All safe. Those are some of our top stories on this monday, august 10th. Thank you for starting your week with us. And we do begin with schools ng a as coravirus cas millionaon be Holding Classes online today and tomorrow, while the building is disinfected following an outbreak among students and staff. In bigtime College Football, the power five conferences may be considering moving their season to the spring. Meantime, the pandemic has prompted some top ncaa players to call for the creation of a union. Abcs Andrew Dymburt has more. Reporter the u. S. Now surpassing 5 million confirmed cases of coronavirus. Kansas city among nine cities warned by the White House Task force they are in danger of becoming new hot spots. Were seeing a lot of activity that has been against Public Health advice. House parties of up to hundreds of people, a lot of backyard parties. Reporter chicagos mayor threatening to shut down the lakefront, posting these images on social media after witnessing what she
One that is so expensive . You get an aid to carry it for you, and you end up with tonight the sobering ith milestone as america tops 5 million covid19 cases. As parents across the country face the tough decision about sending their children back to school. The internal government model. The president s own advisers reportedly warning the midwest will soon suffer. The debate over schools as more children go back. In georgia after a High School Student posted these images of crowded hallways, now nearly a dozen at that School Testing positive. And new concerns about large gatherings. One man at an ohio church infecting more than 90 people as a fight breaks out at a California Church and the warning just in from chicagos mayor over these images. Executive action challenged. The president s announcement inside his new Jersey Country Club sidestepping congress saying hell bring relief to millions of americans in need
but democrats and some republicans taking aim at the specifics. Tonight t
This is the third story in a five-part package revisiting the 2023 stories that The News & Observer’s staff members will remember long after the year is over.