USRA Names Rochelle Ford Vice President, Corporate Affairs and Governance
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COLUMBIA, Md., May 17, 2021 /PRNewswire/ Universities Space Research Association today announced the appointment of Rochelle Ford as Vice President, Corporate Affairs and Governance.
In her new role, Ms. Ford will have executive responsibility for corporate legal matters, congressional advocacy, external communications, and management of corporate governance, including support to the Board of Trustees and the USRA Council of Institutions, which includes representatives from each of USRA s 113 member universities. She will also serve as USRA s Chief Ethics and Compliance Officer (CECO) and Chair of USRA s Executive Compliance Committee (ECC).
Indoor Mask Mandates Still in Place As New Yorkers Raise Concerns About New CDC Guidelines
arrow People wearing masks walk past the Andrew Wagner Quintet, May 13th, 2021. JUSTIN LANE/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says people fully vaccinated against COVID-19 can safely unmask almost everywhere and the reactions in New York are mixed.
New York Governor Andrew Cuomo is currently deliberating over whether to change New York’s mask policy, which still indicates that everyone who can “medically tolerate” a face covering must wear one in public if they’re unable to distance themselves from others. The state adopted the CDC’s last change on April 27th, relaxing mask usage for fully vaccinated people for some social gatherings.
In this relentlessly twisty literary thriller fromÂ
New York Times bestselling author Kimberly McCreight, a desperate intervention brings together a gr
In this relentlessly twisty literary thriller fromÂ
New York Times bestselling author Kimberly McCreight, a desperate intervention brings together a group of college friends 10 years after graduationâa reunion marked by lies, betrayal, and murder.
Everyone has those friends. Doesnât matter how long itâs been, or how badly theyâve occasionally behaved, or how late it is when that call finally comesâyou show up. No questions asked.
Honestly, thatâs how the five of us ended up here in the Catskills. We did have the best of intentions. Especially after what happened to Alice all those years ago, we canât bear to think of losing anyone else. In fact, weâll do anything to make sure that doesnât happen. Weâll go so much farther than we ever thought we would. Â
Marie Albiges of Spotlight PA
This article is part of a year-long reporting project focused on redistricting and gerrymandering in Pennsylvania. It’s made possible by the support of Spotlight PA members and Votebeat, a project focused on election integrity and voting access.
HARRISBURG The Pennsylvania Supreme Court will pick the chair of a powerful redistricting panel after the General Assembly’s top leaders deadlocked on who should cast the likely tie-breaking vote on new legislative maps.
The selection of the chair has fallen to the court in almost every decade since the Legislative Reapportionment Commission was first convened in 1971 to draw the state’s House and Senate maps. The four caucus leaders who serve on the panel interviewed more than 30 people for the position, but said in a letter Friday they were “unable to make a decision.”
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