Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

In the news

-

■ George Gulla, chief of security at a Miami Christian school, said he’d rather be prepared for a shooting than say, “Wow, I wish we would’ve done that,” after the school’s website offered for sale $120 bullet resistant panels that can be slipped into student backpacks.

■ Laurel Scott, a Royal Canadian Mounted Police corporal, said officers called to the scene of a car-truck wreck south of Edmonton, Alberta, arrested the car’s five passengers, who were each naked, in what investigat­ors described as a “purposeful collision.”

■ Justine Olesky, 33, faces a child abuse charge for putting her 3-year-old daughter in the front seat of a car with no restraints, chasing her boyfriend at high speeds in Pinellas County, Fla., and then slamming on the brakes, sending the child headfirst into the windshield, deputies said.

■ Kim Davis, the Rowan County, Ky., clerk jailed in 2015 for refusing to issue marriage licenses to samesex couples, who switched parties to become a Republican after the controvers­y erupted, will run for re-election in 2018.

■ Jaren Stewart, vice president of Clemson University’s student government, narrowly avoided impeachmen­t after an 11-hour trial on misconduct allegation­s that arose after he and about a dozen students remained seated during the Pledge of Allegiance at a meeting.

■ Larry Cohen, the parking authority chief in Lancaster, Pa., said more than 9,000 parking tickets written from January to April worth about $250,000 are expected to go unpaid because of computer delays that rendered them unenforcea­ble.

■ Mary Schafer, a painting conservato­r at the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City, Mo., discovered a small grasshoppe­r embedded in the thick paint of a painting titled Olive Trees, done by Vincent van Gogh, who was known for painting outdoors.

■ Danielle Denis, chamber of commerce president in Skowhegan, Maine, said a now canceled holiday promotion called “Hunt for the Indian,” came “from a place of good intents,” after the chamber apologized when residents lambasted the promotion on social media as racially insensitiv­e.

■ Rob Freierson, founder of an Atlanta-based company that helps maintain school websites, said hackers temporaril­y redirected people looking at hundreds of school Web pages in four states to an online Islamic State Group recruitmen­t or support video.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States