Nils New bill calls for strategy to protect 5G infrastructure from foreign threats
Atlanta s mayor, Keisha Lance Bottoms, has tested positive for coronavirus, she announced Monday, saying COVID-19 has literally hit home. Bottoms, a 50-year-old Democrat in her first-term, said she and her husband only experienced symptoms similar to seasonal allergies.Bottoms, in an appearance on MSNBC, said the positive test result was
stanley cup a shock and she only decided to get tested because her husband had been sleeping more than usual. It leaves me for a loss of words because I think it really speaks to how contagious this virus is. We ve taken all the precautions that you can
stanley cup possibly take. I have no idea when and where we were exposed, she said. Bottoms, who has been considered as a potential running mate for Joe Biden, stepped into the national spotlight this year for her response to the coronavirus pandemic and her pleas for peaceful protests following the fatal shooting of a Black man at the hands of a White police officer in early June.As of Monday, there have been more than
stanley cup 97,000 confirmed virus cases in Georgia, with over 2,870 deaths and over 11,900 hospitalizations, according to the state s Department of Public Health. Coronavirus Pandemic More Jvye Rodney Alcala, the Dating Game Killer, dies of natural causes on death row
NEW YORK -- Moon dust that Neil Armstrong collected during the first lunar landing was displayed Thursday at a New York auction house -- a
salomon symbol of America s glory days in space now valued at $2 million to $4 million. The late astronaut brought the dust and some tiny rocks back to Earth in an ordinary-looking bag. It s one of 180 lots linked to space travel that Sotheby sis auctioning off July 20 to mark the 48th anniversary of the pioneer lunar landing on that date in 1969. The moon dust is the first sample of Earth s satellite ever collected.
air max 1 Neil Armstrong kept mementos from his famous walk on the moon 01:14 The bag has had a storied existence, a
mizuno decades-long trajectory during which it was misidentified and nearly landed in the trash. About two years ago, it appeared in a seized assets auction staged on behalf of the U.S. Marshals Service. The owner, whose name has not been made public, purchased the treasure and sent it to NASA for testing. After a legal tussle, a federal judge granted the owner full rights over the curiosity.Other items on the block are Armstrong s snapshot of fellow Apollo 11 astronaut Buzz Aldrin standing on the moon, with an estimated value of $3,000 to $5,000.A documented flight plan astronauts used to return to Earth is