The Daily Cat | Wed. 11-17-21

The Daily Cat | Wed. 11-17-21
The Daily Cat
The Daily Cat | Wed. 11-17-21

Nov 17 2021 | 00:03:00

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Episode 0 November 17, 2021 00:03:00

Show Notes

WNUR News’ Daily Briefing – November 17, 2021

Northwestern Marriage Pact, Field Hockey team makes tournament run, Chicago FOP president resigns, Kyle Rittenhouse trial

WNUR News broadcasts live at 6 pm CST on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays on WNUR 89.3 FM

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Episode Transcript

Speaker 1 00:00:34 Good morning and welcome to the daily cat WRS daily news brief I'm <inaudible> with a few things you need to know today. It's 9:00 AM central on Wednesday, November 17. Exciting news for all marriage pact participants. According to an email sent out last night, matches will be revealed sometime today. Make sure to keep refreshing those inboxes. If you want to find out who your campus soulmate is, the Northwestern women's field hockey team made it to the NCAA final four. After beating Iowa this past Sunday, the Wildcats pull the spectacular overtime when managing to score a last minute goal that determined their triumphant advance into the semifinals. There'll be playing Harvard, this coming Friday for a chance to play at the finals. So best of luck to them and go cats. The president of Chicago's largest police union, John Cotton, Zahra submitted his retirement papers this past Monday, by doing this, he will be avoiding an inevitable disciplinary hearing regarding violations against CPD regulations, including posting divisive content on social media that could have potentially resulted in him being fired. Speaker 1 00:01:45 He will still be allowed to stay present of the Chicago fraternal order of police. And he has since discussed plans to run against mayor Lori Lightfoot in the next Chicago mayoral elections. After two weeks of testimony, the jury for the Kyle Rittenhouse murder trial spent the entirety of today. Deliberating without reaching a verdict. You may remember Rittenhouse as a 17 year old who's shot three men at the Kenosha police brutality protests last year, killing two of them. He is currently facing multiple charges in court, including first degree, reckless homicide, first degree recklessly endangering safety and possession of a dangerous weapon. Under 18 prosecutors argue that he should be responsible for initiating the conflict of his own volition while written house and the defense claim the assault was for self-defense purposes. The jury will be continuing their deliberation further today. That's all for today's daily cat five from WMUR news. I'm Izzy Perez. See you tomorrow.

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