Stay home and away from others (including people you live with who are not sick) if you have respiratory virus symptoms that aren't better explained by another cause. These symptoms can include fever, chills, fatigue, cough, runny nose, and headache, among others.*
You may be contagious. For the next 5 days: take added precaution, such as taking additional steps for cleaner air, hygiene, masks, physical distancing, and/or testing when you will be around other people indoors. This is especially important to protect people with factors that increase their risk of severe illness from respiratory viruses.
When you have a respiratory virus infection, you can spread it to others. How long someone can spread the virus depends on different factors, including how sick they are (severity) and how long their illness lasts (duration), This is not the same for everyone.
When, for at least 24 hours, your symptoms are getting better overall and you have not had a fever (and are not using fever-reducing medication), you are typically less contagious, but it still takes more time for your body to fully get rid of the virus. During this time, you may still be able to spread the virus to others. Using precautions for the next 5 days can help reduce this risk. After this 5-day period, you are typically much less likely to be contagious. However, some people, especially people with weakened immune systems, can continue to spread the virus for a longer period of time. For COVID-19, taking an antigen test can help you know how likely you are to spread the virus. A positive test tends to mean it is more likely that you can spread the virus to others.
*Symptoms may include but are not limited to chest discomfort, chills, cough, decrease in appetite, diarrhea, fatigue (tiredness), fever or feeling feverish, headache, muscle or body aches, new loss of taste or smell, runny or stuffy nose, sneezing, sore throat, vomiting, weakness, wheezing.
If a single Deferred is passed to jQuery.when(), its Promise object (a subset of the Deferred methods) is returned by the method. Additional methods of the Promise object can be called to attach callbacks, such as deferred.then. When the Deferred is resolved or rejected, usually by the code that created the Deferred originally, the appropriate callbacks will be called. For example, the jqXHR object returned by jQuery.ajax() is a Promise-compatible object and can be used this way:
If a single argument is passed to jQuery.when() and it is not a Deferred or a Promise, it will be treated as a resolved Deferred and any doneCallbacks attached will be executed immediately. The doneCallbacks are passed the original argument. In this case any failCallbacks you might set are never called since the Deferred is never rejected. For example:
In the case where multiple Deferred objects are passed to jQuery.when(), the method returns the Promise from a new "master" Deferred object that tracks the aggregate state of all the Deferreds it has been passed. The method will resolve its master Deferred as soon as all the Deferreds resolve, or reject the master Deferred as soon as one of the Deferreds is rejected. If the master Deferred is resolved, the doneCallbacks for the master Deferred are executed. The arguments passed to the doneCallbacks provide the resolved values for each of the Deferreds, and matches the order the Deferreds were passed to jQuery.when(). For example:
In the event a Deferred was resolved with no value, the corresponding doneCallback argument will be undefined. If a Deferred resolved to a single value, the corresponding argument will hold that value. In the case where a Deferred resolved to multiple values, the corresponding argument will be an array of those values. For example:
In the multiple-Deferreds case where one of the Deferreds is rejected, jQuery.when() immediately fires the failCallbacks for its master Deferred. Note that some of the Deferreds may still be unresolved at that point. The arguments passed to the failCallbacks match the signature of the failCallback for the Deferred that was rejected. If you need to perform additional processing for this case, such as canceling any unfinished Ajax requests, you can keep references to the underlying jqXHR objects in a closure and inspect/cancel them in the failCallback.
You are using an out of date browser. On December 1, 2021, New York State will upgrade security protections to our websites and applications. Access to government websites and applications will now require the use of up-to-date and secure web browsers. View a list of supported browsers.
Beginning in 2024, New York State will launch Summer EBT, a new program that provides low-income families with food benefits to help buy groceries during the summer when kids might not have access to school meals. Most eligible children will receive Summer EBT food benefits automatically; however, some families may need to apply.
Summer EBT food benefits will begin to be issued this summer. Eligible children will receive benefits at different times, depending on whether they attend public or private school, and whether they receive benefits automatically or are determined eligible through a Summer EBT application.
Eligible children who attend public school and are automatically eligible will receive benefits first. A letter will be mailed to eligible households shortly before benefits are issued. These letters will be sent throughout the summer.
Summer EBT food benefits will remain available and accessible on your Summer EBT food benefits card for 122 days after the date they were issued. All unused benefits are removed from the card after this time. Be sure to use your benefits soon after you receive them.
For the purposes of Summer EBT, both P-EBT food benefits cards and Summer EBT food benefits cards work the same. The card that is used to access Summer EBT food benefits will become your child's permanent Summer EBT card for each year that your child is eligible to receive benefits. Please keep it in a safe place.
Families who are automatically eligible will receive a letter this summer letting them know that their child will receive benefits automatically and how they will receive their benefits (existing P-EBT card or new Summer EBT card).
Summer EBT food benefits will remain available and accessible on your Summer EBT food benefits card for 122 days after the date they were issued. All unused benefits are removed from the card after this time. Be sure to use your benefits soon after you receive them.
Protect your benefits from theft by following these important tips. You can also use the ebtEdge website or app to freeze and unfreeze the EBT card between purchases. Summer EBT benefits cannot be replaced if stolen.
The next Olympics will be hosted by the city of Paris, which is the capital of France. Paris previously hosted the Olympics in 1900 and 1924, and will join London (1908, 1948 and 2012) as the only two citites to host the Olympic three times.
The gold medal matches of the soccer tournaments will be held at Le Parc des Princes in Paris, home of the Paris Saint-Germain Football Club, but the earlier soccer matches will take place in six stadiums around France.
The Games will officially open on Friday, July 26, 2024. Instead of being held in a traditional stadium, the 2024 Opening Ceremony will take the form of a four-mile-long floating procession down the Seine River. Athletes and performers will ride through the heart of Paris in approximately 160 boats, with the parade ending at the Trocadero. The Opening Ceremony will conclude there with a final show as the Eiffel Tower lights up the night.
The Opening Ceremony will air again in primetime, beginning at 7:30 p.m. ET/PT on NBC. The stream of the primetime show will be available to watch on Peacock, NBCOlympics.com, NBC.com and the NBC/NBC Sports apps.
More than 500 athletes are expected to represent the U.S. at the Paris Olympics. Most athletes will make Team USA by competing at Olympic Trials or earning required international results and rankings, while others will earn their ticket to Paris through discretionary selections (for example, the athletes named to the U.S. women's soccer team).
Athletes in sports like beach volleyball, surfing and boxing have already been named to the U.S. Olympic team. The Olympic Trials for swimming, diving, gymnastics and track and field will take place in June:
Several of the Olympic tournaments for team sports will kick off prior to the Opening Ceremony. Athletes in handball, rugby and soccer will compete in matches on Wednesday, July 24 and Thursday, July 25. Archery will also get an early start, with the first arrows set to be shot on July 25.
A total of 329 events across 39 sports will be held at the 2024 Paris Olympics. This includes all of the traditional Olympic sports, along with three sports which debuted three years ago at the Tokyo Olympics: sport climbing, skateboarding and surfing.
One new sport will debut at the 2024 Paris Olympics: breaking, the street style of dance which originated in the U.S. The sport of breaking will introduce a new breed of Olympic athlete to the world when B-Boys and B-Girls face off in head-to-head improv dance battles.
Each morning and afternoon during the Olympics, live competition will be presented across NBC, including live finals for the most-anticipated events in swimming, gymnastics, track and field, basketball, beach volleyball and more. USA Network, GOLF Channel, CNBC, E! and Universo will also air Olympic coverage, and all streams can be watched on Peacock, NBCOlympics.com, NBC.com, the NBC app and the NBC Sports apps.
In this section, you will learn how to find your polling place in your county of registration, what to bring to the polls to identify yourself, what type of voting systems you will be using, and what to expect when you go to cast your vote.
Under Texas law, voters who possess one of the seven acceptable forms of photo ID must present that ID at the polls when voting in person. Voters who do not possess and cannot reasonably obtain one of the seven approved forms of photo ID may fill out a Reasonable Impediment Declaration (RID) (PDF) at the polls and present an alternative form of ID, such as a utility bill, bank statement, government check, or a voter registration certificate.
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