. Ages 5 and under are free.

    Tuesday, Oct. 24, gates open at 6 p.m. There will be a special Adult Citizens Day at the Fair from 10 a.m. until noon. Entertainment on Tuesday begins at 7 p.m. and features the LA Kickers line dancing.

    Wednesday, Oct. 25 is Family Night, Military Appreciation Night and Church Night. Those who bring one non-perishable food item will receive entry (between 6-7 p.m.). Guest speaker will be Pastor William Worley. Gates open at 6 p.m. The Community Choir will perform on the inside stage at 6 p.m.

    Thursday, Oct. 26, will feature Special Children’s Day at the Fair from 10 a.m. to noon. Gates open for regular entry at 6 p.m. Entertainment on the outside stage begins at 6:30 p.m. and will feature the Straughn High School String Band, Greenville High School String Band, and the Burning Bush Family.

    On Friday, Oct. 27, gates open at 6 p.m. Entertainment will be on the inside stage featuring Alyssa Jones-5 Runs Karaoke Winner.

    On Saturday, Oct. 28, gates open at 6 p.m. A karaoke contest will be held on the inside stage with registration being held form 5 to 5:30 p.m. and the contest starting at 6 p.m. The contest is limited to 25 participants.

    On Sunday, Oct. 29, there will only be fair rides available. The fair is open from 1 to 6 p.m. and entry cost is $25 for unlimited rides.

    For information about a commercial booth, email kiwanisandalusia@gmail.com or call 334-488-3939 between 7 a.m. and 1 p.m. Paid commercial booth spaces are assigned on a first-come, first-served basis

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