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Wednesday, June 30, 2021

Here's what is known about the Delta variant of coronavirus - CNN

The World Health Organization says the Delta variant, also known as B.1.617.2, has spread to at least 85 countries since it was first identified in India last fall.
Here's what is known about the variant so far:

It's spreading fast

By mid-June, the Delta variant accounted for 99% of Covid-19 cases in the UK, according to Public Health England, and it is set to account for 90% of cases in Europe by the end of August, according to the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control.
In the US, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention now estimates the variant accounts for 26% of new Covid-19 cases -- or at least, that it did as of June 19. It's been reported in all 50 states, plus Washington, D.C.
It accounted for 10% of lineages as of June 5, meaning its prevalence more than doubled in just two weeks.
Genetic testing company Helix tells CNN it estimates Delta accounts for 40% of cases in the US at present.
"Every two weeks for the last month or two this has been doubling," Dr. Mark Mulligan, director of the NYU Langone Vaccine Center, told an International Antiviral Society--USA briefing Tuesday.
"The data from England has shown that it outcompeted the Alpha variant in that population. That is strong head to head evidence that it is a better transmitter," Andrew Pekosz, a professor of immunology and molecular microbiology at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, told CNN.
"Here in the US it is doing very similar things. It seems to be on its way to becoming the dominant lineage in the US."
Testing for any variant is imperfect. Standard tests to diagnose Covid-19 cannot tell which variant someone is infected with. Samples must be shipped to special labs for genomic testing, so the CDC and companies such as Helix extrapolate from the actual test results they get back.

It's more transmissible

"Delta is the most transmissible of the variants identified so far," Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, director-general of the World Health Organization, said Friday.
The virus carries a cluster of mutations, including one known as L452R, that helps it infect human cells more easily.
"We learned this virus, a variant of Covid, is highly transmissible -- the most transmissible we've seen to date," US Surgeon-General Dr. Vivek Murthy told CNN Wednesday.
"This is, again, a serious threat and we are seeing it spread among unvaccinated people."
The ECDC estimates its about 40% to 60% more transmissible than the Alpha variant -- making it about half again as contagious.

Vaccines protect against it - but not perfectly

Real life and laboratory evidence both suggest that fully vaccinated people are protected against the Delta variant.
"The good news is if you are vaccinated -- and fully vaccinated means two weeks after your last shot -- then there is good evidence that you have a high degree of protection against this virus," Murthy told CNN's Erica Hill Wednesday. "But if you are not vaccinated, then you are in trouble."
Vaccine maker Moderna released results Tuesday showing that blood taken from vaccinated people could neutralize Delta, as well as other variants including Alpha, the Beta or B.1.351 variant first seen in South African, and Gamma, or P.1, which has swept Brazil.
"Vaccines can handle it," Mulligan said. "In most cases, we have a cushion of magnitude in circulating antibody and other cellular responses. The vaccines are able to handle this."
And in US states with lower vaccination rates, the Delta variant is more prevalent than in states where the majority of the populations are immunized.
In Missouri, for example, data from Johns Hopkins University shows the infection rate is about 3.5 times the national average. And CDC data shows Delta accounts for about 57.5% of cases in the region that includes Missouri, where under 40% of the population is fully vaccinated, compared to 47% of the US population overall.
But none of the coronavirus vaccines are 100% effective, so there can be infections even in fully vaccinated people.
"It is possible that you will see people who are infected get breakthrough infections," Dr. Anthony Fauci told CNN's Don Lemon Tuesday.
"We haven't formally proven yet how much diminution there is in the likelihood of transmitting it to someone else -- including children -- and that's one of the reasons why you've got to be careful when you're dealing with something like the Delta variant," said Fauci, who is director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.
"With millions of people getting vaccinated against COVID-19, some people who are fully vaccinated will still get sick if they are exposed," CDC spokesperson Jade Fulce told CNN in an email Friday.
"However, people with breakthrough infections may get less severely ill or have a shorter illness than they would have if they had not been vaccinated."

Everyday measures prevent transmission

There's nothing about the Delta variant that makes it different in terms of how it transmits. Coronaviruses are passed in the air and, to a smaller degree, on surfaces that people may touch.
Masks, physical distancing and good ventilation all work to prevent transmission, as does handwashing and keeping surfaces clean.

It's not clear whether it it's more dangerous

While some public officials have said they believe the Delta variant is more dangerous that other lineages of the virus, there's no hard evidence showing this.
The cluster of defining mutations on Delta indicate it is more transmissible and can hide to a small degree from the body's immune response, but none suggest it is more virulent or more pathogenic -- that is causes more severe disease.
It does not carry two other worrying mutations known as E484K and N501Y -- which are seen in the B.1.1.7 or Alpha variant first seen in Britain, which swept many countries at the end of 2020 and the beginning of 2021, and also in the B.1.351 variant of Beta variant first seen in South Africa, and well as the P.1 or Gamma variant.
"It has a few unique mutations, particularly in the spike protein, that would suggest it is able to bind to human cells better and perhaps evade antibody responses that target the spike protein," Pekosz said.
That could mean people who were infected with earlier lineages of coronavirus and recovered could more easily get infected with Delta. It also suggests antibody-based treatments might be slightly less effective.
But as shown in laboratory tests, the vaccines cause an overwhelming immune response, stronger and broader than natural infection, that should protect most vaccinated people against serious illness and even mild infection.

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Here is where to see fireworks and parades for the Fourth - TwinCities.com-Pioneer Press

Here is where to catch the parades, fireworks and other festivities on the Fourth of July:

Afton: Parade and celebration are canceled for 2021. Website: aftonparade.com.

Apple Valley: Apple Valley Freedom Days festivities began Wednesday and will last through July 4. On the 4th, the Freedom Days parade will begin at 1 p.m. starting at Fireside Lane and Pennock Avenue. A pre-fireworks party at Johnny Cake Ridge Park with food and family activities begins at 6 p.m. The fireworks show begins at 10 p.m. Website:  www.avfreedomdays.com.

Bloomington: Summer Fete starts at 6 p.m. with live music and food in Normandale Lake Park. Fireworks start at dusk. Website: www.bloomingtonmn.gov/pr/summer-fete.

Coon Rapids: Festivities begin on July 3 on the grounds of the Coon Rapids Ice Center. There will be a carnival, live music, food and a parade beginning at 1 p.m. A car show runs 5 to 11 p.m. Activities continue Sunday, capped by fireworks at 10 p.m. Website: www.coonrapidscommunitystrengthfoundation.com/4th-of-july-celebration.html.

Delano: Minnesota’s oldest July 4 festival will feature games, a carnival, music and more over several days, beginning July 1. On the Fourth, a 5K starts at 9 a.m. followed by Minnesota’s largest parade at 10:30 a.m. Family entertainment will continue throughout the day until a fireworks display at 10:30 p.m. Website: www.delano4th.com.

Eagan: July 4th Funfest is modified this year with no carnival or parade this year. But there will be a kids’ bike parade and scavenger hunt and a modified 30-minute fireworks show at 10 p.m. at Central Park; the fireworks will be shot higher, allowing viewers to spread out more. Website: eaganfunfest.org.

Edina: Parade will be held Saturday, July 3, at 10 a.m. behind Edina City Hall. There will not be fireworks this year. Website: www.edinaparade.org.

Elk River: Elk RiverFest returns on July 3. Beginning at 2 p.m. on Main Street, there will be food, music and other activities until 9 p.m. A fireworks show will follow at 10 p.m., launching between Salk Middle School and VandenBerge Middle School. Website: www.elkrivermn.gov/elkriverfest.

Excelsior: Lake Minnetonka 4th of July celebration begins in Commons Park with a series of runs at 7:30 a.m. At 11 a.m., there will be a kids’ parade followed by a popsicle social. Fireworks begin at dusk on the lake. Website: www.excelsior-lakeminnetonkachamber.com/lakeminnetonka4th.

Forest Lake: Carnival runs July 1-4 at American Legion with Bingo and music each day. A parade will be held Saturday, July 3, at 10 a.m. Fireworks will be Sunday, July 4, at 10 p.m. Website: www.ci.forest-lake.mn.us/190/4th-of-July.

Hastings: Festivities will be held Friday, July 2, at the Hastings Golf Club beginning at 8 p.m. with food and music. Fireworks at 10 p.m. Website: www.hastingsgolfclub.com/calendar.

Hudson, Wis.: Hudson Booster Days will run July 1-4 at Lakefront Park. There will be a carnival each night and food and live entertainment. Fireworks over the St. Croix River will begin at dusk on Saturday, July 3. Website: www.hudsonboosters.org.

Lakeville: The Pan-O-Prog festival will run July 4-11. Highlights include a July 10 parade at 5:30 p.m., a carnival July 8-11 and a fireworks show at King’s Park on July 4 at dusk. Residents are invited to watch from their car or home; there will be no viewing available at the park. Website: www.panoprog.org.

Maplewood: Fireworks will be held in Hazelwood Park at dusk. Attendees are welcome to bring a picnic, but no grills, no open fires and no alcohol. Website: Look under News & Highlights at maplewoodmn.gov.

Marine on St. Croix: Sunday, July 4, parade on Judd Street begins at noon. There will be no fireworks this year. Website: www.marineonstcroix.org/fourthofjuly.

Mendota Heights: Fireworks on Sunday, July 4, will begin around 10 p.m. from the Mendakota Country Club. Website: mendotaheightsmn.gov.

Minneapolis: The traditional fireworks show along the Mississippi River will be replaced with smaller events in various parks throughout the city. Highlights include the Minneapolis Pops Orchestra at 2 p.m. at Lake Harriet and the bands Maria and the Coins and the Changeups at Father Hennepin Bluff Park from 3 to 6 p.m. Website: mplsredwhiteboom.com.

Mystic Lake Casino: Saturday, July 4, fireworks display after the 8 p.m. John Fogerty concert. Website: mysticlake.com.

Stillwater: There will be live bands playing 5:30 to 9:30 p.m. at Lowell Park, and the St. Croix Jazz Orchestra at 7 p.m. at the Pioneer Park Bandshell. There will be no fireworks. Website: discoverstillwater.com.

St. Croix Falls, Wis.: Big Rock Creek venue is hosting a public Fourth of July celebration from 2 p.m. to midnight. There will be hayrides, food, music and more. Fireworks will be at 10 p.m. Admission: $20 for adults and $10 for kids and veterans. Website: www.bigrockcreekwi.com.

St. Paul: The St. Anthony Park neighborhood’s annual 4th in the Park is back. The parade will begin at 11 a.m. Sunday, July 4, along Como Avenue before ending at Langford Park, where a program will be held in the bandstand at noon. Website: www.4thinthepark.org.

Treasure Island Resort and Casino: Annual Island Block Party will feature free family entertainment, including food trucks, live music and more beginning at 5 p.m. Saturday, July 3. An Elton John tribute show begins at 8:30 p.m. with free general admission seats and $39 limited amphitheater reserved seats. Fireworks begin at dusk. Website: ticasino.com.

White Bear Lake: The annual Manitou Days festival runs July 1-11. Highlights include a Grande Parade on Friday, July 2, at 6:30 p.m. downtown, followed by a Beach Dance at 8 p.m. at Memorial Beach. Fireworks will be held at 10 p.m. Sunday, July 4, at West Park. Website: manitoudays.com.

Woodbury: The 4th of July Hometown Celebration will be held at the HealthEast Sports Center. Food trucks will be on site starting at 7 p.m. Fireworks begin at 10 p.m. Website: www.woodburymn.gov/departments/recreation/special_events.php.

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Restaurant Road Trip: Buenos Dias Café - WBOY.com

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Drummer to Introduce New Recording at Cadieux Café — Detroit Jewish News - The Jewish News

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Sean Perlmutterer
Sean Perlmutterer

Sean Perlmutter joined Paxton/Spangler Septet for a new album – Anthem For The New Nation – which features a collection of compositions by legendary South African pianist/composer Abdullah Ibrahim.

Drummer Sean Perlmutter leads his own jazz trio, MOUTHBREATHr, but he also performs and records with other groups around Michigan. Most recently, he joined with the Paxton/Spangler Septet for the recording, Anthem for the New Nation, which will be introduced July 11 at the Cadieux Café in Detroit.

The album consists solely of compositions by Abdullah Ibrahim, a pianist who mostly performs his own work.

“The recorded music came out of apartheid South Africa, where Ibrahim grew up,” said Perlmutter, 23. “Two of the seven pieces, ‘Cape Town Fringe/Mannenberg’ and ‘Soweto,’ are named after the townships where black South Africans were forced to live in cramped [and discriminatory] conditions. 

“My Jewish understanding comes from my father’s side of the family, and the context of the music reminds me of pogroms and the horrors of the Holocaust. The sounds of struggle and the joy of rising above that is what this music is about in a lot of ways.

“I think the strength of the Jewish people is augmented by noting comparisons of their struggles to those of other people.” 

Perlmutter, who grew up near Grand Rapids, was encouraged by his parents to study instrumental music and become part of the school band. Early on, he tried playing the recorder but soon decided he didn’t like wind instruments. Although the trombone and French horn had been suggested by his teachers to fill out the band, he leaned toward percussions.

“I heard rock albums from the ’60s and ’70s in my dad’s record collections, and the drum set seemed like a hop, skip and a jump from what I thought I could do,” Perlmutter said about his choice, which was supplemented through school studies. “Later, I heard John Coltrane, and I knew jazz was for me.”

At 12, Perlmutter got his own drum set and started playing at home and then in the jazz band at high school. At 16, he began private lessons with a jazz teacher.

Perlmutter worked a bit in the music scene around Grand Rapids. His first paycheck was earned by playing in a community theater band, and he used the money to buy extra cymbals for his drum set. 

“When I first moved to Detroit, I went to jam sessions in clubs and checked out other people’s gigs,” explained Perlmutter, a Redford resident who earned a music degree with a concentration in jazz studies from Wayne State University. 

“If you do that enough, people start to remember you, and they ask for your number. By the time they need someone for a gig because their normal guy can’t make it, you get the call. If you do a good job, the word spreads. Before you know it, you’re working.” 

Besides recording with R.J. Spangler, a percussionist, Perlmutter joined with Tbone Paxton, trombone; Phillip Hale, piano; Jeff Cuny, electric and acoustic basses; Daniel Bennett, tenor sax; Rafael Leafar, alto sax and flute; Kasan Belgrave, alto sax; Damon Warmack, electric bass; and James O’Donnell, flugelhorn.

Improvisational Music

The track “Perfumed Forest Wet with Rain” is especially appreciated by Perlmutter. 

“It’s a beautiful piece of music, but it also allows the band to get into really interesting spaces improvisationally,” said the drummer, who teaches at a studio as well as digitally and performs Monday nights at Barter in Hamtramck. 

“It allowed me, as a player, to use a lot of my experience and a side of my playing I don’t necessarily get a chance to showcase. It has a few different sections, and it’s one of the more floaty or ethereal pieces that has fluidity to the pulse. It starts off slow and picks up just a little bit as it goes on.”

Perlmutter, who recorded “MOUTHBREATHr” as a debut album of his own compositions and has freelance performances lined up, learned about Ibrahim’s style by working on the recording being released.

“The soulful, and many times joyful, music can be appreciated by all types of people,” he said. “It’s not just the jazz audience although the music still has all the jazz bona fides.” 

Details:

Anthem for the New Nation will be introduced at 6:30 p.m. Sunday, July 11, at the Cadieux Café, 4300 Cadieux, Detroit. $10. Cadieuxcafe.com.

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Ethiopia is at war with itself. Here's what you need to know about the conflict - CNN

In November, Abiy ordered a military offensive in the northern Tigray region and promised that the conflict would be resolved quickly. Eight months on, the fighting has left thousands dead, forced more than 1.7 million to flee, fueled famine and given rise to a wave of atrocities.
Ethiopia was struggling with significant economic, ethnic and political challenges long before a feud between Abiy and the region's former ruling party, the Tigray People's Liberation Front (TPLF), bubbled over into unrest. The war is the culmination of escalating tensions between the two sides, and the most dire of several recent ethno-nationalist clashes in Africa's second-most populous country.
Since the conflict began, Ethiopia's government has clamped down on communications and media, effectively sealing off Tigray. Against that murky backdrop, it has often been challenging to understand what is going on in the region.
Here's a closer look at the crisis.

How did the conflict start?

An Ethiopian refugee prays at an Orthodox church near a refugee camp in Gedaref, eastern Sudan, on December 6, 2020.
The Tigray conflict has its roots in tensions that go back generations in Ethiopia.
The country is made up of 10 regions -- and two cities -- that have a substantial amount of autonomy, including regional police and militia. Because of a previous conflict with neighboring Eritrea, there are also a large number of federal troops in Tigray. Regional governments are largely divided along entrenched ethnic lines.
Abiy came to power in 2018 promising to break those divisions. He formed a new national party but the TPLF refused to join, in part because the coalition diminished the influence of the TPLF in government -- a dominance that had lasted since the early 1990s.
Tigrayan leaders accused Abiy of excluding Ethiopia's ethnically-based regions in his bid to consolidate power, and withdrew to their mountainous heartland in the north, where they continued to control their own regional government.
Tensions boiled over in September, when the Tigrayans defied Abiy by going ahead with regional parliamentary elections that he had delayed due to the coronavirus pandemic. Abiy called the vote illegal and lawmakers cut funding to the TPLF leadership, setting off a tit-for-tatseries of escalations between the regional and the federal government.
On November 4, after accusing the TPLF of attacking a federal army base outside Tigray's regional capital Mekelle and attempting to steal its weapons, Abiy ordered a military assault against the group, sending in national troops and fighters from the neighboring region of Amhara, along with soldiers from Eritrea.
Abiy declared the offensive a success after just three weeks when government forces took over Mekelle, and installed an interim administration loyal to Addis Ababa.
A damaged tank on a road north of Mekelle, the capital of Tigray, on February 26

What atrocities have been committed?

For months at the start of the conflict, Abiy denied that civilians were being harmed or that soldiers from Eritrea had joined the fight.
But reports from international observers, human rights groups and CNN proved both of those claims wrong.
Thousands of people have died in the fighting, by many estimates, with reports of razed refugee camps, looting, sexual violence, massacres and extrajudicial killings. Many more have fled to Sudan, in what the United Nations has called the worst exodus of refugees from Ethiopia seen in two decades. They describe a disastrous conflict that's given rise to ethnic violence.
Ethiopia's government has severely restricted access to journalists, and a state-enforced communications blackout concealed events in the region, making it challenging to gauge the extent of the crisis or verify survivors' accounts.
But evidence of atrocities began to leak out earlier this year.
Tigrayans grieve by a mass grave in the city of Wukro, north of Mekele, on February 28, 2021.
Separate investigations by CNN and Amnesty International in February uncovered evidence of massacres carried out by Eritrean forces in the Tigrayan towns of Dengelat and Axum late last year.
Another CNN investigation published Sunday revealed new details of a massacre committed by Ethiopian soldiers in the Tigrayan town of Mahibere Dego in January. The report identified one the perpetrators of the massacre, geolocated human remains to the site of the attack.
In an exclusive report from Tigray in April, CNN captured Eritrean troops -- some disguising themselves in old Ethiopian military uniforms -- operating with total impunity in central Tigray, manning checkpoints and blocking vital humanitarian aid to starving populations more than a month after Abiy pledged to the international community that they would leave.
All actors in the conflict have been accused of carrying out atrocities, but Eritrean forces have been linked to some of the most gruesome. In addition to perpetrating mass killings and rape, Eritrean soldiers have also been found blocking and looting food relief in multiple parts of Tigray.
Eritrea's government has denied any involvement in atrocities. Ethiopia's government has pledged investigations into any wrongdoing.
The conflict, which erupted during the autumn harvest season following the worst invasion of desert locusts in Ethiopia in decades, plunged Tigray even further into severe food insecurity and the deliberate blockade of food risks mass starvation, a report by the World Peace Foundation warned.
The UN World Food Programme warned in June that 5.2 million people -- 91% of people living in the region -- were in need of emergency food assistance due to the conflict.

How did Abiy win the Nobel Peace Prize?

Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed campaigns in Jimma on June 16, 2021.
Less than a year before Abiy launched an assault on his own people, he described war as "the epitome of hell" during his acceptance speech for the Nobel Peace Prize. He was awarded the honor for his role in ending a long-running conflict with neighboring Eritrea and for pushing significant reforms in Ethiopia.
Eritrea was once a part of Ethiopia, but won independence in 1993 after a 30-year armed struggle. From 1998 to 2000, Ethiopia and Eritrea fought a war that killed thousands on both sides, which led to a long, dangerous stalemate and a total freeze in cooperation.
Once in power, Abiy moved quickly to normalize relations with Eritrea, in part by accepting the ruling of an international commission on boundaries between the two states.
Abiy also made significant moves towards domestic reforms, raising hopes that he would bring about lasting change. As well as forging a truce with Eritrea, he lifted a severe security law, released thousands of political prisoners, moved to open up the telecommunications industry and expand private investment.
But his reputation as a leader who could unite Ethiopia has swiftly deteriorated. And his much-lauded peace deal with Eritrea appears to have paved the way for the two countries to go to war with their mutual foe -- the TPLF.
Despite promises to heal ethnic divides and pave the way for a peaceful, democratic transition, Abiy has increasingly invoked the playbook of repressive regimes: Shutting down internet and telephone services, arresting journalists, suppressing critics and failing to hold a credible election.

What's happening now?

Eight months since the conflict began and seven months after Ethiopian forces seized the Tigrayan capital of Mekelle, Tigrayan forces took it back this week, sweeping into the city as Ethiopian troops retreated.
In the wake of Mekelle's capture, the Ethiopian government announced a unilateral ceasefire for several months. But on Tuesday, Tigrayan forces categorically ruled out a truce, with a spokesman for the TPLF saying their forces would not rest until the Ethiopian military and its allied forces, including Eritrean troops, had left the entire region.
Ethiopia's government has claimed that its military could re-enter the Tigray capital at any time if they needed to. "It was a political decision, not a military one," Redwan Hussein, a spokesperson for the government's taskforce on Tigray, said in a televised press conference on Wednesday.
Voters queue outside a polling station in Addis Ababa on June 21.
Abiy also held long-delayed national and regional elections in mid-June, though millions of Ethiopians could not cast their ballots due to widespread ethnic violence in several areas of the country -- and in Tigray, no vote was held at all. While Abiy was expected to win the vote amid an opposition boycott, the US State Department said it was "gravely concerned about the environment."
"The detention of opposition politicians, harassment of independent media ... and the many interethnic and inter-communal conflicts across Ethiopia are obstacles to a free and fair electoral process," the statement said.

What is the international response?

As the war and its impact on civilians deepens, world leaders have voiced their concern about the role of Eritrean forces in exacerbating what US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, according to spokesperson Ned Price, has described as a "growing humanitarian disaster."
The State Department recently announced visa restrictions for Ethiopian and Eritrean government officials and the Biden administration has imposed wide-ranging restrictions on economic assistance to the country.
But it is not clear whether efforts by the US and other countries to force Ethiopia's hand have made much of a difference.
Price said Tuesday that the unilateral ceasefire in Tigray "could be a positive step if it results in changes on the ground to end the conflict," and reiterated the call for Eritrean forces to leave the region.
He also called for the Ethiopian authorities "to immediately restore telecommunication services in Tigray and permit unhindered freedom of movement for and ensure the safety and security of humanitarian organization personnel."
"Our paramount priority is addressing the dire humanitarian situation," Price added, underlining the plight of "an estimated 900,000 people likely already experiencing famine conditions."

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Here's how to spend smarter as consumer prices rise - CNBC

After a year of lockdown, you may be ready to make up for lost time and start going out — and spending more.

At the same time, prices are rising due to inflation.

Consumer prices in May were up 5% from a year earlier, according to the Labor Department's Consumer Price Index, which represents energy, groceries, housing costs and other goods. It's the biggest gain since August 2008.

Therefore, it pays to be smart about how you spend.

Get a clear picture of your finances

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Before you open your wallet, look at your total financial picture. That can help you determine which parts need the most attention and where you have some breathing room.

Add up your assets, including the amount you have in checking, savings, investment and retirement accounts, plus the estimated value of your house or any properties you own.

Then, add up the value of your liabilities, such as credit card balances, student loans, mortgage and car loans. Where your finances currently stand lies in the answer to this equation: assets - liabilities = net worth.

Reassess post-pandemic spending

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Your immediate financial plan and priorities during the pandemic may have been different than what you would like to do with your money now. Think about what you are going to start spending on again, like dining out or travel, and incorporate it into your budget.

"It is really meant to help guide you so that you can have the best of both worlds: You can live your life in the now and still be financially responsible in a way that allows you to reach your mid- to long-term goals," said Jamila Souffrant, creator of financial education podcast "Journey To Launch."

Over the past 15 months, you may have also realized there are certain things you don't really need and other things you can't live without. Look back at what brings meaning to your life and write it down. Then analyze your expenses and see if there are items you can eliminate.

More from Invest in You:
5 ways to spend money that can actually make you happier
How to negotiate for more college aid: one student's successful appeal
How to discover your best spending rate in retirement

One thing to try is cutting at least one recurring expense and saving what you would have spent. You may not need six streaming services now, so you can reduce it to three. Put that "extra" money in a special account for new splurges or new spending priorities.

Also, reverse any changes you may have made during the pandemic, such as a reduction in contributions to your retirement account. Student loans have also been on pause and are set to resume Oct. 1.

Before you start blowing through your paycheck, make sure you have an emergency fund. Experts suggest having at least three to six months of living expenses set aside.

Rework your monthly budget

Try using a budgeting strategy called the "60% Solution." The first 60% of your gross income (all of the money you have coming in for the month) goes to "committed expenses," which includes all taxes, housing costs (rent/mortgage, utilities), credit card and everything that you must pay each month.

The next 30% goes to savings: 20% to long-term savings and 10% to short-term savings, like your emergency fund and a looming big purchase.

The remaining 10% is "fun money" for you to spend on whatever you want to spend it on.

Resist the urge to splurge

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People are experiencing freedom, euphoria and relief post-Covid to varying degrees, said financial therapist and coach Carrie Rattle, CEO and founder of New York-based Behavioral Cents.

"It is easy to take that emotional release and translate it into shopping for material goods," she added.

Before you do, approach your purchase analytically before you put it in your cart. Do you already have one? How often will you be using it?

Tracking your spending can also help. When you buy something, write down what you bought and how much it was. Keeping that real-time tally can help you see patterns, such as situations that made you spend and sites you spend a lot of time on. When we see how much we spend per week, it can have a dampening effect on our urge to shop further, Rattle said.

Budgeting apps can also help keep you from overspending, as can a debit card. We spend less when we know it is coming out of our account today.

In addition, try to avoid what Rattle calls the "shopping break" from work or during your day. When you are shifting away from a project on the computer or are tempted to pick up your phone, instead of loading items into your online shopping cart, walk away and do something else to let your emotion subside.

The bottom line

It is understandable that people are ready to start spending again. The key is doing it responsibly.

Rattle looks at smart spending as purchasing items or experiences that add value to your life.

"Spending smartly means you can afford these items and experiences without going into debt, while saving for those compelling goals in your life," she said.

"If you're not yet clear on what those goals are, you're probably overspending in all the wrong places."

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CHECK OUT: I used to owe $40,000 and now I’m on track to retire at 65 with over $1.5 million: Here’s my best advice via Grow with Acorns+CNBC

Disclosure: NBCUniversal and Comcast Ventures are investors in Acorns.

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Summer School Is Here - The New York Times

But there aren’t enough teachers to help students catch up.

This is the Education Briefing, a weekly update on the most important news in American education. We’re going on summer break, but sign up here to get this newsletter in your inbox next fall.

Today: The start of summer school and a legal win for transgender students.


Mary Altaffer/Associated Press

As the U.S. emerges from the worst of the pandemic, this summer is a critical opportunity for students to make up ground academically and re-engage with school.

But with more students than usual set to take summer classes in many cities, many schools are once again being forced to play catch-up.

“This on-ramp to summer has been really rapid,” said Christine Pitts, who helped lead an analysis of summer programming for the Center on Reinventing Public Education.

A vast majority of large school districts are offering some kind of summer school this year, according to that analysis.

A typical district is offering about five weeks of programming. Some are offering both in-person and remote summer classes, others only in-person, and a small number only remote. Many are combining academic instruction with activities like field trips, art projects and outdoor recreation.

“It’s really important that we kind of reintroduce the school day to kids this summer: ‘By the way, this is what it feels like to learn for four hours at a time and be engaged academically,’” Pitts said. “Part of it is balancing building that stamina in the learning and also making sure we’re allowing kiddos to have that time for peer-to peer connections.”

Here’s a selected rundown:

New York City and Los Angeles, the two largest U.S. districts, are offering summer school to all students for the first time. About 100,000 students are attending classes in L.A. In New York, where the spring semester only just ended, 200,000 students have signed up, and the city is still encouraging more families to enroll.

Philadelphia plans to serve 15,000 students, about triple its usual amount. Some students will be in classrooms for the first time since March 2020.

Roughly 12,000 students have attended the summer program hosted by Guilford County Schools in North Carolina so far, about 10 times as many as in previous, nonpandemic years. Broward County, Fla., will have about 45,000 students, up from about 8,000 to 10,000.

But there are challenges: A Missouri district had to move two of its programs online after more than half of its students tested positive or had to quarantine. And old buildings aren’t always equipped for summer heat: Some schools in New Jersey do not have air-conditioners, and students are sweltering behind masks.

Many districts have had trouble finding enough teachers for summer school, as worn-out educators understandably want a break from a stressful year.

Fairfax, Va., announced it would have to delay a summer program for about 1,200 students with disabilities for about a month as the district looked for more educators, The Washington Post reported. Nearby Arlington also reduced its summer program to 3,000 from 5,000 students because of staff shortages.

Chicago, which is hoping to serve 50,000 more students than usual, still has 67 teacher vacancies and is offering teachers who agree to work in the understaffed programs an extra $200 in pay per week.

And while summer school enrollment is up about 30 percent in Watertown-Mayer Public Schools, in Minnesota, the district has struggled to find enough adults to staff the program. In mid-June, it was considering hiring paraprofessionals from outside the district or even high school students to fill the spots.

“This year, more than any others, teachers were burnt out,” Darren Schuler, the superintendent, told a local news station. “This is the one summer where teachers needed that time to recalibrate and start fresh next school year.”


Al Drago/The New York Times

The Supreme Court will not hear a case challenging the bathroom rights of transgender people, leaving in place an appeals court ruling that a Virginia school board’s policy violated the Constitution and a federal law.

“Having to go to out-of-the-way bathrooms severely interfered with my education,” said Gavin Grimm, who was barred by the Gloucester school board from using the boys’ bathroom. “Trans youth deserve to use the bathroom in peace without being humiliated and stigmatized by their own school boards and elected officials.”

Last year, the court for the first time ruled in favor of transgender rights, saying that a federal employment discrimination law applied to L.G.B.T.Q. workers. But Justice Neil Gorsuch, writing for the majority, said the ruling did not address access to restrooms.

Now, with the yearslong battle over the Virginia bathroom case at an end, advocates say the fight has moved on.

“What were headlines about bathroom fights years ago has been replaced with athletic bans and trans medical bans,” Melanie Willingham-Jaggers of the L.G.B.T.Q. student group GLSEN told The Washington Post.


  • Wednesday is the last day to apply for federal financial aid, or FAFSA.

  • A powerful N.C.A.A. panel recommended that college athletes be allowed to profit off their names, images and likenesses.

  • Gov. Ron DeSantis signed a law mandating that Florida’s public universities take “viewpoint” surveys of their populations to assess political diversity, potentially threatening state funding.

  • The trustees of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill will vote on Wednesday whether to grant the Times journalist Nikole Hannah-Jones tenure.

  • The Yale School of Drama will be tuition-free moving forward, after a $150 million donation from the entertainment mogul David Geffen.

  • An opinion in Politico: Sheryll Cashin, a law professor at Georgetown, argues that colleges should consider permanently disregarding the SAT and ACT.

  • A good read from The Times: Medical schools in the Caribbean often fail their students, our colleague Emma Goldberg reports.


The Education Briefing will be back in your inbox around the time school supplies start going on sale.

When we sent our first edition last August, the world looked very different. And you’ve stayed with us through it all. Thank you for your loyal readership, suggestions and support.

Congratulations on getting through a school year unlike any other. We’ll see you soon!

Sign up here to get the briefing by email.

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NPR Music's 25 Favorite Albums Of 2021 (So Far) - NPR

Courtesy of artists

Here we are halfway through 2021, this year of stepping back across the threshold into the world. And what are we carrying with us as we emerge? Below, you'll find two dozen albums that worked their way into the hearts of NPR Music's staff during those in-between days. Just one pick per person, presented in alphabetical order by artist. (You can find the list of our favorite songs here. Follow NPR Music's ongoing coverage of new songs at our #NowPlaying blog.)


Arooj Aftab, Vulture Prince
New Amsterdam

Arooj Aftab, Vulture Prince

Born in Pakistan and based in Brooklyn, Arooj Aftab revises, adapts and otherwise reimagines South Asian music — poetic songs of grief and desire that follow paths blazed by the likes of Abida Parveen and Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan (as well as Jeff Buckley, a Nusrat devotee). To say she's a worthy heir is hardly an overstatement; the songs on Vulture Prince swoon, stun and hypnotize, while never traversing the same terrain twice. —Stephen Thompson


Bachelor, Doomin' Sun
Polyvinyl

Bachelor, Doomin' Sun

This perfect collaboration between Melina Duterte (Jay Som) and Ellen Kempner (Palehound) produced a surprising and gritty 10-song, 33-minute album, sure to make my end-of-year list. There's a song about mega-fandom and a creepy video for "Back Of My Hand," a song about a parking lot infatuation and the tangles and delights of love. It's a collaboration I'd love to see grow; let's hope it's not just a one-off side project. —Bob Boilen


The Baylor Project, Generations
Self-Released

The Baylor Project, Generations

Thrice Grammy-nominated husband and wife Marcus and Jean Baylor have outdone themselves with their latest offering, Generations. The album is a portal through the expansive legacy of Black music. Highlights include "2020," which features Marcus' explosively musical drumming; an acrobatic scat masterclass by Jean and guests Dianne Reeves and Jazzmeia Horn on "We Swing (The Cypher)"; "Strivin'" with guitarist Kenny Garrett; and "Only Believe," a duet with Jamison Ross. From one song to the next, we are treated to the exquisite silkiness of Jean's vocals and Marcus' incredible finesse on the kit, which together create an album that is incredibly moving and relevant. Gospel, jazz, R&B, soul, blues — it's a complete package. Don't be surprised when Generations gets the duo more Grammy attention later this year. —Nikki Birch


dodie, Build a Problem
Doddieoddie

dodie, Build a Problem

Dodie Clark's breathtaking debut album is densely layered but as light as air. The singer from Essex pulls this off with a vast world of delicate, found sounds and ambient noises that flutter and sigh under songs that celebrate the wonder and joy of life, despite dodie's battles with anxiety, heartache and regret. —Robin Hilton


Doss, 4 New Hit Songs
LuckyMe

Doss, 4 New Hit Songs

Let's hear it for the all-killer, no-filler career. In a streaming environment when we can hear almost anything we want at any time, potency is at a premium, and Doss seems to realize that more so than most. She's released just 8 original tracks across two EPs during her seven-year recording career, and each and every one is a bop — and, going by the title to this year's EP, she knows it. 4 New Hit Songs mixes house, shoegaze and pitched-up vocals for a 15-minute burst of endorphins. —Otis Hart


girl in red, if i could make it go quiet
World In Red

girl in red, if i could make it go quiet

Marie Ulven, more widely known as girl in red, is frank about her pain. What makes her debut album, if i could make it go quiet, so special, though, is her sharp self-awareness. This intentional consciousness takes different shapes, but the most notable instances are in the songs "hornylovesickmess" and "midnight love," which intertwine to create one cohesive narrative about two people in a skewed one-sided relationship, and the feelings that come along with it. She sings from each perspective, as if she's felt the pain of both. This awareness is a theme throughout the album, whether it concerns love, feelings or mental health. —Sofie Hernandez-Simeonidis


Danny L Harle, Harlecore
Mad Decent

Danny L Harle, Harlecore

After a year marred by darkness and isolation, Danny L Harle's debut full-length album, Harlecore, encapsulates the happiness of sharing the dance floor with a thousand sweaty bodies. Anchored by Harle's four different alter egos — DJ Danny, DJ Mayhem, DJ Ocean and MC Boing — the LP darts back and forth between electronic subgenres with a penchant for maximalist nostalgia, creating a primer to the world of millennial rave. —Reanna Cruz


Vijay Iyer, Uneasy
ECM

Vijay Iyer / Linda May Han Oh / Tyshawn Sorey, Uneasy

Vijay Iyer already had a serious claim to one of our era's standout improvising piano trios, and then he went and formed another one. What propels Uneasy into the winner's circle is an even stronger sense of collectivity, as Iyer's unmistakable signature as a pianist and composer meets with equal investment by drummer Tyshawn Sorey and bassist Linda May Han Oh. This is hyperarticulate, politically urgent music that speaks to where we are, and where we should be. —Nate Chinen, WBGO


Japanese Breakfast, Jubilee
Dead Oceans

Japanese Breakfast, Jubilee

After making two albums in the aftershocks of grief and loss, Japanese Breakfast's Michelle Zauner set her sights on joy. The result is her most adventurous and sonically rich release, one where the widened palette suits her boundless vision. As her narrators revel in joy, plead for sweetness and ache with desire, Zauner has never sounded so exuberant or so certain. —Marissa Lorusso


Chuck Johnson, The Cinder Grove
VDSQ

Chuck Johnson, The Cinder Grove

A decade ago, Johnson was one of the leading lights of whatever you call the fingerpicked acoustic guitar style often tied to John Fahey's name but practiced in more diverse, distinct ways than that framing admits. Lately, though, the Californian artist has split the seams of his own practice with works like this wildfire elegy, which turns to yawning pedal steel and other ambient stepchildren (dig the chamber strings on "Red Branch Bell") to evoke a bodiless choir, kneading out notes of boundless sustain. —Daoud Tyler-Ameen


Delvon Lamarr Organ Trio, I Told You So
Colemine

Delvon Lamarr Organ Trio, I Told You So

From the first notes of Delvon Lamarr's latest album, I thought, "This is juke joint music." This album is perfect for small, packed, dimly lit venues that promise a good time, but not much in the way of air conditioning. I Told You So invites you to move, particularly on "Hole in One," "Fo Sho," and "Aces." The trio says they "specialize in the lost art of 'feel good music.'" After listening to this album's blend of jazz, soul and funk (and after a year inside), any listener will be ready to find a hole in the wall to dance like their grandparents used to. —Mitra Arthur


Lukah, When The Black Hand Touches You
FXCK RXP

Lukah, When The Black Hand Touches You

When Lukah speaks of death, he tends to embody seemingly dueling perspectives: the man squeezing the trigger and the one staring down the barrel. If you're from South Memphis like him, those positions ain't always contradictory. When The Black Hand Touches You voices the collective trauma of generations — from post-soul to post-crack — while possessing the endurance of a magical bloodline that understands what it's like to be a pallbearer at your own funeral. —Rodney Carmichael


Mexican Institute of Sound, Distrito Federal
Self-Released

Mexican Institute of Sound, Distrito Federal

Mexican Institute of Sound's Camilo Lara didn't hold back when creating this energetic, heartfelt 10-track ode to his hometown. The record reflects the dynamism of the ever-changing Mexican capitol, pulling sounds from its streets and notes from an array of prominent Mexican collaborators. For an artist who has made his career a global one, it's the ultimate coming home album — brimming with all the love, nostalgia, and pride Lara has for his D.F. —Anamaria Sayre


Audrey Nuna, a liquid breakfast
Arista

Audrey Nuna, a liquid breakfast

With the release of her first record, a liquid breakfast, 22-year-old creative Audrey Nuna demonstrates a mastery of concept and execution over the course of the album's 26 minutes, teetering between R&B, hip-hop and pop. Her musicality and the visual aesthetic of her videos are all over the place, with her dreamy vocal delivery acting as the connective thread. Featuring appearances from Jack Harlow and Saba, Nuna's debut doesn't shy away from experimentation, making it all the more captivating to see what she does next. —Gabrielle Pierre


Patrick Paige II, If I Fail Are We Still Cool?
Self-Released

Patrick Paige II, If I Fail Are We Still Cool?

Failure can feel catastrophic for those who have a lot to live up to, so I completely comprehend the title of Patrick Paige II's If I Fail Are We Still Cool? The bassist for the R&B band of the past decade has a steep uphill climb to uphold the quality of both the group and his collaborators' solo offerings. Lucky for him, he won't have to worry about the answer to the album's question. His second LP, a concept piece impressively sequenced like an airline flight, is the best solo effort from the band members thus far. —Bobby Carter


Playboi Carti, Whole Lotta Red
Interscope

Playboi Carti, Whole Lotta Red

Six months after the polarizing reaction to Whole Lotta Red on its Christmas 2020 release night, people are finally starting to turn. In truth, it seemed inevitable. Playboi Carti picked his most serrated beats since the Awful Records days, burrowed into his own mythology, and came out with a high-stakes opus that's still fun as hell. The screeds got louder, but also sharper, more controlled, and full of details that clash in glorious ways. As on previous albums, the best lines rattle around your head forever, but on WLR, Carti fleshed those strays out into his most masterful rapping to date. —Mano Sundaresan


Olivia Rodrigo, Sour
Geffen Records

Olivia Rodrigo, Sour

Sour is a pastiche of Gen Z's cultural fixations. It's overflowing with the things that plagued our blogs in middle school: the rising choruses in "Ribs" by Lorde, Glee-as-meme, yearning for the teenage dream, "a broken ego [and a] broken heart." It's one of the few pieces of music that's explicitly angry at an ex for sharing with their new lover the music you consider yours. How could they? Rodrigo knows how much this hurts; her frustration is written all over the record. —Alex Ramos


Gabriella Smith and Gabriel Cabezas, Lost Coast
Bedroom Community

Gabriella Smith/Gabriel Cabezas, Lost Coast

Inspired by California coastal woodlands ravaged by wildfires, Lost Coast is a paean to nature, an expression of outrage and a celebration of the close-knit bonds among its makers: composer Gabriella Smith, cellist Gabriel Cabezas and producer Nadia Sirota. The titular composition began life as a concerto, but then transformed into a rangy threnody for cello, voice and electronics; "Bard of a Wasteland," the buoyant album-opening ballad, breaks new ground for everyone involved. —Steve Smith


Jazmine Sullivan, Heaux Tales
RCA

Jazmine Sullivan, Heaux Tales

Dirty laundry — those embarrassing truths we hide for fear of judgment — is rarely aired this thoughtfully. Heaux Tales, Jazmine Sullivan's first record since 2015's Reality Show, is an intimate, honest masterclass in storytelling and a sharp homage to Black oral traditions. Contending with losses and wins and contradictions tied to sex and romance, the Philly singer-songwriter creates a sonic haven for Black women's insecurities: Paying rent for a man who lives with his mama because he's got you hypnotized; having trauma-based aspirations of security only to get labeled a gold digger; confusion on whether sexuality is empowerment or entrapment. Through minimalist instrumentals and boldly specific lyrics, Heaux Tales' thematic narratives — as shared with Sullivan by friends confiding vulnerabilities — reign supreme. —LaTesha Harris


C. Tangana, El Madrileño
Sony Music

C. Tangana, El Madrileño

Spanish vocalist C. Tangana jumped up several levels between his last album, 2018's Avida Dollars, and 2021's El Madrileño. After finding a home for himself amidst so many other talented Spanish language electronic and trap artists, he threw caution to the wind and created an album that is so artistically expansive in its conception and reach that there is literally nothing else out like it. He dug deep into his Spanish roots while enlisting a guest that spans from The Buena Vista Social Club to Latin America's poet laureate, Jorge Drexler. The result is as powerful a statement of creativity as I have heard in the 50-or-so years I have been seriously listening to music. —Felix Contreras


Rosie Tucker, Sucker Supreme
Epitaph

Rosie Tucker, Sucker Supreme

"I can't believe I'll die before becoming a frog," Rosie Tucker sings on their superb third album full of effervescent melodies and squiggly guitar lines. It's a funny lyric, before you realize it's a triple-layer metaphor about the shape-shifting nature of the self, the limits of desire and the endless march of time. But that's Sucker Supreme in a nutshell: breezy, brilliant, tender, playful, paranoid and hopelessly human. —Cyrena Touros


Tyler, the Creator, Call Me If You Get Lost
Columbia Records

Tyler, the Creator, Call Me If You Get Lost

Call Me If You Get Lost is a multi-sensory experience: Tyler, the Creator's 16-track album is textured, soulful and accompanied by whimsical, retro-style music videos and skits. Songs like "WUSYANAME" channel '90s R&B while "LUMBERJACK" brings to mind old-school hip-hop. This album — filled with motifs — can be returned to again and again; each listen reveals something new about the project and the artist himself. —Chasity Hale


Van Buren Records, Bad For Press
Self-Released

Van Buren Records, Bad For Press

After years of individual releases and creating grassroots buzz in a place still mostly overlooked by the rap world, Brockton, Mass. collective Van Buren Records presented its cohesive and mesmerizing debut project, Bad For Press in April. The album is a winding, woozy ride where each artist — Saint Lyor, Luke Bar$, Jiles and more — is distinguishable by tone, texture, cadence and outlook. The ominous warning of "Medic" pays off with snarly social commentary on album highlight "Gangbanger - Remix" while fantasies of new money hijinks on "VVS" and fuzzy delusions of grandeur get brushed off with "Nevermind." Not to mention the chemistry is consistently elite. With Bad For Press, VBR emerges confident enough to have to answer to no one. It's not a record, it's a movement. —Sidney Madden


Wild Pink, A Billion Little Lights
Royal Mountain

Wild Pink, A Billion Little Lights

Only John Ross can write about workshopping advertisement copy and still make you tear up. On Wild Pink's A Billion Little Lights, references to Heat, Indiana Jones and The Pogues sit alongside grandiose declarations (take "you want peace, you want love / you deserve that much," or "you deserved the good things that came to you," for instance). Life's vastness is extolled, and the day's minutiae is detailed alongside the universe's cosmic beauty. It's a sweeping survey of the human condition that understands days spent on Slack and nights spent staring at the sky – or more realistically, the sky as seen on your TV. —Lyndsey McKenna


Wild Up, Julius Eastman: Femenine
New Amsterdam

Wild Up, Julius Eastman, Vol. 1: Femenine

Fueled by a two-note theme in the vibraphone emerging from a thicket of sleigh bells, the late Julius Eastman's Femenine unfolds one surprising and beautiful layer after another for a jubilant 67 minutes. Freewheeling solos for flugelhorn, piccolo and cello share space with swirling, minimalist repetitions that, if you drink it all in, just may leave you feeling sublimely intoxicated. —Tom Huizenga


Yasmin Williams, Urban Driftwood
Spinster

Yasmin Williams, Urban Driftwood

The acoustic guitar's path is not fixed. And like the living wood from which the instrument comes and the person playing, attention must be paid to the ways that they change, learn and even love. Urban Driftwood is a solo guitar album without peer, its patchwork metropolitan in influence (hip-hop, R&B, smooth jazz) and rustic in appearance. As evidenced by the polyrhythmic whirlpools of melody, Yasmin Williams taps, fingerpicks and drums the guitar with a sound truly her own. —Lars Gotrich

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