Letters: Learn about candidates before the primary; Volunteers are the cornerstone of the Red Cross
Editor's note: The Centre Daily Times welcomes letters endorsing candidates in the May 20 primary election and will accept letters that are received by May 6. Letters are subject to editing, must be based on facts and should avoid attacks on other candidates.
Do you know your candidates? The May 20 municipal primary will feature candidates for school board, supervisors and council, mayor, district attorney, district judge and jury commissioner.
The League of Women Voters of Centre County is hosting a non-partisan Candidates' Night April 29 at the State College Municipal Building at 7 p.m. The moderated format includes six questions from constituent concerns, each candidate rotating responding first, then each candidate's closing statement. The forum is livestreamed and archived by C-NET.
Local elections have low turnout and can be won by a few votes, so every voter counts! Candidates' Night is an opportunity to meet candidates.
Candidates in contested races for SCASD school board, BASD school board, Benner and Spring Township supervisors were invited. School boards build hire teachers, build schools and set districts' school taxes. Supervisors manage trash pickup, roads and zoning. Get to know the officials in charge of your life at Candidates' Night!
LWVCC is a nonpartisan organization; we invite all candidates in contested races. SCASD school board candidates Deborah Anderson, Jesse Barlow, Jennifer Black, Rebecca Arnold Desmarais and Jackie Huff accepted; Kristen McTernan and Mihaly Sogor declined. For BASD, Nate Campbell, Jon Guizar and Joe Yech accepted; Kristin Lyons declined. Benner Township supervisors did not reply. For Spring Township, Frank Royer accepted. But Korena Defurio did not reply, so LWVCC cannot hold that race.
You may email your questions to lwvcentrecounty@gmail.com or submit questions at the event. We look forward to seeing you April 29!
Bonnie Goble, Boalsburg. The author is a member of the League of Women Voters of Centre County.
During National Volunteer Week, the American Red Cross of Central Pennsylvania celebrates the selfless volunteers whose unwavering support make it possible for us to assist people in need every day.
Volunteers are the cornerstone of the Red Cross, representing more than 90% of our national workforce and their compassion helps to ensure that people are not alone during the most challenging times of their lives.
Here in central PA, more than 700 Red Cross volunteers supported blood drives, assisted veterans and military families and provided food and shelter after disasters of all sizes.
Today, volunteers are more critical than ever as the Red Cross responds to a new major disaster about every two weeks. These massive events, like storms and wildfires, are on top of the home fires which occur multiple times every day across the country.
During Volunteer Week, join us in thanking all those who volunteer across our community, and consider putting on a red vest and joining our team. Visit redcross.org/volunteer to get started today. Free online training will be provided.
Laura Burke, Harrisburg. The author is the executive director of the American Red Cross Central Pennsylvania Chapter.
Donald Trump promised Americans a booming economy: '…the best jobs, the biggest paychecks, the brightest economic future the world has ever seen.' As egg prices reached a new high (just in time for Easter), he braced Americans for economic turmoil. His chaotic and destabilizing trade war will dramatically increase costs on a broad swath of products, including toys, clothes and electronics.
Trump's overhaul of the federal workforce has targeted scientific research and international aid. Cuts also hit central Pennsylvanians — farmers who supply food banks, and programs treating veterans with PTSD.
Some cuts are purely petty. Eliminating National History Day, a nationwide competition that engages more than a half-million students annually and prepares students for success and civic engagement — something that benefits us all.
As Americans struggle with increased prices and reduced services, Trump frivolously spends $3.4 million for each golf excursion.
Trump vindictively targets law firms and universities whose policies or employees he doesn't like. And he aggressively targets individuals who challenge his false claims.
He issued a brazenly vengeful executive order to investigate Christopher Krebs, former head of Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security, for refuting claims that the 2020 election was rigged. Alarm bells should sound when the president exacts retribution against people who dare to tell the truth that the 2020 election was not stolen. He's testing American democracy.
Trump isn't using his office to improve Americans' lives. He's wielding his power like a Mafia mob-boss and Republicans in Congress are helping him do it!
Margie Swoboda, Julian. The author is the chair of the Centre County Democratic Committee.
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Newsweek
5 days ago
- Newsweek
Reclaiming Religious Freedom—A Liberal Responsibility
Advocates for ideas and draws conclusions based on the interpretation of facts and data. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. On June 17, the International Religious Freedom Summit was held in Nairobi, Kenya. Recently, 200 Christian IDPs (Internally Displaced Persons) were massacred in Nigeria. Terrorist groups like Al‑Shabab frequently also target Christians in Kenya. Dr. Gloria Samdi-Puldu, president of the Nigerian-based LEAH Foundation, supports girls and women like Leah Sharibu, kidnapped by the extremist group Boko Haram in 2018 for refusing to renounce her Christian faith. Samdi-Puldu, who is exhausted by the trauma she faces daily, shared that religious persecution is finally being recognized, giving her reason for hope. What she may not realize is the actual lack of interest in combating religious persecution. Red Cross officials inspect the damage at the burnt COCIN Church building in Mangu, Nigeria, on Feb. 2, 2024, following weeks of intercommunal violence and unrest in the Plateau State. Red Cross officials inspect the damage at the burnt COCIN Church building in Mangu, Nigeria, on Feb. 2, 2024, following weeks of intercommunal violence and unrest in the Plateau State. KOLA SULAIMON/AFP via Getty Images The world is facing one of the fastest-growing human rights crises: religious persecution, increasingly escalating into ethno-religious cleansing and genocide. And it's growing in many parts of the world. Yet liberal politicians, media outlets, and NGOs too often stay silent. This abandons what former President Bill Clinton intended when he championed the International Religious Freedom Act in 1998, making religious freedom a cornerstone of American foreign policy. This has created a vacuum filled by conservative organizations, which—while doing important and lifesaving work—can also bring ideological baggage to what should be a universal human rights cause. The cost is real—120,000 Armenians were ethnically cleansed in 2023 with little Western media attention. Uyghur Muslims in China, Baha'is in Iran, Alawites in Syria, and Christians in Nigeria suffer daily atrocities. When I meet survivors of religious persecution, they ask, "Why don't Western liberals care about us?" Robert Řehák, the Czech Republic's ambassador for Holocaust issues, interfaith dialogue and freedom of religion, leads the International Religious Freedom or Belief Alliance (IRFBA), sometimes called the Article 18 Alliance. This intergovernmental coalition brings together 43 countries, working collectively to promote and defend freedom of religion or belief worldwide. "The struggle for religious freedom is a necessity because the world is increasingly radicalized and polarized. To combat this, we need avenues for dialogue that can counter these dangerous tendencies. It is also a fight for peace, prosperity, and the prevention of future conflicts," Řehák told Newsweek. Hard Lessons from the Field In Beirut, Lebanon, I recently met Ablahad Stayfo, an Assyrian/Syriac activist who spent 15 years opposing the Assad regime in Syria. When I interviewed him in 2012, I asked whether the opposition valued religious freedom. He dismissed the question. Now, in 2025, he told Newsweek, "You were right, Nuri. We should have made it a priority. The progressive politicians we worked with didn't care. And now Syria's future is uncertain." My organization ADFA commissioned Layal Nehme to document Christians who fled Syria and Iraq to Lebanon. When I recently asked what happened to those she interviewed, her response was devastating. "Unfortunately, most have emigrated to Canada or Australia. While I am happy for them, I am devastated that the numbers of Christians are dwindling," she said. The Price of Liberal Silence Why the silence? Too many liberals fear that talking about religious freedom will align them with religious conservatives. But this fear is morally bankrupt. The regimes that persecute religious minorities are also the ones that oppress women, LGBTQ people, journalists, and dissidents. When the movement lacks progressive voices, it risks becoming ideologically skewed. Without sustained political pressure from across the spectrum, authoritarian regimes and extremist groups face little consequence for destroying religious communities. Time to Act At the IRF Summit in Washington, D.C., this January, I urged humanitarian organizations to improve their media outreach—to keep these stories alive and visible. This benefits both the media and the communities they aim to help. I urge my progressive friends to reclaim religious freedom as a liberal value: —Show up at conferences and advocacy events. —Speak out about religious persecution. —Support bipartisan initiatives like the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF). —Cover religious freedom violations with urgency. —And encourage more countries to join the International Religious Freedom or Belief Alliance (IRFBA). This is not a fight that belongs to the right or the left. When we think that way, we fail those who need us most. It's time for liberals to join the fight again—a cause they themselves began—and to understand that it is their struggle as well. Listening to eyewitnesses and survivors from several African countries—of different faiths—was both heart-wrenching and deeply important. Several African activists I spoke with criticized the IRF Summit, saying it should have been organized by Africans themselves. That critique matters. But if local capacity or resources were lacking, then the summit in Kenya was still a meaningful start. It laid the foundation for continued cooperation. Importantly, both Muslims and Christians were given the floor to address the attendees. To ignore the growing threat to religious freedom is to ignore Article 18 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights—and to fail those who need us most. Nuri Kino is an independent investigative multi-award-winning reporter and minority rights expert. The views expressed in this article are the writer's own.


Forbes
6 days ago
- Forbes
Tuesday, June 17. Russia's War On Ukraine: News And Information From Ukraine
Dispatches from Ukraine. Day 1,210. Kyiv. Russian drones and missiles struck Ukrainian capital Kyiv early on Tuesday, June 17th, destroying an apartment building, residential structures, injuring up to 16 people, city officials said. Russian attacks across Ukraine killed at least 14 civilians between June 13-16. Donetsk oblast, or region, in eastern Ukraine bore the brunt of the Kremlin's systematic attacks, with heavy shelling resulting in nine civilian deaths. In the south, authorities in Kherson region reported three locals killed, while aerial strikes in Zaporizhzhia oblast killed two civilians. Ukraine has received the remains of 1,245 fallen soldiers and civilians, concluding the final phase of a sweeping prisoner-of-war swap brokered during talks with Russia in Istanbul earlier this month. The exchange, coordinated with support from the Red Cross, brought the total number of bodies returned to Ukraine under the agreement to 6,057. Russian officials, in turn, reported receiving only 78 bodies. Ukraine's Interior Minister Ihor Klymenko accused Russia of returning severely mutilated bodies and, in some cases, including its own dead among fallen Ukrainian soldiers. He further said the condition of the remains, often mixed across multiple bags, further complicates already difficult identification efforts. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy made his first visit to Austria since 2020, pressing for help repatriating Ukrainian children abducted by Russia. At a joint press conference with Austrian President Alexander Van der Bellen, Zelenskyy urged Austria to support European Union sanctions against Moscow and asked for a more forceful crackdown on Ukrainian corruption suspects sheltering in Vienna. Zelenskyy thanked Austria, whose neutrality is enshrined in its constitution and whose government is divided on supporting Ukraine, for the $350 million in humanitarian and economic aid it has provided. A Russian airstrike damaged a building used by Boeing in Kyiv in what may have been a targeted attack on the American aerospace behemoth. The strike came during an overnight bombardment involving over 300 drones. Verified images showed structural damage in the facility. The company, however, stated there had been 'no operational disruption' after the strike. Although no employees were injured, the incident raised concerns over Moscow's deliberate targeting of Western companies with ties to Ukraine's defense and aviation sectors. Boeing collaborates with Ukrainian national aircraft manufacturer Antonov despite war risks. According to the American Chamber of Commerce in Ukraine, nearly one-third of its 700 member companies have suffered employee casualties, and almost half have reported damage to facilities since 2022. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy's public trust rating has slipped to 65% from a peak of 74% in early May, marking the first decline since a steady rise that began in December 2024. A new poll by the Kyiv International Institute of Sociology (KIIS) shows the share of Ukrainians expressing distrust in Zelenskyy has risen from 22% to 30%, an indication that the 'rally-around-the-flag' effect of U.S. President Donald Trump's re-election and critical view of Ukraine is starting to subside. While Zelenskyy retains strong support in western regions with 73% approval, confidence in him has fallen most sharply in central and southern Ukraine. Analysts at KIIS note that as the wartime unity effects wane, Ukrainians are increasingly attuned to internal issues, including corruption and quality of governance, which may further erode Zelenskyy's standing. The European Union will not move unilaterally to lower the $60-per-barrel price cap on Russian oil to $45, without backing from G7 partners, EU diplomats told Ukrainian news outlet European Pravda. Aimed at ratcheting up pressure on Moscow's ability to finance its war, the measure, which had been proposed for inclusion in the EU's 18th sanctions package, was discussed during a June 16 internal EU meeting. Despite Ukraine's push for a $30 price cap, EU member states remain wary of diverging from the G7 (so called Group-of-Seven developed democratic nations, including the United Kingdom, Canada, and Japan) consensus. Previous reports have highlighted the EU's readiness to cut the Russian oil price cap, juxtaposed with reluctance from Washington, which largely shapes the official G7 position, making a unilateral European move increasingly unlikely. By Danylo Nosov, Karina L. Tahiliani
Yahoo
10-06-2025
- Yahoo
Austrian school shooter was 21-year-old former pupil, authorities say
The gunman who killed nine people at a secondary school in the Austrian city of Graz on Tuesday before taking his own life was a 21-year-old former pupil, Austrian authorities said. The man used a long gun and a handgun, law enforcement officials said at a press conference, adding that they are still investigating the motive. Both firearms were legally owned. Of the nine victims, six were female and three male, according to Interior Minister Gerhard Karner. Twelve people were injured, he said, some of them seriously. The minister said the perpetrator never graduated and that his motive was still being investigated. After carrying out the rampage, he died by suicide in a bathroom at the school. Chancellor Christian Stocker was on his way to the scene in Austria's second-largest city along with top officials as condolences and messages of support poured in from national and European leaders. "This horror cannot be put into words," President Alexander Van der Bellen wrote on X. "Austria is in mourning." Shots fired on Tuesday morning Police said the shots were fired at an upper secondary school around 10 am (0800 GMT), with special units quickly responding to the scene. Students at such schools are typically 14 years and older. The building was evacuated, with students and teachers escorted to a safe meeting place, and some 300 police officers were deployed. Parents and uninjured students were taken to nearby buildings and cared for by crisis intervention teams, the city said. Police wrote later on X there was "no further danger" and that the "situation is secure." A spokesman for the local Red Cross said more than 160 rescue workers were sent to the scene. Several rescue helicopters were also in operation, while a special emergency protocol was activated to ensure medical care for numerous injured individuals. European leaders 'horrified' by shooting European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen wrote in German on X: "The news from Graz hits home. My thoughts are with the victims, their families, and friends." "Schools are symbols of youth, hope, and the future," she added. "It is difficult to bear when schools become places of death and violence." European Council President António Costa said he was "horrified by the news of the school shooting in Graz." "A senseless act of violence in a place where children should feel safe and protected," he wrote on X. German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier and Chancellor Friedrich Merz also extended their condolences over the deadly shooting. "It was with great dismay and deep sadness that I learnt of the act of violence in Graz, in which so many innocent people lost their lives," Steinmeier wrote to his Austrian counterpart Alexander Van der Bellen. "Your German neighbours are with you in their hearts," Steinmeier said. Merz sent a message to Chancellor Stocker, saying he was "deeply shocked that young people were torn from their lives so abruptly." Three days of mourning to be announced Austria will observe three days of national mourning following the deadly shooting. A minute's silence will be observed across the country on Wednesday. Flags at the presidential office, the chancellery, and other official buildings are to be flown at half-mast during the mourning period. Graz, in south-eastern Austria, is home to around 300,000 people.