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Live Nation to require COVID-19 vaccination or negative test from artists, fans
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A hatred that dwells alone? Antisemitism debate cuts to heart of Zionist vision
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Restaurants are betting on to-go alcohol as business picks back up, but experts say competing with liquor stores won t be easy mmeisenzahl@businessinsider.com (Mary Meisenzahl)
More than 30 states allowed alcohol takeout and delivery during the pandemic.
Off-premise alcohol sales were a lifeline for restaurants, and many want to keep it around.
Experts say restaurants have to differentiate offerings from liquor stores.
Takeout and delivery alcohol sales have been a lifeline for restaurants during the past year, and the industry is hoping they ll be allowed to continue - but experts told Insider that competing with liquor stores while still turning a profit is easier said than done.
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Liliana Segre speaks at a ceremony in Milan, Italy, honoring the rescuers of Jews during the Holocaust, March 5, 2021. (Alessandro Bremec/NurPhoto via Getty Images/JTA)
JTA The reassuring speeches, the morale-boosting flyovers and the evening balcony applause for medical staff have done little to impress 90-year-old Liliana Segre.
A prominent lawmaker in her native Italy who barely survived Auschwitz as a teenager, she has maintained a sober attitude throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, which hit Italy early and hard in February 2020.
“In the disease’s early days, there were flags on the windows and singing from the balconies,” she told La Repubblica last month. “I remained pessimistic. I saw that in reality there isn’t much left of that fraternity.”
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Born in a refugee camp in Kenya, Halima Aden found fame as the world’s first hijab-wearing model. And then, in November, she made the shock announcement that she would be quitting the fashion industry, claiming that she could no longer align her career path with her faith. I don t regret my career, there were so many positive things I was able to accomplish, but I am so excited to take a step back and do things differently, Aden tells
The National.
The paradox of modest fashion
At the start of her career at age 19, Aden incorporated two, non-negotiable conditions into her modelling contract: Hijab and no male stylists . Any fashion brand that wanted to work with her had to to abide by these rules.
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