Be former mayor jean claude and her husband. They want to open the dispensary in San Franciscos sunset district. They say that check they chose the location because the Chinese Community is underserved. Amber, the opposition at this dispensary is coming from numbers of the Chinese Community. Reporter thats right. We are at 32nd avenue. The empty storefront behind me is the proposed site. Ambres are upset saying this is not an appropriate location. This was once a pharmacy. Now, former oakland mayor jean quan and her husband plan to open a Cannabis Club that serves the Chinese Community. Our community doesnt have access right now. Reporter access that would be modeled after the apothecary. Hume says it will be professionally operated in a safe environment. As a gerontologist, he says he sees many elderly Chinese Women suffering debilitating pain and marijuana is an alternative to prescription painkillers. We need a bilingual and bicultural location. Reporter but opposition is coming fro
Students are demonstrating on the Santa Clara University campus, protesting the situation in Gaza. But with tensions heightened at universities across the country, organizers were determined to keep this event calm.
The Philadelphia Inquirer reported. The university had 186 active cases as of Sunday.
“This weekend the COVID-19 dashboard numbers are higher than we have previously experienced,” the Reverend John P. Stack, vice president for student life, wrote to students Sunday. “Although we have the resources to manage the current situation, these numbers are not sustainable.”
Students returned to campus Jan. 25.
Father Stack warned that the semester will move online if the numbers don t come down.
At
Liberty University, a Facebook post, since deleted, with pictures taken on campus, raised a question: Does anyone there wear face masks?
Photos featured a snowball fight on the campus. Liberty s acting president, Jerry Prevo, was pictured. Face masks were few and far between.
Santa Clara University fraternity faces consequences for super-spreader event
KTVU s Emma Goss reports.
Santa Clara - Santa Clara University administrators are enforcing harsher consequences for violating county COVID-19 orders after an off-campus fraternity party brought dozens of students from the University to gather, many without masks, on Saturday, January 23.
Cal Phi, an unchartered fraternity unique to Santa Clara University, hosted an Aspen in the 80 s themed party in the backyard of their off-campus house on Bellomy Street.
The Santa Clara, the school s student newspaper, counted as many as 75 students in attendance, based on a photo that circulated on Instagram. It was a lot of noise and hubbub, there was a lot of commotion, a lot of ruckus, even before I woke up, Gena Bruce, a senior at SCU, who lives nearby the Cal Phi house and several other fraternity homes, said.
In a statement, Santa Clara University called the recent fraternity party a blatant disregard for health directives. People tend to forget the severity of the situation. That s why a lot of students have tried to remind their peers that, Hey this is not a joke, said Moezidis.
The recent fraternity party near SCU came just days after the university canceled plans to bring students back to campus for housing and in-person classes.
One student told ABC7 News, with tuition above $50,000 dollars a year, there is frustration. Another student said some feel a false sense of security because free COVID-19 tests are offered to students.