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Kate MedleyThe Obama Gas Station in Columbia, South Carolina, got its name in 2008 following the general election because of the community's support for President Obama's campaign. She visited around 150 gas stations and quick stops in total, finding the unique curation of each space compelling. A gas station in the Mississippi Delta offering an all-you-can-eat-buffet, which Medley visited in 2013. Kate Medley“The closest gas is 30 miles away,” Amanda Simonson, the general manager, told Medley when she walked in, according to Medley’s book. Medley photographed a former gas station in the Arkansas Delta, which had become a modest Baptist church.
Persons: Kate Medley, crawfish, Quik Shoppe, Medley, Marta Miranda, Kate Medley Mike Moatts, Dhinal Patel, Obama's, Kate Medley “, , Gurjeet Singh, Singh, Kate Medley Saint Louis Saveurs, Mouhamadou, Saint Louis Saveurs, , ” Amanda Simonson, Jeff Poynor, she’s, Slim Jims, I’m Organizations: CNN, Institute, Market Express, Obama Gas Station, Mississippi Museum of Art, Scouting, Kwik Chek, Shell, Mississippi Delta, Arkansas Delta, Red Bulls Locations: Oxford , Mississippi, American, Charlotte , Carolina, Elberta , Alabama, Columbia , South Carolina, Jackson, Memphis , Tennessee, Hammond , Louisiana, Chandigarh, India, Indian, Greensboro , North Carolina, Bator, Senegal, Greensboro, Mouhamadou, Elaine , Arkansas, Mississippi, Banner , Mississippi, Arkansas
BEIJING, Aug 24 (Reuters) - Vendors at Beijing's largest seafood market said they were angry and scared for their future as Japan began to release treated radioactive water from the wrecked Fukushima nuclear power plant into the Pacific Ocean on Thursday. Amidst a wave of condemnation in Chinese state and social media, and just before China announced a ban on the import all aquatic products from Japan, several traders at Beijing's Jingshen seafood market expressed their fears and criticised Japan's decision. "The online public opinion is saying that in the future, seafood won't be called 'seafood' anymore, but 'nuclear-seafood," said 22-year-old vendor, Li Yuxuan. "The earth can manage without Japan, but not without seafood," wrote a user registered in Shanxi province, a post liked over a hundred thousand times. It maintains the water release is safe, noting that the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) has also concluded the impact it would have was "negligible."
Persons: Li Yuxuan, Liu, Martin Quin Pollard, Xiaoyu Yin, Lincoln Organizations: China, Tsinghua University, Weibo, International Atomic Energy Agency, Reuters, Thomson Locations: BEIJING, Japan, East, South East Asia, Shanxi province, Tokyo, China, United States, Canada, Russia, Hong Kong
Salesforce 's (CRM) Marc Benioff tried "everything he could" to convince Bret Taylor to remain at the enterprise software maker as co-CEO, Jim Cramer said Thursday, but those efforts were unsuccessful. "Marc did everything he could to keep [Taylor], and he did a great job, but the opportunities were great [for Taylor]," Jim said Thursday morning, drawing on his impressions from talking to Benioff following the Taylor exit announcement. Reflecting on that conversation one day later, Jim said Benioff was "extremely emotional" before the interview began, calling it a "hold-back-tears moment." Jim said Taylor is definitely leaving for "different reasons" than Keith Block, who served as Salesforce co-CEO alongside Benioff from August 2018 to February 2020. "[Taylor] beat Musk," Jim said.
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