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Polls open Tuesday for May 4 primary election

Grateful Dutch youth mail letters, flowers to aging veterans

Author of the article: Doug Schmidt Publishing date: Apr 29, 2021  •  April 29, 2021  •  3 minute read  •  WW2 veteran Stuart Johns, 96, is shown at his Windsor home on Wednesday, April 28, 2021. Johns was supposed to visit the Netherlands last year for 75th anniversary of liberation of NL. This year he received letters from teenagers in Netherlands thanking him for his service. Photo by Dan Janisse /Windsor Star Article content Appreciative of the sacrifices of young soldiers who helped their families survive the horrors of war, occupation and hunger three generations ago, children in the Netherlands have been sending letters and wildflower seeds to veterans around the world.

Dell Technologies Safeguards IT Environments with New Security Service Powered by Secureworks

Dell Technologies Safeguards IT Environments with New Security Service Powered by Secureworks
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Dell and Secureworks team up to protect IT environments

The new service uses Secureworks Taegis XDR software to monitor, detect, investigate and automate response to threats across the entire IT environment, using analytics taken from data across thousands of customers. Dell helps customers in deploying Taegis security control and integration of technologies across their data sources. According to the companies, when a threat arises, expert security analysts investigate and provide recommended actions and step-by-step instructions to contain and remediate them. This service is available today in North America through Dell ProManage and as a standalone service globally by May 10. “Secureworks Taegis XDR is security software designed by security experts for security analysts,” said Mike Cote, CEO of Secureworks.

Trials, hearings in limbo as courts respond to public health crisis

Article content Many of those awaiting trials or judicial hearings in Ontario will have to wait a bit longer for their day in court after the province’s top justices pressed the pause button on criminal cases due to the worsening COVID-19 situation. Starting Monday, only the most urgent and serious criminal, child protection, family and commercial matters will be heard in person, at least until May 7 when the situation will be reevaluated. We apologize, but this video has failed to load. Try refreshing your browser, or Trials, hearings in limbo as courts respond to public health crisis Back to video

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