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Cops: Woman, 77, Hurled Whopper, Racial Slurs

MAY 4 A 77-year-old retiree who was upset about the thickness of the tomato on her Whopper allegedly threw the sandwich at a Burger King employee and then spewed racial slurs at the worker, according to Florida police who arrested the septuagenarian on a felony charge. Investigators say Judith Black became unruly Friday evening at a Burger King near her home in The Villages, the sprawling retirement community billed as the Sunshine State’s “friendliest hometown.” Black was dismayed with the tomato on her Whopper sandwich, according to a police report that does not specify whether the accused sought more or less tomato. Black, seen at right, took her complaint to the restaurant’s front counter, where she allegedly began yelling at a female employee.

Florida woman hurls Whopper, racist slurs at Burger King staffer

Florida woman hurls Whopper, racist slurs at Burger King staffer
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Florida woman, 77, arrested for throwing Whopper, racist slurs at Burger King employee

Florida woman, 77, arrested for throwing Whopper, racist slurs at Burger King employee Jami Ganz A Florida woman irritated about the state of her Whopper threw the fast food at a Burger King employee before leveling racial slurs at the worker. Judith Black, 77, was booked Friday shortly after 8:30 p.m. and charged with battery in the incident, according to inmate records from Sumter County. The charge would usually fall under a misdemeanor, but because of the racist language, was reclassified as a felony under Florida’s statute evidencing prejudice, according to documents obtained Tuesday by The Smoking Gun. © Provided by New York Daily News

Out of the way, little people — big energy project coming through

Out of the way, little people — big energy project coming through Updated December 19, 2020, 2:30 a.m. Email to a Friend From Weymouth to East Boston to Minnesota, fossil fuel projects carry the day Having spent many mornings, at the crack of dawn, standing with the good citizens that make up the Fore River Residents Against the Compressor Station, or FRRACS, holding signs of protest on the bridge above the Weymouth compressor plant site, I was glad to see an investigative piece by Boston Globe Spotlight fellow Mike Stanton (”Brute lesson in power politics,” Page A1, Dec. 13). Sadly, we are seeing parallel investments in hazardous fossil fuel infrastructure as close as East Boston, another community that will bear the brunt of the hunger for and profits from gas, all the way to Minnesota, where the same company that FRRACS is fighting is building Pipeline 3.

2020 PhotoBook Awards Shortlist: First PhotoBook

LIKE explores the experiences and relationships of migrant workers in Oman. But rather than focusing on the defining public image of poor working conditions, photographer Ryan Debolski depicts men finding agency and connection to the landscape of the beach and companionship in each other they are as playful as they are introspective. A running dialogue of conversations via text message weaves together details of infrastructure and landscape and highlights the men’s digital communications with one another. LIKE refuses to dehumanize or mystify the laborer, and an accompanying essay by Jason Koxvold, “Raw Material: Capital and Exploitation at the Neoliberal Frontier

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