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Woodbridge ward seats up for election
Woodbridge ward seats up for election
WOODBRIDGE – The Woodbridge Township clerk’s office has certified nine people as candidates for the Primary Election to be held on June 8, ahead of the General Election in November.
Up for election are Woodbridge Township Council ward seats. The remaining four at-large seats will be selected in two years.
Five council members are seeking re-election – Nancy Bader-Drumm (D–1); Harold “Howie” R. Bauer Jr. (D–2); Corey S. Spillar (D-3); Virbhadra “Viru” Patel (D-4); and Debbie Meehan (D-5).
The challengers in the November election will be Ken Gardner (D-1) and John Vrtaric (Rep-1); Paul Lund Jr. (R-2); John Masculin (R-3); and Rocco Genova (R-5).
(Photo : Saul Loeb - Pool/Getty Images)
Viewers of President Joe Biden s official swearing-in ceremony noticed a shocking livestreamed inauguration glitch as the 46th president of the United States delivered a speech.
Millions around the world were watching the ceremony from the safety of their own homes. Some noticed that as Biden was delivering his inauguration speech, the feed for CBSN cut abruptly for a few seconds.
It returned with a pixelated feed of Biden delivering his address. Some believe this inauguration glitch was just a rendering problem and noticed a minute-long delay upon switching feeds of Biden s speech.
The inauguration glitch appeared to be the only problem with the event as there were no disruptions at the Capitol, noted Crime Online.
Computer chip shortage disrupts global car production
The auto industry has been left scrambling for semiconductors as a swift recovery catches their suppliers off guard. Strong demand for iPhones, Galaxy tabs and Playstation consoles from housebound consumers is to blame.
VW has been forced to reduce production at its Wolfsburg plant because of a chip shortage
The world s biggest carmakers, including Toyota and Volkswagen, have been forced to halt or slow production as a global shortage of computer chips cripples auto part suppliers in the latest blow dealt to the car industry by the coronavirus pandemic.
Soaring demand for smartphones, gaming consoles, tabs and other electronics by homebound consumers has prompted semiconductor makers to divert capacity away from the auto industry, leaving car parts suppliers like Bosch and Continental struggling to keep their customers supplied.
The auto industry has been left scrambling for semiconductors as a swift recovery catches their suppliers off guard. Strong demand for iPhones, Galaxy tabs and Playstation consoles from housebound consumers is to blame.