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The 50 greatest British weekend breaks for 2021
Move over old-school mini-break, action-packed micro-adventures and chic coastal stays are in. Here are the very best Britain has to offer
10 April 2021 • 5:00am
Walking on sunshine: if you’re waiting for the opportunity to take a far-flung holiday, now is the perfect time to bridge the gap with a short break in Britain
Ah, the “mini break”. That must mean a 1950s headscarf and shades. An overpriced and impractical valise. A picnic hamper in the boot. And a drive to a country house retreat, where you shall waft around in floaty fabrics, and bathe in champagne, candlelight, sunsets and smugness.
It’s time for Ohio to nurse its energy sources back to health: Dr. Aparna Bole
Updated Mar 14, 2021;
Posted Mar 14, 2021
Air pollution related to fossil fuel combustion including sulfur dioxide, surface ozone and fine particulate matter causes a host of health harms to Ohioans, especially to our children, writes guest columnist Dr. Arpana Bole. Lisa DeJong/The Plain Dealer
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Guest columnist Dr.
Aparna Bole, MD, FAAP, is medical director of community integration at UH Rainbow Babies & Children’s Hospital and an associate professor of pediatrics at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine. She is a founding advisory council member of the Ohio Clinicians for Climate Action. For this essay, Bole collaborated with Ariunaa Bayanjargal, MD/PhD student at The Ohio State University specializing in childhood cancer research and Dr. William Hardie, a pediatric pulmonologist in Cincinnati.
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) A number of former judges and prosecutors including two previous Alabama chief justices and a state attorney general have joined those seeking a new trial for a death row inmate amid questions about his conviction more than 20 years ago.
Former Alabama Attorney General Bill Baxley, former chief justices Sonny Hornsby and Drayton Nabers and several former judges and prosecutors have submitted briefs supporting a new trial for Toforest Johnson who was convicted of the 1995 murder of a deputy sheriff.
“The petition before the Court is an extraordinary and rare situation in which the evidence of constitutional violations and Mr. Johnson’s innocence is genuinely overwhelming,” wrote attorneys representing Nabers, former Alabama Supreme Court Justice Ralph Cook and others.